Congestion Control in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks by Enhancement of Transmission Control Protocol
Abstract
Problem statement: Transmission Control Protocol is the Internet’s most widely used transport control protocol. TCP’s strength lies in the adaptive nature of its congestion avoidance and control algorithm and its retransmission mechanism. In TCP Vegas rerouting (a path), which change the propagation delay of the connection and this may be able to result in a substantial decrease in through put. An enhanced algorithm for TCP in wireless Ad Hoc networks is needed to obtain a fairer share of the available bandwidth, tackle re-routing problems and solve the problems associated with older TCP Vegas flows. Approach: TCP-Vegas uses an Estimation of the propagation delay, base RTT, to adjust its window size and it is very important for a TCP Vegas connection to be able to have an accurate estimation. Results: One of the issues is rerouting (a path), which change the propagation delay of the connection and this may be able to result in a substantial decrease in through put. The issue identified with TCP Vegas was reinvestigated and to address them, a modification to TCP Vegas’s congestion avoidance algorithm is proposed. Conclusion: This modified TCP enhancement algorithams is shown to obtain a fairer share of the available bandwidth, tackle re-routing problems and solve the problems associated with older TCP Vegas flows.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3844/jcssp.2011.1824.1830
Copyright: © 2011 N. Premalatha and A. M. Natarajan. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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Keywords
- Congestion avoidance
- Performance Evaluation
- packet retransmissions
- Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)
- Vegas connection
- available bandwidth
- higher throughput
- Round Trip Time (RTT)