Fortress Technologies BreadCrumb Wireless Network Mobility through Meshing, Mesh a Definition

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Chapter 1. Introduction

Mobility through Meshing

The key component to a BreadCrumb Wireless Network is a technique known as Meshing. While this is generally handled automatically by BreadCrumb devices, complex deployment scenarios require a basic understanding of how BreadCrumb devices establish and maintain a mesh.

Mesh - A Definition

A mesh is a collection of network devices (in our case, BreadCrumb devices), each of which is connected to one or more other BreadCrumb devices. Data can move between BreadCrumb devices via these links, possibly passing through several intermediate BreadCrumb devices before arriving at its final destination.

The intelligence of a BreadCrumb Wireless Network is in how it adapts rapidly to the creation or destruction of the links in the mesh as devices are moved, switched OFF or ON, blocked by obstructions, interfered with by other devices, or otherwise affected. This adaptation takes place automatically and immediately as needed.

Note: Although all BreadCrumb devices can be Access Points, most Access Points do not provide any meshing capabilities. Traditional Access Points simply allow wireless devices within range to connect to a wired network; they do not extend range through other Access Points.

BreadCrumb Devices Mesh by Channel and ESSID

Two BreadCrumb devices establish a mesh link to one another when they share both a radio channel and an ESSID. The 802.11b radios used by BreadCrumb devices support 11 different channels for communication, numbered 1-11. By default, each BreadCrumb device radio is on channel 1, 8, or 11. Most BreadCrumb devices have two radios, using two of those channels.

An ESSID is essentially a name for a wireless network. By default, BreadCrumb devices use the ESSID "breadcrumb".

Example 1

Suppose you have three BreadCrumb devices, called A, B, and C. Each has two radios. BreadCrumb device A’s radios are on channels 1 and 8, B’s are on 8 and 11, and C’s are on 1 and 11. All three BreadCrumb devices are using the default ESSID of "breadcrumb". Assuming that all three BreadCrumb devices are within radio range of one another, the network will be connected like this:

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Contents For the BreadCrumb Wireless Network Release Rajant CorporationPage Table of Contents Configuration Examples Using BCAdminTroubleshooting List of Tables List of FiguresUser Information PrefacePurpose and Scope What is a BreadCrumb? IntroductionMobility through Meshing Mesh a DefinitionBreadCrumb Devices Mesh by Channel and Essid ExampleMeshing Example 1 Full Connectivity New Features Performance / Process Improvements Issues ResolvedKnown Issues Upgrading to VersionUpgrading to Version Installing / Upgrading BCAdminUpgrading BreadCrumb Firmware Flash Update Procedure for Version 2 and Version 3 Systems Version 3 Power InputUpgrading to Version Models XLV XLEAvailable BreadCrumb Models BreadCrumb MEModels External Connectors BreadCrumb WEBreadCrumb WE External Connectors BreadCrumb SEBreadCrumb SE External Connectors BreadCrumb XLBreadCrumb XL External Connector BreadCrumb XLVBreadCrumb XLV External Connectors BreadCrumb XLEBreadCrumb XLE External Connectors front Deployment Considerations AddressingChannel Assignments BreadCrumb Device AddressesDeployment Considerations Physical Placement and Other ConsiderationsLine Of Sight Distance Device power To Device power DistanceBest-Case Distances by Radio Power Altitude WeatherInterference Using BCAdmin Screen LayoutUsing BCAdmin Topology AreaAnatomy of the BreadCrumb Box BreadCrumb Device NameTime Since Last Update Anatomy of the Client BoxNumber of Peers Number of ClientsAnatomy of a Connection Line 802.11b Channel Line ColorBCAdmin Line Styles Legend Info Area Redundant Connection ExampleConfiguring Individual BreadCrumbs Link Detail TabsGeneral Settings NameType LocationUsing BCAdmin Color Battery Warning minutesManual GPS Settings Latitude and Longitude AirFortress Encryption AES-256 and Set Access IDRadio Settings Access PointChannel MeshReachback Settings Reachback InterfaceNone EthernetUsing BCAdmin Radio Radio 2 ad hocMode AutomaticUsing BCAdmin Gateway Ingress DisabledAlternate Gateway WEP KeyForwarding Settings 11. BreadCrumb Properties Forwarding TabSecurity Example Port Forwarding Configuration for a Web ServerKey Access Control Lists ACLsWEP Deny by default allow only permitted devices Allow by default deny only forbidden devicesAES-256 Encryption with AirFortress Registering AirFortressSetting the Access ID 14. Set Access ID WindowEncrypting Wired Traffic Zeroizing the Access IDHarris SecNET11 Enabling/Disabling AirFortress EncryptionBreadCrumb inactivity threshold seconds BCAdmin PreferencesSecNet11 Key Filling Mapping with Fugawi Tracker Connecting Remote Wired LANs Configuration ExamplesUnencrypted Point-to-Multipoint Encrypted Point-to-PointConvoy with UAV-Based Camera for Forward Observation Configuration ExamplesEncrypting a Video Feed Configuration Examples Troubleshooting BreadCrumb Wireless NetworkIndividual BreadCrumbs Sporadic Network ConnectivitySporadic Network Connectivity Issues BreadCrumb Device Cannot Connect to BcwnBCAdmin Restoring Default Settings Factory ResetTroubleshooting BreadCrumb-BCWN Connectivity IssuesFactory Reset Button Case Study Military Exercise in Thailand Joint Exercise NetworkBCAdmin screen during exercise showing BreadCrumb network Case Study Military Exercise in ThailandBalloon with Camera and BreadCrumb BCAdmin Glossary802.11b BreadCrumb / BreadCrumb DevicePending peer MAC AddressPeer Reachback Table A-1. LED Status Indications Appendix A. Status Indicator LEDColor Blinking/Solid Status Table B-1 .11b Channel Frequency Table Appendix B. Radio Frequencies802.11b Channel Frequency GHz Appendix C. Customer Service