sfx2000
Part of the Furniture
[edit - I've removed the kitten reference - was cute, but not relevant to the content - I've also merged a post below with this one for clarity purposes, and edited for context -- sfx]
The author here was part of Google Fiber, and has some interesting stats across all things WiFi - Mesh, mixed mode, multiple AP's, beamforming, etc... Google Fiber, like many other ISP's, instrument their Customer Premises Equipment - mostly to gather performance statistics so that they can find opportunities to improve the level of service - they mostly don't care about your email or surfing habits - which is probably a topic for another day - but yes, most do collect data for performance reasons...
Anyways, excellent info and data here, very insightful - and it puts to rest many of the "urban myths" about WiFi, esp. in high density areas...
Below are the slide decks - pdf format, and very information dense -
In General
The author here was part of Google Fiber, and has some interesting stats across all things WiFi - Mesh, mixed mode, multiple AP's, beamforming, etc... Google Fiber, like many other ISP's, instrument their Customer Premises Equipment - mostly to gather performance statistics so that they can find opportunities to improve the level of service - they mostly don't care about your email or surfing habits - which is probably a topic for another day - but yes, most do collect data for performance reasons...
Anyways, excellent info and data here, very insightful - and it puts to rest many of the "urban myths" about WiFi, esp. in high density areas...
Below are the slide decks - pdf format, and very information dense -
- http://apenwarr.ca/diary/wifi-consumer-mesh-apenwarr-201706.pdf
- http://apenwarr.ca/diary/wifi-data-apenwarr-201602.pdf
In General
- Most folks will see about 8 overlapping AP's in 2.4GHz - not a bad thing
- Performance impact with many nearby AP's - not really an issue until 50 or more neighboring AP's
- Single Stream clients are very popular, although 2-stream clients are getting more common
- Many clients are still single band 11n 2.4Ghz, but 5GHz is getting more common
- Many WLAN's in the home space - about 20 clients - number of clients associated doesn't really matter
- 2.4GHz is still relevant - physics has a play here...
- MDU's (apartments/condos) are generally better performing than single family homes, range is key
- Speed Testing across WiFI to WAN - generally unreliable
- More Spatial Streams - better - a 4-stream AP will outperform a 2 or 3 stream AP in every case
- even with 1 or 2 stream clients - more radios on the AP add gain, and 4-stream AP's are always 4-stream, so precoding helps here - RF diversity gain for the extra radio, and coding gain from MIMO
- 2.4G performs well until RSSI is around -75
- 5G best place for RSSI is around -55
- Between -75 to -45 dBm - performance is generally similar - there is a cliff that is hit, and perf drops rapidly after that point
- Close range to the AP is not necessarily a good thing - min range is actually a real thing
- I'm thinking this is a saturation thing that impacts Eb/No - clipping in the analog domain
- Power - more power at the AP, generally not good - power is noise to adjacent networks, more power doesn't help clients - most WLAN's are going to be client driven, not AP driven
- Note to @thiggins - should probably look at more clients in future reviews - you touched on this some time back with different client implementations with laptops (i'm missing the link, but it's there on the main site)
- Channel Selection - goes back to power control mentioned above - Google has done some interesting things with minstrel with QCA chipsets
- Interesting note - going back to 2.4GHz and Wide Channels - the 1/6/11 plan might be not be the best - author is actually suggesting 1/5/11 due to channel minimums on 11g/11n - which might mean that 1/4/8/11 might be validated in a very dense environment
- Most generally work - but across different expectations - what works well for the 80 percent, well 20 percent might have problems - so change to a different device...
- swap the device, solve the problem, at the risk of other problems, but generally most devices just work
- Extenders generally don't work, unless they do - depends on that 20 percent above...
- Bugs/Issues have gain - so if issues are with the root AP, they will be amplified with addtional AP's
- Split SSID's generally perform poorly compared to common SSID
- Common SSID's perform well - but does depend on client implementation
- Band Steering can help, but Common SSID is a good approach for clients that do not support BandSteering
- Apple generally does well in dual band common SSID, other vendors do as well
- Ping-Ponging can be a problem in Dual Band Common SSID
- AirTime Fairness is a good thing - a slow client can kill everyone without AirTime Fairness
- Wide Channels in 2.4GHz - not as evil as most folks think - the secondary channel in 11n must check for clear air before transmitting, and then if possible, it will - get the bits across and clear the air afterwords...
- Secondary Channel is only used if it can be - this is in 802.11n Specs
- 11ac - 80MHz seems to be the sweet spot for range/performance (my data concurs) - 40Mhz is ok, 20Mhz not much benefit, superwide 160 or 80+80 - at the moment, no - but something to consider in 2020 - noise floor is the limit there, similar to extended modulation rates (Turbo/Nitro QAM - might work in the lab/conducted, but in the real world, noise rules)
- 11n - basically doesn't work due to standards ambiguity
- might consider disabling this on the AP
- 11ac - much better - required in any event, and a must for MU
- TxBF support required for AP, optional for client
- Can help, but it's complicated - regulatory issues restrict EIRP with beamforming
- EIRP is limited to a max value, period - so might not be a benefit
- Beamforming incurs overhead that might be better put to airtime instead
- More AP's at lower power are preferred to a single AP with big power
- telling that the author only sees the use case of TV set-top boxes
- editorial - I agree - MU is good for static client locations and multicast/broadcast traffic as it stands with 11ac Wave 2
- MU can suffer because of EIRP issues noted above with Beamforming
- MU also incurs overhead, more than SU beamforming
- Content is important - some traffic is better suited, some isn't because of overhead
- Generally good
- Better than AP's + Repeaters due to routing at the dot11 layer
- More nodes - there is a limit - more nodes can be a problem with instability in firmware - if a crashed node is in the mesh (or a node with bad tables), the mesh can have problems overall
- Location of nodes is critical - far enough to extend coverage, too close, clients might stick and not jump
- Editorial Comment - this is my observation as well with 11n/11g efforts back in the 2010/2011 timeframe
- Editorial Comment 2 - this aligns with experience on LTE with "smart antennas" and beam forming - better to have many small cells than one big one...
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