TY - JOUR
T1 - Survey and analysis of VoIP frame aggregation methods over A-MSDU IEEE 802.11n wireless networks
AU - Abualhaj, Mosleh M.
AU - Hussein, Abdelrahman H.
AU - Kolhar, Manjur
AU - AlHija, Mwaffaq Abu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Tech Science Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - The IEEE 802.11n standard has provided prominent features that greatly contribute to ubiquitous wireless networks. Over the last ten years, voice over IP (VoIP) has become widespread around the globe owing to its low-cost or even free call rate. The combination of these technologies (VoIP and wireless) has become desirable and inevitable for organizations. However, VoIP faces a bandwidth utilization issue when working with 802.11 wireless networks. The bandwidth utilization is inefficient on the grounds that (i) 80 bytes of 802.11/RTP/ UDP/IP header is appended to 10-730 bytes of VoIP payload and (ii) 765 μs waiting intervals follow each 802.11 VoIP frame. Without considering the quality requirements of a VoIP call, be including frame aggregation in the IEEE 802.11n standard has been suggested as a solution for the bandwidth utilization issue. Consequently, several aggregation methods have been proposed to handle the quality requirements of VoIP calls when carried over an IEEE 802.11n wireless network. In this survey, we analyze the existing aggregation methods of VoIP over the A-MSDU IEEE 802.11n wireless standard. The survey provides researchers with a detailed analysis of the bandwidth utilization issue concerning the A-MSDU 802.11n standard, discussion of the main approaches of frame aggregation methods and existing aggregation methods, elaboration of the impact of frame aggregation methods on network performance and VoIP call quality, and suggestion of new areas to be investigated in conjunction with frame aggregation. The survey contributes by offering guidelines to design an appropriate, reliable, and robust aggregation method of VoIP over 802.11n standard.
AB - The IEEE 802.11n standard has provided prominent features that greatly contribute to ubiquitous wireless networks. Over the last ten years, voice over IP (VoIP) has become widespread around the globe owing to its low-cost or even free call rate. The combination of these technologies (VoIP and wireless) has become desirable and inevitable for organizations. However, VoIP faces a bandwidth utilization issue when working with 802.11 wireless networks. The bandwidth utilization is inefficient on the grounds that (i) 80 bytes of 802.11/RTP/ UDP/IP header is appended to 10-730 bytes of VoIP payload and (ii) 765 μs waiting intervals follow each 802.11 VoIP frame. Without considering the quality requirements of a VoIP call, be including frame aggregation in the IEEE 802.11n standard has been suggested as a solution for the bandwidth utilization issue. Consequently, several aggregation methods have been proposed to handle the quality requirements of VoIP calls when carried over an IEEE 802.11n wireless network. In this survey, we analyze the existing aggregation methods of VoIP over the A-MSDU IEEE 802.11n wireless standard. The survey provides researchers with a detailed analysis of the bandwidth utilization issue concerning the A-MSDU 802.11n standard, discussion of the main approaches of frame aggregation methods and existing aggregation methods, elaboration of the impact of frame aggregation methods on network performance and VoIP call quality, and suggestion of new areas to be investigated in conjunction with frame aggregation. The survey contributes by offering guidelines to design an appropriate, reliable, and robust aggregation method of VoIP over 802.11n standard.
KW - A-MPDU
KW - A-MSDU
KW - Bandwidth utilization
KW - IEEE 802.11n
KW - VoIP
KW - VoIP frame aggregation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85097188211&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.32604/cmc.2020.012991
DO - 10.32604/cmc.2020.012991
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85097188211
SN - 1546-2218
VL - 66
SP - 1283
EP - 1300
JO - Computers, Materials and Continua
JF - Computers, Materials and Continua
IS - 2
ER -