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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Feasibility study of mesh networks for all-wireless offices

TLDR
This paper evaluates the feasibility of a mesh network for an all-wireless office using traces of office users and an actual 21-node multi-radio mesh testbed in an office area and concludes that for the traces and deployed system, under most conditions, all-Wireless office meshes are feasible.
Abstract
There is a fair amount of evidence that mesh (static multihop wireless) networks are gaining popularity, both in the academic literature and in the commercial space. Nonetheless, none of the prior work has evaluated the feasibility of applications on mesh through the use of deployed networks and real user traffic. The state of the art is the use of deployed testbeds with synthetic traces consisting of random traffic patterns.In this paper, we evaluate the feasibility of a mesh network for an all-wireless office using traces of office users and an actual 21-node multi-radio mesh testbed in an office area. Unlike previous mesh studies that have examined routing design in detail, we examine how different office mesh design choices impact the performance of user traffic. From our traces of 11 users spanning over a month, we identify 3 one hour trace periods with different characteristics and evaluate network performance for them. In addition, we consider different user-server placement, different wireless hardware, different wireless settings and different routing metrics.We find that our captured traffic is significantly different from the synthetic workloads typically used in the prior work. Our trace capture and replay methodology allows us to directly quantify the feasibility of office meshes by measuring the additional delay experienced by individual transactions made by user applications. Performance on our mesh network depends on the routing metric chosen, the user-server placement and the traffic load period. The choice of wireless hardware and wireless settings has a significant impact on performance under heavy load and challenging placement. Ultimately we conclude that for our traces and deployed system, under most conditions, all-wireless office meshes are feasible. In most cases, individual transactions incur under 20ms of additional delay over the mesh network. We believe this is an acceptable delay for most applications where a wired network to every machine is not readily available. We argue that our results are scalable to a network of over 100 users.

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Citations
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CENTAUR: realizing the full potential of centralized wlans through a hybrid data path

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EndRE: an end-system redundancy elimination service for enterprises

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wireless mesh networks: a survey

TL;DR: This paper presents a detailed study on recent advances and open research issues in WMNs, followed by discussing the critical factors influencing protocol design and exploring the state-of-the-art protocols for WMNs.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A high-throughput path metric for multi-hop wireless routing

TL;DR: Measurements taken from a 29-node 802.11b test-bed demonstrate the poor performance of minimum hop-count, illustrate the causes of that poor performance, and confirm that ETX improves performance.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Routing in multi-radio, multi-hop wireless mesh networks

TL;DR: A new metric for routing in multi-radio, multi-hop wireless networks with stationary nodes called Weighted Cumulative ETT (WCETT) significantly outperforms previously-proposed routing metrics by making judicious use of the second radio.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Architecture and algorithms for an IEEE 802.11-based multi-channel wireless mesh network

TL;DR: It is shown that intelligent channel assignment is critical to Hyacinth's performance, and distributed algorithms that utilize only local traffic load information to dynamically assign channels and to route packets are presented, and their performance is compared against a centralized algorithm that performs the same functions.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Comparison of routing metrics for static multi-hop wireless networks

TL;DR: A detailed, empirical evaluation of the performance of three link-quality metrics---ETX, per-hop RTT, andper-hop packet pair---and compare them against minimum hop count finds that the ETX metric has the best performance when all nodes are stationary and the hop-count metric outperforms all of the link- quality metrics in a scenario where the sender is mobile.