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Journal ArticleDOI

Supporting QoS in IEEE 802.11e wireless LANs

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TLDR
An analytical model is built to derive an average delay estimate for the traffic of different priorities in the unsaturated 802.11e WLAN, showing that the QoS requirements of the real-time traffic can be satisfied if the input traffic is properly regulated.
Abstract
In the emerging IEEE 802.11e MAC protocol, the enhanced distributed channel access (EDCA) is proposed to support prioritized QoS; however, it cannot guarantee strict QoS required by real-time services such as voice and video without proper network control mechanisms. To overcome this deficiency, we first build an analytical model to derive an average delay estimate for the traffic of different priorities in the unsaturated 802.11e WLAN, showing that the QoS requirements of the real-time traffic can be satisfied if the input traffic is properly regulated. Then, we propose two effective call admission control schemes and a rate control scheme that relies on the average delay estimates and the channel busyness ratio, an index that can accurately represent the network status. The key idea is, when accepting a new real-time flow, the admission control algorithm considers its effect on the channel utilization and the delay experienced by existing real-time flows, ensuring that the channel is not overloaded and the delay requirements are not violated. At the same time, the rate control algorithm allows the best effort traffic to fully use the residual bandwidth left by the real-time traffic, thereby achieving high channel utilization

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Enhancing VANET Performance by Joint Adaptation of Transmission Power and Contention Window Size

TL;DR: A new scheme for dynamic adaptation of transmission power and contention window (CW) size to enhance performance of information dissemination in Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks (VANETs) and features significantly better throughput and lower average end-to-end delay compared with a similar scheme with static parameters.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Physical Carrier Sensing and Spatial Reuse in Multirate and Multihop Wireless Ad Hoc Networks

TL;DR: This paper investigates the impacts of variable transmission ranges and receiver sensitivities for different channel rates and the impact of multihop forwarding as well as several other important factors, such as SINR, node topology, hidden/exposed terminal problems and bidirectional handshakes, on determining the optimum carrier sensing range to maximize the throughput.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Performance of IEEE 802.11e Wireless Infrastructures for Soft-Real-Time Industrial Applications

TL;DR: An analysis of the real-time performance that can be achieved in quality-of-service (QoS)-enabled 802.11 networks has been carried out and a detailed analysis of latencies and packet loss ratios for a typical enhanced distributed channel access (EDCA) infrastructure wireless local area network (WLAN).
Journal ArticleDOI

QoS in IEEE 802.11-based wireless networks: A contemporary review

TL;DR: This survey discusses the QoS features incorporated by the IEEE 802.11 standard at both physical (PHY) and Media Access Control (MAC) layers, as well as other higher-layer proposals, and focuses on how the new architectural developments of software-defined networking (SDN) and cloud networking can be used to facilitate QoS provisioning in IEEE802.11-based networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rethinking the IEEE 802.11e EDCA performance modeling methodology

TL;DR: This work introduces and describes a novel modeling methodology that does not use per-slot transmission/collision probabilities, but relies on the fixed-point computation of the whole (residual) backoff counter distribution occurring after a generic transmission attempt.
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.
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

MACAW: a media access protocol for wireless LAN's

TL;DR: This paper studies media access protocols for a single channel wireless LAN being developed at Xerox Corporation's Palo Alto Research Center and develops a new protocol, MACAW, which uses an RTS-CTS-DS-DATA-ACK message exchange and includes a significantly different backoff algorithm.
Journal ArticleDOI

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

TL;DR: 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.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Markov Modulated Characterization of Packetized Voice and Data Traffic and Related Statistical Multiplexer Performance

TL;DR: It is shown how the matrix analytic methodology can incorporate practical system considerations such as finite buffers and a class of overload control mechanisms discussed in the literature.
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