Wireless ADSL Router
USER MANUAL
23
n threshold
fragmented and at what size. On an 802.11 connection, packets that are larger
the fragmentation threshold are split into smaller units suitable for the circuit
size. Packets smaller than the specified fragmentation threshold value are not
fragmented.
Enter a value between
256
and
2346
. If user experience a high packet error
rate, try to increase this value slightly. Setting the fragmentation threshold too
low may result in poor performance.
RTS
threshold
This is number of bytes in the packet size beyond which the gateway
invokes its RTS/CTS (request to send, clear to send) mechanism. Packets
larger than this threshold trigger the RTS/CTS mechanism, while the
gateway transmits smaller packets without using RTS/CTS. The default
setting of
2347
, which is the maximum, disables the RTS threshold
mechanism.
DTIM interval
A delivery traffic indication message (DTIM), also known as a beacon, is a
countdown informing wireless clients of the next window for listening to
broadcast and multicast messages. When the gateway has broadcast or
multicast messages for its clients, it sends its next DTIM message with this
DTIM interval value. The clients hear the beacons and awaken as needed
to receive the broadcast and multicast messages.
Beacon
interval
The amount of time (in milliseconds) between beacon transmissions, each
of which identifies the presence of an access point. By default, wireless
clients passively scan all radio channels, listening for beacons coming from
access points. Before a client enters power-save mode, it needs the beacon
interval to determine when to wake up for the next beacon (and learn
whether the access point has any messages for it). User can enter any
value between
1
and
65535
, but the recommended range is
1 - 1000
.
XPr
ess™
Technology
XPress™ Technology
is a feature in which two of our devices can
communicate with each other at twice the normal rate.
54g+ is a technology that achieves higher throughput with frame-bursting. With
54g+ enabled, aggregate throughput (the sum of the individual throughput of
each network client) improves by up to 25% in 802.11g-only networks, and up
to 75% in mixed networks containing both 802.11g and 802.11b equipment.