1. Introduction
Presently, a wide range of industrial and automation applications adopt Industrial Wireless Sensor Networks (IWSNs) to benefit from the deployment flexibility and the support for a large number of mobile nodes that these networks offer. In this context, the IEEE 802.15.4 standard [
1] is one of the most widely used technologies, as it supports different kinds of traffic through different medium access strategies, such as TDMA, CSMA/CA and prioritized channel access (PCA) [
2]. In 2012, the IEEE 802.15.4e [
3] amendment introduced three new Medium Access Control (MAC) protocols, namely the Deterministic and Synchronous Multichannel Extension (DSME), the Time Slotted Channel Hopping (TSCH) [
4] and the Low Latency Deterministic Network (LLDN) [
5]. Later, DSME and TSCH were included in the IEEE 802.15.4-2015 standard.
DSME is a MAC protocol designed for critical application domains with stringent requirements, such as, deterministic delay, high reliability, and adaptability to changes in the network traffic and operating conditions. DSME uses frequency hopping to mitigate the effects of external interference [
6].
As discussed in [
7,
8], DSME is particularly suitable for several industrial, commercial and healthcare applications, such as factory automation, home automation, smart metering, smart buildings, and patient monitoring. DSME can be successfully used in solar tower power plant industries [
9], in WSN applications such as outdoor monitoring (as those reported in [
10,
11]) and in other applications [
12] in which the number of network nodes or the generated data flows change over time [
7] in response to an external event. For instance, the work in [
13] discusses the use of DSME in surveillance systems, such as temperature reading or low-resolution images and video, in which devices send a small amount of data. In particular, in the addressed use cases, the bitrate of a video stream increases upon movement detection and the sample time of a pollution monitoring system decreases when the guard levels are exceeded.
DSME uses a tree topology made up of a root node (named the
PAN-Coordinator), one or multiple
coordinators, and one or multiple
end-nodes [
1]. The end-nodes receive (transmit) data only from (to) their own coordinators. The end nodes use beacons to synchronize with the network time.
The network time is divided into multiple
beacon intervals, each one containing
multi-superframes. Each multi-superframe is divided, in turn, into
superframes. The parameters BO, MO and SO (named
Beacon order,
Multi-superframe order and
Superframe order, respectively) are configurable. Each superframe, as it is shown in
Figure 1, includes the beacon slot and two sections for data transmission, i.e., the Contention Access Period (CAP) and the Contention-Free Period (CFP).
The CAP is used to transmit the aperiodic traffic. During the CAP, no scheduling of source-destination node pairs is used, therefore each node can start the transmission according to the CSMA/CA access mechanism. Conversely, the CFP is divided into multiple GTSs that are used to transmit periodic traffic in a TDMA-like strategy. The duration of the CAP and of the CFP slots is customizable.
DSME provides diverse additional options, such as the CAP reduction and the Group Acknowledgement (ACK). The former enables CAP only in the first superframe of a multi-superframe, thus providing the remaining superframes in the multi-superframe with a longer CFP, i.e., 15 GTSs instead of 7. The latter option, instead, allows aggregating the ACK of multiple frames into a single ACK frame, thus improving the energy efficiency. The Group ACK also allows specifying a GTS for the retransmissions of the frames not correctly received and reduces the delay, as it provides a retransmission opportunity within the same multi-superframe in which the original frame was transmitted.
Motivation. In DSME, each GTS within the multi-superframe can be assigned to at most one flow. If the flow period is longer than the multi-superframe period, bandwidth waste occurs, as some of the GTSs reserved to the flow will not be used. Moreover, the rigid structure of the multi-superframe impairs scalability [
4], because in DSME the number of superframes can be set only to powers of 2 (i.e., 1, 2, 4, 16, and so on). As a result, the multi-superframe length exponentially grows, and, with the CAP reduction enabled, this results in a low CAP frequency (i.e., one CAP every multi-superframe) and, therefore, in high delays in the transmission of the aperiodic messages. A preliminary approach to cope with the DSME scalability problem is addressed in the work [
14] which, however, provide neither a detailed design of the approach nor an extensive performance evaluation. In addition, the work in [
14] does not address the DSME reliability.
Contributions. This work proposes the enhanceD-DSME (D-DSME) extensions, i.e., two novel extensions that improve the DSME scalability and reliability. The first one, named Shareable D-DSME, allows GTSs to be shared among multiple periodic flows when the flow period is longer than the multi-superframe period. This improves scalability, as more flows can be scheduled without increasing the multi-superframe size and, therefore, without increasing the average delays for the aperiodic messages transmitted in the CAP, as the CAP frequency obtained using the D-DSME is higher than or equal to the one in the standard DSME protocol.
The second extension, named Mirror D-DSME, allows using the same GTSs for both message transmission and retransmissions. This feature improves reliability, as a message is retransmitted multiple times.
Henceforward, we will use the D-DSME acronym to refer to both the extensions, i.e., the Shareable and the Mirror DSME.
Organization. The paper is organized as follows.
Section 2 deals with related work.
Section 3 describes the Shareable D-DSME extension, while
Section 4 presents the Mirror D-DSME extension.
Section 5 provides a comparative performance assessment of DSME and D-DSME.
Section 6 presents a proof-of-concept implementation of D-DSME that demonstrates the feasibility of the proposed extensions. Finally,
Section 7 gives conclusions and hints for future work.
2. Related Work
Several works addressed the features and performance of the IEEE 802.15.4 standard. For instance, the works in [
15,
16] address the real-time capabilities of IEEE 802.15.4, while in [
5,
17] multichannel approaches to improve the protocol scalability were proposed.
Recently, thanks to its ability to cope with timing and reliability requirements, the DSME protocol is gaining ground over the plain IEEE 802.15.4 for general industrial and commercial applications. Consequently, several researchers showed high interest in assessing the protocol and in devising solutions to further improve its performance. As far as interference mitigation is concerned, a DSME device in channel adaptation mode switches to another available channel if the received signal quality is less than a threshold value [
18,
19]. The work in [
19] considered a single interfering IEEE 802.11b (WiFi) source and evaluated the error frame rate introduced in a DSME network, for different traffic loads and power levels of the WiFi transmission. As the simulation results show, the frame error rate cannot exceed 25% in DSME, since a WiFi channel can overlap with at most four (out of 16) of the channels used in DSME. Hence, DSME can exploit the channels that are not affected by WiFi transmissions to communicate without interference. Other approaches in the literature, such as [
20], propose a new superframe structure in order to mitigate the problems of WiFi and ZigBee interference. As far as throughput and energy consumption are concerned, the assessment in [
18] shows that the DSME protocol with the CAP reduction enabled performs better than the plain IEEE 802.15.4 protocol. The works in [
21,
22] introduce some enhancements for DSME to reduce both the energy consumption of the end nodes during the CAP and the network discovery time.
In [
23] the authors propose a novel DSME access scheme that divides the network nodes in multiple subsets, each one associated with a CAP slot in the beacon interval. During each CAP slot, only the nodes in the related subset perform channel contention. This way, the probability of collision between transmitting nodes is reduced and a lower number or retransmissions are required. In addition, an improved slot allocation scheme for CFP section is adopted. When a GTS transmission fails, the next CAP slot within the multi-superframe is used for retransmission. The proposed access scheme can reduce delay and power consumption. However, it is intended only for a star topology (not for a mesh topology). The work in [
24] addresses the integration of RPL (IPv6 Routing Protocol for Low Power and Lossy Networks) and proposes Symphony for DSME, a dynamic GTS scheduling algorithm that integrates RPL over DSME to provide a QoS efficient schedule for GTS placement. However, this approach implies that the network schedule is repeated periodically. Thus, every time a cyclic-scheduling allocation problem needs to be solved. In addition, the devices must implement the protocol stack proposed in [
24].
A new DSME implementation, called openDSME, is presented in [
25]. The authors also propose a method for traffic-aware and decentralized slot scheduling in order to realize scalable IWSNs. It is a versatile solution, as it does not require routing information and therefore it can be used with any routing protocol. The works in [
26,
27] propose a scheduling algorithm, implemented using RPL integration and OpenDSME, which changes dynamically the multi-superframe structure as a function of the current number of network nodes, in order to reduce transmission delays.
The work in [
28] proposes a DSME-based distributed scheduling algorithm for mobility support that adaptively assigns GTSs based on the network traffic of each node, thus improving the network reliability and timeliness.
Differently from D-DSME, the solutions proposed in [
13,
23,
24,
25,
26,
27,
28] do not address any sharing mechanism to improve the GTSs use, i.e., the ratio between the number of GTSs actually used and the number of the assigned ones, when the flow period is larger than the multi-superframe one. Moreover, they do not support unconfirmed retransmission of multiple replicas of the same message in order to improve reliability. Recently, the growing interest in DSME has also fostered the development and release of open-source implementations. Among them there are [
9,
25,
29].
3. Shareable D-DSME Extension
In the DSME multi-superframe, each node is assigned one or multiple GTSs for the transmission of messages belonging to one flow. In
Figure 2 the multi-superframe contains two superframes (
). There are 15 periodic real-time flows, 8 of them 1…8} with period
and 7 of them
with period
. In the plain DSME schedule, 15 GTSs are assigned for these flows within one multi-superframe. The slots assigned to the flows
are not always used, as
is larger than the multi-superframe duration
.
The
Shareable D-DSME extension introduces the
Shareable GTS (shGTS), which can be shared among multiple periodic flows, i.e., the ones with a period
, transmitted by the same or different nodes. Thanks to the
shGTS, Shareable D-DSME can schedule the same flows as DSME using a lower number of GTSs. This features results in more free CFP slots that can be used either to enable the CAP in each superframe (as shown in the example in
Figure 2) or to accommodate new periodic flows.
In the D-DSME schedule shown in
Figure 2, the
shGTSs with index
are assigned to the flows
in the MSF 1 and to the flows
in the MSF 2. This way, the flows 5-8 can be transmitted in the same GTSs assigned to flows 1-4, but with an offset (i.e., a shift) of
. Instead, the GTSs
and
are assigned in every MSF to the flows
and
, respectively. No sharing is possible for these flows, as
.
The D-DSME does not restrict the applicability of DSME to centralized architectures, as it also support mesh topologies. The two following subsections describe the DSME and the D-DSME allocation procedures, respectively.
3.1. Plain DSME Allocation Procedure
The GTSs in the CFP are allocated using a distributed procedure [
1], suitable for operating in a mesh network. In order to support the operation, each node maintains two items in memory:
the macDSMEACT table, which contains all the slots in the multi-superframe in which the node is source or destination;
the macDSMESAB mask, which contains all the slots in the multi-superframe that the node knows to be busy.
When a node X needs to allocate a slot to transmit to a destination node Y, it sends to Y a DSME_GTS_REQUEST message (hereinafter named ) containing:
the item macDSMESAB(X), i.e., the current macDSMESAB mask of node X;
the identifier of the slot that node X requests to allocate.
The node Y performs the OR operation between its own current macDSMESAB(Y) mask and the macDSMESAB(X) field in the received . If the bit corresponding to the required slot in the OR-ed result is unset, there is no conflict (at least, in the knowledge of X and Y) and Y can allocate the slot to X. In such a case, the destination node Y updates its local macDSMESAB(Y) mask and sends in broadcast a DSME_GTS_RESPONSE message (hereinafter named ) to all the other nodes, indicating the address of the source node X and the id of the newly allocated slot.
When the node X receives from Y, updates its local macDSMESAB(X) mask and macDSMEACT(X) table. Next, the node X sends a DSME_GTS_NOTIFY message (hereinafter named ) in broadcast to all the other nodes, indicating the address of Y and the id of the newly allocated slot.
The and messages are sent broadcast. This way, all the neighbours of the nodes X and Y are informed that a new slot was allocated, so they can mantain a consistent view of the busy slots. When a node Z in the neighbourhood of X and Y receives or , it verifies that there is no conflict on the assigned slot using its local macDSMESAB(Z) mask. If no conflict is detected, the mask is updated. Otherwise, the node Z sends a message to the other nodes and starts a new procedure to handle the conflict.
3.2. EnhanceD DSME Allocation Procedure
In a mesh network running D-DSME, each node sends the allocation request to its nearest coordinator, which re-routes the message (through multi-hop transmissions) towards the PAN-Coordinator. Later, the allocation response generated by the PAN-Coordinator is sent to one coordinator, which re-routes the message (also, in a multi-hop way) towards the destination node. Only scheduling is centralized, as GTS allocation is up to the PAN-Coordinator.
Table 1 summarizes the notation used in this subsection.
The D-DSME allocation procedure is performed in four steps, described as follows:
Step 1. When a node needs to allocate a GTS for a flow
f, it sends a request to the
PAN-Coordinator indicating the flow period. For each
shGTS the
PAN-Coordinator checks if, in the case the new flow is assigned the
s-th
shGTS, the slot use (
) is lower than or equal to 1, i.e.,
where,
are the flows assigned to the
shGTS s (including the new flow
f),
is the period of the
i-th flow and
is the multi-superframe duration. The slot use indicates the ratio of used GTS during the time. For instance, if a flow has period 10s and the multi-superframe duration is 2s, only one GTS out of five will be used for transmitting that flow.
Step 2. If condition (
1) is met, the
PAN-Coordinator tests if an
offset (in terms of the number of multi-superframes), for each flow that shares the
shGTS s, can be found so as to avoid mutual interference. Hence, it checks if the greatest common divisor (GCD) of the flow periods that share the
shGTS s is greater than or equal to the number of flows that share the
shGTS s (
) multiplied by the multi-superframe duration (
), i.e.,
If condition
2 holds, then the
shGTS s can be shared among all the flows belonging to
and consecutive offsets starting from 0 can be assigned to these flows. The
PAN-Coordinator assigns to the flow
f the next consecutive offset
shGTSOffset, calculated as
. If no
shGTS meets both the conditions (
1) and (
2), either the flow will be assigned an unassigned GTS, if any is found, or the allocation request will be rejected.
Step 3. Once a
shGTS is found for the new flow
f and the offset
shGTSOffset is assigned, the
PAN-Coordinator determines the shared GTS Interval
shGTSInterval, i.e., the interval between two consecutive transmissions of a message belonging to the flow
f, expressed in number of multi-superframes. For example, in
Figure 2, the offset
shGTSOffset of the flow 5 is equal to 1 (i.e., one multi-superframe) and its
shGTSInterval is equal to 2 (i.e., the flow 5 can be transmitted in its GTS every two multi-superframes). The
shGTSInterval is calculated as in the following formula:
Step 4. The PAN-Coordinator sends the GTS allocation response to the node indicating the FlowIdentifier f, the shGTSId (i.e., slot id and superframe id of the assigned shGTS within the multi-superframe), the assigned shGTSOffset and the shGTSInterval. Once the response is received, if the allocation was successful, the node requesting the GTS updates its own macDSMESAB mask and its macDSMEACT table, which was modified (compared with the one used in DSME) in order to contain these new data fields. The new GTS assignment is communicated through the beacon to all the other nodes in the network that are compliant with D-DSME. Finally, the node sends a notification message broadcast to all the other nodes, indicating the newly allocated GTSs, in order to mantain compatibility with the nodes compliant with the standard DSME protocol. is sent only if the GTS is allocated to one flow for the first time, while no notification is needed when it is shared multiple times among several flows. This choice is to prevent the nodes that are not compliant with D-DSME from detecting multiple allocation events.
The Shareable D-DSME allocation procedure is up to the PAN-Coordinator. The nodes requesting shGTS allocation have to wait for a response from the PAN-Coordinator, otherwise they cannot use any shGTS. The node that requests a shGTS, after a timeout with no response from the PAN-Coordinator, will retransmit the allocation request. During the allocation phase messages can be lost, i.e., the allocation request or the allocation response can be lost. In the first case, as the node requesting the shGTS allocation does not receive any response, it will retransmit the allocation request. Even in the case that the allocation response is lost, the node requesting the shGTS allocation will retransmit the allocation request. In this case the PAN-Coordinator replies to the node with the same allocation response transmitted following the first request. The process will repeat until either a reply (positive or negative) is received by the node or a timeout elapses. Hence, termination is always guaranteed. Conversely, if the PAN-Coordinator replies to a shGTS request and the node is not able to receive the reply or to transmit other requests (e.g., due to a temporary channel unavailability), the shGTS allocation may result in an inconsistent state. In fact, the shGTS is allocated, but the node cannot use it. However, the inconsistent state has a limited duration, as the node that is not able to communicate will request again a shGTS for the same flow after a given sleep interval and the PAN-Coordinator will reply with the same shGTS previously assigned.
Transmission onshGTSs. The data in the macDSMEACT table are used by each node to know when it can transmit in the assigned
shGTS. First, the node determines the current
multi-superframe id (
). This is done using the index (
) of the superframe that is transmitted by the DSME coordinator in the beacon (Section 7.4.2.5 in [
1]). The
specifies the index of the current superframe in a beacon interval. If each multi-superframe contains
superframes,
.
A node that wants to know if the
shGTS with id equal to
shGTSId within the current multi-superframe is assigned to a flow
f checks if the following condition is met.
If condition
4 is met, then the
shGTS with id equal to
shGTSId is used to transmit the frames of the flow
f.
4. Mirror D-DSME Extension
The standard DSME protocol provides two mechanisms that can be used for acknowledgement and retransmissions. In the first mechanism a message is acknowledged in the same GTS, right after the message transmission. The second mechanism is based on the Group ACK option. When the Group ACK option is enabled, two GTSs, namely GACK1 and GACK2, are used to send ACKs. To take advantage of the Group ACK, it is important to assign two GTSs per each flow within a multi-superframe, i.e., one GTS before GACK1 and another GTS between GACK1 and GACK2. This way, the first GTS is used for the frame transmission. If the transmitted frame is not correctly received, i.e., the ACK of that frame is not received in the GACK1 slot, the second allocated GTS, namely GTSR (i.e., GTS for Retransmission), will be used for the frame retransmission. The outcome of the retransmission will be checked during the GACK2 slot. Consequently, the Group ACK option supports retransmissions using GTSs dedicated to this scope, but this increases the number of GTSs required by a flow within the multi-superframe.
If no Ack is received, the source node must retransmit the message. Retransmission is performed using another dedicated GTS, but this increases the number of GTSs required by a flow within the multi-superframe.
In industrial applications, the messages are typically generated with different periods, so it may happen than for some flow and, therefore, some of the GTSs assigned to the flow within the multi-superframe cannot be used for transmission.
The Mirror D-DSME extension introduces
miGTS (Mirror GTS), which exploits these unused GTSs for multiple retransmissions of the same message. For instance, in the scenario shown in
Figure 3 each multi-superframe is made up of one superframe (i.e.,
). In the CFP, 7 flows
are transmitted, with period
. As
, the GTS assigned to a flow
f is used for the transmission only one multi-superframe over four. As a consequence, the GTS can be labelled as
miGTS. This way, the three unused occurrences of the GTS are used for message retransmission. The
miGTS allocation procedure performed by the source node is the same as the standard DSME-GTS allocation one described in
Section 3.1.
The messages transmitted through miGTSs are unconfirmed. No Ack reception is supported, so the source node transmits all the configured replicas of the message, thus leaving to the destination node the task of discarding any received duplicate. This means that miGTS can reduce the packet loss rate (thus improving reliability), but it cannot guarantee that no message is lost. However, this is an acceptable limitation in industrial applications, as the newest value acquired from a sensor is typically more important than a previous value delivered late.
In typical Industrial WSN applications the network nodes are mains-powered devices; however, in recent industrial applications battery-powered nodes can also be found. In this case, using the Mirror D-DSME extension, multiple retransmissions entail an increase in the energy consumption of the transmitting nodes that is directly proportional to the number of retransmissions allowed for each node, i.e., deltaEnergy = MsgTxEnergy x NumOfRetransmissions. Conversely, it is possible to configure the receiving nodes so that they switch to the sleep mode following the correct reception of a message. Hence, a trade-off between the number of allowed retransmissions (i.e., the reliability) and the energy consumption has to be found. As both these parameters are strictly related to the application requirements and the adopted hardware [
30], they have to be tuned during the network design phase.
The miGTSs increase the reliability without requiring the allocation of additional GTSs, thus miGTSs are useful in networks with nodes that require reliable transmissions. In fact, the adoption of the miGTS allows working with several GTSs lower than the one that would be needed using the standard retransmission mechanisms.
5. Performance Assessment
In particular, this section assesses three performance indexes, i.e., scalability, queuing delays for the aperiodic messages transmitted in the CAP, and packet loss ratio. In
Section 5.1 we assess the scalability comparing the number of GTSs required to accommodate all the periodic flows in the case of Shareable DSME-GTS extension enabled and in the case of plain DSME, respectively. For this reason, a network with a star topology is chosen, in which each node generates two periodic flows, with periods multiple of the multi-superframe duration. The simulation is performed increasing the number of nodes. As the assessed metrics, i.e., the number of GTSs required to accommodate all flows, does not depend on the DSME parameters, in this scenario no settings of BO, SO, etc. are needed. Conversely, in the second scenario, discussed in
Section 5.2, the average queueing time for the aperiodic messages transmitted in the CAP is assessed. The aim of this assessment is to give some quantitative insights on the improvement in terms of average delays for aperiodic messages when the Shareable DSME-GTS extension is adopted. In this scenario we consider a fixed number of nodes that transmit aperiodic messages and in each simulation run we vary the number of nodes that transmit periodic messages in the GTS. This way the multi-superframe duration varies and, as a consequence, the CAP frequency also varies. Finally, in the third scenario, presented in
Section 5.3, the packet loss ratio results of the Mirror D-DSME and the plain DSME protocol, under harsh channel conditions, are compared varying the distance between the end-nodes and the
PAN-Coordinator.
5.1. Scalability Assessment
We consider that CAP reduction is enabled as this option is very suitable for networks with stringent requirements in terms of delay and reliability, as discussed in [
8]. As a consequence, the number of superframes (
) within the multi-superframe that is required to support a set of flows (i.e., it contains at least
GTSs) is calculated as:
The
function is used in Equation (
5) because
, according to [
1], must be a power of 2 (i.e.,
). Here we recall that the function
returns the minimum power of 2 that is greater than
x (for instance
).
The number of GTSs required () within the multi-superframe to schedule all the network flows without reaching the network saturation must be calculated in order to assess the scalability.
With the CAP reduction enabled, the number of available GTSs (
) as a function of the number of superframes (
) within the multi-superframe is calculated as
The network saturation point represents the maximum number of nodes for which is less than or equal to , under the assumption that all the nodes generate the same flows.
Algorithm 1 (depicted below) calculates the minimum number of superframes () that contains the GTSs () required to schedule all the flows. When the algorithm starts, a variable named i, i.e., the value of , which determines a “test” number of superframe within a multi-superframe (), is initialized to 0. Moreover, the number of required GTSs is inizialized to 0.
Depending on the flow period, the allocation procedure assigns one or multiple GTSs (shared or not shared) to each flow. Multiple GTSs will be allocated if the flow period is shorter than the multi-superframe length, otherwise only one GTS will be allocated. Firstly, the boolean variable
is initialized to
. After that, for each GTS
s the algorithm tests if Equations (
1) and (
2) are met. In such a case, the GTS
s is assigned to the flow
f and the flow
f is inserted in
, i.e., in the set of flows that were assigned the GTS
s. Furthermore, the variable
is set to true. If no GTS can be assigned to the flow
f, new GTSs (one or multiple) are required. Consequently, the number of required GTSs is updated.
When the allocation procedure is completed, the algorithm uses the Equation (
5) in order to calculate the number of superframe (
) required to host
GTSs. If
, the duration of the current “test” multi-superframe is not sufficient to schedule the flows. In such a case, the algorithm increases the
value by increasing the value of
i. Next, the allocation steps are repeated iteratively for each flow. Otherwise, if
, the algorithm ends. The final value of
provides the MSF duration. The number of “free” GTSs can be calculated as a difference between the
(according to Equation (
6)) and the
.
Algorithm 1: Algorithm used to assess the network scalability. |
- 1:
for i = 0; i < 15; i++ do - 2:
- 3:
- 4:
for all flow f do - 5:
- 6:
for all GTS s do - 7:
if Equation 1 and ( 2) are met then - 8:
insert f to - 9:
- 10:
break - 11:
end if - 12:
end for - 13:
if not then - 14:
- 15:
end if - 16:
end for - 17:
as in Equation ( 5) with - 18:
if then - 19:
return - 20:
end if - 21:
end for
|
To assess the scalability, a network with star topology was simulated using Algorithm 1 implemented from scratch in Python. Each node periodically transmits to the
PAN-Coordinator two kinds of real-time messages (
and
) with periods equal to
and
, respectively. In this assessment no retransmissions and errors are considered, as the aim is to compare the scalability of the standard DSME protocol with and without the D-DSME extensions. The scalability is assessed increasing the number of nodes in the network. The number of GTSs (hence, the number of superframes) within the multi-superframe that are required to schedule all network flows without reaching the network saturation was calculated according to Algorithm 1. The analytical results are shown in
Figure 4.
The D-DSME scenario requires a lower number of slots (dark lines in
Figure 4) compared with the standard DSME (light lines in
Figure 4). This entails a higher scalability even in terms of the number of flows that can be supported. In fact, in the case of 25 nodes (in
Figure 4), the number of available GTSs with 4 superframe is equal to 52. Using the standard DSME protocol 50 out of 52 GTSs are required. Conversely, using the D-DSME only 38 out of 52 GTSs are required, thus there are 14 GTSs that can be assigned to additional flows (12 GTSs more than the standard DSME protocol).
In both scenarios, when there are more than 39 nodes for the DSME and 40 nodes for the D-DSME, the network reaches saturation (i.e., the number of required GTSs exceeds the number of available GTSs, as it was explained at the beginning of this subsection. Hence, in the worst-case, i.e., before reaching the network saturation, the D-DSME scalability performance are the same than the standard DSME ones.
The results show that when the multi-superframe period is lower than the period of the flows , in this scenario, the D-DSME provides a higher scalability than the standard DSME protocol. In this scenario, with , the improvement of the number of nodes that can be supported is 30% higher than in the standard DSME protocol.
D-DSME, compared to the standard DSME protocol, reduces the number of required GTSs, with the consequence of a higher number of available GTSs, thus providing two advantages. First, with a fixed number of superframes within the multi-superframe, the D-DSME provides more room for new periodic flows. Second, as the number of superframes within the multi-superframe can be reduced to provide a shorter multi-superframe, the CAP frequency increases and the average delays for aperiodic non real-time messages are shortened.
5.2. Queuing Delay Assessment
To measure the queuing delay (
) of the aperiodic messages transmitted in the CAP, i.e., the time spent by aperiodic messages in the queue while waiting for transmission, we run simulations using the OMNeT++ framework. The IEEE 802.15.4 physical layer model adopted is the one provided by the INETMANET libraries, while the MAC layer model was developed from scratch.
was measured both with and without enabling the D-DSME extensions. The simulations were run with the parameters that are listed in
Table 2.
The simulated network includes: 25 aperiodic nodes (ANs) that transmit aperiodic messages of 59B during the CAP; real-times nodes (RTNs) that transmit two kinds of real-time messages ( and ), respectively, during the CFP; one PAN-Coordinator that receives the messages transmitted by the end nodes. The aperiodic messages are generated by the ANs with a random period, following an exponential distribution with mean 31.2 ms. The periodic messages belonging to and flows are generated by the RTNs with periods equal to and , respectively.
As the number
of RTNs varies for each simulation,
changes according to Equation (
5) (and so, the MSF duration and the CAP frequency). Therefore, the queuing delay
depends on
and varies for each simulation. The measured average
values are shown in
Table 3. Every simulation was repeated multiple times, so as to obtain confidence intervals calculated at 95% in the order of tens of milliseconds.
Table 3 shows that in some cases the queueing delay
can be lower for D-DSME than for DSME. For instance, using a network with
RTNs, the required SFs are
for DSME and only
for D-DSME. In such a case, D-DSME outperforms DSME (the measured
values are respectively 0.79s and 1.60s). This happens because D-DSME allows using a shorter multi-superframe, thus increasing the CAP frequency.
5.3. Packet Loss Ratio Assessment
To evaluate the improvements introduced by the Mirror D-DSME extension a comparative assessment was performed using the OMNeT++ framework, with the simulation parameters shown in
Table 2 (i.e., the same ones used in
Section 5.2).
The assessed metric is the Packet Loss Ratio (PLR), defined as the percentage of lost messages over the number of messages generated at the application level, i.e.,
where
is the number of messages received at the sink application layer and
is the number of messages generated at the source application layer.
The simulated scenario includes one PAN-Coordinator that receives real-time messages from 7 end nodes. Each End node generates a flow f made up of 59-byte messages with a period .
To assess the reliability under different channel conditions, the Log-normal shadowing channel model with
and
was adopted, as these values provide a very harsh channel environment, similar to a realistic industrial context [
31]. Results were obtained increasing the distance of the nodes from the
PAN-Coordinator that acts as the sink.
Two configurations (one for DSME and one for D-DSME) were considered. In the DSME configuration, the messages are confirmed and the Group ACK is enabled, while in the D-DSME configuration the messages are unconfirmed and the Group ACK is disabled. The simulation parameters (excluding the above discussed Group ACK option) are shown in
Table 2. In D-DSME each multi-superframe contains only one superframe, therefore
. As the flow period is
, the
miGTS in the first multi-superframe can be used to transmit the message. The
miGTSs in the following three multi-superframes are used for retransmissions, and so on.
In the D-DSME configuration, the same (unconfirmed) message can be transmitted (or retransmitted) four times as a maximum. Conversely, with the standard DSME approach the (confirmed) message is transmitted twice as a maximum.
Figure 5 shows the measured PLR values. They are significantly lower when the Mirror D-DSME extension is adopted. This is a reasonable result, as in the D-DSME scenario an end node has more chances of transmitting the same message than with the standard DSME protocol.
In particular, the lower the GTS use, the higher are the advantages in terms of PLR that the Mirror D-DSME extension provides. Clearly, if no flow has period there will be no unused slots. In such a case, the Mirror D-DSME extension does not improve the standard DSME protocol.