Wireless networks with no infrastructure arise as a result of multiple wireless devices working together. The Mobile Ad hoc Network (MANET) is a system for connecting independently located Mobile Nodes (MNs) via wireless links. A MANET is self-configuring in telecommunications, while MN produces non-infrastructure networks that are entirely decentralized. Both the MAC and routing layers of MANETs take into account issues related to Quality of Service (QoS). When culling a line of optical discernment communication, MANET can be an effective and cost-saving route cull option. To maintain QoS, however, more or fewer challenges must be overcome. This paper proposes a Fuzzy Logic Control (FLC) methodology for specifying a probabilistic QoS guaranteed for MANETs. The framework uses network node mobility to establish the probabilistic quality of service. Fuzzy Logic (FL) implementations were added to Network Simulator-3 (NS-3) and used with the proposed FLC framework for simulation. Researchers have found that for a given node's mobility, the path's bandwidth decreases with time, hop count, and radius. It is resolutely based on this fuzzy rule that the priority index for a packet is determined. Also, by avoiding sending packets (PKT) out of source networks when there are no beneficial routes, bandwidth is not wasted. The FLC outperforms the scheduling methods with a wide range of results. To improve QoS within MANETs, it is therefore recommended that FLC is used to synchronize packets. Thus, using these performance metrics, the QoSresponsible routing can opt for more stable paths. Based on network simulation, it is evident that incorporating QoS into routing protocols is meant to improve traffic performance, in particular authentic-time traffic.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.