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Article Dans Une Revue The Computer Journal Année : 2017

How far can we go? Towards Realistic Software-Defined Wireless Networking Experiments

Résumé

Software-Defined Wireless Networking (SDWN) is an emerging approach based on decoupling radio control functions from the radio data plane through programmatic interfaces. Despite diverse ongoing efforts to realize the vision of SDWN, many questions remain open from multiple perspectives such as means to rapid prototype and experiment candidate software solutions applicable to real world deployments. To this end, emulation of SDWN has the potential to boost research and development efforts by re-using existing protocol and application stacks while mimicking the behavior of real wireless networks. In this article, we provide an in-depth discussion on that matter focusing on the Mininet-WiFi emulator design to fill a gap in the experimental platform space. We showcase the applicability of our emulator in an SDN wireless context by illustrating the support of a number of use cases aiming to address the question on how far we can go in realistic SDWN experiments, including comparisons to the results obtained in a wireless testbed. Finally, we discuss the ability to replay packet-level and radio signal traces captured in the real testbed towards a virtual yet realistic emulation environment in support of SDWN research.
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Dates et versions

hal-01480973 , version 1 (02-03-2017)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-01480973 , version 1

Citer

Ramon dos Reis Fontes, Mohamed Mahfoudi, Walid Dabbous, Thierry Turletti, Christian Rothenberg. How far can we go? Towards Realistic Software-Defined Wireless Networking Experiments. The Computer Journal, 2017, 60 (10), pp.13. ⟨hal-01480973⟩
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