The subject matter described herein relates to methods and systems for managing mobile subscribers in a wireless telecommunications network. More particularly, the subject matter described herein relates to systems, methods, and computer readable media for providing a home subscriber server (HSS) proxy.
In telecommunications networks that support mobile subscribers, there is a need to know or determine the current location of mobile subscribers so that calls, emails, short message service messages, or other data may be communicated to those mobile subscribers. In mobile telephone networks, there are network entities, usually servers, which maintain that information. These network entities may receive queries for the current location of a particular mobile subscriber, and may reply with the current or last known location of the mobile subscriber. The location is typically given in the form of the network address or ID of a switch, such as a mobile switching center (MSC), that is currently serving the mobile subscriber.
In second-generation (2G) telecommunications networks, the entity that manages this information is called a home location register, or HLR. In third-generation (3G) telecommunications networks, the entity that manages this information is called a home subscriber server, or HSS. Networks that use the session initiation protocol (SIP), such as Internet protocol multimedia subsystem (IMS) networks, also include an HSS.
Network 100 also includes an HSS 106, which contains subscription-related information, such as user profiles, performs authentication and authorization of subscribers, and can provide information about the physical location of the subscriber.
In the network illustrated in
As the number of subscribers in a network increase, however, it may be necessary to distribute the HSS functions across more than one HSS node.
Network 200, however, includes multiple HSS nodes, HSS1206A and HSS2206B, which hereinafter may be collectively referred to as HSS nodes 206, across which is distributed subscriber information. In order for I-CSCF 202 to determine which HSS node 206 to query, network 200 includes a subscriber location function node (SLF) 208. In the network illustrated in
SLF table 210 contains multiple rows, each row representing an entry in the table. Each entry maps a subscriber ID, shown in the left column of each row, to an HSS ID, shown in the right column of each row. In the example SLF table 210 illustrated in
In the network illustrated in
Thus, in the network illustrated in
The networks illustrated in
Network 400 includes a number portability database 402 for storing number portability information for subscribers. In the network illustrated in
In response to receiving Diameter redirect message 412, I-CSCF 202 issues Diameter location information request 416 to HSS3414. HSS3414 responds to I-CSCF 202 with a Diameter location information answer 418. From Diameter location information answer 418, I-CSCF 202 is instructed to forward the SIP INVITE message to a switch in the recipient network, SW_X 420. I-CSCF 202 forwards the SIP INVITE message, shown as SIP INVITE message 422, to recipient network switch SW_X 420.
There are disadvantages associated with the networks illustrated in
Another issue involves technology migration, such as where a subscriber has migrated from one network standard or protocol to another network standard or protocol. For example, in mixed 2G/3G/SIP/IMS networks, what was formerly a 2G subscriber may upgrade to a 3G device or want to access the network using a SIP-capable terminal. This may happen because a subscriber has changed network service providers (and is also likely to be a number portability candidate), but this may also happen as a network provider supports more, different, or better telecommunications standards. In a technology migration scenario, a subscriber whose information was formerly maintained by an HLR, for example, may now have that information maintained at an HSS. The networks described above have no means to check for this scenario.
Accordingly, in light of these potential disadvantages, there exists a need for methods, systems, and computer readable media for providing a home subscriber server (HSS) proxy.
Methods, systems, and computer readable media for providing a HSS proxy are disclosed. According to one aspect, the subject matter described herein includes a method for providing a home subscriber server proxy. The method includes, at a node separate from a home subscriber server in a telecommunications network, receiving, from a requesting network entity, a request for information maintained at a home subscriber server, the information being associated with a subscriber, and, in response to receiving the request for information maintained at a home subscriber server, providing the information associated with the subscriber to the requesting network entity on behalf of the home subscriber server.
According to yet another aspect, the subject matter described herein includes a system for providing a home subscriber server proxy. The system includes at least one database that includes number portability information, technology migration information, and information maintained at a home subscriber server; and a home subscriber server proxy node for receiving, from a requesting network entity, a request for information maintained at a home subscriber server, the information being associated with a subscriber, and, in response to receiving the request for information maintained at a home subscriber server, providing the information associated with the subscriber to the requesting network entity on behalf of the home subscriber server.
The subject matter described herein for providing a home subscriber server proxy may be implemented in hardware, software, firmware, or any combination thereof. As such, the terms “entity” or “module” as used herein refer to hardware for implementing the feature being described, and may additionally include software and/or firmware. In one exemplary implementation, the subject matter described herein may be implemented using a non-transitory computer readable medium having stored thereon computer executable instructions that when executed by the processor of a computer control the computer to perform steps. Exemplary computer readable media suitable for implementing the subject matter described herein include non-transitory computer-readable media, such as disk memory devices, chip memory devices, programmable logic devices, and application specific integrated circuits. In addition, a computer readable medium that implements the subject matter described herein may be located on a single device or computing platform or may be distributed across multiple devices or computing platforms.
Preferred embodiments of the subject matter described herein will now be explained with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals represent like parts, of which:
The subject matter described herein relates to methods, systems, and computer readable medium for providing an HSS proxy. Reference will now be made in detail to exemplary embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts.
In one embodiment, providing the information associated with the subscriber to the requesting network entity on behalf of the home subscriber server may include determining whether the subscriber has been ported to a recipient network, and if so, responding to the requesting network entity with information identifying a switch that is associated with the recipient network.
In one embodiment, providing the information associated with the subscriber to the requesting network entity on behalf of the home subscriber server may include determining whether the subscriber has been migrated to a different technology, and if so, responding to the requesting network entity with information identifying a switch that is associated with the migrated-to technology.
In one embodiment, providing the information associated with the subscriber to the requesting network entity on behalf of the home subscriber server may include determining that the subscriber has not been ported to a recipient network or migrated to a different technology; in this instance, HSS proxy 502 may querying a home subscriber server and send the result to the requesting network entity.
In the embodiment illustrated in
HSS proxy 502 may receive subscriber location information requests from entities within network 500 that process signaling messages that are associated with a mobile subscriber. In the embodiment illustrated in
HSS proxy 502 responds to the subscriber location information request by sending the subscriber location information to the requesting entity. Example responses include Diameter protocol messages, such as the Diameter location information answer (LIA). As will be described in more detail in
The location information provided by HSS proxy 502 may include the address or other identifier, such as a location routing number (LRN), a point code address, a uniform resource identifier (URI), an Internet protocol address, etc., of a node in the network that is currently serving the mobile subscriber or to which call setup messages, such as SIP INVITE messages, should be directed for the purpose of setting up a call with the mobile subscriber. In the embodiment illustrated in
In one embodiment, technology migration database 506 includes current technology registration information for dual mode subscribers and where HSS proxy 502 accesses the current technology registration information to determine a technology or network type (e.g., Internet protocol multimedia subsystem (IMS), long term evolution (LTE), global system for mobile communications (GSM), session initiation protocol (SIP), signaling system 7 (SS7), public switched telephone network (PSTN), etc.), for which the subscriber is currently registered.
In one embodiment, HSS proxy 502 and one or more of one or more of number portability database 504, technology migration database 506, and HSS 508 are components of a signal routing node, such as a SIP router.
In the embodiment illustrated in
In Table 1, the first column contains directory numbers (DNs) that HSS proxy 502 may compare to directory numbers from received DIAMETER messages.
The second column in the table indicates whether the subscriber is an in-network subscriber or whether the subscriber has been ported out. As indicated by the third row in the table, if the subscriber has been ported out, the only remaining data in the table is the location routing number (LRN) that corresponds to the network to which the subscriber has been ported. If the subscriber is an in-network subscriber, technology migration, HSS or HLR address, routing digits, and current technology registration information may be present.
The third column in the table includes technology migration information, which indicates the type of handset that the subscriber is using. In the illustrated example, the technology types that are listed are long term evolution (LTE), 3G-GSM, 3G-IS-41, and 3G-GSM/LTE for a dual mode subscriber.
The fourth column in the table includes the HSS or HLR address for in-network subscribers. For LTE technology subscribers, the address will be an IP address or domain name of an HSS that is currently serving the subscriber.
This information may be important because a network operator may have several HSSs in its network and thus the HSS proxy database may include the IP address of the particular HSS serving the subscriber.
The fifth column in the table includes LRNs for ported out subscribers and prefixes for in-network subscribers.
The sixth column of the table includes current technology registration information for dual mode subscribers. For example, in the last row of the table, the subscriber is a dual mode GSM/LTE subscriber and is currently registered as an LTE subscriber. It should also be noted that for this subscriber, there are two entries in the HSS or HLR address column, an IP address, IP2, for the HSS containing information for the subscriber's LTE registration and an HLR address point code1 (PC1) for the HLR containing the subscriber's 3G-GSM information. HSS proxy 502 would return either the point code or the IP address depending on whether the subscriber is currently registered as an LTE or GSM.
In one embodiment, HSS proxy 502 may perform the lookups or information accesses in the HSS proxy database in the following sequence:
At block 600, a home subscriber server proxy node receives, from a requesting network entity, a request for subscriber information maintained at a home subscriber server, the information being associated with a subscriber. For example, in the embodiment illustrated in
At block 602, in response to receiving the request for information maintained at a home subscriber server, the home subscriber server proxy node provides the information associated with the subscriber to the requesting network entity on behalf of the home subscriber server.
The operation of a network according to an embodiment of the subject matter described herein is described in
HSS proxy 502 then issues a technology migration query 708 to technology migration database 506 to determine whether the subscriber has been migrated to a different technology. In the embodiment illustrated in
HSS proxy 502 then issues LIR 712 to HSS 508. HSS 508 replies with LIA 714, which contains information identifying the switch that is currently serving the subscriber, e.g., SW1512A. HSS proxy 502 communicates the identity of SW1512A to the requesting network entity I-CSCF 510, e.g., via LIA 716. I-CSCF 510 uses this information and sends a SIP INVITE message 718 to the identified serving switch SW1512A. In one embodiment, HSS proxy 502 terminates LIA response 714 and generates a new LIA message 716. In another embodiment, HSS proxy 502 receives the LIA response from HSS 508. In yet another embodiment, HSS 508 sends an LIA response directly to the requesting network entity, e.g., I-CSCF 510.
According to one aspect of the subject matter described herein, HSS proxy 502 may correlate between TCP connections used by I-CSCF 510 and SCTP associations used by HSS 508 (and other HSS nodes in the network.) For example, HSS proxy 502 may establish TCP connections with I-CSCFs with which it communicates and establish SCTP associations with HSSs with which it communicates. When a diameter query from an I-CSCF arrives on one of the TCP connections, and the subscriber is not ported and not migrated, HSS proxy 502 may identify the SCTP association associated with the destination HSS and forward the query to the HSS (or terminate the query and send a new query to the HSS). HSS proxy 502 may correlate the outbound SCTP association with the inbound TCP connection based on the path taken by the received diameter query. When the diameter response is received from the HSS over the SCTP association, HSS proxy 502 may send the response to over the inbound TCP connection that is correlated with the SCTP association using the stored correlation information.
In
In
HSS proxy 502 then issues a technology migration query 908 to technology migration database 506 to determine whether the subscriber has been migrated to a different technology. In the embodiment illustrated in
Although
Likewise, the subject matter described herein is not limited to IMS networks but may also be applied to other types of networks, as shown in
In the embodiment illustrated in
HLR proxy 1002 may receive subscriber location information requests from entities within network 1000 that process signaling messages that are associated with a mobile subscriber. In the embodiment illustrated in
HLR proxy 1002 responds to the subscriber location information request by sending the subscriber location information to the requesting entity. Example responses include MAP messages, such as the send routing information acknowledge (SRI_ACK) message. Other message protocols may be used.
The location information provided by HLR proxy 1002 may include the address or other identifier of a node in the network that is currently serving the mobile subscriber or to which call setup messages, such as ISUP IAM, SAM, or BICC messages, should be directed for the purpose of setting up a call with the mobile subscriber. In the embodiment illustrated in
In one embodiment, technology migration database 1006 includes current technology registration information for dual mode subscribers and where HLR proxy 1002 accesses the current technology registration information to determine a technology type for which the subscriber is currently registered.
In one embodiment, HLR proxy 1002 and one or more of one or more of number portability database 1012, technology migration database 1014, and location database 1016 are components of a signal routing node, such as a signal transfer point (STP).
At block 1100, a home location register proxy node receives, from a requesting network entity, a request for subscriber information maintained at a home location register, the information being associated with a subscriber. For example, in the embodiment illustrated in
At block 1102, in response to receiving the request for subscriber information maintained at a home location register, the home location register proxy node provides the information associated with the subscriber to the requesting network entity on behalf of the home location register. The steps of this process are listed in detail starting at block 1104.
At block 1104, it is determined whether the subscriber has been ported to a recipient network. For example, in the embodiment illustrated in
At block 1106, in response to determining that the subscriber has been ported to a recipient network, the identity of a switch that is associated with the recipient network is provided to the requesting network entity. For example, in the embodiment illustrated in
At block 1108, in response to determining that the subscriber is not ported to a recipient network, it is determined whether the subscriber has been migrated to a different technology. In the embodiment illustrated in
At block 1110, in response to determining that the subscriber has been migrated to a different technology, the identity of a switch that is associated with the migrated-to technology is provided to the requesting network entity. In the embodiment illustrated in
HLR proxy 1002 then issues a technology migration query 1208 to TM database 1006 to determine whether subscriber CDP has been migrated to a different technology. In the embodiment illustrated in
HLR proxy 1002 then issues a MAP SRI message 1212 to HLR 1008. HLR 1008 responds with a MAP SRI_ACK message 1214 identifying the switch that is associated with the subscriber. In the embodiment illustrated in
Finally, HLR proxy 1002 communicates the identity of the serving switch to the requesting network entity, by sending MAP SRI_ACK message 1216 to MSC 1000, the message including the LRN of the switch that currently serves subscriber CDP.
In
HLR proxy 1002 then issues a technology migration query 1308 to TM database 1006 to determine whether subscriber CDP has been migrated to a different technology. In the embodiment illustrated in
Finally, HLR proxy 1002 communicates the identity of the serving switch to the requesting network entity, by sending MAP SRI_ACK message 1312 to MSC 1000, the message indicating that the subscriber has migrated to a switch that is identified by the included RN.
It will be understood that various details of the subject matter described herein may be changed without departing from the scope of the subject matter described herein. Furthermore, the foregoing description is for the purpose of illustration only, and not for the purpose of limitation.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/163,435, filed Mar. 25, 2009; the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 61163435 | Mar 2009 | US |