posted on 2025-07-31, 16:59authored byZ Zhao, W Dong, G Chen, G Min, T Gu, J Bu
The ZigBee communication can be easily and severely interfered by Wi-Fi traffic. Error recovery, as an important means for
ZigBee to survive Wi-Fi interference, has been extensively studied in recent years. The existing works add upfront redundancy to
in-packet blocks for recovering a certain number of random corruptions. Therefore the bursty nature of ZigBee in-packet corruptions
under Wi-Fi interference is often considered harmful, since some blocks are full of errors which cannot be recovered and some blocks
have no errors but still requiring redundancy. As a result, they often use interleaving to reshape the bursty errors, before applying
complex FEC codes to recover the re-shaped random distributed errors. In this paper, we take a different view that burstiness may be
helpful. With burstiness, the in-packet corruptions are often consecutive and the requirement for error recovery is reduced as
”recovering any k consecutive errors” instead of ”recovering any random k errors”. This lowered requirement allows us to design far
more efficient code than the existing FEC codes. Motivated by this implication, we exploit the corruption burstiness to design a simple
yet effective error recovery code using XOR operations (called ZiXOR). ZiXOR uses XOR code and the delay is significantly reduced.
More, ZiXOR uses RSSI-hinted approach to detect in packet corruptions without CRC, incurring almost no extra transmission
overhead. The testbed evaluation results show that ZiXOR outperforms the state-of-the-art works in terms of the throughput (by 47%)
and latency (by 22%)
Funding
This work was supported by the National Natural Science
Foundation of China (No. 61602095 and No. 61472360), the
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No.
ZYGX2016KYQD098 and No. 2016FZA5010), National Key
Technology R&D Program (Grant No. 2014BAK15B02), CCFIntel
Young Faculty Researcher Program, CCF-Tencent Open
Research Fund, China Ministry of Education—China Mobile
Joint Project under Grant No. MCM20150401 and the EU FP7
CLIMBER project under Grant Agreement No. PIRSES-GA-
2012-318939. Wei Dong is the corresponding author.