Hello Tamer,
I think there are two ns-2 groups, the releases earlier thank 2.30 and
later thank and including 2.30. The first group requires older c++
compiler and you should only install them in a linux fedora version
earlier than core 5. This applies to your 2.29, which should be
installed eith
pt language like "awk, perl...".
For these, u need to understand a little bit about the trace file
pattern.
Good luck,
Kamil H. Suleiman
http://crg.ee.uct.ac.za/~kamil/
>
> Regards
>
> "Kamil H. Suleiman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello Ta
Hello Tara,
To the best of my knowledge, once a node is inside a hearing range, we
don't see the difference say between 20 and 30 meters from the BS.
Probably some contributed module might be able to simulate the fading
effect.
Best,
Kamil
On Mon, 2007-11-12 at 00:55 -0800, Tara Arezoumand wrote:
Hello everyone,
I'm trying to do the following simple thing.
Assume a packet of a CBR of packet size 800 is generated and sent via
UDP, 802.11MAC... to a destination. Normally this is what happens: At
the UDP agent the packet size will be 820 then the MAC layer uses the
CSMA to send the packet of
Hi All,
Any body who tries to help will greatly be appreciated.
I'm trying to disable my tracefile so that it doesn't write gigabits of
traces on my computer since I don't have enough memory even for a sinle
run ( I run very bulky, long time simulation).
I'm using the NIST contributed Seamless
Hi Joe,
What u got is perfect. The ns doesn't just run the animation unless you
use some code to do so as in "exec nam wireless1-out.nam &" inside your
tcl script or you can run "nam wireless1-out.nam" in the command
terminal to run the the nam.
http://crg.ee.uct.ac.za/~kamil/
Kamil
On Sun, 2
$ns or $ns_ are just variable names, they could be anything. Normally
you can pick any. However mobility pattern files (if you're sourcing
one) are usually generated assuming the simulator instance is $ns_. In
such cases, either you should use $ns_ or you should modify the mobility
pattern file yo
$ns or $ns_ are just variable names, they could be anything. Normally
you can pick any. However mobility pattern files (if you're sourcing
one) are usually generated assuming the simulator instance is $ns_. In
such cases, either you should use $ns_ or you should modify the mobility
pattern file yo
$ns or $ns_ are just variable names, they could be anything. Normally
you can pick any. However mobility pattern files (if you're sourcing
one) are usually generated assuming the simulator instance is $ns_. In
such cases, either you should use $ns_ or you should modify the mobility
pattern file yo
$ns or $ns_ are just variable names, they could be anything. Normally
you can pick any. However mobility pattern files (if you're sourcing
one) are usually generated assuming the simulator instance is $ns_. In
such cases, either you should use $ns_ or you should modify the mobility
pattern file yo
I don't know which tutorial you'r referring to. But, one thing you
> should know (if u r a beginner), the nam and xgraph don't run by
> default, unless you put exec nam filename.nam & (or exec xgraph
> filename.tr) inside the tcl script and this must be scheduled towards
> the end of the simulatio
Hello guys, I've a simple question on umts
assume I'm trying to send traffic on the DCH up link, from some nodes in
the umts network. In the following configuration,
1. Does it mean that a node using DCH can send a maximum of only 64kbps?
2. What should be the maximum throughput of the system if
Hi ns users
I'm using the SEAMLESS and SECURE mobility module provided by NIST. I'm
trying to simulate the UMTS network in a scenarion wherey by traffic is
sent from user nodes in the UMTS to a wired node outside the umts
network. However I don't know what the exact bandwidth of the uplink
channe
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