Title: Introduction to Wireless LANs
1Introduction to Wireless LANs
2Wireless LANs
- Wireless LANs are not necessarily a replacement
for wired networks. They may form part of a
larger solution. - Radio transmissions are used instead of wires.
- Allows a network to be deployed in awkward
environments, or where it would otherwise be too
expensive to have wired connections. - Wireless LANs are useful where a high level of
mobility is required.
3Wireless LANs
- A wireless network can be installed without
altering the building in any way, and can be
removed when necessary. - There is a premium for wireless hardware over
traditional wired hardware, but this is covered
by the savings in cabling and installation costs
and the benefits of flexible communications. - Many businesses reorganise on a regular basis,
and a wireless network could mean that IT is
placed far down the list of obstacles.
4Wireless LANs
- Wireless networks can provide access to all
online resources from anywhere within the
organisation. - Wireless networks can be configured in similar
ways to wired networks from ad hoc or
peer-to-peer installations from small workgroups,
to full infrastructure for hundreds or thousands
of users. - The user experience of a wireless LAN is exactly
the same as a wired network. No re-training of
the user base is required.
5Consider the following questions
- Would you need to install excessive cabling to
link up distant departments? - Do your premises present special difficulties
when it comes to wiring for Ethernet? - Would your business benefit from having drop in
facilities for roaming staff? - Do you reconfigure your office regularly, cater
for varied staff numbers or allowing people from
partner companies to work on-site with your
staff?
6The 802.11b standard
- Previous wireless devices had a reputation for
being slow and unreliable with poor
interoperability with other vendor equipment. - New standards and co-operation are making
wireless products available to a wide range of
users
7The 802.11b standard
- The main standard for wireless LANs is the IEEE
802.11 standard. - Conceived in 1990, is was approved in 1997.
- It uses the 2.4GHz IMS (Industrial, medical,
scientific) frequency band which does not require
a license. - An 802.11 network is based on a cellular
architecture. - An individual cell is referred to as a basic
service set and is controlled by an access point.
8The 802.11b standard
- Most installations have several cells, with
access points connected through a backbone. The
backbone is usually Ethernet. - There are also situations where no access point
is required known as ad hoc networks. - The original 802.11 standard specified data rates
of 1Mbit/sec and 2Mbit/sec. - The 802.11b standard specifies the additional
rates of 5.5Mbit/sec and 11Mbit/sec.
9Interoperability
- Wi-Fi branding has been created to guarantee
interoperability. - Any product with the Wi-Fi logo is guaranteed to
work with other Wi-Fi products. The Wireless
Ethernet Compatibility Alliance (WECA) was formed
in 1999 to certify the compatibility of Wi-Fi
products, and to promote Wi-Fi as the global
wireless LAN standard.
10Bluetooth
- Bluetooth is the name for a wireless technology
that allows a wide range of devices to
communicate with each other. - A universal short range radio link replaces the
need for cables to connect different types of
device. - For example, mobile phones, laptops, keyboards,
PDAs, fax machines, projectors, and most other
peripherals could be connected with Bluetooth.
11Bluetooth
- Bluetooth uses a rapid acknowledgement and
frequency hopping scheme to ensure a robust link.
- Bluetooth radios also work in the 2.4GHz band.
- The maximum data rate is 1Mbit/sec.
12Security
- Wireless LANs are shared media and are therefore
(theoretically) susceptible to packet sniffing. - There are also a number of wireless LAN specific
security issues. For example, if you have
wireless LAN coverage in your car park, it is as
if you had installed Ethernet ports in your car
park as far as an attacker attempting to gain
access to your internal network is concerned.
13Security
- There are a number of security features that
typically appear in access points - SSIDs
- MAC address filtering
- WEP (Wired Equivalent Protection)
- The Cisco Aironet 350 series also offers a range
of new security features based on the EAP
(Extensible Authentication Protocol) and IEEE
802.1x standards.
14Security
- All of these features have weaknesses, ranging
from poor security in the case of SSIDs to poor
scalability in the case of MAC address filtering. - WEP also suffers from a number of recently
published weaknesses.
15Security
- WEP stands for Wired Equivalent Privacy
- It is intended to provide a level of protection
that is normally found in a wired network. - Wired networks are normally protected by physical
security mechanisms such as controlled access to
a building.
16Security
- Wireless networks, on the other hand, can have
coverage areas outside the building, e.g. in the
car park. - Since wireless LANs are not necessarily protected
by physical security, it was decided to include
WEP encryption into the 802.11 standard to
provide an equivalent level of protection.
17Security
- WEP is not intended as a complete security
solution, just as physical security is not a
complete security solution in the case of a wired
network. - It needs to be augmented with additional measures
such as access control, end to end encryption,
password control, authentication, VPNs and
firewalls.
18Wireless LAN Components
- A number of different wireless LAN components are
available each of which serve different purposes. - PC cards, PCI cards, access points, multifunction
bridges, workgroup bridges, antennae.
19Wireless LAN Components
- PC and PCI cards are used to provide an
individual laptop, desktop or PDA computer
respectively with access to the wireless network. - PC and PCI cards can be purchased with either
fixed or detachable antennae. - Currently compact flash wireless LAN NICs are not
available, but are in development.
20Wireless LAN Components
- Access points are the wireless equivalent of an
Ethernet hub. - Acts as a bridge between the wired network and
the wireless network, transferring information
from one to the other. - Different vendors access points can support
different numbers of (theoretical) simultaneous
users. In practice the limitation on the number
of concurrent users arises from contention for
the medium.
21Wireless LAN Components (Access Points)
22Wireless LAN Components
- The coverage of an access point depends heavily
on the environment in which the access points are
to be deployed. - Factors such as thick walls, steel
reinforcements, microwave ovens, filing cabinets
can all have an effect. - Multiple access points can be deployed in a
cellular architecture for coverage of arbitrarily
large areas.
23Wireless LAN Components
- Ethernet bridges are typically used in
building-to-building line of sight applications. - Distances of up to 25 miles are possible but this
distance is limited in Ireland due to maximum
radiated power restrictions imposed by the ESTI.
24Wireless LAN Components (Bridge)
Point to point link
25Wireless LAN Components (Bridge)
Point to Multi-point link
26Wireless LAN Components (Bridge)
Overcoming obstacles
27Wireless LAN Components
- Workgroup bridges are used to connect devices to
a wireless network for which it would not be
possible to provide a direct connection. - Issues such as lack of device driver support or
no NIC available would lead to a requirement for
a workgroup bridge.
28Wireless LAN Components (Workgroup Bridge)
29Wireless LAN Components
- One of the key benefits of wireless LAN
components is that they can all be disconnected
and reused at a new location with great ease. - This allows total investment protection in
network infrastructure in the case of an office
relocation.
30Cellular Architecture
- Within the 2.4GHz band used for wireless
networking, there are 3 non-overlapping sub-bands
available. - If two access points using the same sub-band (or
overlapping sub-bands) are within range of each
other, they will contend for access to the
medium. - These sub-bands can be used in a cellular
architecture to provide coverage over an
arbitrarily large area.
31Cellular Architecture
32Roaming
- The area covered by a single access point is
known as the coverage cell of that access point. - Roaming is the ability to move seamlessly from
one coverage cell to another. - In order for roaming to work, there must be
overlapping coverage cells.
33Roaming
34Rate Shifting
- As the distance from the nearest access point
increases, the signal from the access point will
weaken. - Under these circumstances, the network throughput
may in fact be increased by decreasing the data
rate. This is because a slower data transmission
rate will lead to fewer retries. - Access points and NICs can usually rate shift
between 11, 5.5, 2 and 1 Mbps as required.
35When to use wireless LANs
- Wireless LANs are not ideal for every situation,
and they are not necessarily a substitute for a
wired network. - Rather, they should be used to overlay and/or
supplement your current wired network. - Wireless LANs allow users the choice between the
speed of a wired network and the convenience of a
wireless network. - Wireless LANs are also ideal in situations where
running cable is either infeasible or impossible.
36When to use wireless LANs
- When you have a highly portable or mobile
workforce. Portable means users who change
location regularly whereas mobile means users who
are moving as they work. E.g. people using PDAs
to manage stock in a warehouse or shop. - Wireless LANs are also ideal in situations where
there are multiple buildings where laying cable
between the buildings is not an option, for
example buildings either side of a public road.
37When to use wireless LANs
- Outlying buildings represent another situation
where wireless LANs are extremely helpful. - Within a building, wireless LANs are extremely
useful in cases such as warehouses, hangars, shop
floors, open plan offices, and general offices
where the convenience of wireless connectivity is
seen as helpful. - Offices in listed buildings, leased temporary
space, or offices with extremely thick walls are
other scenarios where wireless LANs can be used.
38Characteristics of wireless LAN communication
- In the case of both intra- and inter-building
wireless LANs, the data rate is 11Mbps. - This figure depends on distance from the access
point or bridge. - Greater distances are possible at lower data
rates. - In the case of non-point-to-point links, the
medium is shared between all of the nodes who
wish to access the network.
39Characteristics of wireless LAN communication
- This shared nature applies equally in the case of
inter-building links. - If two access points with overlapping coverage
cells are using the same frequency band they will
contend with each other for access to the
bandwidth. - This situation can be avoided by using a well
designed cellular architecture.
40Characteristics of wireless LAN communication
- Wireless LANs use CSMA/CA (carrier sense,
multiple access with collision avoidance) as
opposed to CSMA/CD (carrier sense, multiple
access with collision detection) which is used by
Ethernet. - There is a protocol overhead associated with
CSMA/CA but this is offset by the fact that no
bandwidth is wasted on collisions.
41Characteristics of wireless LAN communication
- On a congested shared Ethernet segment, the
expected throughput is about 30 whereas on a
congested shared wireless segment, the throughput
can be as much as 50. - This figure will vary from vendor to vendor.
42Vendors providing wireless solutions
- Enterasys
- Lucent
- 3COM
- Cisco Systems
- Colubris
- SpectraLink
- BreezeCOM
- Intersil
- WRQ
- NDC
- Elan
- Symbol Systems
- Intermic
43Management
- As with most network components, there are four
different ways to manage the wireless LAN access
points and bridges via a console port, telnet ,
a built in web server and SNMP. - Some access points support propagation of
configuration and firmware upgrades through the
network. - Centralised administration, e.g. centralised
authentication source (RADIUS), central MAC
address filtering database, etc. is missing from
most product lines. (except Aironet 350 series)
44Integrated voice and video over wireless LAN
- Voice over IP will work over a wireless network,
if your existing network infrastructure supports
VoIP functionality. - SpectraLink systems produce a 802.11 wireless
integrated telephone and data system.