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Measuring Queue Capacities of IEEE 802.11 Wireless Access Points

Measuring Queue Capacities of IEEE 802.11 Wireless Access Points


Feng Li, Mingzhe Li, Rui Lu, Huahui Wu, Mark Claypool, and Robert Kinicki

In Proceedings of the Fourth IEEE International conference on Broadband Communications, Networks and Systems (BROADNETS)
Raleigh, NC, USA
September 10-14, 2007


While queue capacities have a direct impact on loss and latency during congestion, and wireless networks continue to spread in university, corporate and home networks, little is publicly known about the queue capacities of wireless access points (APs). This paper presents and deploys the Access Point Queue (APQ) methodology for externally estimating the queue capacity for a wireless AP. APQ determines the AP saturation point, measures the baseline delay, induces the saturation rate to measure the delay with a full AP queue and computes the queue capacity. APQ is deployed to determine the queue capacities of three commercial class and four residential class APs. The wireless AP queue capacities are shown to be packet-based and to range from 50 packets to over 350 packets. The fact that queue capacities vary so much among devices targeted for the same network configuration suggests future work to determine the most appropriate queue capacity.


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This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant Number CNS-0423362. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recomendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation (NSF).