Title :
Coupled 802.11 Flows in Urban Channels: Model and Experimental Evaluation
Author :
Camp, Joseph ; Aryafar, Ehsan ; Knightly, Edward
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Southern Methodist Univ., Dallas, TX, USA
Abstract :
Contending flows in multi-hop 802.11 wireless networks compete with two fundamental asymmetries: (i) channel asymmetry, in which one flow has a stronger signal, potentially yielding physical layer capture, and (ii) topological asymmetry, in which one flow has increased channel state information, potentially yielding an advantage in winning access to the channel. Prior work has considered these asymmetries independently with a highly simplified view of the other. However, in this work, we perform thousands of measurements on coupled flows in urban environments and build a simple, yet accurate model that jointly considers information and channel asymmetries. We show that if these two asymmetries are not considered jointly, throughput predictions of even two coupled flows are vastly distorted from reality when traffic characteristics are only slightly altered (e.g., changes to modulation rate, packet size, or access mechanism). These performance modes are sensitive not only to small changes in system properties, but also small-scale link fluctuations that are common in an urban mesh network. We analyze all possible capture relationships for two-flow sub-topologies and show that capture of the reverse traffic can allow a previously starving flow to compete fairly. Finally, we show how to extend and apply the model in domains such as modulation rate adaptation and understanding the interaction of control and data traffic.
Keywords :
telecommunication network topology; telecommunication standards; telecommunication traffic; wireless LAN; wireless mesh networks; channel asymmetry; channel state information; contending flows; coupled flows; modulation rate adaptation; multihop 802.11 wireless networks; reverse traffic; small-scale link fluctuations; topological asymmetry; urban channels; urban mesh network; Channel state information; Distortion measurement; Fluctuations; Performance evaluation; Physical layer; Spread spectrum communication; Telecommunication traffic; Throughput; Traffic control; Wireless networks;
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM, 2010 Proceedings IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5836-3
DOI :
10.1109/INFCOM.2010.5461980