Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: Finding a place in an internet crowd.

  1. #1
    Senior Member registered user
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Columbia, Maryland USA
    Posts
    1,631

    Finding a place in an internet crowd.

    .
    I know the 2.4 GHz wifi band has eleven channels, but I think it has been shown
    that it is better to be on channel 1, 6 or 11 and not somewhere in-between.
    I assume it then is better to be on one of these three where your signal is
    better than other competing users on that channel. Better is a smaller negative
    dBm number. -35 is 'much better' than -80, for example.

    Knoppix's NetworkManagerApplet gives visual indications of competing user's
    signal strength, but does not help show who's on which channel. In my neighborhood,
    there are currently twenty-two internet subscribers. They have independently
    chosen to align themselves almost uniformly in only the three channels 1, 6 and 11.
    I found it handy to have a small alias program channel_1, to help me decide which
    channel to select for myself. As root, I put this in /etc/profile:
    Code:
    alias channel_1="sudo iwlist wlan0 scan | grep -e Freq -A 3 > text; less text | grep '(Channel 1)' -A 3 | grep -v key"
    Then, as knoppix when I enter channel_1, I get something like:
    Code:
    knoppix@Microknoppix:~$ channel_1
                        Frequency:2.412 GHz (Channel 1)
                        Quality=45/70  Signal level=-65 dBm  
                        ESSID:"belkin.594"
    --
                        Frequency:2.412 GHz (Channel 1)
                        Quality=21/70  Signal level=-89 dBm  
                        ESSID:"K7964"
    --
                        Frequency:2.412 GHz (Channel 1)
                        Quality=29/70  Signal level=-81 dBm  
                        ESSID:"HP-Print-57-Officejet Pro 8600"
    --
                        Frequency:2.412 GHz (Channel 1)
                        Quality=23/70  Signal level=-87 dBm  
                        ESSID:"E5JA2"
    --
                        Frequency:2.412 GHz (Channel 1)
                        Quality=23/70  Signal level=-87 dBm  
                        ESSID:""
    Obviously one may easily coopt 'channel_1' into 'channel_6' or 'channel_11' easily enough
    not to require anything more elegant or comprehensive.
    In this example, Channel 1 looks like a good choice for my Belkin router.

  2. #2
    Senior Member registered user
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Columbia, Maryland USA
    Posts
    1,631

    A fast upgrade:

    .
    Here's a modest refinement which works for 'all wifi channels', although
    in the US there's just 1 thru 11, and in my neighborhood, only 1, 6 & 11
    are used. I've replaced the former alias statement in /etc/profile with
    a similar, more general function definition. The function Channel is
    defined as follows:

    Code:
    Channel() { # Summarize current state of a wifi channel.
    sudo iwlist wlan0 scan | grep -e Freq -A 3 | grep '(Channel '$1')' -A 3 |
         grep -v key | grep -v Freq 
    }
    When I enter Channel 1, for example, I get the following, now:

    Code:
    knoppix@Microknoppix:~$ Channel 1
                        Quality=61/70  Signal level=-49 dBm  
                        ESSID:"belkin.594"
    --
                        Quality=26/70  Signal level=-84 dBm  
                        ESSID:"Amped_SR"
    --
                        Quality=24/70  Signal level=-86 dBm  
                        ESSID:"HP-Print-57-Officejet Pro 8600"
    --
                        Quality=23/70  Signal level=-87 dBm  
                        ESSID:""
    --
                        Quality=22/70  Signal level=-88 dBm  
                        ESSID:""
    --
                        Quality=22/70  Signal level=-88 dBm  
                        ESSID:"E5JA2"
    --
                        Quality=23/70  Signal level=-87 dBm  
                        ESSID:""
    Last edited by utu; 01-26-2013 at 10:09 PM.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  


Dell Poweredge R730xd 3.5 2x E5-2690 v3 2.6ghz 64gb H730 14x Trays 2x 1100w picture

Dell Poweredge R730xd 3.5 2x E5-2690 v3 2.6ghz 64gb H730 14x Trays 2x 1100w

$489.99



DELL R630 SERVER 8 x 2.5'' 2X E5-2680V4 32GB RAM IDRAC ENT & NDC 2X 495W PSU picture

DELL R630 SERVER 8 x 2.5'' 2X E5-2680V4 32GB RAM IDRAC ENT & NDC 2X 495W PSU

$169.95



Dell PowerEdge R620 Server 2x E5-2660 v2 2.2GHz 20 Cores 256GB RAM 1x 480GB SSD picture

Dell PowerEdge R620 Server 2x E5-2660 v2 2.2GHz 20 Cores 256GB RAM 1x 480GB SSD

$139.99



Dell PowerEdge R730XD 28 Core Server 2X Xeon E5-2680 V4 H730 128GB RAM No HDD picture

Dell PowerEdge R730XD 28 Core Server 2X Xeon E5-2680 V4 H730 128GB RAM No HDD

$389.99



Dell PowerEdge R630 Server 2x E5-2640v3 2.60Ghz 16-Core 64GB H330 picture

Dell PowerEdge R630 Server 2x E5-2640v3 2.60Ghz 16-Core 64GB H330

$182.65



Dell PowerEdge R620 Server - 256GB RAM, 2x8cCPU, 120Gb SSD/3x900Gb SAS, Proxmox picture

Dell PowerEdge R620 Server - 256GB RAM, 2x8cCPU, 120Gb SSD/3x900Gb SAS, Proxmox

$320.00



Dell PowerEdge R720xd 26HDD 300gb  2.5-inch E5-2697  X 2CPU 384RAM 7.2 Tb HDD  picture

Dell PowerEdge R720xd 26HDD 300gb 2.5-inch E5-2697 X 2CPU 384RAM 7.2 Tb HDD 

$180.00



Dell Poweredge R620 2x E5-2680 2.7ghz 16-Cores / 128gb / H710 / 2x Trays / 750w picture

Dell Poweredge R620 2x E5-2680 2.7ghz 16-Cores / 128gb / H710 / 2x Trays / 750w

$199.99



DELL PowerEdge R730 Server 2x E5-2698v4 2.2GHz =40 Cores 128GB H730 4xRJ45 picture

DELL PowerEdge R730 Server 2x E5-2698v4 2.2GHz =40 Cores 128GB H730 4xRJ45

$601.00



Dell Poweredge R720xd 2x Xeon E5-2670 2.6GHz 16-Cores  64gb  H710p  26x Trays picture

Dell Poweredge R720xd 2x Xeon E5-2670 2.6GHz 16-Cores 64gb H710p 26x Trays

$339.99