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WiFi Alliance certification: Wi-Fi Alliance is a non-profit organization that promotes Wi-Fi technology and
certifies Wi-Fi products if they conform to certain standards of
interoperability. Not every IEEE 802.11-compliant the device is submitted for certification to the Wi-Fi Alliance, sometimes because of costs associated with the
certification process.
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What is WiFi Alliance certification? |
The lack of Wi-Fi
logo does not necessarily imply a device is incompatible with Wi-Fi devices. The
Wi-Fi Alliance owns the Wi-Fi trademark. Manufacturers may use the trademark to
brand certified products that have been tested for interoperability.
History Early 802.11
products suffered from interoperability problems because of the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers had no provision for testing equipment for
compliance with its standards. In 1999, pioneers of a new, higher-speed variant, endorsed the IEEE 802.11b specification to form the Wireless
Ethernet Compatibility Alliance and branded the new technology Wi-Fi.
The group of companies
included 3Com, Aironet, Harris Semiconductor, Lucent, Nokia and Symbol Technologies. As key
sponsors, the alliance lists Apple inc., Comcast, Samsung, Sony, LG, Intel,
Dell, Broadcom, Cisco,
Qualcomm, Motorola, Microsoft, Texas Instruments, and T-Mobile. The charter for
this independent organization was to perform testing, certify interoperability of
products, and to promote the technology.
WECA renamed itself the
Wi-Fi Alliance in 2002. It is based in Austin, Texas. Most producers of 802.11
equipment became members, and as of 2012, the Wi-Fi Alliance had over 550
member companies. Wi-Fi Alliance extended
Wi-Fi beyond wireless local area network applications into point-to-point and personal area
networking, and enabled specific applications such as Miracast.
Wi-Fi certification The
Wi-Fi Alliance owns and controls the "Wi-Fi Certified" logo, a
registered trademark, which is permitted only on equipment which has passed testing.
Purchasers relying on that trademark will have greater chances of
interoperation than otherwise.
Testing is rigorous
because the standards involve not only radio and data format interoperability, but
security protocols, as well as optional testing for quality of service and
power management protocols.
From a Wi-Fi Alliance
paper on Wi-Fi Certification A focus on user experience has shaped the overall approach of the Wi-Fi Alliance certification program: Wi-Fi Certified products
have to demonstrate that they can perform well in networks with other Wi-Fi
Certified products, running common applications, in situations similar to those
encountered in everyday use.
This pragmatic approach
stems from three tenets, around which certification is centered: Interoperability
is the primary target of certification. Rigorous test cases are used to ensure
that products from different equipment vendors can interoperate in a wide
variety of configurations. Backward compatibility has to be preserved to allow
for new equipment to work with existing gear.
Backward compatibility
protects investments in legacy Wi-Fi products and enables users to gradually
upgrade and expand their networks. Innovation is supported through the
introduction of new certification programs as the latest technology and
specifications come into the marketplace.
These certification
programs may be mandatory or optional. Equipment vendor differentiation and
inventiveness are preserved in areas that are not covered by certification
testing. The Wi-Fi Alliance definition of interoperability goes well beyond the
ability to work in a Wi-Fi network.
To gain certification
under a specific program, products have to show satisfactory performance levels
in typical network configurations and have to support both established and
emerging applications.
A user that purchases a
Wi-Fi enabled laptop, for instance, would not be satisfied if the laptop
established a connection with the home network, only to get the throughput of a
dial-up connection. Similarly, subscribers
using a Wi-Fi-enabled mobile phone would be disappointed, if a voice the call could not go
through or was dropped. The Wi-Fi Alliance certification process includes three
types of tests to ensure interoperability.
Wi-Fi Certified products
are tested for: Compatibility: certified equipment has been tested for connectivity
with other certified equipment. Compatibility testing has always been, and
still is, the predominant component of interoperability testing, and it is the element
that most people associate with "interoperability".
It involves tests with
multiple devices from different equipment vendors. Compatibility testing is the
program component that helps to ensure devices purchased today will work with
Wi-Fi Certified devices already owned or purchased in the future. Conformance:
the equipment conforms to specific critical elements of the IEEE 802.11
standard.
Conformance testing
usually involves standalone analysis of individual products and establishes whether
the equipment responds to inputs as expected and specified. For example,
conformance testing is used to ensure that Wi-Fi equipment protects itself and
the network when the equipment detects evidence of network attacks.
Performance: the
equipment meets the performance levels required to meet end-user expectations in support of key
applications. Performance tests are not designed to measure and compare
performance among products, but simply to verify that the product meets the
minimum performance requirements for good user experience as established by
the Wi-Fi Alliance.
Specific performance
test results are not released by the Wi-Fi Alliance. Certification types The
Wi-Fi Alliance provides certification testing in two levels: Mandatory: Core
MAC/PHY interoperability over 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, and 802.11n.
Wi-Fi Protected Access 2
security, which aligns with IEEE 802.11i. WPA2 is available in two types:
WPA2-Personal for consumer use, and WPA2 Enterprise, which adds EAP
authentication.
Optional: Tests
corresponding to IEEE 802.11h and 802.11d.
WMM Quality of Service,
based upon a subset of IEEE 802.11e.
WMM Power Save, based
upon APSD within IEEE 802.11e
Wi-Fi Protected Setup, a specification developed by the Alliance to ease the process of setting up and
enabling security protections on small office and consumer Wi-Fi networks. Application
Specific Device, for wireless devices other than Access Point and Station which
has specific application, such as DVD players, projectors, printers, etc.
Converged Wireless
Group – Radio Frequency, to provide performance mapping of Wi-Fi and cellular
radios in converged devices. Wi-Fi Direct In October 2010, the Alliance began
to certify Wi-Fi Direct, that allows Wi-Fi-enabled devices to communicate
directly with each other, without going through a wireless access point or
hotspot.
Since 2009 when it was
first announced, some suggested Wi-Fi Direct might replace the need for
Bluetooth on applications that do not rely on Bluetooth low energy. References External
links Official website.
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