Patent Description:
The present application claims the Paris Convention priority of European patent application number <CIT>.

More recently developed wireless communications networks are expected to routinely and efficiently support communications with a wider range of devices associated with a wider range of data traffic profiles and types than current systems are optimised to support. For example, such wireless communications networks are expected to efficiently support communications with devices including reduced complexity devices, machine type communication (MTC) devices, high resolution video displays, virtual reality headsets and so on. Some of these different types of devices may be deployed in very large numbers, for example low complexity devices for supporting the "The Internet of Things", and may typically be associated with the transmissions of relatively small amounts of data with relatively high latency tolerance.

In view of this there is expected to be a desire for such wireless communications networks, for example those which may be referred to as <NUM> or new radio (NR) system / new radio access technology (RAT) systems, as well as future iterations / releases of existing systems, to efficiently support connectivity for a wide range of devices associated with different applications and different characteristic data traffic profiles.

For example, such applications may include those where the <NUM> (or future) network is deployed on an ad-hoc basis to provide a temporary or on-demand network, within specific geographical or temporal boundaries.

<CIT> relates generally to an electronic device for displaying an indicator regarding a network and a method thereof.

<CIT> is directed to resolving ambiguity in system information broadcast in cells that support one or more of 3GPP evolved packet system and fifth generation system core networks.

<CIT> teaches cell discovery reference signal configuration methods.

<CIT> relates to the transmission and reception of system information for next generation wireless communication networks.

<CIT> is directed to a method and apparatus for signalling of access barring parameters in a wireless communication system.

Non-patent document "Cell selection/reselection with NPN cells" (Sony, R2-<NUM>) compares three solutions for cell selection or reselection in non-public networks, and proposes a way forward.

The increasing use of different types of network infrastructure equipment and terminal devices associated with different traffic profiles give rise to new challenges for efficiently handling communications in wireless communications systems that need to be addressed.

The present invention can help address or mitigate at least some of the issues discussed above. Embodiments of the present technique can provide communications devices comprising transceiver circuitry configured to transmit signals to and/or to receive signals from a first cell of a wireless communications network, and controller circuitry. The controller circuitry is configured in combination with the transceiver circuitry to determine that the communications device is within a coverage area of a cell of a wireless communications network, to receive a downlink signal from the cell of the wireless communications network, the downlink signal indicating whether or not the communications device can connect to the cell in order to transmit signals to and/or receive signals from the wireless communications network, and to detect, based on the downlink signal, whether the wireless communications network is an on-demand network and/or a temporary network.

Embodiments of the present technique, which in addition to communications devices also relate to infrastructure equipment, methods of operating communications devices and infrastructure equipment, and circuitry for communications devices and infrastructure equipment, provide solutions that allow for the utilisation of ad-hoc networks, and specifically for on-demand or temporary networks.

Respective aspects and features of the present invention are defined in the appended claims.

The network <NUM> includes a plurality of base stations <NUM> connected to a core network <NUM>. Each base station provides a coverage area <NUM> (i.e. a cell) within which data can be communicated to and from communications devices <NUM>.

Although each base station <NUM> is shown in <FIG> as a single entity, the skilled person will appreciate that some of the functions of the base station may be carried out by disparate, inter-connected elements, such as antennas (or antennae), remote radio heads, amplifiers, etc. Collectively, one or more base stations may form a radio access network.

Data is transmitted from base stations <NUM> to communications devices <NUM> within their respective coverage areas <NUM> via a radio downlink. Data is transmitted from communications devices <NUM> to the base stations <NUM> via a radio uplink. The core network <NUM> routes data to and from the communications devices <NUM> via the respective base stations <NUM> and provides functions such as authentication, mobility management, charging and so on. Terminal devices may also be referred to as mobile stations, user equipment (UE), user terminal, mobile radio, communications device, and so forth.

Services provided by the core network <NUM> may include connectivity to the internet or to external telephony services. The core network <NUM> may further track the location of the communications devices <NUM> so that it can efficiently contact (i.e. page) the communications devices <NUM> for transmitting downlink data towards the communications devices <NUM>.

Base stations, which are an example of network infrastructure equipment, may also be referred to as transceiver stations, nodeBs, e-nodeBs, eNB, g-nodeBs, gNB and so forth. In this regard different terminology is often associated with different generations of wireless telecommunications systems for elements providing broadly comparable functionality. However, certain embodiments of the disclosure may be equally implemented in different generations of wireless telecommunications systems, and for simplicity certain terminology may be used regardless of the underlying network architecture. That is to say, the use of a specific term in relation to certain example implementations is not intended to indicate these implementations are limited to a certain generation of network that may be most associated with that particular terminology.

3GPP has completed the basic version of <NUM> in Rel-<NUM>, known as the New Radio Access Technology (NR). In addition, enhancements have been made in Rel-<NUM>, incorporating new features such as the <NUM>-step RACH procedure [<NUM>], Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) [<NUM>] and NR-based Access to Unlicensed Spectrum (NR-U) [<NUM>]. Further enhancements have been agreed for Rel-<NUM>, such as small data transmissions while the UE is in the RRC_INACTIVE state.

An example configuration of a wireless communications network which uses some of the terminology proposed for and used in NR and <NUM> is shown in <FIG>. In <FIG> a plurality of transmission and reception points (TRPs) <NUM> are connected to distributed control units (DUs) <NUM>, <NUM> by a connection interface represented as a line <NUM>. Each of the TRPs <NUM> is arranged to transmit and receive signals via a wireless access interface within a radio frequency bandwidth available to the wireless communications network. Thus, within a range for performing radio communications via the wireless access interface, each of the TRPs <NUM>, forms a cell of the wireless communications network as represented by a circle <NUM>. As such, wireless communications devices <NUM> which are within a radio communications range provided by the cells <NUM> can transmit and receive signals to and from the TRPs <NUM> via the wireless access interface. Each of the distributed units <NUM>, <NUM> are connected to a central unit (CU) <NUM> (which may be referred to as a controlling node) via an interface <NUM>. The central unit <NUM> is then connected to the core network <NUM> which may contain all other functions required to transmit data for communicating to and from the wireless communications devices and the core network <NUM> may be connected to other networks <NUM>.

The TRPs <NUM> of <FIG> may in part have a corresponding functionality to a base station or eNodeB of an LTE network. Similarly, the communications devices <NUM> may have a functionality corresponding to the UE devices <NUM> known for operation with an LTE network. It will be appreciated therefore that operational aspects of a new RAT network (for example in relation to specific communication protocols and physical channels for communicating between different elements) may be different to those known from LTE or other known mobile telecommunications standards. However, it will also be appreciated that each of the core network component, base stations and communications devices of a new RAT network will be functionally similar to, respectively, the core network component, base stations and communications devices of an LTE wireless communications network.

In terms of broad top-level functionality, the core network <NUM> connected to the new RAT telecommunications system represented in <FIG> may be broadly considered to correspond with the core network <NUM> represented in <FIG>, and the respective central units <NUM> and their associated distributed units / TRPs <NUM> may be broadly considered to provide functionality corresponding to the base stations <NUM> of <FIG>. The term network infrastructure equipment / access node may be used to encompass these elements and more conventional base station type elements of wireless telecommunications systems. Depending on the application at hand the responsibility for scheduling transmissions which are scheduled on the radio interface between the respective distributed units and the communications devices may lie with the controlling node / central unit and / or the distributed units / TRPs. A communications device <NUM> is represented in <FIG> within the coverage area of the first communication cell <NUM>. This communications device <NUM> may thus exchange signalling with the first central unit <NUM> in the first communication cell <NUM> via one of the distributed units <NUM> associated with the first communication cell <NUM>.

It will further be appreciated that <FIG> represents merely one example of a proposed architecture for a new RAT based telecommunications system in which approaches in accordance with the principles described herein may be adopted, and the functionality disclosed herein may also be applied in respect of wireless telecommunications systems having different architectures.

Thus certain embodiments of the disclosure as discussed herein may be implemented in wireless telecommunication systems / networks according to various different architectures, such as the example architectures shown in <FIG> and <FIG>. It will thus be appreciated the specific wireless telecommunications architecture in any given implementation is not of primary significance to the principles described herein. In this regard, certain embodiments of the disclosure may be described generally in the context of communications between network infrastructure equipment / access nodes and a communications device, wherein the specific nature of the network infrastructure equipment / access node and the communications device will depend on the network infrastructure for the implementation at hand. For example, in some scenarios the network infrastructure equipment / access node may comprise a base station, such as an LTE-type base station <NUM> as shown in <FIG> which is adapted to provide functionality in accordance with the principles described herein, and in other examples the network infrastructure equipment may comprise a control unit / controlling node <NUM> and / or a TRP <NUM> of the kind shown in <FIG> which is adapted to provide functionality in accordance with the principles described herein.

A more detailed diagram of some of the components of the network shown in <FIG> is provided by <FIG>. In <FIG>, a TRP <NUM> as shown in <FIG> comprises, as a simplified representation, a wireless transmitter <NUM>, a wireless receiver <NUM> and a controller or controlling processor <NUM> which may operate to control the transmitter <NUM> and the wireless receiver <NUM> to transmit and receive radio signals to one or more UEs <NUM> within a cell <NUM> formed by the TRP <NUM>. As shown in <FIG>, an example UE <NUM> is shown to include a corresponding transmitter <NUM>, a receiver <NUM> and a controller <NUM> which is configured to control the transmitter <NUM> and the receiver <NUM> to transmit signals representing uplink data to the wireless communications network via the wireless access interface formed by the TRP <NUM> and to receive downlink data as signals transmitted by the transmitter <NUM> and received by the receiver <NUM> in accordance with the conventional operation.

The transmitters <NUM>, <NUM> and the receivers <NUM>, <NUM> (as well as other transmitters, receivers and transceivers described in relation to examples and embodiments of the present disclosure) may include radio frequency filters and amplifiers as well as signal processing components and devices in order to transmit and receive radio signals in accordance for example with the <NUM>/NR standard. The controllers <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM> (as well as other controllers described in relation to examples and embodiments of the present disclosure) may be, for example, a microprocessor, a CPU, or a dedicated chipset, etc., configured to carry out instructions which are stored on a computer readable medium, such as a non-volatile memory. The processing steps described herein may be carried out by, for example, a microprocessor in conjunction with a random access memory, operating according to instructions stored on a computer readable medium.

As shown in <FIG>, the TRP <NUM> also includes a network interface <NUM> which connects to the DU <NUM> via a physical interface <NUM>. The network interface <NUM> therefore provides a communication link for data and signalling traffic from the TRP <NUM> via the DU <NUM> and the CU <NUM> to the core network <NUM>.

The interface <NUM> between the DU <NUM> and the CU <NUM> is known as the F1 interface which can be a physical or a logical interface. The F1 interface <NUM> between CU and DU may operate in accordance with specifications 3GPP TS <NUM> and 3GPP TS <NUM>, and may be formed from a fibre optic or other wired high bandwidth connection. In one example the connection <NUM> from the TRP <NUM> to the DU <NUM> is via fibre optic. The connection between a TRP <NUM> and the core network <NUM> can be generally referred to as a backhaul, which comprises the interface <NUM> from the network interface <NUM> of the TRP10 to the DU <NUM> and the F1 interface <NUM> from the DU <NUM> to the CU <NUM>.

Network as a Service (NaaS) describes services for network transport connectivity, and may refer to any of a number of different types of network, such as an on-demand network, a temporary network, or a virtual private network (VPN). The justification, motivation, use cases, and requirements for NaaS are broadly covered in [<NUM>], and are described below.

In some locations, a <NUM> network can be available or deployed in an ad-hoc manner (e.g. for on-demand or temporary events), providing coverage and connectivity to local users, for example:.

The <NUM> network operator may allow/offer users to access on-demand services from a <NUM>rd party (e.g. a content provider or mobile operator), as additional revenue stream(s). Examples here, with reference to the above locations in which an ad-hoc network may be deployed, include:.

Providing these contents or on-demand service over the <NUM> "serving" network may require specific and dynamic QoS support, network/UE configuration and policies/provisioning. For example:.

The on-demand or temporary service may be provided by a Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN), Non-Public Network (NPN) or other content service provider. The network may deploy a dedicated slice for supporting this service, and this may motivate a mobile operator to charge specifically for the use of this service. As described below, embodiments of the present technique propose that the PLMN, NPN or other content service provider for the ad-hoc network to be separate to those used to operate the serving <NUM> networks and run by different mobile network operators. Therefore, it is possible for users/subscribers/UEs of different operators to access the on-demand/temporary networks and services. The <NUM> serving network or the on-demand services may cover specific locations, and here the coverage area size may be small or large.

General mechanisms, for example those related to roaming, QoS, slicing, or charging, could be enhanced. Other specific configurations, for a network to provide access to services of different operators, may have constraints, for example:.

The objectives of the study as described in [<NUM>] include:.

Services and functionalities could be dynamic, e.g. on-demand and/or temporary as has been described above, and may cover specific location(s), of be different area size(s).

In a stadium scenario, a content producer or a mobile operator may provide special contents via a temporary or on-demand network only for those inside the stadium and agreed to use this service. Such contents/services may only be provided at predefined times, for example during a sports match at the stadium. <FIG> shows an example of such a deployment in a stadium. As shown in <FIG>, a base station <NUM> or cell site is deployed in a stadium <NUM>. However, those skilled in the art would appreciate that the stadium <NUM> could be covered by a macro cell as well. The cell is connected to the core network <NUM> (e.g. 5GC) and the 5GC <NUM> is connected to the content server <NUM>, which may physically reside in the stadium <NUM> and using a dedicated slice <NUM>. So, a dedicated slice <NUM> for this service may span across parts of the core network <NUM>, content server <NUM>, gNB <NUM>, and transport network. The above mentioned different functions may be virtualized, and therefore may physically reside at different places to those shown. <FIG> shows two UEs; UE A 14a and UE B 14b. In this example, the gNB <NUM> cell broadcasts a PLMN for UE A 14a only, as UE B 14b is attached to a different network operator than that which operates the gNB <NUM>. UE B 14b will not find its home PLMN in the broadcasted PLMN list from this cell. So, in normal circumstances, this cell is not a suitable cell for UE B 14b, but, as mentioned above and in [<NUM>], UE B 14b should be able to receive this special service in the stadium <NUM>. However, the terms of usage of this network may not always be acceptable to the user of UE B 14b.

Embodiments of the present technique proposes solutions to deal with one of the challenges introduced by the concept of Network as a Service (NaaS). That is, how should on-demand networks and temporary networks be treated differently between. It is foreseen that an on-demand network may be a network already and constantly in a fixed position, but in a dormant state, and requires a trigger to wake it up. On the other hand, a temporary network may only exist for a pre-defined time and/or for a special event/service, and therefore may need to notify potential users of its presence. These characteristics may lead to different UE and network configurations or behaviours when exploiting deployment of ad-hoc networks. Those skilled in the art would appreciate however, from a physical deployment point of view, these two types of ad-hoc networks don't necessarily have to have distinct infrastructures.

<FIG> provides a part schematic representation, part message flow diagram of communications between a communications device or UE <NUM> and a wireless communications network in accordance with embodiments of the present technique. The wireless communications network may include an infrastructure equipment <NUM> which provides a cell having a coverage area within in one of which the communications device <NUM> may be located, or may enter in and out of, either as the communications device <NUM> moves, the wireless communications network - which may only be provided in accordance with a pre-defined time schedule - is available to the communications device <NUM>, or a combination of both. The communications device <NUM> comprises a transceiver (or transceiver circuitry) <NUM>. t configured to transmit signals to or receive signals from the wireless communications network (for example, to the infrastructure equipment <NUM> via a wireless access interface provided by the wireless communications network), or indeed from other wireless communications networks, and a controller (or controller circuitry) <NUM>. c configured to control the transceiver circuitry <NUM>. t to transmit or to receive the signals. As can be seen in <FIG>, the infrastructure equipment <NUM> may also comprise a transceiver (or transceiver circuitry) <NUM>. t, which may configured to transmit signals to or receive signals from the communications device <NUM> via the wireless access interface, and a controller (or controller circuitry) <NUM>. c, which may be configured to control the transceiver circuitry <NUM>. t, to transmit or to receive the signals. Each of the controllers <NUM>. c may be, for example, a microprocessor, a CPU, or a dedicated chipset, etc..

The wireless communications network may be one of a public land mobile network, PLMN, and a non-public network, NPN, which is configured to provide on-demand or temporary services to the communications device regardless of which mobile network operator provides wireless communications services to the communications device.

The controller circuitry <NUM>. c of the communications device <NUM> is configured in combination with the transceiver circuitry <NUM>. t of the communications device <NUM> to determine <NUM> that the communications device <NUM> is within a coverage area of the cell (controlled by the infrastructure equipment <NUM>) of the wireless communications network, to receive <NUM> a downlink signal from the cell of the wireless communications network, the downlink signal <NUM> indicating whether or not the communications device <NUM> can connect to the cell in order to transmit signals to and/or receive signals from the wireless communications network, and to detect <NUM>, based on the downlink signal <NUM>, whether or not the wireless communications network is an on-demand network and/or a temporary network.

Essentially, embodiments of the present technique propose ways of how Network as a Service (NaaS) can be supported, with respect to at least each of on-demand networks and temporary networks. Embodiments of the present technique define signalling and configurations to support such on-demand and temporary networks, by taking the characteristics of these two types of network into account.

In order to distinguish between on-demand networks and temporary networks (if necessary), a special network identity e.g. NPN or PLMN ID may be used, and if so, this should pre-allocated and configured to the UE. In other words, the communications device is configured to detect whether or not the wireless communications network is one of an on-demand network and a temporary network based on a network identifier included within the downlink signal, wherein the network identifier associated with each of an on-demand network and a temporary network is predefined and known to the communications device.

The downlink signal <NUM> as described with respect to <FIG> may indicate whether or not the communications device can connect to the cell in order to transmit signals to and/or receive signals from the wireless communications network based at least in part on a type of the communications device (e.g. the UE is an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) or drone) and/or on a specification in accordance with which the communications device operates (e.g. the UE is not a legacy UE).

The use cases for an on-demand network could be, for example:.

In order to support the on-demand network, additional system information, signalling and/or procedures are introduced by embodiments of the present technique.

In some arrangements of embodiments of the present technique, an indicator is included in the MIB to indicate it is an on-demand network. In other words, the downlink signal is a Master Information Block, MIB, comprising system information relating to the wireless communications network, the MIB comprising an indicator which indicates that the wireless communications network is an on-demand network. With this indicator in the MIB, those conventional UEs/services can ignore it, whereas for those special type of UEs/services (e.g. UAVs), a signal should be sent afterwards to check whether this cell can provide the particularly service(s) they are looking for. Additionally, for those UEs which are interested in on-demand networks, there will not be a requirement to read other SIBs or send any other signalling, only to find that the network does not support on-demand services at all.

In order to bar legacy UEs, in some arrangements of embodiments of the present technique, the cellBarred Information Element (IE) may be set as "barred". However, new type of UEs will read the newly defined IE in MIB (e.g. using the spare bit in Rel-<NUM> MIB) to check whether on-demand networks/services are supported or not. In other words, the MIB comprises an indicator of whether or not access to the cell is barred to communications devices which are unable to receive services from on-demand networks or temporary networks.

In some arrangements of embodiments of the present technique, an on-demand SIB including the related information will be broadcasted on-demand, and SIB1 will indicate its scheduling information. In other words, the communications device is configured to transmit an uplink signal to the cell of the wireless communications network, the uplink signal comprising a request that the wireless communications network provide on-demand services to the communications device, wherein the downlink signal is a System Information Block, SIB, transmitted by the cell of the wireless communications network in response to the uplink signal and comprising system information relating to the wireless communications network, the SIB comprising information indicating that the wireless communications network is an on-demand network.

This on-demand SIB may include information relating to supported services, and supported UE types, and may be treated as any on-demand SIBs in Rel-<NUM>. In other words, the SIB comprises an indication of one or more services supported by the cell of the wireless communications network and/or an indication of one or more types of communications devices supported by the cell of the communications network.

Interested UEs can send a SIB request via RACH to trigger the broadcast of this specific SIB. In other words, the uplink signal forms part of a random access, RACH, procedure initiated by the communications device.

As another option, a reserved preamble can be used to indicate to the network that the SI request is for an on-demand network SIB. In other words, the uplink signal is a reserved preamble, the reserved preamble being associated with a request for the on-demand services. In addition, it is possible for a UE in an RRC_CONNECTED state already to request on-demand services in dedicated manner/message (e.g. DedicatedSIBRequest message). In other words, the uplink signal is a dedicated signal for requesting the on-demand services, and wherein the uplink signal is transmitted by the communications device while the communications device is in a Radio Resource Control, RRC, connected state with the cell of the wireless communications network.

In some cases, the UE may be in an RRC_CONNECTED state in the same cell as that which provides the on-demand services using a dedicated network slice - i.e. a separate logical network to the logical network with which the UE is in the RRC_CONNECTED state. In such a case, the UE first needs to access the SIB to retrieve the service specific information that can be reached from the cell. Once the UE has triggered the broadcast of the SIB through the SI request and determines the availability of the service which the network may provide using a dedicated slice that is used to provide the on-demand services, it can connect to that logical network and receive the on-demand services from the cell. In other words, the SIB comprises an indication of the availability (or presence) of the on-demand service and/or a plurality of network slice identifiers each identifying a different network slice of the cell of the wireless communications network, and wherein the communications device is in the RRC connected state with the cell of the wireless communications network through a different one of the network slices to a network slice used by the cell of the wireless communications network for providing the on-demand services.

The SIB request is also a trigger to initiate the on-demand network, and more specific configurations relating to the on-demand network may be sent to the UE after the connection has been successfully established. From the network's point of view, before it initiates the service, it needs to check the resource availability and service availability. In order to bar legacy UEs, the IE cellReservedForOtherUse could be set to barred and the corresponding PLMN list (e.g. the on-demand network belongs to) should be added as well. In other words, the SIB comprises an indicator of whether or not access to the cell is barred to communications devices which are unable to receive services from on-demand networks or temporary networks.

In some arrangements of embodiments of the present technique, a request can be included in the RRC connection setup message with a specific establishment cause. In other words, the communications device is configured to transmit an uplink signal to the cell of the wireless communications network, the uplink signal comprising a request that the wireless communications network provide on-demand services to the communications device, wherein the uplink signal is an RRC connection request message.

Here, the network can then send an RRC setup reject message if it doesn't support the on-demand network or can send a RRC setup message with additional information; e.g. what services/UE types it supports. In other words, the communications device may be configured to receive, in response to transmitting the uplink signal, an RRC setup reject message indicating that the wireless communications network is not an on-demand network and so cannot provide the on-demand services to the communications device, or alternatively, the communications device may be configured to receive, in response to transmitting the uplink signal, an RRC setup message indicating that the wireless communications network is an on-demand network and so can provide the on-demand services to the communications device.

In some arrangements of embodiments of the present technique, for connected UEs, dedicated RRC signalling can be used to request the on-demand network configurations. In other words, the communications device is configured to transmit an uplink signal to the cell of the wireless communications network, the uplink signal comprising a request that the wireless communications network provide on-demand services to the communications device, wherein the uplink signal is a dedicated signal for requesting the on-demand services, and wherein the uplink signal is transmitted by the communications device while the communications device is in a Radio Resource Control, RRC, connected state with the wireless communications network. Here, as a reply from the network, further on-demand network specific configurations in addition to the supported services/UE types, such as specific bandwidth parts (BWP), configured grants, scheduling request (SR) configurations, etc. may be included.

The use cases for a temporary network could be, for example:.

In order to support the temporary network, additional system information, signalling and/or procedures are introduced by embodiments of the present technique.

In some arrangements of embodiments of the present technique, an on-demand SIB including the related network/service information will be broadcasted on-demand and SIB1 will indicate its scheduling information. In other words, the communications device is configured to transmit an uplink signal to the cell of the wireless communications network, the uplink signal comprising a request that the wireless communications network provide temporary services to the communications device, wherein the downlink signal is a System Information Block, SIB, transmitted by the cell of the wireless communications network in response to the uplink signal and comprising system information relating to the wireless communications network, the SIB comprising information indicating that the wireless communications network is a temporary network.

This on-demand SIB may include information relating to supported services and corresponding schedules for these services, supported UE types, and minimum link quality requirements (e.g. a Reference Signal Received Power (RSRP) threshold), and may be treated as any on-demand SIBs in Rel-<NUM>. In other words, the SIB comprises one or more of: an indication of one or more services supported by the cell of the wireless communications network; an indication of one or more types of communications devices supported by the cell of the communications network; and an indication of a minimum link quality requirement of a connection between the cell of the communications network and communications devices which request the temporary services from the wireless communications network.

As another option, a reserved preamble can be used to indicate to the network that the SI request is for a temporary network SIB, if there is any such SIB. In other words, the uplink signal is a reserved preamble, the reserved preamble being associated with a request for the temporary services.

In some arrangements of embodiments of the present technique, a request can be included in the RRC connection setup message with a specific establishment cause. In other words, the communications device is configured to transmit an uplink signal to the cell of the wireless communications network, the uplink signal comprising a request that the wireless communications network provide temporary services to the communications device, wherein the uplink signal is an RRC connection request message.

Here, the network can then send an RRC setup reject message if it doesn't support the temporary network or can send an RRC setup message with additional information, e.g. what services/UE types it supports, and when the service is going to be initiated. The UE then has the opportunity to go into a dormant (e.g. RRC_IDLE or RRC_INACTIVE) state if it is only interested in one specific service, and wake up at a time at which that service becomes available according to the schedule. In other words, the communications device is configured to receive, in response to transmitting the uplink signal, an RRC setup reject message indicating that the wireless communications network is not a temporary network and so cannot provide the temporary services to the communications device, or alternatively, the communications device is configured to receive, in response to transmitting the uplink signal, an RRC setup message indicating that the wireless communications network is a temporary network and so can provide the temporary services to the communications device.

In some arrangements of embodiments of the present technique, for connected UEs, dedicated RRC signalling can be used to request the temporary network configurations. In other words, the communications device is configured to transmit an uplink signal to the cell of the wireless communications network, the uplink signal comprising a request that the wireless communications network provide temporary services to the communications device, wherein the uplink signal is a dedicated signal for requesting the temporary services, and wherein the uplink signal is transmitted by the communications device while the communications device is in a Radio Resource Control, RRC, connected state with the wireless communications network. Here, as a reply from the network, further temporary network specific configurations in addition to supported services/UE types and schedules, such as specific bandwidth parts (BWP), configured grants, scheduling request (SR) configurations, etc. may be included.

In some arrangements of embodiments of the present technique, paging to notify the UEs of the temporary network/service may be provided. In other words, the downlink signal is a paging message, the paging message indicating that the cell of the wireless communications network can provide temporary services to the communications device. Paging messages can be used to provide the notification to UEs that a temporary network/service is going to be provided, either in advance of the temporary service being provided or as the temporary service is starting. A specific indicator can be included in the paging message (or can be signalling in a dedicated manner to UEs, for example via DCI). The corresponding specific information may be included in the SIB, and interested UEs can decide to access those services or not afterwards. For a temporary network, unlike existing Multimedia Broadcast Multicast Services (MBMS) or conventional networks, it is important to notify the UE that the service has been initiated or is going to be initiated (e.g. a retailer starts a sale); paging is one of the options to send such a notification.

<FIG> shows a flow diagram illustrating a method of operating a communications device in a wireless communications network. The method begins in step S1. The method comprises, in step S2, determining that the communications device is within a coverage area of a cell of a wireless communications network. In step S3, the method comprises receiving a downlink signal from the cell of the wireless communications network, the downlink signal indicating whether or not the communications device can connect to the cell in order to transmit signals to and/or receive signals from the wireless communications network. The process then comprises, in step S4, detecting, based on the downlink signal, whether or not the wireless communications network is an on-demand network and/or a temporary network. The process ends in step S5.

Those skilled in the art would appreciate that the example method shown by <FIG> and example system shown in <FIG> may be adapted in accordance with embodiments of the present technique. For example, other intermediate steps may be included in such methods or systems, or the steps may be performed in any logical order.

Those skilled in the art would further appreciate that such infrastructure equipment and/or communications devices as herein defined may be further defined in accordance with the various arrangements and embodiments discussed in the preceding paragraphs. It would be further appreciated by those skilled in the art that such infrastructure equipment and communications devices as herein defined and described may form part of communications systems other than those defined by the present disclosure.

Described embodiments may be implemented in any suitable form including hardware, software,
firmware or any combination of these.

Claim 1:
A communications device (<NUM>) comprising
transceiver circuitry (<NUM>.t) configured to transmit signals to and/or to receive signals from wireless communications networks, and
controller circuitry (<NUM>.c) configured in combination with the transceiver circuitry
to determine (<NUM>) that the communications device is within a coverage area of a cell of a wireless communications network, wherein the wireless communications network is a public land mobile network, PLMN, or a non-public network, NPN, and is configured to provide on-demand or temporary services to the communications device regardless of which mobile network operator provides wireless communications services to the communications device,
to receive (<NUM>) a downlink signal from the cell of the wireless communications network, the downlink signal indicating whether or not the communications device can connect to the cell in order to transmit signals to and/or receive signals from the wireless communications network, and
to detect (<NUM>), based on the downlink signal, whether or not the wireless communications network is an on-demand network and/or a temporary network.