Data di Pubblicazione:
2000
Abstract:
In WLANs, the medium access control (MAC) protocol
is the main element that determines the efficiency of sharing
the limited communication bandwidth of the wireless channel. The
fraction of channel bandwidth used by successfully transmitted
messages gives a good indication of the protocol efficiency, and its
maximum value is referred to as protocol capacity. In a previous
paper we have derived the theoretical limit of the IEEE 802.11
MAC protocol capacity. In addition, we showed that if a station
has an exact knowledge of the network status, it is possible to tune
its backoff algorithm to achieve a protocol capacity very close to its
theoretical bound. Unfortunately, in a real case, a station does not
have an exact knowledge of the network and load configurations
(i.e., number of active stations and length of the message transmitted
on the channel) but it can only estimate it. In this work
we analytically study the performance of the IEEE 802.11 protocol
with a dynamically tuned backoff based on the estimation
of the network status. Results obtained indicate that under stationary
traffic and network configurations (i.e., constant average
message length and fixed number of active stations), the capacity
of the enhanced protocol approaches the theoretical limits in all the
configurations analyzed. In addition, by exploiting the analytical
model, we investigate the protocol performance in transient conditions
(i.e., when the number of active stations sharply changes).
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Markov chain; multiple access protocol (MAC); performance analysis; protocol capacity; wireless LAN (WLAN)
Elenco autori:
Gregori, Enrico; Conti, Marco
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