Source: https://patents.google.com/patent/RU2361372C2/en
Timestamp: 2020-01-21 05:19:28
Document Index: 739354620

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 650', 'art 660', 'art 660', 'art 716', 'art 716', 'art 716', 'art 718', 'art 718', '§ 39', '§ 39', '§ 39', '§ 39', '§ 39', '§ 39', 'art 8']

RU2361372C2 - Method of flow control in wireless data-transmission networks - Google Patents
Method of flow control in wireless data-transmission networks Download PDF
RU2361372C2
RU2361372C2 RU2007120590/09A RU2007120590A RU2361372C2 RU 2361372 C2 RU2361372 C2 RU 2361372C2 RU 2007120590/09 A RU2007120590/09 A RU 2007120590/09A RU 2007120590 A RU2007120590 A RU 2007120590A RU 2361372 C2 RU2361372 C2 RU 2361372C2
RU2007120590/09A
RU2007120590A (en
Янне МАРИН (FI)
Янне МАРИН
Янне ТЕРВОНЕН (FI)
Янне ТЕРВОНЕН
2004-11-02 Priority to US10/978,417 priority Critical patent/US7359361B2/en
2004-11-02 Priority to US10/978,417 priority
2005-08-26 Application filed by Нокиа Корпорейшн filed Critical Нокиа Корпорейшн
2008-12-10 Publication of RU2007120590A publication Critical patent/RU2007120590A/en
2009-07-10 Publication of RU2361372C2 publication Critical patent/RU2361372C2/en
SUBSTANCE: invention relates to wireless communications. In wireless data-transmission network, first flow data is transmitted during the first part of recurring time period, and note that first dataflow is with at least one remote device. Also control data is transmitted during the second part of recurring time period with control data containing first dataflow identifying code. There is adhered preset time interval when transmission of the second dataflow by at least one remote device using reserved identifying code is prohibited. This time interval follows first dataflow. And in receiving such transmissions this dataflow is considered to be active till the moment by which this dataflow is absent during the second part of recurring time period for at least preset time interval.
EFFECT: enhancing functionality.
45 cl, 8 dwg, 4 tbl
This international application claims priority to a US application having serial number 10/978417, filed November 2, 2004, entitled "Techniques for Stream Handling in Wireless Communications Networks", whose full specification is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to wireless communications. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method for assigning identifier streams in wireless data networks.
Short-range non-contact wireless networks typically include devices having a communication range of up to one hundred meters inclusive. To provide long-distance communications, contactless networks often interact with other networks, such as cellular networks, cable data networks, and the Internet. Examples of short-range wireless data networks are IEEE 802.15.3 and IEEE 802.15.3a specifications.
For the IEEE 802.15.3a specification, a High Speed Physical Layer (PHY) standard is currently selected. The existing medium access control (MAC) layer is intended to be used as much as possible with the selected PHY. There are currently two eligible applicants for PHY. One of these applicants is based on the application of the frequency hopping mode during orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM). Another challenger is based on M-ary binary biased switching. The OFDM project is called Multiband OFDM (MBO). In addition, with the aim of further developing the OFDM project outside of IEEE, a new alliance has been established, called the Multi-Band OFDM Alliance (MBOA).
MBO uses OFDM modulation and frequency hopping. The frequency hopping MBO may include transmitting each of the OFDM symbols at different frequencies at predetermined codes, such as frequency time codes (TFCs). Time-frequency codes can be used to distribute alternating data bits over a larger frequency band.
Currently, the MBOA is interested in creating a MAC layer that will be used instead of the IEEE 802.15.3 MAC layer together with the OFDM physical layer. The current version of the MBOA MAC provides a group of wireless communication devices (referred to as a tag group) capable of communicating with each other. The synchronization of the signaling group is based on the repetition of a combination of "supercycles" in which devices can distribute communication resources.
MAC layers control the exchange of devices among transmissions, called frames. A MAC frame may have various parts. Examples of such parts include frame headers and frame bodies. Frame bodies contain a payload containing data associated with higher layers of the protocol, such as user applications. Examples of such user applications include Web browsers, email applications, messaging applications, and the like.
In addition, MAC layers control resource allocation. For example, each device requires the allocation of part of the available bandwidth of the communication channel for transmitting frames. The current MAC MBOA project provides that resource allocation is accomplished through transmissions called labels. Devices use tags to deliver service data. Each device in the tag group is assigned a portion of the bandwidth for tag transfer.
This approach allows the MBOA MAC to act according to a distributed control approach in which multiple devices share responsibility for the MAC layer. A channel access method, known as a distributed reservation protocol (DRP), is an example of such a separation of responsibilities. DRP contains basic tools for establishing and ending a unidirectional connection between two or more devices.
DRP allows devices to back up some of the data in a super-cycle. The establishment of a reservation is called DRP negotiation. To set up and maintain a reservation, the device requesting the reservation sends a DRP data element (DRP IE) during its time slot. Equally technically advanced device (s) also sends DRP IEs at their respective tagged time intervals for redundancy. These devices continue to send DRP IEs at their respective tagged time intervals for each supercycle during the availability of redundancy. Reservations can be made, for example, for a stream.
Devices may not accept IE DRP sent for various reasons, such as a wireless data medium and device mobility. Unfortunately, the current MBOA MAC specification (version 0.72, dated October 20, 2004) does not offer a robust approach to handling such cases. But the loss of the label can lead to the fact that the device will have a misconception about the state of the stream. Accordingly, a more effective approach is needed.
The present invention provides a method regarding flow control. For example, in the method of the present invention, at least one remote device sends data from the first data stream during the first part of a repeating time interval (for example, one or more media access time intervals). In addition, control data including the identifier of the first data stream is sent during the second part of the repeating time interval (for example, a label time interval). In this method, the identifier of the first data stream is reserved for a predetermined period of time during which the transmission to at least one device of the second data stream is prohibited using the reserved identifier. This time interval immediately follows the termination of the first data stream.
According to an additional method of the present invention, data from a data stream from one or more remote devices is received during the first part of a repeating time period (for example, during one or more time intervals of access to the medium). In addition, control data including the identifier of the first data stream is received during the second part of the repeating time interval (for example, a label time interval). This control data includes a data stream identifier. In addition, in this method, the data stream is considered active until the identifier of the data stream is absent in the second part of the repeating period of time for at least a predetermined time interval. Moreover, in this method, the data stream can be considered active until the notification of termination of the data stream during the second part of the repeating time period is received.
The recurring period of time may be an MBOA supercycle. Thus, the second part may precede the first part during each occurrence of a repeating period of time. A given time interval may be two or more consecutive occurrences of a repeating period of time. The time interval can also be set using the mMaxLostBeacons parameter.
The identifier may be a digital value, such as a binary three-bit number. Also, an identifier can be included in a distributed reservation protocol (DRP IE) data element. In addition, the identifier can be randomly generated from the set of available thread identification numbers.
The present invention also provides an apparatus for providing the aforementioned features. Additionally, the present invention provides a computer program product comprising computer program logic recorded therein, allowing a computer system processor to provide the aforementioned features.
Additional features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the accompanying description and the accompanying drawings.
In the drawings, the same reference numbers usually denote identical, functionally similar and / or structurally similar elements. The drawing in which the element is shown for the first time is indicated by the leftmost digit (s) in the reference number. The present invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Figure 1 shows a diagram of exemplary operating conditions.
2 is a diagram of an exemplary MBOA supercycle format.
3A and 3B are diagrams of exemplary data transmission scenarios.
Figures 4 and 5 show flow charts of an apparatus according to embodiments of the present invention.
6 is a structural diagram of an arrangement of a wireless communication apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention.
7 shows a block diagram of an exemplary implementation of a wireless communication device according to a variant implementation of the present invention.
Before describing the invention in detail, it is useful to first describe the conditions under which the present invention can be applied. Based on this, figure 1 shows a diagram of exemplary operating conditions. These conditions include several tag groups 101, each of which contains a plurality of devices 102. For example, FIG. 1 shows a tag group 101a that includes member devices (DEV) 102a-e. Figure 1 also shows the labeling group 101b, which includes DEV 102f, 102g and 102h.
In the labeling group 101a, each of the DEV 102a-d can communicate with the DEV 102e via a corresponding communication line 120. For example, FIG. 1 shows a DEV 102a communicating with a DEV 102e via a communication line 120a. In addition, in the tag group 101a, each of the devices 102a-e can communicate directly with each other. For example, FIG. 1 shows DEVs 102c and 102d communicating via a forward link 122a.
In the labeling group 101b, each of the DEVs 102f and 102g can communicate with the DEVs 102h via a corresponding communication line 120. For example, DEV 102f communicates with DEV 102h via communication line 120f, while DEV 102g communicates with DEV 102h via communication line 120g. Devices 102f and 102g from tag group 101b may also communicate with each other. For example, FIG. 1 shows DEVs 102f and 102g communicating via communication link 122b. Each of the communication lines 122 and 120 may apply various combinations of frequency hopping. These combinations may include, for example, one or more frequency time codes (TFCs). In embodiments of the present invention, each tag group 101 utilizes a particular combination of frequency hopping. These combinations can be both different and the same.
Each transmission in the tag groups 101a and 102b is based on a repeating combination called a supercycle. Based on this, FIG. 2 shows a diagram of an exemplary MBOA supercycle format. In particular, FIG. 2 shows a frame format comprising supercycles 202a, 202b and 202c. As shown in FIG. 2, supercycle 202b immediately follows supercycle 202a, and supercycle 202c immediately follows supercycle 202b.
Each of the supercycles 202 includes a tag period 204 and a data transfer period 206. The tag period 204 is reserved for transfers between each of the active devices in the tag group. Based on this, figure 2 shows the labeling period 204, consisting of several labeling time intervals 207. Each of these labeling time intervals corresponds to a specific device in the labeling group. During these time intervals, the respective devices can transmit various overhead or network data.
For example, the time slot 207 can be used to set the allocation of resources for the tag group and for reporting control data. This may include DRP reservation and sending DRP IE. In addition, the data transfer period 206 can be used to transmit data regarding services and features (e.g., information services, applications, games, topologies, transfer rates, security features, etc.) of devices in the tag group. The transmission of such data in tag periods 204 may be in response to a request from devices.
The data transmission period 206 is used by devices for transmitting data, for example, according to a frequency hopping technology that uses OFDM and / or TFC. For example, the data transfer period 206 may support communication through communication lines 120 and 122. In addition, devices (e.g., DEV 102a-e) may use data transmission periods 206 to send control data, such as request messages to other devices. To facilitate sending traffic, each of the DEVs can be assigned a specific time interval during each data transmission period 206. In the context of the MBOA MAC specification, these time slots are called medium access time slots (MAS).
A MAS is a period of time during a data transfer period 206 in which two or more devices are protected against access conflict due to recognition of a reservation by devices. MAS can be distributed using a distributed protocol, such as the distributed reservation protocol (DRP).
II. OPERATING SCENARIOS
3A and 3B are diagrams of exemplary problems that might arise if labels are not received. In particular, the diagrams show a series of consecutive supercycles 302 (super cycle 302 0 , super cycle 302 1 , super cycle 302 2 , super cycle 302 3 ), which are plotted along the time axis 300. During these super cycles, device A and device B were involved in data transmission. Accordingly, both of these devices transmit tags containing IE DRPs that reserve communication resources for specific streams. As an example, FIGS. 3A and 3B show that a stream identifier of 1 has been assigned to the stream.
In supercycles 302 0 and 302 2, each device may receive the label of another device. However, for some reason (such as device mobility), this did not happen in supercycle 302 1 . Instead, during this supercycle, the label of device A was not received by device B. However, device A can still receive the label of device B.
In the example of FIG. 3A, the cause of the problem is the loss of stream termination notification. In particular, device A in its tag transmitted during the supercycle 302 1 indicated that it terminates the flow related to flow identifier = 1. This instruction was made by device A by removing the corresponding flow identifier and DRP IE from its tag.
However, in supercycle 302 2, device A wants to establish a new stream with the same stream identifier (i.e., with stream identifier = 1). Accordingly, device A transmits in its supercycle label 302 2 DRP IE containing the given stream identifier. Unfortunately, when device B receives this DRP IE, it cannot recognize that device A is actually establishing a new stream / connection. This is because device B never received the tag transmitted by device A in supercycle 302 1 .
FIG. 3B also shows the presence of a problem caused by loss of label transmission. That is, in FIG. 3B, device A still wants to continue the flow corresponding to flow identifier 1. However, during super cycle 302 1, device A currently does not have data to send in this flow. Also, as described above, device B did not receive the label of device A transmitted during super cycle 302 1 .
However, during super cycle 302 2, device A transmits a tag. This label includes a DRP IE having a stream identifier of 1. When device B receives this label, it is not able to unconditionally interpret this DRP IE. In particular, device B cannot detect whether the DRP IE identifies the stream that existed during the super cycle 302 0 , or the new stream / connection that device A seeks to establish.
One lost label should not terminate the stream, especially when it is assumed that the stream will continue.
The present invention provides approaches that allow devices to share a common view of the state of the streams / connections in which they participate. For example, the approach of the present invention applies a time interval to ensure that all parties (sending and receiving device (s)) share the same view of the completed stream. According to this approach, the stream identifier used in the completed stream / connection should not be used for a new stream / connection between the same set of devices before the specified time interval has elapsed. After this time interval, this stream identifier can be used for a new connection and / or stream. This predetermined time interval is also referred to herein as a quarantine period.
You can use different values for the quarantine period. For example, in embodiments, the period is the passage of a specified number of supercycles. An example of such a specified number is the parameter mMaxLostBeacons, which, according to the current MBOA MAC specification, is equal to three supercycles. Since the current preset supercycle duration is 65536 microseconds, the quarantine period is 196608 microseconds. Therefore, in this embodiment, the device must wait at least a given period of time before reusing the stream identifier for another stream and / or connection.
Also, according to this approach, when the device has not accepted the label of another device, it should take into account the stream announced by the device earlier as active (for example, in DRP IE) until certain conditions are met. In an embodiment of the present invention, such conditions are the receipt of a package terminating a stream (such as a label without a corresponding IE DRP) or the expiration of a quarantine period.
This approach of the present invention ensures that there will no longer be cases in which the device must deal with assumptions regarding the state of one or more devices with equal technical capabilities. This solution also allows you to continue the stream, despite the loss of one or more transfers of labels.
Figures 4 and 5 show flowcharts of an exemplary operation of devices according to embodiments of the present invention. These actions are applicable under conditions such as those shown in FIG. Thus, these actions may involve communication according to the MBOA specification. However, these actions apply to other conditions and / or other types of communication.
As shown in FIG. 4, this action includes a step 402 in which the device participates in a wireless data network, such as tag group 101. Accordingly, this device allocates a portion of the available communication channel bandwidth for overhead transmissions, such as control data . This distributed part may be a time interval in a repeating period of time. For example, this distributed part may be a time slot.
At step 404, the device establishes a data stream with one or more remote devices. This data stream may be a unidirectional stream, which provides one-way data transmission to one or more remote devices. Establishing this data stream involves allocating a portion of the available channel capacity for data transmission (for example, one or more parts of a supercycle data transmission period). In an MBOA network, such distribution can be performed using the distributed reservation protocol (DRP).
As described above, DRP allows devices to make a reservation of a certain period in the data part of the supercycle. The establishment of a reservation is called DRP negotiation. To establish and maintain a reservation (or stream), the device requesting the reservation sends a DRP information element (IE DRP) during its time slot. At the same time, the other device (a) in the given stream also sends the given DRP IE at its corresponding tagged time intervals. During the existence of the stream, these devices continue to send the given DRP IE at their respective tagged time intervals for each super cycle. Therefore, step 404 may consist in the device selecting a flow identifier for the DRP IE, and sending the flow identifier as part of the DRP IE during the device timestamp. According to the current MBOA MAC specification, stream identifiers are randomly assigned.
As shown in FIG. 4, this device sends data stream data at step 406. A similar sending occurs within the portion of the channel bandwidth allocated in step 404. At step 408, the device sends control data during a portion of the repeating time period, wherein control data include the identifier of the first data stream, such as DRP IE. As described above, such a DRP IE sending supports the existence of a data stream.
At step 410, this device terminates the flow established at step 404. This may be that this device refrains from sending the corresponding DRP IE.
At step 412, this device withstands the quarantine period. During the quarantine period, this device is prohibited from using or sending an identifier (for example, a stream identifier) for another data stream. This time interval follows the completion of the data stream at step 410. Accordingly, if the device wishes to apply this identifier to a new data stream, it must first wait for the end of the quarantine period.
5 is a flowchart of an apparatus according to an aspect of the present invention. As shown in FIG. 5, this action includes a step 502 in which the device participates in a wireless data network, such as a tag group 101.
At 504, this device participates in the data stream initiated by the remote device (referred to herein as the sending device). This data stream may be a unidirectional stream, which provides for one-way data transmission from a remote device. In addition, other devices may also receive this unidirectional stream in a multicast or broadband manner.
Participation in a given data stream includes receiving data within a portion of the available bandwidth of a communication channel for transmitting data (for example, one or more parts of a data cycle of a supercycle). In addition, participation in this data stream provides for the adoption of control data associated with the data stream from the remote device. Such control data includes an identifier for a given stream, such as DRP IE, including a stream identifier. In embodiments, the control data is received within the portion of the available bandwidth of the communication channel that is assigned to the sending device, such as a time slot.
At steps 506 and 508, the device detects whether the flow is considered active. For example, in step 506, this device determines whether the identifier of this stream has been received within a predetermined time interval, such as the quarantine period described above. If not, then at step 507, this device considers the stream to be complete.
At 508, this device detects whether a completion notification for the stream has been received from the sending device. This notification can be made as an exception by the sending device of the corresponding DRP IE. Such notification is possible during the time interval of the sending device. If such a notification is received, then this device at step 509 considers this stream completed. Otherwise, at step 510, this device considers the current stream to be active.
IV. ADDITIONAL APPROACH
An additional approach of the present invention introduces a new field in IE DRP. This field defines the reason for adding DRP IE to the label. In particular, this field (called the state field) will describe the state of the stream. When an object makes flow changes, it must communicate the nature of the change in the status field. This field, for example, can have states such as set, changed, completed, and continued. The initiator of the change must change the value of the field when making modifications to the stream. An equal object (or objects) must confirm this change in DRP IE with its (its) own label by changing the corresponding value to the same as that of the initiator. The initiator must wait for confirmation from the peer object (or objects) and use the confirmation (s) to detect whether the peer object (or objects) has received the label and noticed the change. The current MBOA specification defines a one-bit field to indicate the creation of a DRP reservation.
The MBOA MAC offer DRP format is currently described. In the table below 1 shows IE DRP format.
In the table. 1 shows that a given DRP IE includes one or more DRP reservation fields for the same destination DRP control and DEVID. Each of these fields is 3 bytes long. The format of these fields is shown in the table below. 2.
DRP Reservation Field Format Bytes: 2 one Bitmap
DRP reservation Structure
DRP reservation
The DRP reservation structure of a DRP reservation field defines one or more zones in a supercycle. Accordingly, DRP redundancy is based on the zonal structure. This structure divides the 256 MASs in the supercycle into 16 zones of the same size, numbered from 0 to 15. Each zone contains 16 adjacent MASs that are numbered from 0 to 15 relative to the zone in which they are located. The zonal structure allows redundancy of one or several zones in a supercycle. It also provides redundancy of adjacent or non-adjacent MASs from one or more zones.
This DRP reservation bitmap of the DRP reservation field specifies which MASs in the zone (s) specified in the DRP reservation structure field are part of the DRP reservation.
In the table. 1 also shows that a given DRP IE also includes two bytes of a DRP control field. The format of this field is shown in the table below. 3.
In the table. 3 shows that this DRP control field includes many subfields. For example, an ACK policy field sets an acknowledgment policy for frames sent in this reservation. The ACK policy field is decoded only if the reservation type is hard or soft. The reservation priority field indicates the reservation priority with respect to other potential reservations. The user priority / stream index field shows the priority of the user or data stream that is supposed to be sent during the backup. Thus, this field is a stream identifier.
The redundancy type field of the DRP control field shows the redundancy type and is encrypted, as shown in the table below. four.
DRP Reservation Types 000 Tag period 001 Hard backup 010 Soft redundancy 011 Private Reservation 100-111 Reserved
VI. DEVICE EXECUTION
6 is a diagram of a wireless communication device 600 capable of operating according to the method of the present invention. This device can be used in various media, similar to the environment shown in figure 1. As shown in FIG. 1, device 600 includes a physical layer (PFIY) device 602, a medium access control (MAC) device 603, an OFDM transceiver 604, an upper protocol layer (s) 605, and an antenna 610.
The MAC control device 603 generates frames (data blocks) and tags for wireless forwarding. In addition, the MAC control device 603 receives and processes the frames and tagging generated by the remote devices. The MAC control device 603 exchanges frame data and tagging with the PFIY control device 602. In turn, the PFIY control device 602 exchanges data frames and tagged transmissions with the OFDM transceiver 604. Next, the MAC control device 603 identifies the interfering conditions and proceeds to eliminate such conditions. For example, in embodiments, the MAC control device 603 may perform the steps of FIGS. 4 and 5.
6, the MAC control device 603 includes a stream index database 607. A database 607 stores data related to streams from one or more remote devices. For example, for each of the remote device data to which the device of FIG. 6 is connected, the stream index database 607 contains the identifiers of the active (or currently used) stream identifier (s). These identifiers may be in the form of a list, array, or other suitable storage scheme. This information can be dynamically updated in the database 607 data.
By storing this information in the database 607, this device can perform the method of the present invention, similar to the example operations in FIGS. 4 and 5. For example, the device can track prohibited flow indices / flow identifiers. In addition, the database 607 may stop designating a particular stream as active after some events have occurred. Such events may include receiving notification of the end or the end of the quarantine period without accepting control data related to the stream.
6, the OFDM transceiver 604 includes a receiving part 650 and a transmitting part 660. The transmitting part 660 includes an inverse fast Fourier transform (TFFT) module 614, a zero padding module 616, a boost converter 618, and a transmission amplifier 620. TFFT module 614 receives frames for transmission from PHY control device 602. For each of these frames, the TFFT module 614 generates a modulated OFDM signal. This generation provides for the performance of one or more operations of inverse fast Fourier transforms. As a result, this modulated OFDM signal includes one or more OFDM symbols. This signal is sent to the zero padding module 616, which adds one or more “zero samples” to the beginning of each OFDM symbol to create the augmented modulated signal. Boost converter 618 receives this augmented modulated signal and places it in one or more frequency bands using a carrier-dependent method. The data of one or more frequency bands is defined according to a combination of frequency hopping, such as one or more TFCs. As a result, boost converter 618 generates a frequency hopping signal that is amplified by transmission amplifier 620 and transmitted through antenna 610.
6, the receiving portion 650 includes a down converter 622, a receiving amplifier 624, and a fast Fourier transform (FFT) module 626. These components (also called receivers) are used to receive wireless signals from remote devices. In particular, antenna 610 receives wireless signals from remote devices that may use combinations of frequency hopping, such as one or more TFCs. These signals are sent to an amplifier 624, which generates an amplified signal. Amplifier 624 sends these amplified signals to downlink converter 622. Upon receipt, downlink converter 622 converts these signals from one or more frequency hopping bands (i.e., TFC bands) to a predetermined lower frequency range. This results in modulated signals that are received by the FFT module 626, which performs OFDM demodulation on these signals. This demodulation involves performing a fast Fourier transform for each symbol that is transmitted in amplified signals.
As a result of this demodulation, the FFT module 626 creates one or more frames that are sent to the PHY control device 602. Data frames can transmit data, such as payload data and protocol header (s). Upon receipt, the PHY control device 602 processes the data frames. This may involve removing some PHY level headers and transferring the remainder of the frames to the MAC control device 603.
As shown in FIG. 6, device 600 further includes one or more upper protocol layers 605. These levels may imply, for example, user applications. Accordingly, upper layers 605 may communicate with remote devices. This implies that level (s) 605 exchanges protocol data units with MAC control device 603. In turn, the MAC control device 603 sends and receives the corresponding wireless signals, interacting with the PHY control device 602 and the transceiver 604.
The devices in Fig.6 can be performed in hardware, software, firmware, or any combination thereof. For example, boost converter 618, transmit amplifier 620, receive amplifier 624, and down converter 622 may include electronic circuits such as amplifiers, frequency converters, and filters. In addition, an embodiment of device 600 may include digital signal processor (s) (DSP) for implementing various modules, such as scan module 606, TFFT module 614, zero padding module 616, and FFT module 626. In addition, in embodiments of the present invention, processor (s), such as microprocessors, executable instructions (ie, software) that are stored in memory (not shown), can be used to control the actions of various components in device 600. For example, such components , like the PHY control device 602 and the MAC control device 603, can primarily be implemented using software running on one or more processors.
FIG. 7 shows the architecture of one such embodiment of FIG. 6. This diagram illustrates a terminal device made in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention. As shown in FIG. 7, this embodiment includes a processor 710, a storage device 712, and a user interface 714. In addition, the embodiment of FIG. 7 includes an OFDM transceiver 604 and an antenna 610. These components can be performed as described above. with reference to Fig.6. However, the embodiment of FIG. 7 can be modified to include various transceivers supporting other wireless technologies.
A processor 710 controls the operation of the device. As shown in FIG. 7, a processor 710 is coupled to a transceiver 604. The processor 710 may be implemented as one or more microprocessors, each of which is capable of executing program instructions stored in a memory 712, such as a computer system.
The storage device includes random access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM) and / or flash memory, and stores the information in the form of data and software components (also referred to herein as modules). These software components include instructions that may be executed by processor 710. Various types of software components may be stored in memory 712. For example, software components that control the operation of transceiver 604 may be stored in memory 712. Also, software components may be stored in memory 712 to enable operation of PHY control device 602, MAC control device 602, and protocol upper layer (s) 605 thereof.
Also, memory components 712 may store software components that control the exchange of data through user interface 714. As shown in FIG. 7, user interface 714 is also connected to processor 710. User interface 714 facilitates communication with the user. 7 shows that the user interface 714 includes a user input part 716 and a user output part 716.
Part 716 user input may include one or more devices that allow the user to enter data. Examples of such devices include keypads, touch screens, and microphones. Part 718 user output allows the user to receive data from the device. Thus, the user output part 718 may include various devices, such as display devices and one or more speaker systems (e.g., a stereo speaker system) and a sound processor and / or amplifier for controlling the speaker system. Exemplary display devices include color liquid crystal displays and color electronic displays.
These elements shown in Fig.7, you can connect in various ways. One such method involves connecting a transceiver 604, a processor 710, a storage device 712, and a user interface 714 via one or more bus couplers. In addition, each of these components is connected to a power source, such as a removable or rechargeable battery pack (not shown).
Although various embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it should be understood that they were presented by way of example only and not limitation. For example, although the MBOA communication system was meant in the examples described, other technologies for short-range and long-range communication systems are within the scope of the present invention. Moreover, the methods of the present invention can be used with signal transmission methods other than OFDM.
Accordingly, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes can be made in form and detail to this document without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Thus, the scope of the present invention should not be limited to any of the above exemplary embodiments, but should be determined only in accordance with the attached claims and their equivalents.
1. A method of processing data streams, comprising stages in which:
wirelessly sending data of a first data stream during a first part of a repeating period of time, wherein the first data stream is associated with at least one remote device;
sending control data wirelessly during the second part of this repeating time period, the control data including an identifier of this first data stream;
reserve the identifier of the first data stream for a predetermined time interval during which it is forbidden to send a second data stream to the specified at least one remote device using the specified reserved identifier, and this time interval follows the completion of this first data stream.
2. The method according to claim 1, in which the time interval is two or more consecutive occurrences of a repeating period of time.
3. The method according to claim 1, in which the second part of the recurring period of time is included in the label time period.
4. The method according to claim 1, in which the first part of the recurring time period is included in the data transmission period.
5. The method according to claim 1, in which the recurring period of time is a supercycle of the Alliance Broadband OFDM (MBOA).
6. The method according to claim 1, in which the predetermined time interval is the MBOA parameter mMaxLostBeacons.
7. The method according to claim 1, in which the second part precedes the first part during each occurrence of a repeating period of time.
a transmitter configured to wirelessly send data of the first data stream during the first part of the repeating time period, the first data stream being connected to at least one remote device and wirelessly sending control data during the second part of the repeating time period, wherein control data includes an identifier of a first data stream; and
a control device configured to reserve a given identifier of the first data stream for a predetermined time interval during which it is forbidden to send the second data stream to at least one specified remote device using the specified reserved identifier, and this time interval is essentially directly follows the completion of the first data stream.
9. The device of claim 8, in which the time interval is two or more consecutive occurrences of a repeating period of time.
10. The device of claim 8, in which the identifier is included in the distributed reservation protocol information element (DRP IE).
11. The device of claim 8, in which the second part of the recurring time period is included in the label time period.
12. The device according to claim 8, in which the second part of the recurring period of time is a label time interval.
13. The device according to claim 8, in which the first part of the repeating period of time is included in the data transmission period.
14. The device of claim 8, in which the first part of the recurring period of time includes one or more time intervals of access to the medium.
15. The device of claim 8, in which the recurring period of time is a supercycle of the alliance broadband OFDM (MBOA).
16. The device according to claim 8, in which the predetermined time interval is the MBOA parameter mMaxLostBeacons.
17. The device of claim 8, in which the second part precedes the first part during each occurrence of a repeating period of time.
18. A computer-readable storage medium having computer instructions recorded thereon, enabling a processor in a computer system to operate in a wireless communication device, the computer instructions comprising:
program code enabling the processor to provide instructions for sending data of the first data stream during the first part of the repeating time period, the first data stream being associated with at least one remote device;
program code enabling the processor to provide instructions for sending control data during a second portion of a repeating time period, the control data including an identifier of a given first data stream; and
program code enabling the processor to reserve the identifier of the first data stream for a predetermined time interval during which it is forbidden to send the second data stream to at least one specified remote device using the specified reserved identifier, and this time interval essentially directly follows after the completion of the first data stream.
19. A method of processing data streams, comprising stages in which:
receiving data from the first data stream during the first part of the repeating time period, the first data stream being associated with at least one remote device;
receiving control data during a second part of this repeating time period, the control data including an identifier of this first data stream; and
consider this data stream active until the identifier of the stream is absent in the second part of the repeating period of time for at least a predetermined time interval.
20. The method according to claim 19, in which additionally:
consider that this data stream is active until a notification of completion of the stream is received during the second part of the repeating time period.
21. The method according to claim 19, in which the time interval is two or more consecutive occurrences of a repeating period of time.
22. The method according to claim 19, in which the second part of the recurring time period is included in the label time period.
23. The method according to claim 19, in which the first part of the recurring time period is included in the data transmission period.
24. The method according to claim 19, in which the recurring period of time is a supercycle of the broadband OFDM alliance (MBOA).
25. The method according to claim 19, in which the predetermined time interval is the MBOA parameter mMaxLostBeacons.
26. The method according to claim 19, in which the second part precedes the first part during each occurrence of a repeating period of time.
a receiver configured to receive data stream data during the first part of the repeating time period, the first data stream being connected to at least one remote device, and receiving control data during the second part of the repeating time period, the control data including identifier of the first data stream; and
a control device configured to assume that a given data stream is active until the stream identifier is absent in the second part of the repeating time period for at least a predetermined time interval.
28. The device according to item 27, in which the control device is configured to consider that the data stream is active until a notification of completion of the stream is received during the second part of the repeating time period.
29. The device according to item 27, in which the time interval is two or more consecutive occurrences of a repeating period of time.
30. The device according to item 27, in which the identifier is included in the information element of the protocol of distributed reservation (DRP IE).
31. The device according to item 27, in which the second part of the repeating period of time is a label time interval.
32. The device according to item 27, in which the first part of the recurring period of time is included in the period of data transmission.
33. The device according to item 27, in which the first part of the repeating period of time includes one or more time intervals of access to the medium.
34. The device according to item 27, in which the recurring period of time is a supercycle of the alliance broadband OFDM (MBOA).
35. The device according to item 27, in which a predetermined time interval is an MBOA parameter mMaxLostBeacons.
36. The device according to item 27, in which the second part precedes the first part during each occurrence of a repeating period of time.
37. A computer-readable storage medium having computer instructions recorded thereon, enabling a processor in a computer system to operate in a wireless communication device, the computer instructions comprising:
program code enabling the processor to provide instructions for receiving data stream data during the first part of a repeating time period, the first data stream being associated with at least one remote device;
program code enabling the processor to provide instructions for receiving control data during a second part of a repeating time period, the control data including an identifier of a given data stream; and
program code that allows the processor to assume that the data stream is active until the stream identifier is absent in the second part of the repeating time period for at least a predetermined time interval.
38. A computer readable medium according to claim 37, further comprising:
program code that allows the processor to assume that a given data stream is active until a notification of completion of the stream is received during the second part of this repeating time period.
39. A method of processing data streams, comprising stages in which:
the device is distributed the first part of the repeating period of time to send data to the first data stream, the first data stream between this device and one or more remote devices;
the device is distributed the second part of the repeating period of time for sending control data, and the control data includes the identifier of this first data stream;
set the time interval during which this device is prohibited from sending this identifier for the second data stream, and this time interval immediately follows the completion of this user data stream.
40. The method according to § 39, in which the time interval is two or more consecutive occurrences of a repeating period of time.
41. The method according to § 39, in which the second part of the recurring period of time is included in the label time period.
42. The method according to § 39, in which the first part of the repeating period of time is included in the data transmission period.
43. The method according to § 39, in which this recurring period of time is a supercycle of the alliance broadband OFDM (MBOA).
44. The method according to § 39, in which a predetermined time interval is an MBOA parameter mMaxLostBeacons.
45. The method according to § 39, in which the second part precedes the first part during each occurrence of a repeating period of time.
RU2007120590/09A 2004-11-02 2005-08-26 Method of flow control in wireless data-transmission networks RU2361372C2 (en)
US10/978,417 US7359361B2 (en) 2004-11-02 2004-11-02 Techniques for stream handling in wireless communications networks
US10/978,417 2004-11-02
RU2007120590A RU2007120590A (en) 2008-12-10
RU2361372C2 true RU2361372C2 (en) 2009-07-10
ID=36318926
RU2007120590/09A RU2361372C2 (en) 2004-11-02 2005-08-26 Method of flow control in wireless data-transmission networks
US (1) US7359361B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1807976A4 (en)
JP (1) JP4467619B2 (en)
KR (1) KR100913982B1 (en)
CN (1) CN100534054C (en)
AU (1) AU2005302736C1 (en)
BR (1) BRPI0517230A (en)
CA (1) CA2586171C (en)
HK (1) HK1113713A1 (en)
MX (1) MX2007005282A (en)
RU (1) RU2361372C2 (en)
TW (1) TW200631358A (en)
WO (1) WO2006048705A1 (en)
ZA (1) ZA200704238B (en)
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2004-11-02 US US10/978,417 patent/US7359361B2/en active Active
2005-08-26 CN CN 200580037608 patent/CN100534054C/en not_active IP Right Cessation
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2007-05-24 ZA ZA200704238A patent/ZA200704238B/en unknown
2008-03-13 HK HK08102928A patent/HK1113713A1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
Wireless Medium assess Controll (MAC) and Physical layer (PHY) Specifications for networks (WPANs), IEEE Standart for information technjlogy, part 8.5.1.3 - 8.6.4, IEEE Std 802.15.3tm, 2003. *
JP4467619B2 (en) 2010-05-26
US7359361B2 (en) 2008-04-15
JP2008519521A (en) 2008-06-05
AU2005302736A1 (en) 2006-05-11
RU2007120590A (en) 2008-12-10
EP1807976A1 (en) 2007-07-18
AU2005302736B2 (en) 2008-09-18
US20060176860A1 (en) 2006-08-10
EP1807976A4 (en) 2011-10-05
AU2005302736C1 (en) 2009-02-05
KR20070084620A (en) 2007-08-24
CA2586171A1 (en) 2006-05-11
BRPI0517230A (en) 2008-10-07
TW200631358A (en) 2006-09-01
HK1113713A1 (en) 2009-12-18
WO2006048705A1 (en) 2006-05-11
CN101053212A (en) 2007-10-10
ZA200704238B (en) 2008-08-27
CA2586171C (en) 2010-11-16
CN100534054C (en) 2009-08-26
MX2007005282A (en) 2007-07-19
KR100913982B1 (en) 2009-08-25
JP2012525781A (en) 2012-10-22 Method and system for dynamic adjustment of downlink / uplink allocation ratio in LTE / TDD system
JP4897784B2 (en) 2012-03-14 Using decrement assignment