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Chapter 9: Problematic Traffic Pattern
AirMagnet Laptop Wireless LAN Policy Reference Guide
Excessive Fragmentation Degrading Performance
The 802.11 MAC layer supports the processes of fragmentation and
defragmentation. The process of partitioning an 802.11 frame into
smaller frames for transmission is called fragmentation; it helps to
increase reliability and reduce errors. In cases where channel
characteristics limit reception availability, transmitting in smaller
(fragmented) frames increases the probability of successful
transmission. Fragmentation is accomplished at each immediate
transmitter before the actual start of transmission. The process of
recombining fragmented frames into the original unfragmented
longer frame is defined as defragmentation. The IEEE 802.11
standard defines the packet format to identify fragmented frames for
defragmentation (illustrated below).
Figure 9-2: IEEE 802.11 Frame fields for frame fragmentation and
defragmentation
The increased reliability of the smaller fragmented frames comes at
the cost of frame transmission overhead. The frame is divided into
different segments depending upon the fragmentation threshold. The
placement of the fragments in the fragmentation process is decided
by the "sequence control field" as shown in the figure above. The
"more" field indicates if the fragment is the last fragment. If too many
frames are requiring fragmentation and defragmentation, network
overhead will be reduced and there may be a larger problem causing
the fragmentation.
AirMagnet Mobile tracks the fragmentation statistics on the network
and alerts on abused fragmentation usage that could lead to
degraded WLAN performance. The fragmentation threshold needs to
be carefully set to balance the benefit and overhead. Typically,
equipment vendors set the default fragmentation threshold to 1536.
Consult your equipment documentation and ensure that the
manufacturer's recommendations are met.
Laptop Wireless LAN Policy Reference Guide.book Page 170 Thursday, January 25, 2007 5:36 PM
Summary of Contents for PRG-Laptop 7.0
Page 1: ...AirMagnet Laptop Wireless LAN Policy Reference Guide...
Page 8: ...vi Table of Contents AirMagnet Laptop Wireless LAN Policy Reference Guide...
Page 64: ...56 Chapter 2 IDS Denial of Service Attack AirMagnet Laptop Wireless LAN Policy Reference Guide...
Page 138: ...130 Part Two Performance Intrusion AirMagnet Laptop Wireless LAN Policy Reference Guide...
Page 144: ...136 Chapter 6 Channel or Device Overload AirMagnet Laptop Wireless LAN Policy Reference Guide...
Page 192: ...184 Chapter 9 Problematic Traffic Pattern AirMagnet Laptop Wireless LAN Policy Reference Guide...
Page 210: ...196 Chapter 10 RF Management AirMagnet Laptop Wireless LAN Policy Reference Guide...