Mu Association Process - Motorola AP-7131N-FGR Product Reference Manual

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AP-7131N-FGR Access Point Product Reference Guide
sequence enables the receiving MU to recreate the original data pattern, even if bits in the chipping
sequence are corrupted by interference.
The ratio of chips per bit is called the spreading ratio. A high spreading ratio increases the resistance
of the signal to interference. A low spreading ratio increases the bandwidth available to the user. The
access point uses different modulation schemes to encode more bits per chip at higher data rates.

1.3.5 MU Association Process

An access point recognizes MUs as they begin the association process. An access point keeps a list
of the MUs it services. MUs associate with an access point based on the following conditions:
• Signal strength between the and MU
• Number of MUs currently associated with the access point
• MUs encryption and authentication capabilities
• MUs supported data rate
MUs perform pre-emptive roaming by intermittently scanning for 's and associating with the best
available access point. Before roaming and associating, MUs perform full or partial scans to collect
statistics and determine the direct-sequence channel used by the access point.
Scanning is a periodic process where the MU sends out probe messages on all channels defined by
the country code. The statistics enable an MU to reassociate by synchronizing its channel to the
access point. The MU continues communicating with that until it needs to switch cells or roam.
MUs perform partial scans at programmed intervals, when missing expected beacons or after
excessive transmission retries. In a partial scan, the MU scans access points classified as proximate
on the access point table. For each channel, the MU tests for Clear Channel Assessment (CCA). The
MU broadcasts a probe with the ESSID and broadcast BSS_ID when the channel is transmission-free.
It sends an ACK to a directed probe response from the access point and updates the table.
An MU can roam within a coverage area by switching access points. Roaming occurs when:
• Unassociated MU attempts to associate or reassociate with an available access point
• Supported rate changes or the MU finds a better transmit rate with another access point
• RSSI (received signal strength indicator) of a potential access point exceeds the current
access point
• Ratio of good-transmitted packets to attempted-transmitted packets that fall below a
threshold.

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