Probabilistic Routing Protocol for Intermittently Connected Networks
RFC 6693, “Probabilistic Routing Protocol for Intermittently Connected Networks”, is an Experimental document published in August 2012 by A. Lindgren, A. Doria, E. Davies, S. Grasic. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
This document is a product of the Delay Tolerant Networking Research Group and has been reviewed by that group. No objections to its publication as an RFC were raised.
This document defines PRoPHET, a Probabilistic Routing Protocol using History of Encounters and Transitivity. PRoPHET is a variant of the epidemic routing protocol for intermittently connected networks that operates by pruning the epidemic distribution tree to minimize resource usage while still attempting to achieve the \%best-case routing capabilities of epidemic routing. It is intended for use in sparse mesh networks where there is no guarantee that a fully connected path between the source and destination exists at any time, rendering traditional routing protocols unable to deliver messages between hosts. These networks are examples of networks where there is a disparity between the latency requirements of applications and the capabilities of the underlying network (networks often referred to as delay and disruption tolerant). The document presents an architectural overview followed by the protocol specification. This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community.
What “Experimental” means
Describes a specification that is part of a research or development effort, published so the community can gain experience with it.
The canonical text of RFC 6693 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.
- RFC 6692 Source Ports in Abuse Reporting Format Reports
- RFC 6694 The "about" URI Scheme
- RFC 6691 TCP Options and Maximum Segment Size
- RFC 6695 Methods to Convey Forward Error Correction Framework Configuration Information
- RFC 6690 Constrained RESTful Environments Link Format
- RFC 6696 EAP Extensions for the EAP Re-authentication Protocol
- RFC 6689 Usage of the RSVP ASSOCIATION Object
- RFC 6697 Handover Keying Architecture Design