29-03-2017, 03:25 PM
AODV is a routing protocol for ad hoc mobile networks with a large number of mobile nodes. The protocol algorithm creates routes between nodes only when routes are requested by the source nodes, giving the network the flexibility to allow nodes to enter and exit the network at will. Routes remain active as long as the data packets are traveling along paths from the source to the destination. When the source stops sending packets, the path will be exhausted and closed.
Ad hoc Distance to Distance Distance (AODV) routing is a routing protocol for ad hoc mobile networks (MANET) and other wireless ad hoc networks. It was jointly developed in July 2003 at the Nokia Research Center, University of California, Santa Barbara and the University of Cincinnati by C. Perkins, E. Belding-Royer and S. Das.
AODV is the routing protocol used in ZigBee. There are several implementations of AODV such as MAD-HOC, Kernel-AODV, AODV-UU, AODV-UCSB and AODV-UIUC.
Ad hoc Distance to Distance Distance (AODV) routing is a routing protocol for ad hoc mobile networks (MANET) and other wireless ad hoc networks. It was jointly developed in July 2003 at the Nokia Research Center, University of California, Santa Barbara and the University of Cincinnati by C. Perkins, E. Belding-Royer and S. Das.
AODV is the routing protocol used in ZigBee. There are several implementations of AODV such as MAD-HOC, Kernel-AODV, AODV-UU, AODV-UCSB and AODV-UIUC.