MC IIb IEEE802 11
MC IIb IEEE802 11
11 Wireless
LAN Standard
Protocol Architecture
Addresses the issues related to the
transmission of blocks of data over the
network
In OSI terms, higher-layer protocols (layer 3
or 4 and above) are independent of network
architecture
LAN protocols is concerned principally with
lower layers
IEEE 802 Protocol Layers
Protocol Architecture
Functions of physical layer:
Encoding/decoding of signals
Preamble generation/removal (for synchronization)
Bit transmission/reception
Includes specification of the transmission medium
IEEE 802.11, two sublayers
Encoding/decoding of signals
Preamble generation/removal (for synchronization)
Bit transmission/reception
Includes specification of the transmission medium
Two sublayers of Phy-Layer
Physical layer convergence procedure
(PLCP):
Defines a method of mapping 802.11 MAC layer
protocol data units (MPDUs) into a framing format
suitable for sending and receiving user data
Information management between two or more
stations using the associated PMD sublayer
Physical medium dependent sublayer
(PMD):
Two sublayers of Phy-Layer
Physical medium dependent sublayer
(PMD):
Defines the characteristics of transmitting and
receiving, user data through a wireless medium
between two or more stations
Defines the method of transmitting and receiving
Separation of LLC and MAC
The logic required to manage access to a
shared-access medium not found in
traditional layer 2 data link control
For the same LLC, several MAC options
may be provided
MAC and LLC Sublayers
Functions of medium access control (MAC) layer:
On transmission, assemble data into a frame with address and
error detection fields
On reception, disassemble frame and perform address
recognition and error detection
Govern access to the LAN transmission medium
Functions of logical link control (LLC) Layer:
Provide an interface to higher layers and perform flow and
error control
IEEE 802.11 Services
MAC Frame Format
4 Fields
MAC control
Contains MAC protocol information
Destination MAC address
Destination physical attachment point
Source MAC address
Source physical attachment point
CRC
Cyclic redundancy check
MAC Frame Format
Logical Link Control
Characteristics of LLC not shared by other
control protocols:
Must support multiaccess, shared-medium
nature of the link
Relieved of some details of link access by
MAC layer
LLC Services
Unacknowledged connectionless service
No flow- and error-control mechanisms
Data delivery not guaranteed
Connection-mode service
Logical connection set up between two users
Flow- and error-control provided
Acknowledged connectionless service
Cross between previous two
Datagrams acknowledged
No prior logical setup
Differences between LLC and
HDLC
LLC uses asynchronous balanced mode of
operation of HDLC (type 2 operation)
LLC supports unacknowledged
connectionless service (type 1 operation)
LLC supports acknowledged connectionless
service (type 3 operation)
LLC permits multiplexing by the use of
LLC service access points (LSAPs)
WLAN Standard
1990 – new working group IEEE802.11 for
WLAN
1999 – WiFi Allianace – for WiFi Certification
for the products
802.11b – first industry standard for WLAN
Followed by IEEE 802.11g
802.11a – WiFi5 certification
WiFi Alliance concerned with range of
products for home, enterprise, & hotspot
WLAN Standards
WLAN Standards
IEEE 802.11 Terminology
Access Point Any entity that has station functionality and provides
access to the distribution system via the wireless medium
for associated stations
Basic service A set of stations controlled by a single coordination
set (BSS) function
Distribution A system used to interconnect a set of BSSs and Itegrated
system (DS) LANs to create an ESS
Extended A set of one or more interconnected BSSs and integrated
service set (ESS) LANs that appear as a single BSS to the LLC layer