Welcome to the first ACM/IEEE International Workshop on Mobility in the Evolving Internet Architecture (MobiArch 2006) in San Francisco, California! We are delighted to see the workshop has attracted high quality submissions from international researchers in both academia and industry.With the recent development of technologies in wireless access and mobile devices, terminal and network mobility has become an indispensable aspect of today's Internet vision, and this is likely to become yet more important in the future. However, issues like efficient mobility management and optimization, locator-identifier split, multi-homing, security and related operational/deployment concerns are still in their early stages of development. Moreover, the Internet architecture, its end-to-end principles and business models will surely require rethinking due to the massive penetration of mobility into the Internet. This workshop provides the opportunity to participate in the exploration of the state of the art research results.Highlights of the workshop include two keynote speeches to be given by Charles Perkins and Henning Schulzrinne, world-renowned researchers in the fields of Internet mobility and multimedia protocols. In addition, a panel session is offered to discuss technical challenges and future directions associated with various aspects of mobile networking and its impacts on the evolving Internet architecture.The technical sessions consist of presentation and discussion of the 11 accepted papers on a wide variety of issues of mobility support in the Internet architecture, such as future network architectures, network-, transport-, and application-layer approaches, robustness, handover performance and scalability, as well as security and privacy. These papers were selected from 33 submissions, written by approximately 80 authors from 15 different countries. The selected papers were chosen by a technical program committee (TPC) of 22 experts in the field. The selection process started shortly after the submission deadline. Each paper was assigned to at least three TPC members, which included at least one member from industry and one from academia. The papers were evaluated based on scientific novelty, technical quality, relevance to the topics, and contribution to the field. There was also an intense TPC discussion phase following the review process.We hope all of you enjoy MobiArch 2006 and a pleasant weekend in San Francisco. We look forward to seeing you at MobiArch 2007 in Kyoto, Japan.
Proceeding Downloads
Ad Hoc networks, IETF, and convergence in solution space
Within the IETF, the working group for Mobile Ad Hoc Networking (MANET) has recently made new steps towards standardizing new routing protocols. In particular, there is now a document specifying a new protocol called DYMO (for Dynamic Mobile Networks).I ...
Ad Hoc Networks, IETF, and convergence in solution space: extended abstract
Ad hoc networks are autonomous collections of devices that establish connectivity without the need for infrastructure devices. Typically, the network links are modeled as wireless links and the network nodes are considered able to move freely, so that ...
User mobility in IEEE 802.11 networks
We observed wireless network traffic at the 65th IETF Meeting in Dallas, Texas in March of 2006, attended by approximately 1200 engineers. We observed distinct differences among client implementations and saw a number of factors that made the overall ...
User mobility in IEEE 802.11 networks: extended abstract
We observed wireless network traffic at the 65th IETF Meeting in Dallas, Texas in March of 2006, attended by approximately 1200 engineers. We observed distinct differences among client implementations and saw a number of factors that made the overall ...
CogNet: an architectural foundation for experimental cognitive radio networks within the future internet
- Dipankar Raychaudhuri,
- Narayan B. Mandayam,
- Joseph B. Evans,
- Benjamin J. Ewy,
- Srinivasan Seshan,
- Peter Steenkiste
This paper describes a framework for research on architectural tradeoffs and protocol designs for cognitive radio networks at both the local network and the global internetwork levels. Several key architectural issues for cognitive radio networks are ...
MobiSplit: a scalable approach to emerging mobility networks
This paper presents a novel architecture, MobiSplit, to manage mobility in future IP based networks. The proposed architecture separates mobility management in two levels, local and global, that are managed in completely independent ways. The paper ...
Mobility architecture for the global internet
A variety of approaches have been made in various kinds of access networks to create workable IP mobility solutions for mobile devices. Although most of these approaches are host-based, there is a perceived need for network-based IP mobility solutions. ...
Deploying home agent load sharing in operational mobile IPv6 networks
Mobile IPv6 (MIPv6) is a protocol standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in order to provide mobility support for roaming host systems. A key component within the MIPv6 functionality is the Home Agent (HA), a system at which roaming ...
Signalling cost analysis of SINEMO: seamless end-to-end network mobility
IETF has proposed Mobile IPv6-based Network Mobility (NEMO) basic support protocol (BSP) to support network mobility. NEMO BSP inherits all the drawbacks of Mobile IPv6, such as inefficient routing path, single point of failure, high handover latency ...
Optimized FMIPv6 handover using IEEE802.21 MIH services
The emerging IEEE802.21 standard defines Media Independent Handover Functions (MIHF) that assist mobile nodes to seamlessly roam across heterogeneous access networks. The aim of this paper is to present a mechanism which uses existing IEEE802.21 MIH ...
GSABA: a generic service authorization architecture
- Florian Kohlmayer,
- Hannes Tschofenig,
- Rainer Falk,
- Rafa Marin Lopez,
- Santiago Zapata Hernandez,
- Pedro García Segura,
- Antonio F. Gómez Skarmeta
Bootstrapping refers to the process of creating state (typically security associations, configuration and authorization information) between two or more entities based on a trust relationship between a trusted third party and two or more entities. The ...
HIP location privacy framework
Privacy and security are key aspects in future network architectures. The Host Identity Protocol (HIP) is a new proposal which decouples identifiers from locators and may eventually replace conventional addressing and network transport. In this document ...
Protecting mobile devices from TCP flooding attacks
Network firewalls have played a crucial role in reducing unwanted traffic by blocking unsolicited incoming data. However, for many new environments, (such as in peer-to-peer networks and certain new scenarios where wireless terminals act as servers) not ...
Towards more expressive transport-layer interfaces
The individual layers in the Internet protocol stack provide communication abstractions that expose a limited set of operations and information and otherwise hide layer-internal and lower-layer complexities. This paper argues that the communication ...
Application protocol design considerations for a mobile internet
The Internet protocols were designed for a primarily "fixed" and relatively static network environment where communication links are stable and exhibit fairly uniform communication characteristics. Mobile wireless communication has fundamentally ...
Recommendations
Acceptance Rates
Year | Submitted | Accepted | Rate |
---|---|---|---|
MobiArch'20 | 15 | 9 | 60% |
MobiArch '16 | 12 | 6 | 50% |
MobiArch '15 | 18 | 6 | 33% |
MobiArch '14 | 17 | 11 | 65% |
MobiArch '13 | 16 | 8 | 50% |
MobiArch '11 | 14 | 7 | 50% |
Overall | 92 | 47 | 51% |