Short Interframe Space (SIFS), is the amount of time in microseconds required for a wireless interface to process a received frame and to respond with a response frame. It is the difference in time between the first symbol of the response frame in the air and the last symbol of the received frame in the air. A SIFS time consists of the delay in receiver RF, PLCP delay and the MAC processing delay, which depends on the physical layer used. In IEEE 802.11 networks, SIFS is the interframe spacing prior to transmission of an acknowledgment, a Clear To Send (CTS) frame, a block ack frame that is an immediate response to either a block ack request frame or an A-MPDU, the second or subsequent MPDU of a fragment burst, a station responding to any polling a by point coordination function and during contention free periods of point coordination function.[1]

Standard SIFS (μs)[1]
IEEE 802.11-1997 (FHSS) 28
IEEE 802.11-1997 (DSSS) 10
IEEE 802.11b 10
IEEE 802.11a 16
IEEE 802.11g 10
IEEE 802.11n (2.4 GHz) 10
IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.11ac (5 GHz), IEEE 802.11ax, IEEE 802.11be, IEEE 802.11bn 16
IEEE 802.11ah (900 MHz) 160
IEEE 802.11ad (60 GHz) 3

Implications for Software Radio

edit

Because most Software-Defined Radios use a host computer for processing, the SIFS imposes a difficult-to-achieve time constraint, as the latency for most SDR systems for the signal to traverse from the radio to the host and back to the radio, and vice versa, exceeds the SIFS requirements.

While in some cases it is possible to achieve SIFS requirements for testing, the practical approach is almost always to leverage the FPGA portion of processors common to many commercial SDRs.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "IEEE 802.11 - 2012" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on November 19, 2012.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Extended interframe space

Extended Interframe space (EIFS) is used in IEEE 802.11 based WLANs. If a previously received frame contains an error then a station has to defer EIFS

Point coordination function

Coordination Function DIFS Short Interframe Space Arbitration inter-frame spacing Reduced Interframe Space Extended Interframe Space "Point Coordination Function

EIFS

EIFS may refer to: Exterior insulation finishing system Extended interframe space EIF (disambiguation) This disambiguation page lists articles associated

CAN bus

are not preceded by an interframe space and multiple overload frames are not separated by an interframe space. Interframe space contains the bit fields

Video coding format

intraframe and interframe compression is that, with intraframe systems, each frame uses a similar amount of data. In most interframe systems, certain

Ilyushin Il-86

decks fore and aft of the centre section. Rectangular windows in most interframe bays, eight ICAO Type 1a passenger doors on the main deck and three more

IEEE 802.11n-2009

throughput because of 802.11 protocol overheads, like the contention process, interframe spacing, PHY level headers (Preamble + PLCP) and acknowledgment frames

Time-Sensitive Networking

according to IEEE 802.3 with a single IEEE 802.1Q VLAN tag and including interframe spacing, the total length is: 1500 byte (frame payload) + 18 byte (Ethernet