articleJun 25, 2003Closed access

SEAD: secure efficient distance vector routing for mobile wireless ad hoc networks

Rice University · University of California, Berkeley

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Abstract

An ad hoc network is a collection of wireless computers (nodes), communicating among themselves over possibly multihop paths, without the help of any infrastructure such as base stations or access points. Although many previous ad hoc network routing protocols have been based in part on distance vector approaches, they have generally assumed a trusted environment. We design and evaluate the Secure Efficient Ad hoc Distance vector routing protocol (SEAD), a secure ad hoc network routing protocol based on the design of the Destination-Sequenced Distance-Vector routing protocol (DSDV). In order to support use with nodes of limited CPU processing capability, and to guard against denial-of-service (DoS) attacks in…

Citation impact

643
total citations
FWCI
45.21
Percentile
100%
References
62
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Computer science
  • Computer network
  • Wireless Routing Protocol
  • Optimized Link State Routing Protocol
  • Dynamic Source Routing
  • Distributed computing
  • Link-state routing protocol
  • Destination-Sequenced Distance Vector routing
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Industry, innovation and infrastructure
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