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Is Wi-Fi Roaming Really Seamless? PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Jim Geier   
Wednesday, 25 July 2007

Wireless LANs are meant to provide roaming, and most of us expect it to be seamless. Learn what roaming really does to wireless applications.

 

An extremely beneficial aspect of Wi-Fi networks is mobility. For example, a person can walk through a facility while carrying on a conversation over a Wi-Fi phone or when downloading a large file from a server. The Wi-Fi radio inside the user device automatically roams from one access point to another as needed to provide seamless connectivity. At least that’s what we hope will happen!

roaming
In the past, I’ve experienced issues with roaming, so I decided to perform some testing to get an inside view of what’s really happening. I was especially curious about how fast roaming actually works and whether or not it’s disruptive to wireless applications.

My test configuration included two access points, with one access point (AP-1) set to channel 1 and the other access point (AP-2) set to channel 6. Other settings were default values, such as beacon interval of 100 milliseconds, RTS/CTS disabled, etc. The access points were installed in a typical office facility in a manner that provided a minimum of 25dB signal-to-noise ratio throughout each access point’s radio cell, with about twenty percent overlap between cells. This is somewhat the industry standard for wireless voice applications. The roaming client in my case, though, was a laptop equipped with an internal Centrino Wi-Fi radio (Intel 2915ABG).

While standing with the wireless client within a few feet of AP-1, I used AirMagnet Laptop Analyzer (via another Wi-Fi card inserted into the laptop’s PCMCIA slot) to ensure that that I was associated with AP-1. I then kicked off an FTP transfer of a large file from the server to the laptop and started measuring the 802.11 packet trace using AirMagnet Laptop Analyzer. With the file downloading throughout the entire test, I walked toward AP-2 until I was directly next to it. With the packet trace, I was able to view the exchange of 802.11 frames, calculate the roaming delay, and see if there was any significant disruption to the FTP stream.

Once the client radio decided to re-associate, it issued several 802.11 disassociation frames to AP-1 to initiate the re-association process. The radio then broadcasted an 802.11 probe request to get responses from access points within range of the wireless client. This is likely done to ensure that the client radio has up-to-date information (beacon signal strength) of candidate access points prior to deciding which one to re-associate with.

AP-2 responded with an 802.11 probe response. Because the only response was from AP-2, the client radio card decided to associate with AP-2. As expected, the association process with AP-2 consisted of the exchange of 802.11 authentication and association frames (based on 802.11 open system authentication).

The re-association process took 68 milliseconds, which is the time between the client radio issuing the first dissociation frame to AP-1 and the client receiving the final association frame (response) from AP-2. This is quite good, and I’ve found similar values with other vendor access points.

The entire roaming process, however, will interrupt wireless applications for a much longer period of time. For example, based on my tests, the FTP process halts an average of five seconds prior to the radio card initiating the re-association process (i.e., issuing the first disassociation frame to AP-1). I measured 802.11 packet traces indicating that the client radio card re-retransmits data frames many times to AP-1 (due to weak signal levels) before giving up and initiating the re-association with AP-2. This substantial number of retransmissions disrupted the file download process, which makes the practical roaming delay in my tests an average of five seconds! The Centrino radio card I tested is notorious for this problem, but I’ve found this to be the case with most other radio cards as well.

Vendors are likely having the radio cards hold off re-associations to avoid premature and excessive re-associations (access point hopping). Unfortunately, this disrupts some wireless applications. If you plan to deploy mobile wireless applications, then be sure to test how the roaming impacts the applications.

Every model radio card will behave differently when roaming due to proprietary mechanisms, and some cards will do better than others. Just keep in mind that roaming may take much longer than expected, so take this into account when deploying wireless LAN applications, especially wireless voice, which is not tolerant to roaming delays exceeding 100 milliseconds.

 

Jim Geier is an independent consultant and founder of Wireless-Nets, Ltd (www.wireless-nets.com), a consulting firm assisting municipalities, enterprises, hospitals, airports, and equipment providers with the development and deployment of wireless networks.

Comments
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Roaming across APs
compughter (Registered) 2007-08-04 17:50:01

Thanks Jim,Great post roaming in WLANs is a very interesting topic .

Do you think 802.11n APs and client will perform much better under this sort of test in the near future?
Product Expert WLAN&WWAN
Glenn De Haes (IP:194.78.204.252) 2007-08-07 03:30:54

Hello Jim

I have seen the same thing happen for years now with 'standard' roaming and had better results wit access points that have a roaming mechanism with IAPP (Inter Access Point Prototocl) This was first available in the Proxim ORiNOCO APs and made the client loose its connection for about 300 to 500ms with exceptions to 1 second.
Now, we are working with the Meru Networks solution which counters this problem from the other side. The biggest problem in roaming is that it is the client who takes the decision. The Meru system allows to work with all access points on one channel with one virtual MAC address. It thus appears to the client as one big AP instead of a network of APs. As the client is always able to send to the same MAC on the same channel, it never has to roam! The controller and APs have control over roaming and decide for the client what is best to do in terms of load balancing, signal and error rate. This is especially good for voice-over-WiFi as we can now really speak of seamless roaming. The roaming time is now 2.14ms! We have done tests with handsets of which people said it would not work, loose connection during roaming, loose words etc. It always worked like a charm as the client is no longer important.
Seamless Roaming Tested
msrihari (Registered) 2007-08-14 04:34:34

I have done a SEAMLESS ROAMING testing and it was success ful.

Test Procedure.
Chipset: Intel 2200
Access Point: CIsco
FTP: Local FTP Server
we have done testing by downloading 10 MB file from FTP server and simultaneously we were roaming from AP 1 to AP2. no loss and result was successful.

Regards
Srihari
srihari.rgda@gmail.com
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