Design Considerations & Emerging Standards
Carrier Sense Multiple Access / Collision Detect. Practical limit on Nodes per collision domain
Listen before you talk.
All stations share (access) the common media.
Each station must wait at least 9.6 microseconds between packets ◦ InterPacket Gap (IPG) ◦ Allows receiver to process packet ◦ Also allows everyone a chance to use the medium.
The first station to detect a collision sends a 32 bit ‘Jam’ signal. ◦ All stations stop sending for at least 9.6 microseconds The two stations that caused the collision then calculate a “Backoff Period” Before retrying.
There are a certain number of availble values for the random backoff period. Once networks get to about 30 devices, the backoff periods become congested.
CSMA/CD Send and Receive share the same bus Half Duplex Collision Domain
Switches Required Switches create 2 virtual bus’s per connection Collision Domain
is Half Duplex ◦ Tx and Rx uses SAME space ◦ A radio can not Transmit and Receive Simultaneously. ◦ Therefore, Collision Detection is not an option.
Waits for each frame to be ACKd If ACK not received, Collusion Assumed ◦ Takes LONGER then CD. ◦ More devices -> More Collisions -> More Wait Time
Back to the rules of Shared Media Each section of air is Shared Media Each Channel is a segment (at a certain point.)
Radio Frequency 2.6 Ghz, 5.2 Ghz
Knows no boundaries Unprotected from outside signals Distance Sensitive ◦ Law of Inverse Square Regulated differently in each country.
More power = More Distance. ◦ Sorta.
LOTS of interference ◦ Devices operating in the 2.4 GHz range include: Microwave ovens. Bluetooth devices. Baby monitors. Cordless telephones. Building Security Systems
NO Overlap between Channels 1, 6, and 11. All other channels, to bad!
Relatively unused. Less Interference. More Available Channels Shorter Wavelength = ½ theoretical coverage Absorbed more readily by solid objects.
Pros ◦ More Bandwidth ◦ More Channels ◦ Less Interference Cons ◦ Less Coverage Area ◦ Lower Penetration The Drawbacks” of 5 Ghz actually HELP K-12
Uses Different Frequency Hopping to pack more of the RF Space. Therefore, the faster the network, the more “attack surface” for interference it has.
a up to 54 Mbps in 5 Ghz Band b up to 11 Mbps in 2.4 Ghz Band. g up to 54 Mbps in 2.4 Ghz Band. n up to 600 Mbps via MIMO ◦ Technically supported in 2.4 GHZ. ac MultiGbps via MU-MIMO
n ◦ 20 Mhz Channels X 3 Streams = 300 MB ◦ 40 Mhz Channels X 3 Streams = 600 MB ac ◦ 80 Mhz Channels x 4 streams = 1.7 Gb ◦ 160 Mhz Channels X 8 Streams = 6.9 Gb (No chipsets yet bond 160Mhz)
Room 106Room 108
IEEE RTS/CTS mechanism helps to solve this problem only if the nodes are synchronized and packet sizes and data rates are the same for both the transmitting nodes. When a node hears an RTS from a neighboring node, but not the corresponding CTS, that node can deduce that it is an exposed node and is permitted to transmit to other neighboring nodes IEEE RTS/CTS
Limit Association Rates Try for uniform Device Radio Types
interference-when-things-go-bump-in-the- air
Bluetooth hops across the 2.4 GHz 1,600 times a second,
Interference – What’s already there? Building Construction – Brick Walls? Area to Cover Type of service ◦ (VoIP/Wifi?) Number of potential Clients Total Bandwidth required
◦ 5 GHZ Devices ◦ n or ac ◦ One AP : Traditional classroom ◦ One AP : 30 Students 802.1x authentication on WiFi Limiting “casual” associations
Dual Band Devices ◦ abgn ◦ List “preferred” devices with abgn support
Probes – frames advertise the WLAN network Beacons – frames locate the WLAN network of the client Authentication – access and entry into the WLAN network Association – set up of a link between the AP and WLAN client
War Drivers: Scanning devices are used to discover and exploit networks. Hackers (Crackers): Where the hacker understands the complexity of the system and exploits its weaknesses. Employees: End users make changes to the security of the system leaving it vulnerable to intrusion.
PAN LAN MAN WAN