Stray and Overlapping STAs

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Dynamic Sensitivity Control V2
Advertisements

Doc.: IEEE /1012r0 Submission Sept 2013 Dynamic Sensitivity Control Improvement to area throughput Date: Authors: Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide.
Doc.: IEEE /0025r0 Submission Jan 2015 Dynamic Sensitivity Control Roaming Date: 2015-January Authors: Graham Smith, SR TechnologiesSlide 1.
Doc.: IEEE /0543r0 Submission May 2015 TG ax Scenarios Proposed additions for frequency re-use Date: Authors: Graham Smith, SR TechnologiesSlide.
Summary of Path Loss in Propagation
Submission doc.: IEEE /0085r1 Jan 2015 John Son, WILUS InstituteSlide 1 Legacy Fairness Issues of Enhanced CCA Date: Authors:
Doc.: IEEE /1420r1Nov 2014 Submission Po-Kai Huang (Intel) Slide 1 The Impact of Preamble Error on MAC System Performance Date: NameAffiliationsAddressPhone .
Doc.: IEEE /1187r1Sep 2014 Submission Po-Kai Huang (Intel) Slide 1 The Effect of Preamble Error Model on MAC Simulator Date: NameAffiliationsAddressPhone .
Doc.: IEEE /2684r0 Submission November 2007October 2007 Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide 1 Overlapping BSS Proposed Solution Date: Authors:
Doc.: IEEE /1081r0 SubmissionSayantan Choudhury HEW Simulation Methodology Date: Sep 16, 2013 Authors: Slide 1.
Doc.: IEEE /1290r0 Submission Nov 2013 Dynamic Sensitivity Control for HEW SG Date: Authors: Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide 1.
Doc.: IEEE / aa Submission Apr 2009 Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide 1 Proposed Overlapping BSS Solution Date: 2009, July 15 Authors:
Doc.: ax Submission July 2014 Slide 1 Proposed Calibration For MAC simulator Date: Authors:
Doc.: IEEE / aa Submission May 2009 Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide 1 Considerations for Statistical Multiplexing Support in OBSS Proposal.
Doc.: IEEE r0 Amin Jafarian, Newracom 1 CCA Revisit May 2015 NameAffiliationsAddressPhone Amin
Doc.: IEEE / aa Submission March 2009 Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide 1 OBSS “OSQAP” QoS Issues Date: Authors:
Doc.: IEEE /1110r0 Amin Jafarian, Newracom 1 September 2015 BSS-TXOP NameAffiliationsAddressPhone Amin
Doc.: IEEE /0779r2 Submission June 2014 Dynamic Sensitivity Control Practical Usage Date: 2014-July Authors: Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide 1.
Doc.: IEEE / aa Submission Apr 2009 Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide 1 Considerations for Statistical Multiplexing Support in OBSS Proposal.
Doc.: IEEE /0161r1 Submission doc.: IEEE /1031r0 Measurement results for OBSS in home network scenarios Date: September 2009.
Doc.: IEEE /0294r1 Submission Dynamic Sensitivity Control Channel Selection and Legacy Sharing Date: Authors: Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide.
Doc.: IEEE /2684r1 Submission November 2007 Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide 1 Overlapping BSS Proposed Solution Date: Authors:
Doc.: IEEE /0212r3 Submission Feb 2016 TG ax Enterprise Scenario, Color and DSC Date: Authors: Graham Smith, SR TechnologiesSlide 1.
Submission doc.: IEEE /0108r0 January 11 Slide 1 Evaluation of neighbors impact on channel allocation for dense environment and Video use cases.
Doc.: IEEE /0635r1 Submission May 2014 Dynamic Sensitivity Control Implementation Date: 2014-May Authors: Graham Smith, DSP GroupSlide 1.
Synchronization of HCCA APs in OBSS
Overlapping BSS Proposed Solution – “OSQAP”
Spatial Discovery in 60 GHz
Simulation-based evaluation of DSC in enterprise scenario
40 MHz Coexistence in 2.4 GHz Tutorial
TG ax A Unified Approach to Spatial Reuse
TG ax Indoor Enterprise Scenarios, Color, DSC and TPC
Performance Evaluation of OBSS Densification
Results for Beacon Collisions
System Capacity Evaluation in OBSS Environment at 5 GHz band
OBSS Simulations Date: Authors: April 2009 April 2009
The Effect of Preamble Error Model on MAC Simulator
Results for Beacon Collisions
Distributed Channel Assignment for minimal islands of connectivity
OBSS issue and simulation scenarios in TGac
Considerations for OBSS Sharing using QLoad Element
Synchronization of HCCA APs in OBSS
Update on “Channel Models for 60 GHz WLAN Systems” Document
OBSS Sharing with Access Fraction
HCCAOP Scheme, Efficiency and Sharing
20/40MHz Channel Selection
OBSS Sharing with Access Fraction
Overlapping BSS Proposed Solution – “OSQAP”
HCCAOP Scheme, Efficiency and Sharing
OBSS HCCA Race Condition
Stray and Overlapping STAs
Increased Network Throughput with Channel Width Related CCA and Rules
TG ax A Unified Approach to Spatial Reuse
Proposed Overlapping BSS Solution
Proposed Overlapping BSS Solution
Applicability of 11s MCCA to HCCA OBSS
Considerations for OBSS Sharing using QLoad Element
System Capacity Evaluation in OBSS Environment at 5 GHz band
HCCAOP Scheme, Efficiency and Sharing
Comment resolution #79 Date: 2009, November 17 Authors: November 2009
OBSS Sharing with Access Fraction
Interference Analysis for Residential Environments
Applicability of 11s MCCA to HCCA OBSS
Spatial Discovery in 60 GHz
Overlapping BSS Proposed Solution
AP Shut Out Neighborhood Effect
TG ax A Unified Approach to Spatial Reuse
System Level Simulator Evaluation with/without Capture Effect
TG ax Scenarios Proposed additions for frequency re-use
DSC Calibration Result
Presentation transcript:

Stray and Overlapping STAs Aug 2009 doc.: IEEE 802.11-08/0xxx Aug 2009 Stray and Overlapping STAs Date: 2009-08-17 Authors: Graham Smith, DSP Group Graham Smith, DSP Group

Aug 2009 doc.: IEEE 802.11-08/0xxx Aug 2009 Abstract The objective is to first estimate the practical problem of STAs that overlap with another network when the APs do not overlap. Then to look at the effects – what happens Then look to see if any solutions are required, and if so, what are they. Make proposals, if any Graham Smith, DSP Group Graham Smith, DSP Group

The Perceived Problem Aug 2009 Looks obvious in these diagrams, but what about in practice? Graham Smith, DSP Group

Propagation Formula Aug 2009 Indoor propagation loss formula (11n) *, F in MHz, d in feet For d<16.5ft Lp = – 38 + 20 log F + 20 log d + Wall/Floor loss (Free Space formula) For d>16.5ft Lp = – 38 + 20 log F + 20 log 16.5 + 35 log (d/16.5) + Wall/Floor Loss Std. Dev 3-4dB (Shadow Loss) *Erceg et al (2004) as per 11n, Channel Model B – Residential 10dB Outer Wall loss has been used in calculations No internal wall or floor losses used in calculations AP Antenna Gain 2dB STA Antenna Gain 0dB Graham Smith, DSP Group

Terraced/Town Houses Aug 2009 Terraced Houses @20ft -45dBm -52dBm -72dBm -88dBm -102dBm 3 Neighbors X X 150ft Worse Case position of STAs 60 ft, 4 walls = -100dBm HIDDEN X 150 ft, 2 walls = -96dBm HIDDEN -92dBm Neighbors 3 houses down, and opposite houses within 150 feet have potential to overlap Note: No internal wall losses, external wall loss only. STAs within range of each other, or another STA, when APs are not? – NO Graham Smith, DSP Group

Aug 2009 Detached Houses 15ft Worse Case position of STAs 50 ft, 4 walls = -100dBm (no internal walls) HIDDEN X X -53dBm -70dBm -100dBm -125dBm 20ft 5ft X X Worse Case position of STAs 30 ft, 4 walls = -92dBm Add loss with one internal wall in middle house = -95dBm HIDDEN -53dBm -65dBm -95dBm -121dBm 20ft House opposite scenario as per previous slide – STAs are HIDDEN STAs within range of each other, or another STA when APs are not? – NO NOTE: 09/0474r0 by Alex Ashley (NDS) also predicts similar results (Simulation with 5 STAs per house) Graham Smith, DSP Group

Apartment Block Aug 2009 Each Apartment 20 x 35 feet 6 -45dBm -52dBm -72dBm -88dBm -102dBm -44dBm -63dBm -84dBm -99dBm Each Apartment 20 x 35 feet about 700 square feet -61dBm -77dBm -97dBm -77dBm -91dBm -105dBm -92dBm -103dBm Compared to the AP signal strengths, no internal walls, STA signal strength is: 4dB less due to antennas (-4) 20ft less due to position in x axis (+2) 10ft less due to position in z axis (+4dB) i.e. either same as for AP or 2dB less RESULT, -2dB cf AP in x-axis 0dB cf AP in z-axis STAs within range of each other, when APs are not? – NO Graham Smith, DSP Group

Summary for domestic scenarios Aug 2009 Summary for domestic scenarios In practice for residential scenarios, the overlapping STA is very rare if at all The outer wall attenuation dominates Now let us consider when the STA is outside of the building: What is the effect on the two (non-overlapping) networks? What is the effect on the STA? Will this be a permanent situation? How common? Graham Smith, DSP Group

Case 1 – Stray STA Aug 2009 A and B are on same channel Stray STA (X) can see and be seen by B STA to B ~-81dBm (see below) STA to A ~-64dBm Channel selection ensures that B is the only other AP on same channel as A Graham Smith, DSP Group

What Happens – Case 1: Stray STA Aug 2009 What Happens – Case 1: Stray STA Case 1 – STA within range of both APs, (in the garden) Possibly both ‘hidden’ and ‘seen’ nodes in network B ‘Hidden’ nodes in network B have no effect Worse case is STA ‘sees’ all other STAs and AP in B TX STA sees communication (maybe just the preambles) in networks B plus its own network A (“Captive Effect”), resulting in reduced ability to gain the air (depends upon traffic), so STA can only use the “left over bandwidth” Result is that only the STA is affected, not network B or the rest of A RX At best “Step-up Re-start” will result in reception for the STA from its own AP not being affected. (Network A signal strength is ~17dB higher than any transmission from network B) At worse, reception is noisy, resulting in dropped packets SBA limits retries Bottom line – STA is affected, mostly for TX, but not the networks Graham Smith, DSP Group

Extreme Example of Stray STA Aug 2009 Extreme Example of Stray STA Apartment Block around swimming pool Outside STA ‘sees’ multiple networks What Happens? STA is effectively silenced or reduced TX due to ‘captive’ effect RX also impeded due to numerous ‘hidden’ nodes Overall effect is poor performance for an outside STA. No worse, no better due to OBSS . Only “solution” is STA’s network needs to be on own, unique channel or else every other Network reduces it traffic – I don’t think so. Graham Smith, DSP Group

Case 2 – Two Overlapping STAs Aug 2009 Case 2 – Two Overlapping STAs Networks A and B are hidden from each other STAs see each other at ~-78dBm (up to -92dBm) STAs see own QAPs at ~-64dBm Note: Distance from STA to QAP B is >200ft for B to be hidden from STA What Happens? TX - STAs slightly reduced in ability to gain air, only by the traffic on the other STA RX – Step-up re-Start should enable good reception from AP Reception, at worse, only prohibited if two STAs transmitting at same time and stepping on each other. Effect depends on the relative traffic. Basically Networks not affected , just the STAs (mostly TX). Not as much as ‘problem’ as Stray STAs. Graham Smith, DSP Group

Stray STAs – Solutions Possible “solutions” Aug 2009 Notes: Presence of Stray STAs is a dynamic, relatively short-lived problem Stray STA could use CTS to self to improve its TX performance – this impinges on Network B AP decision to re-scan (as below) should also depend upon the QLoad of the Stray STA Possible “solutions” 08/1260r1 outlined method for a QAP to determine if there was an overlapping STA - Uses Beacon Report and continues channel search is Stray STA present Requires the STA to be 11k compliant AP B recognizes a ‘stray STA’, initiates a new Channel Search Switch over after ~200ms, switch <5ms (assuming network is 11h) Not a great incentive for B to do this, but the stray does present a possible hindrance. Stray STA informs own AP that it is a stray Use an “unsolicited” 11h Measurement Report to inform AP. AP can then initiate new channel search. Three spare bits are available. This also works for the overlapping STA situation Note: These could result in several tries for a new channel… but so what? If no better channel found, OK, not made worse. If changing several times, no real new problem, channel change is not that a big deal. Graham Smith, DSP Group

Stray and Overlapping STAs Aug 2009 Stray and Overlapping STAs Do we need to adjust OBSS solution to cater for them? OBSS does not make situation worse, in fact correct Channel Selection does lessen chance of Stray STAs Stray STAs occurrence is pretty unlikely Enlarging QLoad to include QAPs at Distance 1 does not add any information that can be used for a Stray STA. Only in case of a 1:2:1 Overlap is there a way to know about a hidden QAP, and then is the chance of a Stray STA enough to warrant Sharing based upon Distance 2 Networks? Basically, only the STA is affected, not the network Solution #2 does not require any additions to the proposal, but could be added in informative text Solution #3 does require addition to the proposal and has merit – Shall we add this? Graham Smith, DSP Group

Aug 2009 Conclusions Stray and Overlapping STAs will not occur if the STAs are within the confines of the house/apartment Stray Overlapping STAs are corner cases Temporary, dynamic Fences etc. Make the occurrence pretty unlikely for houses Stray STA does not adversely affect the performances of the two hidden networks, but its own performance is impaired RX performance can be mitigated through “Step-up Re-Start” APs can carry out new Channel Search at any time If it sees a Stray STA for example OBSS Channel Search lessens chance of Stray STAs Could consider adding “unsolicited 11h Measurement Report”, sent by STA to inform AP of situation. Graham Smith, DSP Group

Aug 2009 Proposal Do not amend QLoad Element beyond reporting on self QLoad only Add informative text covering possible actions when a Stray STA is present – AP can search for new channel Should we consider adding a ‘Report’ for a STA to report that it is in a Stray STA situation? If so, use 11h Measurement Report basic format? Channel Number, Measurement Start time, Stop time, and Map (use bit 5 of Map for example) Could do it for completeness, but is the ‘problem’ big enough to warrant it? – I personally do not think so Graham Smith, DSP Group