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Journal ArticleDOI

Performance analysis of IEEE 802.11 MAC protocols in wireless LANs

TLDR
It is demonstrated that the exponential distribution is a good approximation model for the MAC layer service time for the queueing analysis, and the presented queueing models can accurately match the simulation data obtained from ns-2 when the arrival process at MAC layer is Poissonian.
Abstract
Summary IEEE 802.11 MAC protocol is the de facto standard for wireless local area networks (LANs), and has also been implemented in many network simulation packages for wireless multi-hop ad hoc networks. However, it is well known that, as the number of active stations increases, the performance of IEEE 802.11 MAC in terms of delay and throughput degrades dramatically, especially when each station’s load approaches its saturation state. To explore the inherent problems in this protocol, it is important to characterize the probability distribution of the packet service time at the MAC layer. In this paper, by modeling the exponential backoff process as a Markov chain, we can use the signal transfer function of the generalized state transition diagram to derive an approximate probability distribution of the MAC layer service time. We then present the discrete probability distribution for MAC layer packet service time, which is shown to accurately match the simulation data from network simulations. Based on the probability model for the MAC layer service time, we can analyze a few performance metrics of the wireless LAN and give better explanation to the performance degradation in delay and throughput at various traffic loads. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the exponential distribution is a good approximation model for the MAC layer service time for the queueing analysis, and the presented queueing models can accurately match the simulation data obtained from ns-2 when the arrival process at MAC layer is Poissonian. Copyright # 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

The effect of frame length, fragmentation and RTS/CTS mechanism on IEEE 802.11 MAC performance

TL;DR: An accurate prototype that can give a great potential with numerical results in assisting engineers in the designing and implementing the hardware/software access parts of the WLAN is provided.
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A capacity analysis framework for the IEEE 802.11e contention-based infrastructure basic service set

TL;DR: The proposed call admission control algorithm maintains satisfactory user-perceived quality for coexisting voice and video connections in an infrastructure Basic Service Set and does not present over-or under-admission problems of previously proposed models in the literature.
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A Token-Based Scheduling Scheme for WLANs and Its Performance Analysis

TL;DR: This paper proposes a novel token-based scheduling scheme for precise and quantitative service differentiation, which can provide great flexibility and facility to the network service provider for service class management.
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Latency and Jitter Analysis for IEEE 802.11e Wireless LANs

TL;DR: A proposed analytic model can estimate the available number of nodes determining the system performance, in order to satisfy user demands on the latency and jitter of IEEE 802.11e wireless local area networks in a saturation condition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Supporting QoS in IEEE 802.11e wireless LANs over fading channel

TL;DR: A modification to the media access scheme, called CAFD (Collision Avoidance with Fading Detection) to elevate the performance against channel failures and an adjustment for the maximum number of retransmissions is proposed to maintain the delay and jitter requirements of the real-time traffic.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Performance analysis of the IEEE 802.11 distributed coordination function

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple but nevertheless extremely accurate, analytical model to compute the 802.11 DCF throughput, in the assumption of finite number of terminals and ideal channel conditions, is presented.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A performance comparison of multi-hop wireless ad hoc network routing protocols

TL;DR: The results of a derailed packet-levelsimulationcomparing fourmulti-hopwirelessad hoc networkroutingprotocols, which cover a range of designchoices: DSDV,TORA, DSR and AODV are presented.
Book

Fundamentals of queueing theory

TL;DR: The Fundamentals of Queueing Theory, Fourth Edition as discussed by the authors provides a comprehensive overview of simple and more advanced queuing models, with a self-contained presentation of key concepts and formulae.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Performance comparison of two on-demand routing protocols for ad hoc networks

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that even though DSR and AODV share a similar on-demand behavior the differences in the protocol mechanics can lead to significant performance differentials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Performance comparison of two on-demand routing protocols for ad hoc networks

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that even though DSR and AODV share similar on-demand behavior, the differences in the protocol mechanics can lead to significant performance differentials.
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