What is rts (request to send) threshold, What is beacon interval, What is preamble type – PLANET WNAP-7205 User Manual

Page 86: What is ssid broadcast

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User’s Manual of WNAP-7205

11. What is RTS (Request to Send) Threshold?

The RTS threshold is the packet size at which packet transmission is governed by the RTS/CTS

transaction. The IEEE 802.11-1997 standard allows for short packets to be transmitted without RTS/

CTS transactions. Each station can have a different RTS threshold. RTS/CTS is used when the data

packet size exceeds the defined RTS threshold. With the CSMA/CA transmission mechanism, the

transmitting station sends out an RTS packet to the receiving station, and waits for the receiving station

to send back a CTS (Clear to Send) packet before sending the actual packet data.

This setting is useful for networks with many clients. With many clients, and a high network load, there

will be many more collisions. By lowering the RTS threshold, there may be fewer collisions, and

performance should improve. Basically, with a faster RTS threshold, the system can recover from

problems faster. RTS packets consume valuable bandwidth, however, so setting this value too low will

limit performance.

12. What is Beacon Interval?

In addition to data frames that carry information from higher layers, 802.11 include management and

control frames that support data transfer. The beacon frame, which is a type of management frame,

provides the "heartbeat" of a wireless LAN, enabling stations to establish and maintain

communications in an orderly fashion.

Beacon Interval represents the amount of time between beacon transmissions. Before a station enters

power save mode, the station needs the beacon interval to know when to wake up to receive the

beacon (and learn whether there are buffered frames at the access point).

13. What is Preamble Type?

There are two preamble types defined in IEEE 802.11 specification. A long preamble basically gives

the decoder more time to process the preamble. All 802.11 devices support a long preamble. The short

preamble is designed to improve efficiency (for example, for VoIP systems). The difference between

the two is in the Synchronization field. The long preamble is 128 bits, and the short is 56 bits.

14. What is SSID Broadcast?

Broadcast of SSID is done in access points by the beacon. This announces your access point

(including various bits of information about it) to the wireless world around it. By disabling that feature,

the SSID configured in the client must match the SSID of the access point.

Some wireless devices don't work properly if SSID isn't broadcast (for example the D-link DWL-120

USB 802.11b adapter). Generally if your client hardware supports operation with SSID disabled, it's not

a bad idea to run that way to enhance network security. However it's no replacement for WEP, MAC

filtering or other protections.

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