Inter-flow interference
In wireless routing, inter-flow interference refers to the interference between neighboring routers competing for the same busy channel.

In such a wireless topology with 2 path flows (S1-D1 and S2-D2), at any given time either wireless transmission from S1-X1, or S2-X3, can be functional. Similarly either X1-X2, or X3-X4, can operate any given time slot to avoid inter-flow interference.
The inter-flow interference routing metric is incorporated in MIC[1] and iAWARE[2] wireless routing protocol.
References
- Yang, Yaling; Wang, Jun; Kravets, Robin (26 September 2005). Designing Routing Metrics for Mesh Networks (PDF). First IEEE Workshop on Wireless Mesh Networks (WiMesh-2005). IEEE. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 April 2012. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
- Subramanian, Anand Prabhu; Buddhikot, Milind M; Miller, Scott (25 September 2006). Interference Aware Routing in Multi-Radio Wireless Mesh Networks (PDF). IEEE Workshop Wireless Mesh Networks (WiMesh 2006). pp. 55–63.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.