Network Technology CSE3020 - 2006 1 Network Technology CSE3020 Week 9.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Networks: Wireless LANs1 Wireless Local Area Networks.
Advertisements

Contents IEEE MAC layer operation Basic CSMA/CA operation
– Wireless PHY and MAC Stallings Types of Infrared FHSS (frequency hopping spread spectrum) DSSS (direct sequence.
© Kemal AkkayaWireless & Network Security 1 Department of Computer Science Southern Illinois University Carbondale CS591 – Wireless & Network Security.
Comp 361, Spring 20056:Basic Wireless 1 Chapter 6: Basic Wireless (last updated 02/05/05) r A quick intro to CDMA r Basic
14.1 Chapter 14 Wireless LANs Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Wireless Local Area Networks By Edmund Gean August 2, 2000.
1 CSE401n:Computer Networks Lecture 16 Wireless Link & LANs WS: ch-14 KR: 5.7.
Wireless Networking So we talked about wired networks. What about wireless?
Networks: Wireless LANs1 Wireless Local Area Networks.
Wireless Local Area Networks
20 – Collision Avoidance, : Wireless and Mobile Networks6-1.
Networks: Wireless LANs1 Wireless Local Area Networks.
specifications overview Specifications MAC  Specification of layers below LLC  Associated management/control interfaces MIB Control Applications.
1 Introduction to Wireless Networks Michalis Faloutsos.
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks6-1 Chapter 6: Wireless and Mobile Networks Background: r # wireless (mobile) phone subscribers now exceeds # wired phone.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar1 ECSE-4730: Computer Communication Networks (CCN) Chapter 5: The Data Link.
5-1 Data Link Layer r What is Data Link Layer? r Wireless Networks m Wi-Fi (Wireless LAN) r Comparison with Ethernet.
WLAN b a Johan Montelius
8/7/20151 Mobile Computing COE 446 Wireless Multiple Access Tarek Sheltami KFUPM CCSE COE hthttp://faculty.kfupm.edu.sa/coe/tarek/coe446.htm Principles.
Basic Wireless Network 1 Chapter 5. Basic Wireless Network 1 Wireless Networks Wireless Technology overview The IEEE WLAN Standards.
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks6-1 Elements of a wireless network network infrastructure wireless hosts r laptop, PDA, IP phone r run applications r may.
Network Security Wireless LAN. Network Security About WLAN  IEEE standard  Use wireless transmission medium such as radio, microwave, infrared.
Chapter 5 outline 5.1 Introduction and services
ECE 4450:427/527 - Computer Networks Spring 2015
Wi-Fi Wireless LANs Dr. Adil Yousif. What is a Wireless LAN  A wireless local area network(LAN) is a flexible data communications system implemented.
CS640: Introduction to Computer Networks Aditya Akella Lecture 22 - Wireless Networking.
Lecture #2 Chapter 14 Wireless LANs.
Overview of Wireless LANs Use wireless transmission medium Issues of high prices, low data rates, occupational safety concerns, & licensing requirements.
Opersating Mode DCF: distributed coordination function
MAC layer Taekyoung Kwon. Media access in wireless - start with IEEE In wired link, –Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection –send.
Wireless Medium Access. Multi-transmitter Interference Problem  Similar to multi-path or noise  Two transmitting stations will constructively/destructively.
Ethernet. Problem In an Ethernet, suppose there are three stations very close to each other, A, B and C. Suppose at time 0, all of them have a frame to.
Computer and Data Communications Semester Mohd Nazri Mahmud Session 4a-12 March 2012.
14.1 Chapter 14 Wireless LANs Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Wireless Access avoid collisions: 2 + nodes transmitting at same time CSMA - sense before transmitting –don’t collide with ongoing transmission by other.
K. Salah 1 Chapter 15 Wireless LANs. K. Salah 2 Figure 15.1 BSSs IEEE Specification for Wireless LAN: IEEE , which covers the physical and data.
IEEE Wireless LAN Standard. Medium Access Control-CSMA/CA IEEE defines two MAC sublayers Distributed coordination function (DCF) Point coordination.
Data and Computer Communications Ninth Edition by William Stallings Chapter 17 – Wireless LANs.
Wireless and Mobility The term wireless is normally used to refer to any type of electrical or electronic operation which is accomplished without the use.
Architecture of an infrastructure network Distribution System Portal 802.x LAN Access Point LAN BSS LAN BSS 1 Access Point STA.
CSC 581 Communication Networks II Chapter 6c: Local Area Network (Wireless LAN – ) Dr. Cheer-Sun Yang.
Lecture # 13 Computer Communication & Networks. Today’s Menu ↗Last Lecture Review ↗Wireless LANs ↗Introduction ↗Flavors of Wireless LANs ↗CSMA/CA Wireless.
Chapter 6 Medium Access Control Protocols and Local Area Networks Wireless LAN.
Ch 14. Wireless LANs IEEE Specification for a wireless LAN – Cover physical and data link layers Basic service sets (BSS) and extended service.
WIRELESS COMMUNICATION Husnain Sherazi Lecture 1.
Wi-Fi. Basic structure: – Stations plus an access point – Stations talk to the access point, then to outside – Access point talks to stations – Stations.
Universität Karlsruhe Institut für Telematik ECE 591
WLAN. Networks: Wireless LANs2 Distribute Coordination Function (DCF) Distributed access protocol Contention-Based Uses CSMA/ CA – Uses both physical.
Chapter 15 Wireless LANs 15.# 1
WLAN.
Chapter 14 Wireless LANs.
Wireless Protocols. 2 Outline MACA 3 ISM: Industry, Science, Medicine unlicensed frequency spectrum: 900Mhz, 2.4Ghz, 5.1Ghz, 5.7Ghz.
MAC Layer Protocols for Wireless Networks. What is MAC? MAC stands for Media Access Control. A MAC layer protocol is the protocol that controls access.
1 Chapter 4 MAC Layer – Wireless LAN Jonathan C.L. Liu, Ph.D. Department of Computer, Information Science and Engineering (CISE), University of Florida.
Distributed-Queue Access for Wireless Ad Hoc Networks Authors: V. Baiamonte, C. Casetti, C.-F. Chiasserini Dipartimento di Elettronica, Politecnico di.
Copyright © 2003 OPNET Technologies, Inc. Confidential, not for distribution to third parties. Wireless LANs Session
Wireless LAN Requirements (1) Same as any LAN – High capacity, short distances, full connectivity, broadcast capability Throughput: – efficient use wireless.
IEEE Wireless LAN. Wireless LANs: Characteristics Types –Infrastructure based –Ad-hoc Advantages –Flexible deployment –Minimal wiring difficulties.
CS440 Computer Networks 1 Wireless LAN (IEEE ) Neil Tang 10/01/2008.
Wireless LAN Provides network connectivity over wireless media An Access Point (AP) is installed to act as Bridge between Wireless and Wired Network.
The University of Adelaide, School of Computer Science
Computer Communication Networks
CS 457 – Lecture 7 Wireless Networks
Wireless Local Area Networks (LANs)
Computer Communication & Networks
IEEE Wireless LAN wireless LANs: untethered (often mobile) networking
Chapter 6 Medium Access Control Protocols and Local Area Networks
Chapter 15 Wireless LANs Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
IEEE Wireless Local Area Networks (RF-LANs)
Presentation transcript:

Network Technology CSE Network Technology CSE3020 Week 9

Network Technology CSE Wireless LAN  Why Wireless LANs?  Mobility  Flexibility  No cables, save cost  Fast installation Problems:  Limited bandwidth  Noisy channel  Multipath  Security  Power consumption

Network Technology CSE Wireless LANs IEEE HIPERLAN 1 HIPERLAN 2 Bluetooth Range (m) Data rate (Mbps)  focus IEEE (USA). HIPERLAN 1 and 2 (Europe). Bluetooth (Industry: Erricson, Nokia, IBM, Intel,…): Provides short distance (around 10m), low data rate (1Mbps) communications between devices (speakers, laptops,…).

Network Technology CSE Wireless LAN: IEEE  Physical Layer  Topologies  MAC Protocol DCF and PCF Infrastructure and Ad hoc Radio (DSSS,FHSS) and Infrared DSSS: Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum FHSS: Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum DCF: Distributed Coordination Function PCF: Point Coordination Function

Network Technology CSE IEEE Functions Distributed Coordination Function (DCF): Based on CSMA with Collision Avoidance Four-way handshaking access method may be applied (optional). Retransmission is based on Binary Exponential Backoff. Point Coordination Function (PCF): Similar to a polling system.

Network Technology CSE Wireless LAN: IEEE family IEEE : First standard in the family (1997). It uses DSSS or FHSS at 2.4GHz ISM band offering up to 2Mbps. IEEE a: It is operated at 5GHz ISM band. It uses OFDM modulation (multi-carrier) scheme. It offers up to 54Mbps. IEEE b (1999): It is operated at 2.4GHz ISM band. It uses CCK & QPSK (with DSSS). It offers 1, 2, 5.5 and 11Mbps. Other standards are still being developed. ISM band: Industrial,Scientific,Medicine band OFDM: Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing

Network Technology CSE IEEE : Physical Layer Radio Experience gained from building mobile phone and wireless WAN networks can be reused. Large coverage and deep penetration. Very limited license-free frequency bands. Very noisy. Infrared Cheap. No licenses needed. Interference by sunlight, heat sources. Low bandwidth. Signals may be blocked by many surrounding objects.

Network Technology CSE IEEE : Topologies Ad hoc networks Infrastructure networks Access Point LAN WAN

Network Technology CSE IEEE : Architecture of an Infrastructure Network ESS BSS STA BSS STA 802.X LANs AP Portal Radio coverage STA = Station AP = Access Point BSS = Basic Service Set ESS = Extended Service Set

Network Technology CSE IEEE : Infrastructure Design issues: Handover and roaming. Frame Forwarding. Frame conversion from/to existing LANs’ frame format. AP LAN WAN AP

Network Technology CSE IEEE : Ad hoc Design issue: Multihop relaying (Routing): How can we connect cells if we do not have an access point in each cell? A B C D E F G

Network Technology CSE IEEE MAC Protocol A protocol is needed to define rules for all stations to access the common channel without conflict. Many proposals were submitted to IEEE working group, CSMA/CA was chosen (1997). CSMA/CA is similar to CSMA/CD (used in Ethernet). A station must make sure the common channel is clear before any transmission attempt. Unlike CSMA/CD (Ethernet), a station cannot detect a collision. The receiver must reply with an acknowledgement immediately after receiving a frame. A station must choose a random future time for all its transmission (new or collided frames).

Network Technology CSE CSMA/CA To transmit a frame, a station first picks a random integer, r (or counter) from range [0,W-1]. The value r is decreased by one when the common channel is detected idle for a short period of time known as slot time (e.g. 50  sec). The station transmits the frame when r reaches zero. If the channel is detected busy before r reaches zero, the station stops to decrease r. The countdown will be reactivated when a long period of idle channel is detected (this period is known as DIFS – Distributed Interframe Space). After the completion of the transmission, the station must wait for a very short period (known as SIFS – Short IFS) for the acknowledgement (ack). The return of the ack confirms the transmission, otherwise, the station must repeat the first step.

Network Technology CSE Ack not received transmission completed Channel turns busy CSMA/CA The station transmits the frame To transmit a frame, a station first picks a random integer, r (or counter) from range [0,W-1] The r value is frozen. The station will continue to monitor the channel. The countdown will be reactivated when a long period of idle channel is detected (known as DIFS) the station must wait for a very short period (known as SIFS) for an acknowledgement (ack). For every slot time (eg. 50  sec) where the common channel is sensed idle, r =r-1 when r =0 channel turns idle for a DIFS START DONE ack received REPEAT START

Network Technology CSE CSMA/CA Initially, W is set to a small value (W=8 according to the IEEE standard, this is known as the “minimum contention window”). As a station experiences collision, W is doubled. When W reaches a large value, it stays at that value (W=256 according to the IEEE standard, this is known as the “maximum contention window”).

Network Technology CSE CSMA/CA Operation: Example-1 B D C Consider this ad hoc WLAN: Scenario: B is attempting to transmit a frame to D. The transmission is successful. time B was ready, B picked r = 3 r = 0 B transmitted its frame ACK from D Slot time SIFS

Network Technology CSE CSMA/CA Operation: Example-2 B D C Consider this ad hoc WLAN: Scenario: B, C are attempting transmissions to D. Both transmissions are successful. time B transmitted its frame. C detected a busy channel, r c was frozen. ACK from D Slot time B, C are ready, B picked r B = 1 and C picked r c = 3 DIFS r c was reactivated C transmitted its frame here when r c = 0.

Network Technology CSE CSMA/CA Operation: Example-3 Scenario: B, C are attempting transmissions to D. A collision occurs before both transmissions are successful. time Transmissions of B and C collided here. Slot time B, C are ready, B picked r B = 1 and C picked r c = 1 No ACK from D DIFS B, C repeated the operation. B picked r B = 1 and C picked r c = 13 B transmitted its frame here when r B =0. r c was frozen here. ACK from D... B D C

Network Technology CSE Hidden Station Problem When A is transmitting a frame to B, since D is not in A’s coverage, D is a hidden station that D doesn’t sense a busy channel, thus D may start a transmission that collides with A’s transmission Hidden Station Problem in ad hoc Wireless LANs: ABCD A’s coverage B’s coverage

Network Technology CSE Exposed Station problem While A is transmitting a frame to C, B senses a busy channel and concludes that it may not transmit any frame to D which is incorrect Exposed Station Problem in ad hoc Wireless LANs: ABCDA’s coverage B’s coverage

Network Technology CSE Solution to Hidden/Exposed Station Problem Four-way Handshaking time senderreceiver data ACK Basic operation Additional operation RTS CTS RTS: Ready to send CTS: Clear to send

Network Technology CSE RTS/CTS Operation B D C Consider this ad hoc WLAN: Scenario: B is attempting to transmit a frame to D. The transmission is successful. time B was ready, B picked r = 3 r = 0 B transmitted its frame after receiving CTS ACK from D Slot time B transmitted RTS D replied with CTS

Network Technology CSE Four-way Handshaking Four-way handshaking access method is an optional operation in IEEE It is also used to improve performance (by reducing the bandwidth wastage due to a collision). Short frames are transmitted using Basic access method, and long frames are recommended to transmit using Four- way handshaking access method.

Network Technology CSE IEEE : DCF & PCF SIFS PIFS DIFS SIFS = Short Interframe space PIFS = Point IFS DIFS = Distributed IFS PCF (optional) DCF SIFS PDataPC DIFS PCF Operation: PIFS time Backoff DataBusy SIFS PIFS time

Network Technology CSE Required Reading W. Stallings, Data and Computer Communications Prentice-Hall. >> Chapter 13.6 & E Chapter 17 7E