Wmm; Overview - Tenda i27 User Manual

Ax3000 wi-fi 6 ceiling access point
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6.5

WMM

6.5.1

Overview

802.11 networks offer wireless access services based on the Carrier Sense Multiple Access with
Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA) channel competition mechanism, which allows all wireless clients to
fairly compete for channels. All the services implemented over wireless networks share the same
channel competition parameters. Nevertheless, different services usually have different
requirements for bandwidth, delay, and jitter. This requires wireless networks to offer accessibility
based on the services implemented over the networks.
WMM is a wireless QoS protocol used to ensure that packets with high priorities are transmitted
first. This ensures better experience of voice and video service over WiFi networks.
WMM involves the following terms:
Enhanced Distributed Channel Access (EDCA): It is a channel competition mechanism
to ensure that packets with higher priorities are assigned more bandwidth and
transmitted earlier.
Access Category (AC): The WMM mechanism divides WLAN traffic by priority in
descending order into the voice stream (AC-VO), video stream (AC-VI), best effort
(AC-BE), and background (AC-BK) access categories. The access categories use queues
with different priorities to send packets. The WMM mechanism ensures that packets in
queues with higher priorities have more opportunities to access channels.
According to the 802.11 protocol family, all devices listen on a channel before using the channel to
send data. If the channel stays idle for or longer than a specified period, the devices wait a random
backoff period within the contention window. The device whose backoff period expires first can use
the channel. The 802.11 protocol family applies the same backoff period and contention window to
all devices across a network to ensure that the devices have the same channel contention
opportunity.
EDCA Parameters
WMM changes the contention mechanism of 802.11 networks by dividing packets into four ACs,
among which the ACs with higher priorities have more opportunities to access channels. The ACs
help achieve different service levels.
WMM assigns each AC a set of EDCA parameters for channel contention, including:
Arbitration Inter Frame Spacing Number (AIFSN): Different from the fixed distributed
inter-frame spacing (DIFS) specified in the 802.11 protocol family, AIFSN varies across
ACs. A greater AIFSN indicates a longer backoff period. See AIFS in the following figure.
Contention window minimum (CWmin) and contention window maximum (CWmax)
specify the average backoff period. The period increases along with these two values.
See the backoff slots in the following figure.
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Document version: V1.0

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