Ad hoc wireless distribution service

Ad hoc Wireless Distribution Service (AWDS) is a layer 2 routing protocol to connect mobile ad hoc networks, sometimes called wireless mesh networks. It is based on a link-state routing protocol, similar to OLSR. Ad hoc Wireless Distribution Service (AWDS) is a layer 2 routing protocol to connect mobile ad hoc networks, sometimes called wireless mesh networks. It is based on a link-state routing protocol, similar to OLSR. AWDS uses a link-state routing protocol for organizing the network. In contrast to other implementations like OLSR it operates in layer 2. That means no IP addresses must be assigned because the unique MAC addresses of the WLAN hardware is used instead. Furthermore, all kinds of layer 3 protocols can be used, like IP, DHCP, IPv6, IPX, etc. The protocol daemon creates a virtual network interface, which can be used by the kernel like a typical LAN interface. The ad hoc routing protocol list contains a large set of alternatives. However, most of them are academic and do not exist as practical implementations.

[ "Optimized Link State Routing Protocol", "Location-based routing", "Interior Gateway Routing Protocol", "Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance for Wireless", "Stochastic geometry models of wireless networks", "Intra-flow interference" ]
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