Has anyone thought about this "problem" recently?
To simplify - 3 routers, 2 adapters each, how do we establish duplex links between each of those by using batman alone?
Or, 3 routers, 2 adapters each, how do we establish simplex links between each of those such that one adapter links "upstream" and one "downstream" using batman alone?
Another thing - think of this as quasi-asynchronous links, i.e. B can talk to A on both interfaces (call them int1 and int2), but only chooses int1, and A does the opposite, chooses the other (int2) to talk back to B. If B has to talk to both A and C at the same time and can see A and C on both int1 and int2 then it will choose int1 to talk to A and int2 to talk to C.
Maybe it makes sense now....
P.S. or maybe I'm just missing something
-----Original Message----- From: Predrag Balorda [mailto:pele@balorda.com] Sent: Friday, January 18, 2008 2:42 PM To: 'The list for a Better Approach To Mobile Ad-hoc Networking' Subject: Multiple wireless interfaces
Ok. Here is something batman doesn't provision for - dual-interface setup where you want to create a duplex link (tx on one and rx on another). Duplex link to one other node is simple (and has to be done manually),
but
how would we go about creating a duplex link to 2 or more nodes? Or one simplex link to downstream node and one simplex link to upstream node? Example:
A = B C duplex link (for example I need to talk from B to A fast and I use both interfaces to talk to A) A - B - C simplex links (I use one interface to talk to A and one to talk to B) A = B/B = C duplex links for all links (I talk to both A and C duplex,
but
not at the same time of course)
How do we do this with batman easily and dynamically (without having to manually mess around with routing tables etc)?