SWRU423A July   2015  – May 2016 WL1801MOD , WL1805MOD , WL1807MOD , WL1831MOD , WL1835MOD , WL1837MOD

 

  1.   WiLink 8 WLAN Features Guide
    1.     Trademarks
    2. 1 Introducion
      1. 1.1 Scope
      2. 1.2 Acronyms Table
      3. 1.3 WiLink 8 Specification
    3. 2 General Features
      1. 2.1  Supported Rates
        1. 2.1.1 11b Rates
        2. 2.1.2 11a/g Rates
      2. 2.2  High-Throughput (HT) Features
        1. 2.2.1 11n Rates
        2. 2.2.2 MIMO at 2.4 GHz
        3. 2.2.3 40-MHz BW Operation
        4. 2.2.4 A-MPDU and A-MSDU
        5. 2.2.5 RIFS
        6. 2.2.6 BA Sessions
        7. 2.2.7 Greenfield
      3. 2.3  Quality of Service (QoS)
      4. 2.4  Protection Types
        1. 2.4.1 General
        2. 2.4.2 Protection Methods
      5. 2.5  Suspend and Resume
      6. 2.6  WoW (Wake on WLAN)
      7. 2.7  Set TX Power
      8. 2.8  5-GHz Antenna Diversity
      9. 2.9  Wi-Fi – Bluetooth/Bluetooth Smart Coexistence
      10. 2.10 Wi-Fi – ZigBee Coexistence
      11. 2.11 Accurate Synchronization Over Wi-Fi
    4. 3 Single Role: Station
      1. 3.1  Scanning
        1. 3.1.1 One-Shot Scan
        2. 3.1.2 Connection Scan
        3. 3.1.3 Background Scan
      2. 3.2  Connection
        1. 3.2.1 Manual (Via Commands)
          1. 3.2.1.1 Connection Time
          2. 3.2.1.2 Connection Success Rate
          3. 3.2.1.3 Connect to Best BSSID of the Configured SSID
        2. 3.2.2 Automatic (Via Profiles)
        3. 3.2.3 Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS)
          1. 3.2.3.1 WPS PBC
          2. 3.2.3.2 WPS PIN
      3. 3.3  Disconnection
      4. 3.4  DHCP Client
      5. 3.5  Security
        1. 3.5.1 Authentication Types
        2. 3.5.2 Encryption Types
        3. 3.5.3 Broadcast Key Rotation (BKR)
      6. 3.6  Filtering
        1. 3.6.1 Beacon Filtering
        2. 3.6.2 Multicast Filtering
      7. 3.7  Auto ARP
      8. 3.8  Preferred Networks (Profiles)
        1. 3.8.1 Hidden Network
      9. 3.9  Power-Save Mode
        1. 3.9.1 Active
        2. 3.9.2 Auto Power-Save Mode
        3. 3.9.3 Forced Power-Save Mode
      10. 3.10 Power-Save Delivery Protocols
        1. 3.10.1 Legacy
        2. 3.10.2 U-APSD
      11. 3.11 Keep-Alive Mechanism
      12. 3.12 Smart Config
      13. 3.13 Regulatory Domain
      14. 3.14 DFS Slave (Channel Switch)
      15. 3.15 Roaming
        1. 3.15.1 Roaming Mechanism
          1. 3.15.1.1 Mechanism Enabling
          2. 3.15.1.2 Roaming Candidates List
          3. 3.15.1.3 A Decision to Roam
          4. 3.15.1.4 Connection to a Better AP
        2. 3.15.2 Roaming Triggers
          1. 3.15.2.1 RSSI Level Delta
          2. 3.15.2.2 APs Disappearing
    5. 4 Single Role: AP
      1. 4.1  Connection
      2. 4.2  Hidden SSID
      3. 4.3  Security
      4. 4.4  Regulatory Domain
      5. 4.5  AP Scan
      6. 4.6  Automatic Channel Selection (ACS)
        1. 4.6.1 40-MHz Operation
        2. 4.6.2 ACS Whitelist and Blacklist Channels
      7. 4.7  Maximum Connected Stations
      8. 4.8  Aging
      9. 4.9  DFS Master
        1. 4.9.1 DFS Standards
        2. 4.9.2 DFS Mechanism
        3. 4.9.3 WiLink8.0 DFS Master Capabilities
      10. 4.10 Access Control
        1. 4.10.1 Blacklist
        2. 4.10.2 Whitelist
      11. 4.11 Extreme Low Power (ELP)
    6. 5 Single Role: P2P
      1. 5.1 P2P Device
        1. 5.1.1 Searching Phase
        2. 5.1.2 Negotiation
        3. 5.1.3 Group Formation
      2. 5.2 PSP Client
      3. 5.3 P2P GO
    7. 6 Single Role: Mesh
      1. 6.1 Supported Modes
        1. 6.1.1 Mesh Point
        2. 6.1.2 Mesh Portal/Gate
        3. 6.1.3 Mesh Access Point
      2. 6.2 Hardware and Software Requirements
        1. 6.2.1 Hardware requirements
        2. 6.2.2 Software Requirements
      3. 6.3 Capabilities
    8. 7 Multi-Role
      1. 7.1 General Overview
      2. 7.2 Limitations
    9. 8 Performance
      1. 8.1 Single-Role
      2. 8.2 Multi-Role
      3. 8.3 AP and mBSSID (Dual AP) Fairness
        1. 8.3.1 AP Fairness: 1-to-10 Stations Throughput Distribution
        2. 8.3.2 mBSSID Fairness: 10 Stations Throughput Distribution
      4. 8.4 Bluetooth WLAN Coexistence
        1. 8.4.1 WLAN Single Role – Bluetooth Performance
  2.   Revision History

Performance

The performance results of the system described in Table 20 are based on real measurements using the end-to-end system, including a host and the WiLink8.0 processors, and reflect the actual system performance. These results should be used as a reference results. Note that the performance results are directly dependent on processor abilities of the host. The results in Table 20 have been achieved using the single-core Sitara processor with a CPU clock of 700 MHz. A faster and powerful processor will achieve higher results, and vice versa.

Systems performance results are divided into three main sections: single-role, multi-role, Bluetooth-WLAN coexistence.

The single-role results refer to the state of a system when only one Wi-Fi role is active, such as station, AP, P2P client, or P2P GO. The combination of more than one Wi-Fi role is called multi role and the performance results are described in Section 8.2. When Bluetooth is enabled, the WLAN changes its behavior to the multi-role behavior, even if only one Wi-Fi role is activated. This combination of one Wi-Fi role and activated Bluetooth is called Bluetooth-WLAN coexistence. Results for this scenario are described in Section 8.4.