The memo documents the interfaces, components, and semantics used by
collection protocol in TinyOS 2.x. Collection provides a best-effort,
-multihop delivery of packets to the root of *a* tree. There may be
-multiple roots in a network, and in this case the semantics implemented
-are of *anycast* delivery to at least one of the roots. A node sending
+multihop delivery of packets to the root of a tree. There may be
+multiple tree roots in a network, and in this case the semantics
+are *anycast* delivery to at least one of the roots. A node sending
a packet does not specify which root the packet is destined to.
* Self-interference, preventing forwarding packets along the route
from introducing interference for subsequent packets.
-The rest of this document describes a set of components and interfaces
-for a collection service outlined above.
+While collection protocols can take a wide range of approaches to
+address these challenges, the programming interface they provide is
+typically independent of these details. The rest of this document
+describes a set of components and interfaces for collection services.
2. Collection interfaces
====================================================================
A node can perform four different roles in collection: producer,
-consumer, snooper, and in-network processor. Depending on their role,
+snooper, in-network processor, and consumer. Depending on their role,
the nodes use different interfaces to interact with the collection
component.
-A consumer is a root of a tree. The set of all roots and the paths that
-lead to them form the collection routing infrastructure in the network.
-For any connected set of nodes implementing the collection protocol
-there is only one collection infrastructure, *i.e.*, all roots in this
-set active at the same time are part of the same infrastructure.
-
-A node is configured to become a root by using the RootControl
-interface. RootControl.setRoot() MUST make the current node a root of
-the collection infrastructure. RootControl.unsetRoot() MUST make
-the current root no longer a root in the collection infrastructure.
-Both calls are idempotent. RootControl.setRoot() MAY be called on a
-node that is already a root, to no effect. RootControl.unsetRoot() MAY
-be called on a node that is not a root::
-
- interface RootControl {
- command error_t setRoot();
- command error_t unsetRoot();
- command bool isRoot();
- }
-
-Both commands MUST return SUCCESS if the node is now in the specified
-state, and FAIL otherwise. For example, if a node is already a root
-and an application calls RootControl.setRoot(), the call will
-return SUCCESS.
-
The collection infrastructure can be multiplexed among independent
applications, by means of a *collection identifier*. It is important
to note that the *data* traffic in the protocol is multiplexed,
of the collection tree. The collection identifier is specified as a
parameter to Send during instantiation.
-Root nodes that receive data from the network are *consumers*. The
-consumers use the Receive interface [1_] to receive a message
-delivered by collection. The collection identifier is specified
-as a parameter to Receive during instantiation.
-
The nodes that overhear messages in transit are *snoopers*. The
snoopers use the Receive interface [1_] to receive a snooped
message. The collection identifier is specified as a parameter
it is unnecessary or if its contents can be aggregated into an
existing packet.
+Root nodes that receive data from the network are *consumers*. The
+consumers use the Receive interface [1_] to receive a message
+delivered by collection. The collection identifier is specified
+as a parameter to Receive during instantiation.
+
+The set of all roots and the paths that
+lead to them form the collection routing infrastructure in the network.
+For any connected set of nodes implementing the collection protocol
+there is only one collection infrastructure, *i.e.*, all roots in this
+set active at the same time are part of the same infrastructure.
+
+The RootControl interface configures whether a node is a
+root::
+
+ interface RootControl {
+ command error_t setRoot();
+ command error_t unsetRoot();
+ command bool isRoot();
+ }
+
+Both commands MUST return SUCCESS if the node is now in the specified
+state, and FAIL otherwise. For example, if a node is already a root
+and an application calls RootControl.setRoot(), the call will
+return SUCCESS. If setRoot() returns SUCCESS, then a subsequent call
+to isRoot() MUST return TRUE. If unsetRoot() returns SUCCESS, then
+a subsequent call to isRoot() MUST return FALSE.
3 Collection Services
====================================================================
}
-CollectionC MAY have additional interfaces, but they MUST have
-default functions on all outgoing invocations (commands for uses,
-events for provides) of those interfaces so that it can operate
-properly if they are not wired.
+CollectionC MAY have additional interfaces. These additional
+interfaces MUST have default functions on all outgoing invocations
+(commands for uses, events for provides) of those interfaces so that
+it can operate properly if they are not wired.
Components SHOULD NOT wire to CollectionC.Send. The generic
component CollectionSenderC (described in section 3.1) provides
collection_id_t generally have the same payload format, so that
snoopers, intercepters, and receivers can parse it properly.
-Receive.receive MUST NOT be signaled on non-root
+ColletionC MUST NOT signal Receive.receive on non-root
nodes. CollectionC MAY signal Receive.receive on a root node when
a data packet successfully arrives at that node. If a root node calls
Send, CollectionC MUST treat it as it if were a received packet.
LinkEstimatorP estimates the quality of link to or from each
neighbor. In this TEP, we briefly describe the reference
implementation in ''tinyos-2.x/tos/lib/4bitle'' and refer the readers
-to [3]_ for detailed description of the estimator.
+to [3]_ for a detailed description of the estimator.
Link estimation is decoupled from the establishment of routes. There
is a narrow interface -- LinkEstimator and CompareBit -- between the
-link estimator and the routing engine. The one requirement is that the
-quality returned is standardized. A smaller return value from
-LinkEstimator.getLinkQuality() MUST imply that the link to the
-neighbor is estimated to be of a higher quality than the one that
-results in a larger return value. The range of value SHOULD be
-[0,65535] and the variation in link quality in that range SHOULD be
-linear. Radio provided values such as LQI or RSI, beacon based link
-estimation to compute ETX, or their combination are some possible
-approaches to estimating link qualities. The routing engine instructs
+link estimator and the routing engine. A smaller return value from
+LinkEstimator.getLinkQuality() implies that the link to the neighbor
+is estimated to be of a higher quality than the one that results in a
+larger return value. Radio provided values such as LQI or RSI, beacon
+based link estimation to compute ETX, or their combination are some
+possible approaches to estimating link qualities. LinkEstimatorP
+returns (ETX-1)*10 as the link quality. The routing engine instructs
LinkEstimatorP to insert the neighbor, through which a high quality
path to the root can be constructed, into the neighbor table by
returning TRUE when LinkEstimatorP signals Comparebit.shouldInsert()
for the newly discovered neighbor.
-LinkEstimatorP MAY have its own control messages to compute
-bi-directional link qualities. LinkEstimatorP provides calls (txAck(),
-txNoAck(), and clearDLQ()) to update the link estimates based on
-successful or unsuccessful data transmission to the
+LinkEstimatorP does not generate its own control messages to compute
+link qualities. When a user of LinkEstimatorP (CtpRoutingEngineP, for
+example) sends a packet using the Send interface provided by
+LinkEstimatorP, link estimation information is also sent with the
+packet as described in an upcoming TEP [4_]. LinkEstimatorP provides
+calls (txAck(), txNoAck(), and clearDLQ()) to update the link
+estimates based on successful or unsuccessful data transmission to the
neighbors. LinkEstimatorP uses the LinkPacketMetadata interface to
determine if the channel was of high quality when a packet is received
from a neighbor to consider the link to that neighbor for insertion
CtpRoutingEngineP is responsible for computing routes to the roots of a
tree. In traditional networking terminology, this is part of the
control plane of the network, and is does not directly forward any
-data packets, which is the responsibility of CtpForwardingEngine.
+data packets, which is the responsibility of CtpForwardingEngineP.
The main interface between the two is UnicastNameFreeRouting.
-CtpRoutingEngineP uses the LinkEstimator interface to learn
-about the nodes in the neighbor table maintained by LinkEstimatorP and
-the quality of links to and from the neighbors. The routing protocol
-on which collection is implemented MUST be a tree-based routing
-protocol with a single or multiple roots. CtpRoutingEngineP
-allows a node to be configured as a root or a non-root node
-dynamically. CtpRoutingEngineP maintains multiple candidate next hops::
+CtpRoutingEngineP uses the LinkEstimator interface to learn about the
+nodes in the neighbor table maintained by LinkEstimatorP and the
+quality of links to and from the neighbors. The routing protocol on
+which collection is implemented computes a routing tree with a single
+or multiple roots. CtpRoutingEngineP allows a node to be configured as
+a root or a non-root node dynamically. CtpRoutingEngineP maintains
+multiple candidate next hops::
generic module CtpRoutingEngineP(uint8_t routingTableSize,
uint16_t minInterval,
.. [2] TEP 123: The Collection Tree Protocol (CTP)
.. [3] Rodrigo Fonseca, Omprakash Gnawali, Kyle Jamieson, and Philip Levis. "Four Bit Wireless Link Estimation." In Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on Hot Topics in Networks (HotNets VI), November 2007
+
+.. [4] TEP 124: The Link Estimation Exchange Protocol (LEEP)