This article possibly contains original research. (July 2021) |
Geocast refers to the delivery of information to a subset of destinations in a wireless peer-to-peer network identified by their geographical locations. It is used by some mobile ad hoc network routing protocols, but not applicable to Internet routing.
Geographic addressing
editRouting schemes |
---|
Unicast |
Broadcast |
Multicast |
Anycast |
A geographic destination address is expressed in three ways: point, circle (with center point and radius), and polygon (a list of points, e.g., P(1), P(2), ..., P(n–1), P(n)). A geographic router (Geo Router) calculates its service area (geographic area it serves) as the union of the geographic areas covered by the networks attached to it. This service area is approximated by a single closed polygon. Geo Routers exchange service area polygons to build routing tables. The routers are organized in a hierarchy.
Applications
editGeographic addressing and routing has many potential applications in geographic messaging, geographic advertising, delivery of geographically restricted services, and presence discovery of a service or mobile network participant in a limited geographic area (see Navas, Imieliński, 'GeoCast - Geographic Addressing and Routing'.[1])
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Navas, J.C.; Imieliński, T. (1997). "GeoCast---geographic addressing and routing". Proceedings of the 3rd annual ACM/IEEE international conference on Mobile computing and networking - MobiCom '97. pp. 66–76. doi:10.1145/262116.262132. ISBN 0897919882. S2CID 17662140.
External links
edit- RFC 2009 GPS-Based Addressing and Routing
- A Survey of Geocast Routing Protocols
- Efficient Point to Multipoint Transfers Across Datacenters