Capacity Allocation in Wireless LANs
Author(s)
Tan, Godfrey; Guttag, John
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Networks and Mobile Systems
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Today's access point based wireless LANs (WLANs) are inefficient and unfair. For many traffic loads they provide far less total throughput than they should, and do a poor job allocating what throughput they do deliver. Inappropriate association of nodes to access points and rates to flows plays a large role in these problems. We address a major root cause of this problem in this paper.Current practice ignores the distinction between flows that connect two wireless nodes via an access point and flows that connect wireless nodes to the wired infrastructure. As wireless devices and applications become more pervasive, ignoring this distinction will lead to a significant degradation in perceived performance.In this paper, we i) describe a series of examples that illustrates the impact of two-hop flows on the performance of the system, ii) provide a practical algorithm to solve the AP-assignment problem and iii) evaluate the performance of our algorithm against other approaches. Our preliminary results show that our algorithm can increase average achieved throughput by as much as 50% for some traffic loads.
Date issued
2004-11-12Other identifiers
MIT-CSAIL-TR-2004-073
MIT-LCS-TR-973
Series/Report no.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory