Theodoras Salonidis, Pravin Bhagwat, et al.
MobiHoc 2000
Bluetooth, a wireless technology based on a frequency-hopping physical layer, enables portable devices to form short-range wireless ad hoc networks. Bluetooth hosts are not able to communicate unless they have previously discovered each other through synchronization of their timing and frequency-hopping patterns. Thus, even if all nodes are within proximity of each other, only those nodes which are synchronized with the transmitter can hear the transmission. To support any-to-any communication, nodes must be synchronized so that the pairs of nodes, which can communicate with each other, form a connected graph. Using Bluetooth as an example, we first provide deeper insights into the issue of link establishment in frequency-hopping wireless systems. We then introduce an asynchronous distributed protocol that begins with nodes having no knowledge of their surroundings and terminates with the formation of a connected network topology satisfying all constraints posed by Bluetooth. An attractive protocol feature is its ease in implementation using the communication primitives offered by the Bluetooth Specification. © 2005 IEEE.
Theodoras Salonidis, Pravin Bhagwat, et al.
MobiHoc 2000
Bing Luo, Wenli Xiao, et al.
INFOCOM 2022
Leonidas Georgiadis, Wojciech Szpankowski, et al.
Queueing Systems
Bing Luo, Xiang Li, et al.
IEEE J-SAC