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The Networking Research Lab (NRL) headed by Prof. Gerla and the recently funded NSF Wireless Network Research Testebed (of which ST-Microelectronics is a partner) are well equipped to host the proposed experimental research effort. Moreover, the Campus provides efficient G-Ethernet connectivity and IEEE 802.11 wireless infrastructures for access to the Commodity Internet and to Internet II. In particular, this project will take benefits from

Qualnet and NS-2 simulation environments

Qualnet is a parallel simulation platform for complex systems which was developed at UCLA to provide researchers with more efficient and convenient ways to simulate various testbeds that cannot be easily structured in real environment such as huge wired and/or wireless networks with a number of nodes. The Qualnet platform not only supports discrete-time message passing functionality for handling events occurring over various time scales, but also allows to take advantage of the power of parallel architectures with multiple processors for fast and scalable simulations. Qualnet was designed at UCLA with the goal of simulating networks that scale up to many thousands of nodes linked by a heterogeneous communications capability that includes multicasting, asymmetric communication links, direct satellite broadcast, multi-hop wireless ad hoc networking, and traditional, wired Internet connectivity. Qualnet uses a layered approach to develop high-fidelity models of the protocol stack to support multi-hop wireless communication in a mobile network. In Qualnet, the scaling to large networks is achieved primarily by exploiting parallel execution of the models. Prior to Qualnet, parallel simulation of wireless networks had been applied primarily to cellular type personal communication networks. In our proposed project, the Qualnet simulation platform will play an important role in guiding and validating our experiments.

In parallel with Qualnet, we will develop our code also on the NS2 simulator that is currently the leading open source network simulator. That strategy will allow us to share our results with a larger number of scientists as well as with the research groups operating within ST-Microelectronics.

The NRL wireless test-bed

The ad hoc wireless testbed at UCLA consists of about twenty laptops and 60 PDAs equipped with IEEE 802.11 cards and running the Linux operating system. This tesbed was assembled with funds from DARPA, ONR and more recently HP. Several ad hoc networking protocols have been implemented and tested on this testbed including routing protocols (DSDV, Bellman Ford, ODMRP unicast); multicast protocols (ODMRP multicast, DVMRP), IP protocols (Ipv, Mobile IP), network management protocols (SNMP) and transport protocols (TCP Reno and TCP Westwood).
In addition, the ad hoc testbed is equipped with video and audio traffic generators, video and speech encoders, speech-to-text translators and speech synthesizers. The ad hoc testbed has been used to carry out several noteworthy experiments, including: video adaptation in a varying network topology and channnel capacity environment, and; multihop TCP experiments, exhibiting capture in the presence of conflicting TCP sessions. More recently, the testbed has been used to carry out audio and video vonference experiments in support of a Campus wireless classroom project sponsored by HP.
A Bluetooth lab is also available. STMicroelectronics provided us 3 Bluetooth mini kits; moreover we have acquired several Bluetooth cards and are now engaged in Bluetooth propagation experiments. We have also installed sensors on our small Bluetooth platforms and are planning to develop a Bluetooth sensor "fabric" (implemented by a scatternet) that allows a passing user to retrieve the sensor data that he/she is interested in.

On a broader scale, the wireless Network Research Testebed (NRT) will make available Campus wide resources which will be extremely valuable for experimental validation of our results. The NRT resources will include: