IEEE 802.11u
IEEE 802.11u-2011 is an amendment to the IEEE 802.11-2007 standard to add features that improve interworking with external networks.
802.11 is a family of IEEE technical standards for mobile communication devices such as laptop computers or multi-mode phones to join a wireless local area network widely used in the home, public hotspots and commercial establishments.
The IEEE 802.11u standard was published on February 25, 2011.
Some amendments added to IEEE 802.11
Network discovery and selection
- Provides for the discovery of suitable networks through the advertisement of access network type, roaming consortium, and venue information.
- Generic Advertisement Service (GAS), which provides for Layer 2 transport of an advertisement protocol's frames between a mobile device and a server in the network prior to authentication. The access point is responsible for the relay of a mobile device's query to a server in the carrier's network and for delivering the server's response back to the mobile.
- Provides Access Network Query Protocol, which is a query and response protocol used by a mobile device to discover a range of information, including the hotspot operator's domain name ; roaming partners accessible via the hotspot along with their credential type and EAP method supported for authentication; IP address type availability ; and other metadata useful in a mobile device's network selection process.
QoS map distribution
This provides a mapping between the IP's differentiated services code point to over-the-air Layer 2 priority on a per-device basis, facilitating end-to-end QoS.For users who are not pre-authorized
currently makes an assumption that a user's device is pre-authorized to use the network. IEEE 802.11u covers the cases where that device is not pre-authorized. A network will be able to allow access based on the user's relationship with an external network, or indicate that online enrollment is possible, or allow access to a strictly limited set of services such as emergency servicesFrom a user perspective, the aim is to improve the experience of a traveling user who turns on a laptop in a hotel many miles from home, or uses a mobile device to place a phone call. Instead of being presented with a long list of largely meaningless SSIDs the user could be presented with a list of networks, the services they provide, and the conditions under which the user could access them. 802.11u is central to the adoption of UMA and other approaches to network mobile devices.