DocumentCode
951244
Title
Performance impact of interlayer dependence in infrastructure WLANs
Author
Choi, Sunwoong ; Park, Kihong ; Kim, Chong-Kwon
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Seoul Nat. Univ., South Korea
Volume
5
Issue
7
fYear
2006
fDate
7/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
829
Lastpage
845
Abstract
Widespread deployment of infrastructure WLANs has made Wi-Fi an integral part of today´s Internet access technology. Despite its crucial role in affecting end-to-end performance, past research has focused on MAC protocol enhancement, analysis, and simulation-based performance evaluation without sufficient consideration for modeling inaccuracies stemming from interlayer dependencies, including physical layer diversity, that significantly impact performance. We take a fresh look at IEEE 802.11 WLANs and using experiment, simulation, and analysis demonstrate its surprisingly agile performance traits. Our findings are two-fold. First, contention-based MAC throughput degrades gracefully under congested conditions, enabled by physical layer channel diversity that reduces the effective level of MAC contention. In contrast, fairness degrades and jitter increases significantly at a critical offered load. This duality obviates the need for link layer flow control for throughput improvement. Second, TCP-over-WLAN achieves high throughput commensurate with that of wireline TCP under saturated conditions, challenging the widely held perception that TCP throughput fares poorly over WLANs when subject to heavy contention. We show that TCP-over-WLAN prowess is facilitated by the self-regulating actions of DCF and TCP feedback control that jointly drive the shared channel at an effective load of two to three wireless stations, even when the number of active stations is large. We show that the mitigating influence of TCP extends to unfairness and adverse impact of dynamic rate shifting under multiple access contention. We use experimentation and simulation in a complementary fashion, pointing out performance characteristics where they agree and differ.
Keywords
Internet; access protocols; transport protocols; wireless LAN; IEEE 802.11 WLAN; Internet access technology; MAC protocol; TCP feedback control; Wi-Fi; infrastructure WLAN; interlayer dependence; link layer flow control; performance impact; Access protocols; Analytical models; Degradation; Feedback control; Internet; Jitter; Media Access Protocol; Performance analysis; Physical layer; Throughput; TCP-over-WLAN performance; Wireless communication; access schemes; experimentation versus simulation.; physical layer diversity;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Mobile Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1233
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMC.2006.102
Filename
1637432
Link To Document