Wireless mesh network
A wireless mesh network is a communications network made up of radio nodes organized in a mesh topology. It can also be a form of wireless ad hoc network.
A mesh refers to rich interconnection among devices or nodes. Wireless mesh networks often consist of mesh clients, mesh routers and gateways. Mobility of nodes is less frequent. If nodes constantly or frequently move, the mesh spends more time updating routes than delivering data. In a wireless mesh network, topology tends to be more static, so that routes
computation can converge and delivery of data to their destinations can occur. Hence, this is a low-mobility centralized form of wireless ad hoc network. Also, because it sometimes relies on static nodes to act as gateways, it is not a truly all-wireless ad hoc network.
Mesh clients are often laptops, cell phones, and other wireless devices. Mesh routers forward traffic to and from the gateways, which may, but need not, be connected to the Internet. The coverage area of all radio nodes working as a single network is sometimes called a mesh cloud. Access to this mesh cloud depends on the radio nodes working together to create a radio network. A mesh network is reliable and offers redundancy. When one node can no longer operate, the rest of the nodes can still communicate with each other, directly or through one or more intermediate nodes. Wireless mesh networks can self form and self heal. Wireless mesh networks work with different wireless technologies including 802.11, 802.15, 802.16, cellular technologies and need not be restricted to any one technology or protocol. See also mesh networking.
Features
Architecture
Wireless mesh architecture is a first step towards providing cost effective and low mobility over a specific coverage area. Wireless mesh infrastructure is, in effect, a network of routers minus the cabling between nodes. It is built of peer radio devices that do not have to be cabled to a wired port like traditional WLAN access points do. Mesh infrastructure carries data over large distances by splitting the distance into a series of short hops. Intermediate nodes not only boost the signal, but cooperatively pass data from point A to point B by making forwarding decisions based on their knowledge of the network, i.e. perform routing by first deriving the topology of the network.Wireless mesh networks is a relatively "stable-topology" network except for the occasional failure of nodes or addition of new nodes. The path of traffic, being aggregated from a large number of end users, changes infrequently. Practically all the traffic in an infrastructure mesh network is either forwarded to or from a gateway, while in wireless ad hoc networks or client mesh networks the traffic flows between arbitrary pairs of nodes.
If rate of mobility among nodes are high, i.e., link breaks happen frequently, wireless mesh networks start to break down and have low communication performance.
Management
This type of infrastructure can be decentralized or centrally managed. Both are relatively inexpensive, and can be very reliable and resilient, as each node needs only transmit as far as the next node. Nodes act as routers to transmit data from nearby nodes to peers that are too far away to reach in a single hop, resulting in a network that can span larger distances. The topology of a mesh network must be relatively stable, i.e., not too much mobility. If one node drops out of the network, due to hardware failure or any other reason, its neighbors can quickly find another route using a routing protocol.Applications
Mesh networks may involve either fixed or mobile devices. The solutions are as diverse as communication needs, for example in difficult environments such as emergency situations, tunnels, oil rigs, battlefield surveillance, high-speed mobile-video applications on board public transport, real-time racing-car telemetry, or self-organizing Internet access for communities. An important possible application for wireless mesh networks is VoIP. By using a quality of service scheme, the wireless mesh may support routing local telephone calls through the mesh. Most applications in wireless mesh networks are similar to those in wireless ad hoc networks.Some current applications:
- U.S. military forces are now using wireless mesh networking to connect their computers, mainly ruggedized laptops, in field operations.
- Electric smart meters now being deployed on residences, transfer their readings from one to another and eventually to the central office for billing, without the need for human meter readers or the need to connect the meters with cables.
- The laptops in the One Laptop per Child program use wireless mesh networking to enable students to exchange files and get on the Internet even though they lack wired or cell phone or other physical connections in their area.
- Google Home, Google Wi-Fi, and Google OnHub all support Wi-Fi mesh networking. Several manufacturers of Wi-Fi routers began offering mesh routers for home use in the mid-2010s.
- The 66-satellite Iridium constellation operates as a mesh network, with wireless links between adjacent satellites. Calls between two satellite phones are routed through the mesh, from one satellite to another across the constellation, without having to go through an earth station. This makes for a smaller travel distance for the signal, reducing latency, and also allows for the constellation to operate with far fewer earth stations than would be required for 66 traditional communications satellites.
Operation
Multi-radio mesh
Multi-radio mesh refers to having different radios operating at different frequencies to interconnect nodes in a mesh. This means there is a unique frequency used for each wirelesshop and thus a dedicated CSMA collision domain. With
more radio bands, communication throughput is likely to increase as a result of more available
communication channels. This is similar to providing dual or multiple radio paths to transmit
and receive data.
Research topics
One of the more often cited papers on Wireless Mesh Networks identified the following areas as open research problems in 2005- New modulation scheme
- * To achieve higher transmission rate requires new wideband transmission schemes other than OFDM and UWB.
- Advanced antenna processing
- * Advanced antenna processing including directional, smart and multiple antenna technologies is further investigated, since their complexity and cost are still too high for wide commercialization.
- Flexible spectrum management
- * Tremendous efforts on research of frequency-agile techniques are being performed for increased efficiency.
- Cross-layer optimization
- * Cross-layer research is a popular current research topic where information is shared between different communications layers to increase the knowledge and current state of the network. This could facilitate development of new and more efficient protocols. A joint protocol that addresses various design problems—routing, scheduling, channel assignment etc.—can achieve higher performance since these problems are strongly co-related. Note that careless cross-layer design can lead to code that is difficult to maintain and extend.
- Software-defined wireless networking
- * Centralized, distributed, or hybrid? - In a new SDN architecture for WDNs is explored that eliminates the need for multi-hop flooding of route information and therefore enables WDNs to easily expand. The key idea is to split network control and data forwarding by using two separate frequency bands. The forwarding nodes and the SDN controller exchange link-state information and other network control signaling in one of the bands, while actual data forwarding takes place in the other band.
- Security
- * A WMN can be seen as a group of nodes that cooperate to provide connectivity. Such an open architecture, where clients serve as routers to forward data packets, is exposed to many types of attacks that can interrupt the whole network and cause denial of service or Distributed Denial of Service.
Protocols
Routing protocols
There are more than 70 competing schemes for routing packets across mesh networks. Some of these include:- Associativity-Based Routing
- AODV
- B.A.T.M.A.N.
- Babel
- Dynamic NIx-Vector Routing|DNVR
- DSDV
- DSR
- HSLS
- HWMP
- Infrastructure Wireless Mesh Protocol for Infrastructure Mesh Networks by GRECO UFPB-Brazil
- OLSR
- OORP
- OSPF
- Routing Protocol for Low-Power and Lossy Networks
- PWRP
- TORA
- ZRP
A less thorough list can be found at Ad hoc routing protocol list.
Autoconfiguration protocols
Standard autoconfiguration protocols, such as DHCP or IPv6 stateless autoconfiguration may be used over mesh networks.Mesh network specific autoconfiguration protocols include:
- Ad Hoc Configuration Protocol
- Proactive Autoconfiguration
- Dynamic WMN Configuration Protocol
Communities and providers
- Anyfi
- AWMN
- CUWiN
- Freifunk / FunkFeuer / OpenWireless
- Firechat
- Firetide
- Guifi.net
- Netsukuku
- Ninux
- NYC Mesh
- Red Hook Wi-Fi
Products
- BT Whole Home Wifi - Wireless mesh system for the UK home and smb market
- Aruba AirMesh - multiservice wireless mesh networks for outdoors
- Cisco Meraki - Mesh networking - access points as gateways and repeaters
- D-Link - Wi-Fi Mesh
- Datto - Datto WiFi - wireless mesh access points, repeaters and bridging
- Juniper Wireless Mesh - wireless mesh and bridging
- Linksys Velop - Mesh WiFi and networking
- MikroTik - Wireless routers
- Nokia - Wireless mesh Beacons
- Ruckus Mesh - Smart Mesh
- TP-Link - Wireless mesh networking - access points
- Others - list of venture backed mesh networking companies.