Intra-flow interference

Intra-flow interference is interference between intermediate routers sharing the same flow path.

For wireless transmission from S1 to D1, either S1-X1 and X2-D1, or X1-X2, can operate at any given time slot to avoid intra-flow interference between the links.

Application

In wireless routing, routing protocol WCETT,[1] MIC[2] and iAWARE[3] incorporate consideration to the intra-flow interference metric.

gollark: Even if, somehow (not that I believe this) our mind is computed on "souls" or something instead of the matter in our brains, you can still study it.
gollark: Wait, how is that even related? Please define materialism.
gollark: I mean, humans are irrational but our behavior can be studied like other things.
gollark: Should we *not* do that?
gollark: Unfortunately, we can't yet perfectly simulate large groups of humans either.

See also

References

  1. R. Draves, J. Padhye, and B. Zill, “Routing in Multi-Radio, Multi-Hop Wireless Mesh Networks,” ACM MobiCom, September 2004, pp. 114–28.
  2. Y. Yang, J. Wang, and R. Kravets, “Designing Routing Metrics for Mesh Networks,” IEEE Workshop Wireless Mesh Networks, September 2005.
  3. A. P. Subramanian, M. M. Buddhikot, and S. C. Miller, “Interference Aware Routing in Multi-Radio Wireless Mesh Networks,” IEEE Workshop Wireless Mesh Networks, September 2006, pp. 55–63.


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