Cellular mobile networks such as 2G and 3G mobile networks are known to the person skilled in the art from the standards available, for example, under www.etsi.org and www.3GPP.com.
The organization ETSI TISPAN is currently working on the definition of the Next Generation Network NGN. The NGN is an IP based network that provides the subscribers with multimedia services (Voice, Video, Chat, Messaging, Gaming) and in the long term is aimed at replacing the existing TDM networks of the landline telephone operators. Hereby the Internet Protocol Multimedia Subsystem IMS (based on SIP) defined by 3GPP is to be adopted as the basis for the Session and Call Control Layer. Certain services must have access to a certain degree to location Information (information representing a location) or to origin information of the A-side (terminal side), so as to be able to offer their services in the optimum way (location related announcements, games, newsrooms, etc.). In addition, in the event of an emergency call, the network must, for example, take into account the origin of the subscriber in order to be able to route the call to the relevant emergency call centre.
In the cellular radio system (GSM, GPRS, UMTS) information such as the Mobile Country Code, Mobile Network Code and Cell ID can already be transmitted to the terminal via the radio interface. The terminal can then make this data available, for example in the SIP signaling (or in another signaling on the application layer), to the corresponding network nodes (IMS CSCF, Application Server, etc.). In an NGN with very heterogeneous access networks such as, for example, XDSL, WLAN or WiMax, there is as yet no uniform procedure for allowing access specific information to be sent to the terminal, which information the terminal can then use as required in the context of different applications.
One aim is to define a uniform and access independent mechanism with which the access network can transmit access specific information to the terminal. Thus the terminal is able to insert this information on the application layer into corresponding signaling messages (e.g. SIP messages). This means that the terminal receives the access-specific information using signaling of the “lower layers” (i.e. below the IP layer) and then inserts said information into the application protocol.
One solution discussed at ETSI TISPAN is based on the assumption that the terminal in general does not receive any origin-specific information from the access network, but this information is inserted by the first SIP proxy (the so-called outbound proxy, in the IMS this is the P-CSCF) into the SIP signaling (e.g. into an own SIP header).
This proposal has several disadvantages:
One object of the present invention is to make it possible for access information to be made available to the mobile terminal regardless of the type of access network (cellular radio system of different standards, WLAN, DSL, WIMAX, ATM etc.) used by the mobile terminal or of the transmission technology used, which information said mobile terminal can then later transmit to the service device when registering and/or identifying with respect to a service device of a telecommunication network offering a service. The object is achieved in each instance by the subject matters of the independent claims.
Even when a mobile terminal has access to different telecommunication networks (such as, for example, landline/2G mobile terminal or 3G mobile network of different standards, DSL, WIMAX etc.) and/or different telecommunication network transmission methods (ATM etc.), the invention allows the mobile terminal to transmit relevant access information (such as, for example, country code, network ID, DSLAM location in particular for DSL/WIMAS, ATM channel ID information ATM VC ID, BRAS ID, WLAN access point ) etc. in the course of access authentication for different telecommunication network accesses (2G/3G/WLAN etc.) and/or transmission methods (ATM etc.), which information, can be recorded at the mobile terminal side (e.g. in the terminal or in a card at the mobile terminal side) and later, e.g. when contacting/identifying/ establishing a call to a service device offering a service (CSCF/emergency call centre etc.) can be transmitted to said service device (CSCF/emergency call centre). In particular, also during an access authentication (with respect to an AAA Server=Authentication, Authorization, Accounting Server) mobile terminals can receive data (which can be stored, for example mobile terminal/ identification card specific for one or several networks and/or one or several information transmission methods) and if the occasion arises when contacting a service via a telecommunication network (2G/3G/WLAN/WIMAX) and/or a transmission technology (ATM etc.) can transmit the stored data relevant for this network and/or transmission method to the service device (CSCF etc.) offering the service (for example, in a link establishing message such as a SIP message—in particular in a SIP message header).
Preferably the mobile terminal receives access information (BRAS ID, DSLAM ID, ATMVC ID, country code, Network ID, DSLAM location etc.) during authentication of the terminal (for example, via a mobile network or WLAN or a different network) from an authentication server of a network, which information, at a later occasion, said mobile terminal, independently of said server, in order to make use of a service, transmits to a service device of the same or of a different network during the setup signaling (
Further features and advantages of the invention emerge from the following description of an exemplary embodiment with reference to the drawing, in which:
A further proposal is, during the access authentication, to send access specific data such as Country Code, Network ID, DSLAM Location (in the case of DSL or WiMax), ATM VC ID, BRAS ID or WLAN Access Point Name (in the case of WLAN) to the client in a simple text string in an XML structure to be defined flexibly. This XML encoded structure can be extended as desired and contains parameters in order to transport information specific to all conceivable access networks and their architecture.
Parameters that are not relevant for an access network, are not engaged. Depending on the method of authentication, the text encoded in XML is transmitted to the terminal. In the DSL environment, for example PPP/PPPoE is normally used to establish an L2 link and to authenticate the subscriber. Within the PPP/PPPoE, the subscriber is prompted by the Access Server to identify himself and sends his username and password to the BRAS via the DSLAM. The BRAS then contacts a radius server, which carries out the actual authentication. If this is successful, the terminal is notified of the result in a PPP Frame. Optionally this PPP Frame can transmit additional data in existing data fields, such as, for example, the string text mentioned.
Even more flexible, and generally more practicable, is the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), which can be transported e.g. via PPP/PPPoE, but also direct via IEEE 802.2 (EAPOL=EAP over LAN), so that, for example, EAP authentication for the access via WLAN and WiMax can be used. Within 3GPP, EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA were specified as authentication mechanisms for the access into the mobile core network via WLAN. EAP offers the possibility of sending additional information to the client within the response message to a successful EAP authentication.
If the client has received the access specific information during the authentication phase, it interprets the bytes received as an XML structure (string) and then analyses these to determine the data that is relevant to it. This data is eventually available to the applications, e.g. a SIP based IMS Client, so that it can be inserted into signaling messages on the application level. During the SIP registration or when setting up a SIP session, the access information is inserted into the corresponding SIP signaling messages (e.g. SIP REGISTER, SIP INVITE) by the terminal. In order to transport the access information, in the IMS the so-called P-Access-Network-Info header as defined in RFC 3455 is used. The definition of the P-Access-Network-Info header is access-specific and allows updates with respect of the connection type and the associated attributes (parameters were already specified for GERAN, UTRAN, and WLAN in accordance with 802.11a/b Standard). New access types and their associated attributes can now be defined within the P-Access-Network-Info header just as well in the NGN environment, too.
Examples might be: Access Type “NGN-DSL” with attributes “Country Code”, “Network Code”, “BRAS ID”, “DSLAM ID” and “ATM VC-ID”; Access Type “NGN-WLAN” with attributes “Country Code”, “Network Code”, “EBRAS ID”, “WLAN Access Point Name (SSID)”; Access Type “NGN-WIMAX” with attributes “Country Code”, “Network Code”, “BRAS ID”, “WiMax Base Station ID”.
Advantages of the method:
Through the invention, a method is described with regards to how access-specific information can be transported in a flexible manner to a terminal during the access authentication, so that it is available later to different applications. As an example for such an application, the IMS was chosen that is already now capable in the P-Access-Network-Info header of sending the GERAN or UTRAN global Cell ID from the terminal to the CSCF. The aim of the invention is to make it possible also to use this mechanism in the NGN environment for the access network which mainly comes into consideration there such as DSL, WLAN or WiMax, so that the NGN-IMS and NGN services, if necessary, can receive this information from the terminal and, in the appropriate circumstances, evaluate.
In the following exemplary embodiment it is shown how a DSL-Client is authenticated using PPP with a BRAS in the NGN and when the authentication is successful receives access specific data from the BRAS or DSLAM. After this data has been evaluated, the SIP application on the terminal is able to place the P-Access-Network-Info header into SIP messages. S-CSCF and SIP application servers can then evaluate this data in order to offer, for example, location dependent services or in the case of emergency call to route to the correct emergency call centre.
In addition to the service described, a large number of other services are possible using the inventive method and devices.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04028031.5 | Nov 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/55924 | 11/11/2005 | WO | 5/24/2007 |