Title: intERLab
1DUMBO an Emergency Network in Action Kanchana
Kanchanasut Computer Science School of
Engineering and Technology Asian Institute of
Technology Hajemi Tazaki WIDE Project,
Japan Witt Hmone Interlab, Asian Institute of
Technology
2Background
- During times of disasters, such as an earthquake
or tsunami, communications infrastructure has
most likely been damaged or destroyed. - Rescue and recovery efforts are usually hampered
by communications failure. - Ad-hoc communication facilities must be quickly
put in place to support the command, control and
coordination in the rescue and recovery
operations.
3Plan
- Introduction
- Emergency Network
- About the project
- Design considerations
- Physical components
- Networks
- Mesh vs Centralized
- OLSR vs AODV
- Experimental results
- Measurements and Analysis
- Conclusions
4Plan
- Introduction
- Emergency Network
- About the project
- Design considerations
- Physical components
- Networks
- Mesh vs Centralized
- OLSR vs AODV
- Experimental results
- Measurements and Analysis
- Conclusions
5Post-Disaster Crisis Management
- Collaboration and Communications are the key
- Can we always rely on existing communication
infrastructure?
Source http//www.molokaihealthguide.com/images/
6Disaster and Infrastructure
Mobile Switching Center (MSC)
Public Switched Telephone Network
BS
Local Branch
Local Branch
BS
BS
7Telephony Networks Congestion or Damage
Mobile Switching Center (MSC)
Public Switched Telephone Network
BS
Local Branch
Local Branch
BS
BS
8Hurricane Katrina
- After surviving Hurricane Katrina's initial
blow, the radio communications system for the New
Orleans police and fire departments dissolved as
its radio towers lost their backup power
generators in the ensuing flood. - Some of the equipment could have been brought
back up quickly, except that technicians were
blocked from entering the submerged city for
three days by state troopers who were themselves
struggling with an overwhelmed radio system from
a different manufacturer. - With regular phone and cellular service knocked
out in Katrina's wake -- the New Orleans mayor's
office had to cobble together an Internet phone
link with the outside world -- first responders
were simply unable to share essential
information. -- LiveScience.com
9Communication in Emergency Scenario
- Traditionally walkie-talkies (Push-to-Talk) or
two-way terrestrial radios have been the choice
for rescue scenarios - Push-to-Talk (PTT) service broadcasts voice
information in short bursts to all receivers in
the channel. - PTT provides robust analog voice communication
only for short to medium ranges, up to several
kilometers. - No multimedia content and not a networking
solution.
10Why multimedia?
- Post-Disaster Communications
- Text, e-mail and instant messaging
- Map, location information and GIS
- Graphics, images and Video
11Why a network solution?
- A network solution is necessary to provide
services like - e-mail, instant messages, video/voice,
information sharing and geographical location
information thus enable delivery of
mission-critical multimedia data between rescue
team members locally and their headquarter over
extremely long distances. - Data network is interoperable with the global
internet.
12About DUMBO Project
- Interlab, AIT, Thailand
- Hipercom Project, INRIA, France
- WIDE Project, Japan
- With partners
- I2R (Singapore), Live!E Project (Japan)
- DUMBO I demonstration Dec 2006
- DUMBO II demonstration Oct 2008
13Plan
- Introduction
- Emergency Network
- About the project
- Design considerations
- Physical components
- Networks
- Mesh vs Centralized
- OLSR vs AODV
- Experimental results
- Measurements and Analysis
- Conclusions
14Design Considerations
- Use of day-to-day equipments laptops, PC and
PDAs - Minimum technical training required
self-configuring/healing - Able to meet the diversity of requirements in the
emergency situation, thus wireless solution - Long range communication by satellite links or
WiMax - For the short range requirement, commercial
solutions with widely available IEEE 802.11 - Multimedia Applications
- Rich conversations, sensor integration, face
recognition
15DUMBO06Wireless Mesh Network and satellite
Internet Satellite
Field Satellite Access
IP Star Uplink
MANET OLSR
IP Star Gateway
Field Satellite Access
Terrestrial Internet
MANET OLSR
Simulated Disaster Area 2
sensor
Simulated Head Command Center (AIT)
Simulated Disaster Area 1
16Mesh vs. Centralized
17Two conflicting schools
Access Point
wireless centralized scheme
wireless meshed scheme
- Ref Philippe Jacquet, HIPERCOM Project,INRIA
18Facts and figures
mesh with node density 10,000
capacity ratio per ha
mesh with node density 1,000
multi-centralized scheme
mesh with node density 100
- Ref Philippe Jacquet,
- HIPERCOM. INRIA
access point density
19- Centralized schemes and mesh schemes have same
interference problems - Mesh schemes scale better
- offer better flexibility
- adapt to and benefit from node density
- Ref Philippe Jacquet, HIPERCOM Project,INRIA
20OLSR vs AODV
- Choice of Mobile Ad Hoc Network Protocol
- Optimized Link State Routing
- or
- Ad Hoc On-Demand Distance Vector
21OLSR
- Though consume resources in keeping up-to-date
routing information, it is more efficient of
sporadic network traffic with less overhead - Cross-layered applications sharing Hello and
Topology Information control messages
22OLSR
- IETF RFC 3626
- Table-driven proactive protocol
- OLSR reduces control traffic by using Multipoint
Relays (MPRs) instead of pure flooding the
network - Network topology maintained periodically
- Implementations (Open source)
- INRIA (http//hipercom.inria.fr/olsr/ )
- Unik ( http//www.olsr.org )
- NRL (http//cs.itd.nrl.navy.mil/work/olsr/index.ph
p )
23Plan
- Introduction
- Emergency Network
- About the project
- Design considerations
- Physical components
- Networks
- Mesh vs Centralized
- OLSR vs AODV
- Experimental results
- Measurements and Analysis
- Conclusions
24Multimedia Communications for Disaster Emergency
Responses
- Interactive Video, Voice, and Instant Messaging
- very important to situational awareness
- Peer-to-Peer Paradigm ( no centralized server )
25Experimental Testbed
26Climate Sensors
Courtesy of Live E!
27Face Recognition System
Face Recognition to search and identify people
28Test Scenarios
- The testbed experimentation is divided into two
scenarios - Intra-team communications between nodes within
the same MANET (referred to as Testbed Scenario A
or just Scenario A) - and Inter-team communications between nodes in
different MANETs (referred to as Testbed Scenario
B or just Scenario B).
29Throughput from 4 streams of Video to HQ
301. VOIP measurement and analysisby Ge Yu Julia,
I2R
- PING results and E-model
- We can clearly see that only the G.711 codec
produces a toll quality in Scenario A, and when
we add Packet Loss Concealment (PLC), the quality
improves by 20. - The results in Scenario B (satellite link
included) cannot meet the requirement of VoIP. - However, for Scenario B, Push-to-talk (PTT) is a
possible solution, because the PTT has relaxed
requirements compared to typical interactive
VoIP.
312. MPR selection
- MPR selection problem across a high-delay bridged
VPN. - Node A may see M and N as its 1-hop neighbor if
we bridge M and N through a high-delay link.
323. Jitter
- Audio -- Not very different on path B and C
- Video -- Significant different
33Plan
- Introduction
- Emergency Network
- About the project
- Design considerations
- Physical components
- Networks
- Mesh vs Centralized
- OLSR vs AODV
- Experimental results
- Measurements and Analysis
- Conclusions
34What have we learnt?
- OLSR with long delay link
- Need MPR selection modification
- Observations
- WiFi equipements have a proclivity to connect
with equipments of the same type - Packet loss rates varies significantly with
devices in use - Next
- Connection to the Internet
- MANET and NEMO
- Cross-layered P2P application
35Thank You
Postal AddressP.O. Box 4, Klong
LuangPathumthani 12120,ThailandDirect
line(66-2)524-6611Fax(66-2)524-6618Email
info at interlab.ait.ac.thhttp//www.interlab.ait
.ac.th