TY - CONF
T1 - On the Fidelity of IEEE 802.11 Commercial Cards
AU - Tinnirello, Ilenia
AU - Scalia, Luca
AU - Giaconia, Giuseppe Costantino
AU - Bianchi, Giuseppe
AU - Di Stefano, Antonio
AU - Terrazzino, Gabriella
AU - Bianchi, Giuseppe
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - The IEEE 802.11 D CF protocol is known to be fair in terms of long-term resource repartition among the contending stations. However, when considering real scenarios, where commercial 802.11 cards interact, very unpredictable as well as sometimes surprising behaviors emerge. Motivation of this paper is to investigate the reasons of the very evident disagreement between the theoretical IEEE 802.11 DCF protocol models and its practical implementations. Inparticular, we try to characterize the card behavior not only in terms of perceived throughput, but also in terms of low-level channel access operations. In fact, the simple throughput analysis does not allow to identify what affecting parameters, both in terms of transceivers architectures and MAC layer deployments, determine the performance differentiation among the cards. To this purpose, we implemented a tunable DCF network card, in which all MAC parameters are programmable and all the baseband signals are available, and we used this card as a probe instrument. We registered the low-level access operations of commercial cards in terms of access times revelead by the carrier sense function of our probe card. By comparing these times, we surprisingly proved that the most evident performance differences are not due to PHY layer issues, but to the MAC implementations, which often seem to do not respect the standard specifications.
AB - The IEEE 802.11 D CF protocol is known to be fair in terms of long-term resource repartition among the contending stations. However, when considering real scenarios, where commercial 802.11 cards interact, very unpredictable as well as sometimes surprising behaviors emerge. Motivation of this paper is to investigate the reasons of the very evident disagreement between the theoretical IEEE 802.11 DCF protocol models and its practical implementations. Inparticular, we try to characterize the card behavior not only in terms of perceived throughput, but also in terms of low-level channel access operations. In fact, the simple throughput analysis does not allow to identify what affecting parameters, both in terms of transceivers architectures and MAC layer deployments, determine the performance differentiation among the cards. To this purpose, we implemented a tunable DCF network card, in which all MAC parameters are programmable and all the baseband signals are available, and we used this card as a probe instrument. We registered the low-level access operations of commercial cards in terms of access times revelead by the carrier sense function of our probe card. By comparing these times, we surprisingly proved that the most evident performance differences are not due to PHY layer issues, but to the MAC implementations, which often seem to do not respect the standard specifications.
KW - Throughput
KW - Wireless local area networks (WLAN)
KW - backoff algorithm
KW - Throughput
KW - Wireless local area networks (WLAN)
KW - backoff algorithm
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10447/17336
M3 - Other
SP - 10
EP - 17
ER -