Bayeux: an architecture for scalable and fault-tolerant wide-area data dissemination
NOSSDAV '01 Proceedings of the 11th international workshop on Network and operating systems support for digital audio and video
Scalable application layer multicast
Proceedings of the 2002 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
Pastry: Scalable, Decentralized Object Location, and Routing for Large-Scale Peer-to-Peer Systems
Middleware '01 Proceedings of the IFIP/ACM International Conference on Distributed Systems Platforms Heidelberg
Application-Level Multicast Using Content-Addressable Networks
NGC '01 Proceedings of the Third International COST264 Workshop on Networked Group Communication
Explicit multicasting for mobile ad hoc networks
Mobile Networks and Applications
SplitStream: high-bandwidth multicast in cooperative environments
SOSP '03 Proceedings of the nineteenth ACM symposium on Operating systems principles
Outdoor experimental comparison of four ad hoc routing algorithms
MSWiM '04 Proceedings of the 7th ACM international symposium on Modeling, analysis and simulation of wireless and mobile systems
From Pastry to CrossROAD: CROSS-Layer Ring Overlay for AD Hoc Networks
PERCOMW '05 Proceedings of the Third IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications Workshops
Experimental Evaluation of Ad Hoc Routing Protocols
PERCOMW '05 Proceedings of the Third IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications Workshops
Towards commercial mobile ad hoc network applications: a radio dispatch system
Proceedings of the 6th ACM international symposium on Mobile ad hoc networking and computing
Towards large-scale mobile network emulation through spatial switching on a wireless grid
Proceedings of the 2005 ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Experimental approaches to wireless network design and analysis
Illinois wireless wind tunnel: a testbed for experimental evaluation of wireless networks
Proceedings of the 2005 ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Experimental approaches to wireless network design and analysis
Proceedings of the 2005 ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Experimental approaches to wireless network design and analysis
Overlay multicast for MANETs using dynamic virtual mesh
Wireless Networks
Lessons from experimental MANET research
Ad Hoc Networks
Understanding the real behavior of Mote and 802.11 ad hoc networks: an experimental approach
Pervasive and Mobile Computing
The capacity of wireless networks
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
Mesh networks: commodity multihop ad hoc networks
IEEE Communications Magazine
A case for end system multicast
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
Scribe: a large-scale and decentralized application-level multicast infrastructure
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
P2P multicast for pervasive ad hoc networks
Pervasive and Mobile Computing
A cluster-based framework for spontaneous collaboration without infrastructure
CCNC'09 Proceedings of the 6th IEEE Conference on Consumer Communications and Networking Conference
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There has recently been an increasing interest in convergence of p2p and ad hoc network research. Actually, p2p systems and multihop ad hoc networks share similar features, such as self-organisation, decentralisation, self-healing, and so forth. It is thus interesting to understand if p2p systems designed for the wired Internet are suitable also for ad hoc networks and, if they are not, in which direction they should be improved. In this paper, we report our experience in running p2p applications in real multihop ad hoc network testbeds. Specifically, we used group-communication applications that require p2p systems made up of an overlay network and a p2p multicast protocol. In this paper, we present experimental results specifically related to the performance of a well-known p2p shared-tree multicast protocol (Scribe). Our results show that such a solution is far from being efficient on ad hoc networks. We emphasize that the structured multicast approach is one of the main causes of inefficiency, and suggest that stateless solutions could be preferable.