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Explore terminal reliability in wired networks and the impact of handoff mechanisms in wireless CORBA architecture for seamless connectivity. Identify system states, component failures, and the influence of mobility on system reliability.
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Expected-Reliability Analysis for Wireless CORBA with Imperfect Components Xinyu Chen and Michael R. Lyu Department of Computer Science and Engineering The Chinese Univ. of Hong Kong
Handoff: a mechanism for a Mobile Host to seamlessly change a connection from one Access Bridge to another Access Bridge Mobile Host Static Host Wired Link Radio Link Cell Home Location Agent Wireless CORBA Architecture Wired Network
Outline • Background • Definitions and assumptions • Expected-reliability analysis for different communication schemes • Conclusions
Reliability • T – a random variable representing the lifetime of a component • f(t) – the probability density function of T • R(t) – the reliability function of the component
Mean Time to Failure (MTTF) • Mean Time to Failure (MTTF) • the expected value of the lifetime T
7 1 S 3 4 6 T 2 5 Two-Terminal Reliability in Wired Networks • Assumption: • Nodes or links experience failures • The probability that there exists an operating path from a source node to a target node
Why Expected-Reliability • Terminal mobility introduces handoff • Handoff causes the change of number and type of engaged communication components, then results in different system states
Expected-Reliability • Two-terminal expected-reliability at time t • Qs(t) • the probability of the system in state s at time t • Rs(t) • the reliability of the system in state s at time t • Mean Time to Failure
Assumptions • There will always be a reliable path in the wired network • The wireless link failure is negligible • All the four components, AB, MS, SH, and HLA, of wireless CORBA are failure-prone and fail independently
The Reliability of the System in State s at Time t • Rs(t) • n(s) – the number of engaged components in system state s • Ri(t) – the reliability of the ith component • c – the type of a component • mh, ab, sh, or hla • kc(s) – the number of component c in state s
Assumptions (cont’d) • The failure parameters for the four components, MH, AB, SH, and HLA, are constant, which are , , , and , respectively • The MH’s sojourn time with an AB and the handoff completion time are exponentially distributed with parameters and , respectively
Four Communication Schemes • Static Host to Static Host (SS) • a traditional communication scheme • Mobile Host to Static Host (MS) • Static Host to Mobile Host (SM) • Mobile Host to Mobile Host (MM)
Handoff completion rate Handoff rate Two-Terminal MTTF of the MS Scheme
The SM Scheme • Mobile Interoperable Object Reference (MIOR) • The LOCATION_FORWARD message
Time-Dependent Reliability Importance • It measures the contribution of component-reliability to the system expected-reliability
General Two-Terminal MTTF • nm MHs and ns SHs • Each MH or SH has the same probability to initiate a communication
Conclusions • Define the expected-reliability to embody the mobility characteristic introduced by handoff • Observe: • The failure parameters of MH, AB, and SH behave similarly on the MTTF; however, the failure parameter of HLA takes little effect on the MTTF • If the handoff happens frequently, we should improve the performance of the handoff completion and location forwarding mechanism • The general two-terminal MTTF increases with the number of SHs but decreases with the number of MHs. • Identify the reliability importance of each component with respect to the expected-reliability