Analyzing the impact of the number of nodes on the performance of the routing protocols in manet environment

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Abstract

Mobile Ad-hoc Networks (MANETs) are independent systems that can work without the requirement for unified controls, pre-setup to the paths/routes or advance communication structures. The nodes/hubs of a MANET are independently controlled, which permit them to behave unreservedly in a randomized way inside the MANET. The hubs can leave their MANET and join different MANETs whenever the need arises. These attributes, in any case, may contrarily influence the performance of the routing conventions (or protocols) and the general topology of the systems. Along these lines, MANETs include uniquely planned routing conventions that responsively as well as proactively carry out the routing. This paper assesses and looks at the effectiveness (or performance) of five directing conventions which are AOMDV, DSDV, AODV, DSR and OLSR in a MANET domain. The research incorporates executing a simulating environment to look at the operation of the routing conventions dependent on the variable number of hubs. Three evaluation indices are utilized: Throughput (TH), Packet Delivery Ratio (PDR), and End-to-End delay (E2E). The assessment outcomes indicate that the AODV beats other conventions in the majority of the simulated scenarios.

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APA

Haglan, H. M., Mostafa, S. A., Mohd Safar, N. Z., Mustapha, A., Saringatb, M. Z., Alhakami, H., & Alhakami, W. (2021). Analyzing the impact of the number of nodes on the performance of the routing protocols in manet environment. Bulletin of Electrical Engineering and Informatics, 10(1), 434–440. https://doi.org/10.11591/eei.v10i1.2516

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