1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to a communication system; more particularly, relates to a wireless local area network (WLAN) communication system set forth in the series of 802.11 Specifications of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).
2. Description of Related Art
The devices can communicate directly with each other in the absence of a base station in a so-called “ad-hoc” network, or they can communicate through a base station, called an access point (AP) in IEEE 802.11 terminology, with distributed services through the AP using local distributed services (DS) or wide area extended services, as shown. In a WLAN system, end user access devices are known as stations (STAs), which are transceivers (transmitters/receivers) that convert radio signals into digital signals that can be routed to and from communications device and connect the communications equipment to access points (APs) that receive and distribute data packets to other devices and/or networks. The STAs may take various forms ranging from wireless network interface card (NIC) adapters coupled to devices to integrated radio modules that are part of the devices, as well as an external adapter (USB), a PCMCIA card or a USB Dongle (self contained), which are all known in the art.
a and 2b show diagrams of the Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) packet network architecture, which is also known in the art. In
In particular, wireless fidelity (Wi-Fi) technology is rapidly gaining acceptance by many corporate and individual entities as an alternative to a wired LAN. Wi-Fi is set forth in the series of IEEE 802.11 specifications. Wi-Fi access points (called “hot spots”) have been established in various other in public spaces such as in hotels, airports, cafes, bookstores, among other public and private spaces. These “hot spots” enable individuals having mobile devices or stations such as mobile phones, lap tops, PDA's, and the like having wireless capabilities to access a wireless local area network (WLAN) to illustratively send and receive information over the as private network or the Internet.
Task Group K of IEEE 802.11 (TGk) is developing enhancements to the basic standard in respect of radio resource measurement capabilities. At the same time Task Group e (TGe) is finalizing Quality of Service (QoS) facilities to the base standard. TGk has received several submissions proposing to add QoS metrics and statistics to the 802.11k draft that has already means to request and deliver client Station (STA) statistics to the Access Point (AP).
The basic standard, IEEE Std 802.11k/D2.0, defines various measurement methods and related reporting mechanisms that can be used e.g. to collect transmission statistics to help optimize performance. The only methods possible are either to request the statistics in a snapshot manner or to set up periodic reporting using a repeated measurement request. New QoS metrics are expected to rely on these methods. However, the problem is that these reports are either sent periodically, even if conditions are fine, wasting bandwidth and processing power in APs and STAs.
IEEE Std 802.11k/D2.0 also allows client stations (STA) to send autonomous reports upon their own decisions. From the STAs perspective, this scheme could be used to report only when needed. However, the problem with this approach is that the AP has no control over what the STA reports, and therefore it cannot rely on receiving useful data.
The basic operation in measurement requests and reporting as per the current draft of IEEE Std 802.11k/D2.0 is as follows:
The AP can request an STA to perform measurements by sending a measurement request frame shown in
Thus, there is a need for a new statistics/metrics-reporting scheme that allows both the client terminal to report that something is going wrong, as well as for the AP to have control over the reporting rules.
To overcome limitations in the prior art, and to overcome other limitations, a system and method of triggering autonomous measurements on QoS streams is disclosed.
The present invention provides a new and unique method and apparatus for generating a report on the quality of service (QoS) in a wireless local area network (WLAN) or other suitable network, wherein a first node, point or terminal provides a measurement request having a reporting rule or condition to a second node, point or terminal for determining when to report the quality of service (QoS).
The reporting rule or condition includes a trigger threshold, including information about triggered QoS statistics. In operation, the trigger threshold is met when a counter value exceeds a trigger threshold value.
The first node, point or terminal may be an access point (AP), and the second node, point or terminal may be a station (STA) in the WLAN.
The first node, point or terminal may provide more than one trigger thresholds, including multiple measurement types across multiple channels.
In one particular embodiment, the method in accordance with embodiments of the present invention may include steps for determining whether triggered reporting should be used for a service/stream by the access point (AP); determining trigger thresholds for the service/stream with which triggered reporting is to be used in said AP; forming a frame that includes field(s) that are used to enable triggered reporting conditions and to indicate trigger conditions and thresholds in said AP; checking a request frame from the AP whether it includes said trigger reporting enabler and conditions in a mobile station receiver; starting autonomous measurements and setting trigger conditions as per the received and decoded request frame in said station; and forming a measurement report if trigger conditions are met and transmitting it to the AP in said station.
The apparatus may take the form of a wireless local area network (WLAN) or other suitable network, having such a first node, point or terminal that provides a measurement request having a reporting rule or condition to such a second node, point or terminal for determining when to report the quality of service (QoS), as well as a first node, point or terminal having a module for providing such a measurement request having such a reporting rule or condition. Moreover, the apparatus may take the form of a node, point or terminal for generating such a report on the quality of service (QoS) based on such a request from such another node, point or terminal in a wireless local area network (WLAN) or other suitable network, where the node, point or terminal has a module that receives the request having the reporting rule or condition for determining when to report the quality of service (QoS), and provides the report to the other node based on the rule or condition.
The apparatus may also take the form of a method for operating such a node, point or terminal, including a station (STA), for generating a report on the quality of service (QoS) based on a request from another node, point or terminal, including an access point (AP), in a wireless local area network (WLAN) or other suitable network, wherein the method comprises one or more steps for receiving a request having a reporting rule or condition for determining when to report the quality of service (QoS), and provides the report to the other node based on the rule or condition. The apparatus may take the form of a computer program product with a program code, which program code is stored on a machine readable carrier, for carrying out the steps of the method shown and described herein.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of embodiments of the invention will become apparent with reference to the following description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed solely for the purposes of illustration and not as a definition of the limits of the invention.
The drawing, which is not necessarily to scale, include the following Figures:
a and 2b show diagrams of the Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) packet network architecture, which is also known in the art.
a shows the Measurement Request frame body format for a measurement request frame that is known in the art and sent by an access point (AP) to a station (STA).
b shows a Measurement Request element format for the measurement request element shown in
c shows a Measurement Request field format for the measurement request shown in
a shows a Triggered QoS Metrics request frame in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
b shows the measurement request mode field in the Triggered QoS request frame in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
In the following description of the exemplary embodiment, reference is made to the accompanying drawing, which form a part hereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration of an embodiment in which the invention may be practiced. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized, as structural and operational changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
To overcome limitations in the prior art, and to overcome other limitations a novel system and method of delivering QoS transmission statistics from a STA to the AP only when so agreed is disclosed. The novel statistics-reporting scheme in accordance with embodiments of the present invention allows standardized reporting conditions in the form of trigger thresholds related to QoS metrics.
a,
8
b: The Triggered QoS Metrics Request Frame
a shows a Triggered QoS Metrics request frame generally indicated as 800 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention. The triggered QoS Metrics request frame 800 includes, for example, an element ID 810, a length 820, a measurement token 830, a measurement request mode field 840, a measurement type 850, and a measurement request 860. The field of the measurement type 850 contains information about a triggered QoS statistic. The field of the measurement request 860 may contain information to enable/disable triggered reporting conditions and to set trigger thresholds (i.e. thresholds for reporting).
b shows an exemplary embodiment of the measurement request mode 840, which includes 8 bits in the form of a parallel bit 840a, an enable bit 840b, a request bit 840c, a report bit 840d and a duration mandatory bit 840e, the functionality of which is set forth below. The remaining bits 5-7 indicated by reference label 840f are presently reserved for future use.
Within the measurement request mode field, the enable bit 840a is used to differentiate between a request to make a measurement and a request to control the measurement requests and autonomous reports generated by the destination STA. When the Enable bit 840b is set to 0, the Measurement Request field contains the specification of the measurement request corresponding to the measurement type field 850. The measurement request field 860 is not present when the enable bit 840b is set to 1, except when requesting a triggered QoS Metrics measurement.
In particular, the measurement duration 910 may, preferably, be set equal to the duration of the requested measurement, expressed, for example, in TUs. When setting up a triggered QoS measurement, the measurement duration field 910 is not used and may, preferably, be set to 0. The triggered reporting enabled 920 enables the triggered reporting. The triggered reporting 930 is used to specify measurement trigger thresholds, and is present if setting up the triggered QoS metrics reporting.
In this embodiment, the triggered reporting fields may be embedded into the measurement request field 860 of an STA statistics measurement request frame. In this case, the measurement type field 850 in
With Reporting Threshold (or similar) fields in a request frame such as 800 (
If a trigger condition is met in an STA, then the STA sends an STA Statistics Report with related metrics for the stream.
It is noteworthy that the scope of the invention is not intended to be limited to only the fields shown and described herein; and embodiments are envisioned in which other fields are also present. Moreover, the order of the fields shown in the figures herein may differ depending on the implementation.
As shown, the randomization interval 1110 may, preferably, be set to a desired maximum random delay in the measurement start time, expressed in TUs. The use of the randomization interval field in relation to the measurement start time is further described in section 11.11.3 of IEEE 802.11. The randomization interval field 1110 is not used and may, preferably, be set to 0 when requesting a triggered QoS metrics measurement.
The measurement duration 1120 may, preferably, be set equal to the duration of the requested measurement, expressed in TUs. When setting up a triggered QoS measurement, the measurement duration field 1120 is not used and may, preferably, be set to 0.
The peer QSTA address 1130 may, preferably, contain the 6-byte MAC address in the Address 1 field of the measured data frames.
The traffic identifier 1140 may, preferably, indicate the TC or TS for which traffic is to be measured. In the traffic identifier field 1140, values 0 through 15 are presently defined, while values 16-255 are reserved for future use.
The bin 0 range 1150 may, preferably, indicate the delay range of the first bin (Bin 0) of the transmit delay histogram, expressed in TUs. It is also used to calculate the delay ranges of the other 5 bins making up the histogram. The delay range for each bin may, preferably, increase in a binary exponential fashion.
The triggered reporting 1155 is used to specify measurement trigger thresholds. It is only present if setting up triggered QoS metrics reporting.
FIGS. 12-15:
The trigger Condition 1155a is a bit-field that specifies reporting triggers when requesting a triggered QoS metrics measurement. The format of Trigger Condition field 1155a is shown in further detail in
The Average Error Threshold field 1155b contains a value representing the number of MSDUs to be used as the threshold value for the Average trigger condition.
The Consecutive Error Threshold field 1155c contains a value representing the number of MSDUs to be used as the threshold value for the Consecutive trigger condition.
The Delay Threshold field 1155d contains two subfields as shown in
the delayed MSDU count subfield 1155d(ii) contains a value representing the number of MSDUs to be used as the threshold value for the delay trigger condition.
The measurement count field 1155e contains a number of MSDUs. This value is used in the Average Error Threshold and in place of measurement duration in determining the scope of the reported results when a report is triggered.
The trigger timeout field 1155f contains a value in units of 100 TU during which a measuring STA may, preferably, not generate further triggered QoS metrics reports after a trigger condition has been met.
STA Requesting and Reporting of Measurements
The requesting and reporting of measurements by STAs are based on the certain rules and principles which are described below. The permissible requests are represented in the table shown in
An STA may measure one or more channels itself or a STA may request peer STAs in the same Base Service Set (BSS) to measure one or more channels on its behalf.
When requesting other STAs to measure one or more channels, the STA may, preferably, use a measurement request frame containing one or more measurement request elements. The measurement request may be sent to a unicast, multicast or broadcast destination address. The permitted measurement requests are shown in Table 16.
The source and destination of a measurement request may, preferably, both be a member of the same BSS or a member of the same IBSS.
The set of requested measurements received in the most recently received measurement request frame of highest precedence is active at the STA. The precedence order for measurement requests may, preferably, be as follows:
The measurement request elements are processed in sequence, with certain measurement request elements processed in parallel according to the parallel bit field setting in
The measurement request elements within a measurement request frame may specify multiple measurement types across multiple channels.
The STA may receive another measurement request frame while the measurements requested in a previous Measurement Request frame are pending or in-progress. In this case, the set of measurement requests in the new frame supersedes any previous requests received in a measurement request frame of the same or lower precedence, and the measuring STA may, preferably, discard any partial results from the previous measurements. If a station receives a measurement request frame with lower precedence than the currently active measurement request frame, the station may, preferably, discard the measurement requests in the new measurement request frame. In an exemplary embodiment, measurement request elements that have the enable bit set to 1 may, preferably, be processed in all received measurement request frames regardless of these precedence rules. The STA that issues a measurement request to another STA to perform a measurement on the serving channel may transmit MPDUs and MMPDUs to that STA during the measurement itself.
An STA that issues a measurement request to another STA to perform a measurement on a non-serving channel is not required to take any special action to suspend traffic to that STA. All stations may, preferably, maintain data services and an association or membership with the BSS or IBSS respectively, on the serving channel while performing measurements on non-serving channels.
The result of each measurement requested in a measurement request element may, preferably, be reported in a measurement report element of type corresponding to the request. The result of each measurement should be returned without undue delay to the requesting STA.
When more than one measurement request element is present in a measurement request frame, the STA may return the corresponding measurement report elements in one or more measurement report frames.
Each measurement report frame may, preferably, contain the same dialog token field value as the corresponding measurement request frame. Each measurement report element may, preferably, contain the same measurement token field value as the corresponding measurement request element.
When an STA is permanently unable to make a requested measurement the STA may, preferably, respond to such a unicast measurement request with an indication that it is incapable of completing the measurement request. A STA may, preferably, not respond to broadcast and multicast requests in this manner. Examples of when an incapable response is appropriate are:
The requested measurement type is not supported.
The measuring STA cannot support requested parallel measurements due to one or more requests relating to different channels.
An STA may refuse to make any requested measurement and may, preferably, respond to such a unicast measurement request with an indication that it is refusing the measurement request. The STA may, preferably, not respond to broadcast and multicast requests in this manner.
Since measurements on non-serving channels could potentially degrade a station's performance, non-serving channel measurements should be requested sparingly and for short durations. Since measurements on the serving channel execute concurrently with normal traffic processing, serving channel measurements may be requested more frequently and for longer durations. If desired, the requesting STA may issue periodic concurrent measurement requests to achieve near-continuous reporting.
An actual Measurement Start Time 1202 may, preferably, be set equal to the TSF at the time at which the measurement started, or for a triggered QoS metrics report the TSF value at the reporting QSTA when the trigger condition was met.
A measurement duration 1204 may, preferably, be set equal to the duration over which the Transmit QoS Metric Report was measured, expressed in TUs. For a triggered QoS Metrics Report, metrics are reported over a number of transmitted MSDUs rather than a duration and the measurement duration may, preferably, be set to 0.
A Peer QSTA Address 1206 may, preferably, contain the 6 byte MAC address in the Address 1 field of the measured Data frames.
A traffic identifier 1208 may, preferably, indicate the TC or TS for which traffic is to be measured. Values 0 through 15 are defined. Values 16-255 are reserved.
A reporting reason field 1210 is a bit field indicating the reason that the measuring QSTA sent the Transmit QoS metrics report. The Reporting Reason field 1210 is shown in more detail in
In a requested Transmit QoS Metrics Report, all bit fields in the Reporting Reason field 1210 are set to 0. More than one bit field in the Reporting Reason field may be set to 1 if more than one trigger condition was met.
The Transmitted MSDU Count 1212, MSDU Discarded Count 1214, MSDU Failed Count 1216, MSDU Multiple Retry Count 1218, QoS CFPolls Lost Count 1220, Average Queue Delay 1222, Average Transmit Delay 1224, and delay histogram fields relate to transmissions to the QSTA given in the Peer QSTA Address field 1206. Metrics may, preferably, be reported over the measurement duration, or for triggered QoS metrics, over the measurement count.
The Transmitted MSDU Count field 1212 contains the number of MSDUs for the TC, or TS given by the Traffic Identifier successfully transmitted.
The MSDU Discarded Count field 1214 contains the number of MSDUs for the TC, or TS given by the Traffic Identifier discarded due either to the number of transmit attempts exceeding dot11ShortRetryLimit or dot11LongRetryLimit as appropriate, or due to the MSDU lifetime having been reached.
The MSDU Failed Count field 1216 contains the number of MSDUs for the TC, or TS given by the Traffic Identifier 1208 discarded due to the number of transmit attempts exceeding dot11ShortRetryLimit or dot11LongRetryLimit as appropriate.
The MSDU Multiple Retry Count field 1218 contains the number of MSDUs for the TC, or TS given by the Traffic Identifier 1208 that are successfully transmitted after more than one retransmission attempt.
The QoS CFPolls Lost Count field 1220 contains the number of QoS (+)CF-Poll frames transmitted where there was no response from the QSTA. The QoS CFPolls Lost Count 1220 may, preferably, only be returned if the reporting QSTA is a QAP and the Traffic Identifier 1208 is for TS. If unused, the QoS CFPolls Lost count 1220 may, preferably, be set to 0.
The average queue delay 1222 may, preferably, be the average queuing delay of the frames (MSDUs) that are passed to the MAC for the indicated Peer QSTA Address 1206 and the indicated Traffic Identifier 1208. The queue delay 1222 may, preferably, be measured from the time the MSDU is passed to the MAC until the point at which the first, or only fragment is ready for transmission and may, preferably, be expressed in TUs.
The average transmit delay 1224 may, preferably, be the average delay of the frames (MSDUs) that are successfully transmitted for the indicated Peer QSTA Address 1206 and the indicated Traffic Identifier 1208. The delay may, preferably, be measured from the time the MSDU is passed to the MAC until the point at which the entire MSDU has been successfully transmitted, including receipt of the final ACK from the peer QSTA if the QoSAck service class is being used. Average Transmit delay may, preferably, be expressed in TUs.
Triggered Autonomous Reporting
Triggered Autonomous Reporting is defined for the Transmit QoS Metrics measurement type and is described in the following paragraphs.
Autonomous reporting is defined for Spectrum Management measurements supporting DFS. It allows a STA to report the results of measurements to a peer STA for which there was no explicit measurement request. In this case, the transmission of autonomous reports may, preferably, be entirely the decision of the STA at which such reporting has been enabled. An example of this use would be to report a change in conditions at the STA observed as a result of background measurement, e.g. the presence of a radar signal.
In radio measurement, all autonomous reporting may, preferably, be subject to trigger conditions set by the enabling STA that determine when measurement reports are issued. This is termed triggered autonomous reporting and provides a method for reporting during continuous background measurement. An example of the use of triggered autonomous measurement is for reporting problem conditions in continuous, non-invasive statistical monitoring.
Triggered autonomous reporting is defined only for the Transmit QoS Metrics measurement type.
A STA indicates that it wishes to accept triggered autonomous reports by sending a Measurement Request element with the Enable and Report bits set to 1. The type of measurement is indicated in the Measurement Type field. Trigger conditions that determine when measurement reports are to be generated may, preferably, be specified in the Measurement Request field. A Measurement Request element that is being used to control triggered autonomous reporting may, preferably, be sent within a Radio Measurement Request frame. Measurement Request elements being used to request measurements may also appear in the same Measurement Request Frame. The Measurement Request frame may be sent to a group receiver address to enable triggered autonomous reports at more than one STA.
A STA may, preferably, not send autonomous reports for radio measurement types without trigger conditions having been set. If a Measurement Request element is received with the Enable and Report bits set to 1 without trigger conditions in the Measurement Request field then that Measurement Request element may, preferably, be ignored.
If a request to enable triggered autonomous reporting is sent to an individual address and the recipient STA does not support measurements of the type indicated, a Measurement Report element may, preferably, be returned to the requesting STA with the Incapable bit set. A STA may also refuse to enable triggered autonomous reporting. In this case a Measurement Report element may, preferably, be returned to the requesting STA with the refused bit set. Such responses may, preferably, not be issued if the request to enable triggered autonomous reporting was sent to a group address.
A STA receiving a request to enable triggered autonomous reporting from another STA may send reports of the appropriate type, addressed to the individual address of the STA that sent the enable request. Autonomous reports may, preferably, only be sent to the individual addresses of STAs from which a valid enable request has been received and may, preferably, only be issued when the trigger conditions have been met.
A STA may update the trigger conditions set for triggered autonomous reports by issuing a new Measurement Request element with the Enable and Report bits both set to 1, the Measurement Type field set to the appropriate type and the Measurement Request field indicating the new trigger conditions. A STA disables all triggered autonomous measurement reports by sending a Measurement Request element with the Enable bit set to 1 and the Report bit set to 0.
A STA in an infrastructure BSS may, preferably, cease all triggered autonomous reporting if it disassociates, or re-associates to a different BSS. A STA in an independent BSS may, preferably, cease all triggered autonomous reporting if it leaves the BSS.
Triggered autonomous reporting and requested measurements are independent: a STA may request measurements from another STA even if it has enabled triggered autonomous reporting from that STA. All Measurement Request elements received in Radio Measurement Request frames that have the Enable bit set may, preferably, be processed without regard for the measurement precedence rules for requested measurements.
A QSTA receiving a Transmit QoS Metrics Request may, preferably, respond with a Radio Measurement Report frame containing one Measurement (Transmit QoS Metrics) Report element. If the traffic stream (TS) that is corresponding to the Traffic Identifier is deleted, either by a DELTS Action Frame or by disassociation, the STA may, preferably, cease sending Radio Measurement Reports.
The Transmit QoS Metrics measurement may, preferably, be made on traffic that is transmitted from the measuring QSTA to the peer QSTA and TC or TS indicated in the request. The Peer QSTA Address may be the MAC address of the QSTA from which the Measurement Request was sent, or the MAC address of another QSTA within the QBSS. This enables a QAP to query Transmit QoS metrics for DLS links. A QAP may, preferably, refuse measurement requests for traffic to other QSTAs in the BSS. The requesting and reporting STAs must be QSTAs. A non-QSTA receiving a Transmit QoS Metrics Measurement Request may, preferably, reject the request with indication of “incapable”.
A QSTA may request that a QoS metrics report be sent when MSDU discard, or delay metrics for a specified TC, or TS at a measuring QSTA reach a defined threshold. This is termed a triggered QoS metrics measurement and may, preferably, be requested by setting the Enable and Report bits to 1 within a Measurement Request Element containing the QoS Metrics Measurement Type. The Measurement Request field may, preferably, contain a QoS Metrics Request with the trigger conditions specified in the Triggered Reporting field. One or more trigger conditions may be set with specified thresholds.
A triggered QoS metrics request may, preferably, not be sent to a QAP. A QAP that receives a triggered QoS metrics request may, preferably, not respond. The number of simultaneous triggered QoS metrics measurements supported at non-AP QSTA is outside the scope of the standard.
A non-AP QSTA accepting a triggered QoS measurement may, preferably, measure the requested TC, or TS. If a trigger condition occurs, the measuring non-AP QSTA may, preferably, send a QoS metrics measurement report to the requesting QSTA. The measuring non AP-QSTA may, preferably, not send further triggered QoS reports until the Trigger Timeout period specified in the request has expired, or new trigger conditions have been requested. Measurement of QoS Metrics may, preferably, continue during the reporting timeout period.
If a non-AP QSTA receives a requested QoS metrics measurement for a TC, or TS that is already being measured using a triggered QoS metrics measurement, the triggered QoS measurement may, preferably, be suspended for the duration of the requested QoS measurement. When triggered measurement resumes the QoS metrics may, preferably, be reset.
QoS metrics reported in a triggered QoS metrics report may, preferably, be the values accumulated over the number of transmitted MSDUs prior to the trigger event given in the Measurement Count field of the QoS metrics measurement request that established the trigger condition. It is possible that a consecutive or delay trigger event occurs after acceptance of a triggered QoS metrics measurement but before the number of MSDUs in Measurement Count have been transmitted. In this case the report may, preferably, be the values accumulated since measurement started. The measurement count value appears in the Transmitted MSDU Count field of a triggered QoS metrics measurement report. Measurement duration may, preferably, not be used in triggered QoS measurement and the Measurement Duration field in both the Measurement Request and any Measurement Report may, preferably, be set to 0.
The Measurement Start Time field of a triggered QoS metrics report may, preferably, contain the value of the QSTA TSF timer at the time the trigger condition occurred to an accuracy of ±1 TU.
Once accepted by a measuring non-AP QSTA, a triggered QoS measurement continues to be active until:
All triggered QoS measurements may, preferably, be terminated at a measuring non-AP QSTA by receiving a triggered QoS metrics measurement request with the Enable bit set to 1 and the Report bit set to 0. A QoS metrics measurement request with no trigger conditions may, preferably, terminate a triggered QoS measurement for the TC, or TS specified in the request. A QSTA requesting a triggered QoS measurement may update the trigger conditions by sending a triggered QoS metrics measurement request specifying the new trigger conditions.
FIGS. 19-20: Nodes, STAs, Points or Terminals
The AP 710 or other suitable network node or terminal 10 shown in
Implementation of the Functionality of the Modules 712 and 722
The functionality of the AP 10 and STA 20 described above may be implemented in the corresponding modules 712 and 722 shown in
The other modules 714 and 724 in the AP 710 and STA 720 and the functionality thereof are known in the art, do not form part of the underlying invention per se, and are not described in detail herein. For example, the other modules 724 may include other modules that formal part of a typical mobile telephone or terminal, such as a UMTS subscriber identity module (USIM) and mobile equipment (ME) module, which are known in the art and not described herein.
The reader is referred to the following documents, which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety:
IEEE Std 802.11k/D2.0, Draft Supplement to STANDARD FOR Telecommunications and information exchange between systems—Local and metropolitan area networks—LAN/MAN Specific requirements—Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications: Radio Resource Measurement, February 2005.
IEEE Std 802.11-1999□ (Reaff 2003), Information technology—Telecommunications and information exchange between systems—Local and metropolitan area networks—Specific requirements—Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications.
IEEE Std 802.11h□-2003, Information technology—Telecommunications and information exchange between systems—Local and metropolitan area networks—Specific requirements—Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications: Spectrum and Transmit Power Management Extensions in the 5 GHz band in Europe.
P802.11e, (Draft Version: D13, 2005) Draft Amendment to Standard for Information Technology—Telecommunications and Information Exchange Between Systems—LAN/MAN Specific Requirements—Part 11 Wireless Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications: Amendment 7: Medium Access Control (MAC) Quality of Service (QoS) Enhancements.
Although described in the context of particular embodiments, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that a number of modifications and various changes to these teachings may occur. Thus, while the invention has been particularly shown and described with respect to one or more preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that certain modifications or changes, in form and shape, may be made therein without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as set forth above.
This application claims benefit to provisional application No. 60/662,531, filed 16 Mar. 2005; 60/680,769, filed 13 May 2005; and 60/719,038, filed 21 Sep. 2005, all hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60662531 | Mar 2005 | US | |
60680769 | May 2005 | US | |
60719038 | Sep 2005 | US |