43
Use the drop down list to choose the rate. If you choose
User
defined
, you have to specify the rate manually.
Download Limit
Define the maximum speed of the data downloading which will be
used for the wireless station connecting to Vigor device with the same
SSID.
Use the drop down list to choose the rate. If you choose
User
defined
, you have to specify the rate manually.
Auto Adjustment
Check this box to have the bandwidth limit determined by the system
automatically.
Total Upload Limit
When Auto Adjustment is checked, the value defined here will be
treated as the total bandwidth shared by all of the wireless stations
with the same SSID for data uploading.
Total Download Limit
When Auto Adjustment is checked, the value defined here will be
treated as the total bandwidth shared by all of the wireless stations
with the same SSID for data downloading.
After finishing this web page configuration, please click
OK
to save the settings.
II-3-9 Airtime Fairness
Airtime fairness is essential in wireless networks that must support critical enterprise applications.
Most of the applications are either symmetric or require more downlink than uplink capacity;
telephony and email send the same amount of data in each direction, while video streaming and
web surfing involve more traffic sent from access points to clients than the other way around. This
is essential for ensuring predictable performance and quality-of-service, as well as allowing 802.11n
and legacy clients to coexist on the same network. Without airtime fairness, offices using mixed
mode networks risk having legacy clients slow down the entire network or letting the fastest client(s)
crowd out other users.
With airtime fairness, every client at a given quality-of-service level has equal access to the
network's airtime.
The wireless channel can be accessed by only one wireless station at the same time.
The principle behind the IEEE802.11 channel access mechanisms is that each station has
equal
probability
to access the channel. When wireless stations have similar data rate, this principle leads
to a fair result. In this case, stations get similar channel access time which is called airtime.
However, when stations have various data rate (e.g., 11g, 11n), the result is not fair. The slow
stations (11g) work in their slow data rate and occupy too much airtime, whereas the fast stations
(11n) become much slower.
Take the following figure as an example, both Station A(11g) and Station B(11n) transmit data
packets through VigorAP 802. Although they have equal probability to access the wireless channel,
Station B(11n) gets only a little airtime and waits too much because Station A(11g) spends longer
time to send one packet. In other words, Station B(fast rate) is obstructed by Station A(slow rate).
Summary of Contents for VigorAP 802
Page 1: ...I ...
Page 6: ...Chapter I Installation ...
Page 28: ...22 5 A summary of settings configuration will be shown on screen Click Finish ...
Page 29: ...23 Chapter II Connectivity ...
Page 34: ...28 ...
Page 57: ...51 Below shows how Band Steering works ...
Page 61: ...55 ...
Page 81: ...75 Chapter III Management ...
Page 101: ...95 ...
Page 104: ...98 ...
Page 113: ...107 Chapter IV Others ...
Page 121: ...115 Chapter V Troubleshooting ...
Page 125: ...119 V 1 4 WLAN 2 4GHz Statistics Such page is used for debug by RD only ...
Page 134: ...VigorAP 802 User s Guide 128 ...