Competitive Routing in Hybrid Communication Networks
Daniel Jung, Christina Kolb, Christian Scheideler, Jannik Sundermeier

TL;DR
This paper introduces distributed algorithms that leverage limited long-range links to create network abstractions enabling near-shortest path routing in wireless ad hoc networks with radio holes, improving routing efficiency.
Contribution
It presents novel distributed algorithms that compute network abstractions using long-range links, achieving efficient routing with minimal storage, especially when radio holes are well-behaved.
Findings
Algorithms run in O(log^2 n) time using long-range links.
Routing paths are c-competitive if radio holes' convex hulls do not intersect.
Storage depends on radio holes, not total node count.
Abstract
Routing is a challenging problem for wireless ad hoc networks, especially when the nodes are mobile and spread so widely that in most cases multiple hops are needed to route a message from one node to another. In fact, it is known that any online routing protocol has a poor performance in the worst case, in a sense that there is a distribution of nodes resulting in bad routing paths for that protocol, even if the nodes know their geographic positions and the geographic position of the destination of a message is known. The reason for that is that radio holes in the ad hoc network may require messages to take long detours in order to get to a destination, which are hard to find in an online fashion. In this paper, we assume that the wireless ad hoc network can make limited use of long-range links provided by a global communication infrastructure like a cellular infrastructure or a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
