35.2. User Documentation¶
35.2.1. Using the WifiNetDevice¶
The modularity provided by the implementation makes low-level configuration of the WifiNetDevice powerful but complex. For this reason, we provide some helper classes to perform common operations in a simple matter, and leverage the ns-3 attribute system to allow users to control the parameterization of the underlying models.
Users who use the low-level ns-3 API and who wish to add a WifiNetDevice to
their node must create an instance of a WifiNetDevice, plus a number of
constituent objects, and bind them together appropriately (the WifiNetDevice is
very modular in this regard, for future extensibility). At the low-level API,
this can be done with about 20 lines of code (see ns3::WifiHelper::Install
,
and ns3::YansWifiPhyHelper::Create
). They also must create, at some point, a
Channel, which also contains a number of constituent objects (see
ns3::YansWifiChannelHelper::Create
).
However, a few helpers are available for users to add these devices and channels
with only a few lines of code, if they are willing to use defaults, and the
helpers provide additional API to allow the passing of attribute values to
change default values. Commonly used attribute values are listed in the
Attributes section. The scripts in examples/wireless
can be browsed to
see how this is done. Next, we describe the common steps to create a WifiNetDevice
from the bottom layer (Channel) up to the device layer (WifiNetDevice).
To create a WifiNetDevice, users need to follow these steps:
Decide on which physical layer framework, the
SpectrumWifiPhy
orYansWifiPhy
, to use. This will affect which Channel and Phy type to use.Configure the Channel: Channel takes care of getting signal from one device to other devices on the same Wi-Fi channel. The main configurations of WifiChannel are propagation loss model and propagation delay model.
Configure the WifiPhy: WifiPhy takes care of actually sending and receiving wireless signal from Channel. Here, WifiPhy decides whether each frame will be successfully decoded or not depending on the received signal strength and noise. Thus, the main configuration of WifiPhy is the error rate model, which is the one that actually calculates the probability of successfully decoding the frame based on the signal.
Configure WifiMac: this step is more related to the architecture and device level. The users configure the wifi architecture (i.e. ad-hoc or ap-sta) and whether QoS (802.11e), HT (802.11n) and/or VHT (802.11ac) and/or HE (802.11ax) features are supported or not.
Create WifiDevice: at this step, users configure the desired wifi standard (e.g. 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11a, 802.11n, 802.11ac or 802.11ax) and rate control algorithm.
Configure mobility: finally, a mobility model is (usually) required before WifiNetDevice can be used; even if the devices are stationary, their relative positions are needed for propagation loss calculations.
The following sample code illustrates a typical configuration using mostly default values in the simulator, and infrastructure mode:
NodeContainer wifiStaNode;
wifiStaNode.Create(10); // Create 10 station node objects
NodeContainer wifiApNode;
wifiApNode.Create(1); // Create 1 access point node object
// Create a channel helper and phy helper, and then create the channel
YansWifiChannelHelper channel = YansWifiChannelHelper::Default();
YansWifiPhyHelper phy = YansWifiPhyHelper::Default();
phy.SetChannel(channel.Create());
// Create a WifiMacHelper, which is reused across STA and AP configurations
WifiMacHelper mac;
// Create a WifiHelper, which will use the above helpers to create
// and install Wifi devices. Configure a Wifi standard to use, which
// will align various parameters in the Phy and Mac to standard defaults.
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211n);
// Declare NetDeviceContainers to hold the container returned by the helper
NetDeviceContainer wifiStaDevices;
NetDeviceContainer wifiApDevice;
// Perform the installation
mac.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac");
wifiStaDevices = wifi.Install(phy, mac, wifiStaNodes);
mac.SetType("ns3::ApWifiMac");
wifiApDevice = wifi.Install(phy, mac, wifiApNode);
At this point, the 11 nodes have Wi-Fi devices configured, attached to a common channel. The rest of this section describes how additional configuration may be performed.
35.2.1.1. YansWifiChannelHelper¶
The YansWifiChannelHelper has an unusual name. Readers may wonder why it is named this way. The reference is to the yans simulator from which this model is taken. The helper can be used to create a YansWifiChannel with a default PropagationLoss and PropagationDelay model.
Users will typically type code such as:
YansWifiChannelHelper wifiChannelHelper = YansWifiChannelHelper::Default();
Ptr<Channel> wifiChannel = wifiChannelHelper.Create();
to get the defaults. Specifically, the default is a channel model with a
propagation delay equal to a constant, the speed of light (ns3::ConstantSpeedPropagationDelayModel
),
and a propagation loss based on a default log distance model (ns3::LogDistancePropagationLossModel
), using a default exponent of 3.
Please note that the default log distance model is configured with a reference
loss of 46.6777 dB at reference distance of 1m. The reference loss of 46.6777 dB
was calculated using Friis propagation loss model at 5.15 GHz. The reference loss
must be changed if 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n (at 2.4 GHz) or 802.11ax (at 2.4 GHz) are used since they operate at 2.4 Ghz.
Note the distinction above in creating a helper object vs. an actual simulation
object. In ns-3, helper objects (used at the helper API only) are created on
the stack (they could also be created with operator new and later deleted).
However, the actual ns-3 objects typically inherit from class ns3::Object
and are assigned to a smart pointer. See the chapter in the ns-3 manual for
a discussion of the ns-3 object model, if you are not familiar with it.
The following two methods are useful when configuring YansWifiChannelHelper:
YansWifiChannelHelper::AddPropagationLoss
adds a PropagationLossModel; if one or more PropagationLossModels already exist, the new model is chained to the endYansWifiChannelHelper::SetPropagationDelay
sets a PropagationDelayModel (not chainable)
35.2.1.2. YansWifiPhyHelper¶
Physical devices (base class ns3::WifiPhy
) connect to ns3::YansWifiChannel
models in
ns-3. We need to create WifiPhy objects appropriate for the YansWifiChannel; here
the YansWifiPhyHelper
will do the work.
The YansWifiPhyHelper class configures an object factory to create instances of
a YansWifiPhy
and adds some other objects to it, including possibly a
supplemental ErrorRateModel and a pointer to a MobilityModel. The user code is
typically:
YansWifiPhyHelper wifiPhyHelper;
wifiPhyHelper.SetChannel(wifiChannel);
The default YansWifiPhyHelper is configured with TableBasedErrorRateModel
(ns3::TableBasedErrorRateModel
). You can change the error rate model by
calling the YansWifiPhyHelper::SetErrorRateModel
method.
Optionally, if pcap tracing is needed, a user may use the following command to enable pcap tracing:
WifiPhyHelper::SetPcapDataLinkType(enum SupportedPcapDataLinkTypes dlt)
ns-3 supports RadioTap and Prism tracing extensions for 802.11.
For MLD devices, it is also possible to select one of these PCAP capture type:
WifiPhyHelper::SetPcapCaptureType(PcapCaptureType type)
ns-3 supports three PCAP capture types for MLD devices: * a single PCAP file for the device, regardless of PHYs and links
phyHelper.SetPcapCaptureType(WifiPhyHelper::PcapCaptureType::PCAP_PER_DEVICE);
a PCAP file generated per PHY (default behavior)
phyHelper.SetPcapCaptureType(WifiPhyHelper::PcapCaptureType::PCAP_PER_PHY);
a PCAP file generated per link
phyHelper.SetPcapCaptureType(WifiPhyHelper::PcapCaptureType::PCAP_PER_LINK);
The PCAP files will always be generated with the suffix of nodeId-deviceId.pcap, unless the user has enabled object names on either the Node or the NetDevice, in which case the string name will be used. When PCAP files are generated per PHY, that suffix is nodeId-deviceId-linkId.pcap. When PCAP files are generated per link, the suffix is nodeId-deviceId-phyId.pcap.
When PCAP files are generated per link, if there is no generated PCAP for a given link, it means no packet has been transmitted nor received on that link. Since PHYs of non-AP MLDs may swap their links during setup, the link ID appended to the PCAP file might be higher than the highest PHY ID.
In case of SLD devices, the configuration of the capture type has no impact since a single PCAP file will always be generated per device.
Note that we haven’t actually created any WifiPhy objects yet; we’ve just prepared the YansWifiPhyHelper by telling it which channel it is connected to. The Phy objects are created in the next step.
In order to enable 802.11n/ac/ax/be MIMO, the number of antennas as well as the number of supported spatial streams need to be configured. For example, this code enables MIMO with 2 antennas and 2 spatial streams:
wifiPhyHelper.Set("Antennas", UintegerValue(2));
wifiPhyHelper.Set("MaxSupportedTxSpatialStreams", UintegerValue(2));
wifiPhyHelper.Set("MaxSupportedRxSpatialStreams", UintegerValue(2));
It is also possible to configure less streams than the number of antennas in order to benefit from diversity gain, and to define different MIMO capabilities for downlink and uplink. For example, this code configures a node with 3 antennas that supports 2 spatial streams in downstream and 1 spatial stream in upstream:
wifiPhyHelper.Set("Antennas", UintegerValue(3));
wifiPhyHelper.Set("MaxSupportedTxSpatialStreams", UintegerValue(2));
wifiPhyHelper.Set("MaxSupportedRxSpatialStreams", UintegerValue(1));
802.11n PHY layer can support both 20 (default) or 40 MHz channel width, and 802.11ac/ax PHY layer can use either 20, 40, 80 (default) or 160 MHz channel width. See below for further documentation on setting the frequency, channel width, and channel number.
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211ac);
wifi.SetRemoteStationManager("ns3::ConstantRateWifiManager",
"DataMode", StringValue("VhtMcs9"),
"ControlMode", StringValue("VhtMcs0"));
//Install PHY and MAC
Ssid ssid = Ssid("ns3-wifi");
WifiMacHelper mac;
mac.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid),
"ActiveProbing", BooleanValue(false));
NetDeviceContainer staDevice;
staDevice = wifi.Install(phy, mac, wifiStaNode);
mac.SetType("ns3::ApWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid));
NetDeviceContainer apDevice;
apDevice = wifi.Install(phy, mac, wifiApNode);
35.2.1.3. Channel, frequency, channel width, and band configuration¶
There is a unique ns3::WifiPhy
attribute, named ChannelSettings
, that
enables to set channel number, channel width, frequency band and primary20 index
for each segment all together, in order to eliminate the possibility of inconsistent settings.
The ChannelSettings
attribute can be set in a number of ways (see below) by
providing either a StringValue object or an AttributeContainerValue object:
Defining a StringValue object to set the
ChannelSettings
attribute
StringValue value("{38, 40, BAND_5GHZ, 0}");
Defining an AttributeContainerValue object to set the
ChannelSettings
attribute
AttributeContainerValue<TupleValue<UintegerValue, UintegerValue, EnumValue, UintegerValue>, ';'> value;
value.Set(WifiPhy::ChannelSegments{{38, 40, WIFI_PHY_BAND_5GHZ, 0}});
In both cases, the operating channel will be channel 38 in the 5 GHz band, which has a width of 40 MHz, and the primary20 channel will be the 20 MHz subchannel with the lowest center frequency (index 0).
The operating channel settings can then be configured in a number of ways:
by setting global configuration default; e.g.
Config::SetDefault("ns3::WifiPhy::ChannelSettings", StringValue("{38, 40, BAND_5GHZ, 0}"));
by setting an attribute value in the helper; e.g.
AttributeContainerValue<TupleValue<UintegerValue, UintegerValue, EnumValue, UintegerValue>, ';'> value;
value.Set(WifiPhy::ChannelSegments{{38, 40, WIFI_PHY_BAND_5GHZ, 0}});
YansWifiPhyHelper wifiPhyHelper = YansWifiPhyHelper::Default();
wifiPhyHelper.Set("ChannelSettings", value);
by setting the WifiHelper::SetStandard(enum WifiStandard) method; and
by performing post-installation configuration of the option, either via a Ptr to the WifiPhy object, or through the Config namespace; e.g.:
Config::Set("/NodeList/0/DeviceList/*/$ns3::WifiNetDevice/Phy/$ns3::WifiPhy/ChannelSettings",
StringValue("{38, 40, BAND_5GHZ, 0}"));
This section provides guidance on how to properly configure these settings.
35.2.1.3.1. WifiHelper::SetStandard()¶
WifiHelper::SetStandard()
is a method required to set various parameters
in the Mac and Phy to standard values, but also to check that the channel
settings as described above are allowed. For instance, a channel in the 2.4 GHz
band cannot be configured if the standard is 802.11ac, or a channel in the 6 GHz
band can only be configured if the standard is 802.11ax (or beyond).
WifiHelper::SetStandard()
can also be called by passing a string with the
standard name. For example any of the strings “802.11ax”, “11ax” or “HE” can
be passed in order to set the standard as WIFI_STANDARD_80211ax
.
The following values for WifiStandard are defined in
src/wifi/model/wifi-standards.h
:
WIFI_STANDARD_80211a,
WIFI_STANDARD_80211b,
WIFI_STANDARD_80211g,
WIFI_STANDARD_80211p,
WIFI_STANDARD_80211n,
WIFI_STANDARD_80211ac,
WIFI_STANDARD_80211ax,
WIFI_STANDARD_80211be
By default, the WifiHelper (the typical use case for WifiPhy creation) will configure the WIFI_STANDARD_80211ax standard by default. Other values for standards should be passed explicitly to the WifiHelper object.
If user has not already configured ChannelSettings when SetStandard is called, the user obtains default values, as described next.
35.2.1.3.2. Default settings for the operating channel¶
Not all the parameters in the channel settings have to be set to a valid value, but they can be left unspecified, in which case default values are substituted as soon as the WifiStandard is set. Here are the rules (applied in the given order):
If the band is unspecified (i.e., it is set to WIFI_PHY_BAND_UNSPECIFIED or “BAND_UNSPECIFIED”), the default band for the configured standard is set (5 GHz band for 802.11{a, ac, ax, be, p} and 2.4 GHz band for all the others).
If both the channel width and the channel number are unspecified (i.e., they are set to zero), the default channel width for the configured standard and band is set (22 MHz for 802.11b, 10 MHz for 802.11p, 80 MHz for 802.11ac, for 802.11ax and for 802.11be if the band is 5 GHz, and 20 MHz for all other cases).
If the channel width is unspecified but the channel number is valid, the settings are valid only if there exists a unique channel with the given number for the configured standard and band, in which case the channel width is set to the width of such unique channel. Otherwise, the simulation aborts.
If the channel number is unspecified (i.e., it is set to zero), the default channel number for the configured standard, band and channel width is used (the default channel number is the first one in the list of channels that can be used with the configured standard, band and channel width)
Following are a few examples to clarify these rules:
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211ac);
YansWifiPhyHelper phyHelper;
phyHelper.Set("ChannelSettings", StringValue("{58, 0, BAND_5GHZ, 0}"));
// channel width unspecified
// -> it is set to 80 MHz (width of channel 58)
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211n);
YansWifiPhyHelper phyHelper;
phyHelper.Set("ChannelSettings", StringValue("{0, 40, BAND_5GHZ, 0}"));
// channel number unspecified
// -> it is set to channel 38 (first 40 MHz channel in the 5GHz band)
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211ax);
YansWifiPhyHelper phyHelper;
phyHelper.Set("ChannelSettings", StringValue("{0, 0, BAND_2_4GHZ, 0}"));
// both channel number and width unspecified
// -> width set to 20 MHz (default width for 802.11ax in the 2.4 GHZ band)
// -> channel number set to 1 (first 20 MHz channel in the 2.4 GHz band)
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211a);
YansWifiPhyHelper phyHelper;
phyHelper.Set("ChannelSettings", StringValue("{0, 0, BAND_UNSPECIFIED, 0}"));
// band, channel number and width unspecified
// -> band is set to WIFI_PHY_BAND_5GHZ (default band for 802.11a)
// -> width set to 20 MHz (default width for 802.11a in the 5 GHZ band)
// -> channel number set to 36 (first 20 MHz channel in the 5 GHz band)
The default value for the ChannelSettings attribute leaves all the parameters unspecified, except for the primary20 index, which is equal to zero.
35.2.1.3.3. WifiPhy::Frequency¶
The configured WifiPhy channel center frequency can be got via the attribute
Frequency
in the class WifiPhy
. It is expressed in units of MHz.
Note that this is a change in definition from ns-3.25 and earlier releases, where this attribute referred to the start of the overall frequency band on which the channel resides, not the specific channel center frequency.
35.2.1.3.4. WifiPhy::ChannelWidth¶
The configured WifiPhy channel width can be got via the attribute ChannelWidth
in the class WifiPhy
. It is expressed in units of MHz.
35.2.1.3.5. WifiPhy::ChannelNumber¶
Several channel numbers are defined and well-known in practice. However, valid channel numbers vary by geographical region around the world, and there is some overlap between the different standards.
The configured WifiPhy channel number can be got via the attribute ChannelNumber
in the class WifiPhy
.
In ns-3, a ChannelNumber may be defined or unknown. These terms are not found in the code; they are just used to describe behavior herein.
If a ChannelNumber is defined, it means that WifiPhy has stored a map of ChannelNumber to the center frequency and channel width commonly known for that channel in practice. For example:
Channel 1, when IEEE 802.11b is configured, corresponds to a channel width of 22 MHz and a center frequency of 2412 MHz.
Channel 36, when IEEE 802.11n is configured at 5 GHz, corresponds to a channel width of 20 MHz and a center frequency of 5180 MHz.
The following channel numbers are well-defined for 2.4 GHz standards:
channels 1-14 with ChannelWidth of 22 MHz for 802.11b
channels 1-14 with ChannelWidth of 20 MHz for 802.11n-2.4GHz and 802.11g
The following channel numbers are well-defined for 5 GHz standards:
|
|
20 MHz |
36, 40, 44, 48, 52, 56, 60, 64, 100, 104, 108, 112, 116, 120, 124, 128, 132, 136, 140, 144, 149, 153, 161, 165, 169 |
40 MHz |
38, 46, 54, 62, 102, 110, 118, 126, 134, 142, 151, 159 |
80 MHz |
42, 58, 106, 122, 138, 155 |
160 MHz |
50, 114 |
10 MHz (802.11p) |
172, 174, 176, 178, 180, 182, 184 |
5 MHz (802.11p) |
171, 173, 175, 177, 179, 181, 183 |
The following channel numbers are well-defined for 6 GHz standards (802.11ax only):
|
|
20 MHz |
1, 5, 9, 13, 17, 21, 25, 29, 33, 37, 41, 45, 49, 53, 57, 61, 65, 69, 73, 77, 81, 85, 89, 93, 97, 101, 105, 109, 113, 117, 121, 125, 129, 133, 137, 141, 145, 149, 153, 157, 161, 165, 169, 173, 177, 181, 185, 189, 193, 197, 201, 205, 209, 213, 217, 221, 225, 229, 233 |
40 MHz |
3, 11, 19, 27, 35, 43, 51, 59, 67, 75, 83, 91, 99, 107, 115, 123, 131, 139, 147, 155, 163, 171, 179, 187, 195, 203, 211, 219, 227 |
80 MHz |
7, 23, 39, 55, 71, 87, 103, 119, 135, 151, 167, 183, 199, 215 |
160 MHz |
15, 47, 79, 111, 143, 175, 207 |
The channel number may be set either before or after creation of the WifiPhy object.
If an unknown channel number (other than zero) is configured, the simulator will exit with an error; for instance, such as:
Ptr<WifiPhy> wifiPhy = ...;
wifiPhy->SetAttribute("ChannelSettings", StringValue("{1321, 20, BAND_5GHZ, 0}"));
The known channel numbers are defined in the implementation file
src/wifi/model/wifi-phy-operating-channel.cc
. Of course, this file may be edited
by users to extend to additional channel numbers.
If a known channel number is configured against an incorrect value of the WifiPhyStandard, the simulator will exit with an error; for instance, such as:
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211n);
...
Ptr<WifiPhy> wifiPhy = ...;
wifiPhy->SetAttribute("ChannelSettings", StringValue("{14, 20, BAND_5GHZ, 0}"));
In the above, while channel number 14 is well-defined in practice for 802.11b only, it is for 2.4 GHz band, not 5 GHz band.
35.2.1.3.6. WifiPhy::Primary20MHzIndex¶
The configured WifiPhy primary 20MHz channel index can be got via the attribute
Primary20MHzIndex
in the class WifiPhy
.
35.2.1.3.7. Non-contiguous 160 MHz operating channel configuration (80+80 MHz)¶
An 80+80 MHz operating channel can be configured by setting each 80 MHz channel for each segment. For example, the following example code snippet configures an non-contiguous 160 MHz channel where the first segment operates on channel 42 and the second segment operates on channel 106:
Ptr<WifiPhy> wifiPhy = ...;
wifiPhy->SetAttribute("ChannelSettings", StringValue("{42, 80, BAND_5GHZ, 0};{106, 80, BAND_5GHZ, 0}"));
It is still possible to have channel numbers set to zero in order to select the default 80+80 MHz channel:
Ptr<WifiPhy> wifiPhy = ...;
wifiPhy->SetAttribute("ChannelSettings", StringValue("{0, 80, BAND_UNSPECIFIED, 0};{0, 80, BAND_UNSPECIFIED, 0}"));
which results in the use of channels 42 and 106.
Note that only the primary 20 MHz channel index of the first specified segment is considered.
80+80MHz requires the use of SpectrumWifiPhy
.
35.2.1.3.8. Order of operation issues¶
Channel settings can be configured either before or after the wifi standard. If the channel settings are configured before the wifi standard, the channel settings are stored and applied when the wifi standard is configured. Otherwise, they are applied immediately.
The wifi standard can be configured only once, i.e., it is not possible to change standard during a simulation. It is instead possible to change the channel settings at any time.
35.2.1.4. SpectrumWifiPhyHelper¶
The API for this helper closely tracks the API of the YansWifiPhyHelper,
with the exception that a channel of type ns3::SpectrumChannel
instead
of type ns3::YansWifiChannel
must be used with it.
Its API has been extended for 802.11be multi-link and EMLSR in order to
attach multiple spectrum channels to a same PHY. For that purpose, a user
may use the following command to attach a spectrum channel to the PHY objects
that will be created upon a call to ns3::WifiHelper::Install
:
SpectrumWifiPhyHelper::AddChannel(const Ptr<SpectrumChannel> channel,
const FrequencyRange& freqRange)
where FrequencyRange is a structure that contains the start and stop frequencies expressed in MHz which corresponds to the spectrum portion that is covered by the channel.
35.2.1.5. WifiMacHelper¶
The next step is to configure the MAC model. We use WifiMacHelper to accomplish this.
WifiMacHelper takes care of both the MAC low model and MAC high model, and configures an object factory to create instances of a ns3::WifiMac
.
It is used to configure MAC parameters like type of MAC, and to select whether 802.11/WMM-style QoS and/or 802.11n-style High Throughput (HT)
and/or 802.11ac-style Very High Throughput (VHT) support and/or 802.11ax-style High Efficiency (HE) support are/is required.
By default, it creates an ad-hoc MAC instance that does not have 802.11e/WMM-style QoS nor 802.11n-style High Throughput (HT) nor 802.11ac-style Very High Throughput (VHT) nor 802.11ax-style High Efficiency (HE) support enabled.
For example the following user code configures a non-QoS and non-HT/non-VHT/non-HE MAC that
will be a non-AP STA in an infrastructure network where the AP has SSID ns-3-ssid
:
WifiMacHelper wifiMacHelper;
Ssid ssid = Ssid("ns-3-ssid");
wifiMacHelper.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid),
"ActiveProbing", BooleanValue(false));
The following code shows how to create an AP with QoS enabled:
WifiMacHelper wifiMacHelper;
wifiMacHelper.SetType("ns3::ApWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid),
"QosSupported", BooleanValue(true),
"BeaconGeneration", BooleanValue(true),
"BeaconInterval", TimeValue(Seconds(2.5)));
To create ad-hoc MAC instances, simply use ns3::AdhocWifiMac
instead of ns3::StaWifiMac
or ns3::ApWifiMac
.
With QoS-enabled MAC models it is possible to work with traffic belonging to four different Access Categories (ACs): AC_VO for voice traffic, AC_VI for video traffic, AC_BE for best-effort traffic and AC_BK for background traffic.
When selecting 802.11n as the desired wifi standard, both 802.11e/WMM-style QoS and 802.11n-style High Throughput (HT) support gets enabled. Similarly when selecting 802.11ac as the desired wifi standard, 802.11e/WMM-style QoS, 802.11n-style High Throughput (HT) and 802.11ac-style Very High Throughput (VHT) support gets enabled. And when selecting 802.11ax as the desired wifi standard, 802.11e/WMM-style QoS, 802.11n-style High Throughput (HT), 802.11ac-style Very High Throughput (VHT) and 802.11ax-style High Efficiency (HE) support gets enabled.
For MAC instances that have QoS support enabled, the ns3::WifiMacHelper
can be also used to set:
block ack threshold (number of packets for which block ack mechanism should be used);
block ack inactivity timeout.
For example the following user code configures a MAC that will be a non-AP STA with QoS enabled and a block ack threshold for AC_BE set to 2 packets,
in an infrastructure network where the AP has SSID ns-3-ssid
:
WifiMacHelper wifiMacHelper;
Ssid ssid = Ssid("ns-3-ssid");
wifiMacHelper.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid),
"QosSupported", BooleanValue(true),
"BE_BlockAckThreshold", UintegerValue(2),
"ActiveProbing", BooleanValue(false));
For MAC instances that have 802.11n-style High Throughput (HT) and/or 802.11ac-style Very High Throughput (VHT) and/or 802.11ax-style High Efficiency (HE) support enabled,
the ns3::WifiMacHelper
can be also used to set:
MSDU aggregation parameters for a particular Access Category (AC) in order to use 802.11n/ac A-MSDU feature;
MPDU aggregation parameters for a particular Access Category (AC) in order to use 802.11n/ac A-MPDU feature.
By default, MSDU aggregation feature is disabled for all ACs and MPDU aggregation is enabled for AC_VI and AC_BE, with a maximum aggregation size of 65535 bytes.
For example the following user code configures a MAC that will be a non-AP STA with HT and QoS enabled, MPDU aggregation enabled for AC_VO with a maximum aggregation size of 65535 bytes, and MSDU aggregation enabled for AC_BE with a maximum aggregation size of 7935 bytes,
in an infrastructure network where the AP has SSID ns-3-ssid
:
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211n);
WifiMacHelper wifiMacHelper;
Ssid ssid = Ssid("ns-3-ssid");
wifiMacHelper.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid),
"VO_MaxAmpduSize", UintegerValue(65535),
"BE_MaxAmsduSize", UintegerValue(7935),
"ActiveProbing", BooleanValue(false));
802.11ax APs support sending multi-user frames via DL OFDMA and UL OFDMA if a Multi-User Scheduler is aggregated to the wifi MAC(by default no scheduler is aggregated). WifiMacHelper enables to aggregate a Multi-User Scheduler to an AP and set its parameters:
WifiMacHelper wifiMacHelper;
wifiMacHelper.SetMultiUserScheduler("ns3::RrMultiUserScheduler",
"EnableUlOfdma", BooleanValue(true),
"EnableBsrp", BooleanValue(false));
The Ack Manager is in charge of selecting the acknowledgment method among the three available methods(see section MAC queues ). The default ack manager enables to select the acknowledgment method, e.g.:
Config::SetDefault("ns3::WifiDefaultAckManager::DlMuAckSequenceType",
EnumValue(WifiAcknowledgment::DL_MU_AGGREGATE_TF));
35.2.1.5.1. Selection of the Access Category (AC)¶
Since ns-3.26, the QosTag is no longer used to assign a user priority to an MSDU.
Instead, the selection of the Access Category (AC) for an MSDU is based on the
value of the DS field in the IP header of the packet (ToS field in case of IPv4,
Traffic Class field in case of IPv6). Details on how to set the ToS field of IPv4
packets are given in the ToS (Type of Service) section of the documentation. In
summary, users can create an address of type ns3::InetSocketAddress
with the desired type of service value and pass it to the application helpers:
InetSocketAddress destAddress(ipv4Address, udpPort);
OnOffHelper onoff("ns3::UdpSocketFactory", destAddress);
onoff.SetAttribute("Tos", UintegerValue(tos));
Mapping the values of the DS field onto user priorities is performed similarly to the
Linux mac80211 subsystem. Basically, the ns3::WifiNetDevice::SelectQueue()
method sets the user priority (UP) of an MSDU to the three most significant
bits of the DS field. The Access Category is then determined based on the user priority
according to the following table:
UP |
Access Category |
---|---|
7 |
AC_VO |
6 |
AC_VO |
5 |
AC_VI |
4 |
AC_VI |
3 |
AC_BE |
0 |
AC_BE |
2 |
AC_BK |
1 |
AC_BK |
ToS and DSCP values map onto user priorities and access categories according to the following table.
DiffServ PHB |
ToS (binary) |
UP |
Access Category |
---|---|---|---|
EF |
101110xx |
5 |
AC_VI |
AF11 |
001010xx |
1 |
AC_BK |
AF21 |
010010xx |
2 |
AC_BK |
AF31 |
011010xx |
3 |
AC_BE |
AF41 |
100010xx |
4 |
AC_VI |
AF12 |
001100xx |
1 |
AC_BK |
AF22 |
010100xx |
2 |
AC_BK |
AF32 |
011100xx |
3 |
AC_BE |
AF42 |
100100xx |
4 |
AC_VI |
AF13 |
001110xx |
1 |
AC_BK |
AF23 |
010110xx |
2 |
AC_BK |
AF33 |
011110xx |
3 |
AC_BE |
AF43 |
100110xx |
4 |
AC_VI |
CS0 |
000000xx |
0 |
AC_BE |
CS1 |
001000xx |
1 |
AC_BK |
CS2 |
010000xx |
2 |
AC_BK |
CS3 |
011000xx |
3 |
AC_BE |
CS4 |
100000xx |
4 |
AC_VI |
CS5 |
101000xx |
5 |
AC_VI |
CS6 |
110000xx |
6 |
AC_VO |
CS7 |
111000xx |
7 |
AC_VO |
So, for example, a ToS equal to 0xc0 (binary 11000000) will map to CS6, User Priority 6, and Access Category AC_VO. Also, the ns3-wifi-ac-mapping test suite (defined in src/test/ns3wifi/wifi-ac-mapping-test-suite.cc) can provide additional useful information.
Note that ns3::WifiNetDevice::SelectQueue()
also sets the packet
priority to the user priority, thus overwriting the value determined by the
socket priority (users can read Use of Send() vs. SendTo() for details on how to
set the packet priority). Also, given that the Traffic Control layer calls
ns3::WifiNetDevice::SelectQueue()
before enqueuing the packet
into a queue disc, it turns out that queuing disciplines (such as
PfifoFastQueueDisc) that classifies packets based on their priority will
use the user priority instead of the socket priority.
35.2.1.6. WifiHelper¶
We’re now ready to create WifiNetDevices. First, let’s create a WifiHelper with default settings:
WifiHelper wifiHelper;
What does this do? It sets the default wifi standard to 802.11a and sets the RemoteStationManager to
ns3::ArfWifiManager
. You can change the RemoteStationManager by calling the
WifiHelper::SetRemoteStationManager
method. To change the wifi standard, call the
WifiHelper::SetStandard
method with the desired standard.
Now, let’s use the wifiPhyHelper and wifiMacHelper created above to install WifiNetDevices on a set of nodes in a NodeContainer “c”:
NetDeviceContainer wifiContainer = WifiHelper::Install(wifiPhyHelper, wifiMacHelper, c);
This creates the WifiNetDevice which includes also a WifiRemoteStationManager, a WifiMac, and a WifiPhy (connected to the matching Channel).
The WifiHelper::SetStandard
method sets various default timing parameters as defined in the selected standard version, overwriting values that may exist or have been previously configured.
In order to change parameters that are overwritten by WifiHelper::SetStandard
, this should be done post-install using Config::Set
:
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211n);
wifi.SetRemoteStationManager("ns3::ConstantRateWifiManager", "DataMode", StringValue("HtMcs7"), "ControlMode", StringValue("HtMcs0"));
//Install PHY and MAC
Ssid ssid = Ssid("ns3-wifi");
WifiMacHelper mac;
mac.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid),
"ActiveProbing", BooleanValue(false));
NetDeviceContainer staDevice;
staDevice = wifi.Install(phy, mac, wifiStaNode);
mac.SetType("ns3::ApWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid));
NetDeviceContainer apDevice;
apDevice = wifi.Install(phy, mac, wifiApNode);
//Once install is done, we overwrite the standard timing values
Config::Set("/NodeList/*/DeviceList/*/$ns3::WifiNetDevice/Phy/Slot", TimeValue(MicroSeconds(slot)));
Config::Set("/NodeList/*/DeviceList/*/$ns3::WifiNetDevice/Phy/Sifs", TimeValue(MicroSeconds(sifs)));
Config::Set("/NodeList/*/DeviceList/*/$ns3::WifiNetDevice/Phy/Pifs", TimeValue(MicroSeconds(pifs)));
The WifiHelper can be used to set the attributes of the default ack policy selector
(ConstantWifiAckPolicySelector
) or to select a different (user provided) ack
policy selector, for each of the available Access Categories. As an example, the
following code can be used to set the BaThreshold attribute of the default ack
policy selector associated with BE AC to 0.5:
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetAckPolicySelectorForAc(AC_BE, "ns3::ConstantWifiAckPolicySelector",
"BaThreshold", DoubleValue(0.5));
The WifiHelper is also used to configure OBSS PD spatial reuse for 802.11ax.
The following lines configure a WifiHelper to support OBSS PD spatial reuse
using the ConstantObssPdAlgorithm
with a threshold set to -72 dBm:
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetObssPdAlgorithm("ns3::ConstantObssPdAlgorithm",
"ObssPdLevel", DoubleValue(-72.0));
There are many other ns-3 attributes that can be set on the above helpers to deviate from the default behavior; the example scripts show how to do some of this reconfiguration.
35.2.1.7. WifiPhyRxTraceHelper¶
The WifiPhyRxTraceHelper
can be used to collect statistics and records of Wi-Fi
reception events at the physical layer, such as whether a PPDU was received or was dropped for
some reason, and whether a PPDU overlapped in time (collided) with one or more other PPDUs on the
channel. Two possible types of studies that may be helped by this feature are:
Wi-Fi PPDU and MPDU reception outcomes to assess the performance of spatial reuse mechanisms
Calculation of airtime fairness between contending stations on a network
The trace helper works by hooking PHY-level traces on the applicable nodes, devices, and links and maintaining per-receiver records of all of the Wi-Fi PPDUs that are received, from each receiver’s vantage point. These records include a listing of all other PPDUs that may have overlapped in time and/or frequency for a given PPDU, and the received signal power of each PPDU involved, and the outcome of the attempt at reception (whether the PPDU was dropped entirely, or whether the PPDU was partially or fully decoded).
This trace helper collects records of all Wi-Fi PPDus received on every PHY that is enabled for the helper. As an example, consider the scenario in Figure WifiPhyRxTraceHelper scenario of interest, depicting the arrival of three PPDUs that overlap in time. The trace helper keeps a record of each PPDU arrival, on each enabled PHY, and also keeps track of the PPDUs that collided with it, if any. In the figure, the first PPDU overlaps in time with both the second and third PPDU. Likewise, the second PPDU overlaps in time with the first and third PPDUs, and the third PPDU overlaps in time with the first and second. All of these relationships (each frame arrival, the frames that overlapped in time with it), from the perspective of each PHY, are stored in internal data structures. Additionally, the reception outcome of each PPDU, and its constituent MPDUs, is tracked. This database of reception events can be exported by the trace helper for fine-grained tabulation of spatial reuse events of interest, or can be summarized by some built-in statistics printing methods.
The output of this trace helper is provided in three formats:
Built-in print methods to allow printing of key statistics with a single C++ statement,
Export of a trace statistics object allowing the user to post-process or format the data according to the user’s formatting choice, and
Export of the complete reception records, allowing the user to perform their own custom processing of the data.
A sample usage of this trace helper is as follows, as demonstrated in the example program
src/wifi/examples/wifi-phy-rx-trace-helper-example.cc
. First, declare an instance
of it as one might do with other Wi-Fi helpers:
WifiPhyRxTraceHelper rxTraceHelper;
You may need to include the trace helper’s header if it is not otherwise included by the wifi module header:
#include "ns3/wifi-phy-rx-trace-helper.h"
Next, enable the trace helper on some subset of the Wi-Fi nodes in the simulation. This step
will hook traces on all of the nodes enabled. It is important to include all of the nodes
within reception range of the nodes of interest, because PPDUs need to be traced at
both transmission and reception times. If you are only interested in statistics or records
on a given receiver, you can later (as explained below) request for only the statistics
of interest. For example, if you are interested in a particular AP, in a particular BSS,
and there is an interfering BSS nearby, you will want to enable all of the nodes within
interference range of the AP of interest (even if not in the same BSS). So, in general,
you will want to Enable()
the trace helper on all Wi-Fi nodes in the simulation,
unless you want to explore pruning this set for runtime scaling reasons.
In this example, we will enable on all of the Wi-Fi nodes:
NodeContainer c;
c.Create(2);
...
NetDeviceContainer apDevice = wifi.Install(wifiPhy, wifiMac, c.Get(1));
NetDeviceContainer staDevice = wifi.Install(wifiPhy, wifiMac, c.Get(0));
...
rxTraceHelper.Enable(c);
The important thing to note in the above is that Enable()
must be called after
Wi-Fi devices are installed, because it will hook traces on what has been installed
up to that point.
The next configuration aspect is to establish a start and stop time for PPDU reception
collection. In the example program, application data is not sent before 1 second,
and we want to capture all data PPDUs, so the Start()
and Stop()
times are set
as follows:
rxTraceHelper.Start(Seconds(1));
// The last packet will be sent at time 1 sec. + (numPackets - 1) * interval
// Configure the stop time to be 1 sec. later than this.
Time stopTime = Seconds(1) + (numPackets - 1) * interval + Seconds(1);
rxTraceHelper.Stop(stopTime);
The start and stop times can be tuned to whatever collection window is desired. Furthermore,
there is a Reset()
method that will clear all of the PPDU records and restart collection;
this can be used if one wants to periodically sample the statistics in different time
intervals.
Next, run the simulation, and either during the run or after the simulation has completed, harvest the statistics. As noted above, there are three main ways to output data. Furthermore, there are C++ method overloads that allow users to narrow the scope of output data.
The first option is to use PrintStatistics()
, which will dump some statistics with
built-in formatting, such as follows:
traceHelper.PrintStatistics();
This will result in a number of statistics being printed out. The statistics will be aggregated for all nodes that are enabled. The following is some of the default output of the sample program:
*** Print statistics for all nodes using built-in print method:
Total PPDUs Received: 1
Total Non-Overlapping PPDUs Received: 1
Total Overlapping PPDUs Received: 0
Successful PPDUs: 1
Failed PPDUs: 0
Total MPDUs: 1
Total Successful MPDUs: 1
Total Failed MPDUs: 0
In the above simple case, there is one PPDU successfully received, and within this PPDU, there was one MPDU which was successfully decoded. No other PPDUs overlapped in time with this PPDU.
Although this is a PHY trace helper, there is one important aspect from the MAC layer that is used to classify PPDUs. When reporting statistics for a given node, a PPDU is counted only if there was at least one MPDU intended for the node. If the MPDU has a MAC address that is either broadcast or belongs to the device (unicast), that PPDU will be counted. If, instead, a receiver locks onto and overhears a PPDU that ultimately will be discarded because the receiver was not an intended receiver, that PPDU reception or failure will be excluded from the statistics.
The sample program next shows how PrintStatistics
can take an argument:
rxTraceHelper.PrintStatistics(c.Get(0)->GetId());
rxTraceHelper.PrintStatistics(c.Get(1));
In the above, the statistics can be limited to a particular node (either passed in by Node ID or by Node pointer). Furthermore, although not shown in the example, the method can be further downscoped to also take a device index argument and (in the case of multi-link operation (MLO)) a specific link ID. In the above example, all devices and all MLO links will be included in the output.
Users can write their own printing methods or further process the statistics by
calling GetStatistics()
as the following example demonstrates:
auto stats = rxTraceHelper.GetStatistics();
std::cout << " numOverlapppingPpdu: " << stats.m_numOverlappingPpdu << std::endl;
std::cout << " numNonOverlapppingPpdu: " << stats.m_numNonOverlappingPpdu << std::endl;
std::cout << " numPpduFailed: " << stats.m_numPpduFailed << std::endl;
std::cout << " numPpduSuccess: " << stats.m_numPpduSuccess << std::endl;
std::cout << " numMpduSuccess: " << stats.m_numMpduSuccess << std::endl;
std::cout << " numMpduFailed: " << stats.m_numMpduFailed << std::endl;
Similar to PrintStatistics()
, GetStatistics()
with no arguments will collect
a statistics output structure covering all nodes, while additional arguments of
Node ID, device index, and link ID can be used to constrain the statistics report.
Finally, the output of the internal data structure that tracks PPDU receptions can
be exported, with the GetPpduRecords()
method, which can be called
without any arguments, and with arguments of nodeId, deviceId, and linkId:
auto optionalRecords = rxTraceHelper.GetPpduRecords(1);
The above statements asks for records from receiving node 1 (the AP). The example iterates the returned vector, printing out the size of this structure, as well as some data fields:
*** Records vector has size of 3
First record:
first PPDU's RSSI (dBm): -30.6633
first PPDU's receiver ID: 1
first PPDU's sender ID: 0
first PPDU's start time: 1
first PPDU's end time: 1.00008
first PPDU's number of MPDUs: 1
first PPDU's sender device ID: 0
Second record:
second PPDU's RSSI (dBm): -30.6633
second PPDU's receiver ID: 1
second PPDU's sender ID: 0
second PPDU's start time: 1.00027
second PPDU's end time: 1.00032
second PPDU's number of MPDUs: 1
second PPDU's sender device ID: 0
Third record:
third PPDU's RSSI (dBm): -30.6633
third PPDU's receiver ID: 1
third PPDU's sender ID: 0
third PPDU's start time: 1.00039
third PPDU's end time: 1.00072
third PPDU's number of MPDUs: 1
third PPDU's sender device ID: 0
That the size of the vector is 3 may be surprising, considering that we have observed
above in this example that only one PPDU is being counted in the statistics. However,
in this example, there is only one data PPDU but also additional management and control
frames. Specifically, the first PPDU is a Block ACK ADDBA_REQUEST frame, the second PPDU
is an ACK of the AP’s ADDBA_RESPONSE frame, and the third PPDU record corresponds to the
actual data PPDU, starting at time 1.00039 and ending at 1.00072.
The management and control frames (which also include beacons) are filtered out above by
the GetStatistics()
methods, but when the raw PPDU records are retrieved, all PPDUs
received are available and the user is responsible for further filtering as they see fit.
35.2.1.8. HT configuration¶
HT is an acronym for High Throughput, a term synonymous with the IEEE 802.11n
standard. Once the ns3::WifiHelper::Install
has been called and the
user sets the standard to a variant that supports HT capabilities (802.11n,
802.11ac, or 802.11ax), an HT configuration object will automatically be
created for the device. The configuration object is used to store and
manage HT-specific attributes.
802.11n/ac PHY layer can use either long (800 ns) or short (400 ns) OFDM guard intervals. To configure this parameter for a given device, the following lines of code could be used (in this example, it enables the support of a short guard interval for the first station):
Ptr<NetDevice> nd = wifiStaDevices.Get(0);
Ptr<WifiNetDevice> wnd = nd->GetObject<WifiNetDevice>();
Ptr<HtConfiguration> htConfiguration = wnd->GetHtConfiguration();
htConfiguration->SetShortGuardIntervalSupported(true);
It is also possible to configure HT-specific attributes using Config::Set
.
The following line of code enables the support of a short guard interval for all stations:
Config::Set("/NodeList/*/DeviceList/*/$ns3::WifiNetDevice/HtConfiguration/ShortGuardIntervalSupported", BooleanValue(true));
35.2.1.9. VHT configuration¶
IEEE 802.11ac devices are also known as supporting Very High Throughput (VHT). Once the ns3::WifiHelper::Install
has been called and either the 802.11ac
or 802.11ax 5 GHz standards are configured, a VHT configuration object will be
automatically created to manage VHT-specific attributes.
As of ns-3.29, however, there are no VHT-specific configuration items to manage; therefore, this object is a placeholder for future growth.
35.2.1.10. HE configuration¶
IEEE 802.11ax is also known as High Efficiency (HE). Once the ns3::WifiHelper::Install
has been called and IEEE 802.11ax configured as the standard, an
HE configuration object will automatically be created to manage HE-specific
attributes for 802.11ax devices.
802.11ax PHY layer can use either 3200 ns, 1600 ns or 800 ns OFDM guard intervals. To configure this parameter, the following lines of code could be used (in this example, it enables the support of 1600 ns guard interval), such as in this example code snippet:
Ptr<NetDevice> nd = wifiStaDevices.Get(0);
Ptr<WifiNetDevice> wnd = nd->GetObject<WifiNetDevice>();
Ptr<HeConfiguration> heConfiguration = wnd->GetHeConfiguration();
heConfiguration->SetGuardInterval(NanoSeconds(1600));
802.11ax allows compressed Block ACKs containing a 256-bits bitmap, making possible transmissions of A-MPDUs containing up to 256 MPDUs, depending on the negotiated buffer size. In order to configure the buffer size of an 802.11ax device, the following line of code could be used:
WifiMacHelper mac;
mac.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac", "MpduBufferSize", UintegerValue(256));
For transmitting large MPDUs, it might also be needed to increase the maximum aggregation size (see above).
When using UL MU transmissions, solicited TB PPDUs can arrive at the AP with a
different delay, due to the different propagation delay from the various stations.
In real systems, late TB PPDUs cause a variable amount of interference depending on
the receiver’s sensitivity. This phenomenon can be modeled through the
ns3::HeConfiguration::MaxTbPpduDelay
attribute, which defines the maximum delay
with which a TB PPDU can arrive with respect to the first TB PPDU in order to be
decoded properly. TB PPDUs arriving after more than MaxTbPpduDelay
since the
first TB PPDU are discarded and considered as interference.
35.2.1.11. Mobility configuration¶
Finally, a mobility model must be configured on each node with Wi-Fi device. Mobility model is used for calculating propagation loss and propagation delay. Two examples are provided in the next section. Users are referred to the chapter on Mobility module for detailed information.
35.2.1.12. Example configuration¶
We provide two typical examples of how a user might configure a Wi-Fi network –
one example with an ad-hoc network and one example with an infrastructure network.
The two examples were modified from the two examples in the examples/wireless
folder
(wifi-simple-adhoc.cc
and wifi-simple-infra.cc
).
Users are encouraged to see examples in the examples/wireless
folder.
35.2.1.12.1. AdHoc WifiNetDevice configuration¶
In this example, we create two ad-hoc nodes equipped with 802.11a Wi-Fi devices.
We use the ns3::ConstantSpeedPropagationDelayModel
as the propagation delay model and
ns3::LogDistancePropagationLossModel
with the exponent of 3.0 as the propagation loss model.
Both devices are configured with ConstantRateWifiManager
at the fixed rate of 12Mbps.
Finally, we manually place them by using the ns3::ListPositionAllocator
:
std::string phyMode("OfdmRate12Mbps");
NodeContainer c;
c.Create(2);
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211a);
YansWifiPhyHelper wifiPhy = YansWifiPhyHelper::Default();
// ns-3 supports RadioTap and Prism tracing extensions for 802.11
wifiPhy.SetPcapDataLinkType(WifiPhyHelper::DLT_IEEE802_11_RADIO);
YansWifiChannelHelper wifiChannel;
wifiChannel.SetPropagationDelay("ns3::ConstantSpeedPropagationDelayModel");
wifiChannel.AddPropagationLoss("ns3::LogDistancePropagationLossModel",
"Exponent", DoubleValue(3.0));
wifiPhy.SetChannel(wifiChannel.Create());
// Add a non-QoS upper mac, and disable rate control (i.e. ConstantRateWifiManager)
WifiMacHelper wifiMac;
wifi.SetRemoteStationManager("ns3::ConstantRateWifiManager",
"DataMode",StringValue(phyMode),
"ControlMode",StringValue(phyMode));
// Set it to adhoc mode
wifiMac.SetType("ns3::AdhocWifiMac");
NetDeviceContainer devices = wifi.Install(wifiPhy, wifiMac, c);
// Configure mobility
MobilityHelper mobility;
Ptr<ListPositionAllocator> positionAlloc = CreateObject<ListPositionAllocator>();
positionAlloc->Add(Vector(0.0, 0.0, 0.0));
positionAlloc->Add(Vector(5.0, 0.0, 0.0));
mobility.SetPositionAllocator(positionAlloc);
mobility.SetMobilityModel("ns3::ConstantPositionMobilityModel");
mobility.Install(c);
// other set up (e.g. InternetStack, Application)
35.2.1.12.2. Infrastructure (access point and clients) WifiNetDevice configuration¶
This is a typical example of how a user might configure an access point and a set of clients. In this example, we create one access point and two clients. Each node is equipped with 802.11b Wi-Fi device:
std::string phyMode("DsssRate1Mbps");
NodeContainer ap;
ap.Create(1);
NodeContainer stas;
stas.Create(2);
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211b);
YansWifiPhyHelper wifiPhy = YansWifiPhyHelper::Default();
// ns-3 supports RadioTap and Prism tracing extensions for 802.11
wifiPhy.SetPcapDataLinkType(WifiPhyHelper::DLT_IEEE802_11_RADIO);
YansWifiChannelHelper wifiChannel;
// reference loss must be changed since 802.11b is operating at 2.4GHz
wifiChannel.SetPropagationDelay("ns3::ConstantSpeedPropagationDelayModel");
wifiChannel.AddPropagationLoss("ns3::LogDistancePropagationLossModel",
"Exponent", DoubleValue(3.0),
"ReferenceLoss", DoubleValue(40.0459));
wifiPhy.SetChannel(wifiChannel.Create());
// Add a non-QoS upper mac, and disable rate control
WifiMacHelper wifiMac;
wifi.SetRemoteStationManager("ns3::ConstantRateWifiManager",
"DataMode",StringValue(phyMode),
"ControlMode",StringValue(phyMode));
// Setup the rest of the upper mac
Ssid ssid = Ssid("wifi-default");
// setup AP.
wifiMac.SetType("ns3::ApWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid));
NetDeviceContainer apDevice = wifi.Install(wifiPhy, wifiMac, ap);
NetDeviceContainer devices = apDevice;
// setup STAs.
wifiMac.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid),
"ActiveProbing", BooleanValue(false));
NetDeviceContainer staDevices = wifi.Install(wifiPhy, wifiMac, stas);
devices.Add(staDevices);
// Configure mobility
MobilityHelper mobility;
Ptr<ListPositionAllocator> positionAlloc = CreateObject<ListPositionAllocator>();
positionAlloc->Add(Vector(0.0, 0.0, 0.0));
positionAlloc->Add(Vector(5.0, 0.0, 0.0));
positionAlloc->Add(Vector(0.0, 5.0, 0.0));
mobility.SetPositionAllocator(positionAlloc);
mobility.SetMobilityModel("ns3::ConstantPositionMobilityModel");
mobility.Install(ap);
mobility.Install(sta);
// other set up (e.g. InternetStack, Application)
35.2.1.12.3. Multiple RF interfaces configuration¶
NodeContainer ap;
ap.Create(1);
NodeContainer sta;
sta.Create(1);
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211be);
// Create multiple spectrum channels
Ptr<MultiModelSpectrumChannel> spectrumChannel2_4Ghz =
CreateObject<MultiModelSpectrumChannel>();
Ptr<MultiModelSpectrumChannel> spectrumChannel5Ghz =
CreateObject<MultiModelSpectrumChannel>();
Ptr<MultiModelSpectrumChannel> spectrumChannel6Ghz =
CreateObject<MultiModelSpectrumChannel>();
// optional: set up propagation loss model separately for each spectrum channel
// SpectrumWifiPhyHelper (3 links)
SpectrumWifiPhyHelper phy(3);
phy.SetPcapDataLinkType(WifiPhyHelper::DLT_IEEE802_11_RADIO);
phy.SetPcapCaptureType(WifiPhyHelper::PcapCaptureType::PCAP_PER_LINK);
phy.AddChannel(spectrumChannel2_4Ghz, WIFI_SPECTRUM_2_4_GHZ);
phy.AddChannel(spectrumChannel5Ghz, WIFI_SPECTRUM_5_GHZ);
phy.AddChannel(spectrumChannel6Ghz, WIFI_SPECTRUM_6_GHZ);
// configure operating channel for each link
phy.Set(0, "ChannelSettings", StringValue("{42, 0, BAND_2_4GHZ, 0}"));
phy.Set(1, "ChannelSettings", StringValue("{42, 0, BAND_5GHZ, 0}"));
phy.Set(2, "ChannelSettings", StringValue("{215, 0, BAND_6GHZ, 0}"));
// configure rate manager for each link
wifi.SetRemoteStationManager(0,
"ns3::ConstantRateWifiManager",
"DataMode", StringValue("EhtMcs11"),
"ControlMode", StringValue("ErpOfdmRate24Mbps"));
wifi.SetRemoteStationManager(1,
"ns3::ConstantRateWifiManager",
"DataMode", StringValue("EhtMcs9"),
"ControlMode", StringValue("OfdmRate24Mbps"));
wifi.SetRemoteStationManager(2,
"ns3::ConstantRateWifiManager",
"DataMode", StringValue("EhtMcs7"),
"ControlMode", StringValue("HeMcs4"));
// setup AP.
wifiMac.SetType("ns3::ApWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid));
NetDeviceContainer apDevice = wifi.Install(wifiPhy, wifiMac, ap);
NetDeviceContainer devices = apDevice;
// setup STA.
wifiMac.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid),
"ActiveProbing", BooleanValue(false));
NetDeviceContainer staDevice = wifi.Install(wifiPhy, wifiMac, sta);
devices.Add(staDevice);
// Configure mobility
MobilityHelper mobility;
Ptr<ListPositionAllocator> positionAlloc = CreateObject<ListPositionAllocator>();
positionAlloc->Add(Vector(0.0, 0.0, 0.0));
positionAlloc->Add(Vector(5.0, 0.0, 0.0));
mobility.SetPositionAllocator(positionAlloc);
mobility.SetMobilityModel("ns3::ConstantPositionMobilityModel");
mobility.Install(c);
// other set up (e.g. InternetStack, Application)
35.2.1.12.4. EMLSR configuration¶
DISCLAIMER EMLSR support is still experimental. Simulations with EMLSR activated may crash unexpectedly.
Proper EMLSR operations require the configuration of multiple RF interfaces, as illustrated above.
Therefore, in order to configure EMLSR operations, we can start from the configuration shown above
and apply the changes described in the following. Firstly, we need to activate EMLSR on both the
AP MLD and the EMLSR client. This can be done by configuring the appropriate EhtConfiguration
attribute through the wifi helper:
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211be);
wifi.ConfigEhtOptions("EmlsrActivated", BooleanValue(true));
The EhtConfiguration
class also provides attributes for the various EMLSR parameters that an
AP MLD that supports EMLSR has to advertise. Given that these attributes are simply ignored by
non-AP MLDs, we can use the same wifi helper to configure such parameters:
WifiHelper wifi;
wifi.SetStandard(WIFI_STANDARD_80211be);
wifi.ConfigEhtOptions("EmlsrActivated", BooleanValue(true));
wifi.ConfigEhtOptions("TransitionTimeout", TimeValue(MicroSeconds(1024)));
wifi.ConfigEhtOptions("MediumSyncDuration", TimeValue(MicroSeconds(3200)));
wifi.ConfigEhtOptions("MsdOfdmEdThreshold", IntegerValue(-72);
wifi.ConfigEhtOptions("MsdMaxNTxops", UintegerValue(0)); // unlimited attempts
EMLSR parameters that are client specific can be configured through the attributes of the EMLSR
Manager class and subclass. The WifiMacHelper
class provides the SetEmlsrManager
method to conveniently set the type of EMLSR Manager and its attributes:
// setup STA.
wifiMac.SetType("ns3::StaWifiMac",
"Ssid", SsidValue(ssid),
"ActiveProbing", BooleanValue(false));
wifiMac.SetEmlsrManager("ns3::DefaultEmlsrManager",
"EmlsrLinkSet",
StringValue("0,1,2"), // enable EMLSR on all EMLSR links
"MainPhyId",
UintegerValue(1),
"EmlsrPaddingDelay",
TimeValue(MicroSeconds(32)),
"EmlsrTransitionDelay",
TimeValue(MicroSeconds(128)),
"SwitchAuxPhy",
BooleanValue(false),
"AuxPhyChannelWidth",
UintegerValue(40));
NetDeviceContainer staDevice = wifi.Install(wifiPhy, wifiMac, sta);
devices.Add(staDevice);
Note that the channel switch delay should be less than the transition delay:
// SpectrumWifiPhyHelper (3 links)
SpectrumWifiPhyHelper phy(3);
phy.SetPcapDataLinkType(WifiPhyHelper::DLT_IEEE802_11_RADIO);
phy.SetPcapCaptureType(WifiPhyHelper::PcapCaptureType::PCAP_PER_LINK);
phy.AddChannel(spectrumChannel2_4Ghz, WIFI_SPECTRUM_2_4_GHZ);
phy.AddChannel(spectrumChannel5Ghz, WIFI_SPECTRUM_5_GHZ);
phy.AddChannel(spectrumChannel6Ghz, WIFI_SPECTRUM_6_GHZ);
phy.Set("ChannelSwitchDelay", TimeValue(MicroSeconds(100)));