Embodiments of the subject matter disclosed herein generally relate to methods and network devices in the context of cellular subscription management, more specifically, to using a hardware identifier when a device connects to a cellular network instead of using an International Mobile Subscriber Identity, IMSI.
In cellular networks, dedicated nodes are employed in the process of connecting client devices (in this document named user equipment, UE). For example, in the 4G, 3G and 2G standards, UE authorization, authentication and accounting is performed by a Home Subscriber Server (HSS) or a Home Location Register/Authentication Center (HLR/AuC) node. Conventionally, UE authentication is based on an International Mobile Subscribed Identity (IMSI) stored in a UE Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) or a Universal Integrated Circuit Card (UICC). Currently, network operators (i.e., providers of cellular network services) buy IMSIs in bulk from the country regulator. The network operators serve any UE whose IMSI (in SIM/UICC) matches an IMSI in their list of served IMSIs.
The conventional centralized architectural approach has worked satisfactorily for a controlled number of users. However, with the coming of the Internet of Things (IoT), billions of devices will be using cellular (i.e., wireless) services, so this centralized approach is no longer suitable. At least two problems are foreseeable.
First are security and scalability concerns. The increase in control plane messaging toward subscription management and authentication nodes due to the larger number of connected devices makes rogue devices more likely to be able to flood the control plane traffic. Distributed approaches to this kind of nodes in cellular networks (as described in WO 2007/052894 A1, entitled, “Distributed HSS (Home Subscriber Server) Architecture,” and in the article, “dHSS—distributed Peer-to-Peer implementation of the LTE HSS based on the bitcoin/namecoin architecture,” by R. P. Jover and J. Lackey, published in 2016 IEEE International Conference on Communications Workshops (ICC), Kuala Lumpur, 2016, pp. 354-359) try to mitigate this problem by distributing traffic and processing load and increasing security.
Second is an issue of subscription management complexity. In the IMSI-based approach, authentication of UE is based on a software-based IMSI stored a priori on the UE's SIM or UICC module. This requirement limits the UE authenticating to a home network operator in a specific region, and, outside the specific region, to a limited set of other network operators that have a roaming agreement with the home network operator. In the IoT context, this limitation leads to undesirable bottlenecks.
For example, given that UEs authenticate to specific cellular networks a priori determined, some mobile network operators become overloaded, even though there are other mobile network operators in the area with less network load that can accommodate additional UEs. In another undesirable scenario, some UEs may not be able to connect in areas where their home operator is not available, and where local mobile network operators do not have roaming agreements with the home operator.
In view of the above-identified weakness of IMSI-based approach, which problems will likely be amplified in the context of IoT, it has become apparent that improvements are desirable to overcome the foreseeable problems of this approach.
In order to avoid the problems of the IMSI-based subscription management, the individual UE's unique hardware identifier is used to connect the UE to a cellular network. The subscription management and authentication nodes have a function that associates the unique hardware identifier to one of the IMSIs available from the list of IMSIs served by the network operator. The subscription management and authentication nodes of participating operators form a trusted network share the status of active IMSIs. In some embodiments, a private blockchain replaces the traditional subscription management functionalities such as trust IDs and distributed ID management, subscription lifecycle management, billing management, etc.
According to an embodiment, there is a method performed by a network device in a cellular network for enabling connecting devices to the cellular network using hardware identifiers uniquely assigned when the devices are manufactured. The method includes storing subscriber records, each subscriber record including a hardware identifier of a device, receiving a target hardware identifier of a target device that has requested to attach to the cellular network, and, if the subscriber records comprise a record including the target hardware identifier, associating an IMSI, to the target hardware identifier.
A network device in a cellular network configured to enable attaching devices to the cellular network using hardware identifiers uniquely assigned when the devices are manufactured. The network device includes a data storing unit that stores subscriber records, each subscriber record including a hardware identifier of a device. The network device further includes a processor connected to the data storing unit and configured to receive a target hardware identifier of a target device that has requested to attach to the network, and, if the subscriber records comprise a record including the target hardware identifier, to associate an IMSI to the target hardware identifier.
According to yet another embodiment there is a network device in a cellular network configured to enable attaching devices to the cellular network using hardware identifiers uniquely assigned when the devices are manufactured. The network device includes a first module that stores subscriber records, each subscriber record including at least a hardware identifier of a device, a second module configured to receive a target hardware identifier of a target device that has requested to attach to the cellular network, and a third module configured to associate an IMSI to the target hardware identifier, if the subscriber records comprise a record including the target hardware.
According to another embodiment there is a method performed by a device having a hardware identifier uniquely assigned when the device was manufactured. The method includes transmitting an attachment request for connecting to a cellular network, the attachment request including the hardware identifier of the device, receiving a reply to the attachment request, and engaging in a procedure for connecting the device to the cellular network using information included in the reply.
According to yet another embodiment there is a device having a hardware identifier uniquely assigned when the device was manufactured. The device includes a cellular interface configured to transmit an attachment request for connecting to a cellular network, the attachment request including the hardware identifier of the device, and to receive a reply related to the attachment request. The device further includes a processor configured to generate the attachment request and communications related to attaching the device to the cellular network using information included in the reply.
According to another embodiment there is a device having a hardware identifier uniquely assigned when the device was manufactured. The device includes a first module that transmits an attachment request for connecting to a cellular network, the attachment request including a hardware identifier of the device, a second module configured to receive a reply related to the attachment request, and a third module configured to engage in a procedure for attaching the device to the cellular network using information included in the reply.
According to another embodiment there is a method performed by a network node in a cellular network, for attaching devices to the cellular network using hardware identifiers uniquely assigned when the devices are manufactured. The method includes forwarding an attachment request including a hardware identifier of a device, to a network device able to verify whether the device is registered to use the cellular network. The method further includes initiating a procedure for connecting the device to the cellular network based on a response to the attachment request indicating an IMSI associated with the hardware identifier.
According to yet another embodiment there is a network node in a cellular network configured to intermediate attaching devices to the cellular network using hardware identifiers uniquely assigned when the devices are manufactured. The network node includes a transceiver configured to receive from a device and transmit to a network device an attachment request including a hardware identifier of a device, the network device being able to verify whether the device is registered in the cellular network. The network node further includes a processor configured to initiate a procedure for connecting the device to the cellular network based on a response to the attachment request indicating an IMSI associated with the hardware identifier.
According to yet another embodiment, there is a network node in a cellular network configured to intermediate attaching devices to the cellular network using hardware identifiers uniquely assigned when the devices are manufactured. The network node has a first module configured to forward an attachment request received from a target device to the cellular network, the attachment request including a hardware identifier of a device and the network device being able to verify whether the device is registered to be serviced by the cellular network. The network node also has a second module configured to initiate a procedure for connecting the device to the cellular network based on a response to the attachment request indicating that an IMSI is associated with the hardware identifier.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate one or more embodiments and, together with the description, explain these embodiments. In the drawings:
The following description of the embodiments refers to the accompanying drawings. The same reference numbers in different drawings identify the same or similar elements. The following detailed description does not limit the invention. Instead, the scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims. The embodiments are described in the context of a cellular network, but may be applied for wired/hybrid networks. The described node functionality may be executed in a cloud environment.
Reference throughout the specification to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure or characteristic described in connection with an embodiment is included in at least one embodiment of the subject matter disclosed. Thus, the appearance of the phrases “in one embodiment” or “in an embodiment” in various places throughout the specification is not necessarily referring to the same embodiment. Further, the particular features, structures or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments.
In various embodiments described in this section, the authentication request submitted by a UE to connect to a cellular network includes a hardware identity assigned to the UE by the manufacturer. The hardware identity may be, for example, the MAC address of a radio module or a UICC identifier. The network operator associates the UE's hardware identity with an IMSI, which is then used to complete the authentication process. The user registry information (i.e., the UE's hardware identifier and the associated IMSI) may be distributed to the subscription management nodes of the cellular network.
The use of the hardware identifier provides the advantage of decreasing subscription management complexity, which is one of the cost drivers for massive machine-type communication, such as for Narrowband IoT, 3GPP LTE-M, etc. Another advantage is that it does not require storage of device IMSIs, and a hardware identifier can be reused for authentication in different networks. Since a UE may connect to different cellular networks in its range, load may be better balanced across mobile network operators. Yet another advantage is that the hardware identifier-based approach may easily be implemented in a back-compatible manner for existing cellular networks (e.g., conforming to 3G or LTE standards).
System 100 includes UEs 110a-c able to attach over the air to respective nodes 120a-c. User Registry and Authentication (URA) nodes 130a-c authenticate UEs. Logical 2G, 3G and 4G nodes have different names, and their functionality may be executed by more than one physical device. For example, in the case of an LTE network, the URA node is called the Home Subscriber Server (HSS), but in the case of a 2G or 3G network, it is called the Home Location Register (HLR), with an Authentication Center (AuC) function. HLR and AuC are usually co-located. Other functional entities (e.g., MME or MSC) located or not in distinct physical devices may operate between the nodes 120a-c and the URA nodes 130a-c.
A cellular module manufacturer entity, which has manufactured the communication module of UEs, assigns a unique hardware identifier to each UE. This hardware identifier can, for example, be the Media Access Control (MAC) address, and be stored in an URA 140.
Steps S111-S114 of the authentication process are performed by UE 110, steps S121-S125 by base station 120, and steps S131-134 by network device 130. At S111, UE 110 sends an attachment request including its hardware identifier to base station 120. Upon receiving this request, at S121, base station 120 sends an authorization data request including UE 110's hardware identifier to URA node 130.
URA node 130 associates UE 110's hardware identifier to an available IMSI and retrieves UE's public key at S131. The parameters received from base station 120 are used to generate a challenge at S132, which is transmitted together with the UE's public key to base station 120 at S133.
At S122, base station 120 encrypts the challenge using the UE's public key, and then sends the encrypted challenge and its public key to UE 110, at S123. It is assumed that the network and the UE knew UE's public key.
UE 110 decrypts the received encrypted message at S112, and then re-encrypts it using the base station's public key, at S113, to send the result to the base station at S114.
Upon receiving this second message from UE 110, the base station decrypts it at S124 and compares the result with the challenge at S125. If the comparison result is satisfactory, a standard authentication procedure using the IMSI may follow. Such standard authentication procedures are currently described, for example, at www.sharetechnote.com/html/Handbook_LTE_Authentication.html.
The subscriber record may include an encryption key of the target device. The encryption key and the IMSI may be further used for attaching the target device to the cellular network.
In some embodiments, the method further includes storing one or more IMSI activation or deactivation blocks in a blockchain. A blockchain is a distributed database, maintaining a continuously growing list of ordered records called blocks. Once added to the list, a block cannot be removed or modified. A block may indicate registration of a device (i.e., it is a subscriber record), or a subsequent activation or deactivation of an IMSI mapped to a device by a mobile network operator.
If block 400 is a subscriber record, then it includes subscriber information 420a, and if it is an activation/deactivation block, then it includes activation-related information 420b. Subscriber information 420a includes a UE public key field 422 and a time-stamp 424a. Activation-related information 420b includes an IMSI field 426, a status field 428 and a time-stamp 424b.
Selecting one of the IMSIs available to be associated by the network with a hardware identifier may be performed in different manners. The IMSI may be randomly selected, or the available IMSI may be stored as a first-in-first-out FIFO queue, which outputs the least-recently-used IMSI.
In one embodiment, the following mapping function may be used to select the IMSI using the hardware identifier. This mapping function selects the IMSI from an existing list of n available IMSIs IOPER={i1, . . . in}. The number n may vary. As previously mentioned a mobile network operator obtains IMSIs from a local regulator and at any time a subset of these IMSIs is used while the rest are available to be used. Returning to the mapping function, the hardware identifier to be mapped to an IMSI is an integer number, more specifically the IEEE 802 MAC addresses of 48-bit address space. Thus, the MAC address can have a decimal value between 0 (00-00-00-00-00-00) and 281,474,976,710,655 (FF-FF-FF-FF-FF-FF). Applying the modulo operation to the MAC address, MAC_Addr, yields a value decMAC which is smaller than n:
f(MAC_Addr)=decMAC mod n.
For example, if n=1265 is the number of available IMSIs and MAC_Addr=68-26-D8-87-92-BA is UE's MAC address, since f(68-26-D8-87-92-BA)=114516050809530 mod 1265=95, then the 95th IMSI in the list is selected to be associated to this hardware identifier. If MAC_Addr=C6-99-97-B0-A5-E2, the 1109th IMSI is selected because f(C6-99-97-B0-A5-E2)=218362977232354 mod 1265=1109.
According to another embodiment, the above-described methods may be performed by a network device 700 in a cellular network as illustrated in
A device configured to perform method 800 may have a structure similar to the one illustrated in
According to yet another embodiment illustrated in
A network node configured to perform method 1000 may have a structure similar to the one illustrated in
According to yet another embodiment illustrated in
Other embodiments of the methods described in this section are computer programs with instructions that make a data processing unit carry out these methods, respectively. The executable codes of the computer programs may be stored on computer-readable recording media.
The embodiments disclosed in this section provide methods and network devices that enable using hardware identifiers when devices are connected to cellular networks. This description is not intended to limit the invention. On the contrary, the exemplary embodiments are intended to cover alternatives, modifications and equivalents, which are included in the scope of the invention. Further, in the detailed description of the exemplary embodiments, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a comprehensive understanding of the invention. However, one skilled in the art would understand that various embodiments may be practiced without such specific details.
Although the features and elements of the present exemplary embodiments are described in the embodiments with particular combinations thereof, each feature or element can be used alone without the other features and elements of the embodiments or in various combinations with or without other features and elements disclosed herein. The methods or flowcharts provided in the present application may be implemented in a computer program, software or firmware tangibly embodied in a computer-readable storage medium for execution by a computer or a processor. This written description uses examples of the subject matter disclosed to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the same, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the subject matter is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims.
This application is a continuation, under 35 U.S.C. § 120, of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/626,733 filed on Dec. 26, 2019 which is a U.S. National Stage Filing under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Patent Application Serial No. PCT/EP2017/066162 filed Jun. 29, 2017 and entitled “METHOD AND DEVICES FOR HARDWARE IDENTIFIER-BASED SUBSCRIPTION MANAGEMENT” which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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