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P-661H/HW Series User’s Guide
358
Appendix K
Figure 209
RTS/CTS
When station
A
sends data to the AP, it might not know that the station
B
is already using the
channel. If these two stations send data at the same time, collisions may occur when both sets
of data arrive at the AP at the same time, resulting in a loss of messages for both stations.
RTS/CTS
is designed to prevent collisions due to hidden nodes. An
RTS/CTS
defines the
biggest size data frame you can send before an RTS (Request To Send)/CTS (Clear to Send)
handshake is invoked.
When a data frame exceeds the
RTS/CTS
value you set (between 0 to 2432 bytes), the station
that wants to transmit this frame must first send an RTS (Request To Send) message to the AP
for permission to send it. The AP then responds with a CTS (Clear to Send) message to all
other stations within its range to notify them to defer their transmission. It also reserves and
confirms with the requesting station the time frame for the requested transmission.
Stations can send frames smaller than the specified
RTS/CTS
directly to the AP without the
RTS (Request To Send)/CTS (Clear to Send) handshake.
You should only configure
RTS/CTS
if the possibility of hidden nodes exists on your network
and the "cost" of resending large frames is more than the extra network overhead involved in
the RTS (Request To Send)/CTS (Clear to Send) handshake.
If the
RTS/CTS
value is greater than the
Fragmentation Threshold
value (see next), then the
RTS (Request To Send)/CTS (Clear to Send) handshake will never occur as data frames will
be fragmented before they reach
RTS/CTS
size.
Note:
Enabling the RTS Threshold causes redundant network overhead that could
negatively affect the throughput performance instead of providing a remedy.
Fragmentation Threshold
A
Fragmentation Threshold
is the maximum data fragment size (between 256 and 2432
bytes) that can be sent in the wireless network before the AP will fragment the packet into
smaller data frames.
Summary of Contents for P-661H Series
Page 2: ......
Page 5: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide Certifications 5...
Page 10: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 10 Customer Support...
Page 44: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 44 Chapter 1 Getting To Know Your ZyXEL Device...
Page 76: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 76 Chapter 3 Wizards...
Page 108: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 108 Chapter 5 LAN Setup...
Page 132: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 132 Chapter 6 Wireless LAN...
Page 192: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 192 Chapter 10 Trend Micro Security Services...
Page 196: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 196 Chapter 11 Content Filtering...
Page 202: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 202 Chapter 12 Introduction to IPSec...
Page 230: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 230 Chapter 13 VPN Screens...
Page 234: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 234 Chapter 14 Static Route...
Page 246: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 246 Chapter 15 Bandwidth Management...
Page 250: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 250 Chapter 16 Dynamic DNS Setup...
Page 280: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 280 Chapter 19 System...
Page 290: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 290 Chapter 21 Tools...
Page 296: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 296 Chapter 23 Troubleshooting...
Page 300: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 300 Appendix A...
Page 304: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 304 Appendix C...
Page 326: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 326 Appendix E...
Page 328: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 328 Appendix F...
Page 334: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 334 Appendix G...
Page 368: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 368 Appendix K...
Page 376: ...P 661H HW Series User s Guide 376 Figure 219 Java Sun...