A. M. Aibinu

Work place: Department of Telecommunications Engineering, Federal University of Technology Minna, Nigeria

E-mail:

Website:

Research Interests: Image Compression, Image Manipulation, Image Processing

Biography

Abiodun Musa AIBINU is presently with the Department of Mechatronics Engineering,
Schhol of Engineering and Engineering Technology, Federal University of Technology,
Minna, Nigeria. His research interests are: Biomedical Signal Processing; Digital Image
Processing; Instrumentation and Measurements; Telecommunication system Design and
Digital System Design

Author Articles
Implementation of a Locator-Based Route Switching Scheme for Improved Routing in Proxy Mobile IPv6

By M. Okwori E. N. Onwuka A. M. Aibinu O. C. Ugweje

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijwmt.2014.04.01, Pub. Date: 1 Nov. 2014

Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6) is a promising IP mobility protocols that is being deployed in emerging wireless technologies. This however has a non-optimal packet route as a result of the triangular routing problem. This creates a bottle neck at the Local Mobility Anchor (LMA) thereby increasing packet delays. This paper presents the implementation of a locator-based route switching scheme on OPNET Modeler. The Mobility Access Gateway (MAG) and the LMA were enhanced by making them intelligent. This enables them to be able to check the position of the Corresponding Node (CN) with respect to the Mobile Node (MN) and also determine the available bandwidth on each link. From the checks made, a three-stage decision process is used to switch routing to the most optimal route that guarantees the best QoS. Node Models were developed for the MAG and LMA, network models were deployed and simulation tests were carried out. The results show that the developed scheme switched packets to a more optimal route according to the designed algorithm. The impact of this switching on differences between transmitted throughput at MN and the received throughput at CN was also evaluated. The receiver activity result shows a reduction in the bottleneck at the LMA-MAG link. The end-to-end delay results show over 50 milliseconds drop in packet delay as a result of the switching to a more optimal route. This shows that the packet delays result from the congestion at the LMA-MAG interface due to suboptimal routing.

[...] Read more.
Other Articles