Abstract:
The MAC protocol of the present invention takes into account backward compatibility and conventional layering principles while introducing QoS parameters to describe and transport the QoS traffic. Minislots are also introduced in the protocol in the context of slots to reduce the transmission time of management, control, and data frames, and to facilitate channel bandwidth allocation, in response to increasing PHY rates. A highly efficient piconet joining process for wireless devices (e.g., IEEE 802.15.3 devices, etc.) is also provided by the protocol.

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS  
       [0001]    This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/232,757, entitled “A MAC PROTOCOL FOR HIGH RATE WPAN”, having attorney docket No. TI-31701PS, and filed on Sep. 15, 2000. 
     
    
     
       TECHNICAL FIELD  
         [0002]    This invention relates in general to the field of wireless communications and more specifically to a medium access control (MAC) protocol for a wireless personal area network.  
         BACKGROUND  
         [0003]    Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) as defined by Bluetooth (BT) 1.0 or IEEE Std 802.15.1 are being used by electronic devices like personal computers, cellular telephones, personal digital assistants (PDA&#39;s), etc., in order to communicate with one another and with peripheral devices. With the increasing need to exchange multimedia and large file applications, a need for a high rate WPAN providing for 20 million-bits-per-second (Mbps) or faster data rates is needed. One such high rate WPAN is the one being proposed by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) Std 802.15.3 high rate task group. Another such high rate WPAN is the one being enhanced by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG) as BT 1.x or BT 2.0. Such high rate wireless capability will provide for a better user experience, while providing improved network utilization efficiencies. With higher rate wireless services, unfortunately, come the problems associated with maintaining quality-of-service (QoS) over shared communication links. A need thus exists in the art for a medium access control (MAC) protocol that can provide for a high rate of transport which can support high bandwidth applications such as VoIP, video, Internet data, etc., while meeting a desirable QoS. 
       
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [0004]    The features of the present invention, which are believed to be novel, are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The invention may best be understood by reference to the following description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in the several figures of which like reference numerals identify like elements, and in which:  
         [0005]    [0005]FIG. 1A shows a frame format based on the MAC protocol of the present invention.  
         [0006]    [0006]FIG. 1B shows a PHY Header format in accordance with the invention.  
         [0007]    [0007]FIG. 1C shows a MAC Header format in accordance with the invention.  
         [0008]    [0008]FIG. 1D shows an ACK_BM field format in accordance with the invention.  
         [0009]    [0009]FIG. 2 shows a Management Frame Body in accordance with the invention.  
         [0010]    [0010]FIG. 3 shows a Permit Frame Body in accordance with the invention.  
         [0011]    [0011]FIG. 4 shows an M-Permit Frame Body in accordance with the invention.  
         [0012]    [0012]FIG. 5 shows a Data-NoAck/Data-Ack Frame Body in accordance with the invention.  
         [0013]    [0013]FIG. 6 shows frame transmission illustrations using the protocol of the present invention.  
         [0014]    [0014]FIG. 7 shows a flowchart highlighting the steps taken in order for a slave unit to join a piconet in accordance with the preferred embodiment.  
         [0015]    [0015]FIG. 8 shows a diagram of a wireless network in accordance with the invention. 
     
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT  
       [0016]    While the specification concludes with claims defining the features of the invention that are regarded as novel, it is believed that the invention will be better understood from a consideration of the following description in conjunction with the drawing figures.  
         [0017]    The MAC protocol of the present invention maintains backward compatibility with the IEEE Std 802.15.1 network standard and conforms to the IEEE 802 layering architecture, while making efficient use of the high rate physical layer (PHY). The protocol has a high level of simplicity and is targeted for multimedia applications that require high channel throughput and QoS as compared to the IEEE Std 802.15.1 standard. The protocol provides for a link management that enables QoS based link setup for multimedia transport and activates multiple communication links between stations for simultaneous multiple services per station.  
         [0018]    The protocol of the present invention has a link control that provides for effective channel access mechanisms for sending variable bit rate (VBR) and bursty traffic, as well as enforces QoS contracts and fair bandwidth usage while reducing radio frequency (RF) interference. The protocol also provides for a link utilization that enhances transmission rules to render the MAC less sensitive to future PHY and Application layer changes, while better utilizing lower layer services and accommodating various applications. The link utilization also extends the frame structure to accommodate new data rates, coding schemes, and acknowledgment/retransmission policies.  
         [0019]    In FIG. 1 there is shown a frame format in accordance with the present invention.  
         [0020]    The frame  110  includes an Access Code field  102 , a PHY Header field  104 , a MAC Header field  106  and a Frame Body field  108 . The Access Code field  102  is used for synchronization and DC offset compensation. The PHY Header field  104  is further broken down into a PHY Rate field  112 , a Forward Error Correction (FEC) field  114 , a Minislot Offset field  116 , a Length field  118 , a reserved field  120 , a PHY Header Error Check (HEC) field  122  and a Reed-Solomon (RS) code field  124 .  
         [0021]    The MAC Header field  106  is broken down into a Protocol Version field  126 , a Type field  128 , a Receiver Address (RA) field  130 , a Transmitter Address (TA) field  132 , an Acknowledgment Bit-Map (ACK_BM) field  134 , a Length field  138 , a MAC HEC field  140  and a RS field  142 . The ACK_BM  134  field is further broken down into a Link ID subfield  144  and a Sequence Bit Map subfield  146 .  
         [0022]    The MAC protocol of the present invention provides for QoS support in a number of service classes, which include delay sensitive constant bit rate (DS-CBR), delay sensitive variable bit rate (DS-VBR) and delay tolerant available bit rate (DT-ABR) service classes. The protocol also provides for service priority based on a number of levels including prescheduled DS-CBR on synchronous connection-oriented (SCO) links, priorities 7-5 (e.g., priority 7=highest priority) for DS-VBR, and priorities 4-0 (e.g., priority 0=best effort) for DT-ABR. The QoS information includes service class/priority, token rate/bucket size, peak rate, delay/delay variation, and flush timeout (a zero value indicates no acknowledgment and a nonzero value indicates acknowledgment required).  
         [0023]    In accordance with the MAC protocol of the present invention, the following new Link Management Protocol (LMP) Protocol Data Unit (PDU) extensions are provided:  
         [0024]    (1). LMP_DS-CBR_link_req: This extension is used for requesting transport of DS-CBR session traffic and provides for (includes):  
         [0025]    Link ID: gives identification of multiple DS-CBR unidirectional links between two stations;  
         [0026]    Direction: indicates whether the link is for transmission from or to the requesting station;  
         [0027]    Supervision TO: states the supervision timeout for the link;  
         [0028]    D DS-CBR  and T DS-CBR : correspond to D sco  and T sco , respectively, as defined by IEEE Std 802.15.1; and  
         [0029]    d DS-CBR : marks the offset, in minislots, from the slot boundary defined by D DS-CBR   
         [0030]    (2). LMP_QoS_link_req: This extension is used for requesting transport of DS-VBR or DT-ABR (except best effort) session traffic and provides (includes);  
         [0031]    Link ID: gives identification of multiple QoS unidirectional links between two stations;  
         [0032]    Direction: indicates whether the link is for transmission from or to the requesting station;  
         [0033]    Supervision TO: states the supervision timeout for the link; and  
         [0034]    QoS values: specify the QoS expectations for the link.  
         [0035]    (3). LMP_remove_DS_CBR_link_req: This extension is used for requesting removal of a DS-CBR link.  
         [0036]    (4). LMP_remove_QoS_link_req: This extension is used for requesting removal of a QoS link.  
         [0037]    In accordance with the LMP PDU extensions of the present protocol, no LMP PDUs are required with asynchronous connectionless (ACL) links for transporting best-effort session traffic.  
         [0038]    Based on the prior art as described in IEEE Std 802.15.1 for SCO links:  
         [0039]    SCO links—legacy stations:  
         [0040]    between master and slave only;  
         [0041]    periodic paired slots for voice traffic only;  
         [0042]    only three periods,  2 ,  4  and  6  slots, allowed; and  
         [0043]    allocated bidirectionally per voice call;  
         [0044]    the following SCO link extensions are also provided with the present invention:  
         [0045]    DS-CBR links—new stations:  
         [0046]    from any station to any other station within same piconet;  
         [0047]    periodic minislots for delay sensitive constant bit rate (DS-CBR) traffic;  
         [0048]    configurable period as determined by QoS values;  
         [0049]    allocated unidirectionally per DS-CBR session; and  
         [0050]    subject to adjustment by the master at/for a given time.  
         [0051]    Based on the prior art as described in IEEE Std 802.15.1 for ACL links:  
         [0052]    ACL links—legacy stations:  
         [0053]    single link between master and slave only;  
         [0054]    paired slots for asynchronous (best effort) data; and  
         [0055]    allocated bidirectionally per frame transmission;  
         [0056]    the following ACL link extensions are further provided with the present invention:  
         [0057]    (1). ACL links—new stations:  
         [0058]    best effort link from any station (LinkID=0);  
         [0059]    aperiodic minislots for asynchronous (best effort) data; and  
         [0060]    allocated unidirectionally per sequence of frame transmissions.  
         [0061]    (2). QoS links—new stations— 
         [0062]    multiple links from any station to any other station within the same piconet;  
         [0063]    quasi-periodic minislots for DS-VBR session traffic;  
         [0064]    allocated by permit (separate/piggybacked) per quasi-period;  
         [0065]    available minislots for DT-ABR session traffic; and  
         [0066]    allocated by reservation and permit/multi-permit per data burst.  
         [0067]    The protocol of the present invention also includes the following MAC features and extensions:  
         [0068]    Slot as frame transmission unit for legacy stations only;  
         [0069]    Alternate slot use by master and slave for legacy stations only;  
         [0070]    Minislot as frame transmission unit: in the preferred embodiment 1 slot =8 minislots +8 IFSs (Inter-Frame Spaces);  
         [0071]    Frame transmission across multiple minislots: no IFS in between;  
         [0072]    Acknowledgment and retransmission: sequential and selective;  
         [0073]    Minislot allocation for traffic transport: controlled by master;  
         [0074]    Permit and M-Permit control frames: efficient access mechanisms;  
         [0075]    Direct transmission between stations: is provided for new stations.  
         [0076]    Hold, Sniff, Park modes: slot based for legacy stations, minislot based for new stations;  
         [0077]    Frame structure: existing format for legacy stations, new format for new stations;  
         [0078]    Frame format: known prior to transmission/reception; and  
         [0079]    PHY rate selection (instructed by MAC): legacy PHY if legacy related, high rate PHY if MAC extended.  
         [0080]    Piconet Joining Processes  
         [0081]    In accordance with the protocol of the present invention, the master unit regularly (subject to bandwidth availability) sends Permit frames containing a broadcast RA field (=000) and a TX_Mini field whose value is an integer multiple of the number of minislots, “i”, needed for transmitting an ID frame at the lowest transmission rate mandated for a new station, shown in step  702  of FIG. 7. A slave unit seeking to join a piconet waits until receiving such a Permit frame. It then, in step  704 , partitions the minislots specified by the TX_Mini field into a number of adjoining groups each of “i” consecutive minislots, and then, in step  706 , transmits its ID frame into a randomly chosen group of minislots out of those groups back to the master unit.  
         [0082]    If a master successfully receives an ID frame out of one of the groups of minislots defined above, it will begin the process of admitting that slave into the piconet in step  708 . If the master detects one or more collisions in the groups of minislots, it will, within a preset time limit, send another Permit frame containing a broadcast RA field (=000) and a TX_Mini field whose value is chosen for a rapid resolution of the collisions. The above steps are repeated until no more collisions are detected or the master decides to suspend the issuance of Permit frames as defined above although there may be stations still attempting to join the piconet.  
         [0083]    Frame Format  
         [0084]    A more detailed discussion of the frame format shown in FIG. 1 follows:  
         [0085]    PHY Header  
         [0086]    Referring back to FIGS.  1 A- 1 D, the PHY Header session  104  is transmitted at the lowest high rate (LHR). The PHY Rate section  112  provides information on the modulation technique used and the bit rate pertaining to the MAC protocol data unit (MPDU). The FEC section  114  provides information on the forward error correction scheme pertaining to the MPDU. The Minislot Offset section  116  provides information on the offset of the frame start from slot boundary in minislots. The Length section  118  states the length of the frame in minislots. The PHY HEC section  122  provides the PHY header error check, while the RS ( 12 ,  6 ) section  124  provides for a shortened Reed-Solomon code over GF ( 32 ). The MPDU is coded and transmitted according to the PHY rate found in section  112  and the FEC value found in section  114  in the PHY Header  104 .  
         [0087]    MAC Header  
         [0088]    The MAC Header  106  includes the Protocol Version field  126 , which provides the highest protocol version implemented by the particular station (e.g., PDA, etc.). The Type field  128  indicates whether the frame is of type Management, Control, Data-NoAck, or Data-Ack. The RA field (receiver address)  130  provides information on the receiver&#39;s address which is “0” for the master unit. The TA field (transmitter address)  132  provides information on the transmitter&#39;s address which is “0” for the master unit.  
         [0089]    The ACK_BM field  134  is the acknowledgment bit map, comprising a Link ID pertaining to the link being acknowledged and a Sequence Bit Map wherein a “1”/“0”in the nth (n 1-8) position is a positive/negative acknowledgement to a frame with minislot number n-1 in the last sequence of frames transmitted from the Link ID, and starting from minislot number 0 (up to 8 frames from a given Link ID may be pending acknowledgment). The Length field  138  provides the length of the Frame Body in bits. The MAC HEC field  140  is the MAC header error check, and the RS ( 21 ,  11 ) field  142  provides the shortened Reed-Solomon code over GF ( 32 ).  
         [0090]    Management Frames  
         [0091]    Referring now to FIG. 2, there is shown a Management frame  200  (Type 000) used for sending LMP PDUs in accordance with the protocol. The Management frame  200  includes an 8-bit opcode field  202  that provides the Management frame Opcode as defined by the IEEE 802.15.1 specification, a 4-bit Frame Body field  204  that provides the LMP message, and an m-bit CRC  206  field that provides error checking, and an n-bit FEC  208  field that provides error correction and is coded according to the FEC value in the PHY Header.  
         [0092]    Control Frames  
         [0093]    Referring to FIGS. 3 and 4, there are shown a Permit frame  300  and an M-Permit frame  400  in accordance with the protocol of the present invention used with new stations. The Permit frame  300  includes a Subtype field  302  equal to “0001”, and the M-Permit frame  400  includes a Subtype field  402  equal to “0010”. A TX_Mini field  304  (in minislots) provides information on the permitted maximum transmission time (in minislots) for the station addressed by the Permit frame, while the permitted maximum transmission time for each of the stations mapped in the M-permit frame is provided by a TX_Mini field  404 . Reserved fields  306  and  406  are currently reserved and not in use. The CRC fields  308  and  410  provide for error checking, while the FEC fields  310  and  412  provide for error correction and are coded according to the FEC value  114  in the PHY Header  104 . The M-Permit Frame Body  400  includes an address bit map field (ADDR_BM)  408  wherein a “1” in the nth (n=0-7) position indicates the station with an address value of n is given a transmission opportunity by this M-Permit frame.  
         [0094]    Data-noAck/Data-ack Frames  
         [0095]    In FIG. 5, there is shown a Data-NoAck/Data-Ack frame  500  used by the protocol. Frame  500 , Data-Ack, with type 0101 is used for sending Logical Link Control and Adaptation Protocol (L2CAP) messages requiring acknowledgment. Frame  500 , Data-NoAck, with type 0100 is used for sending L2CAP messages requiring no acknowledgment. Frame  500  includes a LinkID field  502  that identifies the link between the transmitting/receiving stations. The Seq_L field  504  provides the sequence number for identifying MAC frames of the same L2CAP frame (frames received with the same Seq_L are discarded but acknowledged if required). The Seq_M field  506  provides the minislot number for identifying transmitted frames pending acknowledgment (when all frames transmitted are acknowledged, the transmitting station restarts Seq_M from 0). The TX_Mini/More field  508  is used as a “TX_Mini” field for transmission from a master unit that provides a piggybacked permit of the maximum transmission time (in mini slots) allowed for a slave receiving this frame. The TX_Mini/More field  508  is used as a “More” field for transmission from a slave unit that provides a piggybacked indication by the sending slave of whether there is (no) more data waiting at this slave, via a “1” or “0” in the first bit depending on the design, and if so, the highest service priority of the waiting traffic, via the next 3 bits. Finally, the CRC  514  field provides error checking capability and the FEC  516  field provides error correction capability, coded according to the FEC value on the PHY Header (not necessarily appearing as shown).  
         [0096]    Channel Access Mechanisms  
         [0097]    Further channel access mechanisms are provided by the protocol which provides for improved channel access over the existing IEEE Std 802.15.1. According to the protocol, channel bandwidth usage/allocation is determined by the master unit based on QoS values of admitted traffic as indicated through the LMP_QoS-link_req messages, or on a best effort in the case of no link setup. The Permit/M-Permit frames are sent by the master unit as often as warranted by the QoS contracts indicated though LMP_QoS-link_req messages, and further in view of channel bandwidth availability.  
         [0098]    DS-CBR traffic is prescheduled, and sent periodically, through the setup of a DS-CBR link by the LMP_CBR_link_req frame. DS-VBR traffic from a slave to a master or another slave is transmitted after quasi-periodic Permit/M-Permit frames are sent by the master, with the “More” field used by the sending slave to piggyback indication of waiting data buffered at that slave. DT_ABR traffic is directly transmitted as guided by Permit and M-Permit frames sent by the master, or through reservation as done by piggyback using “More” field or by use of Permit and M-Permit frames.  
         [0099]    In FIG. 6, there is shown an illustration of a typical frame transmission sequence using the protocol of the invention for illustrative purposes. The frame transmissions  600  include a number of slots commencing with “slot 2m”  602  through “slot 2m+11”  604 . Slot 2m  602  includes DS-CBR Data-No Ack frames (voice) such as  606  (Datn 0-1, from master to slave 1),  608  (Datn 1-2, from slave 1 to slave 2), and  610  (Datn 0-#, frome master to every slave in the piconet), all prescheduled and sent on DS-CBR links. Slot 2m  602  also includes a DS-VBR Data-NoAck frame (video)  612  (Datn 0-#, broadcast by master) on a QoS link, a Permit frame  614  (Permit 4) sent by the master to slave 4 for 2 minislots of transmission time. Beginning on slot 2m  602 , a DS-VBR Data_Ack frame (video)  616  (Data 4-3) is sent by slave 4 to slave 3 on a QoS link in response to the preceding Permit 4 ( 610 ).  
         [0100]    On slot 2m+1 there is an M-Permit frame (TX_Mini=1, ADDR_BM=01111000)  618 . The M-permit is sent by the master to slaves numbered 1, 2, 3 and 4 for 1 minislot each of transmission time. Slot 2m+1 includes DT-ABR data frames  620  (Data 1-0, from slave 1 to master),  622  (Data 3-4, from slave 3 to slave 4), and  624  (Data 4-0, from slave 4 to master), all sent on QoS links in response to the M-Permit frame  614 , but none from slave 2 even though slave 2 could have used the minislot after slave 1. Also on slot 2m+1 is another Permit frame  626  (Permit 1) sent by the master to slave 1, from which a DT-ABR data frame  628  (Data 1-0) is returned to the master via an ACL link.  
         [0101]    Slot 2m+2 begins with DS-CBR Data-NoAck frames (voice)  630  (Datn 1-0, from slave 1 to master) and  632  (Datn 2-1, from slave 2 to slave 1), both prescheduled and transmitted on DS-CBR links. Some idle minislots elapse before a DS-VBR frame  634  (Data 0-3) is sent on a QoS link from the master to slave 3 with a piggybacked permit of 2 minislots (TX_Mini=2), for the transmission of a DT-ABR data frame  636  (Data 3-0) from slave 3 back to the master on another QoS link.  
         [0102]    On slot 2m+3, the master sends another Permit frame  638  (Permit 4) to slave 4, which then sends a DT-ABR Data-Ack frame  640  (Data 4-0) back to the master on an ACL link. The returned frame  640  sets the More field to  1006 , indicating a piggybacked request for transmitting priority 6 data (video). A small DT-ABR Data-Ack frame  642  (Data 0-4) is then sent by the master to slave 4 along with a piggybacked permit of 3 minislots (TX_Mini=3). The first two of these minislot are used for sending a priority 6 DS-VBR Data-Ack frame  644  (Data 4-3) by slave 4 to slave 3, while the last minislot is left for sending a DT-ABR Data-Ack frame  646  (Data 4-0) back to the master, with a piggybacked More field set to 0000 as an indication of no additional waiting data for transport.  
         [0103]    Referring now to FIG. 8, there is shown a diagram of a wireless network  800  which supports the protocols discussed herein. Network  800  includes a plurality of wireless transceivers including a master unit  802  and a plurality of slave units  804 .  
         [0104]    Using the protocol of the present invention, channel access for bursty traffic can be handled efficiently through M-Permit frames sent by master and the More field piggybacked in frames sent by the slave units. The master unit transmits without wasting much channel bandwidth. The M-Permit frame, whenever bandwidth is available, allocates a small number of minislots to slaves that are active but have not sent data on a periodic basis. Those slaves that have data to send use the More field to indicate more data is buffered. The Master unit allocates additional minislots to such slave units using the Permit and M-Permit frames.  
         [0105]    While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it will be clear that the invention is not so limited. Numerous modifications, changes, variations, substitutions and equivalents will occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims. The present invention provides for an easy and cost effective way of potential buyers of electronic devices/systems to evaluate a part over the Internet. In this way a potential customer can save the time and expense of buying and using an evaluation board to test a part he/she is considering to purchase.