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Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic tuning of the IEEE 802.11 protocol to achieve a theoretical throughput limit

Frederico Calì, +2 more
- 01 Dec 2000 - 
- Vol. 8, Iss: 6, pp 785-799
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TLDR
A distributed algorithm is proposed that enables each station to tune its backoff algorithm at run-time and indicates that the capacity of the enhanced protocol is very close to the theoretical upper bound in all the configurations analyzed.
Abstract
In wireless LANs (WLANs), the medium access control (MAC) protocol is the main element that determines the efficiency in sharing the limited communication bandwidth of the wireless channel. In this paper we focus on the efficiency of the IEEE 802.11 standard for WLANs. Specifically, we analytically derive the average size of the contention window that maximizes the throughput, hereafter theoretical throughput limit, and we show that: 1) depending on the network configuration, the standard can operate very far from the theoretical throughput limit; and 2) an appropriate tuning of the backoff algorithm can drive the IEEE 802.11 protocol close to the theoretical throughput limit. Hence we propose a distributed algorithm that enables each station to tune its backoff algorithm at run-time. The performances of the IEEE 802.11 protocol, enhanced with our algorithm, are extensively investigated by simulation. Specifically, we investigate the sensitiveness of our algorithm to some network configuration parameters (number of active stations, presence of hidden terminals). Our results indicate that the capacity of the enhanced protocol is very close to the theoretical upper bound in all the configurations analyzed.

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Citations
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WSN07-4: Analytical Modeling and QoS Application of the P-Persistent 802.11 MAC Protocol

TL;DR: Analytical models for the average packet service time, end-to-end delay and system capacity for the p-persistent 802.11 MAC protocol are presented.
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Improving protocol capacity by scheduling random access on WLANs

TL;DR: A new MAC scheme used for DCF (with no control node) that dynamically adapts to traffic changes without degradation of delay in the case of low traffic load and achieves high throughput which is close to transmission capacity in saturated case is proposed.
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Fault tolerance in IEEE 802.11 WLANs

TL;DR: A fault detection approach is developed, which promises to be more effective to identify AP failures and focus on the problem of overcoming APs failures working with reconfiguration of the remaining APs by changing parameters such as power level and frequency channels.
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OPNET-based WLAN Modeling and its Performance Testing

TL;DR: This paper models a WLAN for its simulation and performance tests, and systematically analyzes and compares statistics overall and between nodes as well as the simulation experiments with different parameters, leading to results that fully achieve WLAN modeling and its performance simulation based on the OPNET software.
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Enabling network calculus-based simulation for TCP congestion control

TL;DR: The simulation results indicate that an order of magnitude or more (maximally 30 times) improvement in the execution time is achieved and the performance improvement becomes more salient as the network size increases in perspective of network-link capacities and the number of flows.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Packet Switching in Radio Channels: Part I--Carrier Sense Multiple-Access Modes and Their Throughput-Delay Characteristics

TL;DR: Two protocols are described for CSMA and their throughput-delay characteristics are given and results show the large advantage CSMA provides as compared to the random ALOHA access modes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Packet Switching in Radio Channels: Part II--The Hidden Terminal Problem in Carrier Sense Multiple-Access and the Busy-Tone Solution

TL;DR: The busy-tone multiple-access mode is introduced and analyzed as a natural extension of CSMA to eliminate the hidden-terminal problem and results show that BTMA with hidden terminals performs almost as well as CSMA without hidden terminals.
Book

TCP/IP Illustrated Vol 1 The Protocols

TL;DR: TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1 is a complete and detailed guide to the entire TCP/IP protocol suite - with an important difference from other books on the subject: rather than just describing what the RFCs say the protocol suite should do, this unique book uses a popular diagnostic tool so you may actually watch the protocols in action.
Journal ArticleDOI

IEEE 802.11 Wireless Local Area Networks

TL;DR: The performance investigation reveals that an IEEE 802.11 network may be able to carry traffic with time-bounded requirements using the point coordination function, however, the findings suggest that packetized voice traffic must be handled in conjunction with an echo canceler.
Book

Stochastic models in operations research

TL;DR: This course provides an introduction to the modeling and analysis of various random phenomena occurring in operations research and businesses such as inventory theory, queueing theory, genetics, demography, epidemiology, competing populations.
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