Analysis of Demand Driven Ad-hoc Routing Protocols on Performance and Mobility
Biju Issac, Khairuddhin Ab Hamid, C. E. Tan

TL;DR
This paper analyzes demand-driven ad hoc routing protocols in MANETs, focusing on their performance and mobility aspects to understand their behavior and efficiency in dynamic wireless networks.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of demand-driven routing protocols like AODV, DSR, and TORA, highlighting their performance metrics and mobility handling capabilities.
Findings
AODV shows high throughput under moderate mobility.
DSR results in lower traffic overhead.
TORA adapts well to high mobility scenarios.
Abstract
Mobile ad hoc networking (MANET) is a growing technology that can support the operation of adaptive wireless networks. With the increased demand rate of wireless applications it is useful to have more adaptive and self organizing technologies that adapt to changes within a network region. In this paper we initially present a brief listing of table driven ad hoc routing protocols and eventually analyze in detail the behaviour of demand driven ad hoc routing protocols like - Ad Hoc On Demand Distance Vector Routing (AODV), Dynamic Source Routing (DSR), Temporally-Ordered Routing Algorithm (TORA) in terms of throughput, traffic dropped, routing traffic and mobility. The output graphs are eventually discussed, thus enabling us to understand the routing technology better.
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Ad Hoc Networks · Opportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding
