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Wireless LANS
Justin Champion
Room C208 - Tel: 3273
www.staffs.ac.uk/personal/engineering_and_technology/jjc1
Wireless LANS
Contents
What is a LAN
Types of wireless LAN
AdHoc
Infrastructured
Infrared Communications
Uses of these technologies
Wireless LANS
What is a LAN
There are two main types of network
infrastructures
Local Area Network (LAN)
Wide Area Network (WAN)
The classification for these types of networks is
the distance that the data has to travel
There is no exact formula to classify when a LAN
becomes a WAN in a wired network!
Consider Staffordshire university is the email server part of a
WAN as it is located in Stoke?
Or a LAN as it is all one network
Wireless LANS
LAN
The network in this campus is a example of a
LAN
All machines are attached and located close to
each other
Distance in network terms is classified by the number
of hops travelled between one device and another
Hops are the stages that information has to travel
through to get to the destination.
Wireless LANS
LAN
Within a wireless network this is easier
There is a physical limit to any wireless LAN
technology.
Bluetooth – 10 Metres
Infrared – 1 metre
After these physical limits
The Bit Error Rate (BER) becomes too high for realistic
communications to take place
The BER indicates what percentage of bits sent arrive at the
destination in error
Wireless LANS
Types of networks
In wired networks there is always an
infrastructure
Even if two people bring together laptops for a game,
there will be a cable and a device to repeat the signal
A Hub, Router or Switch on Ethernet
Wireless
This may not be the case
The devices may only be able to communicate for a
few seconds and then they are out of range
People may come together for a meeting and then
move away again
Wireless LANS
Types of networks
AD-HOC
No pre planning of the network takes place
Communications may happen for hours or seconds
Using the Nokia N-Game with friends is an example of this
Business men in a meeting exchanging data
Difficulty in routing data to these devices
Infrastructured
The network has been planned
The structure would not change
A office would be a good example of this
Wireless LANS
Ad-Hoc
These networks work as the devices come within the
transmission distance of each other
When these devices can be used to extend a network
In this diagram device B can not reach the printer
Printer
Device B
Device A
Wireless LANS
Ad-Hoc
One device can be used to reach the device you actually
require
The packet is sent from device B to A and then to the printer
Device A
Printer
Device B
Wireless LANS
Ad-Hoc
These networks are an active research area
The technology works now
The difficulty is working out a route through the network
The route change all of the time
Each time a packet is sent to sort out a route this takes battery
power on all devices
With enough devices nothing but routing information will be sent
Ad-Hoc protocol
Mobile Ad-hoc Networks (MANET)
This group is standardising the IP routing protocols
(www.ietf.org/html.charters/manet-charter.html)
Wireless LANS
Infrastructure
This would be used to supplement the current
network
This allows for laptops
Reduces the amount of cables
This reduces infrastructure costs
Allows workers to operate where they want in the building
Usually combined with wired infrastructure
Examples would be central high power printers
Planning is required
Remember that a radio signal from one device is just
interfering noise to another device
The more interfering devices the less successful communications
that can take place
Wireless LANS
Infrastructure
Planning is required to minimise the amount of
interference
This can be done by increasing the distance between
high users of a system
Different rooms for the devices
Some building materials will dampen the signal
Staffordshire University Octagon is an example of this kind
building
Wireless LANS
The Technologies
Wireless LANS
Before we start on this course clarification of a
widely used term the “Packet”
All data which is transported on a network (wired
or wireless) is broken into smaller parts
These parts are referred to as packets
Each packet is then sent to the recipient
The packets are then reassembled into the original data
Packets usually consist of
Control information
The data which is being transported
A checksum to ensure the packet is not corrupted
Wireless LANS
Infrared
Large installation base
Most devices install these ports
Phones
Laptops
Printers
Not widely used!
Question becomes why?
Standards defined By
Infrared Data Association (IRDA)
www.irda.org
Wireless LANS
Infrared – Operates by line of sight
Wireless LANS
Infrared
The data is encoded into pulses of Infrared (IR) light
Your television remote control works in the same manner
Technology is suited to
Short distances with all devices within a room
It is purposely designed to operate at about 1 meter
This give IR security built in in respect that no one can ‘listen’ to that
conversion
Data Rates
Although IR is considered to be a slow technology it is developing
Serial IR
–
115.2 Kbps
Medium ID
–
1.152 Mbps
Rarely Used
Fast IR
–
4 Mbps
Latest phones, cameras, etc support this standard
Very Fast IR
–
16 Mbps
Microsoft Windows XP supported only
Wireless LANS
Infrared
Advantage of the line of sight problem is that the
communications are not shared
The devices need to be within a 300 arc of each other
Once the receiver and sender have agreed a
transmission speed very little can interfere with this
This reduces the overhead on communications
Collisions do not need detecting
Secure communications layer does not need adding
Wireless LANS
What is a Stack?
The term stack refers to the Open System
Interconnection (OSI) Stack
This is a network standard that defines what communications
should take at which stage
There are 7 layers to the stack as shown below
Each layer carries out a specific task
Each layer can only communicate to the layer above or below
All other network protocols map to this stack
Application
Not all layers are used with every protocol
Presentation
Session
Transport
Network
Data Link
Physical
Wireless LANS
Communication between devices using the stack
Packet of information going from device 1 to device 2
Device 1
Application
Presentation
Session
Transport
Network
Data Link
Physical
Logically
Device 2
Application
Presentation
Session
Transport
Network
Data Link
Physical
Wireless LANS
Infrared Communication Stack
Only the layer above and below can communicate with
a point in the stack
irLAN OBEX irCOMM
IAS
TinyTP
irLMP
Optional
Required
irLAP
Physical
Wireless LANS
Physical
Defines encoding/decoding of data and transmission of the
signal
IRLAP
Link Access Protocol
Responsible for ensuring a reliable transport of data
IRLMP
Link Management Protocol
Multiplexes services and application together to use the one
connection for transport
IAS
Information Access Service
Allows knowledge of the capabilities/services of the device
Wireless LANS
Optional uses of IR
TinyTP
This is a version of transport protocol designed specifically for IR
Flow control is offered ensuring that device buffers do not overflow
Maximum packet sizes are agreed by devices
Large packets can be broken into smaller parts
irOBEX
Object exchange protocol
Allows transfer of files easily between devices
irCOMM
Allows emulation of serial and parallel ports
The applications do not need to know that they are using IR
Legacy applications will work with this a printer is an example
irLAN
Allows LAN access for the devices
Mainly used to allow LAN access through a device which is already connected
to the network
Wireless LANS
So why is not widely used
Although newer versions of the technology are fast
the image is still for a slow technology
Sun light
The sun gives off IR and as such in bright light this will effect
the operation
Makes operation in the open awkward
Positioning
The devices need to be in line of sight, which means that
they need moving from there normal position
The distance between the devices can effect the rate of
transfer
Too close can be as bad as too far!
Wireless LANS
Summary
What is a LAN
OSI Stack
Packet
Infrared communications