Hi Thomas,
Please find my response inline.
Regards
Guogang Huang
发件人: Thomas Derham [mailto:thomas.derham@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
发送时间: 2022年5月12日
1:44
收件人: huangguogang <huangguogang1@xxxxxxxxxx>
抄送: STDS-802-11-TGBE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
主题: Re: [STDS-802-11-TGBE]
答复: [STDS-802-11-TGBE] 答复: [STDS-802-11-TGBE]
答复: [STDS-802-11-TGBE] Discussion on ESS Report element
Thanks. You may get some insight on the intention of the original design from slides 3 and 5 of 11-17-0620r0.
Considering the ESS Report element is used to assist roaming, the STA doesn’t care candidate
APs are collocated or not.
Actually I think it does care. When there are multiple non-colocated BSSs in a planned network, as the STA moves
away from its current associated AP (i.e. towards the edge of its current BSS), in general it moves
towards another transition candidate AP.
So when the current RSSI falls below a threshold, it becomes more likely there is a better transition candidate available and in general the RSSI of the transition candidate increases.
On the other hand, if we consider two colocated BSSs, as the STA moves away from its current associated AP, it also moves away from the colocated AP(s) too - so when the RSSI falls below a threshold, the RSSI of the colocated
APs will be worse too (not better).
[Guogang Huang]I don’t agree with your last sentence. It’s not likely a STA will transition to an AP with worse RSSI. For example, as the STA moves
away from its current associated AP, the STA will transition from the associated AP operating on the 5 GHz to an AP operating on the 2.4 GHz. It’s not likely the RSSI of the AP operating on the 2.4 GHz is worse than the RSSI of the collocated AP operating
on the 5 GHz.
Now, we could have a scenario where there are colocated APs but they have substantially different coverage (e.g. due to different transmit powers, or different propagation characteristics in each band). So in principle
there could be some RSSI that represents the edge of coverage of the lower-coverage AP and might represent a reasonable threshold to transition to the colocated AP that has better coverage.
But this has nothing to do with AP density, so it’s quite a different concept.
I would not necessarily object to usage of this element for such use case - assuming it does not conflict with the mobility roam use case - but if that’s the intent I think some clarification may be needed since it would
impact how the STA interprets the RSSI.
[Guogang Huang]If you don’t agree my resolution, could you please provide a document to update this part? Then I can have a whole picture of your
resolution and find which resolution is better.
Could you point out which sentence you are concerned?
This sentence has the “shall”: . Otherwise,
it shall not initiate a BSS transition if the
Planned ESS For MLDs subfield is equal to 0.
[Guogang Huang]If the current associated AP MLD is alone, then there is no candidate AP to transition. I don’t know why you have concern on this
sentence. Could you help me understand what’s your concern?
Also I am unclear the logic for this “should” recommendation, since the RSSIs advertised on each link are different in general, but this assumes a single threshold is applied to the measured RSSIs on all links irrespective
of their txpower and path loss
When the
beacon RSSIs of all setup links are below the Recommended BSS Transition RSSI Threshold Within ESS subfield in the ESS Information field of the ESS Report element, respectively, then it should...
[Guogang Huang]My original intention is the Beacon RSSI of each link is below the Recommended BSS Transition RSSI Threshold Within ESS subfield in
the ESS Information field of the ESS Report element, then it should… I emphasize the ward “respectively”. Anyway, I will revise the text.
Hi Thomas,
Thanks for your discussion. Please find my response inline.
Regards
Guogang Huang
Thanks for the continued discussion.
I believe the original intent of the Planned ESS subfield definition “ESS that is planned with several BSSs” was to describe a network comprising multiple
physical APs in different locations - not simply a single physical AP operating multiple bands.
[Guogang Huang]I don’t think the Planned ESS subfield is to describe a network comprising
physical APs in different location. Considering the ESS Report element is used to assist roaming, the STA doesn’t care candidate APs are collocated or not.
If we were to clarify the current language along these lines, an MLD AP would not necessarily need to set this bit to 1, and I think your issue would be resolved.
[Guogang Huang] If the Planned Of ESS subfield is set to 0, then the legacy STA will ignore
the following subfields (i.e. Edge Of ESS and Recommended RSSI Threshold) by mistake.
That said, even if we take a literal reading of this text (i.e. assume the field should be set to 1 if there is
any other BSS in the ESS that overlaps the coverage area of the BSS advertising this IE - even if that BSS is colocated), I see little value in supporting an indication that there are no other APs (that are not part of that MLD) overlapping coverage
of the reporting AP MLD. In such cases where the MLD is alone, it would simply not send the IE at all.
[Guogang Huang]Considering to assist the legacy STA’s roaming, the AP MLD should advertise
the ESS Report element even if the AP MLD is alone.
The scenarios where the MLD AP
does have overlapping BSSs is already covered by the baseline definition and RSSI recommendation.
[Guogang Huang] The question is how to differentiate the reporting AP MLD is alone or
not?
As a separate point, I am very concerned about the normative language you propose in 35.3.25.1 which seems to forbid the STA from transitioning to another BSS
based on measured RSSIs and values of this element. (Even the “shoulds” are too strong in my view).
[Guogang Huang] Could you point out which sentence you are concerned? Then we can keep
discussion. In addition, I want to remind you “should” is already used in the current text.
I am unable to figure out exactly what this requirement is (does the “Otherwise” refer to case where PlannedESSforMLDs is not 1, or refer to case where RSSIs
are all below the threshold, or both?) but either way I do not think it is appropriate.
Hi Thomas,
I think you kind of misunderstood me. The introduced Planned Of ESS For MLDs is used to
tell the associated non-AP MLD whether there is a neighboring candidate (no matter it is a legacy AP or AP MLD) which the non-AP MLD can transition to.
The introduced Planned Of ESS For MLDs subfield is just a counterpart of the Planned Of
ESS subfield. For an AP MLD, the original Planned Of ESS subfield shall be set to 1. Hence, we need to define a new subfield for MLDs.
If you doubt why we need to define a Planned Of ESS For MLDs subfield, I think you also
need to doubt why we need to define a Planned Of ESS subfield in 11ax.
Regards
Guogang Huang
I don’t think it matters to the STA whether the transition candidates are MLD APs, legacy APs, or some mixture of the two. The STA will find out all that information,
and make BSS/MLD selection decisions, once it actually performs its scan.
If a STA doesn’t support a given band, then any RSSI recommendation on that band is not relevant for it anyway.
I think the existing/baseline ESS Report is sufficient to handle MLDs. On a given channel, the AP/BSS sets the RSSI recommendation so that, if a STA scanning/operating
on that channel receives the beacon/probe with RSSI equal to or lower than the ESS Report RSSI recommendation, there’s a good likelihood that, if the STA were to perform a scan, it would find some other APs/MLDs that might have better link quality. This cannot
per a “perfect” recommendation because the ESS Report is broadcast and the AP doesn’t know what bands/channels the STA supports (e.g. the “best” transition candidate might happen to be on a channel/band that the recipient STA does not support). But nevertheless,
it’s a good enough rough indication for this use case.
So I don’t think trying to be more accurate/granular specifically for MLDs really brings much benefit here.
Hi Thomas,
Thanks for your discussion. The Planned ESS for MLDs subfield can tell the associated
non-AP MLD whether there is neighboring AP/AP MLD to which it can transition base on the recommended RSSI threshold.
For the Edge Of ESS for MLDs subfield, If we consider that some non-AP MLD cannot support
some band, then it will not probe the info on that link. In this case, the non-AP MLD doesn’t need to probe all links of the AP MLD. That’s why I add this subfield.
Regards
Guogang Huang
Because the Planned ESS subfield shall be always set to 1 for the legacy STA if the AP MLD has more than one affiliated AP.
Not clear to me why that is a problem… Effectively it just means that the Edge of ESS and Recommended … RSSI Thresholds fields are actually defined (not reserved).
The value of Edge Of ESS For MLDs subfield = the value of the Edge Of ESS subfield of affiliated AP 1∨ the value of the Edge Of ESS subfield of affiliated AP
2∨…∨the value of the Edge Of ESS subfield of affiliated AP n
I’m not sure this complexity is really necessary. If the non-AP MLD is using multiple links, it can derive this value from the existing ESS Reports on each link,
without defining new fields.
Hi all,
I initiate this thread to discussion 1931r4. I would like to explain the setting of these subfields in the ESS Report element by using two examples.
Since all APs affiliated with the same AP MLD have the same SSID and belong to the same ESS, the existing Planned ESS subfield and Edge Of ESS subfield cannot
be used to assist the roaming for the non-AP MLD. Because the Planned ESS subfield shall be always set to 1 for the legacy STA if the AP MLD has more than one affiliated AP.
In the following, I will give two examples to explain the setting of these subfields. In scenario 1, since there is no neighboring AP or AP MLD, the Planned Of
ESS For MLDs subfield is set to 0. But for a legacy STA, since it can initiate a BSS transition between AP 1 and AP 2, the Planned Of ESS subfield is set to 1.
Scenario 1: Single AP MLD
In scenario 2, since a non-AP MLD can initiate a BSS transition among AP MLD 1, AP MLD 2 and AP 3, the Planned Of ESS For MLDs subfield is set to 1.
Scenario 2 with non-co-located multiple APs or AP MLDs belonging to the same ESS
When there is at least one affiliated AP that sets the Edge Of ESS subfield to 1, then the Edge of ESS For MLDs shall be set to 1, which can be expressed as the
following formula:
The value of Edge Of ESS For MLDs subfield = the value of the Edge Of ESS subfield of affiliated AP 1∨ the value of the Edge Of ESS subfield of affiliated AP
2∨…∨the value of the Edge Of ESS subfield of affiliated AP n
Please reply with your comments.
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