Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Skip to main content

FAMOUS: A Network Architecture for Delivering Multimedia Services to FAst MOving USers

  • Published:
Wireless Personal Communications Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

When today’s commuters in the train or in a car want to access the Internet, they see themselves restricted to simple web surfing or e-mail. Interactive multimedia services, like online gaming or video conferencing are still unavailable to them, even with promising new technologies like UMTS or WiMAX. The impact of high bit rate multimedia traffic on the access network and aggregation network is an important topic, that has not been addressed in enough detail before. We designed a network architecture for offering these multimedia services to fast moving users. We refer to the overall network architecture as the FAMOUS network architecture, which consists of two parts: (i) an access network part which has to deal with large number of users, asking for a high bandwidth, while experiencing a high handoff frequency and (ii) an aggregation network part which has to deal with dynamic tunnels of very high bandwidth, while experiencing a low handoff frequency. In this paper, we detail the FAMOUS architecture, together with optimized handoff strategies, an optical switching architecture, a design methodology for dimensioning aggregations networks and automatic tunnel pre-configuration and activation. Moreover, performance results of these mentioned aspects will be presented.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Subscribe and save

Springer+ Basic
$34.99 /Month
  • Get 10 units per month
  • Download Article/Chapter or eBook
  • 1 Unit = 1 Article or 1 Chapter
  • Cancel anytime
Subscribe now

Buy Now

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  1. International Telecommunication Union. Information Technology Statistics http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/statistics/at-glance/Internet03.pdf, 2003.

  2. Internet World Stats Internet Usage Statistics – The Big Picture World Internet Users and Population Stats, http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats.htm

  3. Point Topic Ltd. World Broadband Statistics: Q4 2003. http://www.point-topic.com/contentDownload/freeforyou/world%20broadband%20statistics%20q4%202003.pdf, website, 23 March, 2004.

  4. GSM World from the GSM Association. Growth of the Global Digital Mobile Market. http://www.gsmworld.com/news/statistics/pdf/gsma-stats-q2-04-pdf, website, 2004.

  5. Connexion by BoeingSM. http://www.boeing.com/connexion/flash.html, web site.

  6. GNER, Icomera Announce Commercial Agreement to Deliver Real-Time Wireless Internet on Trains. http://www.icomera.com/news/gner-agreement.asp, website, Gothenburg, Sweden, 6 April, 2004.

  7. J. Irvine, D. Robertson and J. Dunlop, “The MOSTRAIN (Mobile Services for High Speed Trains) System Demonstrator”, Personal. Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications. 1998. The Ninth IEEE International Symposium on, Vol. 2, No. 8–11, pp. 1004–1008, September 1998.

  8. J. Ott and D. Kutscher, “Drive-thru Internet: IEEE 802.11b for Automobile Users”, in IEEE Infocom 2004 Conference, Honk Kong, March 2004.

  9. G. Fleishman, Destination wi-fi, by Rail, Bus or Boat. The New York Times, New York, July 2004.

    Google Scholar 

  10. An Intelligent Wi-Fi Bus Equipped with Appear Networks Technology in Paris. http://www.appearnetworks.com/press-room/press-.releases/pr-ratp-bus-june2004.html, website, Stockholm, Sweden, 11 June 2004.

  11. D. Johnson, C. Perkins and J. Arkko, “Mobility Support in IPv6”, IETF RFC 3775, June 2004.

  12. F. Van Quickenborne, F. De Greve, F. De Turck, P. Demeester et al., “Cost Effective Design of Aggregation Networks for Fast Moving Vehicles”, in The 11th Symposium on Communications and Vehicular Technology in the Benelux: SCVT 2004, Gent, Belgium, November 2004.

  13. A. Valkó and I.P. Cellular, “A New Approach to Internet Host Mobility”, ACM Computer Communication Review, January 1999.

  14. R. Ramjee, T. La Porta, L. Salgarelli, S. Thuel and K. Varadhan, “IP-Based Access Network Infrastructure for Next-Generation Wireless Data Networks”, IEEE Personal Communications, pp. 34–41, August 2000.

  15. Gustafsson, E., A. Jonsson and C. Perkins. Mobile IPv4 Regional Registration. draft-ietf-mobileip-reg-tunnel-07.txt, October 2002 (work in progress).

  16. H. Soliman, C. Catelluccia, K. El Malki and L. Bellier, “Hierarchical Mobile IPv6 Mobility Management (HMIPv6)”, draft-ietf-mipshop-hmipv6-02.txt, June 2004 (work in progress).

  17. C. Boukis, N. Georganopoulos and H. Aghvami, “A Hardware Implementation of BCMP Mobility Protocol for IPv6 Networks”, GLOBECOM 2003 – IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference, Vol. 22, No. 1, pp. 3083–3087, December 2003.

  18. R. Koodli (ed.), “Fast Handovers for Mobile IPv6”, draft-ietf-mipshop-fast-mipv6-02.txt, July 2004 (work in progress).

  19. T. Van Leeuwen, I. Moerman, B. Dhoedt and P. Demeester, “Broadband Wireless Communication in Vehicles”, 42nd European Telecommunications Congress (FITCE 2003), pp. 77–82, 4–6 September, Berlin, Germany.

  20. L. Peters, I. Moerman, B. Dhoedt and P. Demeester, “Micro-Mobility Support for Random Access Network Topologies”, IEEE Wireless Communication and Networking Conference (WCNC 2004), 21–25 March, Georgia, USA, ISBN 0-7803-8344-3.

  21. L. Peters, I. Moerman, B. Dhoedt and P. Demeester, “MEHR.OM: Micromobility Support with Efficient Handoff and Route Optimization mechanisms”, 16th ITC Specialist Seminar on Performance Evaluation of Wireless and Mobile Systems (ITCSS16 2004), pp. 269–278, 31 August–2 September, Antwerp, Belgium.

  22. T. Van Leeuwen, I. Moerman, B. Dhoedt and P. Demeester, “A Pro-active Handoff Enhancing Protocol”, 1st Mobile and Wireless Summit 2004, pp. 844–848, 27–29 June, Lyon, France.

  23. H. Al-Raweshidy, et al., Radio over Fiber Technologies for Mobile Comm. Networks, Artech House Inc., Norwood, USA, 2002.

  24. B. Lannoo, D. Colle, M. Pickavet and P. Demeester, “Optical Switching Architecture to Implement Moveable Cells in a Multimedia Train Environment”, in Proceedings of the 30th European Conference on Optical Communication (ECOC 2004), Stockholm, Sweden, September 2004.

  25. S. Srikant, G. Kartik, et al., “Viking: A Multi-Spanning Tree Ethernet Architecture for Metropolitan Area and Cluster Networks”, in The 23rd Conference of the IEEE Communications Society: Infocom 2004, Hong Kong, China, March 2004.

  26. F. De Greve, F. Van Quickenborne, F. De Turck, P. Demeester, et al., “Evaluation of a Tunnel Set-up Mechanism in QoS-aware Ethernet Access Networks”, in Proceedings of the 13th IEEE Workshop on Local and Metropolitan Area Networks: LANMAN 2004, San Francisco, USA, April 2004.

  27. F. De Turck, P. Demeester and H. Alaiwan, “Efficient Bandwidth Scheduling over Switched QoS Networks”, in The 8th Int. Telecommunication Network Planning Symposium, pp. 249–254, Sorrento, Italy, 18–23 October, 1998.

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Filip De Greve.

Additional information

Filip De Greve was born in Gent, Belgium, in 1978. He received his Master of Science degree in Electrotechnical Engineering from Ghent University, Gent, Belgium in 2001. In 2002, he joined the Department of Information Technology of the Faculty of Applied Sciences, University of Ghent as a doctoral researcher. Besides specific Ethernet-related research topics, his current research interests are related to broadband communication networks and include design, routing and reliability of access and aggregation networks.

Bart Lannoo was born in Torhout, Belgium, in 1979. He received his Master of Science degree in Electrotechnical Engineering from Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium in 2002. Since August 2002, he has been working with Department of Information Technology (INTEC) of the Faculty of Applied Sciences, Ghent University as a doctoral researcher. His current research interests are in optical access networks, including both fixed access networks (FTTx) and optical access for wireless communication.

Liesbeth Peters received the degree in Electrotechnical Engineering from Ghent University, Belgium in 2001. Since August 2001, she has been working as a doctoral researcher with the Department of Information Technology of Ghent University, where she joined the Broadband Communications Networks Group. Since October 2002, she works there as a research assistant of the Fund for Scientific Research – Flanders (F.W.O.-V., Belgium). Her current research interests are in broadband wireless communication and the support of IP mobility in wired cum wireless networks.

Tom Van Leeuwen was born in Gent, Belgium, in 1979. He received his masters degree in Computer Engineering from the Ghent University, Gent, Belgium in 2002. Since 2002, he has been working with Department of Information Technology of Ghent University (INTEC) as a doctoral researcher. In 2004 he received a PhD grant from the Institute for the Promotion of Innovation through Science and Technology in Flanders (IWT-Vlaanderen). His current research interests are in broadband wireless communication.

Frederic Van Quickenborne (M. Sc. Degree in Electrotechnical Engineering, University of Ghent, Belgium, 2002) published different papers on the growing importance of ethernet in aggregation and core networks. Besides his interest in ethernet related topics (QoS, VLANs, xSTP), he is also involved in projects concerning video-streaming and is working on a Click-based ethernet testbed. This research is funded by a PhD grant from the Institute for the Promotion of Innovation through Science and Technology in Flanders (IWT-Vlaanderen), that he obtained in 2004.

Didier Colle received a M.Sc. degree in electrotechnical engineering (option: communications) from the Ghent University in 1997. Since then, he has been working at the same university as researcher in the department of Information Technology (INTEC). He is part of the research group INTEC Broadband Communication Networks (IBCN) headed by Prof.: Piet Demeester. His research lead to a Ph.D. degree in February 2002. From January 2003 on, he was granted a postdoctoral scholarship from the “Instituut voor de aanmoediging van Innovatie door Wetenschap en Technologie in Vlaanderen (IWT-Vlaanderen)”. His research deals with design and planning of communication networks. His work is focussing on optical transport networks, to support the next-generation Internet. Up till now, he has actively been involved in three IST projects (LION, OPTIMIST and DAVID) and in the COST266 action. His work has been published in more than 40 scientific publications in international conferences and journals.

Filip de Turck received his M.Sc. degree in Electronic Engineering from the Ghent University, Belgium, in June 1997. In May 2002, he obtained the Ph.D. degree in Electronic Engineering from the same university. From October 1997 to September 2001, Filip De Turck was research assistant with the Fund for Scientific Research-Flanders, Belgium (F.W.O.-V.). At the moment, he is a part-time professor and a post-doctoral fellow of the F.W.O.-V., affiliated with the Department of Information Technology of the Ghent University. Filip De Turck is author or co-author of approximately 80 papers published in international journals or in the proceedings of international conferences. His main research interests include scalable software architectures for telecommunication network and service management, performance evaluation and optimization of routing, admission control and traffic management in telecommunication systems.

Ingrid Moerman was born in Gent, Belgium, in 1965. She received the degree in Electro-technical Engineering and the Ph.D degree from the Ghent University, Gent, Belgium in 1987 and 1992, respectively. Since 1987, she has been with the Interuniversity Micro-Electronics Centre (IMEC) at the Department of Information Technology (INTEC) of the Ghent University, where she conducted research in the field of optoelectronics. In 1997, she became a permanent member of the Research Staff at IMEC. Since 2000 she is part-time professor at the Ghent University. Since 2001 she has switched her research domain to broadband communication networks. She is currently involved in the research and education on broadband mobile & wireless communication networks and on multimedia over IP. She is author or co-author of more than 300 publications in the field of optoelectronics and communication networks.

Mario Pickavet received an M.Sc. and Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering, specialized in telecommunications, from Ghent University in 1996 and 1999, respectively. Since 2000, he is professor at Ghent University where he is teaching telecommunication networks and algorithm design. His current research interests are related to broadband communication networks (WDM, IP, (G-)MPLS, OPS, OBS) and include design, long-term planning and routing of core and access networks. In this context, he is currently involved a.o. in the European IST projects “All-Optical Label Swapping Employing Optical Logic Gates in Network Nodes” (LASAGNE) and “Optical Networks: Towards Bandwidth Manageability and Cost Efficiency” (e-Photon/ONe) and in several national research projects. He has published about a hundred international publications, both in journals (e.g. IEEE JSAC, IEEE Comm. Mag., JLT) and in proceedings of conferences. He is one of the authors of the book ‘Network Recovery: Protection and Restoration of Optical, SONET-SDH, IP, and MPLS’.

Bart Dhoedt received a degree in Engineering from the Ghent University in 1990. In September 1990, he joined the Department of Information Technology of the Faculty of Applied Sciences, University of Ghent. His research, addressing the use of micro-optics to realize parallel free space optical interconnects, resulted in a PhD degree in 1995. After a 2 year post-doc in opto-electronics, he became professor at the Faculty of Applied Sciences, Department of Information Technology. Since then, he is responsible for several courses on algorithms, programming and software development. His research interests are software engineering and mobile & wireless communications. Bart Dhoedt is author or co-author of approximately 70 papers published in international journals or in the proceedings of international conferences. His current research addresses software technologies for communication networks, peer-to-peer networks, mobile networks and active networks.

Piet Demeester finished his PhD thesis at the Department of Information Technology (INTEC) at the Ghent University in 1988. At the same department he became group leader of the activities on Metal Organic Vapour Phase Epitaxial growth for optoelectronic components. In 1992 he started a new research group on Broadband Communication Networks. The research in this field resulted in already more than 300 publications. In this research domain he was and is a member of several programme committees of international conferences, such as: ICCCN, the International Conference on Telecommunication Systems, OFC, ICC, and ECOC. He was Chairman of DRCN’98. In 2001 he was chairman of the Technical Programme Committee ECOC’01. He was Guest Editor of three special issues of the IEEE Communications Magazine. He is also a member of the Editorial Board of the Journals “Optical Networks Magazine” and ldquo;Photonic Network Communications”. He was a member of several national and international PhD thesis commissions. Piet Demeester is a member of IEEE (Senior Member), ACM and KVIV. His current research interests include: multilayer networks, Quality of Service (QoS) in IP-networks, mobile networks, access networks, grid computing, distributed software, network and service management and applications (supported by FWO-Vlaanderen, the BOF of the Ghent University, the IWT and the European Commission). Piet Demeester is currently full-time professor at the Ghent University, where he is teaching courses in Communication Networks. He has also been teaching in different international courses.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

De Greve, F., Lannoo, B., Peters, L. et al. FAMOUS: A Network Architecture for Delivering Multimedia Services to FAst MOving USers. Wireless Pers Commun 33, 281–304 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11277-005-0573-2

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11277-005-0573-2

Keywords