Vault7: CIA Hacking Tools Revealed
Navigation: » Latest version
Owner: User #3375130
SOLDER- DS&T Exploration Fund (EF 1617), A Mesh Networking Development Proposal
Mesh Networking Definitions:
PDF Documentation:Â Wireless mesh network - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.pdf
Â
  Wikipedia:
A mesh network is a topology in which each node relays data for the network. Â All mesh nodes cooperate in the distribution of data in the network.
Â
Mesh networks can relay messages using the flooding technique or a routing technique. Â With routing, the message is propagated along a path by hopping from node to node until it reaches its destination. Â To ensure all its paths' availability, the network must allow for continuous connections and must reconfigure itself around broken paths using a self-healing algorithms such as Shortest Path Bridging. Â Self-healing allows a routing-based network to operate when a node breaks down or when a connection becomes unreliable. Â As a result, the network is typically quite reliable, as there is often more than one path between a source and a destination in the network. Â Although mostly used in wireless situations. this concept can also apply to wired networks and to software interaction.
Â
A mesh network whose nodes are all connected to each other is a fully connected network. Â Fully connected wired networks have the advantages of security and reliability: problems in a cable affect only the two nodes attached to it. Â However, in such networks, the number of cables, and therefore the cost, goes up rapidly as the number of nodes increases.
Â
Mesh networks can be considered a type of an ad-hoc network. Â Thus, mesh networks are closely related to mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs), although MANETs also must deal with problems introduced by the mobility of the nodes.
Â
Shortest path bridging allows Ethernet switches to be connected in a mesh topology for all paths to be active.
   Another internet site:
 A mesh network topology is a decentralized design in which each node on the network connects to at least two other nodes.  Mesh networks are expected to play an important part in the Internet of Things (IoT).  Unlike nodes in a star topology, which require a router to deliver internet services, network nodes can "talk" directly to each other without the assistance of an internet connection.  A big advantage of this decentralized topology is that there cannot be a single point of failure.  If one node can no longer operate, all the rest can still communicate with each other, directly or through on or more intermediate nodes.  Mesh networks can use a full mesh topology or a partial mesh topology. Â
  Byzantium (http://project-byzantium.org/faqs):
 A mesh network is a network in which some of the nodes route traffic for other nodes in addition making services available and acting as clients in the network.  In traditional wired or wireless networks, every node has a default gateway through which it sends all traffic not destined for adjacent nodes on the local network. If that default gateway goes down the local network is isolated.  In a mesh network, every node on the local network can potentially act as a gateway for oll other nodes within broadcast range. Under the hood of a mesh there is no default gateway, there are only neighboring routers that will relay traffic.  Also, due to the sheer number of routers in a mesh, you don't have to worry about your active connections dropping just because you walked three blocks away and your smartphone decided that another two or three mesh nodes were its preferred ("default") gateway; this is called mobile IP. Â
Â
Examples of Mesh Networking:
 Flux/Fluxwire - CCI's default, sole source contractor provided, default mesh networking tool:
First Demonstration? Â Plan on last week of January
 TINC- Self-routing, mesh networking protocol, used for compressed, encrypted, virtual private networks.  It was started in 1998 by User #74835, User #74834, and User #74836, and released as a GPL-licensed project. (http://www.tinc-vpn.org ):
PDF Documentation:Â tinc.pdfÂ
Source Code: Â Â tinc-1.0.26.tar.gz
First Demonstration?Â
 Zigbee:
PDF Documentation:Â ZigBee - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.pdf
 SONOS - Proprietary Mesh Networking Software for consumer based Speaker System:
PDF Documentation:Â How Sonos and User #74838 Built the Perfect Wireless Speaker for Streaming Music - Businessweek.pdf
 CJDNS:
PDF Documentation:Â cjdns_Whitepaper.pdf
 Byzantium - Ad-hoc wireless mesh networking for the zombie apocalypse. (See http://project-byzantium.org ):
PDF Documentation: Not yet retrieved.
Â
Interesting Technologies that may be applicable:
  ZeroMQ:
PDF Documentation:Â The Architecture of Open Source Applications (Volume 2)_ ZeroMQ.pdfÂ
ØMQ - The Guide - ØMQ - The Guide.pdf
Â
Â
Schedule:
12 Jan 2016- Â First Team Meeting
15 February 2016- Mesh Network Survey Status Report
15 April 2016- SOLDER Mesh Networking Requirement Report
31 November 2016- SOLDER Final Report
Â
Administrivia:
Weekly meeting times?
Availability of personnel?
Â
Fill in the Blanks for our project:
Â
Mesh Networking Definition:
Blank
Â
Goals (Like 3-4 basic goal statements):
Blank
Â
Example from SONOS PDFPortable Document Format documentation above:
"Literally we took a clean sheet of paper and said, "Well, what if we made a stereo system for the modern age?' " User #74838 says, leaning back in his chair in the small, Spanish-style courtyard in front of our headquarters. "I think we still have that paper around. I swear, it looks like a bunch of Sonos units you'd buy today. It just takes a while to build this stuff."
They listed the three features they wanted for the hi-fi of the future. Â You should'y have to get up from the sofa to control the music; you should be able to pick any song you want to play; and you shouldn't have to mess with wires. That was it. Â That was the whole plan. Â It still is.
Â
Requirements:
Blank
Â
Â
Equipment Purchases: Â Thank you User #? and User #76378 for equipment ordering information
Â
Training: Â Waiting for feedback from User #76379 for the MikroTik course.
Â
Â