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Multi hop connections using

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Presentation on theme: "Multi hop connections using"— Presentation transcript:

1 Multi hop connections using 802.11
May 2004 doc.: IEEE /xxxr0 July 2004 Multi hop connections using Guido R. Hiertz, Yunpeng Zang ComNets Chair of Communication Networks Aachen University (RWTH) Germany Jörg Habetha Philips Research Aachen Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH) Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University

2 Multi frequency Mesh Advantages of multi frequency mesh networks
July 2004 Multi frequency Mesh Advantages of multi frequency mesh networks Less interference Exclusive channels Reuse patterns Disadvantages of multi frequency mesh networks Frequency planning Frequency coordination Multiple transceivers COST (!) Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

3 Solutions for single frequency mesh needed, too
July 2004 Single frequency Mesh E.g. Consumer Electronics Mass production Limited power Limited computing power Ease of use Cost sensitive (!) Even 50¢ extra might be too much Single transceiver solutions Easy to implement Available Well known Solutions for single frequency mesh needed, too Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

4 Spatial frequency reuse (1)
July 2004 Spatial frequency reuse (1) Assumption TDMA channel Equal transmission duration Equal transmission power Equal distance between stations No errors on wireless medium Simplex connection Interference range limited to neighboring station Reception limited to neighboring station Best case Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

5 Spatial frequency reuse (2)
July 2004 Spatial frequency reuse (2) Reuse limited by neighbor Reuse distance min. 4 hops Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

6 Packet forwarding in 802.11 July 2004
Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

7 Packet forwarding in 802.11 (2)
July 2004 Packet forwarding in (2) Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

8 802.11 forwarding in detail July 2004
Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

9 802.11 = Single hop MAC Distributed Coordination Function
July 2004 = Single hop MAC Distributed Coordination Function Coordinates single hop Local BSS only No Coordination for Multi Hop Independent process in each STA Network Allocation Vector (NAV) reserves single only No priority to forwarding Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

10 No Multi Hop concept in 802.11 Infrastructure based BSS
May 2004 doc.: IEEE /xxxr0 July 2004 No Multi Hop concept in Infrastructure based BSS Multi hop connection via AP Hops to/from AP wireless Wired backbone Four address format Independent BSS All stations in reception range No forwarding procedure defined Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH) Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University

11 802.11 duplex route in detail July 2004
Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

12 Duplex multi hop Much worse than simplex connection
July 2004 Duplex multi hop Much worse than simplex connection Forwarding stations = Bottleneck “Neighborhood capture” (11-01/596r1) For system level, intra BSS Here: For multi hop between stations No equal channel access probability Un-proportional reduced for forwarding nodes Steady collisions with neighbors No priority to forwarding Uncoordinated access Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

13 Without useful protocol for multi hop in core network, mesh will fail
July 2004 Conclusion MAC is not sufficient for multi hop leaves information unused for multi hop Multi hop is key element to mesh networks Without useful protocol for multi hop in core network, mesh will fail Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)

14 Thank you for you attention
July 2004 Thank you for you attention Guido R. Hiertz, ComNets, Aachen University (RWTH)


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