Le 12/08/2015 14:20, Eric Vyncke (evyncke) a écrit :
While I pay for it, I never use the millions of WiFi access points I can
use here in the Netherlands. I tried it once, walking in a small city. At
the time the handover was completed, the connectivity was gone.
This is a question of use-cases. In a city yes there are many hotspots
but also yes they're sparsely distributed - you must handover to
something else in between. In a home network they'd be densely
distributed, could hand-over directly, or not at all.
You could be moving a lot and never handing over, as much as you could
sit and do many hand-overs per second.
Such use-cases and reqs are described in DMM WG documents.
Alex
It might
have to do with IEEE and IETF mismatch. Same SSID shall have same IP
subnet (IEEE) versus each link has its own subnet (some of IETF, no
formal statement...).
Of course, if every SSID has its own 192.168.0.0/24, oups, this is legacy
IP, so, not a Homenet topic :-O
Sorry could not resist
-éric
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