Local mesh
Radio configuration
7-7
Radio configuration
Simultaneous AP and local mesh support (single radio)
A single radio can be configured to simultaneously support wireless users and one or more
local mesh links. Although this offers flexibility, it does have the following limitations:
The total available bandwidth on the radio is shared between all local mesh links and
wireless users. This can result in reduced throughput if lots of traffic is being sent by both
wireless users and the local mesh links. You can use the QoS feature to prioritize traffic.
It limits you to using the same radio options for both wireless clients and local meshes.
A more effective way to handle this is to use a multi-radio AP. This allows one radio to be
dedicated to wireless users and another to local mesh links. Each radio can be configured
optimally according to its application.
Simultaneous AP and local mesh support (dual radios)
Two radios can be enabled at the same time on a local mesh profile. This enables the node to
search for a master (or alternate master) on both radios. Once a master is found and the link
is established on one radio, the other is used to create downstream links. This greatly
improves throughput over single-radio deployments.
Using 802.11a/n for local mesh
It is recommended that 802.11a/n in the 5 GHz band be used for local mesh links whenever
possible. This optimizes throughput and reduces the potential for interference because:
Most Wi-Fi clients support 802.11b or b/g, therefore most APs are set to operate in the 2.4
GHz band. This frees the 5 GHz (802.11a/n) band for other applications such as local
mesh.
802.11a/n channels in the 5 GHz band are non-overlapping.
802.11a/n provides increased data throughput, providing a
fat pipe
for traffic exchange.
The main limitations in using the 5 GHz band are:
Since the same radio options must be used for both wireless clients and local mesh links,
support for 802.11b/g clients is not possible on APs with a single radio.
The 5 GHZ band has a shorter reach when compared to the 2.4 GHz band. This could be a
factor depending on the distance your links must span.
Maximum range (ack timeout)
This is a global setting that is configurable on the
Radio
page when the
Operating mode
is
set to
Local mesh
. It fine tunes internal timeout settings to account for the distance that a
link spans. For normal operation, it is set to less than 1 km.
Содержание E-MSM310
Страница 2: ......
Страница 3: ...HP MSM3xx MSM4xx Access Points Management and Configuration Guide ...
Страница 14: ...Contents xii ...
Страница 26: ...Introduction Online documentation 1 12 ...
Страница 51: ...Wireless configuration Radio configuration 3 9 E MSM460 and E MSM430 ...
Страница 52: ...Wireless configuration Radio configuration 3 10 MSM422 ...
Страница 53: ...Wireless configuration Radio configuration 3 11 MSM410 ...
Страница 54: ...Wireless configuration Radio configuration 3 12 MSM335 radio 1 and 2 ...
Страница 55: ...Wireless configuration Radio configuration 3 13 MSM335 radio 3 ...
Страница 56: ...Wireless configuration Radio configuration 3 14 MSM320 ...
Страница 57: ...Wireless configuration Radio configuration 3 15 MSM310 ...
Страница 112: ...Working with VSCs Quality of service QoS 4 28 ...
Страница 134: ...Network configuration 802 1X supplicant 5 22 ...
Страница 196: ...Regulatory information B 16 ...
Страница 208: ...Resetting to factory defaults Factory defaulting ruggedized products D 6 ...
Страница 209: ......