• DocumentCode
    7259
  • Title

    Harnessing the High Bandwidth of Multiradio Multichannel 802.11n Mesh Networks

  • Author

    Ho, Ivan Wang-Hei ; Lam, Patrick P. ; Chong, Peter Han Joo ; Soung Chang Liew

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electron. & Inf. Eng., Hong Kong Polytech. Univ., Kowloon, China
  • Volume
    13
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Feb. 2014
  • Firstpage
    448
  • Lastpage
    456
  • Abstract
    There has been an increasing interest in deploying wireless mesh networks (WMNs) for communication and video surveillance purposes thanks to its low cost and ease of deployment. It is well known that a major drawback of WMN is multihop bandwidth degradation, which is primarily caused by contention and radio interference. The use of mesh nodes with multiple radios and channels has been regarded as a straightforward solution to the problem in the research community. However, we demonstrate in this paper through real-world experiments that such an approach cannot resolve the multihop TCP throughput degradation problem in IEEE 802.11n mesh networks. With extensive experimentation, we verify that the degradation is principally caused by the increase in TCP Round-Trip Time (RTT) when the number of hops increases. TCP throughput is fundamentally limited inversely by the RTT. We find that the multihop TCP throughput (up to five hops) when using 802.11n is no better than when using 802.11a, despite the much higher data rate 802.11n. We attempt to use multiple parallel TCP connections as a remedy to the problem, and it turns out that the wireless bandwidth can be fully utilized with a sufficient number of parallel streams. In general, our results give a key message that TCP tuning (e.g., setting the correct TCP buffers and use of parallel streams) is of paramount importance in high-bandwidth multihop wireless mesh networks that employ the latest wireless standards. These tuning techniques have to be implemented into commercial products to fully leverage the ever advancing wireless technologies to support the growing demand of multihop communications in wireless mesh networks.
  • Keywords
    radiofrequency interference; transport protocols; video surveillance; wireless LAN; wireless mesh networks; TCP RTT; TCP round-trip time; TCP throughput; TCP tuning; WMN; high-bandwidth multihop wireless mesh networks; multihop TCP throughput; multihop TCP throughput degradation problem; multihop bandwidth degradation; multihop communications; multiradio multichannel 802.11n mesh networks; parallel TCP connections; parallel streams; radio interference; real-world experiment; tuning technique; video surveillance; wireless bandwidth; wireless standards; wireless technology; Bandwidth; Degradation; IEEE 802.11n Standard; Spread spectrum communication; Throughput; Wireless communication; Wireless mesh networks; IEEE 802.11n; Wireless mesh network; bandwidth-delay product; multihop TCP throughput; multiradio multichannel;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Mobile Computing, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1536-1233
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMC.2013.9
  • Filename
    6409848