2015
DOI: 10.4236/cn.2015.72012
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Comparative Study of Proactive, Reactive and Geographical MANET Routing Protocols

Abstract: Mobile Ad-hoc Network (MANET) is defined as a combination of mobile nodes that lack a fixed infrastructure and is quickly deployable under any circumstances. These nodes have self-aware architecture and are able to move in multiple directions, which renders it dynamic topology. Its dynamicity makes routing in MANET rather challenging compared to fixed wired networks. This paper aims to perform a comparative study on the three categories of MANET routing protocol by comparing their characteristics and operation… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Many different routing protocols for MANET have been developed over the years. These protocols are broadly classified into three types: proactive, reactive, and hybrid routing protocols (Abdulleh et al, 2015). Because of the challenges that MANETs pose to related protocols, it has become one of the most popular areas of research in recent years (Ankur & Prabhakar, 2013).…”
Section: Background Of Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many different routing protocols for MANET have been developed over the years. These protocols are broadly classified into three types: proactive, reactive, and hybrid routing protocols (Abdulleh et al, 2015). Because of the challenges that MANETs pose to related protocols, it has become one of the most popular areas of research in recent years (Ankur & Prabhakar, 2013).…”
Section: Background Of Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In GPSR, a source node sends the data packet to the destination through greedy forwarding scheme where node forwards packets to its neighbor node that is closest to the destination node [1]. Forwarding in this strategy follows successively closer geographic hops until the destination is reached.…”
Section: 2gpsr Routing Protocolmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Every node whoever receives the route request message does few things, first it check whether the ID is new or not, if it is new then neighbors node check whether the destination address matches with its own address or not, if it matches then it give reply, if the address does not match & RREQ is new message then broadcast that message further that is called flooding. This protocol maintains a sequence number for a fresh route and keeps table entries according to fresh route information [25]. The main difference between DSR and AODV is that in AODV, the source node & the middle node will store the next hop information but in DSR every outgoing packet will have complete route information from the source to the destination.…”
Section: Ad Hoc On-demand Distance Vector Routing In Smart Environmentioning
confidence: 99%