The present invention relates to radio communications, and more particularly, to radio resource management for a high speed shared channel.
Third generation (3G) Universal Mobile Telephone communications Systems (UMTS), based on Wideband Code Divisional Multiple Access (WCDMA) radio access, provide wireless access at high data rates and support enhanced bearer services not realistically attainable with first and second generation mobile communication systems. A WCDMA radio access network, like the UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network (UTRAN), also enhances quality of service by providing robust operation in fading environments and transparent (soft/softer) handover between base station/base station sectors. For example, deleterious multipath fading is used to improve received signal quality with RAKE receivers and improved signal processing techniques.
Demand continues for improved multimedia communications in the UTRAN including higher peak data rates, lower radio interface delay, and greater throughput. A High Speed-Downlink Shared Channel (HS-DSCH) has been proposed for use in WCDMA UTRAN networks to support higher peak rates on the order of 8-10 megabits per second. One of the ways the HS-DSCH achieves higher data speeds is by shifting some of the radio resource coordination and management responsibilities to the base station from the radio network controller, including one or more of the following briefly described below: shared channel transmission, higher order modulation, link adaptation, radio channel dependent scheduling, and hybrid-ARQ with soft combining.
Shared channel transmission and higher order modulation: In shared channel transmission, radio resources, like spreading code space and transmission power in the case of CDMA-based transmission, are shared between users using time multiplexing. A high speed-downlink shared channel is one example of shared channel transmission. One significant benefit of shared channel transmission is more efficient utilization of available code resources as compared to dedicated channels. Higher data rates may be also be attained using higher order modulation, which is more bandwidth efficient than lower order modulation, when channel conditions are favorable.
Link Adaptation and Rate Control: Radio channel conditions experienced on different communication links typically vary quite significantly, both in time and between different positions in the cell. In traditional CDMA systems, power control compensates for differences in variations in instantaneous radio channel conditions. Unfortunately, a larger part of the total available cell power is allocated to communication links with bad channel conditions to ensure similar quality of service to all communication links. But radio resources are more efficiently utilized when allocated to communication links with good channel conditions. For services that do not require a specific data rate, such as many best effort services, rate control or adjustment can be used to ensure there is sufficient energy received per information bit for all communication links as an alternative to power control. By adjusting the channel coding rate and/or adjusting the modulation scheme, the data rate can be adjusted to compensate for variations and differences in instantaneous channel conditions.
Channel Dependent Scheduling and Hybrid ARQ: For maximum cell throughput, radio resources may be scheduled to the communication link having the best instantaneous channel condition. Rapid channel dependent scheduling performed at the bases station allows for very high data rates at each scheduling instance and thus maximizes overall system throughput. Hybrid ARQ with soft combining increases the effective received signal-to-interference ratio for each transmission and thus increases the probability for correct decoding of retransmissions compared to conventional ARQ. Greater efficiency in ARQ increases the effective throughput over a shared channel.
High-speed data transmission is achieved by allocating a significant number of spreading codes (i.e., radio resources in CDMA systems) to the HS-DSCH.
Although not necessarily preferred, it is also possible to use code multiplexing along with time multiplexing. Code multiplexing may be useful, for example, in low volume transmission situations.
To achieve higher throughput and high peak data rates, a high speed shared channel may not use closed loop power control, (as dedicated channels do), but instead simply uses the remaining power in the base station cell up to a preset maximum. Because the high-speed shared channel is used along with other channels, radio resources must be allocated to the different channels efficiently and without overloading the cell with too high of a power level. The power level for channels other than the high-speed shared channel must be managed to leave sufficient power for the shared channel to have the desired, high throughput.
The code assignment affects the throughput on the high-speed shared channel as well as the available code space for other channels. An optimal code assignment depends on several factors, such as traffic load, the type of traffic, and current radio conditions. If too many CDMA codes are assigned to the high-speed shared channel, some of those codes may be underutilized, which is a waste of radio resources. If too few codes are assigned, the channel throughput over the high-speed shared channel is too low.
The radio network controller (RNC) performs radio resource management. Radio resources like spreading codes are allocated using one or more resource management algorithms. Other examples of such resource management include power/interference control, admission control, congestion control, etc. The radio network controller can better perform its resource management tasks if it knows the current resource status or use in the cell. One measurement useful to the radio network controller is how often the codes currently allocated to the high-speed shared channel are being used. The present invention provides measurements from the base station to the radio network controller about the usage of the set of codes currently allocated to a particular channel, like a high speed shared channel. Based on those measurements, the RNC can adjust (if necessary) the code allocation to the high speed shared channel.
Another managed radio resource that needs judicious allocation to different radio channels in a base station cell is radio transmission power level.
Some base stations already provide measurements to the RNC, e.g., channel quality estimates for link adaptation. But such base station measurements do not take into account the special nature of a high-speed downlink shared channel (HS-DSCH). Indeed, one typical base station measurement provided to the RNC is total transmitted carrier power for all downlink channels. That measurement would include the transmission power for the high-speed shared channel. Including the high-speed downlink shared channel in the total transmitted carrier power measurement presents a problem. First, the HS-DSCH, by design, uses all of the remaining transmission power up to the cell maximum. Second, the RNC uses the total transmission power measurement to decide whether to set up new dedicated radio channels. Consequently, the RNC will always conclude that the cell is operating at full capacity as long as there is a moderate traffic demand on the high-speed downlink shared channel. For the same reason, channel requests will be denied as soon as there is even moderate traffic demand on the high-speed downlink shared channel. Nor is it possible in this situation to determine an accurate congestion level in the cell. Because the high speed shared channel uses the remaining cell power, the total carrier power measurement will always be equal or close to the cell maximum erroneously suggesting that the cell is always fully loaded.
The present invention provides a cell transmission power measurement to a radio resource manager that specifically takes into account a high-speed shared channel even where that channel is designed to use the remaining transmission power in a cell up to a cell maximum. The radio network controller is informed when a high speed shared channel has little or no power available because of increasing power demands required by channels other than the high speed shared channel. Other parameters may also be measured at the base station that may be useful to a radio resource controller.
One or more base station measurements provided to a radio resource manager allows it to optimally access, allocate, and/or regulate radio resources, like spreading codes and transmission power, to different types of radio channels supported in the cell, including a specialized channel like a high-speed shared channel. Such measurements include one or more of the following: other-channel power, HS-DSCH code usage, transport format usage, average active load, empty buffer, excess power, and/or similar parameters.
In one example embodiment, transmission power is measured for signals transmitted over first radio channels that do not include measurement of a transmission power for signals transmitted over a second radio channel, e.g., a high speed shared channel. CDMA code usage may also he measured for the second channel during a predetermined time period. One or both of the measured transmission power and the measured CDMA code usage are reported to a radio resource controller which may take appropriate resource management action(s). In a preferred example, the first and second channels are downlink radio channels from the CDMA mobile communications network to one or more of the mobile radios. The first radio channels include one or more of the following: one or more dedicated channels, one or more common channels, one or more control channels, and one or more broadcast channels. The second channel is a high speed downlink shared channel.
The measured transmission power may be used to perform radio resource control such as power allocation to the second radio channel and/or the first radio channels, code allocation to the second radio channel and/or first radio channel, congestion control, and admission control. The measurement also alerts the radio resource controller to situations where the power being used by the other channels leaves insufficient or rapidly decreasing power for the HS-DSCH. The radio resource controller may take appropriate action to reallocate power resources to ensure there is sufficient power for the HS-DSCH to function.
Using the measured CDMA code usage information, a determination may be made whether CDMA codes currently allocated to the second radio channel are being efficiently used. If not, the current CDMA code allocation for the second radio channel is changed. In one implementation, the predetermined time period includes plural transmission time intervals (TTIs). The number of TM that a CDMA code is used for the second radio channel during the determined time period is measured. Alternatively, a number of TTIs that a set of the CDMA codes is used for the second radio channel during the predetermined time period may be measured. The CDMA code usage measurement may be reported in any number of fashions. In one example, the code usage is reported to the resource manager as a histogram.
Other example base station measurements may be used alone or in combination with each other and/or those measurements described above. For example, a number of mobile radio users may be measured that currently have data to transmit over the high speed shared channel in a base station buffer at a data transmission scheduling time for the high speed shared channel. The measured number corresponds to an active load and is provided to a radio network controller for use in managing a load on the high speed shared channel. A buffer monitor may be used to measure an amount of data being buffered per high speed shared channel user. A number of high speed shared channel transmission time intervals (TTIs) is determined over a measurement period when the measured amount of buffered data reaches zero or is below a threshold. The measured number can be used to (re)configure the high speed shared channel. An excess power monitor may be used to measure a first power level actually used for transmission to a mobile radio user over the high speed shared channel and determine a second power level required for reliable transmission to the mobile radio user over the high speed shared channel. The difference between the first and second power levels is calculated and used in allocating resources associated with the high speed shared channel.
The present invention enables efficient radio resource management without excessive signaling. By accounting for the specific characteristics of a particular type of channel, like a high-speed shared channel, one or more measurements in accordance with the present invention permits an accurate estimate of current cell conditions. As a result, a radio resource manager can better control cell congestion, admit new users to the cell, block new users, or even drop existing users, if necessary. Actions can be taken to ensure that maximum power limitations are not exceeded before the maximum power is reached which would otherwise result in unpredictable signaling distortion and poor signal quality. Moreover, the invention allows the radio resource controller to ensure the high-speed shared channel has enough resources to fulfill its job as a high-speed shared channel. Since spreading codes are a limited resource in a CDMA system, an optimal code allocation is assured to various channels, which is particularly advantageous for a high-speed shared channel. Proper code allocation to a high-speed shared channel ensures optimal performance of that channel without under-utilizing or otherwise wasting radio resources.
The foregoing and other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention may be more readily understood with reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
In the following description, for purposes of explanation and not limitation, specific details are set forth, such as particular embodiments, procedures, techniques, etc. in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced in other embodiments that depart from these specific details. For example, while the present invention is described in an example application to a CDMA-based cellular system that uses a high-speed downlink shared channel, the present invention may be employed in any cellular system having different types of channels.
In some instances, detailed descriptions of well-known methods, interfaces, devices, and signaling techniques are omitted so as not to obscure the description of the present invention with unnecessary detail. Moreover, individual function blocks are shown in some of the figures. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the functions may be implemented using individual hardware circuits, using software functioning in conjunction with a suitably programmed digital microprocessor or general purpose computer, using an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), and/or using one or more digital signal processors (DSPs).
The present invention finds advantageous, but still example, application to a CDMA mobile communications network such as that shown at reference numeral 10 in
System 10 includes different types of radio channels: one or more dedicated channels, one or more common channels, one or more broadcast channels, and a high speed shared channel such as a high speed downlink shared channel (HS-DSCH). Although an HS-DSCH is used in the examples below, the invention is not limited to HS-DSCHs. Base station 24 has a particular number of spreading codes available for use. See the example code tree with a spreading factor of 16 shown in
Similarly, each base station cell is assigned a maximum downlink radio transmission power level. Transmission power is distributed amongst the various channels in the cell. In the power distribution shown in
The high speed channel controller 32 may perform the various functions described above for a the high speed downlink shared channel such as shared channel transmission, higher order modulation, link adaptation, radio channel dependent scheduling, and hybrid-ARQ with soft combining. Particularly, the high speed channel controller 32 controls fast scheduling of transmissions (and retransmissions) over the high speed downlink shared channel in each transmission time interval (TTI). The high speed controller 32 preferably allocates all of the codes allocated to the high speed downlink channel, e.g., twelve codes in the code tree of
In a first general example embodiment, one or more measurements are made and reported by the base station and used by a resource controller, which in this non-limiting example, is located the RNC. Refer to the Radio Resource Management for a High Speed Downlink Shared Channel procedures shown in flowchart form in
The base station sends to the RNC one or more of the base station measurements, and the resource controller 22 in the RNC uses that measurement information to perform power allocation and perhaps power control on the dedicated channels based upon the reported measurements. It also adjusts spreading code allocation adjustments based upon the reported measurements. The admissions controller 18 uses these measurements as a factor in determining whether to admit new call requests. The load controller 20, with this same information, determines whether congestion/load control is required in this cell (block 42).
Other Channel Power: Other channel power is transmission power attributable to transmissions made over one or more channels other than the high speed downlink shared channel. In this example, it includes the power of all channels but the high speed downlink shared channel. These channels may include, for example, one or more dedicated channels dedicated to a connection between the UTRAN 14 and the UEs 34, one or more common channels shared by the mobile radios, one or more control channels, and one or more broadcast channels. Other channel power may be measured by the power monitor 27 in the example manner described in conjunction with
Example Other Channel Power Measurement procedures are illustrated in flowchart form in
The power allocated to the high speed downlink shared channel is controlled so that the remaining power in the base station cell is used without exceeding (at least not significantly) the maximum power designed for that cell (block 56). Other power control operations such as power control for one or more of the dedicated channels, congestion control, and/or admission control may be performed using the total power measurement. In addition, the base station preferably notifies the RNC when there is little or no transmission power available for the high speed downlink shared channel.
The transmitted signal is the sum of the signals from all individual physical channels, including common physical channels, dedicated physical channels, and shared physical channels (in particular the high-speed shared physical channel). The preferred, example implementation is to sum all signals except from the shared physical channel(s). The other channel power is measured by taking the average of the squared chip magnitudes of the signal sum. The signal to be transmitted is formed by adding the HS-DSCH signal to that signal sum.
Alternatively, the power measurement can be formed as a sum of several individual power measurements made on individual channel signals, or on sums of subsets of non-shared channel signals. This can be advantageous if the summing of the signals in an implementation must be done in a certain order different from the one described above. Individual power measurements are made by averaging the squared chip magnitudes of the individual channel signals or of the subsets.
If the individual power measurements are performed on individual channel signals (and not on subsets), the power measurements may be generated more easily based on knowledge of the configured transmission power and the current usage of each channel. The measured power value of an individual channel signal is then formed as the product of the squared gain factor for that signal and the activity factor for that channel. The activity factor is the ratio of the number of actually transmitted symbols to the total number of symbols.
The total other channel power is provided to the RNC as indicated. The total other channel power is also summed in a summer 74 with the power of the high speed downlink shared channel. Although the HS-DSCH is not power controlled in the same manner as dedicated channels, the power must be set according to the power needed for other channels. Because the HS-DSCH uses the remaining power, which varies over time, the HS-DSCH power also varies. Thus, the PC factor for the HS-DSCH depends on the measured, non-HS-DSCH power. The sum of all downlink channels including the HS-DSCH is processed in the signal and radio processing block 76 and transmitted via antenna 78.
HS-DSCH Code Usage/Transport Format Usage: The high speed channel code usage monitor 28 measures the HS-DSCH code usage over a predetermined time period. A code resource/transport format usage measurement procedure is illustrated in flowchart form in
The code usage data detected by the monitor 28 and/or the transport format usage data detected by the monitor 29 for the predetermined time period is provided to the RNC. In one non-limiting example, the code usage information and/or the transport format usage data may be delivered in the form of a usage histogram. The radio resource controller (RRC) 22 in the RNC 16 determines whether to change the code allocation for the high speed downlink shared channel based on that code usage data or the transport format based on that transport format usage data (block 84).
The HS-DSCH code usage measurement may be generalized and expressed statistically as a function of the transport formats used. Based on certain available information, such as buffer status, channel conditions, available power resources, etc., the high speed channel controller 33 selects one of the transport formats. During a defined time interval, the base station transport format usage monitor 29 counts the number of times each transport format is used for the HS-DSCH. The result is a two-dimensional histogram describing for each transport format the number of times this transport format is used. The measurement can either be the two-dimensional histogram or a function thereof.
In a preferred, example embodiment, groups of transport formats are defined and only the number of times any transport format within this group is used is reported. In
As an alternative to reporting the number of times each group is used, the fraction of TTIs in each transport format group can be measured or the proportion of time that each transport format group is used. A relative measurement, e.g., the number of times one transport format group is used in relation to another transport format group, may be used. Furthermore, the statistics may be collected and reported individually for several data streams with different priorities. Individual statistics for each priority level used for packet data streams for the HS-DSCH are reported. In this situation, the RNC may be configured to act only on measurements for streams for which it wants to guarantee a certain quality of service.
Average Active Load: The active load for the HS-DSCH at a certain time instant is the number of users the high speed channel controller 33 can select between at that time instant. As indicated in the average active load measurement flowchart shown in
Empty Buffer: At each scheduling instant, the high speed channel controller 33 selects a suitable transport format, including the payload size, for the user(s) assigned to the HS-DSCH for the upcoming TTI. The payload size depends on the radio channel quality, i.e., a higher (lower) channel quality supports a larger (smaller) payload, and on the amount of data available in the base station buffers. Referring to the flowchart of
Excess Power. Excess power is the difference between the power actually used for a transmission to a user and the power required for sufficiently reliable transmission that user with the selected transport format. As shown in the flowchart in
An excess power example is illustrated in the graph shown in
As an alternative to specifying a single excess power measurement for the HS-DSCH, the excess power measurement may be defined per transport format or per transport format group. The transport format statistics described above can be used to generate “transport format and resource usage” statistics. So in addition to counting the number of times a certain transport format is used, the average excess power for this transport format is also recorded.
While the present invention has been described with respect to particular embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the present invention is not limited to these specific exemplary embodiments. Different formats, embodiments, and adaptations besides those shown and described as well as many variations, modifications, and equivalent arrangements may also be used to implement the invention. Therefore, while the present invention has been described in relation to its preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that this disclosure is only illustrative and exemplary of the present invention. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only by the scope of the claims appended hereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10371199 | Feb 2003 | US |
Child | 13712174 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13712174 | Dec 2012 | US |
Child | 15004407 | US |