Abstract:
The invention is related to a digital, wired or wireless, communication system constituting a network of multiple nodes. The network comprises a central node. The central node controls all the communication in the network. In such a system, information related to the system itself or to the nodes in the system can be distributed by the central node among the peripheral nodes in the network or kept in a database in the central node, which database is accessible on request from the peripheral nodes in the network. The information can be conveyed to the central node from the peripheral nodes, either commanded by the central node itself or on request from a peripheral node, triggered by an internal event in the peripheral node, e.g. a change of state having external consequences.  
     The invention provides a mechanism for efficient distribution of relevant information in such a system.

Description:
FIELD OF INVENTION  
         [0001]    The present invention relates to a method and arrangement in a digital communication system constituting a network of multiple nodes. More specifically the present invention relates to a method and an arrangement for providing distribution within a Piconet using short range radio technology.  
         DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ART  
         [0002]    The Bluetooth interface is an example of a short-range radio interface, which was originally intended as a replacement for cables between electrical devices. The term Bluetooth is in this disclosure used as an example of usage of short-range radio communication. Printers, digital cameras, telephones, laptop computers, video monitors, electronic calendars (PDA), desktops, fax machines, keyboards, joysticks as well as ordinary computers and virtually any other digital device can be part of such a short-range radio system, i.e. any of these devices could have a Bluetooth radio chip and the software required therefore. But beyond untethering devices by replacing cables, short range radio communication can provide a universal bridge to existing data networks, as a peripheral interface. It can also be used to form small private ad hoc groupings of interconnected devices away from fixed network infrastructures or connected to a fixed network infrastructure via a gateway. The Bluetooth radio communication system is designed to operate in a noisy radio frequency environment and uses therefore a fast acknowledgement and frequency hopping scheme to make the links between the units in the system robust. Thus, Bluetooth radio modules avoid interference from other signals by hopping to a new frequency after transmitting or receiving a data packet, as is illustrated in FIG. 5. Compared to other systems operating in the same frequency band, the Bluetooth radio communication system typically hops faster and uses shorter data packets. This makes the Bluetooth radio communication system more robust than other systems. Use of Forward Error Correction (FEC) limits the impact of random noise on long-distance links between units in the system.  
           [0003]    A Bluetooth radio communication system uses a frequency hopping scheme within the unlicensed ISM (Industrial, Scientific, Medical) band at 2.4 GHz. A frequency hop transceiver is used in the units to reduce the influence of interference and fading. A shaped, binary FM modulation scheme is used to minimize the complexity of the transceiver. The gross data rate is 1 Mb/s and a TDD (Time-Division Duplex) scheme is used for full-duplex transmission.  
           [0004]    The Bluetooth base band protocol is a combination of circuit and packet switching, as is shown in FIG. 5. In FIG. 5, s 1  denotes a single time slot, and p 1  denotes a packet the transmission of which requires three time slots. The packets are normally transmitted using different hop frequencies. A packet is nominally transmitted in a single slot, but a single packet can require up to five slots. Bluetooth can support an asynchronous data channel, up to three simultaneous synchronous voice channels, or a channel, that simultaneously supports asynchronous data and synchronous voice. Each voice channel supports a 64 kb/s synchronous (voice) link. The asynchronous channel can support an asymmetric link of maximally 721 kb/s in either direction while permitting 57.6 kb/s in the return direction, or a 432.6 kb/s symmetric link.  
           [0005]    In FIG. 2, function blocks of a unit having a short-range radio transceiver, such as Bluetooth, are shown. A radio unit  300  provided with an antenna is connected to a link control unit  310  providing the base band. The link control unit  310  is connected to the Central Processing Unit, called CPU,  320  providing the link management. The CPU is connected to a memory  360  storing the software and consisting of two memory units: an SRAM  330  and a FLASH memory  340 . The CPU  320  is connected to a host interface  350 . An SRAM is a fast temporary memory. A FLASH memory is programmable ROM.  
           [0006]    [0006]FIG. 8 shows two piconets A 1  and B 1  in a scatternet. The piconet A 1  comprises four units  10 ,  20 ,  30 ,  40 ; and the piconet B 1  comprises three units  40 ,  50  and  60 . In the piconet A 1 , the unit  10  is a master unit. The unit  40  is a member of both piconet A 1  and piconet B 1 . Two or more Bluetooth units (BT) using Bluetooth for communication with each other and sharing the same channel (i.e. the same frequency hop sequence and time slot synchronization) form a piconet, i.e. a piconet is a collection of units interconnected using Bluetooth in an ad hoc fashion. Within a piconet a Bluetooth unit can have either of two roles: it can be a master or a slave. Within each piconet there is one and only one master, and up to seven active slaves can be connected, i.e. a piconet starts with two interconnected units, such as portable PC and a cellular telephone, and it may grow to eight interconnected units. All Bluetooth units are peer units and basically have identical implementations. Any BT unit can become the master in a piconet. However, when a piconet is being formed, one unit will take the role of the master and the other(s) will be slave(s) for the duration of the piconet. A scatternet, or an ad hoc network, is a network comprising multiple independent and non-synchronized piconets. The master or master unit is the unit in a piconet the clock and hopping sequence of which are used to synchronize all other units in the piconet. A slave or slave unit is every unit in a piconet that is not the master in the piconet. Two or more piconets can be interconnected, forming a scatternet as has already been defined. The connection point between two piconets consists of a single BT unit that is a member of both piconets. A BT unit can simultaneously be a slave of a plurality of piconets, but only master in one piconet. I.e., a BT unit functioning as master in one piconet can act as a slave in another piconet or piconets. A BT unit can only transmit and receive data in one piconet at a time, so participation in multiple piconets has to be on a time division multiplex basis. The Bluetooth system supports both point-to-point and point-to-multi-point connections. Several piconets can be linked together ad hoc, where each piconet is identified by a different frequency hopping sequence. All units participating in a same piconet are synchronized to the hopping sequence of the piconet. The scatternet topology can best be described as a multiple piconet structure, see FIG. 8. However, Bluetooth units for use in scatternets are not yet commercially available.  
           [0007]    [0007]FIG. 3 a  shows a Personal Digital Assistant PDA  500  utilizing an “add-on” Bluetooth communication device  510 . The Bluetooth communication unit  510 , which is provided with an antenna, is inserted in a slot in the PDA. The Bluetooth communication unit may be a PC-card or a compact flashcard provided with a Bluetooth chipset.  
           [0008]    [0008]FIG. 3 b  shows a PDA utilizing a “built-in” Bluetooth communication device. Here, the PDA is provided with an antenna.  
           [0009]    [0009]FIG. 3 c  shows a mobile telephone utilizing a “built-in” Bluetooth communication device, the Bluetooth transceiver having an antenna, not shown, different from that of the mobile telephone.  
           [0010]    A Bluetooth system provides, as already told, full-duplex transmission built on slotted Time Division Duplex (TDD). Each slot used has a length of 0.625 ms. The time slots are numbered sequentially using a very large number range (the range is cyclic having a cycle of 2 27 ). Transmission from master to slave always starts in an even-numbered time slot whereas transmission from slave to master always starts in an odd-numbered time slot. The term “frame” as used here is defined as the combination of an even numbered time slot and the subsequent odd numbered time slot (i.e. a master-to-slave time slot and a slave-to-master time slot), except when multi-slot packets are used, and then other conventions are used. In a communication system using Bluetooth no direct transmission exists between slaves in a piconet.  
           [0011]    The communication between the units of a piconet is organized such that the master polls each slave according to some polling scheme. With one exception a slave is only allowed to transmit after having been polled by the master. The slave will then start its transmission in the slave-to-master time slot immediately following the packet received from the master. The master may or may not include data, e.g. payload data, in the packets used to poll the slave. The only exception to the above principle is that when a slave has an established SCO (Synchronous Connection-Oriented) link to the master, it is always allowed to transmit in a pre-allocated slave-to-master slot, even if not explicitly polled by the master in the directly preceding master-to slave slot. SCO links support real time voice traffic using reserved bandwidth.  
           [0012]    Each BT unit has a globally unique 48 bit address. This address, the Bluetooth Device Address (BD_ADDR) is assigned when the BT unit is manufactured and it is never changed. In addition thereto, the master of a piconet assigns a local Active Member Address (AM_ADDR) to each active slave of the piconet. The AM_ADDR is only three bits long and is unique only within a single piconet. The master uses the AM_ADDR when polling a slave in a piconet. When the slave, triggered by a packet received from the master and addressed using the AM_ADDR of the slave, transmits a packet to the master, it includes its own AM_ADDR in the header of the packet.  
           [0013]    The packets can carry both synchronous data, on Synchronous Connection Oriented (SCO) links, and asynchronous data, on Asynchronous Connection-Less (ACL) links. For some types of packet used, an acknowledgment and retransmission scheme is used to ensure reliable transfer of data. Such a scheme is not used for SCO packets transferring synchronous data. Also forward error correction (FEC) in the form of channel coding can be used.  
           [0014]    The standard format of a Bluetooth Baseband packet is shown in FIG. 1 a . It comprises a field for an access Code, a header field and a payload field. The FIG. 1 c  illustrates the format of the header field, which comprises an AM_ADDR field, followed by a TYPE field, indicating the type of packet. The FLOW field encompasses one bit used for flow control. The fields ARQN and SEQN control the acknowledgement and retransmission scheme. The Header Error check (HEC) field has information for checking the integrity of the header. In receiving a packet and using the information in the HEC field for checking the header field. The header field can be found to be in error and then the packet is discarded. Otherwise the packet is retained and further checks can be made. The format of the payload depends on the type of packet being transferred. An SCO packet is a packet transported on an SCO link and an ACL packet is a packet transferred on an ACL link. The payload field of a SCO packet comprises only a data field. The payload of an ACL packet, which is shown in FIG. 1 b , comprises a header field, a data field and, a field carrying information for cyclic redundancy check (CRC). In addition, there are hybrid packet including two data fields, one for synchronous data and one for asynchronous data. Hybrid packets are used when voice information and data are transmitted over the same link. Packets having a payload field and not provided with a CRC field are neither acknowledged nor retransmitted. There are two different formats of the payload header field. In FIG. 1 d  the format of the payload header field for single-slot packets is illustrated. In FIG. 1 e  is illustrated the format of the payload header field for multi-slot packets. L_CH is a two bit field indicating the type of payload. L_CH=00 means that the “00” value is undefined, and will therefore not be used. L_CH=01 indicates a continuation fragment of an L 2 CAP message to be described below. L_CH=01 indicates the start of a L 2 CAP message or no fragmentation. Fragmentation means that the L 2 CAP packet is to large to be carried by a single Basband packet and therefore it has been split into multiple parts, so-called fragments, each fragment being carried by a single Baseband packet. At the destination node the fragments are reassembled into a complete L 2 CAP packet. L_CH=11 indicates an LMP message. The FLOW field is used for flow control. The FLOW bit in the header field is used for flow control at the L 2 CAP level. FLOW=0 indicates “stop transmission”. FLOW=1 indicates “ready for transmission”. The FLOW bit in the last correctly received payload header determines the flow status. The LENGTH field indicates the length of the data field. Since multi-slot packets can carry a longer data field, the LENGTH field of the multi-slot payload header (FIG. 1 e ) is longer (not shown in the figure) than the LENGTH field of the single-slot payload header (FIG. 1 d ). As is shown in FIG. 1 e , the payload header field of a multi-slot packet, the four last bits are undefined.  
           [0015]    In a Bluetooth system a few protocol layers are used which are illustrated in FIG. 4 and comprise the Baseband (BB), protocol between the physical layer  103  and the data link layer  104 , the Link Manager Protocol (LMP) and the Logical Link Control and Adaptation Layer Protocol (L 2 CAP)in the data link layer  104 . Also a “High level protocol or application” layer ( 106 ) may or may not be provided as well as a Network layer ( 105 ) is. In addition, a Network Adaptation Layer (NAL), not shown, residing between the data link layer ( 104 ) and the network layer ( 105 ) can be provided.  
           [0016]    Now the Bluetooth protocol stack will be described with reference to FIG. 4. In FIG. 4 two Bluetooth units are depicted: a unit Nr.  1 ,  101 , and unit Nr.  2 ,  102 .  
           [0017]    The BaseBand BB protocol describes the specifications of the digital signal processing part of the hardware—the Bluetooth link controller, which carries the Baseband protocols and other low-level link routines. It uses two link types: Synchronous Connection-Oriented (SCO) links and Asynchronous Connection-Less (ACL) links. The Link Management Protocol LMP handles messages used for link set-up, security and control. The LMP is located above the Baseband Protocol.  
           [0018]    The Logical Link Control and Adaptation layer Protocol L 2 CAP is also located over the Baseband Protocol. L 2 CAP provides connection-oriented and connectionless data services to upper layer protocols with protocol multiplexing capability, segmentation, reassemble operation, and group abstractions. The L 2 CAP is defined only for ACL links.  
           [0019]    As previously stated, physical transmission in a piconet is allowed exclusively between the master and each slave, and vice-versa. Thus, there is no way for a slave to send data to another slave in a piconet, since direct communication is not allowed.  
           [0020]    In a Bluetooth system there is no way specified to address and route packets from one piconet to another. However, a BT unit, which is a member of more than one piconet can be used to forward packets from one piconet to another. Such a BT unit is herein called a “forwarding node”.  
           [0021]    In order to allow slave-to-slave communication in a piconet and inter-piconet communication. One piece of important information is a slave, which is to send a message to another slave in a piconet, e.g. the address, such as BD_ADDR of each of the other members of piconet. This information is normally only known by the master unit in a piconet. Another example of important information can be whether a receiving BT unit supports slave-to-slave communication.  
           [0022]    Nokia has proposed to the Bluetooth SIG (Special Interest Group), the organization writing the Bluetooth standard, a new method enabling inter-piconet routing in a scatternet as well as intra-piconet routing between slaves within the same piconet. In the Nokia proposal a protocol layer called Virtual Network Segment (VNS) is inserted between the L 2 CAP and the Network layer  104 , see FIG. 4, in order to emulate a shared medium network, i.e. a broadcast medium, to the Network layer, i.e. the VNS layer serves the same purpose as the NAL layer. The VNS entity in a forwarding node will register itself in the master unit by sending a message to its peer entity in the master unit. In the transfer of messages slave units use the knowledge of the master. When a slave unit wants to send a message to a forwarding node, e.g. a request to create a route to a specific destination in another piconet, it sends the message to the master unit. The master unit will then forward the message to the appropriate forwarding node(s) based on its retained information.  
           [0023]    Another example arising from Bluetooth Core Specification 1.0, (i.e. Specification of the Bluetooth system; Core; Specification Volume 1:1, version 1.0) relates to the compatibility between different BT units. When two BT units communicate over a direct wireless link, i.e. not slave-to-slave communication via the master unit, the compatibility problem is solved by exchanging lists of features including indications for each feature whether it is supported or not. This information exchange is performed using the LMP PDU (Protocol data Unit), LMP_features_req and LMP_features_res. A message in the Link Manager Protocol (LMP) is called “LMP PDU”, PDU standing for “Protocol Data Unit”. LMP_features_req and LMP_features_res indicate two LMP PDU according to the Bluetooth Core Specification 1.0. In fact, before this information exchange is performed a BT unit is allowed to use only a small subset of the Bluetooth features, e.g. packet types, when communicating with the other BT unit. After the information exchange has occurred the intersection of the supported features in the two BT units may be used. The information being exchanged using LMP_features_req and LMP_features_res is a list of Bluetooth features and a bit for each feature. The bit indicates whether the feature is supported or not, see page 235-236 in the Bluetooth Core Specification Volume 1:1.  
         SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
         [0024]    The Problems discussed in the present disclosure are the following:  
           [0025]    The VNS approach deals with only a small part of the general distribution of information.  
           [0026]    Regarding the LMP procedure for exchange of lists of supported features, this is limited to BT units communicating over a direct link, i.e. a master unit and a slave unit communicating with each other. The compatibility issues arising when slave-to-slave communication is considered are not addressed.  
           [0027]    When slave-to-slave communication within a piconet is introduced, a problem is that neither the AM_ADDR nor the BD_ADDR, or a possible IP address, of other slave units in said piconet are available for a slave unit in said piconet.  
           [0028]    Since Bluetooth is the main target of the invention, the method and arrangement as disclosed herein is described in a Bluetooth context using Bluetooth terminology. The term “Bluetooth” is a registered trademark denomination of a short-range radio transceiver and the communication system using such a transceiver. A man skilled in the art understands that other types of short range communication may be used, e.g. infrared light, the devices in such a system being provided with means for communication by infrared light. Further types of short-range communication may be ultrasonic or hydrophonic communication. Furthermore, the invention can be applicable to other network technologies, both wired and wireless. Thus a target system is considered which is a digital, wired or wireless, communication system constituting a network of multiple nodes. The network comprises a central node, also called master and two or more peripheral nodes, also called slaves or slave units. The central node controls all the communication in the network. On the lowest protocol layer, the physical layer, all the communication flows exclusively between the central node and a peripheral node or vice versa. No communication, on the lowest protocol layer, goes directly between two peripheral nodes. In such a system, information related to the system itself or to the nodes in the system can be distributed by the central node among the peripheral nodes in the network or kept in a database in the central node, which database is accessible on request from the peripheral nodes in the network. The information can be conveyed to the central node from the peripheral nodes, either commanded by the central node itself or on request from a peripheral node, triggered by an internal event in the peripheral node, e.g. a change of state having external consequences. The distributed information can comprise:  
           [0029]    Number of peripheral nodes  
           [0030]    Addresses of peripheral nodes  
           [0031]    IP addresses of all nodes  
           [0032]    Associations between an IP address and a low layer address (e.g. Medium Access Control MAC address) for a peripheral node or for all nodes  
           [0033]    Addresses of forwarding nodes  
           [0034]    Supported features of peripheral nodes  
           [0035]    State changes in peripheral nodes (e.g. when a node becomes or ceases to be a forwarding node)  
           [0036]    Forwarding bit rate capacity of forwarding nodes  
           [0037]    Notifications when nodes join or leave the network  
           [0038]    Notifications when a connection to a fixed infrastructure becomes available or ceases to be available  
           [0039]    Notifications of other events  
           [0040]    Information related to forwarding policy  
           [0041]    Furthermore, it should be noted that the methods to be used in a Bluetooth system are not limited to the type of information mentioned in conjunction with the mechanisms. Any type of information related to the system of the individual nodes could be managed using any of the described mechanisms. Such information may be the above listed information and can contain:  
           [0042]    AM_ADDR of slaves  
           [0043]    BD_ADDR of slaves  
           [0044]    IP address of slaves  
           [0045]    Inter-piconet scheduling parameters for forwarding nodes  
           [0046]    Thus, to overcome the above described problems and to provide a generally viable solution a piconet must include an efficient mechanism to make all the relevant information available to all slave units in a timely manner. This can be achieved in different ways. Although different types of information will be described in conjunction with different mechanisms, the distribution of all the different types of information could be handled by a common protocol, but separate protocols are also feasible. It is also possible to use different protocols for the same information in different situations. The purpose of the invention is to provide mechanisms for efficient distribution of relevant information in a piconet  
           [0047]    In a system using Bluetooth technology, an advantage of the herein disclosed method and arrangement is that slave-to-slave communication is facilitated, since distribution of useful system or node related information in a piconet is enabled. When slave-to-slave communication is enabled it is no longer enough that the master unit is informed of relevant information regarding the slave units. Useful information can be e.g.:  
           [0048]    Address information related to the member units in a piconet, including notifications when BT units join or leave the piconet.  
           [0049]    Forwarding node information, which also facilitates inter-piconet communication.  
           [0050]    Compatibility related information.  
           [0051]    In a system using Bluetooth technology, a further advantage of the herein disclosed method and arrangement is that slave-to-slave LMP PDU also facilitates slave-to-slave communication.  
           [0052]    In a mobile telecommunication constituting a network of multiple nodes, comprising a central node and at least two peripheral nodes, where the central node control all the communication in the network, an advantage of the herein disclosed method and arrangement is that communication between peripheral nodes, via the central node, is facilitated, since relevant information related to the system and the individual nodes can be distributed among the peripheral nodes. The information may be any of the above listed.  
           [0053]    The term “comprises/comprising” when used in this specification is taken to specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps or components but does not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, components or groups thereof.  
           [0054]    Further scope of applicability of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description given hereinafter. However, it should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating preferred embodiments of the invention, are given by way of illustration only, since various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from this detailed description.  
       
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [0055]    [0055]FIG. 1 a  is a diagram illustrating a standard base band packet format.  
         [0056]    [0056]FIG. 1 b  is a diagram illustrating the format of an ACL packet.  
         [0057]    [0057]FIG. 1 c  is a diagram illustrating a base band packet header.  
         [0058]    [0058]FIG. 1 d  is a diagram illustrating a base band payload header for a singe slot packet.  
         [0059]    [0059]FIG. 1 e  is a diagram illustrating a base band payload header for a multi slot packet.  
         [0060]    [0060]FIG. 2 is a schematic view illustrating a Bluetooth transceiver.  
         [0061]    [0061]FIGS. 3 a - c  are schematic views of three electronic devices provided with a Bluetooth transceiver.  
         [0062]    [0062]FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating the Bluetooth protocol layers.  
         [0063]    [0063]FIG. 5 is a diagram showing the relationship between time slots and frequency hops in a system using Bluetooth.  
         [0064]    [0064]FIG. 6 is a diagram illustrating a forwarding scenario.  
         [0065]    [0065]FIG. 7 a - 7   c  are diagram illustrating the Baseband packet format.  
         [0066]    [0066]FIG. 8 is a schematic view of two piconets in a scatternet.  
         [0067]    [0067]FIG. 9 is a flowchart illustrating the routing of a packet.  
         [0068]    [0068]FIG. 10 is a diagram illustrating a Bluetooth unit.  
         [0069]    [0069]FIG. 11 is a flowchart illustrating the process of a Bluetooth unit becoming a forwarding node.  
         [0070]    [0070]FIGS. 12 a,b  are flowcharts illustrating an example of a process when a Bluetooth unit becomes a forwarding node.  
         [0071]    [0071]FIGS. 13 a,b  are flowcharts illustrating an other example of a process when a Bluetooth unit becomes a forwarding node.  
         [0072]    [0072]FIG. 14 is a flowchart illustrating the process of a forwarding node ceasing to be a forwarding node and the information flow in a first piconet.  
         [0073]    [0073]FIGS. 15 a,b  are flowcharts illustrating the process of a forwarding node ceasing to be a forwarding node and the information flow in a second piconet.  
         [0074]    The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to preferred exemplifying embodiments thereof and also with reference to the accompanying drawings.  
     
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION  
       [0075]    The internal logical structure of a Bluetooth unit having an enhanced communication capability appears from FIG. 10. The Bluetooth unit  1195  comprises basic Bluetooth functions  1150 , forwarding functions  1160  and a database  1180 . The block basic Bluetooth functions  1150  comprises the functions performed by a transceiver, a clock, a memory, a power source, logic circuits for implementing the Bluetooth protocol stack, logic circuits for analyzing signaling messages and logic circuits for generating signaling messages, etc. The block forwarding functions  1160  comprises the functions performed by forwarding logic circuits, i.e. logic circuits to receive a packet in a first piconet, logic circuits to analyze the routing and address information located in said packet and logic circuits for transmitting a packet to a second piconet, etc. The block database  1180  comprises a physical memory for storing data, a piconet indicator  1198 , blocks  1197  provided with data related to each piconet in which the BT unit is currently a member, a block  1179  comprising inter-piconet scheduling parameters, a block  1178  comprising BT unit related data. The block  1198  comprising a piconet indicator includes a data unit indicating the piconet, if any, in which the BT unit is currently active, i.e. which set of piconet related data that is currently valid. The block  1179  “Inter-piconet scheduling parameters” include timing parameters governing when the BT unit is to be active in each piconet, i.e. when to switch from one set of piconet related data (in particular the radio related parameters  1173  and the timing parameters  1175 ) to another. The block  1178  “BT unit related data” includes data related to the BT unit irrespective of the piconet to which the BT unit is located e.g. Battery status, user interface options, data entered by the user. The blocks  1197  “Data related to the k th  piconet” comprises a block  1196  “master/slave indicator”, a block  1194  “forwarding node/non-forwarding indicator”, a block  1192  “forwarding related data”, a block  1190  “list of piconet members”, i.e. Bluetooth units that are connected to the piconet, a block  1170  “list of forwarding nodes in the piconet”, a block  1173  “radio related parameters”, and other piconet related data. The block  1196  “master/slave indicator includes a data unit indicating whether the BT unit is a master or a slave in the piconet. The block  1194  “forwarding node/non-forwarding node indicator” includes a data unit indicating whether the BT unit is a forwarding node or not in the piconet. The block  1192  “forwarding related data” includes data necessary to perform forwarding of data from one piconet to another, e.g. list of piconet being currently interconnected. The block  1173  “radio related parameters” comprises frequency hop sequence and currently used transmitter power, The block  1175  “timing parameters” include an estimate of the clock value of the master unit. The block  1170  list of forwarding nodes comprises a data record of each forwarding node in the piconet, each data record comprising at least  
         [0076]    The AM_ADDR of the forwarding node  
         [0077]    The BD_ADDR of the forwarding node  
         [0078]    The block  1190  list of piconet members comprises  
         [0079]    A data record of each member unit of the piconet, except in some cases the Bluetooth unit itself, each record comprising  
         [0080]    The AM_ADDR of the Bluetooth unit  
         [0081]    The BD_ADDR of the Bluetooth unit  
         [0082]    Other optional information about the Bluetooth unit, e.g. compatibility information  
         [0083]    In order to allow that information is transferred from one slave to another slave in a piconet the information on the members of the piconet must be distributed to all members of the piconet. Thus, when a source slave unit is to transfer information to another slave unit the source slave must have access to the address of the other slave unit. This address could be the BD_ADDR or the AM_ADDR or some other address used on a higher layer, e.g. the IP address. The best choice of address depends on the addressing scheme used in the piconet. A combination of several addresses could sometimes also be used to allow translation between addresses, e.g. between an IP address and a BD_ADDR and/or between a BD_ADDR and an AM_ADDR.  
         [0084]    Thus, e.g. the AM_ADDR and the BD_ADDR of all slaves should be made available to all slaves.  
         [0085]    When transferring information between slaves in a piconet the routing is performed using the Baseband layer protocol, thereby eliminating the need to traverse all the protocol layers up to the network layer  105  or a NAL layer. The packets containing the information to be transferred can be called Baseband Packets and they are transferred from a first slave, via the master, to a second slave. The first slave obtains the address of the second slave from the master, inserts it in a header field of the Baseband packets and transmits them to the master. The master analyses the address in the header and forwards the packet to the second slave according to the address. Furthermore, when AM_ADDR is used addressing, the data overhead represented by a higher layer destination address (e.g. an IP address on the IP layer or a BD_ADDR on the NAL layer) is completely eliminated.  
         [0086]    To make the presence of a new member, and the relevant address(es) of this new member, known to the other slave units in the piconet as soon as possible, it is preferable that the master unit distributes the address information of the new slave unit as soon as the new slave unit has been connected to the master. The master unit should also inform the new slave unit of the slave units being already present in the piconet, by transferring the relevant information and in particular the address information for all the already existing slave units. Similarly, the master unit informs all the other slave units in the piconet, when a slave unit leaves the piconet. When a slave unit leaves the piconet it is detected explicitly or implicitly by time-out due to loss of radio contact. An alternative distributing mechanism is that the master periodically distributes the address information of all the slave units in the piconet. Of course, it is also possible to combine “event triggered” the time driven distribution of information.  
         [0087]    The distribution mechanism could be either broadcasting to all the piconet members at once, although the Bluetooth intra-piconet broadcast mechanism is not reliable, since the messages are not acknowledged, or unicast from the master unit to each slave unit, one at a time. If the address information of all the slave units is periodically unicast to each slave unit, the address information of the slave unit receiving the information should of course be excluded from the message. The protocol to be used could be LMP (including new PDUs) or a VNS layer protocol. There are also other proposals of adaptation layers between L 2 CAP and the Network layer, e.g. called Network Adaptation Layer (NAL), which could also include this protocol. Other protocols may also be used for this purpose.  
         [0088]    A BT unit can only transmit and receive data in one piconet at a time, so participation in multiple piconets has to be on a time division multiplex basis. The time spent in each piconet is governed by a scheduling algorithm. This algorithm could be designed in various ways according to different principles, e.g. fixed round robin, negotiation between a slave unit and a master unit (when applicable), dynamically assigned time windows (by the master of a piconet based on the current traffic, etc. When a BT unit switches from one piconet to another, it has to start using another set of piconet related data, as shown in FIG. 10. In particular, the radio related parameters, e.g. the frequency hop sequence, and the timing parameters, e.g. the clock value of the master of the piconet, have to be switched in order for the Bluetooth unit to be able to communicate in the new piconet. In FIG. 10 different sets of piconet related data in a BT unit are illustrated, as well as a piconet indicator indicating which of the sets of piconet related data that is currently valid.  
         [0089]    To allow inter-piconet communication, the address of each forwarding node that is present in the piconet must also be distributed. This address could be AM_ADDR, the BD_ADDR, an IP address or even a VNS or NAL specific address, or similar address. In the same way as for general address information of a slave member, also in this case, any combination of these addresses could be useful depending on the addressing and routing mechanisms used in the piconet and the scatternet, and the independent use of the address information. Distribution of forwarding node information could be handled separately or in conjunction with the distribution of the general address information of all the slave units in the piconet. If provided in conjunction with the distribution of address information, there could be an indicator for each slave unit indicating whether it is a forwarding node or not. When forwarding node information is considered, this concerns the master too, since the master may also be a forwarding node. If the forwarding node information is distributed along with the slave unit address information, and the master unit happens to be a forwarding node, this status of the master unit has to be added to the information of the slave units.  
         [0090]    Even if the forwarding node information is included in the distribution of slave unit address information, it must still be possible to distribute forwarding node information separately if event triggered distribution is used. When a BT unit becomes a forwarding node, the other members of the piconet must be informed. Likewise, when a BT unit ceases to be a forwarding node, the other piconet members should be informed. This information could be broadcast or unicast by the master unit to the other slave units, but first the concerned BT unit, i.e. the unit that become or cease to be a forwarding node, must inform the master unit. This is preferably done via messages on the VNS layer or NAL layer, or a similar layer, but the messages could also be carried by new LMP PDUs or by another protocol.  
         [0091]    In a further embodiment, the BT unit that has changed its forwarding status, from not being a forwarding node to being one or vice versa, notifies the other piconet members directly via slave-to-slave communication.  
         [0092]    In order to attend to the compatibility problem in slave-to-slave communication within a piconet, the master unit could simply distribute the list of supported, and unsupported, features for a certain slave unit together with the address information for the concerned slave unit. The list of features should first be obtained from the new slave unit by the master unit via the LMP_features_req LMP_features_res procedure, although the list of features must be extended to cover e.g. support for the shared medium emulation layer, e.g. the NAL layer, if used, forwarding capability, support for slave-to-slave intra-piconet communication, etc. Changes in the list of supported features in already existing piconet members should also be communicated to the other piconet members. This could be done by first informing the master unit, unless the concerned unit itself is the master unit, which then distributes it to the other slave units using broadcast or multiple unicast messages. An alternative is that the concerned slave unit distributes the new list of supported, and unsupported, features, or possibly just the modifications of the old list, to the other slaves using slave-to-slave communication and to the master unit using slave-to-master unicast.  
         [0093]    In a yet further method for providing useful information, i.e. any of the above mentioned types of information and possibly other useful information, to all the member units of a piconet is to store all the information in the master unit, e.g. a database, and making said information accessible on request from the slave units. A slave unit would then be able to request all the information in the database of the master or a relevant subset of said information from the master. A relevant subset would e.g. be all address information, all forwarding node information, or address information for a selected unit.  
         [0094]    The request and response could be carried by LMP or a specifically designated protocol or by different protocols, depending on the type of information that is requested.  
         [0095]    Before a slave unit can request any information from the master unit, the relevant information must be conveyed from the slave units to the master unit. This could be done on request from the master unit or transmitted from a slave unit triggered by an internal event in the slave unit, e.g. a switch from being a forwarding node to not being one. Such a “master unit database” method may be used as a stand-alone solution or as a back up mechanism for any of the distribution mechanisms described above.  
         [0096]    In another embodiment, a method for attending to compatibility problems during slave-to-slave communication is to allow the LMP_features_req and LMP_features_res PDU to go slave-to-slave, i.e. essentially traversing two hops within a piconet. This method requires that both the involved slave units support slave-to-slave communication, but also other information of the support of other features, e.g. support of a the modified Baseband packet header format described in the simultaneously filed patent application (Method, node and arrangement in a communication network) and discussed in more detail in conjunction with FIG. 1 a - e.    
         [0097]    In FIG. 6 a Bluetooth network or scatternet  601  is illustrated comprising two piconets. The first piconet  602  comprises multiple nodes A, B, C, D, E and F. The node F being the master and the other nodes A, B, C, D, E being slaves. The second piconet  603  comprises multiple nodes E, G, H, I and J, the node J being the master, and the other nodes E, G, H and I being slaves. The respective slaves A, B, C, D and E communicate with the master F over radio links  604 . The respective slaves E, G, H and I are communicating with the master J over radio links  605 . The unit E is a slave in both the first piconet  602  and in the second piconet  603  and acts as a forwarding node, when transferring packets between the first piconet  602  and the second piconet  603 . The Bluetooth network  601  thus comprises two masters F and J and one forwarding node E. Within the network, a Baseband packet is transferred, the Baseband packet having a header, as shown in FIGS. 1 a  and  1   b . The master F controls all the communication within the first piconet  602  and the master J controls all the communication within the second piconet  603 . A packet, also called a Baseband packet as in slave-to-slave communication, may be routed from a first node A in the first piconet via the master F, the forwarding node E and the master J, to a second node G in the second piconet. To perform the transmission of the packet, a route is created between the first node A and the second node G, each packet being sent along the route comprising routing information, originating from the Network layer or NAL layer. When a routing protocol called AODV (Ad-Hoc On demand Distance Vector) is used, the routing information is the address of the destination node, in this case that of the second node G. When a routing protocol called Dynamic Source Routing is used, the routing information comprises the address of each node to be traversed along the route and the destination address, which in this case comprise the addresses of the nodes F, E, J and G. In order to perform the packet transmission using the Baseband protocol in the physical layer, the routing information is placed in a header of a lower protocol, i.e. in the payload header field implying a short-circuiting of both the Baseband payload sub-layer and the L 2 CAP layer. The term short-circuiting a protocol layer as used herein means that the forwarding node and the master node does not have to unpack and analyze the information of said protocol layer, in order to forward the packet.  
         [0098]    In FIG. 7 c  a diagram of the Baseband packet header format is shown. In FIG. 7 a  the payload header format of a Baseband packet for single slot packets is shown. In FIG. 7 b  a diagram of the format for Baseband packets of multi-slot type is shown. The headers shown in FIG. 7 a - c  are, relatively the headers depicted in FIG. 1 c - e , enlarged by a forwarding indicator field FORW IND and a relevant routing indicator field ROUTING INFO. The forwarding indicator instructs a forwarding node that it should send the packets to the upper layer protocols, when the forwarding indicator is not set, e.g. FORW IND=0, or that it should invoke a forwarding process within the lower layer, when the forwarding indicator is set, e.g. FORW IND=1. The setting of the forwarding indicator also indicates that it is followed by the address information that is required to forward the packet. If the forwarding indicator is not set, no routing information is included. Alternatively, the routing information may be included, indicating to the receiving node that said receiving node is the destination node and thus that the packet is to be sent to upper layer protocols. This low level routing method may be used for data packets being sent along an already established route. The message that was used to create the route in the first place, e.g. NAL or a Network layer message, cannot use the procedure as described herein.  
         [0099]    Now, packet transmission the network layer, the packet may be much larger than in the physical layer. The NAL or Network layer packets will probably fit into a single L 2 CAP packet, but the L 2 CAP packets may often have to be segmented before they are transferred in multiple Baseband packets. The fact that the routing information is included in every Baseband packet, instead of only in the NAL or Network layer packet, increases the overhead. In one embodiment, a L 2 CAP packet is segmented into multiple Baseband packets to be transmitted, wherein a first Baseband packet comprises the first segment of the L 2 CAP packet, and the subsequent Baseband packets comprise the respective subsequent segments of the L 2 CAP packet. In a further embodiment, the forwarding indicator is set, and routing information is inserted in the first and the subsequent Baseband packets.  
         [0100]    In a yet further embodiment, the forwarding indicator is set and the routing information is inserted only in the first Baseband packet, but in the subsequent Baseband packets no routing information is included. In this case, the forwarding indicator within the first Baseband packet also instructs the forwarding node E and the masters F and J (as shown in FIG. 6) to store the routing information of the first Baseband packet and associate the routing information with the incoming link, i.e. the link on which the first Baseband packet is received by the forwarding node E and on which also the subsequent Baseband packets will be received by the forwarding node E. The forwarding indicator has to be complemented with yet a one-bit indicator, which is called Routing Information Indicator (RII) . The RII is set only when the forwarding indicator is set. The purpose of the RII is to indicate whether the routing information is actually included after the forwarding indicator. For the first Baseband packet the RII packet is set e.g. =1, indicating that the routing information is present. In the subsequent respectively Baseband packets the forwarding bit is set, the RII is cleared, e.g. =0, indicating that no routing information is present. Then, the forwarding node E, and the master nodes F and J, use the latest received routing information to forward the subsequently received Baseband packets, until new routing information is received in a Baseband packet.  
         [0101]    In FIG. 9 is a flowchart illustrating how a packet is routed from a first node A in a first piconet via a forwarding node E to a second node G in a second different piconet in the physical layer using the Bluetooth protocol of a Bluetooth network comprising multiple nodes. In block  901 , the first node A indicates in a header of a Baseband packet that the packet should be forwarded. Thereafter, in block  902 , the first node A inserts relevant information in the header of the Baseband packet. Then, in block  903 , the first node transmits the packet using slave-to-slave communication to the forwarding node E. Thereafter, in block  904 , the forwarding node E analyses the forwarding indication and the routing information of the received Baseband packet. Then, in block  905 , the forwarding node E short-circuits the Logical Link Control and Adaptation Layer Protocol (L 2 CAP) layer of the packet. Finally, in block  906 , the forwarding node E forwards the packet to the destination node, i.e. the second node G, according to the received routing information, using slave-to-slave communication.  
         [0102]    Now a process illustrating how a node becomes a forwarding node will be described. First, the information flow in the first piconet will be described with reference to the flowchart in FIG. 11. Two cases must be considered; the considered Bluetooth unit may be a slave unit or a master unit of the first piconet. In block  1510  a Bluetooth unit A is a member of a first piconet. Then, in block  1520 , said unit A joins a second piconet using the INQUIRY and PAGE procedures, specified in the Bluetooth standard. In block  1530  it is checked whether the unit A is the master of the first piconet. If the unit A is the master of the first piconet, the flow proceeds directly to block  1550 . If the unit A is not the master of the first piconet, the flow goes to block  1540 . In block  1540  the unit A informs the master of the first piconet of its new forwarding node status, optionally including other information, such as the BD_ADDR of the master of the second piconet, the master clock value and scheduling parameters of the second piconet. Then, in block  1550  the master unit of the first piconet enters data concerning unit A in its list of forwarding nodes in the piconet, including e.g. the AM_ADDR and BD_ADDR of unit A and other optional information. Thereafter, in block  1560 , the master unit of the first piconet transmits information about the new forwarding node, all the information being stored in the master unit, or a subset thereof, to the at least one of the slave units, except unit A, when unit A is a slave unit in the first piconet and unless the intra-piconet broadcast mechanism is used to convey the information. Finally, the flow goes to block  1570 . In block  1570  each receiving slave unit inserts the received forwarding node information in its list of forwarding nodes in the piconet, of which the receiving slave unit is a member.  
         [0103]    Now the information flow in the second piconet when a node becomes a forwarding node will be disclosed. There are two cases having two alternative ways to distribute information in the piconet, resulting in four different cases:  
         [0104]    The new unit is a slave in the second piconet  
         [0105]    Case 1: First the piconet member information is distributed, thereafter, the forwarding node information is distributed.  
         [0106]    Case 2: Piconet member information and forwarding node information are distributed together.  
         [0107]    The new unit is the master of the second piconet, i.e. the second piconet was just created.  
         [0108]    Case 3: First, the piconet member information is distributed, thereafter, the forwarding node information is distributed.  
         [0109]    Case  4: Piconet member information and forwarding node information are distributed together    
         [0110]    The cases 1 and 3 will now be disclosed with reference to the flowchart in FIG. 12 a  and FIG. 12 b . In block  2100  of FIG. 12 a , a Bluetooth unit A is a member of a first piconet. Then, in block  2110  the unit A joins a second piconet using the INQUIRY and PAGE procedures specified in the Bluetooth standard. In block  2115  it is determined whether the unit A is a master of the second piconet. If the unit A is the master of the second piconet, the BD_ADDR of unit A is already known to the at least one slave unit of the second piconet. Since unit A is the master unit, it has no AM_ADDR. Thus, when unit A is the master of the second piconet, the flow proceeds to block  2120 , in which other relevant information, e.g. compatibility information such as a list of supported and unsupported features, IP address, etc. is transmitted to the at least one slave unit of the second piconet. Thereafter, the flow goes to FIG. 12 b , which will be discussed below. When the unit A is a slave unit of the second piconet, the flow goes from block  2115  to  2125 . When the unit A is a slave unit of the second piconet, the BD_ADDR and the AM_ADDR of unit A is already known to the master of the second piconet. In block  2125 , other relevant information, e.g. compatibility information such as a list of supported and unsupported features, IP address, etc. is transmitted from unit A to the master unit of the second piconet. Thereafter, the flow goes to block  2130 . In block  2130  the master unit of the second piconet stores the received information in its database, preferably in its list of piconet members. Then, in block  2135  the master unit of the second piconet sends BD_ADDR and AM_ADDR of each of the other slave units in the second piconet, information which it has previously received from each of the other slave units in the second piconet, entirely or a subset thereof, and the corresponding information on the master unit of the second piconet, excluding BD_ADDR, which is already known to unit A, and the AM_ADDR, which does not exist, to unit A. Together with the above information, or as a separate transmission, the master of the second piconet also sends information about the forwarding nodes in the second piconet to unit A. Then, in block  2140  unit A inserts a new record having relevant data for each of the other slave units in the second piconet in its database, preferably in its list of piconet members. The received information about the master unit of the second piconet is also stored in the list of piconet members, or elsewhere in the database. Thereafter the flow go to block  2145  in which unit A inserts a new record having relevant data for each of the other forwarding nodes in the second piconet in its database, preferably in the list of forwarding nodes in the piconet, including in each record, e.g. BD_ADDR, and the AM_ADDR, when present, of the forwarding node and other optional information. Then, in block  2150  the master unit of the second piconet sends the BD_ADDR and the AM_ADDR of unit A and the information which it received from unit A, entirely or a subset thereof, to the other at least one slave unit in the second piconet, i.e. excluding unit A, unless the intra-piconet broadcast mechanism is used to convey the information. Thereafter the flow goes to block  2155  in which each receiving slave unit inserts a new record having relevant data concerning unit A in its database, preferably in its list of piconet members. Then, in block  2160  the unit A delivers information about its forwarding node status to the master unit of the second piconet. Thereafter, in block  2165  the master unit of the second piconet inserts a record concerning unit A in its list of forwarding nodes in the piconet, comprising e.g. the AM_ADDR and the BD_ADDR of unit A and other optional information. Then, in block  2170  the master unit of the first piconet transmits information concerning the new forwarding node, all the information stored in the master unit or a subset thereof, to the at least one slave unit, except unit A, when unit A is a slave unit of the first piconet, and unless the intra-piconet broadcast mechanism is used to convey information. Finally, in block  2175  each receiving slave unit inserts the received forwarding node information in its list of forwarding nodes in the piconet.  
         [0111]    [0111]FIG. 12 b  discloses the continued information flow, after block  2120 . The BD_ADDR and the AM_ADDR of each of the slave units in the second piconet is already known to unit A, since unit A is the master unit of the second piconet, and in a block  2180  unit A collects other information relevant to the slaves, if any, e.g. compatibility information, such as a list of supported and unsupported features. When a slave unit is a forwarding node, the forwarding node status and optional related information is also transferred to and collected by unit A. Then, in block  2182  unit A inserts the received information in the already existing records in its list of piconet members. Thereafter, in block  2184  unit A inserts information of each slave unit which is a forwarding node, in its list of forwarding nodes in the piconet, the information comprising e.g. AM_ADDR and the BD_ADDR and other optional information. The BD_ADDR of unit A is already known to the slave units of the second piconet and since unit A is the master unit, it has no AM_ADDR, but in the next block, other relevant information is transmitted to the at least one slave units of the second piconet, e.g. compatibility information, such as a list of supported and unsupported features, IP addresses, etc. Then in block  2190 , each receiving slave unit stores the relevant data concerning unit A in its database, e.g. in its list of piconet members. Then, in block  2192 , unit A sends information concerning its forwarding node status to the at least one slave units of the second piconet. Finally, in block  2194 , each receiving slave unit inserts the received forwarding node information in its list of forwarding nodes in the piconet, including e.g. the BD_ADDR and other optional information.  
         [0112]    The cases 2 and 4 will now be discussed with reference to the flowchart in FIG. 13 a  and FIG. 13 b . In block  5500 , FIG. 13 a , a Bluetooth unit A is a member of a first piconet. Then, in block  5510  said unit A joins a second piconet using the INQUIRY and PAGE procedures being specified in the Bluetooth specification. In block  5520  it is determined whether the unit A is a master of the second piconet. If the unit A is the master of the second piconet, the flow goes to FIG. 13 b , which will be discussed below. In the case where the unit A is a slave unit of the second piconet, the flow goes from block  5520  to  5530 . When the unit A is a slave unit of the second piconet, the BD_ADDR and the AM_ADDR of unit A are already known to the master of the second piconet. In block  5530  other relevant information, e.g. compatibility information such as a list of supported and unsupported features, IP address, etc., is transmitted together with information concerning the forwarding node status of unit A, from unit A to the master unit of the second piconet. Thereafter, the flow goes to block  5535 . In block  5535 , the master unit of the second piconet stores the received information in its database. Preferably, part of the information, e.g. excluding the information concerning the forwarding status of unit A, is stored in the list of piconet members and the information concerning the forwarding node status of unit A, together with e.g. BD_ADDR and AM_ADDR of unit A is entered in the list of forwarding nodes. Then, in block  5540  the master unit of the second piconet sends BD_ADDR and AM_ADDR of each of the other slave units in the second piconet, the information which it has previously received from each of the other slave units in the second piconet, entirely or a subset thereof, and the corresponding information about the master unit of the second piconet, excluding BD_ADDR, which is already known to unit A, and the AM_ADDR, which does not exist, to unit A. Together with the above mentioned information, or as a separate transmission, the master of the second piconet also sends information about the forwarding nodes in the second piconet to unit A. Then, in block  5545  unit A inserts a new record having relevant data for each of the other slave units in the second piconet in its database, preferably in its list of piconet members. The received information about the master unit of the second piconet is also stored in the list of piconet members, or elsewhere in the database. Thereafter, the flow goes to block  5550 , wherein unit A inserts a new record with relevant data for each of the other forwarding nodes in the second piconet in its database, preferably in the list of forwarding nodes in the piconet, including in each record, e.g. BD_ADDR, and the AM_ADDR, when present, of the forwarding node and other optional information. Then, in block  5555 , the master unit of the second piconet sends the BD_ADDR and the AM_ADDR of unit A and the information which it received from unit A, entirely or a subset thereof, to the other at least one slave unit in the second piconet, i.e. excluding unit A unless the intra-piconet broadcast mechanism is used to convey the information. Finally, the flow go to block  5560 , wherein each receiving slave unit stores all or parts of the received data in its database. Preferably part of the data, e.g. excluding the data concerning the forwarding node status of unit A, is inserted in the list of piconet members. The data concerning the forwarding node status of unit A, together with e.g. the BD_ADDR and AM_ADDR of unit A is inserted in the list of forwarding nodes.  
         [0113]    [0113]FIG. 13 b  discloses the information flow, in the case where unit A is a master, after block  5520  in FIG. 13 a . The BD_ADDR and the AM_ADDR of each of the slave units in the second piconet are already known to unit A, since unit A is the master unit of the second piconet. Thus, in block  5560 , unit A collects other relevant information, if any, e.g. compatibility information, such as a list of supported and unsupported features. When a slave unit is a forwarding node, the forwarding node status and optional related information is also transferred to unit A. Then in block  5562 , unit A inserts the received information in the already existing records in its list of piconet members. Thereafter, in block  5564 , unit A inserts information of the possibly at least one slave units being forwarding nodes in its list of forwarding nodes in the piconet, comprising e.g. AM_ADDR and the BD_ADDR and other optional information. The BD_ADDR of unit A is already known to the slave units of the second piconet and since unit A is the master unit, it has no AM_ADDR. Thus, in block  5560  other relevant information is transmitted to the at least one slave unit of the second piconet, e.g. compatibility information, such as list of supported and unsupported features, IP address, etc. Then in block  5570 , each receiving slave unit stores the relevant data concerning unit A in its database, e.g. in its list of piconet members. Then, in block  5572 , each receiving slave unit inserts the received forwarding node information in its list of forwarding nodes in the piconet, including e.g. the BD_ADDR and other optional information.  
         [0114]    The scenario when a Bluetooth unit ceases to be a forwarding node will now be considered. A Bluetooth unit A is assumed to be a member of a first and a second piconet and thus constitutes a forwarding node in both piconets. Unit A then leaves the second piconet. FIG. 14 is a flowchart illustrating the information flow in the first piconet when a unit A ceases to be a forwarding node. There are two cases to consider:  
         [0115]    Unit A is a slave unit in the first piconet  
         [0116]    Unit A is the master of the first piconet  
         [0117]    In FIG. 14, as stated in block  4100 , unit A is a member of a first and a second piconet. Then, the flow goes to block  4110 , wherein the unit A leaves the second piconet, in accordance with known procedures specified in the Bluetooth standard, either explicitly, by sending or receiving the LMP PDU LMP_detach, or implicitly by connection time-out due to loss of radio contact. Then in block  4120 , it is decided whether the unit A is the master of the first piconet. If unit A is the master the flow goes to block  4130 . If the unit A is a slave unit in the first piconet, the unit A sends a message to the master unit of the first piconet, indicating that unit A is no longer a forwarding node. If unit A is present in its own list of forwarding nodes, then the record comprising unit A is removed from this list. Then, in block  4130 , the master unit of the first piconet removes the record comprising unit A from its list of forwarding nodes. Thereafter, in block  4135 , the master unit of the first piconet informs the at least one slave units of the first piconet, excluding A when unit A is a slave unit of the first piconet and unless the intra-piconet broadcast mechanism is used to convey the information, that unit A has ceased to be a forwarding node. Finally, in block  4140 , each receiving slave unit removes the record comprising unit A from its list of forwarding nodes.  
         [0118]    Now the information flow when a Bluetooth unit ceases to be a forwarding node in the second piconet will be disclosed with reference to FIGS. 15 a  and  15   b . There are two cases to be considered:  
         [0119]    Case 1: First, the indication that unit A has ceased to be a forwarding node is distributed, thereafter the indication that unit A has left piconet is distributed.  
         [0120]    Case 2: Only the indication that unit A has ceased to be a forwarding node is distributed. The fact that unit A can no longer be a forwarding node in the piconet is assumed implicitly.  
         [0121]    The trivial cases, where unit A is the master of the second piconet, in which case the second piconet breaks down when the master unit leaves, and where the second piconet comprises only one unit apart from unit A, in which case there are no other units to which information is to be distributed are not described in detail.  
         [0122]    Now, the first case will be described with reference to FIG. 15 a . First, as stated in block  7100 , a unit A is assumed to be a member of a first and a second piconet, the unit A being a slave unit in the second piconet. Then, in block  7110 , the unit A leaves the second piconet, in accordance with procedures specified in the Bluetooth standard, either explicitly, by sending or receiving the LMP PDU LMP_detach, or implicitly by connection time-out due to loss of radio contact. Thereafter, in block  7115 , the master unit of the second piconet detects that the unit A has left the second piconet, using known mechanism specified in the Bluetooth standard. Then, in block  7120 , the master unit of the second piconet removes the record comprising unit A from its list of forwarding nodes. In block  7125 , the master unit of the second piconet informs the at least one slave unit of the second piconet that unit A has ceased to be a forwarding node. Then, in block  7130 , each slave unit removes the record comprising unit A from its list of forwarding nodes. In block  7140 , the master unit of the second piconet removes the record comprising unit A from its list of piconet members. Thereafter, in block  7145 , the master unit of the second piconet informs the at least one slave unit of the second piconet that unit A has left the piconet. Finally, in block  7150 , each receiving slave unit removes the record comprising the unit A from its list of piconet members.  
         [0123]    Now, the second case will be disclosed with reference to FIG. 15 b . First, in block  7200 , a unit A is a member of a first and a second piconet, the unit A being a slave unit in the second piconet. Then, in block  7210 , the unit A leaves the second piconet, in accordance with procedures specified in the Bluetooth standard, either explicitly, by sending or receiving the LMP PDU LMP_detach, or implicitly by connection time-out due to loss of radio contact. Thereafter, in block  7220 , the master unit of the second piconet detects that the unit A has left the second piconet, using known mechanism specified in the Bluetooth standard. Then, in block  7230 , the master unit of the second piconet checks whether unit A was included in the list of forwarding nodes and removes the record comprising unit A from its list of forwarding nodes. In block  7240 , the master unit of the second piconet removes the record comprising unit A from its list of piconet members. In block  7250 , the master unit of the second piconet informs the at least one slave units of the second piconet that unit A has left the piconet. In block  7260 , each receiving slave unit checks whether unit A was included in the list of forwarding nodes and then removes the record comprising unit A from its list of forwarding nodes. Finally, in block  7270 , each receiving slave unit removes the record comprising unit A from its list of piconet members.  
         [0124]    The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.