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Old 02-23-2005, 07:48 PM
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After doing some reading up, I want to clarify that I have understood correctly. It's to do with the available bandwidth any given AP has.

Let's say I have a .g ap , and a number of .g and .b clients. If one .g client connects to my ap , they will have use of 100% of the available bandwidth (let's assume for the time being that it's a perfect world and theres no such thing as packet headers, signal degradation etc so they actually get 54mbps throughput). When 2 or more .g people connect , they all get to "contend" for that available 54mbps. This part I understand (unless im wrong).

What i'm having trouble finding a definitive answer to, is if I fix the connect rate on the ap to say 1mbps (as an example only) , does that mean everyone contends for their share of that 1 mbps only, or that every connection gets 1mbps up to the point that the total available is used up, then everyone is "in contention" for the total available (up to the 1mbps).

The other q is, if someone connects with a .b client, is everyone forced to run .b (ie their .g equipment falls back). and if one person is connecting at a low mbps(b or g) , purely because of distance or poor signal, does that force the ap to connect everyone at a similar speed(assuming in this case the ap is set to allow connections of any available speed).

I'm basically wondering wether I can use the AP to limit connections based on speed (set it to a particular mbps, anyone that cant connect at a speed that high is plain old not connected, and anyone capable of connecting higher is forced to connect at a lower speed) - as a form of bandwidth management.
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Old 02-23-2005, 10:31 PM
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As far as I understand it, if you set it to 1Mbit/s rate, then that's shared between all the clients

Some access points do drop back to a common speed, which sucks. I.e. if you have someone connect with a crap signal strength it will lower the speed for everyone. Same as connecting a b client, everyone comes down to a speed that the b client can handle, i.e. 11Mbit/s. I think there are some access points that get around this problem though.

I'm not sure if using the connection speed as a form of bandwidth management is a good idea. Best to just let everyone connect at the highest they can, and if you're limiting speed to the internet use a firewall or proxy server to rate limit them as need be.
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Old 02-24-2005, 05:22 AM
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Hey thanks for that, yeah it looks like I will have a look at some other alternative (cheap/free) maybe I should learn linux
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