QoS for WLANs according to IEEE 802.11e (WMM/WME)

With the extension to the 802.11 standard, 802.11e, Quality of Service can be provided for transfers via WLAN. Among others, 802.11e supports the prioritization of certain data-packet types. This extension is an important basis for the use of voice applications in WLANs (Voice over WLAN, VoWLAN).

The Wi-Fi alliance certifies products that support Quality of Service according to 802.11e, and refer to WMM (Wi-Fi Multimedia, formerly known as WME or Wireless Multimedia Extension). WMM defines four categories (voice, video, best effort and background) which make up separate queues to be used for prioritization.

The 802.11e standard sets priorities by referring to the VLAN tags or, in the absence of these, by the DiffServ fields of IP packets. Delay times (jitter) are kept below 2 milliseconds, a magnitude which is inaudible to the human ear. 802.11e controls access to the transfer medium with EDCF, the Enhanced Distributed Coordination Function.

Note: Priorities can only be set if the WLAN client and the access point both support 802.11e or WMM, and also if the applications are able to mark the data packets with the corresponding priorities.

An access point can activate 802.11e for each of its physical WLAN networks separately.





LANconfig: Wireless LAN > General > Physical WLAN settings > Performance

Command line: Setup > Interfaces > WLAN > Performance

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