802.11 Wireless LAN Components

802.11 Wireless LAN Components

IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN networking consists of the following components:

  • Stations

  • Wireless APs

  • Ports

These components are shown in Figure 1-3.

figure 1-3 the components of 802.11 wireless lan networking.

Figure 1-3. The components of 802.11 wireless LAN networking.

Stations

A station (STA) is a computing device that is equipped with a wireless LAN network adapter. A personal computer equipped with a wireless LAN network adapter is known as a wireless client. Wireless clients can communicate with each other either directly or through a wireless AP. An STA can be stationary or mobile.

Wireless Access Points

A wireless AP is a networking device equipped with a wireless LAN network adapter that acts as a peripheral bridge device to extend a traditional wired network to include STAs. An AP contains the following:

  • At least one interface that connects the AP to an existing wired network (such as an Ethernet backbone).

  • Radio equipment with which it creates wireless connections with wireless clients.

  • IEEE 802.1D bridging software, so it can act as a transparent bridge between the wireless and wired networks.

The wireless AP is similar to a cellular phone network s base station wireless clients communicate with the wired network and other wireless clients through the wireless AP, and wireless APs are stationary.

Ports

A port is a logical channel of a device that supports a single point-to-point connection. For IEEE 802.11, a port is an association a logical entity over which a single wireless connection is made. A typical wireless client or wireless AP has multiple ports and can support multiple simultaneous wireless connections.

The logical connection between a port on the wireless client and a port on a wireless AP is a point-to-point bridged LAN segment, similar to an Ethernet-based network client connected to an Ethernet switch. All frames sent from a wireless client whether unicast, multicast, or broadcast are sent on the point-to-point LAN segment between the wireless client and the wireless AP. For frames sent by the wireless AP to wireless clients, unicast frames are sent on the point-to-point LAN segment, and multicast and broadcast frames are sent to all connected wireless clients at the same time.



Deploying Secure 802.11 Wireless Networks with Microsoft Windows
Deploying Secure 802.11 Wireless Networks with Microsoft Windows
ISBN: 0735619395
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2000
Pages: 123
Authors: Joseph Davies

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