04-07-2012, 09:49 AM
Wi-Fi
WiFi.ppt (Size: 711.5 KB / Downloads: 71)
What is the goal of 802.11 standard ?
To develop a Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specification for wireless connectivity for fixed, portable and moving stations within a local area.
802.11 sub-standards(amendments ) ….
802.11 MAC (Media Access Control) ratified 1999
802.11b PHY 2.4 GHz (max 11 Mbps) ratified 1999
802.11a PHY 5.0 GHz (max 54 Mbps) ratified 1999
802.11g PHY 2.0 GHz (max 54 Mbps) ratified 2003
802.11i Security draft number XXX
802.11e QoS, Multimedia draft number XXX
802.11h European regulations for 5GHz draft number XXX
802.11h Japan regulations for 5GHz draft number XXX
Do I need any license to use 802.11 device ?
No , 2.4 GHz and 5.0 GHz are public available frequency !!!
Frames types and subtypes
Three types of frames:
Control
(ACK,RTS,CTS ,Power Save …)
Management
(Beacon,Probe Request ,Probe Response,
Association request , Association response …)
Data
(Data, Null Data, Data_CF_Ack , ….)
Two types of access to air
DCF (distributed coordination function )
means everybody can speak and try
to get air : 100% on the market
PCF (point coordination function)
means ONE point coordinator (BOSS)
who will allowed you to speak
(like in bluetooth)
Summary of required features and difficulties vs 802.11 features
Features
High speed operation (PHY only)
Fair access (DCF, PCF)
Time-bounded access (PCF)
Flexible configuration (BSS, IBSS)
Security (WEP)
Mobility support (ESS)
Low power (PS)
Difficulties
Hidden terminals (RTS/CTS)
Capture (CSMA/CA, ACK)
Noise and interference (ACK, frag)
Limited spectrum (licencing, PHYs)
The 802.11 MAC basic Distributed Co-ordination Function (DCF) access scheme uses a CSMA/CA based protocol
If the STA detects the medium is busy when attempting to send a packet then:
the STA starts a random back-off timer
the randomisation parameters depend on previous transmission successes/failures
the back-off timer runs once the medium has been idle for an IFS period
An STA may transmit a packet after sensing the medium is idle for an Inter Frame Space (IFS) period
the back-off timer suspends when the medium is busy and does not restart until medium is idle for an IFS period
The STA may transmit when the back-off timer expires
The state (busy or idle) of the medium is determined using:
physical carrier sense
virtual carrier sense, based on reservations in received packets. These reservations set the NAV timer. The medium is considered busy until the NAV timer expires
Security
WEP ( wired equivalent privacy) 64/128 bits
Using RC4 algorithm, almost permanent key, very week
security, able to crack by collecting statistic
Current security level for 99.9% products on the market.
TKIP (temporal key integrity protocol )
Used RC4 algorithm with with a 128-bit "temporal key"
but changes temporal keys every 10,000 packets and key dependes on address and sequence number.
Will be required to obtain WiFi certification from 09/01/03
AES (Advanced Encryption Standard )
New, much more stronger encryption, protect against hacker frames in insertion. Need hardware accelerator. Optional feature.
Why do we need 11A/11B/11G ?
11B: 2.4 GHz , CCK modulation
Rates from 1 to 11Mbps , on market from 1999
11A: 5.0 GHz , OFDM modulation
Rates from 6 to 56 Mbps , on market from 2002
11G: 2.4 GHz, CCK+OFDM modulation
Rates from 6 to 56 Mbps, on market from 2003 and …
most popular today !!!
Advantages of 2.4 GHz PHY:
Low frequency, better wall penetration, less sensitive to multipath
3 not-overlapped channels
Advantages of 5.0 GHz PHY:
Less devices on the market (no microwave, no blue tooth …)
8 not-overlapped channels
Range: almost the same …
IEEE 802.16 for MAN==Metropolitan Area NetworkNew alternative to DSL/Cable modems
IEEE 802.16 Progress
Work on 802.16 started in July 1999. Four years into its mission, the IEEE 802.16 Working Group on Broadband Wireless Access has delivered a base and three follow-on standards.
IEEE 802.16 (“Air Interface for Fixed Broadband Wireless Access Systems”) was approved in December 2001. This standard is for wireless MANs operating at frequencies between 10 and 66 GHz.
IEEE 802.16.2, published in 2001, specifies a “recommended practice” to address the operation of multiple, different broadband systems in the 10-66 GHz frequency range.
In January of this year, the IEEE approved an amendment to 802.16, called 802.16a, which adds to the original standard operation in licensed and unlicensed frequency bands from 2-11 GHz.
802.16c, which was approved in December 2002, is aimed at improving interoperability by specifying system profiles in the 10-66 GHz range.