nanog mailing list archives

Re: Wireless (WiFi) MOS equivalent?


From: Scott Helms <khelms () zcorum com>
Date: Mon, 21 Mar 2016 07:35:52 -0400

Jim,

There isn't such an animal and that's because the notion of an opinion
score for voice is pretty easy to quantify, but a good WiFi experience
depends a lot more on what you find to be acceptable for your deployment
and that normally depends a lot on your budget.  What we do is determine
what our target metrics are and then measure to that, most of the
commercial APs and controllers can provide all this data, average speed,
clients per AP, average RSSI, number of associations and auths per minute,
and error counts.  The reason you can't just get an industry standardized
score is that while most conferences are happy if the average PHY speed is
over 6 mbps that's clearly bad in an enterprise service.


Scott Helms
Chief Technology Officer
ZCorum
(678) 507-5000
--------------------------------
http://twitter.com/kscotthelms
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On Wed, Mar 16, 2016 at 1:54 PM, Jim Wininger <jbotctc () gmail com> wrote:

Hello all,

Is there a WiFi equivalent to the VoIP MOS score?

We are looking for a way to measure performance of a fairly large WiFi
deployment.

We have 8000+ access points (All Cisco). WE have the standard Cisco tools
for managing the wireless network (ISE, Prime etc). But we are coming up
short with a way to “score” the network.

Does anyone have experience with this that might be able to help? How do
large conferences “measure” wireless service quality etc? We are already
doing end user surveys etc. We have “soft date”, we really need data points.

—Jim


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