IEEE 802.11I : 2004
Superseded
A superseded Standard is one, which is fully replaced by another Standard, which is a new edition of the same Standard.
A superseded Standard is one, which is fully replaced by another Standard, which is a new edition of the same Standard.
Hardcopy , PDF
06-12-2007
English
01-01-2004
1 Overview
1.2 Purpose
2 Normative references
3 Definitions
4 Abbreviations and acronyms
5 General description
5.1 General description of the architecture
5.2 Components of the IEEE 802.11 architecture
5.3 Logical service interfaces
5.4 Overview of the services
5.6 Differences between ESS and IBSS LANs
5.7 Message information contents that support the services
5.8 Reference model
5.9 IEEE 802.11 and IEEE 802.1X
6 MAC service definition
6.1 Overview of MAC services
7 Frame formats
7.1 MAC frame formats
7.2 Format of individual frame types
7.3 Management frame body components
8 Security
8.1 Framework
8.2 Pre-RSNA security methods
8.3 RSNA data confidentiality protocols
8.4 RSNA security association management
8.5 Keys and key distribution
8.6 Mapping EAPOL keys to IEEE 802.11 keys
8.7 Per-frame pseudo-code
10 Layer management
10.3 MLME SAP interface
11 MAC sublayer management entity
11.3 Association and reassociation
11.4 Association, reassociation, and disassociation
Annex A (normative) Protocol Implementation Conformance
Statements (PICS)
Annex C (normative) Formal description of MAC operation
Annex D (normative) ASN.1 encoding of the MAC and PHY MIB
Annex E (informative) Bibliography
Annex H (informative) RSNA reference implementations and
test vectors
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