The IETF standardized PMIPv6, a network-based mobility management protocol. It is a protocol that supports several access technologies, including WLAN-based access designs, 3GPP, 3GPP2, and WiMAX, and builds a common and access technology independent of mobile core networks. The only network-based mobility management protocol that the IETF has standardized is Proxy Mobile IPv6.
Unlike the Mobile IP technique, this job is carried out by
the network, which is in charge of monitoring the host's motions and triggering
the necessary mobility signaling on its behalf. To preserve the same IP address
across multiple interfaces, the host must make adjustments akin to those for
mobile IP in the event that mobility involves several network interfaces.
This proposed technique adapts PMIPv6 to the Extended
Open-Flow architecture, and this technique is referred to as the Extended
Open-Flow Technique of PMIPv6 (EOFT-PMIPv6). This method isolates the
versatility capacities from the PMIPv6 segments, for example, the Local
Mobility Anchor (LMA) and Mobile Access Gateway (MAG), and recreates the parts
to take points of interest of the Open-Flow design. The parts that contain the
LMA work set the stream table of the switches situated in the way as the
controller of Open-Flow, and as such, the area of the MN is kept up. The
entrance switches with the MAG capacities tell the connection of a MN and
introduce the portability related motioning of MAG. The fundamental commitments
of this proposed strategy are twofold: 1) isolating the control and data planes
and 2) reducing handover latency.
Author(s) Details:
L. K. Indumathi,
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Matrusri Engineering
College, Hyderabad, India.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/TAER-V7/article/view/13765
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