在受管理的802.11无线网络中推断和减轻链路对传输的阻碍

Eugenio Magistretti, Omer Gurewitz, E. Knightly
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引用次数: 26

摘要

在802.11管理的无线网络中,管理器可以通过限制冲突节点的速率来处理服务不足的链路。为了确定每个冲突节点在多大程度上对性能差负责,管理者需要了解冲突节点之间传输的协调情况。在本文中,我们提出了一个名为MIDAS(使用活动共享的管理、推理和诊断)的管理框架。我们引入了活动共享的概念,它描述了任何一组网络节点之间的协调,根据它们同时传输的时间。不幸的是,节点无法在本地度量活动共享。因此,MIDAS包含一个推理工具,该工具基于物理、协议和统计方法的组合,通过使用节点报告的一小组被动收集的、时间聚合的本地通道测量值来推断活动共享。MIDAS使用估计的Activity Share作为一个简单模型的输入,该模型预测限制任何冲突节点的传输速率将如何使服务不足的链路的吞吐量受益。该模型基于当前网络条件,因此代表了使用在线测量的第一个吞吐量模型。我们在真实的硬件上实现了我们的工具,并将其部署在室内测试平台上。我们广泛的验证结合了试验台实验和模拟。结果表明,在所有测试平台实验中,MIDAS推断出的活动份额平均归一化相对误差低于12%。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Inferring and mitigating a link's hindering transmissions in managed 802.11 wireless networks
In 802.11 managed wireless networks, the manager can address under-served links by rate-limiting the conflicting nodes. In order to determine to what extent each conflicting node is responsible for the poor performance, the manager needs to understand the coordination among conflicting nodes' transmissions. In this paper, we present a management framework called MIDAS (Management, Inference, and Diagnostics using Activity Share). We introduce the concept of Activity Share which characterizes the coordination among any set of network nodes in terms of the time they spend transmitting simultaneously. Unfortunately, the Activity Share cannot be locally measured by the nodes. Thus, MIDAS comprises an inference tool which, based on a combined physical, protocol, and statistical approach, infers the Activity Share by using a small set of passively collected, time-aggregate local channel measurements reported by the nodes. MIDAS uses the estimated Activity Share as the input of a simple model that predicts how limiting the transmission rate of any conflicting node would benefit the throughput of the under-served link. The model is based on the current network conditions, thus representing the first throughput model using online measurements. We implemented our tool on real hardware and deployed it on an indoor testbed. Our extensive validation combines testbed experiments and simulations. The results show that MIDAS infers the Activity Share with an average normalized relative error below 12% in all testbed experiments.
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