<div dir="ltr">Agreed w/David.<br><br>Scan times are typically based upon the beacon rate and the number of channels to scan. W/o a "simple secondary receiver for scan support," things like roaming actually cost more (in latency) to decide to roam (or not) and to where vs. the actual switching latency.<br><br>The channel map per some smart "system" seems to me maybe a good idea too. Possibly even a machine learning backend that calculate and pass the maps to the APs which in turn passed them to STAs. The feature vectors for map generation could be things like network traffic metrics and phy channel estimates. Again, just a wild idea.<br><br>Bob</div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Sat, Mar 24, 2018 at 1:52 PM, <a href="mailto:dpreed@deepplum.com">dpreed@deepplum.com</a> <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:dpreed@deepplum.com" target="_blank">dpreed@deepplum.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">My understanding, which may be wrong, is that a channel scan requires listening for either a packet or a beacon on each channel. Beacons being the longest you have to wait. But adding up across all the 5 GHz channels + 2.4 GHz channels, assuming most are unused, you get real long delays!<br>
<br>
A better idea would be listening for beacons with a simple secondary receiver. That receiver could be a variable bandwidth front end, so it could listen on adjacent channel groups at the same time, in parallel with the normal stuff.<br>
<br>
It would be even easier if you were only interested in newer and louder signals than the current one, because you could just open the channel filter bandwidth (getting worse SNR) and use SDR to sample for louder signals, if any.<br>
<br>
Conceptually, what you probably want is good hints about what fallback channel you might switch to. Channel scanning one at a time is a poor, poor algorithm for that.<br>
<br>
And even for fixed stations, propagation varies -- turn on a fan in the room causing time varying multipath distortion, or open a metal filing cabinet drawer. So a fallback is useful to have for quick association switching. However, the ideal thing at that point is to be associated simultaneously with multiple APs or mesh peers, and maybe even have DHCP leases with fallback nets.<br>
<br>
-----Original Message-----<br>
From: "Dave Taht" <<a href="mailto:dave.taht@gmail.com">dave.taht@gmail.com</a>><br>
Sent: Fri, Mar 23, 2018 at 5:15 pm<br>
To: "Rich Brown" <<a href="mailto:richb.hanover@gmail.com">richb.hanover@gmail.com</a>><br>
Cc: "Rich Brown" <<a href="mailto:richb.hanover@gmail.com">richb.hanover@gmail.com</a>>, <a href="mailto:make-wifi-fast@lists.bufferbloat.net">make-wifi-fast@lists.<wbr>bufferbloat.net</a><br>
Subject: Re: [Make-wifi-fast] Latency spikes every few minutes?<br>
<span class=""><br>
On Fri, Mar 23, 2018 at 2:12 PM, Rich Brown wrote:<br>
> Hi folks,<br>
><br>
> My Google-fu is weak today. I know that someone described the reason that some Wifi sees big latency spikes every few minutes. I remember it being related to an AP scanning something, for some reason, but that's all I remember. Could someone refresh my brain? Thanks.<br>
<br>
<a href="http://blog.cerowrt.org/post/disabling_channel_scans/" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">http://blog.cerowrt.org/post/<wbr>disabling_channel_scans/</a><br>
><br>
> Rich<br>
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