WO2011022448A1 - Pre registration/pre-authentication in wireless networks - Google Patents
Pre registration/pre-authentication in wireless networks Download PDFInfo
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- WO2011022448A1 WO2011022448A1 PCT/US2010/045826 US2010045826W WO2011022448A1 WO 2011022448 A1 WO2011022448 A1 WO 2011022448A1 US 2010045826 W US2010045826 W US 2010045826W WO 2011022448 A1 WO2011022448 A1 WO 2011022448A1
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W36/00—Hand-off or reselection arrangements
- H04W36/0005—Control or signalling for completing the hand-off
- H04W36/0083—Determination of parameters used for hand-off, e.g. generation or modification of neighbour cell lists
- H04W36/00837—Determination of triggering parameters for hand-off
- H04W36/008375—Determination of triggering parameters for hand-off based on historical data
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W36/00—Hand-off or reselection arrangements
- H04W36/0005—Control or signalling for completing the hand-off
- H04W36/0011—Control or signalling for completing the hand-off for data sessions of end-to-end connection
- H04W36/0016—Hand-off preparation specially adapted for end-to-end data sessions
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W36/00—Hand-off or reselection arrangements
- H04W36/0005—Control or signalling for completing the hand-off
- H04W36/0055—Transmission or use of information for re-establishing the radio link
- H04W36/0061—Transmission or use of information for re-establishing the radio link of neighbour cell information
Definitions
- the present invention generally relates to methods and systems for performing pre-registration/pre-authentication and reserving resources in wireless communications networks and more specifically to the use of such methods and systems in an Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access Network (E-UTRAN) and an evolved High Rate Packet Data (eHRPD) network.
- E-UTRAN Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access Network
- eHRPD evolved High Rate Packet Data
- Fourth-generation (4G) wireless systems are end-to-end (from radio access networks to core networks) all-IP systems.
- 4G systems are expected to upgrade existing communication networks, e.g., 3G networks, and provide secure ubiquitous IP-based communications on an "Anytime, Anywhere" basis at significantly higher data rates.
- 4G networks are anticipated to enhance existing services (e.g., voice, e-mail) and provide new services such as, for example, wireless broadband access, video chat, mobile TV, HDTV content and digital video broadcasting (DVB) .
- Such networks are expected to enhance spectral efficiency (more bits/unit of time per unit of frequency) and provide more capacity, smooth handoffs, seamless connectivity, and global roaming across multiple networks.
- a leading 4G wireless system is the Evolved Packet System (EPS) defined by the Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) . It includes Long Term Evolution (LTE) for radio access networks (RANs) and Service Architecture Evolution (SAE) for the core network. It also includes an architecture for interworking with other wireless technologies such as 3GPP2 Evolution — Data Optimized
- Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access Metwork E-UTRAN
- Evolved Packet Core Evolved Packet Core
- EV-DO generally refers to the 3GPP2 High Rate Packet Data (HRPD) and Evolved HRPD ⁇ eHRPD) standards.
- HRPD is a CDMA2000 based technology for packet transmission as described in the 3GPP2 C.S0024-A v3.0 specification.
- An eHRPD network provides a radio access network that supports an evolved mode of operation and provides an IP environment supporting attachment to multiple packet data networks via the 3GPP EPC.
- the interworking architecture is referred to as E-UTRAN and eHRPD Interworking as described in the 3GPP2 X.S0057 specification.
- pre-registration and pre-authentication As a general matter, standard bodies usually do not standardize algorithms for performing pre-registration and pre-authentication. Accordingly, different approaches have been proposed to reduce handoff delay using pre-authentication and pre-registration.
- the user equipment or mobile station either working independently or in collaboration with one or more base stations, selects neighboring base stations it is likely to visit and participate in performing pre-registration/pre- authentication, proactive key distribution, and other procedures with candidate base stations before the user equipment or mobile station is handed off to neighboring networks.
- Most existing pre-registration/authentication mechanisms typically focus, however, on predicting the user equipment movement and, based on such movement, how to select target base stations that the user equipment station may be handed off to.
- some mechanisms use a centralized database associated with a server to collect the user equipment movement histories between cells to predict future handoff behavior through, for example, constructing neighbor graphs among access points in a WiFi network.
- the extra signaling messages exchanged between access points may cause consistency problem in signaling to other access points which do not employ the same algorithm.
- the centralized server is likely to become a performance bottleneck.
- this technique is not suitable for heterogeneous networks (networks using different access technologies) because the access points need to be under the same administrative domain.
- each access point records the average required time intervals that a mobile station or the user equipment can reach its neighbors.
- the serving access point helps to identify all the neighbors which satisfy the requirement.
- Another issue is which neighboring networks or cells should pre-registration/pre-authentication be performed with.
- the user equipment may move in any direction and may change its moving direction at any time. It is therefore important to decide the neighboring cells with which the user equipment should perform pre-registration and pre-authentication. If pre-registration and pre-authentication is to be performed with multiple neighboring networks or cells, it is also important to determine the order in which the user equipment performs pre-registration and pre-authentication with these neighboring cells. This is because pre-registration and pre-authentication are time consuming and the mobile may leave its current cell before it completes the pre-registration and pre-authentication operations with all the neighboring networks or cells it sought to pre-register and pre-authenticate with.
- Another issue is when to release network resources reserved by pre-registration/pre-authentication in the neighboring network.
- some contexts including IP address, security keys, and mobility context, will be reserved for a particular user equipment or mobile station in the neighboring network.
- the user equipment may not visit some of the candidate cells with which the user equipment has performed pre-registration/pre-authenti ⁇ ation. Therefore, it is important to delete the contexts in those cells in a timely manner.
- An aspect of the present invention is a method for managing wireless network mobility.
- the method preferably comprises acquiring, at a first network equipment, one or more time samples associated with a time that one or more user devices stay in a coverage range of the first network equipment.
- the method also preferably comprises estimating, at a second network equipment, a time that another user device may stay in the coverage range based on the acquired time samples.
- the method preferably comprises processing the acquired samples using a stochastic process, wherein the stochastic process comprises a Wiener process.
- the method may comprise processing the acquired samples using time series analysis.
- the method may comprise transmitting, by the second network equipment, the estimated time to the another user device.
- the first network equipment and the second network equipment comprise the same network equipment .
- the first or second network equipment may be selected from the group consisting of a base station, a cell phone, a mobility management entity, a home subscriber server, a serving gateway, and an authentication, authorization and accounting server.
- the method may comprise receiving, at a network equipment , a pre-authentication/pre-registration request from the another user device, and performing pre-authentication/pre-registration request at the network equipment based on the estimated time.
- the method may comprise acquiring signal-to-noise ratios of one or more neighboring cells defined by the coverage of one or more neighboring base stations associated with the another user device, and determining a target cell, from among the neighboring cells, for handing off the another user device based on the acquired signal-to-noise ratios.
- the present invention comprises a method of managing wireless network resources.
- the method preferably comprises acquiring, at a first network equipment, one or more time samples for a plurality of user devices associated with a first base station; and estimating, at a second network equipment, a cell residence time for another user device associated with the first base station based on the acquired time samples; determining at the second network equipment, a time to release network resources based on the estimated cell residence time.
- the estimating further comprises calculating a standard deviation of the estimated cell residence time.
- the network resource may comprise a network address, QoS profile, security key or a bearer.
- the method may comprise: receiving, at a second base station, a pre-authentication or a pre-registration request from the another user device; pre-authenticating and pre-registering, at the second base station, the another user device based on the estimated time,- and reserving network resources for handing off the another user device to a neighbor cell associated with the another user device.
- estimating may comprise processing the acquired time samples using a stochastic process or time series analysis, wherein the stochastic process may comprise a Wiener process.
- the method may comprise transmitting by the network equipment the estimated time to another user device .
- the present invention is a system that may comprise a base station for acquiring one or more time samples for a plurality of user devices associated with the base station; and a processor associated with a network device for estimating a cell residence time for another user device associated with the base station based on the acquired time samples.
- the network device may be selected from the group consisting of a base station, a cell phone, a mobility management entity, a home subscriber server, a serving gateway, and an authentication, authorization and accounting server.
- the time samples comprise a cell residence time, a time a user device enters a cell or a time a user device leaves a cell .
- FIG. IA illustrates an internetworking network topology of E-UTRAN and eHRPD networks.
- FIG. IB illustrates a system diagram of an E-UTRAN and eHRPD internetworking architecture.
- FIG. 2 illustrates a call-flow diagram for pre-registration and pre-authentication in an E-UTRAN and eHRPD interworking.
- FIG. 3 illustrates a flow chart in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
- FIG. 4 illustrates a system diagram in accordance with an aspect of the system and method.
- FIG. 5A illustrates a call flow diagram in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
- FIG. 5B illustrates a call flow diagram in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
- FIG. 5C illustrates a call flow diagram in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
- FIG. 5D illustrates a call flow diagram in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
- FIG. IA shows an internetworking network topology for E-UTRAN and eHRPD networks.
- the topology 100 includes an eHRPD network portion or cell 101 and an E-UTRAN network portion or cell 102.
- the user equipment, mobile station or network device 103 moves between these networks or cells, 101, 102, it needs to seamlessly establish communications as appropriate through base stations 109, 113. This requires pre-authentication and pre-registration, as well as allocation of network resources to enable smooth and seamless handoffs between the networks or cells.
- FIG. IB shows a simplified E-UTRAN and eHRPD internetworking architecture 160.
- the E-UTRAN network includes a radio access network 168 that includes a base station or eNodeB (evolved Node B or eNB, which may comprise a base station) 113.
- eNodeB 113 is connected to one or more network equipment or elements in a 3GPP Evolved Packet . Core (EPC) network 170.
- EPC Evolved Packet . Core
- eNode 113 may be connected to either a serving gateway 164 or a mobility management entity 174.
- the serving gateway 164 may be connected to a packet data network gateway 176 and a policy and charging rules function network element 184.
- the mobility management entity 174 is connected to home subscriber server 180, which is itself connected to 3GPP authentication, authorization and accounting (AAA) server 186.
- AAA 3GPP authentication, authorization and accounting
- FIG. IB shows the connections as lines between such network equipment, it should be understood that there may be intermediary equipment between the network equipment or elements.
- the lines shown between each network equipment are intended to illustrate that these network equipment or elements communicate, directly or indirectly, with each other.
- the serving gateway 164 transports data packets between the E-UTRAN 168 and EPC 170 portions of the network.
- the mobility management entity 174 is responsible for functions related to mobility management and authentication.
- the serving gateway 164 is associated with each user equipment 103i. When the user equipment moves across eNodeB 113, the serving gateway 164 serves as a local mobility anchor point. That is, it routes and forwards user packet data.
- a packet data network gateway 176 serves as the anchor point of packet data between 3GPP EPC and external packet data networks ⁇ not shown) . There may be more than one packet data network gateway in order to access multiple packet data networks.
- a home subscriber server 180 stores information for a subscriber.
- the policy and charging rules function element 184 supports policy control and management of QoS resources.
- the 3GPPP AAA server 186 is responsible for authentication, authorization, and accounting.
- the user equipment 103i may roam to an eHRPD network 188 through an eHRPD radio access network 192.
- the radio access network 192 includes a base station 109 that communicates with the user equipment 103.
- the base station 109 is connected to an evolved access network/evolved packet control function (eAN/ePCF) 194.
- eAN/ePCF evolved access network/evolved packet control function
- the eAN/ePCF 194 is connected to a HRPD serving gateway 190, an access network AAA 196, and is preferably connected to mobility management entity 174.
- the HRPD serving gateway 190 is connected to a 3GPP2 AAA server 198.
- the HRPD serving gateway 190 is the serving gateway that connects the eHRPD access network with the 3GPP EPC.
- the eAN/ePCF 194 is a combination of evolved Access Network (eAN) and evolved Packet Control Function (ePCF) .
- the eAN is used for radio communications with the user equipment.
- the ePCF manages
- An access network AAA 196 is responsible for the authentication of the access network, which is the eHRPD radio access network 192 in FIG. IB.
- a 3GPP2 AAA 198 serves as the AAA server in the eHRPD system.
- a cell is defined by the radio signal coverage area served by a base station. In 3GPP LTE, the cell coverage area may range from lkm to 100km.
- An active handoff refers to a handoff that occurs when the user equipment 103 is in an active state, i.e., a physical traffic channel exists between the user equipment 103 and the eAN/ePCF 194 and a connection exists between the eAN/ePCF 194 and the HSGW 190. There is also a point-to-point protocol (PPP) link between the user equipment 103 and the HSGW 190.
- PPP point-to-point protocol
- the first phase is to perform pre-registration and pre-authentication with target neighboring cells.
- the neighboring cells are on different networks, e.g., 3GPP EPC and 3GPP2 eHRPD
- handoff occurs between neighboring networks.
- the second phase, the handoff phase includes the rest of the handoff procedure, i.e., having the user equipment or network device actually change networks or serving base stations .
- registration and authentication take more time than the other procedures normally performed during a handoff. Therefore, pre-registration and pre-authentication could significantly reduce handoff latency.
- FIG. 2 there is shown a call flow depicting the steps for pre-registration and pre-authentication as part of the handoff procedures between E-UTRAN and eHRPD networks as specified in 3GPP1 X.0057.
- the user equipment 103 initiates the establishment of a new session 209 in the eHRPD system.
- the eHRPD eAN/ePCF 194 establishes a main AlO connection with the HRPD serving gateway 190.
- the user equipment 103 and HRPD serving gateway 190 then initiate the PPP connection establishment procedure 212.
- the user equipment 103 then performs user authentication and authorization by using EAP-AKA, 212i - 212 3 , as described in IETF RFC 4187.
- the ⁇ AP-AKA messages are exchanged between the user equipment 103 and HRPD serving gateway 190 using a point-to-point protocol (PPP) .
- PPP point-to-point protocol
- the EAP-AKA messages are further relayed by the 3GPP2 AAA server 198 to the 3GPP AAA server 186, which authenticates and authorizes the user equipment .
- the 3GPP AAA server 186 Upon successful authentication and authorization, the 3GPP AAA server 186 queries the home subscriber server 180 and returns the packet data network gateway address to the eHRPD system.
- the HRPD serving gateway 190 stores the PDN GW IP address, QoS profile, and other user context information, 213, 214, received from the 3GPP AAA server 186 or home subscriber server 180.
- the network initiates resource reservation procedures to establish all dedicated bearers and complete the pre-registration/authentication process. Using this procedure, the eHRPD and IP contexts are established.
- wireless network mobility and resource management are enhanced by methods and systems for predicting when, whether, and with which neighboring radio cell or network the user equipment should perform pre-registration/ pre-authentication, and estimating the lifetime of the contexts (e.g., reserved network resources) established during pre-registration/pre-authentication to reduce handoff delays.
- the method and system use historical information to predict the user equipment's cell residence time, which is defined as the time interval from when the user equipment connects to a base station until the user equipment is handed off to another base station.
- the historical information preferably comprises resident time samples for user equipment that previously resided in a cell.
- FIG. 3 there is shown a flow chart 300 illustrating a method in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
- the method begins at step 305 with a network equipment (for example, a base station) acquiring samples of cell residence time for the user equipment (s) that have resided in the cell associated with the network equipment.
- the cell residence time will be acquired when the user equipment (s) are being handed off to the neighboring cells from their original serving cell.
- the cell residence time may be acquired periodically by polling the user equipment or having the periodically the user equipment report its current residence time to the network equipment.
- the network equipment based on the samples acquired at step 305, estimates the cell residence time for the user equipment residing in a cell. Then, based on the estimated cell residence time, the network equipment estimates the lifetime of the network resources to be reserved for the user equipment at step 315, and performs pre-authentication and pre-registration for the user equipment at step 320.
- FIG. 4 shows a system 400 that may be implemented in accordance with one aspect of the present invention.
- FIG. 4 illustratively depicts a system 400 that comprises a base station 401 and the user equipment 402.
- the base station 401 may comprise or be referred to as an eNodeB or eNB.
- the base station 401 includes an antenna, and receiver and transmitter ⁇ together transceiver unit ⁇ for communicating user and control information to or from the user equipment 402.
- the antenna is configured to radiate or receive radio frequency waves to or from the user equipment.
- the base station comprises a part of the RAN and is coupled to core network, e.g., EPC 170 or eHRPD 188.
- core network e.g., EPC 170 or eHRPD 188.
- the base station 401 may include a database 403 containing acquired samples of cell residence times for the user equipment that previously resided in the cell or serving area of the base station 401.
- FIG. 4 illustrates the database 403 as being part of the base station, the database may reside in the core network as shown in FIG. 2. For example, it may reside in any of network equipment or elements shown in FIG. IB or as a separate database. Likewise, any of the steps 413-423 may also be performed by any such network equipment.
- the user equipment 402 monitors the signal-to-noise Ratio (SNR) of the base station it is currently connected to or using to communicate with, for example, other user equipment.
- the base station may be referred to as the serving base station in that it is the base station that is used to provide content (e.g., voice, video, etc.) to the user equipment 402.
- base station 401 defines the current cell it is residing ⁇ or staying) in.
- the time that the user equipment stays or resides in base station's coverage area or cell is generally referred to as the user equipment's cell residence time.
- the user equipment or the user equipment 402 generally includes any mobile device or mobile station that is able to communicate wirelessly with base station 401.
- Examples of the user equipment 402 include cell phones, smart phones, personal digital assistants or mobile computing devices.
- the user equipment 402 compares the current measured SNR to a predetermined threshold Ti (e.g., Ti ⁇ 50%) . If the SNR is less than T 1 , the user equipment informs the base station that it wishes to perform pre-registration and pre-authentication with candidate neighboring base stations or cells at step 412. In steps 413-420, base station 401 (or other network equipment) makes the decision whether to trigger pre-registration/pre-authentication by estimating the cell residence time of the user equipment 402.
- a predetermined threshold Ti e.g., Ti ⁇ 50%
- base station 401 receives the pre- registration and pre-authentication request from the user equipment 402 at step 413. Then, at step 414, it retrieves, from the database 403, the collected samples of cell residence time for the user equipments that are handed off to neighboring cells from the cell served by base station 401. At steps 415-418, which will be described in further detail below, base station 401 estimates the cell residence time of the user equipment based on a statistical model. At step 419, the residual time of the user equipment is calculated. The residual time is the difference between the estimated cell residence time and the time the user equipment resided in the current cell.
- base station 401 proceeds to step 423 instructing the user equipment to perform pre-registration/pre-authentication, and proceeds to estimate the standard deviation of the cell residence time at step 421.
- the estimated standard deviation of the cell residence time may be used, at step 422 , to estimate the lifetime of the network resource to be reserved for the user equipment for performing the handoff. If the residual time is equal or larger than a predetermined threshold T2 , base station 401 does not grant the pre-registration and pre- authentication request.
- FIG. 5A there is illustrated a call flow diagram showing additional aspects of the present invention.
- the user equipment 402 compares the current measured SNR to a predetermined threshold T 1 (e.g., T 1 ⁇ 50%). If the SNR is less than Tl, the user equipment informs the base station that it wishes to perform pre-registration and pre-authentication with candidate neighboring base stations or cells at step 412. Base station 401 estimates cell residence time and residual time for the user equipment 402 at steps 418-419. As previously described in the reference to FIG. 4, at step 420, if the residual time is equal or larger than a predetermined threshold T 2 , base station 401 declines the pre-registration/pre-authentication request at step 424. On the other hand, if the residual time of the user equipment is less than a threshold T 2 , base station 401 grants the pre-registration/pre-authentication request at step 423.
- T 1 e.g., T 1 ⁇ 50%
- FIG. 5B shows another aspect of the present invention.
- the base station 401 sends the predicted cell residence time to the user equipment when the user equipment connects to the base station or when the user equipment reports to the base station that its SNR with the base station is lower than a threshold Ti .
- the user equipment itself may then use the predicted cell residence time received from the base station to determine when (and whether) it should initiate pre-registration and pre-authentication .
- the base station may also transmit the cell residence times it acquires from one or more user equipments to other network equipment. These acquired residence times or samples may be stored in these other network equipment or elements and used to estimate cell residence time in the other network equipments.
- network equipment may comprise network components in a 3GPP EPC, such as mobility management entity 174, home subscriber server ISO, serving gateway 164, or AAA server 186.
- the equipment may comprise eAN/ePCF 194, access network AAA 196, or AAA server 198.
- the base station may instruct the user equipment to perform pre-registration/pre-authentication with the neighboring cells in a list sorted based on the descending order of SNR.
- FIGS. 5C and 5D show that the user equipment collects the SNRs of neighboring cells of the base station at step 453, and report the collected SNRs to the base station at step 454.
- the number of neighboring cells which may be E-UTRAN or eHRPD, is less than 10.
- the base station In a handoff from a E-UTRAN to an eHRPD, the base station first lists the cells of the eHRPD. The base station then sorts the list of eHRPD cells based on the SNRs reported by the user equipment at step 455.
- the SNR of some or all cells in the list may be zero because it is possible that the user equipment cannot find all neighboring cells before commencing pre-registration and pre-authentication.
- the network then, at step 456, sends the sorted list back to the user equipment and instructs the user equipment to perform pre-registration/ pre-authentication with the cells in the list based on the descending order of SNR.
- the reason to perform pre-registration/ pre-authentication with the cell of highest SNR is that it is likely that the user equipment will roam to that cell.
- the base station determines the ranking of candidate cells for the user equipment's pre-registration and pre-authentication based on the ratio of increase in SNR, instead of SNR itself.
- a higher ratio of increase in SNR is an indication that the user equipment is moving towards that candidate cell.
- the user equipment when the user equipment decides to perform pre-registration and pre-authentication, it samples the SNR for the candidate cells at step 453 over a given time period Et 1 , t 2 ] , and reports the SNR of the neighboring cells to the base station at ti and t 2 at step 454.
- the base station Upon receiving the SNR from the user equipment, the base station calculates the rate of increase in SNR over this time period for each candidate cell at step 455. The base station then ranks the candidate cells in a descending order according to the ratio of increasing in the SNR, and sends the list back to the user equipment at step 456.
- FIGS. 5A to 5D show that, the user equipment performs pre-registration and pre-authentication starting from the candidate cell with the highest ratio of increase in SNR or the highest SNR.
- the base station After the network proceeds to the pre-registration and pre-authentication of the user equipment, the base station starts to estimate the standard deviation of network residence time and calculate the lifetime of the context data reserved for handing off the user equipment at step 459, and sets the lifetime of the context data accordingly at step 460.
- calculation of the context life time may be performed at other network equipment or elements.
- Such network equipment may comprise network components in a 3GPP EPC 7 such as mobility management entity 174, home subscriber server 180, serving gateway 164, or AAA server 186.
- the equipment may comprise eAN/ePCF 194, access network AAA 196, or AAA server 198.
- a Wiener process may be used to estimate the cell residence time.
- the Wiener process is a stochastic process that has proven effective in modeling processes where the values of the random variables are affected by a large number of independent or weakly dependent factors, each with a relatively small impact.
- the cell residence time is a model impacted by a large number of factors, which are either independent or weakly dependent of each other. Therefore, Wiener process provides an effective way to model the cell residence time.
- X t is defined by the following three properties : X t is N(O, c 2 t) distributed for all t ⁇ O. N denotes the normal distribution with mean of zero and variance of c 2 t .
- ⁇ t be the prediction time interval and a be a Standard normal random variable.
- ⁇ K the variation
- ⁇ K is the variation from t- ⁇ t to t.
- the quantity of ⁇ K is computed every ⁇ t time unit.
- ⁇ K can be modeled as a normal random variable for any given ⁇ t .
- the variation of Wiener process in the following equation allows the mean and the standard deviation of ⁇ K to change over time:
- Equation (3) ⁇ K becomes a normal distributed random variable with mean ⁇ A ⁇ and standard deviation ⁇ - ⁇ jAt . It suggests that the mean and the standard deviation of ⁇ K, for any given time interval ⁇ t, can be calculated directly from ⁇ and S . Therefore, ⁇ and ⁇ are referred to as the expected drift and the standard deviation rate of ⁇ K, respectively. Moreover, for any given time interval ⁇ , ⁇ and ⁇ can be estimated based on the mean and variance of the sample value of ⁇ K in previous time intervals of length ⁇ .
- ⁇ can be estimated by ⁇ :
- Equations (3) - (5 ⁇ ) ⁇ K can be closely estimated when r is large enough. Usually 25 is enough for r.
- the Wiener process can estimate the value of K(t + ⁇ t) in the near future by using the old records in any given sampling time interval ⁇ .
- the k(t - i ⁇ ) is then used in Equations
- Equation (3) (4) -(5 ⁇ to compute ⁇ ⁇ and ⁇ ⁇ , which are then used to generate ⁇ K by using Equation (3) .
- a base station needs to run r x ⁇ time units to collect enough samples. After that, the base station can start to compute the estimated value of ⁇ K using Equations (3)TM (5). The estimated K(t + ⁇ t ⁇ then can be computed by ⁇ K and K(t) .
- base station 401 receives the pre-registration and pre-authentication request from the user equipment 402 at step 413. Then, at step 414, it retrieves, from the database 403, for example, the collected samples of cell residence time for the last n user equipments for r-1 time intervals of length ⁇ . At step 415, the instantaneous mean of cell residence times before t- ⁇ r - l) ⁇ is calculated. Then at step 416, base station 401 calculates the expected drift and the standard deviation of the variation in cell residence time from t - ⁇ t to t .
- the variation of cell residence time from t - ⁇ t to t is then calculated at step 417.
- the cell residence time for the user equipment 402 is estimated based on the calculated variation of cell residence time from t - ⁇ t to t .
- the context lifetime of the network resources reserved by pre-registration/authentication can be estimated based on the cell residence time. If the predicted context lifetime is shorter than the residual cell residence time, the reserved context can expire before handoff begins. This may impact the pre-registration/pre-authentication process, rendering it meaningless in some cases .
- a standard deviation of the cell residence time estimated by equations (3) - (5) , can be calculated.
- K(t + ⁇ t ⁇ then can be computed by ⁇ K and K(t) .
- Context Lifetime K(t + ⁇ t)+ a x ⁇ (t + ⁇ t)
- eNodeB in eGPP EPS can be connected by an interface called X2 Interface, the primary purpose of X2 Interface is to forward packets from old eNodeB to new eNodeB after handoff.
- X2 Interface for deleting unused contexts will need to be standardized.
- each pre-established context can have a context lifetime that expires on itself. This avoids the need for the user equipment to use additional signaling to instruct the neighboring networks to remove the pre-established text, hence significantly reduces the complexity of pre-registration/pre-authentication.
- call blocking/handoff dropping probability An arbitrarily chosen static context lifetime has been proven to result in bad performance.
- One evaluation criterion is call blocking/handoff dropping probability.
- a longer lifetime leads to a higher call blocking/handoff dropping probability.
- the blocking probability of new calls will drop if more resources are reserved for handoff calls.
- the handoff dropping probability will drop if more resources are reserved for new calls. Therefore a shorter lifetime performs better in terms of call blocking/handoff dropping probability.
- Another evaluation criterion is the measurement of how many contexts reserved are actually used. This could be defined as a hit rate:
- the context lifetime reserved for the user equipment in this candidate cell will be reset to last as long as the user equipment stays inside this cell.
- Various aspects of the present disclosure may be embodied as a program, software, or computer instructions embodied in a computer or machine usable or readable medium, which causes the computer or machine to perform the steps of the method when executed on the computer, processor, and/or machine. More particularly, the methods described herein may be reduced to programming instructions that are stored in memory and executed by a process or central processing unit (CPU) 7 microprocessor or the like. Such processors may include those made by Intel, AMD or any other similar products. In addition, the instructions may also be programmed to operate using application specific integrated circuits (ASICs) , which may make the method more portable to, for example, a base station or the user equipment.
- ASICs application specific integrated circuits
- the system and method of the present disclosure may be implemented and run on a general-purpose computer or special-purpose computer system.
- the computer system may be any type of known or will be known system and may typically include a processor, memory device, a storage device, input/output devices, internal buses, and/or a communications interface for communicating with other computer systems in conjunction with communication hardware and software, etc.
- the user equipment, mobile station or user devices of the present disclosure may include mobile device, such as a cell phone, a mobile computer, a mobile media recorder, a mobile media player, a mobile game console, a navigation device, a communication device and accessories.
- the wireless networks between which the mobile device performs handoff may comprise 3GPP, 3GPP2 or WiFi network.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
- Signal Processing (AREA)
- Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)
Abstract
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Claims
Priority Applications (4)
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| CN201080036834.8A CN102648637B (en) | 2009-08-18 | 2010-08-18 | Pre-registration/pre-authentication in wireless networks |
| JP2012525654A JP5631996B2 (en) | 2009-08-18 | 2010-08-18 | Pre-registration / pre-authentication in wireless networks |
| EP10810524.8A EP2468010B1 (en) | 2009-08-18 | 2010-08-18 | Pre-registration/pre-authentication in wireless networks |
| KR1020127006820A KR101190991B1 (en) | 2009-08-18 | 2010-08-18 | Pre-registration/pre-authentication in wireless networks |
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| US12/634,842 | 2009-12-10 |
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Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
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| JP5631996B2 (en) | 2014-11-26 |
| CN102648637B (en) | 2015-04-08 |
| US9107131B2 (en) | 2015-08-11 |
| EP2468010B1 (en) | 2017-09-20 |
| KR20120038022A (en) | 2012-04-20 |
| EP2468010A4 (en) | 2014-11-12 |
| KR101190991B1 (en) | 2012-10-15 |
| EP2468010A1 (en) | 2012-06-27 |
| JP2013502838A (en) | 2013-01-24 |
| CN102648637A (en) | 2012-08-22 |
| US20110044264A1 (en) | 2011-02-24 |
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