Characterizing the IEEE 802.11 Traffic: The Wireless Side
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Abstract
Many studies on measurement and characterization of wireless LANs
have been performed recently. Most of these measurements have been
conducted from the wired portion of the network based on wired
monitoring or SNMP statistics. In this paper we argue that traffic
measurements from a wireless vantage point in the network are more
appropriate than wired measurements or SNMP statistics, to expose
the wireless medium characteristics and their impact on the
traffic patterns. While it is easier to make consistent
measurements in the wired part of a network, such measurements can
not observe the significant vagaries present in the wireless
medium itself. As a consequence constructing an accurate
measurement system from a wireless vantage point is important but
usually quite difficult due to the noisy wireless channel. In our
work we have explored the various issues in implementing such a
system to monitor traffic in an IEEE 802.11 based wireless
network. We show the effectiveness of the wireless monitoring by
quantitatively comparing it with SNMP and measurements at wired
vantage points. We also show the analysis of a typical computer
science department network traffic using the wireless monitoring
technique. Our analysis reveals rich information about the PHY/MAC
layers of the IEEE 802.11 protocol such as the typical traffic mix
of different frame types, their temporal characteristics,
correlation with the user activities and the error characteristics
of the wireless medium. Moreover, we identify anomalies in the operation of the IEEE 802.11 MAC protocol.
Our results show excessive retransmissions of some management
frame types reducing the useful throughput of the wireless network.
We also find that some features of the protocol, which were designed to
reduce the retransmission errors, are not used.
In addition, most of the clients fail to adapt the data rate
according to the signal condition between them and the access
point, which further reduce the useful throughput.
(UMIACS-TR-2004-15)