Performance Measurement of Real-Time Mobile Communication in an IPv6 Testbed

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Performance Measurement of Real-Time Mobile Communication in an IPv6 Testbed"

Transcription

1 Performance Measurement of Real-Time Mobile Communication in an IPv6 Testbed Nobuyasu Nakajima Toshiba America Research, Inc POBox 136 Convent Station, NJ 07961, USA Abstract This paper presents some experimental results on the performance of real-time mobile communication in an IPv6 testbed For real-time multimedia communication, we adopt Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) as signaling protocol and Mobile IPv6 (MIPv6) to support seamless connectivity While performance measurement of real-time mobile communication consists of several factors, we focus here on the handoff delay due to a node configuration in a typical IPv6 environment In particular, we measure the delay incurred when a mobile node moves to a new location and performs Stateless Address Autoconfiguration and Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) during configuration We also present a detailed analysis and delay measurements with and without DAD for real-time communication I INTRODUCTION The proliferation of wireless devices along with the rapid growth of the Internet is forcing the Internet Community to move from Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) [1] to Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) [2] The major motivations behind this are the limitation of IPv4 address space Although Network Address Translator (NAT) is widely used to circumvent the address space problem, it does not provide the global routability On the other hand, IPv6 is designed to solve these problems Expanded address space of IPv6 will enable us to assign global routable IP addresses to every possible device willing to connect to the Internet Commercial and non-commercial IPv6-based Internet services are becoming popular Many standard bodies are considering IPv6 for their next generation networks and services For example, 3GPP mandates IPv6 for IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) including Voice over IP (VoIP) in Release 5 [3] Operating systems, routers, and other network elements are starting to support IPv6 It is anticipated that all future wireless devices will have built-in IPv6 stack Therefore, wireless service providers are interested in IPv6 based services Apart from data communication, such as file transfer and web browsing, they are more interested in offering real-time services, such as voice and video However, careful investigations are needed regarding the IPv6 performance issues for real-time communication since it has different features than IPv4 In this paper, we discuss some such issues and measure the performance of real-time multimedia communication in our IPv6 laboratory testbed Although several documents such as [4] already mentioned DAD s drawback in the handoff delay, performance measurement is hardly available Reference [5] discusses an IPv6-based mobile communication testbed using SIP and Mobile IP However, measurement or analysis of performance such as delay Ashutosh Dutta and Subir Das Telcordia Technologies, Inc 445 South Street Morristown, NJ 07960, USA was not reported in that paper We are also building our IPv6 testbed in the laboratory using SIP and Mobile IP in order to measure the performance of real-time mobile communication which include various delays, disruptions, packet loss, and even media quality test In this paper, however, we give emphasis on handoff delay due to Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) performed by the mobile node while visiting a new network The rest of the paper is organized as follows Section II briefly presents the IPv6 and its mobility protocol, Mobile IPv6 While Section III describes our testbed configuration, Section IV deals with the handoff delay and in particular the delay caused by DAD Section V depicts the handoff delay measurement and its analysis Finally, conclusion is presented in Section VI A IPv6 II IPV6 AND MOBILE IPV6 The major difference between IPv4 and IPv6 is the length of address field While the address length of IPv4 is 32 bits, that of IPv6 is 128 bits It is anticipated that this huge address space of IPv6 will solve the address space limitation of IPv4 and will enable us to assign global unique IP address to every device in the network Many new features other than address length are available in IPv6 specifications One such interesting feature is Stateless Address Autoconfiguration [6] While DHCP is also available in IPv6 [7], this mechanism allows an interface to assign an IPv6 address automatically, based on the network prefix advertised by the router and the unique information of the interface, eg, MAC address Security is also integrated into IPv6 For example, IPSec [8] is mandatory in IPv6 node while it is an option in IPv4 This gives a secure data communication as well as an authentication of each packet transmitted B Mobile IPv6 Mobile IPv6 (MIPv6) [4] provides a mechanism to support mobility in IPv6 It is already accepted by the industry and is expected to be an IETF standard in the near future In MIPv6, each Mobile () has its home network and is assigned unique IP address called home address The prefix of this address is the same as that of the home network gets a new IP address when it moves to a network other than the home network This new address is called care-of address (CoA) and essentially provides the s current point of attachment to the network Another node called Home Agent () is located in s home network and is responsible for maintaining the

2 Home Network Mobile () Correspondent (CN) Testbed Backbone Home Agent () Binding Update to CN IPv6 A IPv6 B E1 Home Network E2 Visited Networks E3 Binding Update to Mobile Visited Network 1: data path when at home () 2: data path without route optimization when away from home 3: tunnel from to at CoA 4: route optimized path between and CN Fig 1 3 Mobile IPv6 s current point of attachment Fig 1 shows the basic operation of Mobile IPv6 In the base protocol, when an is in its home network, sent by the Correspondent (CN) which uses s home address as a destination address reaches directly When moves to a network other than its home network, will reach via after completing following two steps: i) once gets a new CoA in the visited network, it sends a Binding Update (BU) to in order to inform of its current CoA, ii) upon receiving a BU, captures destined for and forwards them to s new CoA However, can also send BUs to CNs directly while sending BUs to Assuming CNs have the capability to process these BUs it can send directly to an using s new CoA This technique is popularly known as route optimization It is important to note that while route optimization is an option for MIPv4, it is now specified within MIPv6 III TESTBED FOR REAL-TIME MOBILE COMMUNICATION USING IPV6 We extended our existing IPv4-based multimedia testbed [9] to support IPv6-based mobile multimedia communication While our IPv4 testbed has been built using IEEE 80211b network and has capabilities such as, rapid auto-configuration, mobility support in various layers, QoS and user/device authentication and authorization, IPv6 testbed presently has limited capabilities such as, Stateless Address Autoconfiguration, Mobile IPv6 (MIPv6) and SIP for signaling A Testbed Configuration and Components Fig 2 shows the configuration of our experimental IPv6 testbed It consists of two routers ( A & B), an,, and CN A has two ethernet segments: one for the home network and another for the B On the other hand, B has three ethernet segments; two for visited networks and one for the connection to A We use Linux 249 kernel in our testbed Additionally, a patch for better conformance with IPv6 specification developed CN Fig 2 H31 H12 s movement H23 Experimental testbed configuration by USAGI projects [10] is applied to the kernel We also integrate MIPL Mobile IPv6 [11] code to support mobility This includes the MIPv6 s Mobile, Home Agent, and Correspondent functionalities Stateless Address Autoconfiguration [6] is introduced for s IPv6 address configuration As mentioned earlier, we use Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) [12] as a signaling protocol which is also used for multimedia sessions in the Internet In the testbed, both the and the CN are equipped with SIP User Agent (UA) which establishes Voice over IP session In fact, Columbia University s SIP UA implementation [13] is used in our testbed However, we modified it to comply with IPv6 specification We also use RAT [14] to support media application program It is a voice communication tool over IPv4 as well as IPv6 Because mobility is supported by MIPv6, SIP messages as well as media are sent to the even when the moves to the visited network IV NDOFF DELAY A Components of Handoff Delay Fig 3 depicts the sequence of handoff process and its delay components in details We define handoff delay (D) as the delay when a mobile node changes its location and attaches to a new subnet so that it is capable of communicating with other nodes such as and CN It essentially consists of three components: i) lower layer switching delay (D 1 ), ii) delay for detecting a new router (D 2 ), and iii) MIPv6 registration delay (D 3 ) Therefore, D = D 1 + D 2 + D 3 (1) In particular, D 1 is the layer-2 switching delay D 2 pertains to the detection of the new access router In IPv6, this is achieved by means of Advertisement (RA) By listening to a new RA, determines the subnet change In fact, maximum value of D 2 can be one RA interval Finally, D 3 refers to MIPv6 registration delay It works as follows: after receiving the new RA, configures its interface with new CoA and informs and/or CNs of the new CoA via Binding Update

3 detachment from old access medium attachment to new access medium handoff detection DAD completion D handoff completion D1 D2 Advertisement Binding Update Binding Acknowledgement C Analysis of Duplicate Address Detection Delay Fig 4 depicts the delay caused by DAD In the figure, a random delay D rand between 0 to a certain maximum value (D rand,max ) has been chosen and is applied before sending out NS for DAD event We also denote the number of transmissions of NS and the interval of the transmission of the two consecutive NSes as N and D ret In our testbed, all these variables are configurable system parameters The average delay caused by DAD is therefore D DAD = D rand + N D ret, (2) Fig 3 Handoff flow (BU) message In reply, sends Binding Acknowledgement (BA) to process It should be noted that BA from CN is optional in MIPv6 Although D 1 and D 2 are equally important to the delay performance in a real-time mobile communication, in this paper, we measure D 3 and analyze it However, we believe that D 1 is specific to link layer and can be reduced For example, D 1 can be considered zero for link layer technologies supporting soft handoff On the other hand, D 2 depends upon the frequency of router advertisement and could be large in a bandwidth constraint environment in which D DAD and D rand denote the average of D DAD and D rand, respectively In our testbed, D rand,max is 1000ms, N is 1, and D ret is 1000ms, which are also default values in [6] Since D rand is uniformly distributed, D DAD = 1500ms (3) Although DAD is mandatory in [6], Mobile IPv6 suggests that one may use new IPv6 address while performing the DAD in parallel with MIPv6 signaling or without performing the DAD If DAD can be avoided, one can eliminate the delay, D DAD, and as a result handoff performance will be improved Following this approach in our testbed, we can reduce the average handoff delay by 1500ms B Duplicate Address Detection The purpose of Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) is to confirm the uniqueness of the IPv6 address on the link In fact, DAD plays an important role in MIPv6 registration delay It is performed between an RA and a BU (Fig 3) Before an assigns a new address (also known as tentative address) to its interface, it sends out a (NS) on the local link This is to verify whether any other node on the link is having the same address When the pre-determined transmission time expires and does not receive a reply, assumes that no other node on the link has this tentative address and finally assigns this to its interface as a valid address According to [6], a tentative address is not allowed to be used by a node before completing the DAD This means that the cannot send with a tentative address as a source IPv6 address and has to discard all inbound during DAD phase This may cause the delay in sending out a BU and also receiving a BA On the other hand, in order to achieve a fast handoff, should inform of the change of CoA as quickly as possible by sending a BU In fact, this should happen just after the listens to the new RA and generates its new CoA address However, until DAD is done, cannot send a BU carrying the new CoA and therefore adds a substantial delay to the component of D 3 We refer here D DAD as the delay due to DAD and is measured as the time between the router advertisement and DAD completion In the next subsection, we analyze D DAD and it turns out that D DAD is a significant component of D 3 V NDOFF DELAY MEASUREMENT A Measurement Procedure The effect of DAD on the performance of handoff delay was discussed in the previous section In this section, we present our measurements on handoff delay in our testbed for two cases: i) using DAD, and ii) without using DAD We modified IPv6 stack not to perform the DAD but to accept and process other The handoff delay was measured by monitoring the in the testbed for both the cases Although we have already installed IEEE 80211b access points in our IPv6 testbed, we used wired ethernet for this measurement in order to eliminate additional errors related to wireless technologies such as, packet error, packet loss, processing handoff detection DAD completion Drand Fig 4 DAD delay Advertisement

4 delay in the wireless access points Handoff is emulated by disconnecting the s Ethernet cable and connecting the cable to the new hub attaching to the new router As seen in Fig 2, starts from its home network, E 1, and then moves to E 2 and E 3, two visited networks in our testbed, and finally returns back to its home network, E 1 In short, goes along the following path during one measurement; E 1 E 2 E 3 E 1 The handoff from E 1 to E 2, E 2 to E 3, and E 3 to E 1 are labeled as H 12, H 23, and H 31, respectively Handoff delay was measured by analyzing the tcpdump output gathered at the Table I shows the average handoff delay measured 10 times for each handoff case In Table I, we see a substantial performance improvement of the handoff delay for H 12 and H 23 without DAD While the average handoff delays with DAD for H 12 and H 23 are 19099ms and 20123ms, respectively, those without DAD are 15ms and 20ms It should be noted that during our measurement does not perform DAD when returning to its home network This happens only when returns to its home network before the expiry of current binding This behavior is reflected in Table I for the case of H 31 with DAD Moreover, the home address should always be retained for the regardless of its location In order to protect the s home address against other nodes performing DAD, should act as a proxy on behalf of and perform the DAD while is away from the home network Now we will analyze these results in the following subsections B Analysis of Measured Delay with DAD An example of message flow in the case of the handoff, H 12, with DAD is shown in Fig 5, which was collected mainly at the The time in the left hand side of each message represents the relative time which begins at the reception of Advertisement (RA) ((a), in Fig 5) and is measured in milliseconds RA also indicates the starting point of measurement of D 3 According to this implementation of MIPv6, a Binding Update (BU) ((b), in Fig 5) from the occurs immediately after receiving the RA ((a), in Fig 5) Due to DAD, however, the does not use the new CoA generated by Stateless Address Autoconfiguration based on the prefix in the RA This implementation of Mobile IPv6 picks the s home address instead of CoA as a source address Since this messages does not carry the care-of address it fails to perform the Binding Update function TABLE I AVERAGE NDOFF DELAY FOR EACH NDOFF CASE with DAD without DAD H ms 15 ms H ms 20 ms H 31 N/A 10 ms 0 ms 07 ms 728 ms ms ms ms ms ms ms Fig 5 CN (a) RA (d) DAD completed (g) NS (h) NA (f ) BA (j) BU (c) NS for DAD (e) BU with CoA (f) BA tunnel (b) BU with Home Address Example of the message flow with DAD (i) UDP (k) UDP After a random time, which is 728ms in this particular measurement shown in Fig 5, the sends a (NS) ((c), in Fig 5) for the purpose of DAD Although this is not a signaling message, the symbol (d) in Fig 5 represents the completion of DAD and occurred in 1000ms after sends out the NS, ((c), in Fig 5) We see the behavior of DAD in Fig 5 is the same as discussed in subsection IV-C When the does not get a Binding Acknowledgement (BA) in reply to the initial BU, it retransmits the BU ((e), in Fig 5) which occurred in approximately 1500ms after it sent the initial BU Due to the completion of DAD, the second BU at this time can carry the correct CoA to the Thus the can send the BA, ((f), in Fig 5) After exchanging Neighbor Solicitation ((g), in Fig 5) and Neighbor Advertisement ((h), in Fig 5) with the router for address resolution, receives the BU ((f ), in Fig 5) at 15035ms, and it also indicates the end point of the delay measurement Thus from Fig 5, we see D 3 is 15035ms, which is too long for real-time communication The also sends another BU ((j), in Fig 5) to the CN Before receiving this BU, CN is not aware of the change of s IP address and accordingly (as referred to (i), in Fig 5) from the CN would go via the Once CN receives the BU it starts sending to the directly (referred to (k), in Fig 5) instead of It should be noted that the Binding Update retransmission is managed by Mobile IPv6 module which is independent of the DAD process in this implementation In Fig 5, BU is retransmitted in 1500ms after the initial BU However, in this MIPv6 implementation, another BU retransmission is required after 1000ms ie, 2500ms in our measurement scale, if the DAD phase is not finished On the other hand, DAD in this IPv6 implementation completes between 1000ms to 2000ms

5 as discussed in subsection IV-C Considering both the DAD and BU retransmission conditions the correct BU which carries the new care-of address can be sent in either 1500ms or 2500ms after receiving an RA The variance is due to the fact that it depends upon DAD completion time, which is uniformly distributed Thus, we can infer that the average handoff delay is 2000ms which very well matches with our measurement as shown in Table I C Analysis of Measured Delay without DAD Fig 6 shows an example of message flow in the case of the handoff H 12 without DAD In Fig 6, message (a) represents the new RA, which is the starting point of the measurement of D 3 Since DAD is not performed here, BU ((b), in Fig 6) has the correct CoA also sends a BA ((c), in Fig 6) immediately and it ends the delay measurement Before the router forwards the BU to the, the router and the have to exchange NS ((d), in Fig 6) and NA ((e), in Fig 6) for address resolution However, the delay added to D 3 by these two messages is very small Our measured delay is 17ms in this particular example Table I shows the average handoff delay, which is 15ms for H 12 and 20ms for H 23, respectively The measurement results show that avoiding DAD improves the delay D 3, since D DAD becomes almost negligible Also in Fig 6, another BU ((h), in Fig 6) is sent to the CN As we see with earlier result, avoiding DAD also improves the delay in sending the BU to the CN Address Detection (DAD) We performed extensive measurement on delays with and without the DAD It shows that for real-time applications DAD related delays are substantial and it will improve the performance a great deal if we can avoid the DAD phase Although avoiding DAD improves the handoff delay, we face the risk of not detecting the IP address collision The probability of the address duplication in the case of Stateless Address Autoconfiguration seems to be negligible if the uniqueness of lower layer address is guaranteed However, we still have the possibility of address duplication, because any IP address can be freely assigned to interfaces with or without any prior intention This may cause some vulnerability in the network from security perspective, which is an open issue Given the delay sensitive real-time applications, we would suggest to avoid the DAD phase, however, additional policy enforcement or mechanism may be necessary to guarantee uniqueness of IPv6 address As a future work, we would like to perform more experiments on several other issues which are critical for the performance of real-time mobile communications in an IPv6 environment ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The authors greatly appreciate the interesting and helpful discussions by ITSUMO project members Ashutosh Dutta would like to acknowledge Prof Henning Schulzrinne for many helpful discussion VI CONCLUSION In this paper, we describe some experimental results on realtime mobile communication in an IPv6 laboratory testbed We integrate SIP and MIPv6 in order to support real-time multimedia communication and seamless roaming Several modifications and changes were made to the publicly available IPv6, MIPv6, and Columbia University SIP User Agent code While several components in an s handoff delay are discussed in this paper, we give emphasis on the delay related to Duplicate 0 ms 07 ms 16 ms 17 ms 17 ms 638 ms Fig 6 (a) RA (b) BU (d) NS (e) NA (c ) BA (g) BU (c) BA tunnel CN Example of the message flow without DAD (f) UDP (i) UDP REFERENCES [1] Jon Postel (Editor), Internet Protocol, RFC791, September 1981 [2] S Deering and R Hinden, Internet Protocol, version 6 (IPv6) specification, RFC2460, December 1998 [3] 3rd Generation Partnership Project, Technical specification group services and system aspects, 3rd Generation mobile system Release 5 specifications, 3GPP TS 21103, work in progress [4] D B Johnson and C Perkins, Mobility support in IPv6, draft-ietfmobileip-ipv6-15txt, July 2001, work in progress [5] P Flykt and T Alakoski, SIP Services and Interworking with IPv6, Second International Conference on 3G Mobile Communication Technologies, March 2001, pp [6] S Thomson and T Narten, IPv6 stateless address autoconfiguration, RFC2462, December 1998 [7] J Bound, M Carney, C Perkins, T Lemon, B Volz, R Droms, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6), draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-23txt, February 2002, work in progress [8] S Kent and R Atkinson, Security architecture for the Internet Protocol, RFC2401, November 1998 [9] A Dutta, J-C Chen, S Das, M Elaud, D Famolari, S Madhani, A McAuley, M Tauil, S Baba, T Maeda, N Nakajima, YOhba, and H Schulzrinne, Implementing a testbed for mobile multimedia, Proceedings of IEEE Globecom 2001, San Antonio, Texas, USA, November 2001 [10] [11] A J Tuominen and H Petander, MIPL Mobile IPv6 for Linux in HUT campus network MediaPoli, Proceedings of Ottawa Linux Symposium 2001, Ottawa, Canada, June 2001 [12] M Handley, H Schulzrinne, E Schooler, and J Rosenberg, SIP: Session Initiation Protocol, RFC2543, March 1999 [13] hgs/software/sipc [14] V Hardman, M A Sasse, M Handley, A Watson, Reliable audio for use over the Internet, Proceedings of INET 95, Honolulu, Hawaii, June 1995

Handover Management for Mobile Nodes in IPv6 Networks

Handover Management for Mobile Nodes in IPv6 Networks TECHNOLOGY ADVANCES FOR 3G AND BEYOND Handover Management for Mobile Nodes in IPv6 Networks Nicolas Montavont and Thomas Noël LSIIT Louis Pasteur University CNRS, Strasbourg ABSTRACT In this article we

More information

An Analysis of The Fast Handovers for Mobile IPv6 Protocol

An Analysis of The Fast Handovers for Mobile IPv6 Protocol An Analysis of The Fast Handovers for Mobile IPv6 Protocol Janne Lundberg Helsinki University of Technology Laboratory for Theoretical Computer Science May 28, 2003 Abstract Fast Handovers for Mobile IPv6

More information

Mobile SCTP for IP Mobility Support in All-IP Networks

Mobile SCTP for IP Mobility Support in All-IP Networks Mobile SCTP for IP Mobility Support in All-IP Networks Seok Joo Koh sjkoh@cs.knu.ac.kr Abstract The Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) is a new transport protocol that is featured multi-streaming

More information

An Analysis of the Flow-Based Fast Handover Method for Mobile IPv6 Network. Jani Puttonen, Ari Viinikainen, Miska Sulander and Timo Hämäläinen

An Analysis of the Flow-Based Fast Handover Method for Mobile IPv6 Network. Jani Puttonen, Ari Viinikainen, Miska Sulander and Timo Hämäläinen An Analysis of the Flow-Based Fast Handover Method for Mobile IPv6 Network Jani Puttonen, Ari Viinikainen, Miska Sulander and Timo Hämäläinen Emails: janput@cc.jyu.fi, arjuvi@mit.jyu.fi, sulander@cc.jyu.fi,

More information

A DHCPv6 Based IPv6 Autoconfiguration Mechanism for Subordinate MANET

A DHCPv6 Based IPv6 Autoconfiguration Mechanism for Subordinate MANET 2008 IEEE Asia-Pacific Services Computing Conference A DHCPv6 Based IPv6 Autoconfiguration Mechanism for Subordinate MANET Shubhranshu Singh Advanced Technology Division Samsung India Software Operations

More information

SJTU 2018 Fall Computer Networking. Wireless Communication

SJTU 2018 Fall Computer Networking. Wireless Communication SJTU 2018 Fall Computer Networking 1 Wireless Communication Internet Protocol Stack 2 Application: supporting network applications - FTP, SMTP, HTTP Transport: data transfer between processes - TCP, UDP

More information

Implementation and Performance Evaluation of TeleMIP

Implementation and Performance Evaluation of TeleMIP Implementation and Performance Evaluation of TeleMIP Kaushik Chakraborty, kauchaks@glue.umd.edu Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA. Archan

More information

Implementation of Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 for Linux.

Implementation of Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 for Linux. Implementation of Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 for Linux. Richard Nelson Greg Daley Nick Moore Center for Telecommunications and Information Engineering, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia October 18,

More information

Multimedia SIP sessions in a Mobile Heterogeneous Access Environment

Multimedia SIP sessions in a Mobile Heterogeneous Access Environment Multimedia sessions in a Mobile Heterogeneous Access Environment Ashutosh Dutta, Yibei Ling, Wai Chen, Jasmine Chennikara Telcordia Technologies Inc., 445 South Street, Morristown, NJ 07960 Onur Altintas,

More information

IPv6 Changes in Mobile IPv6 from Connectathon

IPv6 Changes in Mobile IPv6 from Connectathon IPv6 Changes in Mobile IPv6 from Connectathon David B. Johnson The Monarch Project Carnegie Mellon University http://www.monarch.cs.cmu.edu/ dbj@cs.cmu.edu 47th IETF, Adelaide, Australia March 26 31, 2000

More information

IPv6 CONSORTIUM TEST SUITE Address Architecture Conformance Test Specification

IPv6 CONSORTIUM TEST SUITE Address Architecture Conformance Test Specification IPv6 CONSORTIUM TEST SUITE Address Architecture Technical Document Version 2.4 University of New Hampshire 121 Technology Drive, Suite 2 Durham, NH 03824 IPv6 Consortium Phone: +1-603-862-2804 http://www.iol.unh.edu

More information

Route Optimization for Proxy Mobile IPv6 in IMS Network

Route Optimization for Proxy Mobile IPv6 in IMS Network Route Optimization for Proxy Mobile IPv6 in IMS Network Tsunehiko Chiba, Hidetoshi Yokota KDDI R&D Laboratories, Inc. Saitama, Japan Ashutosh Dutta, Dana Chee Telcordia Technologies, Inc. New Jersey, USA

More information

A Study on Mobile IPv6 Based Mobility Management Architecture

A Study on Mobile IPv6 Based Mobility Management Architecture UDC 621.396.69:681.32 A Study on Mobile IPv6 Based Mobility Management Architecture VTsuguo Kato VRyuichi Takechi VHideaki Ono (Manuscript received January 19, 2001) Mobile IPv6 is considered to be one

More information

Mobile IPv6. Washington University in St. Louis

Mobile IPv6. Washington University in St. Louis Mobile IPv6 Raj Jain Professor of Computer Science and Engineering Washington University in Saint Louis Saint Louis, MO 63130 Audio/Video recordings of this lecture are available at: http://www.cse.wustl.edu/~jain/cse574-08/

More information

Fast handoff for Mobile IP and Link Layer Triggers

Fast handoff for Mobile IP and Link Layer Triggers Fast handoff for Mobile IP and Link Layer Triggers Gang Wu and Alper egin DoCoMo USA Labs Slide1 Overview Handover events necessitate both networklayer and lower layers actions Network-layer needs information

More information

Fast Location Opposite Update Scheme for Minimizing Handover Latency over Wireless/Mobile Networks

Fast Location Opposite Update Scheme for Minimizing Handover Latency over Wireless/Mobile Networks Fast Location Opposite Update Scheme for Minimizing Handover Latency over Wireless/Mobile Networks Sunguk Lee Research Institute of Industrial Science and Technology Pohang, Gyeongbuk, 790-330, S.KOREA

More information

Utilizing Multiple Home Links in Mobile IPv6

Utilizing Multiple Home Links in Mobile IPv6 Utilizing Multiple Home Links in Mobile IPv6 Hongbo Shi and Shigeki Goto Department of Computer Science, Waseda University 3-4-1 Ohkubo Shijuku-ku, Tokyo, 169-8555 JAPAN Email: {shi, goto}@goto.info.waseda.ac.jp

More information

Performance Comparison and Analysis on MIPv6, Fast MIPv6 Bi-casting and Eurecom IPv6 Soft Handover over IEEE802.11b WLANs

Performance Comparison and Analysis on MIPv6, Fast MIPv6 Bi-casting and Eurecom IPv6 Soft Handover over IEEE802.11b WLANs Performance Comparison and Analysis on MIPv6, Fast MIPv6 Bi-casting and Eurecom IPv6 Soft Handover over IEEE802.11b WLANs Farouk Belghoul, Yan Moret, Christian Bonnet Department of Mobile Communications,

More information

IPv4 Care-of Address Registration for IPv4 Support on the NEMO Basic Support Protocol

IPv4 Care-of Address Registration for IPv4 Support on the NEMO Basic Support Protocol IPv4 Care-of Address Registration for IPv4 Support on the NEMO Basic Support Protocol Ryuji Wakikawa Carl Williams Keisuke Uehara Jun Murai Keio University. Graduate School of Media and Governance KDDI

More information

Mobility Approaches for All IP Wireless Networks

Mobility Approaches for All IP Wireless Networks Mobility Approaches for All IP Wireless Networks Onur Altintas Ashutosh Dutta, Wai Chen Henning Schulzrinne Toyota InfoTechnology Center, USA Telcordia Technologies 450 Computer Science Bldg. 4009 Miranda

More information

A QoS Architecture for Future Wireless IP Networks

A QoS Architecture for Future Wireless IP Networks A QoS Architecture for Future Wireless IP Networks Jyh-Cheng Chen, Armando Caro, Anthony McAuley Telcordia Technologies, Inc., Morristown, NJ 07960 fjcchen,acaro,mcauleyg@research.telcordia.com Shinichi

More information

A Fast Handover Protocol for Mobile IPv6 Using Mobility Prediction Mechanism

A Fast Handover Protocol for Mobile IPv6 Using Mobility Prediction Mechanism A Fast Handover Protocol for Mobile IPv6 Using Mobility Prediction Mechanism Dae Sun Kim 1 and Choong Seon Hong 2 1 School of Electronics and Information, Kyung Hee Univerity 1 Seocheon, Giheung, Yongin,

More information

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Request for Comments: 8191 Category: Standards Track. X. Lee CNNIC. August 2017

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Request for Comments: 8191 Category: Standards Track. X. Lee CNNIC. August 2017 Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Request for Comments: 8191 Category: Standards Track ISSN: 2070-1721 Z. Yan CNNIC J. Lee Sangmyung University X. Lee CNNIC August 2017 Abstract Home Network Prefix

More information

Multilayered Mobility Management for Survivable Network

Multilayered Mobility Management for Survivable Network 1 Multilayered Mobility Management for Survivable Network Ashutosh Dutta,Ravi Jain, Daniel Wong, James Burns, Ken Young Telcordia Technologies, 445 South Street, Morristown, NJ 07960 Henning Schulzrinne

More information

Seamless Handover Scheme for Proxy Mobile IPv6

Seamless Handover Scheme for Proxy Mobile IPv6 IEEE International Conference on Wireless & Mobile Computing, Networking & Communication Seamless Handover Scheme for Proxy Mobile IPv6 Ju-Eun Kang 1, Dong-Won Kum 2, Yang Li 2, and You-Ze Cho 2 1 LGDACOM

More information

IPv6 NEMO. Finding Feature Information. Restrictions for IPv6 NEMO

IPv6 NEMO. Finding Feature Information. Restrictions for IPv6 NEMO The network mobility (NEMO) basic support protocol enables mobile IPv6 networks to attach to different points in the Internet. This protocol is an extension of Mobile IPv6 and allows session continuity

More information

On using Mobile IP Protocols

On using Mobile IP Protocols Journal of Computer Science 2 (2): 211-217, 2006 ISSN 1549-3636 2006 Science Publications On using Mobile IP Protocols Fayza A. Nada Faculty of Computers and Information, Suez Canal University, Ismailia,

More information

On the use of SHIM6 for Mobility Support in IMS Networks

On the use of SHIM6 for Mobility Support in IMS Networks On the use of SHIM6 for Mobility Support in IMS Networks John Ronan, Sasitharan Balasubramaniam Telecommunications Software and Systems Group Waterford Instiute of Technology, Carriganore Waterford, Ireland

More information

Mobility Approaches for All-IP Wireless Networks

Mobility Approaches for All-IP Wireless Networks Mobility Approaches for All-IP Wireless Networks Ashutosh Dutta, Wai Chen Onur Altintas Henning Schulzrinne Telcordia Technologies Totyota InfoTechnology Center, USA 450 Computer Science Bldg. 445 South

More information

Performance Analysis of Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 in IP-based Cellular Networks

Performance Analysis of Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 in IP-based Cellular Networks Performance Analysis of Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 in IP-based Cellular Networks Sangheon Pack and Yanghee Choi School of Computer Science & Engineering Seoul National University Seoul, Korea Abstract Next-generation

More information

Charles Perkins Nokia Research Center 2 July Mobility Support in IPv6 <draft-ietf-mobileip-ipv6-14.txt> Status of This Memo

Charles Perkins Nokia Research Center 2 July Mobility Support in IPv6 <draft-ietf-mobileip-ipv6-14.txt> Status of This Memo IETF Mobile IP Working Group INTERNET-DRAFT David B. Johnson Rice University Charles Perkins Nokia Research Center 2 July 2000 Mobility Support in IPv6 Status of This

More information

Mobile IPv6 performance in networks: handover optimizations on the link and network layer

Mobile IPv6 performance in networks: handover optimizations on the link and network layer Mobile IPv6 performance in 802.11 networks: handover optimizations on the link and network layer LaTe project, Networking laboratory, TKK Mikko Hautala mhautala@cc.hut.fi 16.03.2006 Supervisor: Instructor:

More information

Keywords: IEEE , Heterogeneous Handover, Seamless Mobility, Media Independent Pre-authentication

Keywords: IEEE , Heterogeneous Handover, Seamless Mobility, Media Independent Pre-authentication Secured Seamless Convergence across Heterogeneous Access Networks Ashutosh Dutta, Subir Das, David Famolari Telcordia Technologies, NJ Yoshihiro Ohba, Kenichi Taniuchi, Victor Fajardo, Toshikazu Kodama

More information

Route Optimization based on ND-Proxy for Mobile Nodes in IPv6 Mobile Networks

Route Optimization based on ND-Proxy for Mobile Nodes in IPv6 Mobile Networks Route Optimization based on ND-Proxy for Mobile Nodes in IPv6 Mobile Networks Jaehoon Jeong, Kyeongjin Lee, Jungsoo Park, Hyoungjun Kim Protocol Engineering Center, ETRI, 161 Gajeong-dong Yuseong-gu, Daejeon,

More information

Network-based Fast Handover for IMS Applications and Services

Network-based Fast Handover for IMS Applications and Services Network-based Fast Handover for IMS Applications and Services Sang Tae Kim 1, Seok Joo Koh 1, Lee Kyoung-Hee 2 1 Department of Computer Science, Kyungpook National University 2 Electronics and Telecommunications

More information

Performance Evaluation of vertical handover mechanisms in IP networks

Performance Evaluation of vertical handover mechanisms in IP networks Performance Evaluation of vertical handover mechanisms in IP networks Andrea Polidoro, Stefano Salsano DIE - Dept. Of Electronic Engineering University of Rome Tor Vergata Rome, Italy Saverio Niccolini

More information

Implementation and Operation of Mobility in WIDE

Implementation and Operation of Mobility in WIDE Implementation and Operation of Mobility in WIDE The 14th Korea Internet Conference June 28, 2006 Keiichi Shima Internet Initiative Japan Inc. / WIDE project Contents Background Implementation

More information

Mobile IP and Mobile Transport Protocols

Mobile IP and Mobile Transport Protocols Mobile IP and Mobile Transport Protocols 1 IP routing Preliminaries Works on a hop-by-hop basis using a routing table 32 bits: 129.97.92.42 Address = subnet + host (Mobility No packet for you) Two parts»

More information

Mobile IPv6 Overview

Mobile IPv6 Overview Sungkyunkwan University Prepared by H. Choo Copyright 2000-2018 Networking Laboratory Lecture Outline Network Layer Mobile IPv6 Proxy Mobile IPv6 Networking Laboratory 2/87 Sungkyunkwan University Network

More information

IPv6 Neighbor Discovery

IPv6 Neighbor Discovery About, page 1 Prerequisites for, page 2 Guidelines for, page 2 Defaults for, page 4 Configure, page 5 View and Clear Dynamically Discovered Neighbors, page 10 History for, page 11 About The IPv6 neighbor

More information

Adaptive Local Route Optimization in Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 Networks

Adaptive Local Route Optimization in Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 Networks Adaptive Local Route Optimization in Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 Networks Sangheon Pack, Taekyoung Kwon, and Yanghee Choi School of Computer Science and Engineering Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea

More information

Asian Info-communications Council. Document No November th Conference (Manila)

Asian Info-communications Council. Document No November th Conference (Manila) Asian Info-communications Council Working Group 2 (Services & Applications) TITLE: A COMPARATIVE SURVEY OF SEAMLESS HANDOVER MECHANISMS THEME: Services & Applications related SOURCE: Tran Cong Hung, Ph.D

More information

A Global Mobility Scheme for Seamless Multicasting in Proxy Mobile IPv6 Networks

A Global Mobility Scheme for Seamless Multicasting in Proxy Mobile IPv6 Networks ICACT Transactions on on the Advanced Communications Technology (TACT) Vol. Vol. 2, 2, Issue Issue 3, 3, May May 2013 2013 233 A Global Mobility Scheme for Seamless Multicasting in Proxy Mobile IPv6 Networks

More information

Fast-handoff Scheme for Application Layer Mobility Management

Fast-handoff Scheme for Application Layer Mobility Management Fast-handoff Scheme for Application Layer Mobility Management Ashutosh Dutta, Sunil Madhani, Wai Chen Telcordia Technologies Inc., 445 South Street, Morristown, NJ 07960 Onur Altintas, Toyota InfoTechnology

More information

Mobile IP. Mobile IP 1

Mobile IP. Mobile IP 1 Mobile IP Mobile IP 1 Motivation for Mobile IP Routing based on IP destination address, network prefix (e.g. 129.13.42) determines physical subnet change of physical subnet implies change of IP address

More information

A Scheme of Primary Path Switching for Mobile Terminals using SCTP Handover

A Scheme of Primary Path Switching for Mobile Terminals using SCTP Handover Proceedings of the 2007 WSEAS International Conference on Computer Engineering and Applications, Gold Coast, Australia, January 17-19, 2007 218 A Scheme of Primary Path Switching for Mobile Terminals using

More information

On the Layer based Seamless Handover Schemes for Mobile Data Network

On the Layer based Seamless Handover Schemes for Mobile Data Network On the Layer based Seamless Handover Schemes for Mobile Data Network Y. J. Lee Department of Technology Education, Korea National University of Education Cheongju, 363-791, South Korea lyj@knue.ac.kr Abstract

More information

IEEE Assisted Network Layer Mobility Support

IEEE Assisted Network Layer Mobility Support IEEE802.21 Assisted Network Layer Mobility Support Qazi Bouland Mussabbir *, Wenbing Yao ** and John Cosmas *** *School Of Engineering and Design, Brunel University Uxbridge, London, UB83PH, UK, qazi.mussabbir@brunel.ac.uk

More information

A Hybrid Load Balance Mechanism for Distributed Home Agents in Mobile IPv6

A Hybrid Load Balance Mechanism for Distributed Home Agents in Mobile IPv6 A Hybrid Load Balance Mechanism for Distributed Home Agents in Mobile IPv6 1 Hui Deng 2Xiaolong Huang 3Kai Zhang 3 Zhisheng Niu 1Masahiro Ojima 1R&D Center Hitachi (China) Ltd. Beijing 100004, China 2Dept.

More information

A Simulative Study on the Performance Evaluation for Simultaneous and Successive Mobility for Mobile IPv6

A Simulative Study on the Performance Evaluation for Simultaneous and Successive Mobility for Mobile IPv6 Journal of Computer Science 6 (12): 1511-1517, 2010 ISSN 1549-3636 2010 Science Publications A Simulative Study on the Performance Evaluation for Simultaneous and Successive Mobility for Mobile IPv6 Ibrahim

More information

Transparent Mobility in Mobile IPv6: An Experience Report

Transparent Mobility in Mobile IPv6: An Experience Report Transparent Mobility in Mobile IPv6: An Experience Report Rodolfo Kohn Senior Software Engineer at Global Software Group Argentina, Motorola, 146 Hipólito Irigoyen 9th floor, Córdoba, 5000, Argentina.

More information

Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6)

Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6) Sungkyunkwan University Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6) - Grand ICT 연구센터지원사업라이프컴패니온쉽경험을위한지능형인터랙션융합연구 - 무선포함접속방식에독립적인차세대네트워킹기술개발 SDN/NFV 기반의기업유무선통합네트워크를위한액세스기술독립적오픈소스컨트롤러개발 - 자율제어네트워킹및자율관리핵심기술개발생체모방자율제어시스템및자율관리

More information

MIPv6: New Capabilities for Seamless Roaming Among Wired, Wireless, and Cellular Networks

MIPv6: New Capabilities for Seamless Roaming Among Wired, Wireless, and Cellular Networks Page 1 M: New Capabilities for Seamless Roaming Among Wired, Wireless, and Cellular Networks Paul Schmitz Technical Marketing Engineer Geoff Weaver Business Development Manager Copyright 2002. *Third-party

More information

Internet Engineering Task Force. C. Perkins Nokia Research Center R. Droms(ed.) Cisco Systems 22 November 2000

Internet Engineering Task Force. C. Perkins Nokia Research Center R. Droms(ed.) Cisco Systems 22 November 2000 Internet Engineering Task Force INTERNET DRAFT DHC Working Group Obsoletes: draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-15.txt J. Bound Compaq Computer Corp. M. Carney Sun Microsystems, Inc C. Perkins Nokia Research Center

More information

A Design of Distributed Data Traffic Algorithm based on Hierarchical Wireless/Mobile Networks

A Design of Distributed Data Traffic Algorithm based on Hierarchical Wireless/Mobile Networks , pp.147-151 http://dx.doi.org/10.14257/astl.2015.117.35 A Design of Distributed Data Traffic Algorithm based on Hierarchical Wireless/Mobile Networks Ronnie Caytiles, Seungyong Shin, Minji Yang and Byungjoo

More information

Performance Comparison between MIPv6 and SEMO6

Performance Comparison between MIPv6 and SEMO6 This full text paper was peer reviewed at the direction of IEEE Communications Society subject matter experts for publication in the IEEE Globecom proceedings. Performance Comparison between MIPv6 and

More information

Internet Engineering Task Force INTERNET DRAFT. C. Perkins Nokia Research Center R. Droms(ed.) Cisco Systems 1 March 2001

Internet Engineering Task Force INTERNET DRAFT. C. Perkins Nokia Research Center R. Droms(ed.) Cisco Systems 1 March 2001 Internet Engineering Task Force INTERNET DRAFT DHC Working Group Obsoletes: draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-16.txt J. Bound Nokia M. Carney Sun Microsystems, Inc C. Perkins Nokia Research Center R. Droms(ed.) Cisco

More information

DHCP for IPv6. Palo Alto, CA Digital Equipment Company. Nashua, NH mentions a few directions about the future of DHCPv6.

DHCP for IPv6. Palo Alto, CA Digital Equipment Company. Nashua, NH mentions a few directions about the future of DHCPv6. DHCP for IPv6 Charles E. Perkins and Jim Bound Sun Microsystems, Inc. Palo Alto, CA 94303 Digital Equipment Company Nashua, NH 03062 Abstract The Dynamic Host Conguration Protocol (DHCPv6) provides a framework

More information

Expiration Date: August 2003 February Access Control Prefix Router Advertisement Option for IPv6 draft-bellovin-ipv6-accessprefix-01.

Expiration Date: August 2003 February Access Control Prefix Router Advertisement Option for IPv6 draft-bellovin-ipv6-accessprefix-01. Network Working Group Steven M. Bellovin Internet Draft AT&T Labs Research Expiration Date: August 2003 February 2003 Access Control Prefix Router Advertisement Option for IPv6 draft-bellovin-ipv6-accessprefix-01.txt

More information

Study and Performance Analysis of Traffic Class MIPv6 on Linux Base

Study and Performance Analysis of Traffic Class MIPv6 on Linux Base Study and Performance Analysis of Traffic MIPv on Linux Base ANNOP MONSAKUL Faculty of Science and Technology Tapee College Suratthani, THAILAND annop@tapee.ac.th Abstract: Application on mobile device

More information

Mobile & Wireless Networking. Lecture 9: Mobile IP. [Schiller, Section 8.1]

Mobile & Wireless Networking. Lecture 9: Mobile IP. [Schiller, Section 8.1] 192620010 Mobile & Wireless Networking Lecture 9: Mobile IP [Schiller, Section 8.1] Geert Heijenk Outline of Lecture 11 q Mobile IP Basics q 3 parts of Mobile IP: q Advertising Care-of Addresses q Registration

More information

PMIPv6 PROXY MOBILE IPV6 OVERVIEW OF PMIPV6, A PROXY-BASED MOBILITY PROTOCOL FOR IPV6 HOSTS. Proxy Mobile IPv6. Peter R. Egli INDIGOO.COM. indigoo.

PMIPv6 PROXY MOBILE IPV6 OVERVIEW OF PMIPV6, A PROXY-BASED MOBILITY PROTOCOL FOR IPV6 HOSTS. Proxy Mobile IPv6. Peter R. Egli INDIGOO.COM. indigoo. PMIPv6 PMIPv6 Proxy Mobile IPv6 PROXY MOBILE IPV6 OVERVIEW OF PMIPV6, A PROXY-BASED MOBILITY PROTOCOL FOR IPV6 HOSTS Peter R. Egli INDIGOO.COM 1/25 Contents 1. Why PMIPv6 when we have MIP? 2. PMIPv6 terminology

More information

IPv6 Neighbor Discovery

IPv6 Neighbor Discovery About, page 1 Prerequisites for, page 2 Guidelines for, page 2 Defaults for, page 4 Configure, page 5 Monitoring, page 10 History for, page 11 About The IPv6 neighbor discovery process uses ICMPv6 messages

More information

Experimental Evaluation of Proxy Mobile IPv6: an Implementation Perspective

Experimental Evaluation of Proxy Mobile IPv6: an Implementation Perspective Experimental Evaluation of Proxy Mobile IPv6: an Implementation Perspective Giuliana Iapichino and Christian Bonnet Mobile Communications Department Eurecom Sophia Antipolis, France {Giuliana.Iapichino,

More information

Analysis of Proxy Mobile IPv6: A Network-based Mobility Solution

Analysis of Proxy Mobile IPv6: A Network-based Mobility Solution Analysis of Proxy Mobile IPv6: A Network-based Mobility Solution Md. Shohrab Hossain and Mohammed Atiquzzaman School of Computer Science, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 7319 Email: {shohrab, atiq}@ou.edu

More information

Fast Duplicate Address Detection for Mobile IPv6

Fast Duplicate Address Detection for Mobile IPv6 Fast Duplicate Address Detection for Mobile IPv6 Panita Pongpaibool 1, Pahol Sotthivirat 2, Sukumal I. Kitisin 2, Chavalit Srisathapornphat 2 1 NECTEC, 112 Pahol Yothin Rd., Klong Luang, Pathumthani 12120

More information

Optimal method to Reducing Link and Signaling Costs in Mobile IP

Optimal method to Reducing Link and Signaling Costs in Mobile IP Optimal method to Reducing Link and Signaling Costs in Mobile IP Sridevi Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science,Karnatak University,Dharwad Abstract The objective of this research paper is

More information

Mobile IPv6. Raj Jain. Washington University in St. Louis

Mobile IPv6. Raj Jain. Washington University in St. Louis Mobile IPv6 Raj Jain Washington University in Saint Louis Saint Louis, MO 63130 Jain@cse.wustl.edu These slides are available on-line at: http://www.cse.wustl.edu/~jain/cse574-06/ 13-1 Overview! IPv6:

More information

PMIPv6: A Network-Based Localized Mobility Management Solution

PMIPv6: A Network-Based Localized Mobility Management Solution PMIPv6: A Network-Based Localized Mobility Management Solution by Ignacio Soto, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid; Carlos J. Bernardos, and María Calderón, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid; and Telemaco

More information

Mobile IP and its trends for changing from IPv4 to IPv6

Mobile IP and its trends for changing from IPv4 to IPv6 Mobile IP and its trends for changing from IPv4 to IPv6 Nguyen Ngoc Chan*, Tran Cong Hung Ph.D. (Posts & Telecommunications Institute of Technology, Viet Nam) E-mail: ngoc_chan@ptithcm.edu.vn, conghung@ptithcm.edu.vn

More information

Location Management Agent for SCTP Handover in Mobile Network

Location Management Agent for SCTP Handover in Mobile Network Location Management Agent for SCTP Handover in Mobile Network Yong-Jin Lee Department of Technology Education, Korea National University of Education 250 Taesungtapyon-ro, Heungduk-ku, Cheongju, South

More information

Internet Engineering Task Force. Obsoletes: draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-05.txt 16 August 1996

Internet Engineering Task Force. Obsoletes: draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-05.txt 16 August 1996 Internet Engineering Task Force INTERNET DRAFT DHC Working Group Obsoletes: draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-05.txt J. Bound Digital Equipment Corp. C. Perkins IBM Research 16 August 1996 Dynamic Host Configuration

More information

Experimental Evaluation of Mobile IPv6 for Linux

Experimental Evaluation of Mobile IPv6 for Linux International Journal of Computer Science and Telecommunications [Volume 4, Issue 12, December 2013] 1 Experimental Evaluation of Mobile IPv6 for Linux ISSN 2047-3338 Jesús Calle-Cancho 1, David Cortés-Polo

More information

MIX Network for Location Privacy First Draft

MIX Network for Location Privacy First Draft 2G1319 Communication Systems Design Department of Microelectronics and Information Technology, KTH csd2002-ipv6privacy@2g1319.ssvl.kth.se MIX Network for Location Privacy First Draft O. Sirovatcenko April

More information

Extended Correspondent Registration Scheme for Reducing Handover Delay in Mobile IPv6

Extended Correspondent Registration Scheme for Reducing Handover Delay in Mobile IPv6 Extended Correspondent Registration Scheme for Reducing Handover Delay in Mobile IPv6 Ved P. Kafle Department of Informatics The Graduate University for Advanced Studies Tokyo, Japan Eiji Kamioka and Shigeki

More information

A Service Management Architecture for NEMO in IPv4 and IPv6 Networks

A Service Management Architecture for NEMO in IPv4 and IPv6 Networks A Service Management Architecture for NEMO in IPv4 and IPv6 Networks JinHoKim,ChoongSeonHong, Dae Sun Kim Department of Computer Engineering, Kyung Hee University, Seocheon, Giheung, Yongin, Gyeonggi,

More information

Evaluation of IEEE b and Mobile IPv6 Handoff Times

Evaluation of IEEE b and Mobile IPv6 Handoff Times Evaluation of IEEE 802.11b and Mobile IPv6 Handoff Times Mai Banh 1 Mobile IPv6 Mobile IPv6 (MIPv6) retains connectivity through a single, well-known Home Address of the Mobile Node when it changes its

More information

Introduction Mobility Support Handover Management Conclutions. Mobility in IPv6. Thomas Liske. Dresden University of Technology

Introduction Mobility Support Handover Management Conclutions. Mobility in IPv6. Thomas Liske. Dresden University of Technology 2005 / High Speed Networks II Outline Introduction Mobility Support Overview of IPv6 Mobility Support Handover Management Mobility Support What means Mobility Support? allow transparent routing of IPv6

More information

Partial Bicasting with Buffering for Proxy Mobile IPv6 Handover in Wireless Networks

Partial Bicasting with Buffering for Proxy Mobile IPv6 Handover in Wireless Networks Journal of Information Processing Systems, Vol.7, No.4, December 2011 http://dx.doi.org/10.3745/jips.2011.7.4.627 Partial Bicasting with Buffering for Proxy Mobile IPv6 Handover in Wireless Networks Ji-In

More information

An Approach to Efficient and Reliable design in Hierarchical Mobile IPv6

An Approach to Efficient and Reliable design in Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 An Approach to Efficient and Reliable design in Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 Taewan You 1, Seungyun Lee 1, Sangheon Pack 2, and Yanghee Choi 2 1 Protocol Engineering Center, ETRI, 161 Gajoung-dong, Yusong-gu,

More information

Implementing Mobile IPv6 for Multimedia *

Implementing Mobile IPv6 for Multimedia * Implementing Mobile IPv6 for Multimedia * Joe Finney and Andrew Scott Computing Department Lancaster University Lancaster, UK {J.Finney, A.Scott}@Lancaster.ac.uk Abstract Recent trends show an increasing

More information

Network PMIP Support COPYRIGHT. 3GPP2 X.S Version 1.0 Date: December 5, 2008

Network PMIP Support COPYRIGHT. 3GPP2 X.S Version 1.0 Date: December 5, 2008 GPP X.S00-0 Version.0 Date: December, 00 COPYRIGHT GPP and its Organizational Partners claim copyright in this document and individual Organizational Partners may copyright and issue documents or standards

More information

Roaming Scenarios Based on SIP

Roaming Scenarios Based on SIP Roaming Scenarios Based on SIP Andrea Floris 1 and Luca Veltri 1 1 CoRiTeL ñ Research Consortium on Telecommunication, Via Anagnina 203, 00040 Roma, Italy {floris, veltri}@coritel.it Abstract. This work

More information

T.J. Watson Research Center IBM Corp Sue Thomson Bellcore. Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6. draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-01.

T.J. Watson Research Center IBM Corp Sue Thomson Bellcore. Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6. draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-01. HTTP/1.1 200 OK Date: Tue, 09 Apr 2002 01:46:15 GMT Server: Apache/1.3.20 (Unix) Last-Modified: Wed, 22 Mar 1995 23:00:00 GMT ETag: "2ed703-7c52-2f70abf0" Accept-Ranges: bytes Content-Length: 31826 Connection:

More information

C. Perkins, Nokia Research Center M. Carney, Sun Microsystems June 9, 2002

C. Perkins, Nokia Research Center M. Carney, Sun Microsystems June 9, 2002 Internet Engineering Task Force R. Droms (ed.), Cisco INTERNET DRAFT J. Bound, Hewlett Packard DHC Working Group Bernie Volz, Ericsson Obsoletes: draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-25.txt Ted Lemon, Nominum C. Perkins,

More information

Network Working Group. Category: Standards Track February 2009

Network Working Group. Category: Standards Track February 2009 Network Working Group M. Stapp Request for Comments: 5460 Cisco Systems, Inc. Category: Standards Track February 2009 Status of This Memo DHCPv6 Bulk Leasequery This document specifies an Internet standards

More information

P A R T T W O MOBILE IPv6

P A R T T W O MOBILE IPv6 P A R T T W O MOBILE IPv6 Mobile IPv6 T H R E E Consider a scenario where you had to change your place of residence on a semipermanent basis, for instance, due to relocation of your company. One problem

More information

Overview of the MIPv6 Implementation

Overview of the MIPv6 Implementation Overview of the MIPv6 Implementation Tunneling Tunneling support was added as it is necessary for MIPv6. Interfaces have interfaceids that uniquely identify them. Similarly, every tunnel has a virtual

More information

Auto-Networking Technologies for IPv6 Mobile Ad Hoc Networks

Auto-Networking Technologies for IPv6 Mobile Ad Hoc Networks Auto-Networking Technologies for IPv6 Mobile Ad Hoc Networks Jaehoon Jeong, Jungsoo Park, and Hyoungjun Kim Protocol Engineering Center, ETRI, 161 Gajeong-dong, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305 350, Korea {paul,pjs,khj}@etri.re.kr

More information

OPTIMIZING MOBILITY MANAGEMENT IN FUTURE IPv6 MOBILE NETWORKS

OPTIMIZING MOBILITY MANAGEMENT IN FUTURE IPv6 MOBILE NETWORKS OPTIMIZING MOBILITY MANAGEMENT IN FUTURE IPv6 MOBILE NETWORKS Sandro Grech Nokia Networks (Networks Systems Research) Supervisor: Prof. Raimo Kantola 1 SANDRO GRECH - OPTIMIZING MOBILITY MANAGEMENT IN

More information

Internet Engineering Task Force. C. Perkins Nokia Research Center Ted Lemon Nominum Bernie Volz Ericsson R. Droms(ed.) Cisco Systems May

Internet Engineering Task Force. C. Perkins Nokia Research Center Ted Lemon Nominum Bernie Volz Ericsson R. Droms(ed.) Cisco Systems May Internet Engineering Task Force INTERNET DRAFT DHC Working Group Obsoletes: draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-24.txt J. Bound Hewlett Packard M. Carney Sun Microsystems, Inc C. Perkins Nokia Research Center Ted Lemon

More information

Mobility Management Basics

Mobility Management Basics Mobility Management Basics Summer Semester 2011 Integrated Communication Systems Group Ilmenau University of Technology Content Motivation Problem and possible solutions IP-based mobility management Conclusions

More information

Request for Comments: 1971 Category: Standards Track IBM August 1996

Request for Comments: 1971 Category: Standards Track IBM August 1996 Network Working Group Request for Comments: 1971 Category: Standards Track S. Thomson Bellcore T. Narten IBM August 1996 Status of this Memo IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration This document specifies

More information

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Request for Comments: 7078 Category: Standards Track. University of Southampton January 2014

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Request for Comments: 7078 Category: Standards Track. University of Southampton January 2014 Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Request for Comments: 7078 Category: Standards Track ISSN: 2070-1721 A. Matsumoto T. Fujisaki NTT T. Chown University of Southampton January 2014 Distributing Address

More information

MBC. Auto. Address. Networks. Mesh. uto- configuration for Wireless. Keecheon Kim. Konkuk University Seoul, Korea

MBC. Auto. Address. Networks. Mesh. uto- configuration for Wireless. Keecheon Kim. Konkuk University Seoul, Korea Address Auto uto- configuration for Wireless Mesh Networks Keecheon Kim Konkuk University Seoul, Korea kckim@konkuk.ac.kr Contents Wireless Mesh Networks Auto- configuration Topics In Autoconf WG Proposed

More information

Experiments and Analysis of Voice over Mobile IP

Experiments and Analysis of Voice over Mobile IP Experiments and Analysis of Voice over Mobile IP Soonuk Seol, Myungchul Kim Information and Communications University Yusong P.O. Box 77. Daejeon, 5-6, Korea +82 42 866 6177, 6 {suseol, mckim}@icu.ac.kr

More information

nsctp: A New Transport Layer Tunnelling Approach to Provide Seamless Handover for Moving Network

nsctp: A New Transport Layer Tunnelling Approach to Provide Seamless Handover for Moving Network nsctp: A New Transport Layer Tunnelling Approach to Provide Seamless Handover for Moving Network Peyman Behbahani City University, London, UK p.behbahani@city.ac.uk Veselin Rakocevic City University, London,

More information

ROUTE OPTIMIZATION EXTENSITON FOR THE MOBILE INTERNET PROTOCOL IN LINUX

ROUTE OPTIMIZATION EXTENSITON FOR THE MOBILE INTERNET PROTOCOL IN LINUX ROUTE OPTIMIZATION EXTENSITON FOR THE MOBILE INTERNET PROTOCOL IN LINUX ABSTRACT The base Mobile Internet Protocol (Mobile IP) provides a means for portable computers to roam freely, changing its point

More information

EXPERIMENTS WITH IPV6 NETWORK MOBILITY USING NEMO PROTOCOL

EXPERIMENTS WITH IPV6 NETWORK MOBILITY USING NEMO PROTOCOL EXPERIMENTS WITH IPV6 NETWORK MOBILITY USING NEMO PROTOCOL Nuno Veiga, Mário Antunes and Vítor Santos School of Technology and Management, Polytechnic Institute of Leiria Morro do Lena, Leiria, Portugal

More information

IPv6 Neighbor Discovery

IPv6 Neighbor Discovery The IPv6 neighbor discovery process uses Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) messages and solicited-node multicast addresses to determine the link-layer address of a neighbor on the same network (local

More information