Published 2009
| Version v1
Publication
On the Effectiveness of IEEE 802.11e Implementations in Real Hardware
Contributors
Description
Real-time multimedia traffic requires some minimum
delivery guarantees to be effectively transmitted over
packet-switched networks. This is even more necessary when
interactive sessions (e.g., Voice-over-IP applications) are involved.
Effective and timely packet delivery is sometimes achieved by
overdimensioning network capacity. However, this is not the most
practical and economic solution. Instead, providing a specific
service to different traffic types may achieve better results without
wasting network resources.
Quality of Service (QoS) be implemented at different layers of
the protocol stack, but tight control at the link layer is essential
when the physical medium is shared among a number of devices.
Wireless LANs are a typical example of that.
The IEEE 802.11e amendment enhances the original version
of the WiFi standard with new QoS functionalities. It maintains
backward compatibility with legacy hardware, and this may
cause the priority scheme to be ineffective in those deployments
where non-QoS enabled hardware is present.
In this paper, we analyze some widespread commercial 802.11
products to check the effectiveness of the QoS mechanisms. We
show that all hardware under examination fails in providing
effective QoS guarantees when legacy stations are present.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/326544
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/326544
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE