학술논문

Wi-Fi Multi-Link Operation: An Experimental Study of Latency and Throughput
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking IEEE/ACM Trans. Networking Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on. 32(1):308-322 Feb, 2024
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computing and Processing
Signal Processing and Analysis
Throughput
Wireless fidelity
Delays
Real-time systems
Cloud gaming
Uncertainty
Telecommunication traffic
Wi-Fi 7
IEEE 80211be
extremely high throughput (EHT)
multi-link operation (MLO)
unlicensed spectrum
WLAN
Language
ISSN
1063-6692
1558-2566
Abstract
In this article, we investigate the real-world capability of the multi-link operation (MLO) framework—one of the key MAC-layer features included in the IEEE 802.11be amendment—by using a large dataset containing 5 GHz spectrum occupancy measurements on multiple channels. Our results show that when both available links are often busy, as is the case in ultra-dense and crowded scenarios, MLO attains the highest throughput gains over single-link operation (SLO) since it is able to leverage multiple intermittent transmission opportunities. As for latency, if the two links exhibit statistically the same level of occupancy, MLO can outperform SLO by one order of magnitude. In contrast, in asymmetrically occupied links, MLO can sometimes be detrimental and even increase latency. We study this somewhat unexpected phenomenon, and find its origins to be packets suboptimally mapped to either link before carrying out the backoff, with the latter likely to be interrupted on the busier link. We cross validate our study with real-time traffic generated by a cloud gaming application and quantify MLO’s benefits for latency-sensitive applications.