On the Packet Delay Characteristics for Serially–Connected Links using Random Linear Network Coding with and without Recoding

Konferenz: European Wireless 2015 - 21th European Wireless Conference
20.05.2015 - 22.05.2015 in Budapest, Hungary

Tagungsband: European Wireless 2015

Seiten: 6Sprache: EnglischTyp: PDF

Persönliche VDE-Mitglieder erhalten auf diesen Artikel 10% Rabatt

Autoren:
Toemoeskoezi, Mate; Fitzek, Frank H. P. (acticom GmbH, Berlin, Germany)
Toemoeskoezi, Mate; Fitzek, Frank H. P.; Lucani, Daniel E.; Pedersen, Morten V. (Department of Electronic Systems, Aalborg University, Denmark)
Toemoeskoezi, Mate; Ekler, Peter (Department of Automation and Applied Informatics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary)
Seeling, Patrick (Department of Computer Science, Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, MI 48859, USA)

Inhalt:
Low latency and high reliability are critical characteristics of many wireless use cases, such as real–time video surveillance. In a dense network, the best way to resolve such problems is by utilizing the fastest and most reliable connection to the destination, typically through relaying. Classical solutions, such as Reed–Solomon codes, increase the reliability, but also introduce additional coding delays at the relays. This paper describes the reduction of the packet delay achievable by network coding through a series of network nodes. Our metric captures the elapsed time between (network) encoding RTP frames and complete decoding of the packets on the receiver side while playing out the video recording contained in the payload. Our solutions are implemented and evaluated on serially connected Raspberry Π devices and a network (de)coding enabled software running on a regular PC. We find that the recoding relays work at least as well as the systematic approach to network coding. In all cases network coding outperformed schemes employing classical Reed–Solomon codes. This low per–packet delay and the inherent reliability of our schemes make these solutions particularly suitable for real–time multimedia delivery in contrast to other classical and network coding strategies.