Dynamic frequency selection
Dynamic Frequency Selection is a channel allocation scheme specified for wireless LANs, commonly known as Wi-Fi. It is designed to prevent electromagnetic interference by avoiding co-channel operation with systems that predated Wi-Fi, such as military radar, satellite communication, and weather radar, and also to provide on aggregate a near-uniform loading of the spectrum. It was standardized in 2003 as part of IEEE 802.11h.
Radar detection mechanism
When starting operation, an access point automatically selects channels with low interference levels in a phase known as Channel Availability Check. During this phase, the access point is in a passive state scanning for radar signals. This commonly takes one to two minutes, but could take up to ten minutes. Thereafter, the access point performs In-Service Monitoring to detect active radar signals; if radar is detected, and the access point is configured to automatically select a channel, it broadcasts a switch-channel event to its clients and follows by switching the channel.The actual mechanism, durations, radar pulse pattern, power levels, and frequency bands on which DFS is enforced vary by jurisdiction. DFS is mandated for the 5470–5725 MHz U-NII band in United States by the FCC. DFS is mandatory for the 5250–5350 and 5470–5725 MHz bands in India.