The present invention relates to broadband digital transmission networks, particularly although not exclusively, Digital Video Broadcast Networks.
Digital broadband transmission networks are known. An example of such a network enjoying popularity in Europe and elsewhere world-wide is Digital Video Broadcast (DVB) which, in addition to the delivery of televisual content, is also capable of delivering data. Another example of a broadband digital transmission network is that defined by the Advanced Television Systems Committee (ATSC). Both ATSC and DVB utilise a containerisation technique in which content for transmission is placed into MPEG-2 packets which act as data containers. Thus, the containers can be utilised to transport any suitably digitised data including, but not limited to High Definition TV, multiple channel Standard definition TV (PAL/NTSC or SECAM) and, of course, broadband multimedia data and interactive services.
In addition to the content, the transmissions of a typical broadband digital transmission also contain metadata describing the content being presently delivered together with content intended to be transmitted in the near future. The metadata that describes the said content is referred to as Service Information (SI). In the DVB systems, the DVB Service Information protocol as specified in the DVB Service Information specification (EN 300 468) and presently available for download from www.dvb.org can be used for transmitting this service information; however, the concept of service information is not limited to using the said DVB protocol. The service information is typically used in a receiver for digital broadband transmission for providing electronic programme guides (EPG) to the user on her display. Depending on the capabilities of a receiver, the user may be able to select programming for viewing, set reminders, and browse by genre, time or channel. In view of the demands placed upon a receiver as exemplified by the needs set out above, the power requirements of a receiver can be quite onerous, which is particularly the case for a mobile terminal equipped to receive digital broadband transmissions.
Thus, according to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a time division multiplexing method for a communication network, the method comprising receiving content in the form of stream, reformatting said content as a first series of bursts discontinuous in time and generating a further series of bursts for inclusion in a transport stream with said first series of bursts, wherein said further series of bursts comprises copies of at least some of said first series of bursts.
Preferably, a set of Quality of Service (QoS) parameters are selected to match the requirements of a terminal population which may then be used to determine the periodicity and number of copies of a first burst. Thus where the terminal population is made up of terminals having a relatively large memory, then repeat bursts may be spread over a longer time period than for terminal populations having a relatively smaller memory. In this way, the sensitivity of the terminal to long period errors is reduced. In those terminal populations where the internal power source has a relatively limited capacity, the QoS parameters may be adjusted so that repeat bursts immediately follow the original burst, thereby maximising the time for which the receiver may be switched off. It will be further apparent that the QoS parameters may be varied even during a transmission so as to provide content in a form suitable for different populations of terminals. It will be appreciated that the content may be delivered in both continuous and discontinuous streams. The invention contributes to the delivery of high quality, high bandwidth content to users in any one of three transmission modes namely broadcast (one to all), multicast (one to many) or unicast, (one to one). In addition, the invention seeks to overcome the inherent disadvantage in the delivery of such content over simplex wireless networks namely the absence of a return channel. In any event, even were such a return channel available, perhaps via a different transmission network or medium, data recovery based on requests carried over such a return channel could be very inefficient due to the potentially huge number of users.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a time division multiplexing method for a communication network, the method comprising receiving content in the form of a first series of bursts discontinuous in time and generating a further series of bursts for inclusion in a transport stream with said first series of bursts, wherein said further series of bursts comprises copies of at least some of said first series of bursts.
Preferably, the content is delivered in a burst format to the head end. Advantageously, the content provider or other another entity having responsibility for the Quality of Service will define a set of QoS parameters for the content. The head end may then use the QoS parameters in the step of generating said further set of bursts.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of generating a transport stream for transmission by a communication network, the method comprising generating for inclusion in said transport stream a series of discrete bursts of a first bandwidth, said bursts including content corresponding to content delivered in a continuous stream of a second, narrower bandwidth wherein said transport stream further includes copies of at least some of said bursts.
Advantageously, the method may be applied to each transport stream delivered to a head end for transmission by the network. Thus, rather than the network transmitting content in a plurality of continuous streaming channels, the content may: be transmitted in a burst mode. Consequently, a receiver in the terminal need only be active during those bursts relevant to the transport stream being received. The periodicity and number of repeats or copies of the series of discrete bursts may be determined by reference to a set of QoS parameters which may be defined by the content provider.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of compensating for errors in a time division multiplex transport stream received in a digital broadband transmission, the method comprising extracting a first burst from said transport stream, identifying those packets contained in said burst having errors and where said errors are present extracting a further burst from said transport stream and replacing bad packets in said first burst with corresponding packets from said further burst.
Advantageously, the provision of a further identical burst improves the QoS as a terminal operating in accordance with the method is able to receive the same content a number of times and thus, where bad packets are received, the terminal is able to replace such failed portions of a burst from packets received subsequently containing the same content. It will also be appreciated that where a burst is formed from multiplicands of MPE packets, a terminal can identify an MPE packet from its MAC address. The terminal can also calculate CRC/checksum of individual MPE packets. Additionally, because the each time sliced portion of content is available from a number of bursts, a terminal can, on initially receiving a transport stream, receive a first burst, which can be an original, or a copy of said original bursts and by so doing the terminal can reduce service start-up time.
According to a yet further aspect of the present invention, there is provided a client for receiving broadband digital transmissions, said client including a receiver, a filter, a controller and a memory, wherein said filter is operable to extract a burst from a first series of bursts in a transport stream, the controller being operable to identify packets contained in said burst and to further identify those packets having errors and to store said packets in said memory such that where an error is present in a packet, said filter is operable to extract at least a portion of a further burst from said transport stream, the controller being operable to identify packets contained in said further burst and to identify those packets contained in said further burst having errors such that a said packet contained in said memory having an error is replaced by a corresponding packets identified in said further burst, provided said corresponding packet has not been identified as having an error. Such a terminal is particularly suited to receiving transmissions from a wireless network in which there is no return channel such as an IP datacast network.
Such a network includes digital broadband transmission networks such utilising MPEG-2 multi-protocol encapsulation, for example DVB and ATSC networks. By implementing the invention at as low a level as possible in the network side multiplex and receiver demultiplex, processing demands on the receiver controller may be minimised.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
a, 3b and 3c are all graphical examples of a transport stream in accordance with an embodiment of the invention;
In the following, although reference is made to a terrestrial digital video broadcasting network (DVB-T), it will be clearly understood that the invention is applicable to any such digital broadband data transmission network and is not therefore intended to be limited by references to DVB-T. Similarly, references to System Information (SI) and Multi-Protocol Encapsulation (MPE) are also not intended to be limiting. Furthermore, the term transmission may be understood in the following to indicate a broadcast (one to all), multicast (one to many) or unicast (one to one), as required. In addition, the terms client and terminal are intended to used interchangeably.
Referring to
At the head-end 150, a number of television channels 154 and 156 are multiplexed together with a number of data channels 158 and 160 by a multiplexer 152. In addition to this, service information (SI) 162, which contains details of each of the other multiplexed channels, is also input to the multiplexer 152, provided by a SI generator 165. The multiplexer creates a single, multiplexed, signal 166 which contains all of the separate channels 154, 156, 158 and 160, along with the SI 162. The multiplexed signal 166 is transmitted via an antenna 164, across a single physical transmission channel, and received at an antenna 102 of a client 106 in the form of a mobile terminal. In the case of DVB-T, the transmission channel is a terrestrial transmission channel. However, the transmission channel could, alternatively, be a satellite, microwave, cable or optical channel.
The signals received by the antenna 102 are input to a DVB-T receiver 100 which enables the user to select a desired channel. Received data may also be stored in a memory 104.
Whilst the client 106 is switched on, the receiver 100 is also powered up and receiving the signal in the form of the physical transmission channel. The receiver decodes SI information which provides details of the content and location of each of the channels within the received multiplexed signal as will be described in more detail below. The SI information also contains schedule details for each of the multiplexed channels. The schedule details allow a user to watch or record a specific programme of interest. For example, if the client 106 in the form of a set-top-box is connected to a personal computer (not shown), it is possible to receive data transmitted over the DVB-T network. In this way, the transmission of large data files can be transmitted, to a large audience, using the high data rates provided by DVB-T transmission. If a data file is due to be transmitted at a certain time on a certain channel, the SI information will contain this information which can be used by the client 106 to ensure that receiver 100 receives the required data.
SI information may change frequently, to reflect not only changes in program scheduling, but also to reflect re-allocation of frequencies and channels etc by the broadcaster. For example, it is possible for a channel to be transmitted on a different frequency to that scheduled originally. Since the SI contains details of the frequencies (or changes to the frequencies), the receiver 100 should always be able to receive the desired content.
Turning in more detail to the operation of the head-end 150 and client 106,
The processor 170 implements time slicing of the transport stream or service 200 to with the result the processor 170 delivers to the multiplexer 152 a set of discrete time sliced bursts 210,212,214 of content. In addition to the original time sliced bursts 210,212,214 of the service 200, the processor 170 ensures that each original time sliced burst 210,212,214 is repeated at least once. The determination of how often an original burst 210,212,214 is repeated and at what time interval and spacing, is determined by the processor 170 in consultation with the look up table 172.
In
In
In
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that other time slicing approaches are possible in addition to the three examples set out herein. It will be further appreciated that the QoS may be varied during the streaming of data to the terminal perhaps on a cyclical basis.
In addition to delivering the time sliced bursts to the multiplexer 152 input, the processor 170 provides an indication of the timing of the original bursts, the number of repeats and their timing interval. This indication is prvided as a data 300 for inclusion in the Si generated at the head end 150 and is therefore delivered to each terminal 106.
Turning now to the terminal 106 in more detail, as is well known, a user of the terminal 106 is able to select either directly and/or via an Electronic Program Guide or such, what datastream is to be rendered by the terminal 106. The generation of the programme guide may be carried out using information derived from the SI transmitted in the physical channel, thus the SI is always obtained by the terminal 106. Alternatively, the programme guide may be generated from another information channel delivered over IP. Where the user selects the aforementioned datastream for rendering on his terminal 106, the SI related to that stream is accessed by the terminal 106 and used to obtain the timing of the original bursts 210,212,214 and the repeated copies (see
The received burst 210 is filtered in the receiver 100 and saved into memory 104. Once in memory 104, a controller 500 carries out error checking based on the CRC 320 and/or checksum 330 information provided with each packet 300 in the burst 210. In the example shown in
It will also be apparent that the receiver 100 is able to reduce service start up time for a stream delivered in a time-sliced manner as described above. Because each original burst 210,212,214 is repeated at least once, the opportunity to receive a burst is spread out over time, thus the receiver 100 does not have to wait the full time interval between successive original bursts.
As will be appreciated from the forgoing, the presence of interference in the transmission channel may have a deleterious effect on the integrity of data being carried on that channel, particularly where high bandwidth bursts of relatively short duration are utilised to carry the data. Again, as has previously been indicated, a receiver, of which there may be many, may not always be provided with a return channel by which the receiver can request re-transmission of corrupted and/or missing packets and/or bursts.
FIGS. 5 to 7 illustrate in the time domain, the transmission of bursts utilising the above described apparatus and in accordance with two further embodiments of the transmission approach set out above. In these embodiments, information pertaining to the timing of original bursts, their copies and timing intervals is not included in the SI, rather it is placed in the packet frame information.
Thus, according to a further embodiment of a transmission method illustrated in
At the head end 150, data is introduced to the frame information of those packets 500, 500′, 600 comprising a burst. The data provides a current interval to the so-called ‘Wakeup Time Estimate (WTE)’ 1000 namely the time at which the transmission of the next, in this example, the second, original burst 600 commences. The current interval 1010 is calculated as the time period between a packet of the burst 500 in which the data is introduced, to the WTE 1000 of the next original burst 600. Thus, the receiver 100 of the terminal 106 is able to prepare for the arrival of an original burst 600 provided at least the immediately preceding original burst 500 or a copy 500′ thereof is received.
In a variant of this embodiment, the client 106 is provided with an algorithm to allow the calculation of a retransmission interval 1020 namely the time period between a particular packet of a burst 500 from which the current interval 1010 data is extracted by the client 106 and the next burst 500′ containing a copy of that packet. The algorithm may be pre-programmed in the terminal 106 and/or programmable in response to data delivered over the channel from the head end 150.
With reference to
It will be recognised by those skilled in the art that in respect of either of the above described embodiments, there is no need for the client 106 to maintain an accurate real time clock based on Greenwich Mean Time or indeed, any other absolute time measurement.
The client 106 is able to mark packets that have bit errors 2000. Such packets may be Transport Stream (TS), Multi-Protocol Encapsulated (MPE) or some other packet. If there are no errors detected during the retransmission of a burst that contained bit errors, the retransmitted burst can be used as is, that is it can be passed in its entirety to the client application. However, in the event there are some broken packets in the retransmitted burst the receiver attempts to reconstruct a new burst for delivery to the application by collecting good packets together from received bursts, in a Data recovery step 3000. If there remain corrupted packets following data recovery, further retransmissions may be obtained, if available 4000.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that a receiver may be able to adapt to changes in a transmission scheme reflecting the above-described embodiments. For example, the scheme may be varied depending on the location, time or current content. For example, at the head end 150, different operation schemes are defined via an identification code given to each scheme. The identification code may then be included in the channel such that the receiver is able to adapt to the scheme represented by a particular code.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0203539.2 | Feb 2002 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/00437 | 2/10/2003 | WO | 5/2/2005 |