Evaluation of the pre IEEE 802.11s RFC : Aspects of the Design and Implementation of the Mesh Station with RA-OLSR in the C-Core

The demand for ubiquitous networks has pushed the designs of networks all the way. The requirement for access point to be integrated into IEEE 802.3 standard and other networks has always been a sore point in the limitation of wireless coverage of IEEE 802.11 standard networks. Wireless Mesh Network...

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Main Authors: Nwup, Emineimo Kennedy, Akande, Adesola Idris
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, Avdelningen för telekommunikationssystem 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:bth-3883
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-bth-38832018-01-12T05:14:06ZEvaluation of the pre IEEE 802.11s RFC : Aspects of the Design and Implementation of the Mesh Station with RA-OLSR in the C-CoreengNwup, Emineimo KennedyAkande, Adesola IdrisBlekinge Tekniska Högskola, Avdelningen för telekommunikationssystemBlekinge Tekniska Högskola, Avdelningen för telekommunikationssystem2009IEEE 802.11sWireless Mesh NetworkRA-OLSRC-COREHWMPIEEE 802.3WLANSignal ProcessingSignalbehandlingComputer SciencesDatavetenskap (datalogi)TelecommunicationsTelekommunikationThe demand for ubiquitous networks has pushed the designs of networks all the way. The requirement for access point to be integrated into IEEE 802.3 standard and other networks has always been a sore point in the limitation of wireless coverage of IEEE 802.11 standard networks. Wireless Mesh Network (WMN) is expected to be the future of the next generation wireless network. It is experiencing a fast growing development due to its attractive features which includes high reliable connectivity, easy deployment, self healing, self configuring, flexible network expansion etc. Hence the mobility of the WMN nodes has been of paramount importance, which would make it independent of wired infrastructure and flexible interoperability with various networks and devices. The requirements like mobility, transparency etc. have led to the amendment of the WMN standard by the Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineering (IEEE) 802.11 Working Group (WG), Task Group (TG) “S. The IEEE 802.11s standard tackles these issues by its operation on layer 2 of Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) reference model and creates a transparent IEEE 802 broadcast domain that supports any higher layer protocol. In our work we give the evaluation of the upcoming IEEE 802.11s standard based on its features some of which include routing at layer 2 and medium access control to enable its design and implementation in the existing mesh frame work of Communication Research Labs (CRL) using the proposed IEEE 802.11s routing protocols with focus on RA-OLSR and HWMP. We concentrate on how to integrate these features into the existing CRL’s C-CORE which runs other layer 3 routing protocols and complex functions as Application Programming Interface (API) modules. The implementation of the IEEE 802.11s standard creates major challenges as we have to create a roadmap on integrating the new wireless kernel interfaces like the nl80211, cfg80211 and the Wireless Extension (Wext) into the CRL’s C-CORE framework for communication between user space and kernel space, especially taking into consideration of the existing HAL and madwifi wireless drivers of the CRL’s framework. To support the evaluation of the features like the layer 2 routing and the modified MAC performance, we compare results of the CRL’s real time mesh network test with our simulation result of the IEEE 802.11s standard using the Qualnet 4.5 simulator with focus on the basic network parameters like delay, jitter and throughput. The comparison shows that the CRL’s network has higher throughput running its existing layer 3 protocols. The analysis also proves that the 802.11s is flexible, scalable and efficient in delivering multi hop capabilities to clients that cannot afford the deployment time or the cost for wired networks that use access points. With the complete integration, of the 802.11s standard specifications the CRL’s C-CORE framework can be much more capable of supporting more diverse network scenario deployments. +46-736318897Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:bth-3883Local oai:bth.se:arkivex2F854345389BEFC1C125764200555DD9application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic IEEE 802.11s
Wireless Mesh Network
RA-OLSR
C-CORE
HWMP
IEEE 802.3
WLAN
Signal Processing
Signalbehandling
Computer Sciences
Datavetenskap (datalogi)
Telecommunications
Telekommunikation
spellingShingle IEEE 802.11s
Wireless Mesh Network
RA-OLSR
C-CORE
HWMP
IEEE 802.3
WLAN
Signal Processing
Signalbehandling
Computer Sciences
Datavetenskap (datalogi)
Telecommunications
Telekommunikation
Nwup, Emineimo Kennedy
Akande, Adesola Idris
Evaluation of the pre IEEE 802.11s RFC : Aspects of the Design and Implementation of the Mesh Station with RA-OLSR in the C-Core
description The demand for ubiquitous networks has pushed the designs of networks all the way. The requirement for access point to be integrated into IEEE 802.3 standard and other networks has always been a sore point in the limitation of wireless coverage of IEEE 802.11 standard networks. Wireless Mesh Network (WMN) is expected to be the future of the next generation wireless network. It is experiencing a fast growing development due to its attractive features which includes high reliable connectivity, easy deployment, self healing, self configuring, flexible network expansion etc. Hence the mobility of the WMN nodes has been of paramount importance, which would make it independent of wired infrastructure and flexible interoperability with various networks and devices. The requirements like mobility, transparency etc. have led to the amendment of the WMN standard by the Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineering (IEEE) 802.11 Working Group (WG), Task Group (TG) “S. The IEEE 802.11s standard tackles these issues by its operation on layer 2 of Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) reference model and creates a transparent IEEE 802 broadcast domain that supports any higher layer protocol. In our work we give the evaluation of the upcoming IEEE 802.11s standard based on its features some of which include routing at layer 2 and medium access control to enable its design and implementation in the existing mesh frame work of Communication Research Labs (CRL) using the proposed IEEE 802.11s routing protocols with focus on RA-OLSR and HWMP. We concentrate on how to integrate these features into the existing CRL’s C-CORE which runs other layer 3 routing protocols and complex functions as Application Programming Interface (API) modules. The implementation of the IEEE 802.11s standard creates major challenges as we have to create a roadmap on integrating the new wireless kernel interfaces like the nl80211, cfg80211 and the Wireless Extension (Wext) into the CRL’s C-CORE framework for communication between user space and kernel space, especially taking into consideration of the existing HAL and madwifi wireless drivers of the CRL’s framework. To support the evaluation of the features like the layer 2 routing and the modified MAC performance, we compare results of the CRL’s real time mesh network test with our simulation result of the IEEE 802.11s standard using the Qualnet 4.5 simulator with focus on the basic network parameters like delay, jitter and throughput. The comparison shows that the CRL’s network has higher throughput running its existing layer 3 protocols. The analysis also proves that the 802.11s is flexible, scalable and efficient in delivering multi hop capabilities to clients that cannot afford the deployment time or the cost for wired networks that use access points. With the complete integration, of the 802.11s standard specifications the CRL’s C-CORE framework can be much more capable of supporting more diverse network scenario deployments. === +46-736318897
author Nwup, Emineimo Kennedy
Akande, Adesola Idris
author_facet Nwup, Emineimo Kennedy
Akande, Adesola Idris
author_sort Nwup, Emineimo Kennedy
title Evaluation of the pre IEEE 802.11s RFC : Aspects of the Design and Implementation of the Mesh Station with RA-OLSR in the C-Core
title_short Evaluation of the pre IEEE 802.11s RFC : Aspects of the Design and Implementation of the Mesh Station with RA-OLSR in the C-Core
title_full Evaluation of the pre IEEE 802.11s RFC : Aspects of the Design and Implementation of the Mesh Station with RA-OLSR in the C-Core
title_fullStr Evaluation of the pre IEEE 802.11s RFC : Aspects of the Design and Implementation of the Mesh Station with RA-OLSR in the C-Core
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the pre IEEE 802.11s RFC : Aspects of the Design and Implementation of the Mesh Station with RA-OLSR in the C-Core
title_sort evaluation of the pre ieee 802.11s rfc : aspects of the design and implementation of the mesh station with ra-olsr in the c-core
publisher Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, Avdelningen för telekommunikationssystem
publishDate 2009
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:bth-3883
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AT akandeadesolaidris evaluationofthepreieee80211srfcaspectsofthedesignandimplementationofthemeshstationwithraolsrintheccore
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