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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Optimal Mapping of Stations to Access Points in Enterprise Wireless Local Area Networks

TLDR
This work proposes to move the AP association decision to a periodically-running central controller which aims to maximize the proportionally-fair network throughput, and devise several heuristics requiring various degrees of knowledge, e.g., pairwise user-AP link rates, throughput demand of each user.
Abstract
Efficient resource allocation in enterprise wireless local area networks(WLAN) has become more paramount with the shift of traffic toward WLANs and increasing share of the video traffic. Unfortunately, current practise of client-driven association to APs has several shortcomings, e.g., sticky client problem. As a remedy, we propose to move the AP association decision to a periodically-running central controller which aims to maximize the proportionally-fair network throughput. After formulating the optimal mapping problem, we devise several heuristics requiring various degrees of knowledge, e.g., pairwise user-AP link rates, throughput demand of each user. Our analysis via simulations on realistic scenarios (conference, office, and shopping mall) shows the superior performance of our proposals in terms of aggregate logarithmic throughput. While the utility gain over the conventional client-driven approach is modest, up to 18%, the resulting increase in the weakest user's throughput is significant (71-120%) as well as that of AP load balance and fairness of user throughputs. Moreover, our evaluations reveal a very small optimality gap (between 0.1-5%). The highest gain is observed in the conference setting where the users are unevenly distributed in the network and hence there is a huge load imbalance among the APs. While schemes requiring more knowledge, i.e., on handover-cost and traffic demands, perform the best, a naive approach which runs periodically and assigns each user to the AP providing the highest signal level to that user maintains up to 41% gain in the weakest user's throughput over the client-driven handover approach.

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Citations
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Proceedings Article

Load Balancing

R. McConnell
TL;DR: In EFI XF 3.0, load balancing is not an officially supported feature and can only be achieved by manual ticket editing as mentioned in this paper, which is only recommended for experienced users.
Journal ArticleDOI

ABRAHAM: Machine Learning Backed Proactive Handover Algorithm Using SDN

TL;DR: ABRAHAM is introduced, a machine learning backed, proactive, handover algorithm that uses multiple metrics to predict the future state of the network and optimize the load to ensure the preservation of QoS.
Proceedings Article

Proactive Access Point Driven Handovers in IEEE 802.11 Networks

TL;DR: This paper uses virtualization and softwarization to shift the traditional mobile node-driven handovers to the access point, while maintaining compliance with legacy devices, and develops a proactive handover algorithm ADNA, which combines network state, traffic load and node mobility information.
Journal ArticleDOI

User-AP Association Management in Software-Defined WLANs

TL;DR: This paper uses software-defined networking (SDN) to propose a user association solution for WLANs aiming to mitigate such inefficiencies, thus improving resource utilization and considering user-AP association jointly with multicast delivery leads to a significant performance increase over the default client-driven approach.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

An optimal station association policy for multi-rate ieee 802.11 wireless lans

TL;DR: A centralized optimal association policy for stations association for IEEE 802.11 WLANs is presented and the effectiveness of the solution is evaluated through the results obtained from Lingo optimization and NCTUns simulation packages.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sociality-Aware Access Point Selection in Enterprise Wireless LANs

TL;DR: This paper proposes a novel AP allocation scheme to tackle the load balancing problem in WLANs, taking into account the social relationships of users, and proposes an online greedy algorithm for this scheme.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A trigger-based dynamic load balancing method for WLANs using virtualized network interfaces

TL;DR: A method for trigger-based dynamic load balancing in WLANs, which adapts association topology dynamically based on traffic conditions, while keeping the handoff overhead negligible using virtualized wireless network interfaces (WNICs).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Handover triggering in IEEE 802.11 networks

TL;DR: An anticipation-based handover solution that uses a Kalman filter to predict the short term evolution of the received power allows a mobile device to proactively start scanning and executing a handover as soon as better APs are available.
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