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Friday | 5 December, 2008
Disruption-tolerant nets set for large-scale test
Phase 3 of DARPA project will demonstrate a large-scale DTN in the field
John Cox (Network World) 25/08/2008 12:51:00

Scientists at BBN Technologies have begun readying a large-scale field test of a mobile network designed to keep working despite transmission failures, glitches and long delays.

The test is the third phase of a US Department of Defense project to create disruption-tolerant networks, or DTNs. It builds on a field prototype of 20 nodes that was successfully demonstrated last November at the US Army's Fort A.P. Hill. The large-scale trial, due in late 2009, is intended to show that big DTNs are not only possible, but also commercially viable and able to be built with off-the-shelf, standard components.

To fund Phase 3, the US Defense Department's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) just awarded almost US$9 million to BBN. Key priorities involve work on DTN scalability and robustness to support thousands of nodes, and designing and implementing new algorithms for several key tasks. The BBN team also will be working with the US Marines to introduce DTN into the Marines' CONDOR mobile network program, which is designed to link maneuvering units with command centers beyond line-of-sight (about 20 to 30 miles).

Though driven by military networking requirements, DTNs potentially have a much wider applicability. They can sustain communications without the stability, connectivity and predictability required by today's IP networks, including the Internet. If these networks lose a connection or suffer delays, packet deliveries plummet because the existing routing protocols assume an end-to-end path that becomes stable fairly quickly. But those assumptions break down in the face of repeated disconnections and long delays, which can be caused by equipment failures, weather, terrain or jamming.

One civilian prototype is the DieselNet project at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. DieselNet consists of off-the-shelf single-board computers, GPS receivers and radios mounted in 40 UMass buses. As two buses near each other, their DTN nodes query each other to find out what other nodes each sees most frequently. If one of those other nodes is related to the final network destination of a message, that message is handed off to the passing node in the seconds they're close enough for the Wi-Fi connection. At some point, the message is handed to a node attached to the wired Internet.

Central to DTN's effectiveness is the technology's tenacity.

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