Dear Everyone,

I recently read about Ubiquiti’s AirFiber hardware and noticed that its link 
efficiency is remarkable. Air Fiber’s link speed is about 770Mbps up and 
770Mbps down (a 1:1 split). People are reporting benchmarks that show 700Mbps 
throughput over miles. The link efficiency is therefore in the range of wired 
ethernet, which typically obtains iperf results in the range of 85% to 95%. So 
far, all benchmarks of WiFi that I have seen never touch 1/e or roughly 37% 
efficiency.  A few have come rather close to 1/e though.

The 1/e number is significant because I am told that it is the theoretical 
limit on the efficiency of wired ethernet when a there is a shared collision 
domain on a coaxial cable. After reading about how the Air Fiber hardware 
works, I hav suspicion that its link efficiency can be replicated between two 
computers with off the shelf Wi-Fi hardware by abusing the radios via the 
kernel driver. In specific, you would have two systems, each with two radios on 
different frequencies. I will call each system A and B and refer to their 
radios as indices into an array. e.g. A[0] and B[1].

Much like the AirFiber, I envision node A as having A[0] be transmit-only on 
the frequency that B[0] uses (frequency 0) with B[0] being receive only. 
Similarly, I envision node B as having B[1] be transmit-only on the frequency 
that A[1] uses (frequency 1) with A[1] be receive only. The kernel driver is to 
instruct the WiFi hardware to ignore everything about the 802.11 protocol 
possible (e.g. RTS is to be ignored), send frames when given a packet (in send 
mode) and receive forward frames when hearing a packet (in receive mode). No 
radio in send mode is to listen to packets and no radio in listen mode is to 
send packets. The radios would be attached to directional antennas and 
frequency 0 != frequency 1.

I asked Adrian Chadd about this in IRC. He replied that it is possible to hack 
the driver to obtain tight control over when 802.11 frames are received/sent, 
but doing something like this would require oscillator isolation and baseband 
RF isolation. He also asked that I send my question to the list, so here it is.

How doable is this with off the shelf hardware? Could simultaneous dual-band 
equipment be abused to obtain the proper isolation (where 2.4GHz is 1 direction 
and 5GHz is another)? Would it be reasonable to expect wireless throughput to 
achieve 90% of the link speed in this configuration?

Yours truly,
Richard Yao

P.S. I am not on the mailing list, so please include me on CC.
_______________________________________________
freebsd-wireless@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-wireless
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-wireless-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"

Reply via email to