Guidelines to the Problem of Location Management and Database Architecture for the Next Generation Mobile Networks

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📝 Original Info

  • Title: Guidelines to the Problem of Location Management and Database Architecture for the Next Generation Mobile Networks
  • ArXiv ID: 1304.2867
  • Date: 2013-04-11
  • Authors: Researchers from original ArXiv paper

📝 Abstract

In near future, anticipated large number of mobile users may introduce very large centralized databases and increase end-to-end delays in location registration and call delivery on HLR-VLR database and will become infeasible. After observing several problems we propose some guidelines. Multitree distributed database, high throughput index structure, memory oriented database organization are used. Location management guidelines for moving user in overlapping network, neighbor discovery protocol (NDP), and global roaming rule are adopted. Analytic model and examples are presented to evaluate the efficiency of proposed guidelines.

💡 Deep Analysis

Deep Dive into Guidelines to the Problem of Location Management and Database Architecture for the Next Generation Mobile Networks.

In near future, anticipated large number of mobile users may introduce very large centralized databases and increase end-to-end delays in location registration and call delivery on HLR-VLR database and will become infeasible. After observing several problems we propose some guidelines. Multitree distributed database, high throughput index structure, memory oriented database organization are used. Location management guidelines for moving user in overlapping network, neighbor discovery protocol (NDP), and global roaming rule are adopted. Analytic model and examples are presented to evaluate the efficiency of proposed guidelines.

📄 Full Content

In near future, anticipated large number of mobile users may introduce very large centralized databases and increase end-to-end delays in location registration and call delivery on HLR-VLR database and will become infeasible. After observing several problems we propose some guidelines. Multitree distributed database, high throughput index structure, memory oriented database organization are used. Location management guidelines for moving user in overlapping network, neighbor discovery protocol (NDP), and global roaming rule are adopted. Analytic model and examples are presented to evaluate the efficiency of proposed guidelines.

Reference

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