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First International Conference on Broadband Networks (BROADNETS'04)
A Practical Cross-Layer Mechanism For Fairness in 802.11 Networks
San Jose, California, USA
October 25-October 29
ISBN: 0-7695-2221-1
Joseph Dunn, University of Colorado, Boulder
Michael Neufeld, University of Colorado, Boulder
Anmol Sheth, University of Colorado, Boulder
Dirk Grunwald, University of Colorado, Boulder
John Bennett, University of Colorado, Boulder
Many companies, organizations and communities are providing wireless hotspots that provide networking access using 802.11b wireless networks. Since wireless networks are more sensitive to variations in bandwidth and environmental interference than wired networks, most networks support a number of transmission rates that have different error and bandwidth properties. Access points can communicate with multiple clients running at different rates, but this leads to unfair bandwidth allocation. If an access point communicates with a mix of clients using both 1mb/s and 11mb/s transmission rates, the faster clients are effectively throttled to 1mb/s as well. This happens because the 802.11 MAC protocol approximate "station fairness", with each station given an equal chance to access the media. We provide a solution to provide "rate proportional fairness", where the 11mb/s stations receive more bandwidth than the 1mb/s stations. Unlike previous solutions to this problem, our mechanism is easy to implement, works with common operating systems and requires no change to the MAC protocol or the stations.
Citation:
Joseph Dunn, Michael Neufeld, Anmol Sheth, Dirk Grunwald, John Bennett, "A Practical Cross-Layer Mechanism For Fairness in 802.11 Networks," broadnets, pp.355-364, First International Conference on Broadband Networks (BROADNETS'04), 2004
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