EARC: Enhanced Adaptation of Link Rate and Contention Window for IEEE 802.11 Multi-rate Wireless Networks

碩士 === 國立交通大學 === 電信工程研究所 === 99 === IEEE 802.11 wireless network supports multiple link rates at the physical layer. Each link rate is associated with a certain required Signal-to-Interference-and-Noise Ratio (SINR) threshold for successfully decoding received packets. On transmission failures, the...

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Main Authors: Tsai, Ching-Yi, 蔡境宜
Other Authors: 林亭佑
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/61012533177341871715
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spelling ndltd-TW-099NCTU54350492016-04-08T04:22:00Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/61012533177341871715 EARC: Enhanced Adaptation of Link Rate and Contention Window for IEEE 802.11 Multi-rate Wireless Networks IEEE 802.11 多重速率無線網路之加強型參數整合調整策略 Tsai, Ching-Yi 蔡境宜 碩士 國立交通大學 電信工程研究所 99 IEEE 802.11 wireless network supports multiple link rates at the physical layer. Each link rate is associated with a certain required Signal-to-Interference-and-Noise Ratio (SINR) threshold for successfully decoding received packets. On transmission failures, the 802.11 DCF performs a binary exponential backoff mechanism to discourage channel access attempts, hoping to reduce congestion. When traditional link adaptation is applied, both rate reduction and binary backoff represent double penalties for this wireless link, which may cause overly conservative transmission attempts. On the other hand, once transmission succeeds, 802.11 DCF resets the backoff contention window to the minimum value to encourage channel access attempts. At the same time, traditional link adaptation may also decide to increase the data rate, which leads to overly aggressive transmission attempts. We observe this improper interaction of link rate and backoff mechanism that harms the 802.11 system performance, due to separate consideration of those two parameters. In this thesis, we propose to jointly adapt the rate and backoff parameters. Specifically, an Enhanced Adaptation of link Rate and Contention window, abbreviated as EARC, is devised. EARC is a closed-loop (receiver-assisted) link rate adaptation protocol that jointly considers the backoff mechanism. With only one extra byte carried by the DATA packet, EARC incurs little controlling overhead despite its receiver-assisted nature. Moreover, since SINR information commonly utilized by receiver-assisted protocols is not precisely supported in real devices, we introduce a rate selection reference (RSR) table empirically derived by constantly monitoring the environmental energy level and reception behavior. The RSR table then guides the receiver to select the best sustainable rate for the transmitter. Simulation results demonstrate the RSR table is a practical option for making the rate decision, and the proposed EARC approach is effective in maintaining high system throughput, compared to other link adaptation algorithms. 林亭佑 2010 學位論文 ; thesis 29 en_US
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description 碩士 === 國立交通大學 === 電信工程研究所 === 99 === IEEE 802.11 wireless network supports multiple link rates at the physical layer. Each link rate is associated with a certain required Signal-to-Interference-and-Noise Ratio (SINR) threshold for successfully decoding received packets. On transmission failures, the 802.11 DCF performs a binary exponential backoff mechanism to discourage channel access attempts, hoping to reduce congestion. When traditional link adaptation is applied, both rate reduction and binary backoff represent double penalties for this wireless link, which may cause overly conservative transmission attempts. On the other hand, once transmission succeeds, 802.11 DCF resets the backoff contention window to the minimum value to encourage channel access attempts. At the same time, traditional link adaptation may also decide to increase the data rate, which leads to overly aggressive transmission attempts. We observe this improper interaction of link rate and backoff mechanism that harms the 802.11 system performance, due to separate consideration of those two parameters. In this thesis, we propose to jointly adapt the rate and backoff parameters. Specifically, an Enhanced Adaptation of link Rate and Contention window, abbreviated as EARC, is devised. EARC is a closed-loop (receiver-assisted) link rate adaptation protocol that jointly considers the backoff mechanism. With only one extra byte carried by the DATA packet, EARC incurs little controlling overhead despite its receiver-assisted nature. Moreover, since SINR information commonly utilized by receiver-assisted protocols is not precisely supported in real devices, we introduce a rate selection reference (RSR) table empirically derived by constantly monitoring the environmental energy level and reception behavior. The RSR table then guides the receiver to select the best sustainable rate for the transmitter. Simulation results demonstrate the RSR table is a practical option for making the rate decision, and the proposed EARC approach is effective in maintaining high system throughput, compared to other link adaptation algorithms.
author2 林亭佑
author_facet 林亭佑
Tsai, Ching-Yi
蔡境宜
author Tsai, Ching-Yi
蔡境宜
spellingShingle Tsai, Ching-Yi
蔡境宜
EARC: Enhanced Adaptation of Link Rate and Contention Window for IEEE 802.11 Multi-rate Wireless Networks
author_sort Tsai, Ching-Yi
title EARC: Enhanced Adaptation of Link Rate and Contention Window for IEEE 802.11 Multi-rate Wireless Networks
title_short EARC: Enhanced Adaptation of Link Rate and Contention Window for IEEE 802.11 Multi-rate Wireless Networks
title_full EARC: Enhanced Adaptation of Link Rate and Contention Window for IEEE 802.11 Multi-rate Wireless Networks
title_fullStr EARC: Enhanced Adaptation of Link Rate and Contention Window for IEEE 802.11 Multi-rate Wireless Networks
title_full_unstemmed EARC: Enhanced Adaptation of Link Rate and Contention Window for IEEE 802.11 Multi-rate Wireless Networks
title_sort earc: enhanced adaptation of link rate and contention window for ieee 802.11 multi-rate wireless networks
publishDate 2010
url http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/61012533177341871715
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