2.1 The Standards
Here's a brief overview of the current (and future)
standards that all fall under the 802 family:
- 802.11
-
The first wireless standard to be defined in the 802 family was
802.11. It was approved by the IEEE in 1997, and defines three
possible physical layers: FHSS at 2.4GHz, DSSS at 2.4GHz, and Infrared.
802.11
could achieve data rates of 1 or 2Mbps. 802.11 radios that use DSSS
are interoperable with 802.11b and 802.11g radios at those speeds,
while FHSS radios and Infrared are obviously not.
- 802.11a
-
According to the specifications available from the IEEE
(http://standards.ieee.org/getieee802/), both
802.11a and 802.11b were ratified on September 16, 1999. Early on,
802.11a was widely touted as the "802.11b
killer," as it not only provides significantly
faster data rates (up to 54Mbps), but operates in a completely
different spectrum, the 5GHz UNII band. It uses an encoding technique
called Orthogonal Frequency Division
Multiplexing (OFDM). While the promise of higher speeds and freedom
from interference with 2.4GHz devices made 802.11a sound promising,
it came to market much later than 802.11b. 802.11a also suffers from
range problems: at the same power and gain, signals at 5GHz appear to
travel only half as far as signals at 2.4GHz, presenting a real
technical hurdle for designers and implementers. The rapid adoption
of 802.11b only made matters worse, since users of 802.11b gear
didn't have a clear upgrade path to 802.11a (the two
are incompatible). As a result, 802.11a isn't nearly
as ubiquitous or inexpensive as 802.11b, although client cards and
dual-band access points (which essentially incorporate two radios, or
a single radio with a dual-band chipset) are coming down in price.
- 802.11b
-
Throughout this book, I mainly discuss 802.11b. It is the de facto
wireless networking standard of the last
few years, and for good reason. It offers excellent range and
respectable throughput (while the radio can send frames at up to
11Mbps, protocol overhead puts the data rate at 5 to 6Mbps, on par
with 10baseT wired Ethernet). It operates using DSSS at 2.4GHz, and
will automatically select the best data rate (1, 2, 5.5, or 11Mbps),
depending on available signal strength. Its greatest advantage at
this point is its ubiquity: millions of 802.11b devices have shipped,
and the cost of client and access point gear is not only phenomenally
low, but many laptop and handheld devices now ship with 802.11b
connectivity. Since it can move data at rates much faster than the
average Internet connection, 802.11b is widely regarded as
"good enough" for general use.
- 802.11g
-
While the 802.11g specification hasn't yet been
ratified by the IEEE, it will likely be passed by the time this book
goes to press. 802.11g uses the OFDM encoding of 802.11a in the
2.4GHz band, and will also fall back to DSSS to maintain backward
compatibility with 802.11b radios. This means that speeds of 54Mbps
are theoretically achievable in the 2.4GHz band, all while keeping
backwards compatibility with existing 802.11b gear. This is a very
promising technology (so promising, in fact, that the lack of
ratification hasn't stopped some manufacturers from
shipping gear that uses the draft standard). In all likelihood,
equipment that ships now will be upgradeable to 802.11g via a
firmware update once the actual specification is ratified. 802.11g
will likely be a massively popular technology; it promises many of
the advantages of 802.11a without significantly greater cost while
maintaining backward compatibility. For these reasons, 802.11g is
poised to become the next major ubiquitous wireless technology.
- 802.16
-
Approved on December 6, 2001, 802.16 promises to overcome all of the
shortcomings of long-distance applications encountered by people
using 802.11 protocols. It should be pointed out that the 802.11
family was never intended to provide long-distance, metropolitan-area
coverage (although I'll show you some examples of
people doing exactly that). The 802.16 specification is specifically
designed for providing wireless infrastructure that will cover entire
cities, with typical ranges measured in kilometers. It will use
frequencies from 10 to 66GHz to provide commercial-quality services
to stationary locations (i.e., buildings). As I write this, a new
extension that will operate in the 2 to 11GHz range (802.16a) has
just been ratified. This should help significantly with the
line-of-sight problems posed by the extremely short waves of 10 to
66GHz. Equipment that implements 802.16 is just now coming to market,
and will likely be priced well above the consumer-grade equipment of
the 802.11 family.
- 802.1x
-
The 802.1x protocol is not actually a wireless protocol. It describes
a method for port authentication that can be applied
to nearly any network connection, wired or wireless. Chapter 3 covers 802.1x in more detail.
At this point, the clear front-runner in wireless technology is
802.11b, so I will focus on it for the remainder of this book. Of
course, this state of affairs will change as time goes on and
consumer demands bring new products to market. For a good overview of
802.11
technologies (including a bunch that I don't have
space to cover here), take a look at http://www.80211-planet.com/tutorials/article.php/1439551.
You can also download the specifications from the IEEE for yourself
at
http://standards.ieee.org/getieee802/.
Our original questions (how much does 802.11b cost, how far it will
go, and what it is good for) all have the same practical answer:
"It depends!" It is easiest to
explain how people have applied wireless to fit their needs and
answer these questions by way of example.
People are using wireless networking in three general applications:
point-to-point links,
point-to-multipoint links, and ad-hoc
(or peer-to-peer)
workgroups. A typical
point-to-point
application would be to provide network bandwidth where there
isn't any otherwise available. For example, suppose
you have a DSL line at your office, but can't get
one installed at your house (due to CO distance limits). If you have
an unobstructed view of your home from your office, you can probably
set up a point-to-point connection to connect the two together. With
proper antennas and clear line of sight, reliable point-to-point
links in excess of 20 miles are possible.
One common way of using wireless in a point-to-multipointapplication is to set up an access point at home to let
several laptop users simultaneously browse the Internet from wherever
they happen to be (the living room couch is a typical example).
Whenever several nodes are talking to a single, central point of
access, this is a
point-to-multipoint
application. But point-to-multipoint doesn't have to
end at home. Suppose you work for a school that has a fast Internet
connection run to one building, but other buildings on your campus
aren't wired together. You could use an access point
in the wired building with a single antenna that all of the other
buildings can see. This would allow the entire campus to share the
Internet bandwidth for a fraction of the cost of wiring, in a matter
of days rather than months.
The last class of networking, ad-hoc (or peer-to-peer) applies
whenever an access point isn't available. In
peer-to-peer mode, nodes with the same network settings can talk to
each other, as long as they are within range. The big benefit of this
mode of operations is that even if none of the nodes are in range of
a central access point, they can still talk to each other. This is
ideal for quickly transferring files between your laptop and a
friend's when you are out of range of an access
point, for example. In addition, if one of the nodes in range happens
to be an Internet gateway, traffic can be relayed to and from the
Internet, just as if it were a conventional access point. In Chapter 5, we'll see a method for using
this mode to provide gateway services without the need for a hardware
access point. In Chapter 7, we'll
build on that simple gateway to create a public access wireless
gatekeeper, with dynamic firewalling, a captive web portal, user
authentication, and real-time traffic shaping.
You can use these modes of operation in conjunction with each other
(and with other wired networking techniques) to extend your network
as you need it. It is common, for example, to use a long-distance
wireless link to provide access to a remote location, and then set up
an access point at that end to provide local access. Multiple
point-to-point links can also be linked together to create a large
network that extends many miles beyond the area of readily available
broadband Internet access.
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