WO2004062199A1 - Multiprotocol wlan access point devices - Google Patents

Multiprotocol wlan access point devices Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2004062199A1
WO2004062199A1 PCT/US2003/028004 US0328004W WO2004062199A1 WO 2004062199 A1 WO2004062199 A1 WO 2004062199A1 US 0328004 W US0328004 W US 0328004W WO 2004062199 A1 WO2004062199 A1 WO 2004062199A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
wireless
portal
multiprotocol
routed
ieee
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2003/028004
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Carlos A. Rios
Original Assignee
Rios Carlos A
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US10/334,747 external-priority patent/US6873611B2/en
Application filed by Rios Carlos A filed Critical Rios Carlos A
Priority to AU2003270377A priority Critical patent/AU2003270377A1/en
Publication of WO2004062199A1 publication Critical patent/WO2004062199A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W88/00Devices specially adapted for wireless communication networks, e.g. terminals, base stations or access point devices
    • H04W88/08Access point devices
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W40/00Communication routing or communication path finding
    • H04W40/02Communication route or path selection, e.g. power-based or shortest path routing
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W88/00Devices specially adapted for wireless communication networks, e.g. terminals, base stations or access point devices
    • H04W88/08Access point devices
    • H04W88/10Access point devices adapted for operation in multiple networks, e.g. multi-mode access points
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W84/00Network topologies
    • H04W84/02Hierarchically pre-organised networks, e.g. paging networks, cellular networks, WLAN [Wireless Local Area Network] or WLL [Wireless Local Loop]
    • H04W84/10Small scale networks; Flat hierarchical networks
    • H04W84/12WLAN [Wireless Local Area Networks]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W88/00Devices specially adapted for wireless communication networks, e.g. terminals, base stations or access point devices
    • H04W88/02Terminal devices
    • H04W88/06Terminal devices adapted for operation in multiple networks or having at least two operational modes, e.g. multi-mode terminals

Definitions

  • the present invention generally relates to the field of computer networking. More particularly, the present invention relates to the field of wireless networking communications between computing devices.
  • Various communications systems are used to allow electronic devices such as computers to communicate and exchange data and other types of information.
  • various systems such as Local Area Networks ("LANs"), the Internet and conventional telephone networks often link computers.
  • LANs Local Area Networks
  • WLAN Wireless Local Area Network
  • a very popular and pervasive WLAN system is that specified by the IEEE 802.11 wireless networking standard, an industry protocol that has successfully resolved many interoperability issues among the manufacturers of WLAN equipment.
  • the IEEE 802.11 standard specifies several distinct OSI Physical (“PHY”) Layer radio transmission mechanisms whereby signals may be transmitted over the wireless medium, as well as a single Medium Access Control (“MAC”) layer that organizes and controls the exchange of data packets or datagrams between the communicating stations.
  • PHY OSI Physical
  • MAC Medium Access Control
  • This (IEEE 802.11-1997) MAC also supports mechanisms whereby special 802.11 stations referred to as Access Points ("APs") also connect to a wired LAN, to then in many occasions traverse said LAN and access the broader Internet.
  • Mobile computers connect to the Access Points wirelessly using 802.11 WLAN Network Interface Cards (“NICs”) that plug in to their standard computer I/O connections (such as USB, PCI or CardBus).
  • NICs 802.11 WLAN Network Interface Cards
  • 5 GHz OFDM 802.11a-based equipment therefore, involves serious interoperability and legacy support issues, and both WLAN equipment manufacturers and systems deployers are still grappling with how best to resolve them.
  • One emerging, popular approach is to use dual band, multiple protocol WLAN equipment.
  • Some IC vendors have begun to ship "IEEE 802.11abg” chipsets and associated software that enable wireless stations to transmit and receive using either 802.11a or 802.11b/g on a datagram by datagram basis.
  • This technology is presently being used to manufacture "Multiprotocol NICs" (“MPNICs”) that can auto-negotiate and communicate with an AP using either 802.11 b, 802.11 g or 802.11 a at any given time.
  • MPNICs Multiprotocol NICs
  • these new "multilingual" NICs also incorporate the exact IEEE 802.11-1997 MAC protocols in order to not confuse any legacy devices with which they would communicate.
  • the new MPNICs can communicate with the common legacy 802.11 b-only APs, the newer (and very rare) 802.11 a- only APs or the increasingly popular "802.11a and b/g" dual protocol DSPAPs.
  • these DSPAPs can communicate with the overwhelmingly predominant 802.11 b-only legacy NICs, the (relatively rare) newer 802.1 la- only NICs and the "802.11a, b or g" MPNICs.
  • MPR Multiprotocol Repeater
  • the invention described herein provides a structure, method and system to effectively utilize dual (2.4 and 5 GHz) band, multiple (CCK and OFDM) protocol "IEEE 802.11 abg” radio technology to implement reduced cost and complexity, "simultaneous IEEE 802.11a and 802.11b/g Access Points” and related devices (collectively, “Multiprotocol Devices” or “MPDs”).
  • the invention combines a framework and mechanism that specifically allows for production of three distinct types of MPDs: a "Multiprotocol AP", a “Multiprotocol Repeater” and a "High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater".
  • the invention consists of two distinct, intimately related and ultimately inseparable component elements: 1) a novel and unique "Datagram Flow Structure", whereby WLAN data packets transmitted and received by an MPD are internally organized and routed, and 2) a novel and unique "MAC Methodology", whereby said data packets are then externally wirelessly exchanged between the MPD and other IEEE 802.11 -compliant devices.
  • a Multiprotocol Access Point (“MPAP"), the first principal claimed embodiment of this invention, provides concurrent IEEE 802.11a and 802.11 b/g AP services to multiple distinct 802.11a or 802.11 b/g capable WLAN stations while only employing a single IEEE 802.11 abg radio and a wired connection to the infrastructure Distribution System (“DS").
  • MPAP Multiprotocol Access Point
  • a Multiprotocol Repeater (“MPR"), another key embodiment of this invention, is an MPD that also provides simultaneous 802.11a and 802.11 b/g Access Point functionality to any and all associated single protocol WLAN stations, but with its "wired DS" port replaced by a "virtual DS wireless link" to another "upstream” MPD.
  • An MPR also uses a single IEEE 802.11 abg radio, and, like the MPAP, provides virtual DS connectivity to "further downstream" MPD Repeater devices.
  • a "High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater” (“HCMPR"), another claimed embodiment of this invention, is an MPR variant that uses two actual 802.11 abg radios to provide the "three virtual" MPR wireless links: the upstream virtual DS plus the downstream 802.11a and 802.11 b/g AP services to the associated distinct protocol stations (as well the virtual DS wireless daisy chain link to other downstream MPDs).
  • the simultaneous operation of two actual radios allows the HCMPR to support a greater volume of wireless traffic than can the single radio MPR.
  • FIGURE 1 is a block diagram of a representative WLAN deployment featuring a LAN infrastructure, legacy single-protocol NICs, single protocol-based APs and Repeaters, Multiprotocol APs and Multiprotocol Repeaters (both MPR and HCMPR versions).
  • FIGURE 2 is a schematic representation of the Multiprotocol
  • FIGURE 3 presents a set of specific, distinct instantiations of the general MPCDFS presented in Figure 2.
  • FIGURE 3A presents the MPCDFS for a representative (unclaimed) Dual Single Protocol Access Point device consisting of two independent single protocol APs.
  • FIGURE 3B illustrates the MPCDFS for a representative (also unclaimed) Triple Single Protocol AP Repeater consisting of three single protocol APs.
  • FIGURE 3C shows the MPCDFS for a claimed Multiprotocol AP (MPAP).
  • Figure 3D presents the MPCDFS for a claimed Multiprotocol Repeater (MPR) and
  • Figure 3E presents a general MPCDFS for a claimed High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater (HCMPR).
  • MPR Multiprotocol Repeater
  • HCMPR High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater
  • FIGURE 4 is a timing diagram of the Multiprotocol Core Wireless
  • Access Protocol It illustrates management and control datagrams transmitted by different types of Access Point devices, including a legacy single-protocol AP, the claimed MPAP, the claimed MPR and the claimed HCMPR.
  • Multiprotocol Core invention as well as to its claimed embodiments. While the invention will be described together with the embodiments, it needs be understood that said embodiments are not intended to limit the scope of the invention in any way. On the contrary, the intention is to cover any and all alternatives, modifications and equivalents that may fall within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. [0021] Within the following detailed description of the invention numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the same. However, it will be obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention may be understood and practiced without taking recourse to these specific details. In other instances, well-known and understood methods, procedures, references, standards, protocols, systems and components have not been described in detail so not to unnecessarily obscure salient aspects of the invention.
  • FIG 1 illustrates a representative Local Area Network (“LAN”)
  • the LAN Switch 101 is a piece of computer networking equipment that routes data packets (or “datagrams") between other high capacity networking equipment (indicated by the unconsummated connection 116) and computing or other networking devices connected to its ports (indicated by the consummated connections to devices 102, 109, 117 and 120 and by the unconsummated connections 118, 119, 121 and 122).
  • Device 102 is a representative "Dual Single Protocol Access
  • DSPAP Data Access Point
  • DSPAP 102 consists of two independent, distinct, single-protocol Access Points 103 and 104, respectively.
  • AP 103 within DSPAP 102 serves to bridge or route wirelessly transmitted datagrams conforming to the IEEE 802.11b WLAN standard between appropriately capable wireless stations (802.11b NICs, such as devices 110 and 114) and Switch 101.
  • AP 104 within DSPAP 102 serves to route wirelessly transmitted datagrams conforming to the IEEE 802.11a WLAN standard between appropriately capable wireless stations (802.11a NICs, such as devices 113 and 116) and Switch 101.
  • DSPAP 102 is representative of the (excessive) cost and complexity involved when utilizing single protocol technology to implement multiple protocol APs.
  • Device 105 is a representative "Triple Single Protocol AP Repeater" ("TSPAPR") intended to provide simultaneous IEEE 802.11a and 802.11b AP functionality while incorporating a wireless (802.11a) connection back to the Distribution System.
  • TSPAPR 105 consists of three independent, distinct, single-protocol Access Points 106, 107 and 108, respectively.
  • 802.11b AP 106 within TSPAPR 105 serves to bridge datagrams between associated 802.11 b STAs and the DS port of the contained 802.11 a AP 108.
  • TSPAPR 105 serves to bridge datagrams between associated 802.11a STAs and AP 108's DS port.
  • 802.11a AP 108 within TSPAPR 105 then serves to bridge datagrams between its DS port and an associated "upstream" 802.11a-compliant AP device actually connected to the infrastructure Distribution System.
  • TSPAPR 105 is representative of the (unnecessarily extreme) cost and complexity involved when utilizing single protocol technology to implement multiple protocol repeater devices.
  • Devices 117 and 120 are networking-capable computing devices, connected directly to Switch 101 via fixed wiring or cable.
  • the networking protocol used by devices 105 and 106 (as well as Switch 101) is IEEE 802.3 10/100 Base T Ethernet, and said devices are hereafter referred to as 802.3 STAs.
  • Devices 117 and 120 serve merely to illustrate the non- wireless networking functionality supported by Switch 101.
  • Devices 110 and 114 are computing devices incorporating wireless stations ("STAs") conforming to the IEEE 802.11b WLAN standard. These devices are capable of networking wirelessly with single protocol 802.11b devices such as AP 103 (of DSPAP 102) and AP 106 (of TSPAPR 105) and with Multiprotocol Devices such as MPAP 109, MPRs 111 and 112 and HCMPR 115.
  • Devices 113 and 116 are computing devices incorporating wireless STAs conforming to the IEEE 802.11a WLAN standard. These devices are capable of networking wirelessly with single protocol 802.11a devices such as AP 104 (of DSPAP 102) and AP 107 (of TSPAPR 105) and with Multiprotocol Devices such as MPAP 109, MPRs 111 and 112 and HCMPR 115.
  • Multiprotocol ("MP") Devices 109, 111 , 112 and 115 represent the distinct claimed embodiments of the present Multiprotocol Core invention.
  • MP Device 109 is a Multiprotocol Access Point ("MPAP") capable of networking wirelessly with 802.11 a and 802.11 b or 802.11 b/g STAs simultaneously.
  • MPAP provides the functionality of DSPAP 102 while using a single frequency-band agile (i.e., tunable to channels in both the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands), IEEE 802.11a and 802.11 b/g capable (i.e., containing independently operating CCK and OFDM modems) radio device (hereafter, an "802.11 abg radio”) instead of dual single protocol APs.
  • MPAP Multiprotocol Access Point
  • MP Devices 111 and 112 are Multiprotocol Repeaters ("MPRs"), another Multiprotocol Core invention embodiment. These MPRs are capable of simultaneous wireless networking with associated 802.11a and 802.11 b/g STAs and thereafter bridging said traffic wirelessly (using 802.11a or
  • MP Device 115 uses two distinct 802.11 abg radios to implement the three distinct, concurrent MPR wireless links: the upstream virtual DS connection and the downstream 802.11a and 802.11 b/g wireless networks that service its associated stations.
  • MP Device 115 is hereafter referred to as a "High Capacity" MPR ("HCMPR").
  • Multiprotocol Core invention a Multiprotocol Access Point (MPAP 109), a Multiprotocol Repeater (MPR 111 or MPR 112) or a High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater (HCMPR 115), each incorporating an 802.11 abg radio and the Multiprotocol Core invention, to reproduce the functionality provided by multiple distinct 802.11a and 802.11 b/g Access Points such as contained in DSPAP 102 and TSPAPR 105.
  • MPAP Multiprotocol Access Point
  • MPR 111 or MPR 112 Multiprotocol Repeater
  • HCMPR 115 High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater
  • MPCWAP Multiprotocol Core Wireless Access Protocol
  • an Access Point is any device containing an 802.11- conformant medium access control (MAC) and physical layer (PHY) interface to the wireless medium that provides wirelessly associated 802.11 -compliant stations with access to the infrastructure Distribution System.
  • MAC medium access control
  • PHY physical layer
  • an AP is a device incorporating one or more "wireless portals” and one (wired) Distribution System (“DS") portal whose function is to route externally originating data packets between any of its wireless portals and its DS portal.
  • DS Distribution System
  • Any 802.11 -compliant AP then, incorporates some manner of datagram flow structure.
  • An Access Point also actively manages the wireless traffic between all the 802.11 stations with which it is associated. This is accomplished using standard 802.11-1997 MAC management and control wireless packet exchanges between the AP and the stations.
  • the collection of specific packet exchange sequences that provide for stations to identify themselves as valid network participants, to join or leave the network, to set up and tear down individual wireless sessions and to manage the flow of individual packet transmissions between stations is generically referred to as a "wireless access protocol" or "WAP".
  • IEEE 802.11-1997 describes a WAP between (single protocol) APs and stations.
  • the Multiprotocol Core invention described herein incorporates a set of innovative extensions to the 802.11 WAP (the MPCWAP) that defines the wireless access between MPCDFS- provisioned Multiprotocol Devices and single protocol stations, multiple protocol stations and/or other Multiprotocol Devices.
  • the MPCWAP 802.11 WAP
  • FIG. 2 presents a diagram of the MPCDFS structure illustrating the data packet routing within a generalized Multiprotocol Device. Note that this MPCDFS, in addition to supporting its three specific claimed MP Device embodiments, is also readily reducible to a data flow structure characteristic of an unclaimed single protocol legacy IEEE 802.11-1997 AP.
  • This Multiprotocol Core structure 200 of Figure 2 consists of four distinct bi- directional portals, the DS portal 201 , IT portal 204, D1 OT portal 207 and the D2 portal 210.
  • the function of the DS portal is to service all traffic between the
  • the bi-directional DS portal 201 consists of two unidirectional components, the receive buffer DS R 202 that accepts datagrams originating at the IDS and the transmit queue DS TQ 203 that buffers datagrams destined for the same.
  • the function of the IT portal is to service all traffic between the
  • the bi-directional IT portal 204 consists of two unidirectional components, the receive buffer IT R 205 that accepts datagrams from the remote Multiprotocol Device and the transmit queue IT TQ 206 that buffers datagrams destined for the same.
  • the function of the D1OT portal is to service all traffic between the Multiprotocol Core 200 and all its associated 802.11a-compliant stations, including, specifically, any downstream Multiprotocol Repeater devices that should incorporate 802.11a-provisioned IT portals.
  • the bi-directional D1OT portal 207 consists of two unidirectional components, the receive buffer D1OT R 208 that accepts datagrams originating at the associated 802.11a stations and the transmit queue D1OT TQ 209 that buffers datagrams destined for the same.
  • the function of the D2 portal is to service all traffic between the
  • the bi-directional D2 portal 210 consists of two unidirectional components, the receive buffer D2 R 211 that accepts datagrams from the associated 802.11 b/g stations and the transmit queue D2 TQ 212 that buffers datagrams destined for the same.
  • Figure 2 also illustrates the permissible internal datagram routing between the four possible Multiprotocol Core 200 portals. Note that datagrams originating at any portal's receive buffer may be routed to any one other portal's transmit queue.
  • the fundamental defining characteristic of the Multiprotocol Core structure 200 is that it supports the operational functionality of any 802.11 AP device, single protocol or multiple protocol, by judiciously routing datagrams between its appropriately enabled portals.
  • legacy IEEE 802.11-1997-compliant 802.11a, 802.11b or 802.11b/g Access Points as well as all the claimed MP Device embodiments can be modeled as specific reduced-complexity instantiations of the general MPCDFS.
  • the Multiprotocol Core 200 supports 802.11 b single protocol AP (“SPAP") functionality (for a physical device featuring an 802.11b-capable radio) by enabling only its DS and D2 portals.
  • SPAP 802.11 b single protocol AP
  • IDS- originating packets appearing at DS R 202 are routed only to D2 TQ 212, and packets from associated 802.11b stations appearing at D2 R 211 are routed solely to DS TQ 203.
  • the Multiprotocol Core 200 supports 802.11a SPAP functionality by enabling only its DS and D1OT portals. In this fashion, IDS-originating packets appearing at DS R 202 are routed exclusively to D1OT TQ 209, and packets from associated 802.11a stations appearing at D1OT R 208 are correspondingly routed to DS TQ 203.
  • FIG. 3A illustrates the datagram flow structure for a representative Dual Single Protocol Access Point, DSPAP 300, applicable to a device such as Dual SPAP 102 of Figure 1.
  • DSPAP 300 consists of an 802.11a SPAP 301 and an 802.11b SPAP 302, interconnected at their DS ports.
  • Figure 3B illustrates the datagram flow structure for a representative Triple Single Protocol Access Point Repeater, TSPAPR 310, applicable to a device such as Triple SPAR 105 of Figure 1.
  • TSPAPR 310 consists of three independent single protocol APs: an 802.11a SPAP 311, another 802.11a SPAP 312 and an 802.11b SPAP 313.
  • the Multiprotocol [0042] Specific to one embodiment of this invention, the Multiprotocol
  • Core 200 structure supports Multiprotocol Access Point ("MPAP") functionality by enabling only its DS, D1OT and D2 portals.
  • MPAP Multiprotocol Access Point
  • IDS-originating packets appearing at DS R 202 are routed to the appropriate D1OT TQ 209 or D2 TQ 212 portals, depending if they correspond to associated 802.11 a or 802.11 b/g station traffic, respectively.
  • datagrams originating at associated 802.11a stations appearing at D1OT R 208 are routed to either to DS TQ 203 or to D2 TQ 212, as appropriate, and datagrams from associated 802.11 b/g stations appearing at D2 R 211 are correspondingly routed to DS TQ 203 or to D1 OT TQ 209.
  • Figure 3C illustrates the datagram flow structure for a representative MPAP 320.
  • Multiprotocol Core 200 supports Multiprotocol Repeater (MPR) functionality by enabling its IT, D1OT and D2 portals.
  • MPR Multiprotocol Repeater
  • IT packets originating at the upstream MP Device appearing at IT R 205 are routed to the appropriate D1OT TQ 209 or D2 TQ 212, depending if they correspond to associated 802.11 a or 802.11 b/g station traffic, respectively.
  • Datagrams from associated 802.11a stations appearing at D1OT R 208 are routed to IT TQ 206 or to D2 TQ 212, as appropriate, and datagrams from associated 802.11b/g stations appearing at D2 R 211 are correspondingly routed to IT TQ 206 or to D1OT TQ 209.
  • Figure 3D illustrates the datagram flow structure for a representative MPR 330.
  • Multiprotocol Core 200 supports High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater (HCMPR) functionality by conjoining two independent Multiprotocol Core 200- based structures, an MPAP as described above plus a "Slave SPAP", at their DS ports and selectively enabling wireless portals within each structure as described below.
  • HCMPR Slave SPAP (“SSPAP”) is a single protocol
  • MPCDFS implementation illustrated in Figure 3E as SSPAP 342, that serves to route datagrams between its P3 portal and its DS portal.
  • the P3 portal may be configured as desired for IT, D1OT or D2 functionality.
  • the SSPAP is an MPCDFS with only its DS and P3 (IT, D1OT or D2, as configured) portals enabled, such that incoming traffic at DS R 202 is routed to the P3 TQ port and incoming traffic at the P3 R port is routed to DS TQ 203.
  • the HCMPR MPAP is identically the MPCDFS Multiprotocol Access Point instantiation as described in the paragraphs above, and illustrated in Figure 3E as MPAP 341, save that the P1 and P2 portals may be configured as desired for IT, D1OT and D2 functionality, consistent with the SSPAP P3 portal assignment.
  • Figure 3E illustrates the combination of the SSPAP 342 and MPAP 341 datagram flow structures to produce a representative High
  • Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater HCMPR 340 For illustrative purposes the P1, P2 and P3 portals are assigned as described forthwith, but it is important to emphasize that distinct alternative portal assignments are possible and may be altogether preferable depending on the actual application.
  • any given Multiprotocol Device may have datagrams queued and ready to transmit at any of its wireless portals at any given instant in time.
  • each wireless portal is assigned a distinct frequency channel of operation (within either the 2.4 or 5 GHz bands) a single frequency-band-agile-radio Multiprotocol Device sequences between its wireless portal channels in order to appropriately transmit its queued datagrams as well as receive any incoming packets.
  • the MP device initially tunes its frequency band agile radio to a selected portal's RF channel assignment.
  • the radio remains tuned to that channel long enough for the MP device to enable on-channel traffic by transmitting an appropriate 802.11 management/control frame, transmit the contents of the portal's transmit queue, dwell further to allow for receipt of any incoming datagrams or for transmission of late-arriving queued packets, and then finally suspend on-channel traffic by transmitting another appropriate management/control frame.
  • the MP device then tunes the radio to the RF channel assigned to the next portal, where the wireless datagram enabling, traffic exchange and suspension takes place once again.
  • the Beacon Interval cycling continues for as long as the MP Device remains operational, as 802.11a (including other MP devices) and 802.11 b/g stations may independently join and/or leave the MP device- managed wireless network as well as begin, conduct and end individual wireless sessions in this "multiprotocol environment" just as they could in any legacy single protocol environment.
  • 802.11a including other MP devices
  • 802.11 b/g stations may independently join and/or leave the MP device- managed wireless network as well as begin, conduct and end individual wireless sessions in this "multiprotocol environment" just as they could in any legacy single protocol environment.
  • the 802.11 -1997 MAC Wireless Access Protocol defines a set of specific management/control frame exchanges between an AP and a Station that provide for network access, session setup and datagram traffic control.
  • These wireless datagrams include network access frames such as "Authentication Request”, “Authentication Response” and “Deauthentication” packets, session setup frames such as “Probe Request”, “Probe Response”, “Association Request”, “Association Response”, and “Disassociation” packets and traffic control frames such as "Beacon”, “Request to Send”, “Clear to Send”, “Contention-Free End", and "ACK” packets.
  • Multiprotocol Core Wireless Access Protocol MPCWAP are two specific 802.11-1997 MAC frames that can be innovatively used to start and suspend all wireless activity as needed on a specific radio channel, the "Beacon” management frame and the "Contention-Free End” control frame.
  • Figure 4 presents a set of timing diagrams that illustrate details of the MPCWAP operation as applicable to the MPAP, MPR and HCMPR embodiments.
  • a timing diagram for a representative legacy single protocol AP device is included, and it is instructive to begin any detailed description of MPCWAP with precisely the operation of a (legacy) single protocol AP.
  • 802.11-1997-defined single protocol AP may be viewed as a special case of Multiprotocol Device operation.
  • the SPAP Beacon Interval consists of one Al associated with its single wireless (802.11a D1OT or 802.11 b/g D2) portal.
  • 802.11a D1OT or 802.11 b/g D2 802.11a D1OT or 802.11 b/g D2 portal.
  • 802.11a D1OT or 802.11 b/g D2 802.11a D1OT or 802.11 b/g D2
  • the resulting timing diagram SPAP0 410 of Figure 4 applies to such an SPAP device, for example 802.11 b/g AP 103 (SPAP0) within Dual SPAP 102 in Figure 1.
  • the Beacon Interval corresponds to a single D2 Al, the beginning and end of which is delimited by a standard IEEE 802.11- 1997 MAC management frame of subtype "Beacon".
  • This Beacon frame is, in turn, further specified as signaling "Distributed Coordination Function” operation, will be hereafter referred to as a "DCFB" frame, and is represented in Figure 4 SPAP0410 by DCFB 411 and DCFB 412.
  • any datagrams (including all management, control and data frames) internally routed to AP 103's D2 transmit queue are made immediately available for transmission, and, correspondingly, any associated (802.11b) wireless station is cleared to transmit (management, control and data) frames to SPAPO at any time.
  • the wireless access protocol for an 802.11 b/g SPAP is, therefore, fully represented by the timing diagram SPAP 410 of Figure 4.
  • Timing diagram MPAP0420 of Figure 4 illustrates the MPCWAP operation of a representative Multiprotocol AP such as MPAP 109 of Figure 1 (also designated hereafter as MPAP0). Being a Multiprotocol Access Point, its forever-repeating Beacon Interval consists of two distinct Access Intervals, a D1OT Al plus a D2 Al, separated by identical non-zero Tuning Periods (TP 415, TP 416 and TP 417).
  • Interval are signaled by distinct, existing, standard IEEE 802.11-1997 management control frames, innovatively invoked in a fashion that strictly limits transmissions from the associated (D1OT 802.11a or D2 802.11b/g) wireless stations to their corresponding (D1 OT or D2) Als, and effectively prohibits transmissions at all other times.
  • These frames must be unambiguously interpreted as "Start Traffic” and “Stop Traffic” commands, respectively, by any and all 802.11 stations, including legacy devices already deployed, operating and presently in use.
  • PCFB Physical Beacon frame
  • CFE Contention-Free End
  • the first D1OT Al (corresponding to transmissions on its assigned 802.11a 5 GHz band channel) is delimited by a start-traffic frame D1OT CFE 423 and a stop- traffic frame D1OT PCFB 424.
  • the D1OT transmit queue is emptied of all buffered packets, which are transmitted to associated
  • any traffic originating from the associated stations and/or downstream Multiprotocol Repeaters is accepted at the D1OT receive buffer and forwarded to MPAPO's DS portal.
  • MPAPO After a Tuning Period TP 416 (during which the device tunes from the 5 GHz band D1OT channel to its assigned 802.11 b/g 2.4 GHz band D2 channel) MPAPO transmits a D2 CFE 425 to signal the beginning of the D2 Al.
  • the D2 transmit queue is flushed of all buffered packets, which are appropriately transmitted to the associated 802.11 b/g stations, and any incoming datagrams from the 802.11 b/g stations are received and processed at the D2 receive buffer.
  • the D2 Al is then appropriately terminated upon MPAPO transmission of D2 PCFB 426.
  • the next D1OT Al begins with a D1OT CFE 427, and 802.11 a 5 GHz D1 OT traffic suspended by the previous D1 OT
  • PCFB 424 is permitted to resume. Any D1OT packets queued since the end of the previous D1OT Al are transmitted and any incoming 802.11a packets are correspondingly received and forwarded to the IDS.
  • the MPCWAP algorithm presented above readily extends and applies to the Multiprotocol Repeater.
  • An MPR's Beacon Interval therefore, consists of three distinct wireless portal Access Intervals, an IT Al, a D1OT Al and a D2 Al, each separated by nonzero Tuning Periods.
  • the upstream MP Device dedicates either its
  • the MPR's IT Al is determined by and set identically to the upstream MP Device's D1OT or D2 Al, or, equivalents stated, the MPR's IT Al delimiters IT CFE and IT PCFB identically correspond to the upstream MP Device's D1OT or D2 CFE and D1OT or D2 PCFB. By convention, therefore, an MPR does not actually transmit IT Al delimiters.
  • Timing diagram MPR1 430 of Figure 4 illustrates the MPCWAP operation of a representative Multiprotocol Repeater such as MPR 111 of Figure 1 (also designated hereafter as MPR1).
  • MPR1 IT Al (delimited by the dashed IT CFE 432 and IT PCFB 433) corresponds exactly to the D1OT Al of MPAPO 420.
  • MPAPO's D1 OT Al (equivalent ⁇ MPR1 's IT Al) the devices exchange the contents of their D1OT and IT transmit queues, respectively, and emulate (albeit with added latency) a direct connection between MPRI's wireless portals and MPAPO's DS portal.
  • MPRI's IT Al any packets (originating at MPAPO's D1OT portal) appearing at MPRI's IT receive buffer are routed to its D1OT or D2 transmit queues, as appropriate, for subsequent transmission during the next corresponding D1OT or D2 access intervals.
  • any packets buffered at MPRI's transmit queue are flushed and transmitted directly to MPAPO.
  • MPRI's IT Al ends upon MPAPO's transmission of D1OT PCB 424 (equivalent ⁇ , MPR1 IT PCFB 433). MPR1 then tunes within a Tuning Interval (left undesignated for simplicity) from the 5 GHz 802.11a or 2.4 GHz 802.11b/g IT channel to the distinct 5 GHz 802.11a D1OT channel. [0068] Settled upon the new channel, MPR1 transmits D1 OT CFE 434 to enable D1OT exchanges with its associated 802.11a stations, including any downstream MPRs provisioned with 802.11a IT portals (and particularly, as will be discussed below, with MPR2).
  • MPR1 ends the D1OT Al upon transmitting D1 OT PCFB 435, and then tunes to its assigned 2.4 GHz 802.11 b/g D2 channel.
  • MPR1 then transmits D2 CFE 436 to enable D2 Al traffic with its associated 802.11 b/g stations, including any downstream MPRs provisioned with 802.11 b/g IT portals. Specifically, during MPRI's D2 Al any packets buffered at its D2 transmit queue are flushed and transmitted to the appropriate 802.11 b/g client stations, and any packets from an associated 802.11 b/g station appearing at MPRI's D2 receive buffer are routed to its IT transmit queue for subsequent transmission back upstream during the next IT Al. MPR1 ends the D2 Al by transmitting D2 PCFB 437. MPR1 then tunes once again to its 5 GHz IT channel to listen for MPAPO's D1OT CFE 427 transmission and thereupon begin its MPCWAP cycle once again. [0070] Timing diagram MPR2440 illustrates the operation of another
  • Multiprotocol Repeater MPR2 associated with and downstream to MPR1. Note that MPR2's IT CFE 444 and IT PCFB 445 correspond exactly to
  • MPRI's D1OT CFE 434 and D1OT PCFB 435 respectively, demonstrating the master-slave wireless linkage between the upstream MPR1 and the downstream MPR2.
  • MPR2's MPCWAP operation is otherwise identical to that of MPR1. Further examination of and reflection upon timing diagrams MPR1 430 and MPR2440 show that MPRs may be daisy-chained indefinitely in this fashion to provide appropriate, location-distributed Access Point functionality to their particularly associated 802.11 a and 802.11 b/g stations, limited only by the aggregate bandwidth demands of the collective associated stations. [0071] Incorporating MPCWAP as described above and depicted in
  • Timing Diagrams MPR1 430 and MPR2440 respectively, in conjunction with the MPR MPCDFS structure, then, devices such as MPR1 and MPR2, each using a single 802.11 abg radio, plainly enable and support simultaneous 802.11 a and 802.11 b/g Repeater operation.
  • a High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater such as HCMPR 115 of
  • Figure 1 (hereafter also designated as HCMPR3) incorporates the MPCWAP algorithm in a different fashion than does an MPR. Specifically, since an HCMPR's MPCDFS is modeled as a distinct "Slave SPAP" structure interconnected with a separate MPAP structure, and whose combined three wireless portals may be arbitrarily assigned the IT, D1OT and D2 functions, the HCMPR MPCWAP may also be modeled as an SSPAP MPCWAP operating in parallel with the above-described MPAP MPCWAP.
  • HCMPR 115 hereafter, HCMPR3 of Figure 1 is shown associated downstream to MPAP 109 (MPAPO).
  • FIG 3E shows HCMPR3's composite MPCDFS structure 340 incorporating structures SSPAP 341 and MPAP 342, which for purposes of this example have the P1, P2 and P3 portals assigned to IT, D1OT and D2 operation, respectively.
  • Timing Diagram HCMPR3450 of Figure 4 shows the composite HCMPR3 MPCWAP resulting from the corresponding combination of the SSPAP and MPAP wireless access protocols.
  • Timing diagram HCMPR3450 is best interpreted as a superim position of the device's SSPAP MPCWAP over its MPAP MPCWAP.
  • the HCMPR3 MPAP provides the IT and D1OT wireless portals and is therefore responsible for the IT and D1OT wireless access protocols.
  • the HCMPR3 SSPAP provides the D2 wireless portal and therefore manages the D2 WAP.
  • HCMPR3's IT wireless portal operation is slaved to the D1OT operation of an upstream MP Device MPAPO, that is, its IT CFE and IT PCFB delimiters actually correspond to the D1OT CFE and D1OT PCFB transmissions from MPAPO.
  • the IT CFE 451 and IT PCFB 453 of timing diagram HCMPR3450 correspond exactly to MPAPO 420's D1OT CFE 423 and D1OT PCFB 424, respectively.
  • HCMPR3's MPAP operation therefore, consists of appropriately interpreting MPAPO's D1OT CFE 423 and D1OT PCFB 424 transmissions as its own IT CFE 451 and IT PCFB 453 Al delimiters, and supporting wireless datagram exchanges exclusively with MPAPO during that interval.
  • incoming HCMPR3 IT traffic appearing at the MPAP IT receive buffer is routed either to its DS portal (and passed on to the SSPAP DS portal and thereafter to its D2 portal for immediate transmission) or directly to its MPAP D1OT portal transmit queue.
  • any datagrams received at the MPAP D1OT portal or the SSPAP D2 portal are ultimately routed back to the MPAP IT transmit queue for transmission, if possible, during the same HCMPR3 IT Al.
  • IT Al terminated by MPAPO PCFB 424 HCMPR3 then tunes the MPAP 802.11abg radio to the D1OT channel and issues D1OT CFE 454 to begin the D1OT Al.
  • Any datagrams appearing at HCMPR3's MPAP D1OT receive buffer are routed to either to its DS portal (for transfer to the SSPAP DS portal and subsequent immediate D2 transmission) or to its IT transmit queue.
  • D1OT Al complete, the HCMPR issues D1OT PCFB 455 and then tunes back to the IT channel to begin IT processing once again.
  • HCMPR3's SSPAP operation occurs concurrently (in parallel) with the above MPAP actions, as also illustrated in timing diagram HCMPR3450 of Figure 4.
  • the SSPAP radio is fixed tuned to the 2.4 GHz D2 channel and will support only D2 operation at any time. Consequently its operation corresponds precisely to that of a Single Protocol AP such as SPAPO 410, and features a single 100% duty cycle D2 Al.
  • the SPAP merely issues periodic DCF Beacons (DCFB 452 and DCFB 453, respectively) to comprehensively manage the D2 traffic.
  • DCFB 452 and DCFB 453 respectively
  • the HCMPR3 SSPAP exchanges wireless datagrams with its associated 802.11 b/g stations, including any other associated downstream MP Repeaters provisioned with 802.11 b/g IT portals.
  • any datagrams appearing at the SSPAP D2 portal during the D1OT Al are routed to its DS portal and then to either the MPAP D1OT transmit queue for immediate transmission or the MPAP IT transmit queue for transmission during the next MPAP IT Al.
  • MPCDFS structure coupled with the time-overlapping IT and D1OT/D2 Access Intervals provided by the parallel SSPAP and MPAP MPCWAPs provide an HCMPR MP device with more "air time" for IT, D1OT and D2 wireless exchanges than is available to a single radio MPR.
  • the HCMPR device therefore supports a higher volume of 802.11 transmissions than can the MPR, and, ergo, therefrom derives its name.

Abstract

The embodiment of the present invention comprises a device-internal data flow organization coupled with a wireless communications medium access control protocol for a set of WLAN 'Multiprotocol Devices', each containing a 2.4 and 5 Ghz frequency band-agile CCK and OFDM modulation capable radio, such that the devices may support simultaneous IEEE 802.11a and 802.11b/g-compliant Access Point functionality (109). The set includes a 'Multiprotocol Access Point'that bridges communications from IEEE 802.11a (116) and/or IEEE 802.11b/g (114) compliant WLAN client devices, and other Multiprotocol Devices, to the wired LAN distribution system.

Description

MULTIPROTOCOL WLAN ACCESS POINT DEVICES
CROSS REFERENCE
[0001] This application claims the benefit of priority of U.S. patent application no. 10/621,688, filed July 16, 2003, which is a continuation-in-part of commonly owned U.S. patent application no. 10/334,747, filed December 31 , 2002. These prior.patent applications are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
TECHNICAL FIELD
[0002] The present invention generally relates to the field of computer networking. More particularly, the present invention relates to the field of wireless networking communications between computing devices.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0003] Various communications systems are used to allow electronic devices such as computers to communicate and exchange data and other types of information. For example, various systems such as Local Area Networks ("LANs"), the Internet and conventional telephone networks often link computers. A particularly effective method to allow mobile computers to communicate is with a Wireless Local Area Network ("WLAN"). A very popular and pervasive WLAN system is that specified by the IEEE 802.11 wireless networking standard, an industry protocol that has successfully resolved many interoperability issues among the manufacturers of WLAN equipment. The IEEE 802.11 standard specifies several distinct OSI Physical ("PHY") Layer radio transmission mechanisms whereby signals may be transmitted over the wireless medium, as well as a single Medium Access Control ("MAC") layer that organizes and controls the exchange of data packets or datagrams between the communicating stations. This (IEEE 802.11-1997) MAC also supports mechanisms whereby special 802.11 stations referred to as Access Points ("APs") also connect to a wired LAN, to then in many occasions traverse said LAN and access the broader Internet. Mobile computers connect to the Access Points wirelessly using 802.11 WLAN Network Interface Cards ("NICs") that plug in to their standard computer I/O connections (such as USB, PCI or CardBus). [0004] Two specific IEEE 802.11 PHY standards (called 802.11 a and
802.11b, respectively) have gained overwhelming worldwide acceptance. The 11 Mbps 802.11b PHY, operating at 2.4 GHz and employing Complementary Code Keying ("CCK") single carrier QPSK modulation, has been shipped in millions of NICs and APs since 1999. The 54 Mbps 802.11a PHY, operating in the 5 GHz band and based on multiple carrier Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex ("OFDM") signaling, is, on the other hand, rapidly gaining wide acceptance for large company WLAN deployments. To complicate matters further, the IEEE is standardizing a combined CCK and OFDM-based extension to the 2.4 GHz 802.11b PHY called 802.11g, and corresponding "802.11b/g" IC and software technology has begun to ship. [0005] The evolution from 2.4 GHz CCK-based 802.11 b technology to
5 GHz OFDM 802.11a-based equipment, therefore, involves serious interoperability and legacy support issues, and both WLAN equipment manufacturers and systems deployers are still grappling with how best to resolve them.
[0006] One emerging, popular approach is to use dual band, multiple protocol WLAN equipment. Some IC vendors have begun to ship "IEEE 802.11abg" chipsets and associated software that enable wireless stations to transmit and receive using either 802.11a or 802.11b/g on a datagram by datagram basis. This technology is presently being used to manufacture "Multiprotocol NICs" ("MPNICs") that can auto-negotiate and communicate with an AP using either 802.11 b, 802.11 g or 802.11 a at any given time. As an important note, these new "multilingual" NICs also incorporate the exact IEEE 802.11-1997 MAC protocols in order to not confuse any legacy devices with which they would communicate.
[0007] Legacy (single band, single protocol) APs, are nearly 100%
802.11b-based and can only communicate using CCK at 2.4 GHz. "Dual Single Protocol APs" ("DSPAPs", consisting of two individual 802.11a and 802.11b APs in one enclosure sharing a common Ethernet connection to the LAN distribution system) however, are now being manufactured that can, effectively, simultaneously "talk" CCK at 2.4 GHz and OFDM at 5 GHz, again using the common 802.11-1997 MAC.
[0008] In the above fashion, the new MPNICs can communicate with the common legacy 802.11 b-only APs, the newer (and very rare) 802.11 a- only APs or the increasingly popular "802.11a and b/g" dual protocol DSPAPs. Similarly, these DSPAPs can communicate with the overwhelmingly predominant 802.11 b-only legacy NICs, the (relatively rare) newer 802.1 la- only NICs and the "802.11a, b or g" MPNICs. [0009] While the above solution works acceptably well, it is a very costly disadvantage to require incorporation of two independent single protocol APs (incorporating separate 802.11a and 802.11b radios and MAC processors, and incurring much duplication of costly support circuitry) in order to produce a single dual protocol AP. It would be much more cost-effective to utilize a single 802.11 abg-capable radio device for these new "802.11 a and 802.11 b (and 802.11g)" APs as well. And of course, it is essential that any such devices incorporate the IEEE 802.11-1997 MAC unchanged. The present invention accomplishes all these objectives. [00010] Once such a "single 802.11abg radio, same 802.11 MAC" Multiprotocol Access Point ("MPAP") proves feasible, a new type of AP-like device that takes advantage of both the frequency agility and the multiprotocol capabilities of the MPAP technology also becomes viable, if not compelling. This new device, a "Multiprotocol Repeater" ("MPR") replaces the MPAP's wired LAN connection with an(other) 802.11a or b/g link that would, in turn, communicate with an "upstream" MPAP provisioned with the actual connection to the wired LAN or Internet. Multiple protocol repeaters could be implemented using three (!) distinct legacy single protocol 802.11a and 802.11 b/g APs, but the invention documented herein provides for implementation of MPR devices that specifically make use of 802.11abg radio technology to provide significantly reduced cost and complexity. BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The invention described herein provides a structure, method and system to effectively utilize dual (2.4 and 5 GHz) band, multiple (CCK and OFDM) protocol "IEEE 802.11 abg" radio technology to implement reduced cost and complexity, "simultaneous IEEE 802.11a and 802.11b/g Access Points" and related devices (collectively, "Multiprotocol Devices" or "MPDs"). The invention combines a framework and mechanism that specifically allows for production of three distinct types of MPDs: a "Multiprotocol AP", a "Multiprotocol Repeater" and a "High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater". [0012] The invention consists of two distinct, intimately related and ultimately inseparable component elements: 1) a novel and unique "Datagram Flow Structure", whereby WLAN data packets transmitted and received by an MPD are internally organized and routed, and 2) a novel and unique "MAC Methodology", whereby said data packets are then externally wirelessly exchanged between the MPD and other IEEE 802.11 -compliant devices. [0013] A Multiprotocol Access Point ("MPAP"), the first principal claimed embodiment of this invention, provides concurrent IEEE 802.11a and 802.11 b/g AP services to multiple distinct 802.11a or 802.11 b/g capable WLAN stations while only employing a single IEEE 802.11 abg radio and a wired connection to the infrastructure Distribution System ("DS"). In addition, the MPAP provides "virtual DS" connectivity to other associated "downstream" MPD Repeater devices with which it shares a dedicated portion of its wireless traffic. [0014] A Multiprotocol Repeater ("MPR"), another key embodiment of this invention, is an MPD that also provides simultaneous 802.11a and 802.11 b/g Access Point functionality to any and all associated single protocol WLAN stations, but with its "wired DS" port replaced by a "virtual DS wireless link" to another "upstream" MPD. An MPR also uses a single IEEE 802.11 abg radio, and, like the MPAP, provides virtual DS connectivity to "further downstream" MPD Repeater devices.
[0015] A "High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater" ("HCMPR"), another claimed embodiment of this invention, is an MPR variant that uses two actual 802.11 abg radios to provide the "three virtual" MPR wireless links: the upstream virtual DS plus the downstream 802.11a and 802.11 b/g AP services to the associated distinct protocol stations (as well the virtual DS wireless daisy chain link to other downstream MPDs). The simultaneous operation of two actual radios allows the HCMPR to support a greater volume of wireless traffic than can the single radio MPR.
[0016] These and other embodiments of the present invention are further made apparent, in the remainder of the present document, to those of ordinary skill in the art.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017] The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and form part of this specification, illustrate key elements of the Multiprotocol Core invention as well as the three claimed embodiments of the same. These drawings, together with the detailed description following serve to fully explain the principles of the invention. These drawings are not to be considered limitations in the scope of the invention, but are merely illustrative. [0016] FIGURE 1 is a block diagram of a representative WLAN deployment featuring a LAN infrastructure, legacy single-protocol NICs, single protocol-based APs and Repeaters, Multiprotocol APs and Multiprotocol Repeaters (both MPR and HCMPR versions).
[0017] FIGURE 2 is a schematic representation of the Multiprotocol
Core Datagram Flow Structure (MPCDFS), itself incorporating the transmitted and received, wired and wireless data packet flow into, within and out from the data portals of a WLAN device incorporating the Multiprotocol Core invention. [0018] FIGURE 3 presents a set of specific, distinct instantiations of the general MPCDFS presented in Figure 2. FIGURE 3A presents the MPCDFS for a representative (unclaimed) Dual Single Protocol Access Point device consisting of two independent single protocol APs. FIGURE 3B illustrates the MPCDFS for a representative (also unclaimed) Triple Single Protocol AP Repeater consisting of three single protocol APs. FIGURE 3C shows the MPCDFS for a claimed Multiprotocol AP (MPAP). Figure 3D presents the MPCDFS for a claimed Multiprotocol Repeater (MPR) and Figure 3E presents a general MPCDFS for a claimed High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater (HCMPR).
[0019] FIGURE 4 is a timing diagram of the Multiprotocol Core Wireless
Access Protocol. It illustrates management and control datagrams transmitted by different types of Access Point devices, including a legacy single-protocol AP, the claimed MPAP, the claimed MPR and the claimed HCMPR.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS
[0020] Detailed reference will now be made to the specifics of the
Multiprotocol Core invention as well as to its claimed embodiments. While the invention will be described together with the embodiments, it needs be understood that said embodiments are not intended to limit the scope of the invention in any way. On the contrary, the intention is to cover any and all alternatives, modifications and equivalents that may fall within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. [0021] Within the following detailed description of the invention numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the same. However, it will be obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention may be understood and practiced without taking recourse to these specific details. In other instances, well-known and understood methods, procedures, references, standards, protocols, systems and components have not been described in detail so not to unnecessarily obscure salient aspects of the invention.
[0022] Figure 1 illustrates a representative Local Area Network ("LAN")
100 as deployed in many present-day large and medium sized businesses. The LAN Switch 101 is a piece of computer networking equipment that routes data packets (or "datagrams") between other high capacity networking equipment (indicated by the unconsummated connection 116) and computing or other networking devices connected to its ports (indicated by the consummated connections to devices 102, 109, 117 and 120 and by the unconsummated connections 118, 119, 121 and 122). [0023] Device 102 is a representative "Dual Single Protocol Access
Point" ("DSPAP") intended to provide simultaneous IEEE 802. 1a and 802.11b AP functionality. DSPAP 102 consists of two independent, distinct, single-protocol Access Points 103 and 104, respectively. AP 103 within DSPAP 102 serves to bridge or route wirelessly transmitted datagrams conforming to the IEEE 802.11b WLAN standard between appropriately capable wireless stations (802.11b NICs, such as devices 110 and 114) and Switch 101. Similarly, AP 104 within DSPAP 102 serves to route wirelessly transmitted datagrams conforming to the IEEE 802.11a WLAN standard between appropriately capable wireless stations (802.11a NICs, such as devices 113 and 116) and Switch 101. DSPAP 102 is representative of the (excessive) cost and complexity involved when utilizing single protocol technology to implement multiple protocol APs. [0024] Device 105 is a representative "Triple Single Protocol AP Repeater" ("TSPAPR") intended to provide simultaneous IEEE 802.11a and 802.11b AP functionality while incorporating a wireless (802.11a) connection back to the Distribution System. TSPAPR 105 consists of three independent, distinct, single-protocol Access Points 106, 107 and 108, respectively. 802.11b AP 106 within TSPAPR 105 serves to bridge datagrams between associated 802.11 b STAs and the DS port of the contained 802.11 a AP 108. Similarly, 802.11a AP 107 within TSPAPR 105 serves to bridge datagrams between associated 802.11a STAs and AP 108's DS port. 802.11a AP 108 within TSPAPR 105 then serves to bridge datagrams between its DS port and an associated "upstream" 802.11a-compliant AP device actually connected to the infrastructure Distribution System. TSPAPR 105 is representative of the (unnecessarily extreme) cost and complexity involved when utilizing single protocol technology to implement multiple protocol repeater devices. [0025] Devices 117 and 120 are networking-capable computing devices, connected directly to Switch 101 via fixed wiring or cable. The networking protocol used by devices 105 and 106 (as well as Switch 101) is IEEE 802.3 10/100 Base T Ethernet, and said devices are hereafter referred to as 802.3 STAs. Devices 117 and 120 serve merely to illustrate the non- wireless networking functionality supported by Switch 101. [0026] Devices 110 and 114 are computing devices incorporating wireless stations ("STAs") conforming to the IEEE 802.11b WLAN standard. These devices are capable of networking wirelessly with single protocol 802.11b devices such as AP 103 (of DSPAP 102) and AP 106 (of TSPAPR 105) and with Multiprotocol Devices such as MPAP 109, MPRs 111 and 112 and HCMPR 115.
Devices 113 and 116 are computing devices incorporating wireless STAs conforming to the IEEE 802.11a WLAN standard. These devices are capable of networking wirelessly with single protocol 802.11a devices such as AP 104 (of DSPAP 102) and AP 107 (of TSPAPR 105) and with Multiprotocol Devices such as MPAP 109, MPRs 111 and 112 and HCMPR 115. [0027] Multiprotocol ("MP") Devices 109, 111 , 112 and 115 represent the distinct claimed embodiments of the present Multiprotocol Core invention. MP Device 109, representative of the first embodiment, is a Multiprotocol Access Point ("MPAP") capable of networking wirelessly with 802.11 a and 802.11 b or 802.11 b/g STAs simultaneously. An MPAP provides the functionality of DSPAP 102 while using a single frequency-band agile (i.e., tunable to channels in both the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands), IEEE 802.11a and 802.11 b/g capable (i.e., containing independently operating CCK and OFDM modems) radio device (hereafter, an "802.11 abg radio") instead of dual single protocol APs.
[0028] MP Devices 111 and 112 are Multiprotocol Repeaters ("MPRs"), another Multiprotocol Core invention embodiment. These MPRs are capable of simultaneous wireless networking with associated 802.11a and 802.11 b/g STAs and thereafter bridging said traffic wirelessly (using 802.11a or
802.11 b/g) to another MP Device actually connected to the DS, in the fashion of TSPAPR 105. MPRs 111 and 112 each utilize a single 802.11 abg radio to perform all their wireless networking functions. [0029] MP Device 115, a different type of Multiprotocol Repeater, uses two distinct 802.11 abg radios to implement the three distinct, concurrent MPR wireless links: the upstream virtual DS connection and the downstream 802.11a and 802.11 b/g wireless networks that service its associated stations. MP Device 115 is hereafter referred to as a "High Capacity" MPR ("HCMPR"). [0030] Detailed descriptions will now be made regarding the specifics of the Multiprotocol Core invention, that is, precisely how the innovations contained in the appended claims enable a Multiprotocol Access Point (MPAP 109), a Multiprotocol Repeater (MPR 111 or MPR 112) or a High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater (HCMPR 115), each incorporating an 802.11 abg radio and the Multiprotocol Core invention, to reproduce the functionality provided by multiple distinct 802.11a and 802.11 b/g Access Points such as contained in DSPAP 102 and TSPAPR 105. It will be shown that such multiprotocol functionality is enabled by incorporation of the two key Multiprotocol Core invention elements, the Multiprotocol Core Datagram Flow Structure ("MPCDFS") and the Multiprotocol Core Wireless Access Protocol ("MPCWAP").
Multiprotocol Core [0031] As def ined by IEEE 802.11, an Access Point ("AP") is any device containing an 802.11- conformant medium access control (MAC) and physical layer (PHY) interface to the wireless medium that provides wirelessly associated 802.11 -compliant stations with access to the infrastructure Distribution System. Stated differently, an AP is a device incorporating one or more "wireless portals" and one (wired) Distribution System ("DS") portal whose function is to route externally originating data packets between any of its wireless portals and its DS portal. Any 802.11 -compliant AP, then, incorporates some manner of datagram flow structure. The present invention covers devices that specifically incorporate the MPCDFS, or any claimed structure reduced and/or derived therefrom, to enable simultaneous, multiple protocol 802.11 AP functionality as described in the paragraphs below. [0032] An Access Point also actively manages the wireless traffic between all the 802.11 stations with which it is associated. This is accomplished using standard 802.11-1997 MAC management and control wireless packet exchanges between the AP and the stations. The collection of specific packet exchange sequences that provide for stations to identify themselves as valid network participants, to join or leave the network, to set up and tear down individual wireless sessions and to manage the flow of individual packet transmissions between stations is generically referred to as a "wireless access protocol" or "WAP". IEEE 802.11-1997 describes a WAP between (single protocol) APs and stations. The Multiprotocol Core invention described herein incorporates a set of innovative extensions to the 802.11 WAP (the MPCWAP) that defines the wireless access between MPCDFS- provisioned Multiprotocol Devices and single protocol stations, multiple protocol stations and/or other Multiprotocol Devices.
Multiprotocol Core Datagram Flow Structure (MPCDFS) [0033] Figure 2 presents a diagram of the MPCDFS structure illustrating the data packet routing within a generalized Multiprotocol Device. Note that this MPCDFS, in addition to supporting its three specific claimed MP Device embodiments, is also readily reducible to a data flow structure characteristic of an unclaimed single protocol legacy IEEE 802.11-1997 AP. This Multiprotocol Core structure 200 of Figure 2 consists of four distinct bi- directional portals, the DS portal 201 , IT portal 204, D1 OT portal 207 and the D2 portal 210.
[0034] The function of the DS portal is to service all traffic between the
Multiprotocol Core 200 and the wired (LAN or otherwise) Infrastructure Distribution System ("IDS"). The bi-directional DS portal 201 consists of two unidirectional components, the receive buffer DS R 202 that accepts datagrams originating at the IDS and the transmit queue DS TQ 203 that buffers datagrams destined for the same.
[0035] The function of the IT portal is to service all traffic between the
Multiprotocol Core 200 and a remote, wirelessly accessed IDS portal, specifically belonging to another Multiprotocol Device. The bi-directional IT portal 204 consists of two unidirectional components, the receive buffer IT R 205 that accepts datagrams from the remote Multiprotocol Device and the transmit queue IT TQ 206 that buffers datagrams destined for the same. [0036] The function of the D1OT portal is to service all traffic between the Multiprotocol Core 200 and all its associated 802.11a-compliant stations, including, specifically, any downstream Multiprotocol Repeater devices that should incorporate 802.11a-provisioned IT portals. The bi-directional D1OT portal 207 consists of two unidirectional components, the receive buffer D1OT R 208 that accepts datagrams originating at the associated 802.11a stations and the transmit queue D1OT TQ 209 that buffers datagrams destined for the same.
[0037] The function of the D2 portal is to service all traffic between the
Multiprotocol Core 200 and all its associated 802.11b/g-com pliant stations, including, specifically, any downstream Multiprotocol Repeater devices that should incorporate 802.11b/g-provisioned IT portals. The bi-directional D2 portal 210 consists of two unidirectional components, the receive buffer D2 R 211 that accepts datagrams from the associated 802.11 b/g stations and the transmit queue D2 TQ 212 that buffers datagrams destined for the same. [0038] Figure 2 also illustrates the permissible internal datagram routing between the four possible Multiprotocol Core 200 portals. Note that datagrams originating at any portal's receive buffer may be routed to any one other portal's transmit queue. The fundamental defining characteristic of the Multiprotocol Core structure 200 is that it supports the operational functionality of any 802.11 AP device, single protocol or multiple protocol, by judiciously routing datagrams between its appropriately enabled portals. Specifically, legacy IEEE 802.11-1997-compliant 802.11a, 802.11b or 802.11b/g Access Points as well as all the claimed MP Device embodiments can be modeled as specific reduced-complexity instantiations of the general MPCDFS. [0039] For example, the Multiprotocol Core 200 supports 802.11 b single protocol AP ("SPAP") functionality (for a physical device featuring an 802.11b-capable radio) by enabling only its DS and D2 portals. IDS- originating packets appearing at DS R 202 are routed only to D2 TQ 212, and packets from associated 802.11b stations appearing at D2 R 211 are routed solely to DS TQ 203. Similarly, the Multiprotocol Core 200 supports 802.11a SPAP functionality by enabling only its DS and D1OT portals. In this fashion, IDS-originating packets appearing at DS R 202 are routed exclusively to D1OT TQ 209, and packets from associated 802.11a stations appearing at D1OT R 208 are correspondingly routed to DS TQ 203. [0040] Figure 3A illustrates the datagram flow structure for a representative Dual Single Protocol Access Point, DSPAP 300, applicable to a device such as Dual SPAP 102 of Figure 1. DSPAP 300 consists of an 802.11a SPAP 301 and an 802.11b SPAP 302, interconnected at their DS ports. [0041] Figure 3B illustrates the datagram flow structure for a representative Triple Single Protocol Access Point Repeater, TSPAPR 310, applicable to a device such as Triple SPAR 105 of Figure 1. TSPAPR 310 consists of three independent single protocol APs: an 802.11a SPAP 311, another 802.11a SPAP 312 and an 802.11b SPAP 313.
[0042] Specific to one embodiment of this invention, the Multiprotocol
Core 200 structure supports Multiprotocol Access Point ("MPAP") functionality by enabling only its DS, D1OT and D2 portals. In this fashion, IDS-originating packets appearing at DS R 202 are routed to the appropriate D1OT TQ 209 or D2 TQ 212 portals, depending if they correspond to associated 802.11 a or 802.11 b/g station traffic, respectively. Similarly, datagrams originating at associated 802.11a stations appearing at D1OT R 208 are routed to either to DS TQ 203 or to D2 TQ 212, as appropriate, and datagrams from associated 802.11 b/g stations appearing at D2 R 211 are correspondingly routed to DS TQ 203 or to D1 OT TQ 209. Figure 3C illustrates the datagram flow structure for a representative MPAP 320.
[0043] Specific to another embodiment of this invention, the
Multiprotocol Core 200 supports Multiprotocol Repeater (MPR) functionality by enabling its IT, D1OT and D2 portals. In this fashion, IT packets originating at the upstream MP Device appearing at IT R 205 are routed to the appropriate D1OT TQ 209 or D2 TQ 212, depending if they correspond to associated 802.11 a or 802.11 b/g station traffic, respectively. Datagrams from associated 802.11a stations appearing at D1OT R 208 are routed to IT TQ 206 or to D2 TQ 212, as appropriate, and datagrams from associated 802.11b/g stations appearing at D2 R 211 are correspondingly routed to IT TQ 206 or to D1OT TQ 209. Figure 3D illustrates the datagram flow structure for a representative MPR 330.
[0044] Specific to another embodiment of this invention, the
Multiprotocol Core 200 supports High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater (HCMPR) functionality by conjoining two independent Multiprotocol Core 200- based structures, an MPAP as described above plus a "Slave SPAP", at their DS ports and selectively enabling wireless portals within each structure as described below. [0045] The HCMPR Slave SPAP ("SSPAP") is a single protocol
MPCDFS implementation, illustrated in Figure 3E as SSPAP 342, that serves to route datagrams between its P3 portal and its DS portal. The P3 portal may be configured as desired for IT, D1OT or D2 functionality. Referring back to Figure 2, the SSPAP is an MPCDFS with only its DS and P3 (IT, D1OT or D2, as configured) portals enabled, such that incoming traffic at DS R 202 is routed to the P3 TQ port and incoming traffic at the P3 R port is routed to DS TQ 203. [0046] The HCMPR MPAP is identically the MPCDFS Multiprotocol Access Point instantiation as described in the paragraphs above, and illustrated in Figure 3E as MPAP 341, save that the P1 and P2 portals may be configured as desired for IT, D1OT and D2 functionality, consistent with the SSPAP P3 portal assignment. [0047] Figure 3E illustrates the combination of the SSPAP 342 and MPAP 341 datagram flow structures to produce a representative High
Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater HCMPR 340. For illustrative purposes the P1, P2 and P3 portals are assigned as described forthwith, but it is important to emphasize that distinct alternative portal assignments are possible and may be altogether preferable depending on the actual application. In this case, packets originating at the upstream MP device appearing at the MPAP 341 P1 (=IT) receive buffer are routed either to its DS or P2 (=D1OT) transmit queue. Packets at the MPAP DS portal are forwarded directly to the conjoined SSPAP's DS receive buffer for immediate routing to its P3 (=D2) transmit queue. Correspondingly, datagrams from associated stations appearing at the HCMPR's MPAP P2 (=D1OT) or SSPAP P3 (=D2) wireless portals are ultimately routed to the MPAP P1 (=IT) portal for transmission to the upstream Multiprotocol Device.
Multiprotocol Core Wireless Access Protocol (MPCWAP) [0048] The following is a description of the wireless access protocol used by a generalized Multiprotocol Device. Specific MPCWAP instantiation descriptions then follow for each of the claimed Multiprotocol Device embodiments. [0049] By virtue of the MPCDFS, any given Multiprotocol Device may have datagrams queued and ready to transmit at any of its wireless portals at any given instant in time. As each wireless portal is assigned a distinct frequency channel of operation (within either the 2.4 or 5 GHz bands) a single frequency-band-agile-radio Multiprotocol Device sequences between its wireless portal channels in order to appropriately transmit its queued datagrams as well as receive any incoming packets. [0050] Specifically, the MP device initially tunes its frequency band agile radio to a selected portal's RF channel assignment. The radio remains tuned to that channel long enough for the MP device to enable on-channel traffic by transmitting an appropriate 802.11 management/control frame, transmit the contents of the portal's transmit queue, dwell further to allow for receipt of any incoming datagrams or for transmission of late-arriving queued packets, and then finally suspend on-channel traffic by transmitting another appropriate management/control frame. The MP device then tunes the radio to the RF channel assigned to the next portal, where the wireless datagram enabling, traffic exchange and suspension takes place once again. [0051] In this fashion, MPAP devices alternate wireless communications between their D1OT and D2 channels, MPRs alternate between their IT, D1OT and D2 channels, and HCMPRs alternate between their (MPAP) selectable P1 and P2 channels, as the (SSPAP) selectable P3 radio always remains fixed-tuned to its assigned channel. [0052] This cycling between the portal channels is defined, by convention, over a global "Beacon Interval" consisting of sequential, distinct wireless portal-specific "Access Intervals" ("Als") plus non-zero- time radio "Tuning Periods". The Beacon Interval cycling continues for as long as the MP Device remains operational, as 802.11a (including other MP devices) and 802.11 b/g stations may independently join and/or leave the MP device- managed wireless network as well as begin, conduct and end individual wireless sessions in this "multiprotocol environment" just as they could in any legacy single protocol environment.
[0053] The 802.11 -1997 MAC Wireless Access Protocol defines a set of specific management/control frame exchanges between an AP and a Station that provide for network access, session setup and datagram traffic control. These wireless datagrams include network access frames such as "Authentication Request", "Authentication Response" and "Deauthentication" packets, session setup frames such as "Probe Request", "Probe Response", "Association Request", "Association Response", and "Disassociation" packets and traffic control frames such as "Beacon", "Request to Send", "Clear to Send", "Contention-Free End", and "ACK" packets. Of particular relevance to the Multiprotocol Core invention, and fundamental to the Multiprotocol Core Wireless Access Protocol MPCWAP are two specific 802.11-1997 MAC frames that can be innovatively used to start and suspend all wireless activity as needed on a specific radio channel, the "Beacon" management frame and the "Contention-Free End" control frame.
[0054] Figure 4 presents a set of timing diagrams that illustrate details of the MPCWAP operation as applicable to the MPAP, MPR and HCMPR embodiments. In addition, a timing diagram for a representative legacy single protocol AP device is included, and it is instructive to begin any detailed description of MPCWAP with precisely the operation of a (legacy) single protocol AP.
[0055] As has been noted previously, the operation of a legacy IEEE
802.11-1997-defined single protocol AP may be viewed as a special case of Multiprotocol Device operation. Specifically, the SPAP Beacon Interval consists of one Al associated with its single wireless (802.11a D1OT or 802.11 b/g D2) portal. Also, as a single protocol device by definition always operates on the same channel, no radio retuning is necessary and therefore the Tuning Period is identically zero. The resulting timing diagram SPAP0 410 of Figure 4 applies to such an SPAP device, for example 802.11 b/g AP 103 (SPAP0) within Dual SPAP 102 in Figure 1. Note in timing diagram SPAP0410 of Figure 4 that the Beacon Interval corresponds to a single D2 Al, the beginning and end of which is delimited by a standard IEEE 802.11- 1997 MAC management frame of subtype "Beacon". This Beacon frame is, in turn, further specified as signaling "Distributed Coordination Function" operation, will be hereafter referred to as a "DCFB" frame, and is represented in Figure 4 SPAP0410 by DCFB 411 and DCFB 412. [0056] Since the SPAP0 D2 Al duty cycle is practically 100%, any datagrams (including all management, control and data frames) internally routed to AP 103's D2 transmit queue are made immediately available for transmission, and, correspondingly, any associated (802.11b) wireless station is cleared to transmit (management, control and data) frames to SPAPO at any time. The wireless access protocol for an 802.11 b/g SPAP is, therefore, fully represented by the timing diagram SPAP 410 of Figure 4.
[0057] Timing diagram MPAP0420 of Figure 4 illustrates the MPCWAP operation of a representative Multiprotocol AP such as MPAP 109 of Figure 1 (also designated hereafter as MPAP0). Being a Multiprotocol Access Point, its forever-repeating Beacon Interval consists of two distinct Access Intervals, a D1OT Al plus a D2 Al, separated by identical non-zero Tuning Periods (TP 415, TP 416 and TP 417).
[0058] Key to the MPCWAP, the beginning and end of each Access
Interval are signaled by distinct, existing, standard IEEE 802.11-1997 management control frames, innovatively invoked in a fashion that strictly limits transmissions from the associated (D1OT 802.11a or D2 802.11b/g) wireless stations to their corresponding (D1 OT or D2) Als, and effectively prohibits transmissions at all other times. These frames must be unambiguously interpreted as "Start Traffic" and "Stop Traffic" commands, respectively, by any and all 802.11 stations, including legacy devices already deployed, operating and presently in use.
[0059] Notwithstanding the fact that they were not expressly designed to provide such functionality, two standard, existing 802.11 MAC management and control frames can indeed be used as the above "Start Traffic" and "Stop Traffic" commands. Per IEEE 802.11-1997, upon AP transmission of an IEEE 802.11-1997 MAC management frame of subtype "Beacon", where said
Beacon frame (hereafter referred to as a "PCFB" frame) appropriately asserts its contained "Capabilities" and "CF Parameter Set" "Information Elements" to signal "Point Coordination Function operation with no polling", any and all stations associated with said AP must defer any and all independently originating transmissions until after receipt of an appropriate, subsequent "Contention-Free End" ("CFE") frame from said AP. Therefore, by convention, the MPCWAP signals the start of any MP Device wireless portal Al by a transmission of a CFE frame, and correspondingly signals the end of the same Al by transmission of a PCFB frame. [0060] Referring back to timing diagram MPAPO 420 of Figure 4, the first D1OT Al (corresponding to transmissions on its assigned 802.11a 5 GHz band channel) is delimited by a start-traffic frame D1OT CFE 423 and a stop- traffic frame D1OT PCFB 424. During the D1OT Al the D1OT transmit queue is emptied of all buffered packets, which are transmitted to associated
802.11a stations and any downstream MP Repeaters. In addition, any traffic originating from the associated stations and/or downstream Multiprotocol Repeaters is accepted at the D1OT receive buffer and forwarded to MPAPO's DS portal. [0061] After a Tuning Period TP 416 (during which the device tunes from the 5 GHz band D1OT channel to its assigned 802.11 b/g 2.4 GHz band D2 channel) MPAPO transmits a D2 CFE 425 to signal the beginning of the D2 Al. D2 traffic enabled, the D2 transmit queue is flushed of all buffered packets, which are appropriately transmitted to the associated 802.11 b/g stations, and any incoming datagrams from the 802.11 b/g stations are received and processed at the D2 receive buffer. The D2 Al is then appropriately terminated upon MPAPO transmission of D2 PCFB 426. [0062] After another Tuning Period TP 417 (wherein MPAPO tunes back to the 5 GHz D1OT channel) the next D1OT Al begins with a D1OT CFE 427, and 802.11 a 5 GHz D1 OT traffic suspended by the previous D1 OT
PCFB 424 is permitted to resume. Any D1OT packets queued since the end of the previous D1OT Al are transmitted and any incoming 802.11a packets are correspondingly received and forwarded to the IDS. [0063] Incorporating MPCWAP as described above and correspondingly depicted in timing diagram MPAPO 420, in conjunction with the MPAP MPCDFS structure, a device such as MPAPO plainly enables and supports simultaneous 802.11a and 802.11 b/g Access Point operation using a single 802.11 abg radio. [0064] The MPCWAP algorithm presented above readily extends and applies to the Multiprotocol Repeater. The principal discriminating characteristic between an MPR and an MPAP is the Multiprotocol Repeater's wireless connection (using an MPCDFS IT wireless portal) to a "virtual IDS" that in fact consists of another MP Device (either an MPAP or another MPR). An MPR's Beacon Interval, therefore, consists of three distinct wireless portal Access Intervals, an IT Al, a D1OT Al and a D2 Al, each separated by nonzero Tuning Periods.
[0065] By convention, the upstream MP Device dedicates either its
D1OT or its D2 portal to the wireless connection with the MPR's IT portal (therefore set to operate, via configuration, on the identical D1OT or D2 RF channel). Also by convention, the MPR's IT Al is determined by and set identically to the upstream MP Device's D1OT or D2 Al, or, equivalents stated, the MPR's IT Al delimiters IT CFE and IT PCFB identically correspond to the upstream MP Device's D1OT or D2 CFE and D1OT or D2 PCFB. By convention, therefore, an MPR does not actually transmit IT Al delimiters. It instead designates the D1OT or D2 CFE and D1OT or D2 PCFB frames received from the upstream MP device as its own equivalent IT CFE and IT PCFB packets, respectively. [0066] Timing diagram MPR1 430 of Figure 4 illustrates the MPCWAP operation of a representative Multiprotocol Repeater such as MPR 111 of Figure 1 (also designated hereafter as MPR1). Note that the MPR1 IT Al (delimited by the dashed IT CFE 432 and IT PCFB 433) corresponds exactly to the D1OT Al of MPAPO 420. This illustrates the linkage between an MPR and its upstream MP Device, in this case an MPAP using its D1OT portal for the MPR upstream link.
[0067] During MPAPO's D1 OT Al (equivalent^ MPR1 's IT Al) the devices exchange the contents of their D1OT and IT transmit queues, respectively, and emulate (albeit with added latency) a direct connection between MPRI's wireless portals and MPAPO's DS portal. Specifically, during MPRI's IT Al any packets (originating at MPAPO's D1OT portal) appearing at MPRI's IT receive buffer are routed to its D1OT or D2 transmit queues, as appropriate, for subsequent transmission during the next corresponding D1OT or D2 access intervals. Correspondingly, any packets buffered at MPRI's transmit queue are flushed and transmitted directly to MPAPO. MPRI's IT Al ends upon MPAPO's transmission of D1OT PCB 424 (equivalent^, MPR1 IT PCFB 433). MPR1 then tunes within a Tuning Interval (left undesignated for simplicity) from the 5 GHz 802.11a or 2.4 GHz 802.11b/g IT channel to the distinct 5 GHz 802.11a D1OT channel. [0068] Settled upon the new channel, MPR1 transmits D1 OT CFE 434 to enable D1OT exchanges with its associated 802.11a stations, including any downstream MPRs provisioned with 802.11a IT portals (and particularly, as will be discussed below, with MPR2). Specifically, during MPRI's D1OT Al any packets buffered at its D1OT transmit queue are flushed and transmitted to the appropriate 802.11a client stations, and any packets from an associated 802.11a station appearing at MPRI's D1OT receive buffer are routed to its IT transmit queue for subsequent transmission to the upstream device during the next IT Al. MPR1 ends the D1OT Al upon transmitting D1 OT PCFB 435, and then tunes to its assigned 2.4 GHz 802.11 b/g D2 channel.
[0069] Tuning period elapsed and MPR1 settled on the 2.4 GHz channel, MPR1 then transmits D2 CFE 436 to enable D2 Al traffic with its associated 802.11 b/g stations, including any downstream MPRs provisioned with 802.11 b/g IT portals. Specifically, during MPRI's D2 Al any packets buffered at its D2 transmit queue are flushed and transmitted to the appropriate 802.11 b/g client stations, and any packets from an associated 802.11 b/g station appearing at MPRI's D2 receive buffer are routed to its IT transmit queue for subsequent transmission back upstream during the next IT Al. MPR1 ends the D2 Al by transmitting D2 PCFB 437. MPR1 then tunes once again to its 5 GHz IT channel to listen for MPAPO's D1OT CFE 427 transmission and thereupon begin its MPCWAP cycle once again. [0070] Timing diagram MPR2440 illustrates the operation of another
Multiprotocol Repeater MPR2 associated with and downstream to MPR1. Note that MPR2's IT CFE 444 and IT PCFB 445 correspond exactly to
MPRI's D1OT CFE 434 and D1OT PCFB 435, respectively, demonstrating the master-slave wireless linkage between the upstream MPR1 and the downstream MPR2. MPR2's MPCWAP operation is otherwise identical to that of MPR1. Further examination of and reflection upon timing diagrams MPR1 430 and MPR2440 show that MPRs may be daisy-chained indefinitely in this fashion to provide appropriate, location-distributed Access Point functionality to their particularly associated 802.11 a and 802.11 b/g stations, limited only by the aggregate bandwidth demands of the collective associated stations. [0071] Incorporating MPCWAP as described above and depicted in
Timing Diagrams MPR1 430 and MPR2440, respectively, in conjunction with the MPR MPCDFS structure, then, devices such as MPR1 and MPR2, each using a single 802.11 abg radio, plainly enable and support simultaneous 802.11 a and 802.11 b/g Repeater operation.
[0072] A High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater such as HCMPR 115 of
Figure 1 (hereafter also designated as HCMPR3) incorporates the MPCWAP algorithm in a different fashion than does an MPR. Specifically, since an HCMPR's MPCDFS is modeled as a distinct "Slave SPAP" structure interconnected with a separate MPAP structure, and whose combined three wireless portals may be arbitrarily assigned the IT, D1OT and D2 functions, the HCMPR MPCWAP may also be modeled as an SSPAP MPCWAP operating in parallel with the above-described MPAP MPCWAP. [0073] As a specific example, HCMPR 115 (hereafter, HCMPR3) of Figure 1 is shown associated downstream to MPAP 109 (MPAPO). Figure 3E shows HCMPR3's composite MPCDFS structure 340 incorporating structures SSPAP 341 and MPAP 342, which for purposes of this example have the P1, P2 and P3 portals assigned to IT, D1OT and D2 operation, respectively. Timing Diagram HCMPR3450 of Figure 4 shows the composite HCMPR3 MPCWAP resulting from the corresponding combination of the SSPAP and MPAP wireless access protocols.
[0074] Timing diagram HCMPR3450 is best interpreted as a superim position of the device's SSPAP MPCWAP over its MPAP MPCWAP. Specifically, the HCMPR3 MPAP provides the IT and D1OT wireless portals and is therefore responsible for the IT and D1OT wireless access protocols. Correspondingly, the HCMPR3 SSPAP provides the D2 wireless portal and therefore manages the D2 WAP.
[0075] As in the case of the MPR1 and MPR2, HCMPR3's IT wireless portal operation is slaved to the D1OT operation of an upstream MP Device MPAPO, that is, its IT CFE and IT PCFB delimiters actually correspond to the D1OT CFE and D1OT PCFB transmissions from MPAPO. Note in Figure 4 that the IT CFE 451 and IT PCFB 453 of timing diagram HCMPR3450 correspond exactly to MPAPO 420's D1OT CFE 423 and D1OT PCFB 424, respectively. [0076] HCMPR3's MPAP operation, therefore, consists of appropriately interpreting MPAPO's D1OT CFE 423 and D1OT PCFB 424 transmissions as its own IT CFE 451 and IT PCFB 453 Al delimiters, and supporting wireless datagram exchanges exclusively with MPAPO during that interval. Specifically, incoming HCMPR3 IT traffic appearing at the MPAP IT receive buffer is routed either to its DS portal (and passed on to the SSPAP DS portal and thereafter to its D2 portal for immediate transmission) or directly to its MPAP D1OT portal transmit queue. Correspondingly, any datagrams received at the MPAP D1OT portal or the SSPAP D2 portal are ultimately routed back to the MPAP IT transmit queue for transmission, if possible, during the same HCMPR3 IT Al. IT Al terminated by MPAPO PCFB 424, HCMPR3 then tunes the MPAP 802.11abg radio to the D1OT channel and issues D1OT CFE 454 to begin the D1OT Al. During the D1OT Al HCMPR3 exchanges wireless datagrams with its associated 802.11a stations, including any other associated downstream MP Repeaters provisioned with 802.11 a IT portals. Any datagrams appearing at HCMPR3's MPAP D1OT receive buffer are routed to either to its DS portal (for transfer to the SSPAP DS portal and subsequent immediate D2 transmission) or to its IT transmit queue. D1OT Al complete, the HCMPR issues D1OT PCFB 455 and then tunes back to the IT channel to begin IT processing once again.
[0077] HCMPR3's SSPAP operation occurs concurrently (in parallel) with the above MPAP actions, as also illustrated in timing diagram HCMPR3450 of Figure 4. Note that the SSPAP radio is fixed tuned to the 2.4 GHz D2 channel and will support only D2 operation at any time. Consequently its operation corresponds precisely to that of a Single Protocol AP such as SPAPO 410, and features a single 100% duty cycle D2 Al. Instead of transmitting alternating CFE and PCFB frames, then, the SPAP merely issues periodic DCF Beacons (DCFB 452 and DCFB 453, respectively) to comprehensively manage the D2 traffic. During this D2 Al, the HCMPR3 SSPAP exchanges wireless datagrams with its associated 802.11 b/g stations, including any other associated downstream MP Repeaters provisioned with 802.11 b/g IT portals.
[0078] Note from Timing Diagram HCMPR3450 that the SSPAP D2 Al runs concurrently and in parallel with the sequential MPAP IT and D1OT Als. During the MPAP IT Al segment any datagrams received at the SSPAP DS portal from the MPAP IT portal are immediately queued for D2 transmission. Correspondingly, any datagrams appearing at the SSPAP D2 portal during the MPAP IT Al are routed to its DS portal and then to either the MPAP IT portal for immediate transmission or the MPAP D1OT transmit queue for later transmission. During the MPAP D1OT Al segment any datagrams received at the SSPAP DS portal from the MPAP D1OT portal are immediately queued for SSPAP D2 transmission. And correspondingly, any datagrams appearing at the SSPAP D2 portal during the D1OT Al are routed to its DS portal and then to either the MPAP D1OT transmit queue for immediate transmission or the MPAP IT transmit queue for transmission during the next MPAP IT Al.
[0079] HCMPR3's composite, dual 802.11 abg radio SSPAP and MPAP
MPCDFS structure, coupled with the time-overlapping IT and D1OT/D2 Access Intervals provided by the parallel SSPAP and MPAP MPCWAPs provide an HCMPR MP device with more "air time" for IT, D1OT and D2 wireless exchanges than is available to a single radio MPR. The HCMPR device therefore supports a higher volume of 802.11 transmissions than can the MPR, and, ergo, therefrom derives its name. [0080] Incorporating the MPCWAP operation as described in the paragraphs above and depicted in timing diagram HCMPR3450, then, a multiprotocol device such as HCMPR3, featuring two distinct 802.11 abg radios and appropriate, corresponding SSPAP and MPAP MPCDFS implementations, plainly enables and supports simultaneous 802.11 a and 802.11 b/g Repeater operation. [0081] The above descriptions of a general Multiprotocol Core construct consisting of a Multiprotocol Core Datagram Flow Structure and a Multiprotocol Core Wireless Access Protocol, and the subsequent incorporation and application of the same into three specific Multiprotocol Core device embodiments (the Multiprotocol Access point, the Multiprotocol Repeater and the High Capacity Multiprotocol Repeater) provide all the necessary and sufficient information to define the present invention. [0082] Throughout the description and drawings, example embodiments are given with reference to specific configurations. It will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention can be embodied in other specific forms. Those of ordinary skill in the art would be able to practice such other embodiments without undue experimentation. The scope of the present invention, for the purpose of the present patent document, is not limited merely to the specific example embodiments of the foregoing description, but rather is indicated by the appended claims. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalents within the claims are intended to be considered as being embraced within the spirit and scope of the claims.

Claims

What is claimed is:
1. An IEEE 802.11 compliant wireless local area network (WLAN) multiprotocol device comprising: one frequency band agile, complementary code keying (CCK) and orthogonal frequency division multiplex (OFDM) modulation-capable radio; a data flow structure framework which organizes and routes transmitted and received data packets within the multiprotocol device; and a medium access control (MAC) mechanism which wirelessly exchanges the data packets between the multiprotocol device and other IEEE 802.11 compliant devices, wherein the device is capable of engaging in simultaneous distinct channel I EEE 802.11 a, 802.11 b and 802.11 g communications.
2. The multiprotocol device of Claim 1 wherein: the data flow structure comprises one wired portal and two or more wireless portals, each portal consisting of a transmit queue and an associated receive buffer; and interconnections between distinct pairs of wired and wireless portal receive buffers and transmit queues such that any data packet externally deposited at any one portal receive buffer is internally routed to one appropriate other portal transmit queue, and the MAC mechanism provides for distinct, sequential time intervals assigned to each wireless portal, only during which data packets can be transmitted from or received by said wireless portal, and where each time interval includes a beginning and end indicated by specific, standard 802.11 MAC management or control data packets.
3. The multiprotocol device of Claim 2, wherein one wired portal and two wireless portals are used for internal datagram routing, and wherein all wireless communications conforming to the IEEE 802.11a standard are routed through one wireless portal on one 5 GHz band RF channel, and wherein all wireless communications conforming to the IEEE 802.11 b/g standards are routed through the other wireless portal on one 2.4 GHz band RF channel, and wherein the multiprotocol device, referred to as a multiprotocol access point, complies with all relevant IEEE 802.11 standards regarding access point devices.
4. The multiprotocol device of Claim 2 wherein the multiprotocol device is configured to communicate wirelessly with an upstream multiprotocol device, and wherein three wireless portals are used for internal datagram routing, and wherein all wireless communications routed through the first of the three wireless portals conform to a designated IEEE 802.11a or 802.11 b/g standard and occur on the same RF channel as that used by a wireless portal belonging to the upstream multiprotocol device, and wherein all wireless communications routed through the second of the three wireless portals conform to the IEEE 802.11a standard and occur on a 5 GHz band RF channel distinct from the channel used by the first wireless portal, and wherein all wireless communications routed through the third of the three wireless portals conform to the IEEE802.11b/g standard and occur on a 2.4 GHz band RF channel distinct from the channel used by the first wireless portal, and wherein the multiprotocol device, referred to as a multiprotocol repeater, complies with all relevant IEEE 802.1 standards regarding access point devices.
5. A combination multiprotocol device comprising: a first multiprotocol device of Claim 2 and a second multiprotocol device of Claim 2, the second multiprotocol device being different from the first multiprotocol device, wherein one of the multiprotocol devices is configured to communicate wirelessly with one separate upstream multiprotocol device and wherein one of the multiprotocol devices uses one wired portal and one wireless portal for internal datagram routing, and wherein the other multiprotocol device uses one wired portal and two wireless portals for internal datagram routing, and
7. The multiprotocol device of Claim 6 wherein: the data flow structure comprises one wired portal and three or more wireless portals, each portal consisting of a transmit queue and an associated receive buffer; and interconnections between the distinct wired and wireless portal receive buffers and transmit queues such that any WLAN data packet externally deposited at the wired portal receive buffer is internally routed to one appropriate wireless portal transmit queue, and any data packet externally deposited at a wireless portal receive buffer is internally routed to one appropriate wired portal or other wireless portal transmit queues, and the MAC mechanism provides for distinct, sequential time intervals assigned to each wireless portal, only during which data packets can be transmitted from or received at the respective wireless portal, and where each time interval includes a beginning and end indicated by specific, standard 802.11 MAC management or control data packets.
8. The multiprotocol device of Claim 7, wherein one of the wireless portals is disabled such that any data packet externally deposited at either of the two remaining enabled wireless portal receive buffers is internally routed to the wired portal transmit queue, and any data packet externally deposited at the wired portal receive buffer is internally routed to an appropriate one of the two remaining enabled wireless portal transmit queues, and wherein all wireless communications conforming to the IEEE 802.11a standard are routed through one of the enabled wireless portals on one 5 GHz band RF channel, and wherein all wireless communications conforming to the IEEE 802.11 b/g standards are routed through the other remaining enabled wireless portal on one 2.4 GHz band RF channel, and wherein the multiprotocol device, referred to as a multiprotocol access point, complies with all relevant IEEE 802.11 WLAN standards regarding access point devices.
27
9. The multiprotocol device of Claim 7 wherein the multiprotocol device is coupled to and configured to communicate with one separate upstream multiprotocol device, and wherein the wired portal is disabled and any data packet externally deposited at a first of the three wireless portal receive buffers is internally routed to an appropriate transmit queue of a second or a third wireless portal, and any data packet externally deposited at the receive buffer of the second or third wireless portal is internally routed to the transmit queue of the first wireless portal, and wherein all wireless communications routed through the first of the three wireless portals conform to the IEEE 802.11a standard and occur on a same 5 GHz band RF channel as that used by a wireless portal of the upstream multiprotocol device, and wherein all wireless communications routed through the second of the three wireless portals conform to the IEEE 802.11a standard and occur on a 5 GHz band RF channel likely, but not necessarily, distinct from the channel used by the first wireless portal, and wherein all wireless communications routed through the third of the three wireless portals conform to the IEEE802.11b/g standard and occur on a 2.4 GHz band RF channel, and wherein the multiprotocol device, referred to as a multiprotocol repeater, complies with all relevant IEEE 802.11 WLAN standards regarding access point devices
10. A combination multiprotocol device comprising: a first multiprotocol device of Claim 7 and a second multiprotocol device of Claim 7, the second multiprotocol device being different from the first multiprotocol device, wherein the first multiprotocol device is coupled to and configured to communicate with one separate upstream multiprotocol device and wherein the first multiprotocol device has two wireless portals disabled such that any data packet deposited at its wired portal receive buffer is routed to the remaining wireless portal transmit queue, and any data packet
28 externally deposited at the wireless portal receive buffer is routed to the wired portal transmit queue, and wherein the second multiprotocol device has one wireless portal disabled, such that any data packet externally deposited at its wired portal receive buffer is internally routed to the transmit queue of one of its remaining enabled wireless portals, as appropriate, and that any wireless data packet externally deposited at either of the two remaining enabled wireless portal receive buffers is internally routed to its wired portal transmit queue, and wherein the first and second multiprotocol devices are mutually interconnected at their wired portals, such that packets at the first multiprotocol device's wired portal transmit queue are routed to the second multiprotocol device's wired portal receive buffer, and that packets at the second multiprotocol device's wired portal transmit queue are routed to the - first multiprotocol device's wired portal receive buffer, and wherein all wireless communications routed through the first multiprotocol device's wireless portal conform to the IEEE 802.11 a standard and occur within the same 5 GHz band RF channel as that used by a wireless portal of the upstream multiprotocol device, and wherein all wireless communications routed through one of the second multiprotocol device's wireless portals conform to the IEEE 802.11a standard and occur within a 5 GHz band RF channel likely, but not necessarily, distinct from the channel used by the first multiprotocol device's wireless portal, and wherein all wireless communications routed through the other second multiprotocol device's wireless portal conform to the IEEE802.11 b/g standard and occur within one 2.4 GHz band RF channel and wherein the combination multiprotocol device, referred to as a high capacity multiprotocol repeater, complies with all relevant IEEE 802.11 WLAN standards regarding access point devices.
29
PCT/US2003/028004 2002-12-31 2003-09-05 Multiprotocol wlan access point devices WO2004062199A1 (en)

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US10/334,747 2002-12-31
US10/334,747 US6873611B2 (en) 2002-12-31 2002-12-31 Multiprotocol WLAN access point devices
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