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Copyright © 2004-2005, Vivato, Inc.
Broadcast Address
See
.
BSS
A
basic service set
(BSS) is an
with a single AP/
Bridge. Also see extended service set (
) and independent basic service set (
).
BSSID
In
, the
Basic Service Set Identifier
address of the wireless
interface of the
CCMP
Counter mode/CBC-MAC Protocol
(CCMP) is an encryption method for
. It employs
a
CCM
mode of operation, combining the Cipher Block Chaining Counter mode (CBC-CTR) and the
Cipher Block Chaining Message Authentication Code (CBC-MAC) for encryption and message integrity.
AES-CCMP requires a hardware coprocessor to operate.
CGI
The
Common Gateway Interface
(CGI) is a standard for running external programs from an
server. It
specifies how to pass arguments to the executing program as part of the
request. It may also define
a set of environment variables.
A CGI program is a common way for an
server to interact dynamically with users. For example, an
HTML page containing a form can use a CGI program to process the form data after it is submitted.
Channel
The
Channel
defines the portion of the radio spectrum the radio uses for transmitting and receiving. Each
standard offers a number of channels, dependent on how the spectrum is licensed by national and
transnational authorities such as the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
, the
Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI)
, the
Korean Communications Commission
, or the
Telecom Engineering Center (TELEC)
Client
A wireless
client
is any device that is equipped with an IEEE 802.11a, 802.11b, or 802.11g wireless
interface that uses radio signals to connect to an 802.11 access point or base station in order to access
hosts on a local network or a gateway that provides access to the Internet. Common examples of clients
are laptop computers, personnel digital assistants (PDAs), and remote video cameras. Clients are also
referred to as "
stations
".
CSMA/CA
Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance
(CSMA/CA) is a low-level network arbitration/
contention protocol. A station listens to the media and attempts to transmit a packet when the channel is
quiet. When it detects that the channel is idle, the station transmits the packet. If it detects that the channel
is busy, the station waits a random amount of time and then attempts to access the media again.
CSMA/CA is the basis of the IEEE 802.11e Distributed Control Function (
and