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Connecting The World FlexNET Access and Link Functions The Bridge Function Explained Radio 2 IP 192.168.3.1 Radio 1 IP: 192.168.4.1 Bridge 1 IP: 192.168.5.1 Ethernet 1 IP: 192.168.1.1 Ethernet 2 IP: 192.168.2.1 By default all Interfaces have their own IP, These IP’s should be removed as needed. In a typical access network both Radio’s are added to the bridge one Ethernet is also very common Radio 2 Radio 1 Bridge 1 :Enabled IP: 192.168.5.1 Ethernet 1 IP: 192.168.1.1 Ethernet 2 IP: 192.168.2.1 The Bridge Interface is a virtual interface which lets you bind all the interfaces to one IP address (Bridge) RN900 supports 2 Bridges, The RN810 and RN820 always have both radio’s and 1 ethernet in a bridge and this cannot be modified. 700/800 has one bridge available 2 Bridge Example Wireless clients group 1 (With RN900) Wireless clients group 2 Bridge 1: Radio 1 and Ethernet 1 Bridge 2: Radio 2 and Ethernet 1 group 1 network Firewall group 2 network Firewall 3 Signal strength explained • The signal percentage shown in each device is a percentage , to find a more familiar RSL figure in dB the percentage figure can be divided by 3. • Any SNR of over 33dB is depicted as 100% • The device drive is updated every 10 seconds and the browser needs to be refreshed, The level is only reliable when wireless traffic is applied. (100%) 4 Some Radio features 5 OFDM Each 20 MHz Channel is composed of 52 independent sub-carriers The 802.11a standard supports eight data rates from 6 Mbps to 54 Mbps (6 Mbps, 9 Mbps, 12 Mbps, 18 Mbps, 24 Mbps, 36 Mbps, 48 Mbps, and 54 Mbps). Each data rate employs the same 52 subcarriers but they use different modulation and forward error correction (FEC) techniques. 6 802.11a Data rates • As the data rate goes up, the modulation gets more complex. – More complex modulations = more fragile Signal – More fragile signal = lower range – G data rates the same but provides CCK for 11 and 5.5Mbps and QPSK for 2 and 1Mbps Data Rate (Mbps) Modulation Type Error Correction 6 BPSK 1/2 9 BPSK 3/4 12 QPSK 1/2 18 QPSK 3/4 24 16-QAM 1/2 36 16-QAM 3/4 48 64-QAM 2/3 54 64-QAM 3/4 7 Medium Reservation (RTS/ CTS) “Hidden stations” – The problem – The solution Problem: A B C > A sends to B > C doesn’t detect that, so C might also start sending to B > Collision of messages at B: both messages lost Occurs in larger cells (typical outdoor) RTS: I want to send to B 500 bytes CTS: OK A, go ahead, so everybody quiet Data: the 500 bytes of data from A to B ACK: B received the data OK, so an ACK > Loss of performance > Error recovery required Solution: MAC level RTS/CTS > Adds overhead, but provides robustness Configuration option : > Threshold: RTS only used for packets larger than this option 8 Message fragmentation Hit A hit in a large frame requires re-transmission of a large frame Fragmenting reduces the frame size and the required time to retransmit • IEEE 802.11 defines: – MAC level function to transmit large messages as smaller frames (user definable) – Improves performance in RF polluted environments – Can be switched off to avoid the overhead in RF clean environments 9