The present invention relates to a method and means in multi-carrier transceivers for online reconfiguration in the presence of changing noise and/or changing line conditions. The online reconfiguration function will update the bit loading and/or the transmit power of the different carriers when for instance the reception quality of certain carriers degrade, in order to preserve optimal performance.
Such an online reconfiguration mechanism is already known from section 10 of the ANSI T1E1.413-1998 Specification entitled “Network and Customer Installation Interfaces—Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) Metallic Interface”. Therein, online updating the number of bits assigned to carriers (named subcarriers in T1E1.413-1998) and changing the transmit energy of carriers, is called “Bit Swapping”. The known ADSL bit swap process makes use of the overhead control channel or so called AOC channel (Auxiliary Overhead Channel) to convey the bit swap request and bit swap acknowledge messages between the multi-carrier transceivers whose bit and power allocations will be updated as a result of the changing noise or line conditions. The AOC bytes are carried as overhead bytes in the ADSL frame structure. As such, they are also modulated on the carriers and therefore also vulnerable to changing noise and/or line conditions. If the noise is severe on the carriers that convey the AOC bytes, the bitswap commands themselves may be impaired. In that case, the multi-carrier transceiver will be unable to successfully complete online reconfiguration.
For implementations of ADSL compliant with the ANSI T1E1.413-1998 Specification, the robustness problem of the online reconfiguration mechanism is even worse because the AOC bytes are modulated on a fixed set of carriers, as a consequence of which noise at a few particular frequencies can disturb the transfer of bit swap commands. Moreover, the AOC bytes constitute the start of the data contents of a Discrete Multi Tone symbol, as a result of which the AOC bytes are always modulated on the carriers carrying the least bits (tone or carrier ordering principle described in section 6.7 of the above cited ANSI T1E1.413-1998 Spec). Those tones are usually lying at the border of the ADSL passband and do suffer most from inter-symbol and inter-carrier interference (ISI/ICI), making the AOC overhead channel and the online reconfiguration process even more vulnerable to changing noise or line conditions.
An object of the present invention is to provide a mechanism and means for online reconfiguration in multi-carrier transceivers with increased reliability and robustness over the known bit swap technique.
According to the present invention, this object is realized by the method for reconfiguration as defined by claim 1, and the multi-carrier transceiver as defined by claim 7.
Indeed, the bit swap (bit and transmit energy reallocation) for the information channel can only be carried out reliably if the overhead channel conveying the bit swap commands has sufficient quality. If the loop quality degrades due to changing noise or line conditions, the first priority should therefore be to improve the quality of the overhead channel by reconfiguration of the overhead channel. Thus, the bit swap should first be applied to carriers that carry the data corresponding to the bit swap protocol. Only when these carriers have been successfully protected will further bit swap of the information bearing carriers be performed. Obviously, this may require repeated transmission of certain bit swap commands.
It is noted that the reconfiguration mechanism according to the current invention has the best effect when the bit swap commands, or more generally the overhead bytes, have a fixed position in the multi-carrier frame as a result of which these overhead bytes will be mapped onto a fixed set of carriers. For ADSL systems operating in compliance with the above cited ANSI T1E1.413-1998 or its ITU equivalent (ITU Specification G.992.1), this holds true. For ADSL systems operating in compliance with a more recent ITU Specification (ITU Specification G.992.3) this is not necessarily the case, but it can be imposed if during initialization of the latter ADSL system an integer relationship between the multi-carrier symbols (the so called DMT symbols) and the codewords (the so called Reed Solomon codewords) is negotiated.
It is further noted that the term ‘comprising’, used in the claims, should not be interpreted as being limitative to the means or steps listed thereafter. Thus, the scope of the expression ‘a device comprising means A and B’ should not be limited to devices consisting only of components A and B. It means that with respect to the present invention, the only relevant components of the device are A and B.
Additional, optional features of the online reconfiguration method according to the present invention are defined by claim 2.
Indeed, a typical implementation of the invented reconfiguration method is initiated by sending a request for reconfiguration. The request tells the other transceiver which carriers carrying overhead data have to be modified. The transceiver receiving the reconfiguration request, responds with an acknowledge message indicating the point in time from which the new configuration will take effect. Both transceivers thereupon prepare for the bitswap and at the appropriate time modify the bit assignment and/or the transmit energy assignment for the overhead data bearing carriers. It is evident however that tens of variant message sequences can be thought off leading to the same result, which is the reconfiguration of the overhead channel between two multi-carrier transceivers in order to make this overhead channel more reliable and more robust. Also, the contents of the messages could be different in variant implementations of the online configuration method according to the present invention.
Another optional feature of the online reconfiguration method according to the present invention is defined by claim 3.
Thus, the transceiver sending the request for reconfiguration of the overhead channel shall start a time-out period from the moment it sends the request. When no acknowledgement has been detected within this time-out interval, the transceiver shall re-send the request for reconfiguration with the same parameter values, and shall re-start the time-out period. Only when an acknowledgement has been detected within the time-out interval shall the transceiver prepare for reconfiguration of the overhead channel at the point in time indicated in the acknowledge message.
Further optional features of the online reconfiguration mechanism according to the current invention are defined by claim 4.
Hence, similar to the implementation of the overhead channel reconfiguration in claim 2, the information channel reconfiguration might be initiated by a request from one transceiver followed by an acknowledgement from the other transceiver. The request contains the parameters for the reconfiguration, e.g. the carrier indexes of information bearing carriers to be modified, as well as the amounts of bits to be reassigned and/or amounts of transmit energy to be assigned to the respective information bearing carriers. The acknowledge message informs on the time moment where the reconfiguration of the information channel shall take place.
Yet another optional feature of the online reconfiguration mechanism according to the present invention is defined in claim 5.
The current invention is suitable for implementation in various multi-carrier systems like Discrete Multi Tone (DMT) based multi-carrier systems such as ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line) or VDSL (Very High Speed Digital Subscriber Line) systems, OFDM based multi-carrier systems, DWMT based multi-carrier systems, etc.
Still an optional feature of the online reconfiguration mechanism according to the invention is defined by claim 6.
Thus, complementary to first reconfiguring the overhead channel before reconfiguring the information channel, the overhead channel can be better protected by assigning a signal to noise ratio margin to the overhead bearing tones which is larger than the signal to noise ratio margin assigned to the information bearing tones. This can be done either during initialization or at reconfiguration.
Thus, the request for reconfiguration of the information channel will repeatedly be sent out until an acknowledge message is received within a predetermined time-out interval. Only when the acknowledge message is received within the time-out interval, shall the multi-carrier transceivers prepare for the change in bit assignments and the transmit energy assignments for the information channel.
The above mentioned and other objects and features of the invention will become more apparent and the invention itself will be best understood by referring to the following description of an embodiment taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:
The time diagram of
The bit swap process enables the ADSL transceivers ATU-C and ATU-R to change the number of bits assigned to the carriers and/or to change the transmit energy of the carriers without interrupting the data flow. Either transceiver, ATU-C or ATU-R, may initiate a bitswap upon detection of changing noise or line conditions. The bit swap procedures for the upstream and downstream directions are independent, but may take place simultaneously.
In the example scenario illustrated by
The central office transceiver ATU-C starts a time out period T-OUT from the moment it sends the overhead bitswap request message AOC-BITSWAP-REQ1. It receives no acknowledgement within this time out interval and therefor resends a copy AOC-BITSWAP-REQ2 of the overhead bitswap request message AOC-BITSWAP-REQ1 with the same parameter values, and restarts the time out interval T-OUT. When no acknowledgement is received within the time out interval T-OUT after a finite number of unsuccessful retries, the central office ADSL transceiver ATU-C can take recovery actions.
In
Upon receipt of the overhead bitswap acknowledge message AOC-BITSWAP-ACK, the central office ADSL transceiver ATU-C in
Thanks to the overhead bitswap, the robustness of the carriers that will convey the bitswap commands for the information channel reconfiguration has increased. It is possible that further overhead bitswap requests have to be sent before the entire overhead channel is sufficiently qualitative and reliable to continue with the online reconfiguration of the information channel. According to the invention, only when the carriers that carry the overhead data (AOC channel) or at least the carriers that carry the bit swap commands have been successfully protected, will further bit swap be performed. This may require repeated transmission of overhead bitswap request and acknowledge messages.
Once the overhead channel has been sufficiently protected, the central office ADSL transceiver ATU-C in
The remote ADSL transceiver ATU-R responds to the information bitswap request message INFO-BITSWAP-REQ with an information acknowledge message INFO-BITSWAP-ACK that contains a message header INFO-ACK-HDR, an acknowledge command INFO-ACK-CMD and a time field INFO-ACK-TIME, as depicted in
The central office transceiver ATU-C receives the information bitswap acknowledge message INFO-BITSWAP-ACK within the time out period T-OUT, and starts waiting until its superframe counter equals the value FRAMEn. Beginning with the next ADSL superframe, the central office transceiver ATU-C will modify the bit and transmit energy assignments as specified in the information bitswap request message INFO-BITSWAP-REQ. For example, CMD41 may require to increase the transmit power of the tone with index INDEX41 by 3 dB, . . . , CMD4p may require to decrease the amount of information bits assigned to the tone with index INDEX4p by 1.
Similarly, the remote ADSL transceiver ATU-R, upon transmission of the information bitswap acknowledge message INFO-BITSWAP-ACK, shall start waiting until its superframe counter has reached the number of FRAMEn, and shall then carry out the INFORMATION BITSWAP by modifying the bit and energy assignments to the information bearing carriers.
Depending on the loop quality degradation and the amount of carriers to be reconfigured, additional information bitswap request and acknowledge messages may have to be transmitted in order to improve the quality of the information channel between ATU-C and ATU-R to a satisfying level.
Complementary to the invention, the carriers that carry the overhead data could be extra protected during initialization or during one of the reconfiguration cycles by giving them extra signal-to-noise ratio margin with respect to the other tones. Current bit loading algorithms and bit swap protocols do not give special weight to the carriers that transport the reconfiguration commands. Implementing this feature would further enhance the chances that reconfiguration can be performed under severe noise constraints, and as a consequence further increases the stability of the multi-carrier system.
The above example describes in detail a bit swap procedure, i.e. online re-allocation of bits and power amongst the carriers. The basic principle of first improving the quality of the overhead channel conveying the reconfiguration messages before reconfiguring the information channel is however equally applicable to other types of online reconfiguration such as SRA or seamless rate adaptation (online reconfiguration of the aggregate data rate by modifying frame multiplexor control parameters as well as modifying the bits and gains parameters), DRR or dynamic rate repartitioning (online reconfiguration of the data rate allocation between multiple latency paths by modifying frame multiplexor parameters as well as modifying the bits and gains parameters), or even other types of online reconfiguration.
Also, the choice to describe the invented reconfiguration mechanism for the downstream direction, i.e. from ATU-C to ATU-R, is rather artificial. It is evident that the invention is equally applicable to the reverse direction, from ATU-R to ATU-C.
Although reference was made above to ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line) technology used for transmission over twisted pair telephone lines, any skilled person will appreciate that the present invention can be applied with same advantages in other DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) systems such as VDSL (Very High Speed Digital Subscriber Line), SDSL (Synchronous Digital Subscriber Line) systems, HDSL (High Speed Digital Subscriber Line) systems, and the like, or in a cable based, a fiber based or a radio based access system, where multi-carrier modulation techniques are used for transferring between two transceivers both an information channel and an overhead channel over a set of carriers or tones.
Furthermore, it is remarked that an embodiment of the present invention is described above rather in functional terms. From the functional description, it will be obvious for a person skilled in the art of designing hardware and/or software solutions for multi-carrier communications systems how embodiments of the invention can be manufactured.
While the principles of the invention have been described above in connection with specific apparatus, it is to be clearly understood that this description is made only by way of example and not as a limitation on the scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04290024.1 | Jan 2004 | EP | regional |