[MLB-WIRELESS] Single slow link can bog network: New Scientist
Clae
clae at tpg.com.au
Sat Aug 9 03:44:28 EST 2003
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99994018
Single slow user can throttle wi-fi network
18:27 04 August 03
NewScientist.com news service
A single user with a slow connection to a wireless network can
significantly degrade the overall service to everyone using that
wi-fi access station, new research shows.
Researchers from the Institut d'Informatique et Mathématiques
Appliquées de Grenoble, part of France's CNRS, studied the
performance of networks using the popular wi-fi standard 802.11b.
They found that if a single user's connection is slowed, perhaps
because they are far from the access station, every user can suffer
reduced data transfer speeds. "That computer may degrade the nominal
bit rate," Duda told New Scientist.
This is because of the way bandwidth is allocated to each user by the
wi-fi standard's access protocol, called Carrier Sense Multiple
Access/Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA).
If just one person is unable to connect at the optimal speed, the
CSMA/CA protocol throttles back the maximum connection speed for all.
This guarantees that any user, no matter what their access speed, can
get stable access to the network.
If the faster users were not limited and the network approached its
maximum bandwidth, the slower user's service would be the first to
degrade to the point of uselessness. However, the speed limit could
mean that the best connected users see their transfer speeds cut from
11 Mb per second to about 1 Mb/s.
Duda says users may not notice a network snarl-up unless they are
using a lot of bandwidth by, for example, downloading large files.
And he adds that some manufacturers have already begun to address the
issue with their latest wireless networking hardware.
But it is particularly important, he says, that devices using the
newer and higher-bandwidth networking standards such as 802.11g do
not suffer from the same problem.
"In general, designers should be aware of this problem," says Mingyan
Liu, a wireless networking expert at the University of Michigan in
the US. He says it is a question of balancing the stability of the
network for all with the quality of service delivered to the majority
of users.
"But it would be worthwhile for researchers and engineers to come up
with mitigating methods," Lui told New Scientist.
Will Knight
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"People that are really very weird can get into sensitive positions and
have a tremendous impact on history. - Dan Quayle
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