A Review of Software-Defined WLANs: Architectures and Central Control Mechanisms
Behnam Dezfouli, Vahid Esmaeelzadeh, Jaykumar Sheth, and Marjan Radi

TL;DR
This paper reviews the architectures and control mechanisms of software-defined WLANs, highlighting their advantages in managing dense deployments, mobility, and QoS, and discusses open research challenges.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview and qualitative comparison of SDWLAN architectures and centralized control mechanisms like association control and channel assignment.
Findings
SDWLANs enhance network control and QoS provisioning.
Comparison of control mechanisms reveals their features and metrics.
Identifies open research problems in SDWLAN control mechanisms.
Abstract
The significant growth in the number of WiFi-enabled devices as well as the increase in the traffic conveyed through wireless local area networks (WLANs) necessitate the adoption of new network control mechanisms. Specifically, dense deployment of access points, client mobility, and emerging QoS demands bring about challenges that cannot be effectively addressed by distributed mechanisms. Recent studies show that software-defined WLANs (SDWLANs) simplify network control, improve QoS provisioning, and lower the deployment cost of new network control mechanisms. In this paper, we present an overview of SDWLAN architectures and provide a qualitative comparison in terms of features such as programmability and virtualization. In addition, we classify and investigate the two important classes of centralized network control mechanisms: (i) association control (AsC) and (ii) channel assignment…
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