Measuring NFS Performance in Wireless Networks
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Abstract
Technological trends suggest that soon communication networks will
consist of a high speed wired backbone with numerous wireless Local Area
Networks. Mobile computing and wireless subnetworks are increasingly in
demand. Mobile routing solutions provide wireless LANs with seamless
connectivity to backbone wired systems. However, these solutions do not
provide acceptable performance. Wireless networks have distinct transmission
characteristics which present challenges to achieving efficient performance.
Performance over wireless links is limited by high error rates, mobility,
and low bandwidth. We have studied the performance of TCP and NFS over
a wireless network. The prevalence of these protocols means that mobile
hosts will frequently use them when communicating with stationary hosts.
Measurements have been collected to determine the response of these protocols
in the presence of various error patterns. These measurements show that
NFS and TCP performance suffer extreme degradation due to these wireless
link characteristics. Unexpectedly, NFS performance is not better than an
TCP FTP file transfer. NFS performance over wireless links is limited by
large packet sizes, long retransmission timeouts, and slow response to losses.
Our goal is to understand the effects of wireless communication on these
protocols and improve performance without requiring changes to the current
network Infrastructure.
(Also cross-referenced as UMIACS-TR-95-125)