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IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 370
A STUDY AND COMPARISON OF OLSR, AODV AND ZRP ROUTING
PROTOCOLS IN AD HOC NETWORKS
Hrituparna Paul
1
, Priyanka Sarkar
2
1, 2
Assistant Professor, National Institute of Technology, Agartala
hrituparnanita@gmail.com, priyanka.csenita@gmail.com
Abstract
A mobile ad hoc networks (MANET) is characterized by multihop wireless connectivity consisting of independent nodes which move
dynamically by changing its network connectivity without the uses of any pre-existent infrastructure. MANET offers[1, 2] such
flexibility which helps the network to form anywhere, at any time, as long as two or more nodes are connected and communicate with
each other either directly when they are in radio range or via intermediate mobile nodes. Routing is a significant issue and
challenge in ad hoc networks and many routing protocols have been proposed like OLSR, AODV, DSDV,DSR, ZRP, and TORA, LAR
so far to improve the routing performance and reliability. This research paper describes the characteristics of ad hoc routing
protocols OLSR, AODV and ZRP based on the performance metrics like packet delivery ratio, end–to–end delay, throughput and
jitter by increasing number of nodes in the network. This comparative study proves that OLSR, ZRP performs well in dense networks
in terms of low mobility and low traffic but in high mobility and high traffic environment ZRP performs well than OLSR and AODV.
Keywords: MANET, AODV, OLSR, ZRP, routing
--------------------------------------------------------------------***-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. INTRODUCTION:
The rapid increases in the applications of Personal Digital
Assistants (PDAs) devices such as tabs, compact laptops etc
has made popularity of wireless networks. One of the major
types of wireless networks is Mobile Ad-Hoc networks
(MANET). Every node in this network acts as a router or
relay station to forward data to the designated node. In this
network nodes are mobile and constantly change its location
from one MANET to another. The application of this
network is such as emergency situation, disaster recovery,
crowd control, battle fields etc.
Many routing protocols have been proposed for the mobile ad
hoc network and classified as Proactive or Table Driven
routing Protocol, Reactive or On Demand Routing Protocol,
Hybrid Routing protocol.
A. Proactive or Table-Driven Routing Protocols
Proactive routing is also often termed as table- driven
routing. In this type of routing protocols, fresh lists of
destinations and their routes are maintained by periodic
distribution of routing tables throughout the network and this
category of protocol always strives to maintain consistent and
updated routing information at each node [3]. The proactive
routing protocols use link-state routing algorithms which
frequently flood the link information about its neighbors and
the main drawback of proactive routing protocol is that all the
nodes in the network always maintain an updated table.
Destination-Sequenced
Distance-Vector Routing Protocol (DSDV) [4] and Optimized
Link-State Routing (OLSR) [5] are the two common
proactive routing protocols.
B. Reactive or On Demand Routing Protocol
This type of routing is often known as on- demand routing or
source-initiated routing protocol. The main advantage of
reactive protocols is that it imposes less overhead due to route
messages on the network but at the same time, it is also facing
high latency time in route finding process and sometimes
excessive flooding of the communication packets may lead to
network blockage. Unlike table driven protocols, all nodes
need not maintain up-to- date routing information here. Ad-
hoc On- Demand Distance Vector Routing (AODV) [4],
Dynamic Source Routing (DSR) [6] and Temporally Ordered
Routing Algorithm (TORA) [7], are some of the examples of
reactive routing protocol.
C. Hybrid Routing Protocol
Hybrid routing protocol combines the advantages of both
proactive and reactive routing protocols. The routing is
initially established with some proactively prospected routes
and then serves the demand from additionally activated nodes
through reactive flooding. Some of the existing hybrid
protocols are ZRP [8] and TORA [9].
IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 371
Figure 1 Classification of MANET routing protocols
The figure 1 shows the prominent way of classifying
MANETs routing protocols. The protocols may be categorized
into two types, Proactive and Reactive. Other category of
MANET routing protocols which is a combination of both
proactive and reactive is referred as Hybrid.
This paper is categorized as follows. Section I present the
Introduction and overview of Proactive, Reactive and Hybrid
routing protocols. Section II provides an overview of Routing
protocols. Section III provides description about Metrics for
performance comparison Section IV presents Comparative
Study of Ad Hoc Routing Protocols. Section IV concludes the
paper
2. OVERVIEW OF ROUTING PROTOCOLS:
A. Optimized Link State Routing Protocol
Optimized link state routing [10] is a proactive protocol in
which, each node intermittently broadcasts its routing table,
allowing each node to build an inclusive view of the network
topology. The episodic nature of this protocol creates a large
amount of overhead and in order to reduce overhead, it
limits the number of mobile nodes that can forward
network wide traffic and for this purpose it use multi point
relays (MPRs), which are responsible for forwarding routing
messages and optimization for flooding operation. Mobile
nodes, which are selected as MPRs can forward control traffic
and reduces the size of control messages. MPRs are
chosen by a node, such that, it may reach each two hop
neighbor via at least one MPR, then it can forward packets, if
control traffic received from a previous hop has selected the
current node as a MPR. Mobility causes, route change and
topology changes very frequently and topology control (TC)
messages are broadcasted throughout the network. All mobile
nodes maintain the routing table that contains routes to all
reachable destination nodes. This protocol does not notify the
source immediately after detecting a broken link. Source node
comes to know that route is broken, when the intermediate
node broadcasts its next packets. Thus, by determining the
path through the multipoint relays, it is possible to keep away
the difficulties experienced during the packet transmission
over a uni-directional link.
Fig2:-Multipoint Relays of the OLSR network
Advantages and Limitations:
OLSR is a flat routing protocol and it does not need central
administrative system to handle its routing process. The link is
reliable for the control messages, since the messages are sent
periodically and the delivery does not have to be sequential.
This protocol is best suitable for high density network and
does not allows long delays in the transmission of the packets.
However, as a limitation this protocol needs that each node
periodically sends the updated topology information
throughout the entire network, this increase the protocols
bandwidth usage. But the flooding is minimized by the
MPR‟s, which are only allowed to forward the topological
messages.
B. Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector
Routing (AODV)
AODV is a up to date routing protocol that adopts a purely
reactive approach and capable of both unicast and multicast
routing: it sets up a route on-demand at the start of a
communication session, and uses it till it breaks, after which a
new route setup is initiate .AODV adopts a very different
mechanism to maintain routing information. It uses traditional
routing tables, one entry per destination [11–15]. Without
source routing, AODV relies on routing table entries to
propagate a route replay (RREP) back to the source and,
subsequently, to route data packets to the destination. AODV
uses sequence numbers maintained at each destination to
determine the freshness of routing information and to prevent
routing loops. All routing packets carry these sequence
numbers. An important feature of AODV is the maintenance
of timer-based states in each node, regarding utilization of
individual routing table entries. A routing table entry is
expired if not used recently. A set of predecessor nodes
is maintained for each routing table entry, indicating the
set of neighboring nodes which use that entry to route data
IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 372
packets. These nodes are notified with route error (RERR)
packets when the next hop link breaks. Each predecessor
node, in turn, forwards the RERR to its own set of
predecessors, thus effectively erasing all routes using the
broken link. Route error propagation in AODV can be
visualized conceptually as a tree whose root is the node at the
point of failure and all sources using the failed link [16].
The algorithm’s primary objectives are as follows:
 To broadcast discovery packets only when necessary.
 To distinguish between local connectivity
management Neighborhood detection and general
topology maintenance.
 To disseminate information about changes in local
connectivity to those neighboring mobile nodes that
are likely to need the information.
Advantages and Limitations
The main advantage of AODV protocol is that routes are
established on demand and destination sequence numbers are
used to find the latest route to the destination and it also
supports both unicast and multicast packet transmissions even
for nodes in constant movement. It responds quickly to the
topological changes in the network and updating only the
nodes that may be affected by the change, using the RRER
message. The Hello messages, which are responsible for the
route maintenance, are also limited so that they do not create
unnecessary overhead in the network.
The limitations of AODV protocol is all nodes in the
broadcast medium can detect each other‟s broadcasts. It is also
possible that a valid route is expired and the determination of a
reasonable expiry time is difficult. The reason behind this is
that the nodes are in mobility and their sending rates may
differ widely. In addition, as the size of network grows,
various performance metrics begin decreasing. A route
discovered with AODV may no longer be the optimal route
further along in time. This situation can arise because of
network congestion or the fluctuating characteristics of
wireless links.
C. ZRP
ZRP [14] divides the topology into zones and uses different
routing protocols within and between the zones based on their
weaknesses and strengths. Each node in ZRP has a predefined
zone centered at itself.. ZRP maintains a zone around each
node that consists of all nodes within „k‟ hops away from that
node. Proactive routing is used within the zone whereas
reactive routing is used amongst zones. For data delivery, it is
checked whether the destination node exists within the zone or
not. If yes, data is sent immediately otherwise RREQ packet is
sent to border nodes. Border nodes check within their own
zones for destinations. If found, border node sends RREP on
reverse path otherwise it adds its own address to the packet
and forwards to its own border nodes. Process continues until
packet reaches to the destination itself or to a node having
destination within its zone. Path in the RREP packet is used
for sending data to destinations.
Advantages and Limitations
ZRP tries to combine the advantages of reactive and proactive
routing protocols. With properly configured zone radius, ZRP
may outperform both proactive routing protocols and reactive
routing protocols.
The potential disadvantage is that since hierarchical routing is
used, the path to a destination may be suboptimal.
Furthermore, since each node has higher level topological
information, memory requirement is greater
3. METRICS FOR PERFORMANCE
COMPARISON
MANET has number of qualitative and quantitative metrics
that can be used to compare ad hoc routing protocols. The
table I illustrates the comparison of OLSR, AODV and ZRP
routing protocols. This paper has been considered the
following metrics to evaluate the performance of ad hoc
network routing protocols.
1) End-to-end Delay:
This metric represents average end-to-end delay and indicates
how long it took for a packet to travel from the source to the
application layer of the destination. It includes all possible
delay caused by buffering during route discovery latency,
transmission delays at the MAC, queuing at interface queue,
and propagation and transfer time. It is measured in seconds.
2) Packet Delivery Ratio:
Packet delivery ratio is calculated by dividing the number of
packets received by the destination through the number of
packets originated by the application layer of the source (i.e.
CBR source). It specifies the packet loss rate, which limits the
maximum throughput of the network.
3) Throughput:
It is the measure of the number of packets successfully
transmitted to their final destination per unit time. It is the
ratio between the number of received packets vs sent packets.
4) Packet Jitter:
It is the ratio of transmission delay of the current packet
and the transmission delay of the previous packet. Jitter can
be calculated only if at least two packets have been received
IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 373
Low Mobility and Low Traffic
Protocol End
to End
delay
Packet
delivery
ratio
Throughput Jitter
OLSR Low High Good Low
AODV Average High Average High
ZRP Low High Average Low
4. COMPARATIVE STUDY OF AD HOC
ROUTING PROTOCOLS
TABLE 1 COMPARISON OF AD HOC ROUTING
PROTOCOLS
Performance
Constraints
OLSR AODV ZRP
Category Table driven or
Proactive
On Demand
or Reactive
hybrid
Protocol
Type
Link state
scheme
Distance
Vector
Link Reversal
Route
Maintained
in
Route Table Route Table Route Table
Loop
Freedom
Yes Yes Yes
Route
Philosophy
Flat Flat Flat
Multiple
routes
No No Yes
Multicast Yes Yes NO
Message
Overhead
Minimum Moderate Moderate
Periodic
broadcast
Possible Possible Possible
Requires
sequence
data
No Yes Yes
Route
reconfigurati
on
methodology
Control messages
sent in advance
to
increase the
reactiveness
Erase Route
notify
Source
Link Reversal
and information
stored in link
table
TABLE.2 ROUTING PERFORMANCE IN LOW
MOBILITY
TABLE.3ROUTING PERFORMANCE IN HIGH
MOBILITY
High Mobility and High Traffic
Protocol End
to End
delay
Packet
delivery
ratio
Throughput Jitter
OLSR Low Average Good Low
AODV Average Average Average High
ZRP High Low Average Average
CONCLUSIONS
This paper presents the comparative study and
Performance analysis of various ad hoc routing protocols
(OLSR, AODV and ZRP) on the basis of end-to-end
delay, packet delivery ratio, throughput, jitter performance
metrics. The study of these routing protocols shows that
OLSR is more efficient in high density networks with highly
sporadic traffic. OLSR requires that it continuously have
some bandwidth in order to receive the topology updates
messages. As well, AODV keeps on improving in packet
delivery ratio with dense networks. The performance of all
protocols was almost stable in sparse medium with low traffic.
It has been concluded that performance of ZRP is better for
high mobility and high traffic networks where as the OLSR
and ZRP performs well in low mobility and low traffic
networks. The future work suggested that the effort will be
made to enhance ad hoc network routing protocol by tackle
core issues.
REFERENCES:
[1] Alexander Klein, “Performance Comparison and
Evaluation of AODV, OLSR and SBR in Mobile Ad-Hoc
Networks”, Innovation Works, IEEE 3rd International
Symposium on Wireless Pervasive Computing, 2008.
[2] Anne Aaron, Jie Weng, “Performance Comparison of
Ad-hoc Routing Protocols for Networks with Node Energy
Constraints”, available at http://ivms.stanford.edu, Spring
2000-2001.
[3] Shah, R.C., Rabaey, J.:Energy Aware Routing for Low
Energy Ad Hoc Sensor Networks. In: IEEE Wireless
Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC
2002), vol. 1, pp. 350–355 (2002)
[4]. Perkins, C.E., Bhagwat, P.Highly Dynamic Destination-
Sequenced Distance-Vector Routing (DSDV) for Mobile
Computers. In: SIGCOMM 1994, pp. 234–244 (August
1994)
[5]. Clausen, T., Jacquet, P.: Optimized link state routing
protocol, IETF RFC 3626 (2003),
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3626.txt
[6].Perkins, C.E., Royer, E.M.: Ad Hoc On-Demand Distance
Vector Routing. In: 2nd IEEE Workshop on Mobile
Computing Systems and Applications (WMCSA 1999), pp.
90–100 (February 1999)
[7]. Camp, T., Boleng, J., Davies, V.: A Survey of Mobility
Models for Ad-hoc Network Research. Wireless
Communication and Mobile Computing [WCNC]: Special
Issue on Mobile Ad-hoc Networking: Research, Trends and
Applications 2(5), 483–502 (2002)
[8]. H. Ehsan and Z. A. Uzmi (2004), “Performance
Comparison of Ad Hoc Wireless Network Routing Protocols”,
IEEE 8th International Multi topic Conference, Proceedings of
INMIC, pp.457 – 465, December 2004.
[9]. Z. J. Hass and M. R. Pearlman, “Zone Routing
Protocol (ZRP)”, Internet draft available at www.ietf.org,
IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 374
November 1997.
[10]. Open Link State Routing. http://www.olsr.org
[11]. Perkins CE, Royer EM, Das SR. Ad Hoc on Demand
Distance Vector (AODV) routing. Available from:
http://www.ietf.org/internetdrafts/draft-ietfmanet-aodv-06.txt,
IETF Internet Draft, work in progress, 2000.
[12]. Perkins C, Belding-Royer E, Das S. Ad hoc On-
Demand Distance Vector (AODV) routing. Network
working group, IETF RFC,RFC 3561, 2003.
[13]. Gallissot M. Routing on ad hoc networks, Project,
Supervisor,Maurice Mitchell Date, 2007.
[14]. Zygmunt J Haas, Marc R. Pearlman, and Prince Samar,
"The Zone Routing Protocol (ZRP) for Ad Hoc Networks", draft-
ietf-manet-zone-zrp-04.txt,july,2002
[15]. Jaisankar N, Saravanan R. An extended AODV
protocol for multipath routing in MANETs. Int J Eng Technol
2010;2(40).
[16]“Zone Routing protocol(ZRP),” http://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-
ietf-manetzone- zrp-04.txt.

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A study and comparison of olsr, aodv and zrp routing protocols in ad hoc networks copy (2)

  • 1. IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308 __________________________________________________________________________________________ Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 370 A STUDY AND COMPARISON OF OLSR, AODV AND ZRP ROUTING PROTOCOLS IN AD HOC NETWORKS Hrituparna Paul 1 , Priyanka Sarkar 2 1, 2 Assistant Professor, National Institute of Technology, Agartala hrituparnanita@gmail.com, priyanka.csenita@gmail.com Abstract A mobile ad hoc networks (MANET) is characterized by multihop wireless connectivity consisting of independent nodes which move dynamically by changing its network connectivity without the uses of any pre-existent infrastructure. MANET offers[1, 2] such flexibility which helps the network to form anywhere, at any time, as long as two or more nodes are connected and communicate with each other either directly when they are in radio range or via intermediate mobile nodes. Routing is a significant issue and challenge in ad hoc networks and many routing protocols have been proposed like OLSR, AODV, DSDV,DSR, ZRP, and TORA, LAR so far to improve the routing performance and reliability. This research paper describes the characteristics of ad hoc routing protocols OLSR, AODV and ZRP based on the performance metrics like packet delivery ratio, end–to–end delay, throughput and jitter by increasing number of nodes in the network. This comparative study proves that OLSR, ZRP performs well in dense networks in terms of low mobility and low traffic but in high mobility and high traffic environment ZRP performs well than OLSR and AODV. Keywords: MANET, AODV, OLSR, ZRP, routing --------------------------------------------------------------------***------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. INTRODUCTION: The rapid increases in the applications of Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) devices such as tabs, compact laptops etc has made popularity of wireless networks. One of the major types of wireless networks is Mobile Ad-Hoc networks (MANET). Every node in this network acts as a router or relay station to forward data to the designated node. In this network nodes are mobile and constantly change its location from one MANET to another. The application of this network is such as emergency situation, disaster recovery, crowd control, battle fields etc. Many routing protocols have been proposed for the mobile ad hoc network and classified as Proactive or Table Driven routing Protocol, Reactive or On Demand Routing Protocol, Hybrid Routing protocol. A. Proactive or Table-Driven Routing Protocols Proactive routing is also often termed as table- driven routing. In this type of routing protocols, fresh lists of destinations and their routes are maintained by periodic distribution of routing tables throughout the network and this category of protocol always strives to maintain consistent and updated routing information at each node [3]. The proactive routing protocols use link-state routing algorithms which frequently flood the link information about its neighbors and the main drawback of proactive routing protocol is that all the nodes in the network always maintain an updated table. Destination-Sequenced Distance-Vector Routing Protocol (DSDV) [4] and Optimized Link-State Routing (OLSR) [5] are the two common proactive routing protocols. B. Reactive or On Demand Routing Protocol This type of routing is often known as on- demand routing or source-initiated routing protocol. The main advantage of reactive protocols is that it imposes less overhead due to route messages on the network but at the same time, it is also facing high latency time in route finding process and sometimes excessive flooding of the communication packets may lead to network blockage. Unlike table driven protocols, all nodes need not maintain up-to- date routing information here. Ad- hoc On- Demand Distance Vector Routing (AODV) [4], Dynamic Source Routing (DSR) [6] and Temporally Ordered Routing Algorithm (TORA) [7], are some of the examples of reactive routing protocol. C. Hybrid Routing Protocol Hybrid routing protocol combines the advantages of both proactive and reactive routing protocols. The routing is initially established with some proactively prospected routes and then serves the demand from additionally activated nodes through reactive flooding. Some of the existing hybrid protocols are ZRP [8] and TORA [9].
  • 2. IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308 __________________________________________________________________________________________ Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 371 Figure 1 Classification of MANET routing protocols The figure 1 shows the prominent way of classifying MANETs routing protocols. The protocols may be categorized into two types, Proactive and Reactive. Other category of MANET routing protocols which is a combination of both proactive and reactive is referred as Hybrid. This paper is categorized as follows. Section I present the Introduction and overview of Proactive, Reactive and Hybrid routing protocols. Section II provides an overview of Routing protocols. Section III provides description about Metrics for performance comparison Section IV presents Comparative Study of Ad Hoc Routing Protocols. Section IV concludes the paper 2. OVERVIEW OF ROUTING PROTOCOLS: A. Optimized Link State Routing Protocol Optimized link state routing [10] is a proactive protocol in which, each node intermittently broadcasts its routing table, allowing each node to build an inclusive view of the network topology. The episodic nature of this protocol creates a large amount of overhead and in order to reduce overhead, it limits the number of mobile nodes that can forward network wide traffic and for this purpose it use multi point relays (MPRs), which are responsible for forwarding routing messages and optimization for flooding operation. Mobile nodes, which are selected as MPRs can forward control traffic and reduces the size of control messages. MPRs are chosen by a node, such that, it may reach each two hop neighbor via at least one MPR, then it can forward packets, if control traffic received from a previous hop has selected the current node as a MPR. Mobility causes, route change and topology changes very frequently and topology control (TC) messages are broadcasted throughout the network. All mobile nodes maintain the routing table that contains routes to all reachable destination nodes. This protocol does not notify the source immediately after detecting a broken link. Source node comes to know that route is broken, when the intermediate node broadcasts its next packets. Thus, by determining the path through the multipoint relays, it is possible to keep away the difficulties experienced during the packet transmission over a uni-directional link. Fig2:-Multipoint Relays of the OLSR network Advantages and Limitations: OLSR is a flat routing protocol and it does not need central administrative system to handle its routing process. The link is reliable for the control messages, since the messages are sent periodically and the delivery does not have to be sequential. This protocol is best suitable for high density network and does not allows long delays in the transmission of the packets. However, as a limitation this protocol needs that each node periodically sends the updated topology information throughout the entire network, this increase the protocols bandwidth usage. But the flooding is minimized by the MPR‟s, which are only allowed to forward the topological messages. B. Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector Routing (AODV) AODV is a up to date routing protocol that adopts a purely reactive approach and capable of both unicast and multicast routing: it sets up a route on-demand at the start of a communication session, and uses it till it breaks, after which a new route setup is initiate .AODV adopts a very different mechanism to maintain routing information. It uses traditional routing tables, one entry per destination [11–15]. Without source routing, AODV relies on routing table entries to propagate a route replay (RREP) back to the source and, subsequently, to route data packets to the destination. AODV uses sequence numbers maintained at each destination to determine the freshness of routing information and to prevent routing loops. All routing packets carry these sequence numbers. An important feature of AODV is the maintenance of timer-based states in each node, regarding utilization of individual routing table entries. A routing table entry is expired if not used recently. A set of predecessor nodes is maintained for each routing table entry, indicating the set of neighboring nodes which use that entry to route data
  • 3. IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308 __________________________________________________________________________________________ Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 372 packets. These nodes are notified with route error (RERR) packets when the next hop link breaks. Each predecessor node, in turn, forwards the RERR to its own set of predecessors, thus effectively erasing all routes using the broken link. Route error propagation in AODV can be visualized conceptually as a tree whose root is the node at the point of failure and all sources using the failed link [16]. The algorithm’s primary objectives are as follows:  To broadcast discovery packets only when necessary.  To distinguish between local connectivity management Neighborhood detection and general topology maintenance.  To disseminate information about changes in local connectivity to those neighboring mobile nodes that are likely to need the information. Advantages and Limitations The main advantage of AODV protocol is that routes are established on demand and destination sequence numbers are used to find the latest route to the destination and it also supports both unicast and multicast packet transmissions even for nodes in constant movement. It responds quickly to the topological changes in the network and updating only the nodes that may be affected by the change, using the RRER message. The Hello messages, which are responsible for the route maintenance, are also limited so that they do not create unnecessary overhead in the network. The limitations of AODV protocol is all nodes in the broadcast medium can detect each other‟s broadcasts. It is also possible that a valid route is expired and the determination of a reasonable expiry time is difficult. The reason behind this is that the nodes are in mobility and their sending rates may differ widely. In addition, as the size of network grows, various performance metrics begin decreasing. A route discovered with AODV may no longer be the optimal route further along in time. This situation can arise because of network congestion or the fluctuating characteristics of wireless links. C. ZRP ZRP [14] divides the topology into zones and uses different routing protocols within and between the zones based on their weaknesses and strengths. Each node in ZRP has a predefined zone centered at itself.. ZRP maintains a zone around each node that consists of all nodes within „k‟ hops away from that node. Proactive routing is used within the zone whereas reactive routing is used amongst zones. For data delivery, it is checked whether the destination node exists within the zone or not. If yes, data is sent immediately otherwise RREQ packet is sent to border nodes. Border nodes check within their own zones for destinations. If found, border node sends RREP on reverse path otherwise it adds its own address to the packet and forwards to its own border nodes. Process continues until packet reaches to the destination itself or to a node having destination within its zone. Path in the RREP packet is used for sending data to destinations. Advantages and Limitations ZRP tries to combine the advantages of reactive and proactive routing protocols. With properly configured zone radius, ZRP may outperform both proactive routing protocols and reactive routing protocols. The potential disadvantage is that since hierarchical routing is used, the path to a destination may be suboptimal. Furthermore, since each node has higher level topological information, memory requirement is greater 3. METRICS FOR PERFORMANCE COMPARISON MANET has number of qualitative and quantitative metrics that can be used to compare ad hoc routing protocols. The table I illustrates the comparison of OLSR, AODV and ZRP routing protocols. This paper has been considered the following metrics to evaluate the performance of ad hoc network routing protocols. 1) End-to-end Delay: This metric represents average end-to-end delay and indicates how long it took for a packet to travel from the source to the application layer of the destination. It includes all possible delay caused by buffering during route discovery latency, transmission delays at the MAC, queuing at interface queue, and propagation and transfer time. It is measured in seconds. 2) Packet Delivery Ratio: Packet delivery ratio is calculated by dividing the number of packets received by the destination through the number of packets originated by the application layer of the source (i.e. CBR source). It specifies the packet loss rate, which limits the maximum throughput of the network. 3) Throughput: It is the measure of the number of packets successfully transmitted to their final destination per unit time. It is the ratio between the number of received packets vs sent packets. 4) Packet Jitter: It is the ratio of transmission delay of the current packet and the transmission delay of the previous packet. Jitter can be calculated only if at least two packets have been received
  • 4. IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308 __________________________________________________________________________________________ Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 373 Low Mobility and Low Traffic Protocol End to End delay Packet delivery ratio Throughput Jitter OLSR Low High Good Low AODV Average High Average High ZRP Low High Average Low 4. COMPARATIVE STUDY OF AD HOC ROUTING PROTOCOLS TABLE 1 COMPARISON OF AD HOC ROUTING PROTOCOLS Performance Constraints OLSR AODV ZRP Category Table driven or Proactive On Demand or Reactive hybrid Protocol Type Link state scheme Distance Vector Link Reversal Route Maintained in Route Table Route Table Route Table Loop Freedom Yes Yes Yes Route Philosophy Flat Flat Flat Multiple routes No No Yes Multicast Yes Yes NO Message Overhead Minimum Moderate Moderate Periodic broadcast Possible Possible Possible Requires sequence data No Yes Yes Route reconfigurati on methodology Control messages sent in advance to increase the reactiveness Erase Route notify Source Link Reversal and information stored in link table TABLE.2 ROUTING PERFORMANCE IN LOW MOBILITY TABLE.3ROUTING PERFORMANCE IN HIGH MOBILITY High Mobility and High Traffic Protocol End to End delay Packet delivery ratio Throughput Jitter OLSR Low Average Good Low AODV Average Average Average High ZRP High Low Average Average CONCLUSIONS This paper presents the comparative study and Performance analysis of various ad hoc routing protocols (OLSR, AODV and ZRP) on the basis of end-to-end delay, packet delivery ratio, throughput, jitter performance metrics. The study of these routing protocols shows that OLSR is more efficient in high density networks with highly sporadic traffic. OLSR requires that it continuously have some bandwidth in order to receive the topology updates messages. As well, AODV keeps on improving in packet delivery ratio with dense networks. The performance of all protocols was almost stable in sparse medium with low traffic. It has been concluded that performance of ZRP is better for high mobility and high traffic networks where as the OLSR and ZRP performs well in low mobility and low traffic networks. The future work suggested that the effort will be made to enhance ad hoc network routing protocol by tackle core issues. REFERENCES: [1] Alexander Klein, “Performance Comparison and Evaluation of AODV, OLSR and SBR in Mobile Ad-Hoc Networks”, Innovation Works, IEEE 3rd International Symposium on Wireless Pervasive Computing, 2008. [2] Anne Aaron, Jie Weng, “Performance Comparison of Ad-hoc Routing Protocols for Networks with Node Energy Constraints”, available at http://ivms.stanford.edu, Spring 2000-2001. [3] Shah, R.C., Rabaey, J.:Energy Aware Routing for Low Energy Ad Hoc Sensor Networks. In: IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC 2002), vol. 1, pp. 350–355 (2002) [4]. Perkins, C.E., Bhagwat, P.Highly Dynamic Destination- Sequenced Distance-Vector Routing (DSDV) for Mobile Computers. In: SIGCOMM 1994, pp. 234–244 (August 1994) [5]. Clausen, T., Jacquet, P.: Optimized link state routing protocol, IETF RFC 3626 (2003), http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3626.txt [6].Perkins, C.E., Royer, E.M.: Ad Hoc On-Demand Distance Vector Routing. In: 2nd IEEE Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications (WMCSA 1999), pp. 90–100 (February 1999) [7]. Camp, T., Boleng, J., Davies, V.: A Survey of Mobility Models for Ad-hoc Network Research. Wireless Communication and Mobile Computing [WCNC]: Special Issue on Mobile Ad-hoc Networking: Research, Trends and Applications 2(5), 483–502 (2002) [8]. H. Ehsan and Z. A. Uzmi (2004), “Performance Comparison of Ad Hoc Wireless Network Routing Protocols”, IEEE 8th International Multi topic Conference, Proceedings of INMIC, pp.457 – 465, December 2004. [9]. Z. J. Hass and M. R. Pearlman, “Zone Routing Protocol (ZRP)”, Internet draft available at www.ietf.org,
  • 5. IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308 __________________________________________________________________________________________ Volume: 02 Issue: 08 | Aug-2013, Available @ http://www.ijret.org 374 November 1997. [10]. Open Link State Routing. http://www.olsr.org [11]. Perkins CE, Royer EM, Das SR. Ad Hoc on Demand Distance Vector (AODV) routing. Available from: http://www.ietf.org/internetdrafts/draft-ietfmanet-aodv-06.txt, IETF Internet Draft, work in progress, 2000. [12]. Perkins C, Belding-Royer E, Das S. Ad hoc On- Demand Distance Vector (AODV) routing. Network working group, IETF RFC,RFC 3561, 2003. [13]. Gallissot M. Routing on ad hoc networks, Project, Supervisor,Maurice Mitchell Date, 2007. [14]. Zygmunt J Haas, Marc R. Pearlman, and Prince Samar, "The Zone Routing Protocol (ZRP) for Ad Hoc Networks", draft- ietf-manet-zone-zrp-04.txt,july,2002 [15]. Jaisankar N, Saravanan R. An extended AODV protocol for multipath routing in MANETs. Int J Eng Technol 2010;2(40). [16]“Zone Routing protocol(ZRP),” http://tools.ietf.org/id/draft- ietf-manetzone- zrp-04.txt.