Gateway apparatus and methods for wireless IoT (Internet of Things) services
11190861 · 2021-11-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04L43/10
ELECTRICITY
H04W80/10
ELECTRICITY
H04L5/006
ELECTRICITY
H04M7/006
ELECTRICITY
H04L12/2838
ELECTRICITY
H04L27/0006
ELECTRICITY
H04W16/14
ELECTRICITY
H04L67/12
ELECTRICITY
H04L41/0806
ELECTRICITY
H04L5/0007
ELECTRICITY
H04W72/0453
ELECTRICITY
H04L47/821
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04W80/10
ELECTRICITY
H04W16/14
ELECTRICITY
H04L12/28
ELECTRICITY
H04J3/16
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Gateway apparatus and methods for providing data services (including IoT data services) which leverage existing managed network (e.g., cable network) infrastructure. The disclosed methods and apparatus enable, among other things, delivery of IoT data services in a unified manner via a common portal or IoT gateway (IoTG) which may be both remotely accessed by a user, and remotely controlled/configured by the host network operator (e.g., MSO). In one variant, the premises devices include RF-enabled receivers (enhanced consumer premises equipment, or CPEe) configured to receive (and transmit) OFDM waveforms via a coaxial cable drop to the premises, and interface with the aforementioned IoTG to enable provision of both 5G high-speed data services and lower bandwidth IoT services to the premises, all via a single coaxial cable drop in the exemplary embodiment.
Claims
1. Computerized apparatus configured to use of one or more air interfaces within a premises for provision of IoT (Internet of Things) data services, the computerized apparatus comprising: an RF (Radio Frequency) interface device configured to at least receive RF signals from a radio frequency distribution network; processor apparatus in data communication with the RF interface device; a plurality of radio apparatus in data communication with the processor apparatus; and storage apparatus in data communication with the processor apparatus and comprising at least one computer program, the at least one computer program comprising a plurality of instructions which are configured to, when executed by the processor apparatus, cause the computerized apparatus to: process the received RF signals to extract data for respective ones of a plurality of IoT (Internet of Things) devices in data communication with the computerized apparatus via the plurality of radio apparatus; and utilize the respective radio apparatus to transmit the extracted data to the respective ones of the plurality of IoT devices via respective RF bands, each of the respective RF bands associated with a respective short-range communications protocol of a plurality of short-range communications protocols; wherein the received RF signals comprise data configured according to a frequency mapping scheme that correlates one or more of the plurality of IoT devices to a respective portion of a single spectrum, the single spectrum exceeding a total bandwidth of 98 MHz.
2. The computerized apparatus of claim 1, wherein a first of the plurality of short-range communication protocols comprises an IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) Std. 802.15.4 protocol, and a second of the plurality of short-range communication protocols comprises a BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy) protocol.
3. The computerized apparatus of claim 1, wherein the radio frequency distribution network comprises a managed hybrid fiber coax (HFC) cable network, and the RF interface device is configured to interface with the managed HFC cable network via a single coaxial cable.
4. The computerized apparatus of claim 3, wherein the received RF signals comprise at least a portion of a 3GPP LTE (Long Term Evolution) anchor channel maintained as part of an NSA (Non-standalone) configuration utilized by at least the HFC cable network in delivering 5G NR (New Radio) services to the computerized apparatus via the single coaxial cable.
5. The computerized apparatus of claim 3, wherein the received RF signals comprise at least a portion of a 3GPP (Third Generation Partnership Project) 5G NR (New Radio) NB-IoT (narrowband Internet of Things) channel.
6. A computerized method for processing and transmission of data among a plurality of premises apparatus, the computerized method comprising: detecting radio frequency (RF) signals transmitted over a wireline data network, the detected RF signals having been formed based at least on a frequency mapping scheme, the frequency mapping scheme correlating one or more of the plurality of premises apparatus to one or more corresponding portions of a prescribed frequency spectrum, the prescribed frequency spectrum comprising a total usable bandwidth of over 98 MHz; processing the detected RF signals to obtain data from the detected RF signals, the data associated with respective ones of the plurality of premises apparatus; and transmitting the obtained data to the respective ones of the plurality of premises apparatus via respective frequency bands, each of the respective frequency bands associated with a different one of a plurality of short-range communications protocols.
7. The computerized method of claim 6, wherein the total usable bandwidth of the prescribed frequency spectrum is 1.6 GHz or greater, and each of the one or more corresponding portions of the prescribed frequency spectrum comprises a 5G NR (Fifth Generation New Radio) wideband having a bandwidth of approximately 98 MHz.
8. The computerized method of claim 6, wherein the wireline data network comprises a hybrid fiber coax (HFC), and the prescribed frequency spectrum has a bandwidth of approximately 1.6 GHz.
9. The computerized method of claim 6, further comprising converting at least a portion of the detected RF signals into a plurality of waveforms compliant with respective Personal Area Network (PAN) protocols, the respective PAN protocols comprising at least one of an IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) Std. 802.15.4 protocol or a BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy) protocol.
10. The computerized method of claim 6, wherein the detecting of RF signals from the wireline data network Generation Partnership Project) compliant waveforms transmitted by a node of a hybrid fiber coax (HFC) cable network.
11. The computerized method of claim 6, wherein the detecting the RF signals from the data services network comprises receiving waveforms from the data services network via a prescribed frequency band, the waveforms having been upconverted from a lower frequency so as to occupy the prescribed frequency band.
12. The computerized method of claim 6, wherein the prescribed frequency band comprises a frequency band within an operating range of a coaxial cable used to deliver the received waveforms to a gateway apparatus.
13. The computerized method of claim 11, wherein the plurality of premises apparatus comprises a plurality of IoT (Internet of Things) devices accessible via the gateway apparatus.
14. A non-transitory computer-readable apparatus comprising a storage medium, the storage medium comprising a plurality of instructions configured to, when executed by a processor apparatus of a computerized apparatus, cause the computerized apparatus to: obtain radio frequency (RF) signals from a radio frequency distribution network; obtain data from the obtained RF signals for respective ones of a plurality of premises devices in data communication with the computerized apparatus; and transmit the obtained data to the respective ones of the plurality of premises devices via respective RF bands, each of the respective RF bands associated with a respective short-range wireless communications protocol of a plurality of short-range communications protocols; wherein the obtained RF signals have been transmitted according to a frequency mapping scheme configured to map one or more of the plurality of premises devices to the respective portions of a frequency spectrum designated for at least downstream communications within the radio frequency distribution network, the frequency spectrum comprising a total bandwidth exceeding 98 MHz.
15. The non-transitory computer-readable apparatus of claim 14, wherein at least one of the plurality of short-range wireless communication protocols comprises at least one of an IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) Std. 802.15.4 protocol, or a Bluetooth-based protocol.
16. The non-transitory computer-readable apparatus of claim 15, wherein the obtained RF signals comprise 3GPP (Third Generation Partnership Project)-based waveforms; and wherein the plurality of instructions are further configured to, when executed by the processor apparatus, cause the computerized apparatus to: convert the 3GPP-based waveforms to at least a second type of waveforms; and transmit the at least the second type of waveforms to the plurality of premises devices via one or more wireless air interfaces configured to transmit via one of the at least the IEEE Std. 802.15.4 protocol or the Bluetooth-based protocol.
17. The non-transitory computer-readable apparatus of claim 14, wherein each of the respective portions of the frequency spectrum comprises a carrier bandwidth of at most 98 MHz.
18. The non-transitory computer-readable apparatus of claim 14, wherein the transmission of the extracted data to the respective ones of the plurality of premises devices comprises enablement of modification of at least one operational aspect associated with the respective ones of the premises devices.
19. The computerized apparatus of claim 1, wherein the RF signals received from the radio frequency distribution network comprises 3GPP (Third Generation Partnership Project)-compliant signals, and the radio frequency distribution network comprises at least a portion of a hybrid fiber coax (HFC) network.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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(46) All figures © Copyright 2017-2019 Charter Communications Operating, LLC. All rights reserved.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(47) Reference is now made to the drawings wherein like numerals refer to like parts throughout.
(48) As used herein, the term “application” (or “app”) refers generally and without limitation to a unit of executable software that implements a certain functionality or theme. The themes of applications vary broadly across any number of disciplines and functions (such as on-demand content management, e-commerce transactions, brokerage transactions, home entertainment, calculator etc.), and one application may have more than one theme. The unit of executable software generally runs in a predetermined environment; for example, the unit could include a downloadable Java Xlet™ that runs within the JavaTV™ environment.
(49) As used herein, the term “central unit” or “CU” refers without limitation to a centralized logical node within a wireless network infrastructure. For example, a CU might be embodied as a 5G/NR gNB Central Unit (gNB-CU), which is a logical node hosting RRC, SDAP and PDCP protocols of the gNB or RRC and PDCP protocols of the en-gNB that controls the operation of one or more gNB-DUs, and which terminates the F1 interface connected with one or more DUs (e.g., gNB-DUs) defined below.
(50) As used herein, the terms “client device” or “user device” or “UE” include, but are not limited to, set-top boxes (e.g., DSTBs), gateways, modems, personal computers (PCs), and minicomputers, whether desktop, laptop, or otherwise, and mobile devices such as handheld computers, PDAs, personal media devices (PMDs), tablets, “phablets”, smartphones, and vehicle infotainment systems or portions thereof.
(51) As used herein, the term “computer program” or “software” is meant to include any sequence or human or machine cognizable steps which perform a function. Such program may be rendered in virtually any programming language or environment including, for example, C/C++, Fortran, COBOL, PASCAL, assembly language, markup languages (e.g., HTML, SGML, XML, VoXML), and the like, as well as object-oriented environments such as the Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA), Java™ (including J2ME, Java Beans, etc.) and the like.
(52) As used herein, the term “distributed unit” or “DU” refers without limitation to a distributed logical node within a wireless network infrastructure. For example, a DU might be embodied as a 5G/NR gNB Distributed Unit (gNB-DU), which is a logical node hosting RLC, MAC and PHY layers of the gNB or en-gNB, and its operation is partly controlled by gNB-CU (referenced above). One gNB-DU supports one or multiple cells, yet a given cell is supported by only one gNB-DU. The gNB-DU terminates the F1 interface connected with the gNB-CU.
(53) As used herein, the term “DOCSIS” refers to any of the existing or planned variants of the Data Over Cable Services Interface Specification, including for example DOCSIS versions 1.0, 1.1, 2.0, 3.0 and 3.1.
(54) As used herein, the term “headend” or “backend” refers generally to a networked system controlled by an operator (e.g., an MSO) that distributes programming to MSO clientele using client devices, or provides other services such as high-speed data delivery and backhaul.
(55) As used herein, the terms “Internet” and “internet” are used interchangeably to refer to inter-networks including, without limitation, the Internet. Other common examples include but are not limited to: a network of external servers, “cloud” entities (such as memory or storage not local to a device, storage generally accessible at any time via a network connection, and the like), service nodes, access points, controller devices, client devices, etc.
(56) As used herein, the term “IoT device” refers without limitation to electronic devices having one or more primary functions and being configured to provide and/or receive data via one or more communication protocols. Examples of IoT devices include security or monitoring systems, appliances, consumer electronics, vehicles, infrastructure (e.g., traffic signaling systems), and medical devices, as well as receivers, hubs, proxy devices, or gateways used in association therewith.
(57) As used herein, the term “IoT network” refers without limitation to any logical, physical, or topological connection or aggregation of two or more IoT devices (or one IoT device and one or more non-IoT devices). Examples of IoT networks include networks of one or more IoT devices arranged in a peer-to-peer (P2P), star, ring, tree, mesh, master-slave, and coordinator-device topology.
(58) As used herein, the term “LTE” refers to, without limitation and as applicable, any of the variants or Releases of the Long-Term Evolution wireless communication standard, including LTE-U (Long Term Evolution in unlicensed spectrum), LTE-LAA (Long Term Evolution, Licensed Assisted Access), LTE-A (LTE Advanced), 4G LTE, WiMAX, VoLTE (Voice over LTE), and other wireless data standards.
(59) As used herein the terms “5G” and “New Radio (NR)” refer without limitation to apparatus, methods or systems compliant with 3GPP Release 15, and any modifications, subsequent Releases, or amendments or supplements thereto which are directed to New Radio technology, whether licensed or unlicensed.
(60) As used herein, the term “memory” includes any type of integrated circuit or other storage device adapted for storing digital data including, without limitation, ROM, PROM, EEPROM, DRAM, SDRAM, DDR/2 SDRAM, EDO/FPMS, RLDRAM, SRAM, “flash” memory (e.g., NAND/NOR), 3D memory, and PSRAM.
(61) As used herein, the terms “microprocessor” and “processor” or “digital processor” are meant generally to include all types of digital processing devices including, without limitation, digital signal processors (DSPs), reduced instruction set computers (RISC), general-purpose (CISC) processors, microprocessors, gate arrays (e.g., FPGAs), PLDs, reconfigurable computer fabrics (RCFs), array processors, secure microprocessors, and application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs). Such digital processors may be contained on a single unitary IC die, or distributed across multiple components.
(62) As used herein, the terms “MSO” or “multiple systems operator” refer to a cable, satellite, or terrestrial network provider having infrastructure required to deliver services including programming and data over those mediums.
(63) As used herein, the terms “MNO” or “mobile network operator” refer to a cellular, satellite phone, WMAN (e.g., 802.16), or other network service provider having infrastructure required to deliver services including without limitation voice and data over those mediums. The term “MNO” as used herein is further intended to include MVNOs, MNVAs, and MVNEs.
(64) As used herein, the terms “network” and “bearer network” refer generally to any type of telecommunications or data network including, without limitation, hybrid fiber coax (HFC) networks, satellite networks, telco networks, and data networks (including MANs, WANs, LANs, WLANs, internets, and intranets). Such networks or portions thereof may utilize any one or more different topologies (e.g., ring, bus, star, loop, etc.), transmission media (e.g., wired/RF cable, RF wireless, millimeter wave, optical, etc.) and/or communications technologies or networking protocols (e.g., SONET, DOCSIS, IEEE Std. 802.3, ATM, X.25, Frame Relay, 3GPP, 3GPP2, LTE/LTE-A/LTE-U/LTE-LAA, 5GNR, WAP, SIP, UDP, FTP, RTP/RTCP, H.323, etc.).
(65) As used herein the terms “5G” and “New Radio (NR)” refer without limitation to apparatus, methods or systems compliant with 3GPP Release 15, and any modifications, subsequent Releases, or amendments or supplements thereto which are directed to New Radio technology, whether licensed or unlicensed.
(66) As used herein, the term “QAM” refers to modulation schemes used for sending signals over e.g., cable or other networks. Such modulation scheme might use any constellation level (e.g. QPSK, 16-QAM, 64-QAM, 256-QAM, etc.) depending on details of a network. A QAM may also refer to a physical channel modulated according to the schemes.
(67) As used herein, the term “server” refers to any computerized component, system or entity regardless of form which is adapted to provide data, files, applications, content, or other services to one or more other devices or entities on a computer network.
(68) As used herein, the term “storage” refers to without limitation computer hard drives, DVR device, memory, RAID devices or arrays, optical media (e.g., CD-ROMs, Laserdiscs, Blu-Ray, etc.), or any other devices or media capable of storing content or other information.
(69) As used herein, the term “Wi-Fi” refers to, without limitation and as applicable, any of the variants of IEEE Std. 802.11 or related standards including 802.11 a/b/g/n/s/v/ac/ax, 802.11-2012/2013 or 802.11-2016, as well as Wi-Fi Direct (including inter alia, the “Wi-Fi Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Specification”, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety).
(70) Overview
(71) In one exemplary aspect, the present disclosure provides improved architectures, methods and apparatus for providing IoT data services which, inter alia, leverage existing managed network (e.g., cable network) infrastructure, while also providing support and in some cases utilizing the 3GPP requisite “NSA” functionality. The disclosed architectures and apparatus enable, among other things, delivery of IoT data services in a unified manner via a common “portal” or IoT gateway (IoTG) which may be both remotely accessed by a user, and remotely controlled/configured by the host network operator (e.g., MSO).
(72) Also disclosed are the ability to control nodes within the network (including the enhanced CPEe endpoints described herein) via embedded control channels, some of which “repurpose” requisite 3GPP NSA infrastructure such as LTE anchor channels. In one variant, the premises devices include RF-enabled receivers (enhanced consumer premises equipment, or CPEe) configured to receive (and transmit) OFDM waveforms via a coaxial cable drop to the premises, and interface with the aforementioned IoTG to enable provision of both 5G high-speed data services and lower bandwidth IoT services to the premises, all via a single coaxial cable drop in the exemplary embodiment.
(73) In one approach, the NSA LTE channels required for transmission of IoT user data (and control/management data) to one or more premises devices are leveraged, with the premises devices include RF-enabled IoT end user devices configured to receive (and transmit) wireless signals to and from the IoTG at the premises, such as via one or more IoT wireless interfaces such as BLE, LoRA or IEEE Std. 802.15.4 interfaces. In this fashion, heterogeneous interfaces (e.g., 3GPP and non-3GPP) commonly found in IoT devices can be aggregated via a common MSO interface to the HFC infrastructure (and beyond).
(74) In one variant, the premises devices include RF-enabled receivers configured to receive (and transmit) OFDM waveforms via the coaxial cable drop to the premises, and this acts in effect as a “distributed antenna system” for the IoT devices at the premises. IoT traffic may be positioned e.g., at an unused portion of the RF spectrum carried by the coaxial distribution network, and depending on the available spectrum at the premises used by the IoT user devices, either upconverted/downconverted to a desired carrier (and radiated at the premises) and distributed by the IoT gateway, or simply “passed through” at the transmission frequency by the receiving CPEe.
(75) Detailed Description of Exemplary Embodiments
(76) Exemplary embodiments of the apparatus and methods of the present disclosure are now described in detail. While these exemplary embodiments are described in the context of the previously mentioned wireless access nodes (e.g., gNBs and eNBs) associated with or supported at least in part by a managed network of a service provider (e.g., MSO), other types of radio access technologies (“RATs”), other types of networks and architectures that are configured to deliver digital data (e.g., text, images, games, software applications, video and/or audio) may be used consistent with the present disclosure. Such other networks or architectures may be broadband, narrowband, or otherwise, the following therefore being merely exemplary in nature.
(77) It will also be appreciated that while described generally in the context of a network providing service to a customer or consumer or end user or subscriber (i.e., within a prescribed service area, venue, or other type of premises), the present disclosure may be readily adapted to other types of environments including, e.g., commercial/retail, or enterprise domain (e.g., businesses), or even governmental uses. Yet other applications are possible.
(78) Other features and advantages of the present disclosure will immediately be recognized by persons of ordinary skill in the art with reference to the attached drawings and detailed description of exemplary embodiments as given below.
(79) Service Provider Network Architecture—
(80) Referring now to
(81) As illustrated, the architecture 500 includes one or more hubs 505 within the MSO network (e.g., whether near edge portions of the network, or further towards the core), including a 5G NR core (5GC) 503. The hub 505 includes a WLAN controller process 515, and services one or more “enhanced” nodes 501, which each include a gNB CUe 504 and a network radio node 509, described in greater detail below. The nodes 501 utilize HFC infrastructure, including N-way taps 512 to deliver RF waveforms to the various served premises (including the enhanced CPE or CPEe) 513 and ultimately the user device(s) 507 (e.g., 3GPP-enabled UEs).
(82) Also serviced by the node 501 are one or more non-CUe enabled nodes 511 including 4G/4.5G/5G enabled network radio nodes 509, which service additional premises as shown.
(83) In the illustrated embodiment, the nodes 501, 511 are backhauled by optical fiber, although this is merely illustrative, as other types of backhauls including e.g., high-bandwidth wireless may be used consistent with the present disclosure.
(84) Similarly, one or more pole-mounted radio nodes 506a (and potentially other mobile client devices enabled for DU-type functionalities; e.g., authorized to receive data from another node or client device, and broadcast/receive signals according to the user domain frequency band) are backhauled to the MSO network via optical fiber (or other medium); these nodes 506 provide, inter alia, supplemental capacity/coverage for both indoor and outdoor (and mobility) scenarios as described in greater detail in co-owned and co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/261,234 entitled “APPARATUS AND METHODS FOR ENABLING MOBILITY OF A USER DEVICE IN AN ENHANCED WIRELESS NETWORK,” previously incorporated herein.
(85) In one exemplary embodiment, radio nodes 506a are located on an “edge” of a network (i.e., functioning as a network node proximate to the premises and away from the core), and are enabled for 4G and/or 5G communications as described in greater detail below. A given DUe that provides 5G coverage to the premises thereby supplements the ultra-low latency and high-bandwidth services by the CUe 504. Moreover, as described further below, the CUe may be logically and functionally grouped with one or more DUe's 506 to together make up a gNB. Prescribed unlicensed and/or licensed frequency bands are utilized by the nodes 506a. For example, in one implementation, the disclosed solution supports one or more prescribed subsets of NR and NR-U band combinations as defined by 3GPP, depending on the particular application(s) anticipated by the installation and the locale in which it is installed (including for example whether other operators or carriers such as MNOs are utilizing licensed spectrum within the prescribed area, and which frequency bands such operators are using). It will also be appreciated that so-called “quasi-licensed” spectrum (such as for instance that within the 3.55-3.70 GHz CBRS bands in the U.S.) may be utilized consistent with the methods and apparatus described herein.
(86) In one variant, as noted above, mobile devices may function as intermediary nodes or transient “jumping points.” Such devices may be those owned by subscribers of the hub or core providing the managed network services who have opted into (or not opted out) of use of their eligible devices as nodes. In other variants, devices owned by subscribers of a different core (e.g., managed by a different entity) may be included in the network of nodes. As an aside, such networking schemes are often generally referred to as “fog networking,” a decentralized computing infrastructure in which data, computations, storage, and applications are distributed in an efficient manner between the data source and the destination (e.g., a “cloud” server, premises equipment, end user device) as opposed to a more highly centralized architecture.
(87) A Wi-Fi router device 517 is also present in the served premises to provide WLAN coverage, in conjunction with the controller 515 at the hub 505. The centralized Wi-Fi controller 515 is also utilized in the exemplary architecture 500 for tight-interworking and better mobility between the 3GPP and Wi-Fi access technologies where the Wi-Fi router is either integrated with the consumer premises equipment (e.g., enhanced CPE or CPEe) or connected to it. In various embodiments, one or more intermediary nodes (e.g., radio node 506a) located between the CUe 504 and the served premises are utilized to provide additional coverage and bandwidth to the premises. Then, mobility between the 3GPP and Wi-Fi channels for any user can be triggered for the best data throughput, such as based on (i) estimation of the RF quality of the Wi-Fi channel toward the user, and/or (ii) the degree of congestion of the Wi-Fi router, and not just the Wi-Fi received signal strength indicators (RSSI) measured at the mobile device, the latter which may not be representative of the service quality that can be obtained by the user. Additional detail on the foregoing Wi-Fi related aspects is also described in greater detail in co-owned and co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/261,234 entitled “APPARATUS AND METHODS FOR ENABLING MOBILITY OF A USER DEVICE IN AN ENHANCED WIRELESS NETWORK,” previously incorporated herein.
(88) The architecture 500 also includes an IoTG (IoT gateway) functionality, as described in greater detail subsequently herein. The IoTG 519 is in data communication with the CPEe 513 (and as discussed below, may also be integrated therein to varying degrees depending on the particular application), as well as a plurality of IoT-enabled end devices 556a-c via for example the various air interfaces of the IoTG 519.
(89) The MSO network architecture 500 of
(90) The architecture 500 of
(91) Moreover, the architecture can be used for both broadband data delivery as well as “content” (e.g., movie channels) simultaneously, and obviates much of the prior separate infrastructure for “in band” and DOCSIS (and OOB) transport. Specifically, with DOCSIS (even FDX DOCSIS), bandwidth is often allocated for video QAMs, and a “split” is hard-coded for downstream and upstream data traffic. This hard split is typically implemented across all network elements—even amplifiers. In contrast, under the exemplary configuration of the architecture disclosed herein, effectively all traffic traversing the architecture is IP-based, and hence in many cases there is no need to allocate QAMs and frequency splits for different program or data streams. This “all-IP” approach enables flexible use of the available bandwidth on the transmission medium for all applications dynamically, based on for instance the demand of each such application at any given period or point in time.
(92) In certain embodiments, the service provider network 500 also advantageously permits the aggregation and/or analysis of subscriber- or account-specific data (including inter alia, correlation of particular CUe or DUe or E-UTRAN eNB/femtocell devices associated with such subscriber or accounts) as part of the provision of services to users under the exemplary delivery models described herein. As but one example, device-specific IDs (e.g., gNB ID, Global gNB Identifier, NCGI, MAC address or the like) can be cross-correlated to MSO subscriber data maintained at e.g., the network head end(s) 507 so as to permit or at least facilitate, among other things, (i) user/device authentication to the MSO network; (ii) correlation of aspects of the area, premises or venue where service is provided to particular subscriber capabilities, demographics, or equipment locations, such as for delivery of location-specific or targeted content or advertising or 5G “slicing” configuration or delivery; and (iii) determination of subscription level, and hence subscriber privileges and access to certain services as applicable.
(93) Moreover, device profiles for particular devices (e.g., 3GPP 5G NR and WLAN-enabled UE, or the CPEe 513 and any associated antenna 516, etc.) can be maintained by the MSO, such that the MSO (or its automated proxy processes) can model the device for wireless or other capabilities. For instance, one (non-supplemented) CPEe 513 may be modeled as having bandwidth capability of X Gbps, while another premises' supplemented CPEe may be modeled as having bandwidth capability of X+Y Gbps, and hence the latter may be eligible for services or 3GPP NR “slices” that are not available to the former.
(94) Referring now to
(95) Also served by the IoTG 519 are three IoT devices 556 (556a, 556b, and 556c). The first IoT device 556a is shown as having user plane data connectivity only (e.g., via a wired interface such as Cat-5, USB, etc., or wireless); i.e., the IoTG or CPEe 513 acts as the logical 3GPP endpoint “proxy” for the IoT device 556a, and recovers and transacts the user plane data to/from the IoT device 556a. This allows, inter alia, the IoT device 556a to be highly simplified, in that it does not need to have an MSO/3GPP “stack” or related functionality so that the IoT device itself can act as a 3GPP endpoint.
(96) In contrast, the second IoT device 556b is shown as having user plane data connectivity and control plane connectivity (e.g., via a wired interface such as Cat-5, USB, or wireless); i.e., the IoTG 519 or CPEe 513 acts as merely a logical pass-through for the IoT device 556b (contrast: frequency pass-through as described elsewhere herein), and transacts the user plane and control plane data to/from the IoT device 556b without implementing these functions itself. This allows, inter alia, the IoT device 556b to be controlled remotely, and implement greater functionality than could be achieved using the first IoT device 556a. The second IoT device 556b also includes a 3GPP (or non-3GPP) IoT stack such that it can act as the logical endpoint for the IoT data channels being terminated at the premises 551; the CPEe upconverts/downconverts the received waveforms from the HFC network to the required IoT device 556b carrier (e.g., consistent with an RF wireline or air interface maintained by the second IoT device 556b), and distributes them via the IoTG 519. The IoT device 556b demodulates and recovers the user and control plane data indigenously.
(97) The third IoT device 556c is shown as having user plane data connectivity and control plane connectivity (e.g., via a wired interface such as Cat-5, USB, or wireless); i.e., the CPEe 513 acts as merely a logical pass-through for the IoT device 556c, as well as a frequency pass-through as described elsewhere herein, and transacts the user plane and control plane data to/from the IoT device 556c without implementing these functions itself for the IoT device. This allows, inter alia, the IoT device 556c to be controlled remotely, and implement greater functionality than could be achieved using the first IoT device 556a. The third IoT device 556c again includes a 3GPP (or non-3GPP) IoT stack such that it can act as the logical endpoint for the IoT data channels being terminated at the premises 551; however, rather than the CPEe upconverting/downconverting the received waveforms from the HFC network to the required IoT device 556c carrier (e.g., consistent with an RF wireline or air interface maintained by the third IoT device 556c), and CPEe 513 merely acts as an RF pass-through of the IoT channel(s) which are transmitted by the transmitting node 509 at carrier to the IoT device 556c, via the repeater antennae and port of the CPEe (see discussion of
(98) The architecture 550 of
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(100) See the discussions of
(101) As a brief aside, the 5G technology defines a number of network functions (NFs), which include the following:
(102) 1. Access and Mobility Management function (AMF)—Provides for termination of NAS signaling, NAS integrity protection and ciphering, registration and connection and mobility management, access authentication and authorization, and security context management. The AMF has functions analogous to part of the MME functionality of the prior Evolved Packet Core (EPC).
(103) 2. Application Function (AF)—Manages application influence on traffic routing, accessing NEF, interaction with policy framework for policy control. The NR AF is comparable to the AF in EPC.
(104) 3. Authentication Server Function (AUSF)—Provides authentication server functionality. The AUSF is similar to portions of the HSS from EPC.
(105) 4. Network Exposure function (NEF)—Manages exposure of capabilities and events, secure provision of information from external applications to 3GPP network, translation of internal/external information. The NEF is a wholly new entity as compared to EPC.
(106) 5. Network Slice Selection Function (NSSF)—Provides for selection of the Network Slice instances to serve the UE, determining the allowed NSSAI, determining the AMF set to be used to serve the UE. The NSSF is a wholly new entity as compared to EPC.
(107) 6. NF Repository function (NRF)—Supports the service discovery function, maintains NF profile and available NF instances The NRF is a wholly new entity as compared to EPC.
(108) 7. Policy Control Function (PCF)—Provides a unified policy framework, providing policy rules to CP functions, and access subscription information for policy decisions in UDR. The PCF has part of the PCRF functionality from EPC.
(109) 8. Session Management function (SMF)—Provides for session management (session establishment, modification, release), IP address allocation & management for UEs, DHCP functions, termination of NAS signaling related to session management, DL data notification, traffic steering configuration for UPF for proper traffic routing. The SMF includes portions of the MME and PGW functionality from EPC.
(110) 9. Unified Data Management (UDM)—Supports generation of Authentication and Key Agreement (AKA) credentials, user identification handling, access authorization, subscription management. This comprises a portion of HSS functionality from EPC.
(111) 10. User plane function (UPF)—The UPF provides packet routing & forwarding, packet inspection, QoS handling, and also acts as an external PDU session point of interconnect to Data Network (DN). The UPF may also act as an anchor point for intra-RAT and inter-RAT mobility. The UPF includes some of the prior SGW and PGW functionality from EPC.
(112) Within the 5G NR architecture, the control plane (CP) and user plane (UP) functionality is divided within the core network or NGC (Next Generation Core). For instance, the 5G UPF discussed above supports UP data processing, while other nodes support CP functions. This divided approach advantageously allows for, inter alia, independent scaling of CP and UP functions. Additionally, network slices can be tailored to support different services, such as for instance those described herein with respect to session handover between e.g., WLAN and 3GPP NR, and supplemental links to the CPEe.
(113) In addition to the NFs described above, a number of different identifiers are used in the NG-RAN architecture, including those of UE's and for other network entities, and may be assigned to various entities described herein. Specifically: the AMF Identifier (AMF ID) is used to identify an AMF (Access and Mobility Management Function); the NR Cell Global Identifier (NCGI), is used to identify NR cells globally, and is constructed from the PLMN identity to which the cell belongs, and the NR Cell Identity (NCI) of the cell; the gNB Identifier (gNB ID) is used to identify gNBs within a PLMN, and is contained within the NCI of its cells; the Global gNB ID, which is used to identify gNBs globally, and is constructed from the PLMN identity to which the gNB belongs, and the gNB ID; the Tracking Area identity (TAI), which is used to identify tracking areas, and is constructed from the PLMN identity to which the tracking area belongs, and the TAC (Tracking Area Code) of the Tracking Area; and the Single Network Slice Selection Assistance information (S-NSSAI), which is used to identify a network slice.
Hence, depending on what data is useful to the MSO or its customers, various portions of the foregoing can be associated and stored to particular gNB “clients” or their components being backhauled by the MSO network.
Distributed gNB Architectures
(114) In the context of
(115) Notably, the “enhanced” NR-based gNB architecture utilizes existing infrastructure (e.g., at least a portion of the extant HFC cabling controlled by an MSO such as the Assignee hereof) while expanding the frequency spectrum used for signal propagation within the infrastructure (e.g., 1.6 GHz in total bandwidth). Moreover, access points or nodes installed at venues or premises, especially “edge”-based nodes (at least some of which may be controlled, licensed, installed, or leased by the MSO), may be leveraged to deliver 5G-based services to a subscriber of the 5G NR Core (e.g., 503). Fog-based networking made possible through this leveraged infrastructure allows the subscriber to access receive and maintain 5G service whether indoor or outdoor, and in fact, even while the subscriber is changing locations, e.g., moving indoor to outdoor, outdoor to indoor, between servicing nodes indoors (e.g., within a large house, office or housing complex, or venue), and between servicing nodes outdoors. Other nodes may be leveraged, including other 5G-enabled mobile devices that have opted into (or not opted out of) participating in the fog network. In effect, the ubiquity of mobile devices creates a peer-to-peer network for distribution and delivery of ultra-low-latency (e.g., 1 ms ping) and ultra-high-speed (e.g., 10 Gbps or higher) connectivity. In many cases, utilizing one or more participating peer devices results in faster service (e.g., greatly reduced ping) by obviating the need to reach a cell tower, a server, or a gateway that is resident in the backend portion of a cloud-type network.
(116) Notably, the principles described further below enable a subscriber to maintain the 5G service (or any other 3GPP- or IEEE 802.11-based connectivity) without the signals dropping or disconnecting between sessions. In other words, “seamless” transfer of connectivity between nodes (akin to handovers) is made possible despite a difference in at least a portion of wireless data communications standards that may be utilized by the nodes. For instance, a CPEe and a DUe disposed near the “edge” of the network (i.e., near consumer premises) may each be capable of communicating data with, e.g., a mobile user device, via either or both 3GPP- and IEEE 802.11-based protocols. A subscriber, however, would not require a reconnection process with a different base station or modem (as opposed to, e.g., establishing connection to cellular data services when outside the range of a Wi-Fi AP, or connecting back to the Wi-Fi AP when entering the premises), invoking a “seamless” feel and further increasing the user experience.
(117) By virtue of the way the frequency spectra used in existing infrastructure is accessed, such enhanced gNB architecture provides salient advantages to a subscriber thereof, such as improved connectivity speeds (e.g., data rates, response times, latency) and seamless mobility of user devices, thus significantly improving user experience relative to currently available services. Further, the operator of such an architecture may advantageously save costs of connecting new cables and pipes across long distances by obviating the need to overhaul the infrastructure itself.
(118) Accordingly, referring now to
(119) The individual DUe's 506, 506a in
(120) In the architecture 640 of
(121) In the architecture 660 of
(122)
(123) In a “standalone” or SA scenario (e.g.,
(124) As previously described with respect to
(125)
(126)
(127)
(128) It will also be appreciated that while described primarily with respect to a unitary gNB-CUe entity or device 501 as shown in
(129) It is also noted that heterogeneous architectures of eNBs or femtocells (i.e., E-UTRAN LTE/LTE-A Node B's or base stations, including eLTE eNBs 316) and gNBs may be utilized consistent with the architectures of
(130) In accordance with the 5G NR model, the DUe(s) 506, 506a comprise logical nodes that each may include varying subsets of the gNB functions, depending on the functional split option. DUe operation is controlled by the CUe 504 (and ultimately for some functions by the NG Core 303). Split options between the DUe and CUe in the present disclosure may include for example: Option 1 (RRC/PCDP split) Option 2 (PDCP/RLC split) Option 3 (Intra RLC split) Option 4 (RLC-MAC split) Option 5 (Intra MAC split) Option 6 (MAC-PHY split) Option 7 (Intra PHY split) Option 8 (PHY-RF split)
(131) Under Option 1 (RRC/PDCP split), the RRC (radio resource control) is in the CUe while PDCP (packet data convergence protocol), RLC (radio link control), MAC, physical layer (PHY) and RF are kept in the DUe, thereby maintaining the entire user plane in the distributed unit.
(132) Under Option 2 (PDCP/RLC split), there are two possible variants: (i) RRC, PDCP maintained in the CUe, while RLC, MAC, physical layer and RF are in the DU(s); and (ii) RRC, PDCP in the CUe (with split user plane and control plane stacks), and RLC, MAC, physical layer and RF in the DUe's.
(133) Under Option 3 (Intra RLC Split), two splits are possible: (i) split based on ARQ; and (ii) split based on TX RLC and RX RLC.
(134) Under Option 4 (RLC-MAC split), RRC, PDCP, and RLC are maintained in the CUe 504, while MAC, physical layer, and RF are maintained in the DUe's.
(135) Under Option 5 (Intra-MAC split), RF, physical layer and lower part of the MAC layer (Low-MAC) are in the DUe's 506, 506a, while the higher part of the MAC layer (High-MAC), RLC and PDCP are in the CUe 504.
(136) Under Option 6 (MAC-PHY split), the MAC and upper layers are in the CUe, while the PHY layer and RF are in the DUe's. The interface between the CUe and DUe's carries data, configuration, and scheduling-related information (e.g. Modulation and Coding Scheme or MCS, layer mapping, beamforming and antenna configuration, radio and resource block allocation, etc.) as well as measurements.
(137) Under Option 7 (Intra-PHY split), different sub-options for UL (uplink) and DL downlink) may occur independently. For example, in the UL, FFT (Fast Fourier Transform) and CP removal may reside in the DUe's, while remaining functions reside in the CUe 504. In the DL, iFFT and CP addition may reside in the DUe, while the remainder of the PHY resides in the CUe.
(138) Finally, under Option 8 (PHY-RF split), the RF and the PHY layer may be separated to, inter alia, permit the centralization of processes at all protocol layer levels, resulting in a high degree of coordination of the RAN. This allows optimized support of functions such as CoMP, MIMO, load balancing, and mobility.
(139) Generally speaking, the foregoing split options are intended to enable flexible hardware implementations which allow scalable cost-effective solutions, as well as coordination for e.g., performance features, load management, and real-time performance optimization. Moreover configurable functional splits enable dynamic adaptation to various use cases and operational scenarios. Factors considered in determining how/when to implement such options can include: (i) QoS requirements for offered services (e.g. low latency to support 5G RAN requirements, high throughput); (ii) support of requirements for user density and load demand per given geographical area (which may affect RAN coordination); (iii) availability of transport and backhaul networks with different performance levels; (iv) application type (e.g. real-time or non-real time); (v) feature requirements at the Radio Network level (e.g. Carrier Aggregation).
(140) It is also noted that the “DU” functionality referenced in the various split options above can itself be split across the DUe and its downstream components, such as the RF stages of the node 509 (see
(141) It will further be recognized that user-plane data/traffic may also be routed and delivered apart from the CUe. In one implementation (described above), the CUe hosts both the RRC (control-plane) and PDCP (user-plane); however, as but one alternate embodiment, a so-called “dis-aggregated” CUe may be utilized, wherein a CUe-CP entity (i.e., CUe—control plane) hosts only the RRC related functions, and a CUe-UP (CUe—user plane) which is configured to host only PDCP/SDAP (user-plane) functions. The CUe-CP and CUe-UP entities can, in one variant, interface data and inter-process communications via an E1 data interface, although other approaches for communication may be used.
(142) It will also be appreciated that the CUe-CP and CUe-UP may be controlled and/or operated by different entities, such as where one service provider or network operator maintains cognizance/control over the CUe-UP, and another over the CUe-CP, and the operations of the two coordinated according to one or more prescribed operational or service policies or rules.
(143) Referring again to
(144) As discussed with respect to
(145) Referring again to
(146) Notably, different classes of DUe/node 506, 506a may be utilized. For instance, a putative “Class A” LTE eNB may transmit up X dbm, while a “Class-B” LTE eNBs can transmit up to Y dbm (Y>X), so the average area can vary widely. In practical terms, a Class-A device may have a working range on the order of hundreds of feet, while a Class B device may operate out to thousands of feet or more, the propagation and working range dictated by a number of factors, including the presence of RF or other interferers, physical topology of the venue/area, energy detection or sensitivity of the receiver, etc. Similarly, different types of NR-enabled nodes/DUe 506, 506a can be used depending on these factors, whether alone or with other wireless PHYs such as WLAN, etc.
(147) Moreover, using the architecture of
(148) Signal Attenuation and Bandwidth
(149)
(150) Notably, the portions of the extant HFC architecture described above (see e.g.,
(151)
where: R.sub.t=Total line resistance ohms per 1000 ft. R.sub.t=0.1 (1/d+1√{square root over (F)} D) (for single copper line) p=Power factor of dielectric F=Frequency in megahertz (MHz)
(152) As such, attenuation increases with increasing frequency, and hence there are practical restraints on the upper frequency limit of the operating band. However, these restraints are not prohibitive in ranges up to for example 2 GHz, where with suitable cable and amplifier manufacturing and design, such coaxial cables can suitably carry RF signals without undue attenuation. Notably, a doubling of the roughly 800 MHz-wide typical cable RF band (i.e., to 1.6 GHz width) is very possible without suffering undue attenuation at the higher frequencies.
(153) It will also be appreciated that the attenuation described above is a function of, inter alia, coaxial conductor length, and hence higher levels of “per-MHz” attenuation may be acceptable for shorter runs of cable. Stated differently, nodes serviced by shorter runs of cable may be able to better utilize the higher-end portions of the RF spectrum (e.g., on the high end of the aforementioned exemplary 1.6 GHz band) as compared to those more distant, the latter requiring greater or disproportionate amplification. As such, the present disclosure contemplates use of selective mapping of frequency spectrum usage as a function of total cable medium run length or similar.
(154) Another factor of transmission medium performance is the velocity factor (VF), also known as wave propagation speed or velocity of propagation (VoP), defined as the ratio of the speed at which a wavefront (of an electromagnetic or radio frequency signal, a light pulse in an optical fiber or a change of the electrical voltage on a copper wire) propagates over the transmission medium, to the speed of light (c, approximately 3E08 m/s) in a vacuum. For optical signals, the velocity factor is the reciprocal of the refractive index. The speed of radio frequency signals in a vacuum is the speed of light, and so the velocity factor of a radio wave in a vacuum is 1, or 100%. In electrical cables, the velocity factor mainly depends on the material used for insulating the current-carrying conductor(s). Velocity factor is an important characteristic of communication media such as coaxial, CAT-5/6 cables, and optical fiber. Data cable and fiber typically has a VF between roughly 0.40 and 0.8 (40% to 80% of the speed of light in a vacuum).
(155) Achievable round-trip latencies in LTE (UL/DL) are on the order of 2 ms (for “fast” UL access, which eliminates need for scheduling requests and individual scheduling grants, thereby minimizing latency, and shorter TTI, per Release 15), while those for 5G NR are one the order of 1 ms or less, depending on transmission time interval frequency (e.g., 60 kHz).
(156) Notably, a significant portion of 4G/4.5G transport latency relates to network core and transport (i.e., non-edge) portions of the supporting infrastructure.
(157) Hence, assuming a nominal 0.7 VF and a one (1) ms roundtrip latency requirement, putative service distances on the order of 100 km are possible, assuming no other processing or transport latency:
0.5E−03 s (assume symmetric US/DS)×(0.7×3E08 m/s)×1 km/1000 m=1.05E02 km
(158) As discussed in greater detail below with respect to
(159) Network Node and DUe Apparatus—
(160)
(161) As shown, in
(162) A synchronization signal generator 818 is also used in some embodiments as discussed in greater detail below with respect to
(163) In the exemplary implementation of
(164) In the exemplary embodiment, the 5G and LTE OFDM carriers produced by the node 509 utilize 1650 MHz of the available HFC bearer bandwidth, and this bandwidth is partitioned into two or more sub-bands depending on e.g., operational conditions, ratio of “N+0” subscribers served versus “N+i” subscribers served, and other parameters. In one variant, each node utilizes RF power from its upstream nodes to derive electrical power, and further propagate the RF signal (whether at the same of different frequency) to downstream nodes and devices including the wideband amplifiers.
(165) While the present embodiments are described primarily in the context of an OFDM-based PHY (e.g., one using IFFT and FFT processes with multiple carriers in the time domain) along with TDD (time division duplex) temporal multiplexing, it will be appreciated that other PHY/multiple access schemes may be utilized consistent with the various aspects of the present disclosure, including for example and without limitation FDD (frequency division duplexing), direct sequence or other spread spectrum, and FDMA (e.g., SC-FDMA or NB FDMA).
(166) As previously noted, to achieve high throughput using a single receiver chipset in the consumer premises equipment (CPEe) 513 and 3GPP 5G NR waveforms over a single coaxial feeder, such as the coaxial cable that MSOs bring to their subscriber's premises or the single coaxial cable that is installed for lower-cost single input single output (SISO) distributed antenna systems (DAS), the total carrier bandwidth that can be aggregated by the prior art chipset is limited to a value, e.g. 800 MHz, which is insufficient for reaching high throughputs such as 10 Gbit/s using one data stream alone given the spectral efficiencies supported by the 3GPP 5G NR standard.
(167) Since the 3GPP 5G NR standard supports the transmission of multiple independent parallel data streams as part of a multiple input multiple output (MIMO) channel for the same RF bandwidth to leverage the spatial diversity that wireless channels afford when multiple antenna elements are used, the very first generation of 3GPP 5G chipsets will support such parallel MIMO data streams. However, attempts to transmit these parallel streams over a single cable would generally be counterproductive, as all the streams would occupy the same RF bandwidth and would interfere with each other for lack of spatial diversity between them.
(168) Accordingly, the various embodiments of the apparatus disclosed herein (
(169)
(170) In the exemplary embodiment, the 5G and LTE OFDM carriers produced by the node 509 utilize 1650 MHz of the available HFC bearer bandwidth, and this bandwidth is partitioned into two or more sub-bands depending on e.g., operational conditions, ratio of “N+0” subscribers served versus “N+i” subscribers served, and other parameters. See discussion of
(171) While the present embodiments are described primarily in the context of an OFDM-based PHY (e.g., one using IFFT and FFT processes with multiple carriers in the time domain) along with TDD (time division duplex) temporal multiplexing, it will be appreciated that other PHY/multiple access schemes may be utilized consistent with the various aspects of the present disclosure, including for example and without limitation FDD (frequency division duplexing), direct sequence or other spread spectrum, and FDMA (e.g., SC-FDMA or NB FDMA).
(172) As previously noted, to achieve high throughput using a single receiver chipset in the consumer premises equipment (CPEe) 513 and 3GPP 5G NR waveforms over a single coaxial feeder, such as the coaxial cable that MSOs bring to their subscriber's premises or the single coaxial cable that is installed for lower-cost single input single output (SISO) distributed antenna systems (DAS), the total carrier bandwidth that can be aggregated by the prior art chipset is limited to a value, e.g. 800 MHz, which is insufficient for reaching high throughputs such as 10 Gbit/s using one data stream alone given the spectral efficiencies supported by the 3GPP 5G NR standard.
(173) Since the 3GPP 5G NR standard supports the transmission of multiple independent parallel data streams as part of a multiple input multiple output (MIMO) channel for the same RF bandwidth to leverage the spatial diversity that wireless channels afford when multiple antenna elements are used, the very first generation of 3GPP 5G chipsets will support such parallel MIMO data streams. However, attempts to transmit these parallel streams over a single cable would generally be counterproductive, as all the streams would occupy the same RF bandwidth and would interfere with each other for lack of spatial diversity between them.
(174) Accordingly, the various embodiments of the apparatus disclosed herein (
(175)
(176) Accordingly, in one variant of the present disclosure (
(177) As further shown in the top portion 830 of
(178) In the exemplary implementation 840 (
(179) Within the LTE FDD band 842, two LTE carriers for UL and DL 835, 836 are used, and a separate DL synchronization channel 833 is used at the lower end of the spectrum. As will be appreciated, various other configurations of the lower portion of the cable spectrum frequency plan may be used consistent with the present disclosure. In one variant, the lower spectrum portion 842 (
(180) As an aside, 5G NR supports adaptive TDD duty cycles, whereby the proportion of time allocated for downstream and upstream transmissions can be adapted to the net demand for traffic from the total set of transmitting network elements, viz. the node and all the CPEe 513 sharing the coaxial bus with the node. 4G LTE does not support such adaptive duty cycles. To prevent receiver blocking in the likely scenario that the 5G and 4G duty cycles differ, high-rejection filter combiners 814 (
(181) As noted above, another minor portion 833 of the lower spectrum on the coaxial cable (e.g., <5 MHz) employs one-way communication in the downstream for the transmission of two digital synchronization channels, one for 5G and one for 4G, which are I-Q multiplexed onto one QPSK analog synchronization channel within the aforementioned “minor portion” 833 from the signal generator 818 of the transceiver node 409 to the multiple inline amplifiers and CPEe 513 that may be sharing the coaxial bus. These synchronization channels aid coherent reception of the PRBs, specifically, the synchronization signal is used to achieve frequency synchronization of oscillators in all active components downstream from the node such as line-extender amplifiers and CPEe's. The oscillators for the 4G and 5G technologies may be independent. If the carrier uses FDD, such as on the 4G LTE channels, frequency synchronization is sufficient. If the carrier uses TDD as in the 5G NR portions of
(182) It will also be recognized that: (i) the width of each 5G TDD wideband carrier 832 may be statically or dynamically modified based on e.g., operational requirements such as demand (e.g., network or bandwidth requirements of any dedicated bearer created for enhanced-QoE voice services), and (ii) the number of wideband carriers 832 used (and in fact the number of layers utilized within each wideband carrier 832) can be similarly statically or dynamically modified. It will also be appreciated that two or more different values of bandwidth may be used in association with different ones of the plurality of widebands, as well as being aggregated as previously described.
(183) The values of f.sub.lower 852 and f.sub.upper 854 may also be varied depending on operational parameters and/or other considerations, such as RF signal attenuation as a function of frequency as discussed in detail previously herein. For example, since higher frequencies attenuate much more over the coaxial transmission media than lower frequencies, in one variant the Intermediate Frequencies (IF) are transmitted over the media, and block-conversion to RF carrier frequency is employed subsequently in the consumer premises equipment (CPEe) 513 for 3GPP band-compliant interoperability with the 3GPP 5G NR chipset in the CPEe. In this fashion, attenuation that would otherwise be experienced by conversion earlier in the topology is advantageously avoided. Similarly, very short runs of cable (e.g., a “last mile” between a fiber delivery node and a given premises, or from a distribution node to various subscriber CPEe within a multi-dwelling unit (MDU) such as an apartment or condominium building, hospital, or enterprise or school campus can be mapped out into much higher frequencies since their overall propagation distance over the cable is comparatively small.
(184) In another variant, active or dynamic Tx/Rx port formation specified in the 5G NR standards is utilized, yet the formed beams therein are substituted with frequency bandwidth assignments as discussed above (i.e., total bandwidth, f.sub.lower 852 and f.sub.upper 854 values, and TDD carrier bandwidth values).
(185) The foregoing aspects of
(186) In operation, the IF carriers injected by the transceiver node into the coaxial feeder 804 can be received by multiple CPEe 513 that share the feeder as a common bus using directional couplers and power dividers or taps. Point-to-Multipoint (PtMP) downstream transmissions from the node 409 to the CPEe 413 can be achieved by, for instance, scheduling payload for different CPEe on different 3GPP 5G NR physical resource blocks (PRB) which are separated in frequency.
(187) In the exemplary embodiments of
(188) An Ethernet switch 805 is also provided at the optical interface in the embodiment of
(189) The exemplary node 509 also includes a power converter 819 to adapt for internal use of quasi-square wave low voltage power supply technology over HFC used by DOCSIS network elements as of the date of this disclosure. The node 509 in one variant is further configured to pass the quasi-square wave low voltage power received on the input port 801 through to the HFC output port 804 to other active network elements such as e.g., amplifiers, which may be installed downstream of the node on the HFC infrastructure.
(190) It is noted that as compared to some extant solutions, the illustrated embodiment of
(191) CPEe Apparatus—
(192)
(193) The exemplary CPEe 513 also includes a 5G UE process 908 to implement 3GPP functionality of the UE within the CPEe, and 3GPP (e.g., 5G/LTE) repeater module 909 which includes one or more antennae elements 910 for indoor/premises coverage within the user RF band(s). As such, the CPEe 513 shown can in effect function as a base station for user devices within the premises operating within the user band(s).
(194) A 10 GbE WLAN port 918 is also included, which interfaces between the UE module 908 and the (optional) WLAN router 517 with internal 10 GbE switch 919) to support data interchange with premises WLAN infrastructure such as a Wi-Fi AP.
(195) Also shown in the configuration of
(196) In the exemplary implementation of
(197) Notably, the CPEe 513 applies block-conversion between the IF and RF carrier frequency for the 4G and 5G carrier separately since they may be on different frequency bands. The CPEe includes in one implementation a 5G NR and 4G LTE-capable user equipment (UE) chipset 916. The two technologies are supported in this embodiment, since the first release of 3GPP 5G NR requires 4G and 5G to operate in tandem as part of the non-standalone (NSA) configuration.
(198) It is noted that in the exemplary configuration of
(199) It is also noted that the specific implementation of
(200) Block conversion to the RF frequency makes the signals 3GPP band-compliant and interoperable with the UE chipset in the CPEe 513. The RF carriers are also then amenable for amplification through the included repeater 909 for 4G and 5G which can radiate the RF carriers, typically indoors, through detachable external antennas 910 connected to the CPEe. Mobile devices such as smartphones, tablets with cellular modems and IoT devices can then serve off of the radiated signal for 4G and 5G service (see discussion of
(201) The UE chipset 916 and the repeater 909 receive separate digital I/Q synchronization signals, one for 4G and one for 5G, for switching between the downstream and upstream modes of the respective TDD carriers, since they are likely to have different downstream-to-upstream ratios or duty cycle. These two digital synchronization signals are received from an I-Q modulated analog QPSK signal received from lower-end spectrum on the coaxial cable that feeds the CPEe 513 via the port 917.
(202) In the exemplary implementation of
(203) The CPEe of
(204) The specific implementation of
(205) Block conversion to the RF frequency makes the signals 3GPP band-compliant and interoperable with the UE chipset 956 in the CPEe 513. The RF carriers are also then amenable for amplification through the included repeater 909 for 5G which can radiate the RF carriers, typically indoors, through detachable external antennas 910 connected to the CPEe. Mobile devices such as smartphones, tablets with cellular modems and IoT devices can then serve off of the radiated signal for 5G (and 4G, where so equipped) service (see discussion of
(206) The UE chipset 956 and the repeater 909 receives digital I/Q synchronization signals (not shown) for switching between the downstream and upstream modes of the respective TDD carriers. These digital synchronization signals are received from an I-Q modulated analog QPSK signal received from lower-end spectrum on the coaxial cable that feeds the CPEe 513 via the port 917.
(207) As noted, in the exemplary implementation, OFDM modulation is applied to generate a plurality of carriers in the time domain at the distribution node 509; accordingly, demodulation (via inter alia, FFT) is used in the CPEe to demodulate the IF signals. See, e.g., co-owned and co-pending U.S. Pat. No. 9,185,341 issued Nov. 10, 2015 and entitled “Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods,” and U.S. Pat. No. 9,300,445 issued Mar. 29, 2016 also entitled “Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods,” each incorporated herein by reference in their entirety, for inter alia, exemplary reprogrammable OFDM-based receiver/demodulation apparatus useful with various embodiments of the CPEe 513 described herein.
(208) Similar to the embodiment of
(209) Further, to boost the broadband capacity beyond the capacity available through the primary coaxial cable link and to add a redundant connection for higher reliability (which could be important for small businesses, enterprises, educational institutions, etc.), two additional RF interfaces on the CPEe of
(210) IoTG Apparatus—
(211)
(212) As shown in
(213) In this and various embodiments, the IOT Gateway includes the functions of the IoTG server stack and the communication with relevant network entities such as the CPEe and upstream nodes 509. IOT gateway is connected to different IOT access front ends. The spectrum used will be the following for different RF front ends, 900 MHz for LORA, 3.5 GHz radio front end for NB-IOT/CAT-M, mmWave 37 GHz radio front end for MMTC/CMTC and Bluetooth LE. These all get consolidated in the IOT gateway which connects to either 4G/5G access via 10GE internal switch.
(214) The IOT gateway will have an IOT stack where all the data from the different IOT modules will be combined.
(215) As shown in the figure the data will be routed to 4G/5G interface via the 10GE switch which is being shared between the IOT gateway and 5G CPE.
(216) The network interface(s) generally includes wireline data interfaces such as IEEE 802.3 Ethernet/GbE/10 GbE (via CAT-5/6 cabling), IEEE-1394, USB, or other, useful for transmitting data communications (such as the IoT “data) upstream for delivery to the CPEe and ultimately to the HFC network (
(217) It will be appreciated that while shown as separate components, two or more of the IoTG, 10GE switch and CPEe can be combined into a common device, thereby further simplifying the architecture.
(218)
(219) As shown in
(220) The processor subsystem 1032 of the IoTG 519 may include one or more of a digital signal processor (DSP), microprocessor (e.g., RISC core(s) such as ARM core), field-programmable gate array, or plurality of processing components mounted on one or more substrates (e.g., printed circuit board). The processor subsystem/CPU 1032 may also comprise an internal cache memory (e.g., L1/L2/L3 cache). The processor subsystem is in communication with a memory subsystem 1004, the latter including memory which may for example comprise SRAM, flash, and/or SDRAM components. The memory subsystem may implement one or more of DMA-type hardware, so as to facilitate data accesses as is well known in the art. The memory subsystem of the exemplary embodiment contains computer-executable instructions which are executable by the processor subsystem.
(221) In this and various embodiments, the processor subsystem/CPU 1032 is configured to execute at least one computer program stored in program memory 1034 (e.g., a non-transitory computer readable storage medium), including functions of the IoTG server stack where equipped 1021, and to support the IoT sniffer 1020 is used, as well as communication with relevant network entities such as the CPEe and upstream nodes 509. In terms of the IoT sniffer 1020, see, e.g., co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/821,218 filed Nov. 22, 2017 entitled “APPARATUS AND METHODS FOR PREMISES DEVICE EXISTENCE AND CAPABILITY DETERMINATION,” and issued as U.S. Pat. No. 10,966,073 on Mar. 30, 2021, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. As disclosed therein, the IoT sniffer function and module leverages the ability to passively canvass or assess a given premises as to its IoT profile, including both transparent and proxy-managed installations. Data obtained via this canvassing can be utilized by e.g., a network operator or service provider for any number of different functions, including (i) populating on-screen displays such as cloud-based EPGs or device setup UIs with data relating to all such IoT devices within the premises; and (ii) one-stop management of various aspects of the IoT devices (e.g., naming, interconnectivity functions, reporting, etc.). In one embodiment thereof, the passive canvassing of the premises is conducted by a software-defined radio (SDR) device incorporated into another MSO (host) device at the premises (here, the IoTG 519 and/or CPEe 513 depending on configuration). The SDR is controlled by logic operative to run on the host device, enabling the SDR to scan the RF environment within the premises in particular frequency bands typically associated with IoT devices and protocols, including those of the IoTG air interfaces. In one variant, the SDR and logic are configured to acquire and decode one or more broadcast channels of the IoT device(s) to obtain yet additional information regarding the particular device. The sniffer (if used) may also make use of the extant IoT air interfaces of the IoTG 519, such as for IoT device canvassing and detection, thereby avoiding any requirement or use of duplicative air interfaces.
(222) Advantageously, by having the IoT sniffer module 1020 co-located with the IoTG 519, the typically centralized location of the IoTG can be leveraged for the characteristically shorter range of the IoT (PAN) interfaces. Moreover, even if the PAN interfaces use the same 2.4 GHz band as the WLAN interface 517 of the router, mutual interference to the WLAN modem and vice versa is mitigated by, for instance the reduced signal strength, different sub-band allocations, and CSMA-CD mechanisms of the exemplary 802.15.4 MAC/PHY of the typical IoT device. Notably, IEEE Std. 802.11g/n implementations use a 20 MHz channel width, with 16.25 MHz allocated to sub-carriers for the OFDM interface. Specifically, channels at 2412, 2437, and 2462 MHz are supported. Similarly, 40 MHz channels with 33.75 allocated to OFDM subcarriers may be used in certain modes of 802.11n for enhanced data throughput; e.g., centered at 2422 MHz.
(223) Various other functions in support of the individual air interface modems are also performed by the device, including baseband management (e.g., transmit and receive functions via the baseband processor 1035 and associated Tx and Rx chains of the RF front end 1036 and their MIMO or spatially diverse antenna elements 1040a, 1040b).
(224) As shown in
(225) It will be appreciated that while shown as separate components, two or more of the IoTG 519, WLAN router 517 and CPEe 513 can be combined into a common device, thereby further simplifying the architecture.
(226) IoTG-Enabled Mobile Device—
(227)
(228) In one exemplary embodiment, the processor subsystem/CPU 1152 may include one or more of a digital signal processor (DSP), microprocessor (e.g., RISC core(s) such as ARM core), field-programmable gate array, or plurality of processing components mounted on one or more substrates (e.g., printed circuit board). The processor subsystem/CPU 1152 may also comprise an internal cache memory (e.g., L1/L2/L3 cache). The processor subsystem is in communication with a memory subsystem 654, the latter including memory which may for example comprise SRAM, flash, and/or SDRAM components. The memory subsystem may implement one or more of DMA-type hardware, so as to facilitate data accesses as is well known in the art. The memory subsystem of the exemplary embodiment contains computer-executable instructions which are executable by the processor subsystem.
(229) In this and various embodiments, the processor subsystem/CPU 1152 is configured to execute at least one computer program stored in program memory 1154 (e.g., a non-transitory computer readable storage medium). A GPU 1160 and DRM module 1160 are also in data communication with the processor subsystem 1152, and collectively the foregoing components include a plurality of computer programs/firmware configured to perform various functions such as conditional access/digital rights management, decryption, content decode and rendering, as well as communication with relevant network entities such as the IoTG server stack 1021 or the managed network proxy or application server (where used; see
(230) In operation, the IoTG client application 1121 executes on the CPU 1152 to enable the user to access, visualize, and control as applicable the various IoT devices 565a-c within the controlled premises. The client application or “app” logically communicates with the IoTG server functionality (wherever disposed) so as to enable such functions by the user, including when mobile and away from the premises.
(231)
(232) An MSO IoTG application server process 1220 is also in data communication with the 5GC (and hence the mobile device application 1121 via the gNB); the application server also is in logical communication with the IoTG process 1021 operative to run on the IoTG 519 at the controlled premises (via the 5G node 509, CPEe 513 and IoTG 519 as shown).
(233)
(234) CPE/IoTG Control and IoT Data Services Using an Embedded Channel—
(235) As previously described, at least the initial set of 3GPP 5G standards is based on an operating mode known as “non-standalone” or NSA. As discussed, in NSA mode the connection is anchored in LTE, while 5G NR carriers are used to boost data-rates and reduce latency.
(236) Also, some initial NR equipment implementations may only support a connection to an LTE core network, since the 5G core network standardization may still be in progress. In such cases, for a 5G NR to operate, an LTE carrier must exist and be used for at least the system control channels (e.g. BCCH, PCCH, RACH, etc.). As technology migration from LTE/LTE-A toward 5G NR has evolved, other NSA configurations (including those involving a 5GC such as that shown in
(237) The first generation of 5G capable end device chipsets will support an LTE anchor channel, since this will be the defacto mode of operation for some time. Hence, in one variant, the CPEe 513 for an evolved HFC network using 3GPP 5G waveforms is based on available device chipsets which support LTE anchor channels.
(238) It is desired that the 5G NR portion of the network architecture 500 of
(239)
(240) The primary difference between the architectures 1300, 1350 shown is that in
(241) Conversely, in a 5G network architecture operating in “stand-alone” mode (see e.g.,
(242) Referring to the architectures 1400, 1450 of
(243) For example, eMTC/NB-IoT may occupy a 1 MHz edge band, while 5G users can use the remaining bandwidth. In some aspects, two edge 1 MHz bands may be used for eMTC/NB-IoT within an 80 MHz system, and 5G users may use the remaining center 78 MHz band. In some cases, 5G signals such as cell-specific reference signal (CRS) and channel state information reference signal (CSI-RS) may occupy only the remaining bandwidth (e.g., the center band of 78 MHz). In some aspects, 5G signals such as CRS and CSI-RS may occupy the whole bandwidth, and puncture eMTC/NB-IoT users.
(244) For 5G systems, when NB-IoT or eMTC are present, the eNB 317 can indicate different control regions via master information block (MIB) or system information block (SIB) signaling. The different control regions may avoid collision with the NB-IoT/eMTC bandwidth. This may reduce the puncturing of NB-IoT/eMTC by the 5G systems. Once the control region is orthogonal to the NB-IoT/eMTC, the data region orthogonality can be maintained by scheduling.
(245) In one embodiment, one or more coverage extension (CE) or coverage enhancement (CE) configurations are utilized in the random access with respective specific settings to serve UEs 507 and/or IoT devices 556a-c in different coverage conditions that have different ranges of path loss. That is, when UEs 507 and/or IoT devices 556a-c are located in the CE regions, they can have difficulty receiving the downlink channel, or the base station (e.g., eNB 317) can have difficulty receiving the uplink channel. Accordingly, the eNB selects the configuration of the radio resources; and the Modulation and Coding Scheme (MCS) and repetitions depend on UE's coverage. In one variant, a CE configuration includes performing bundle transmissions (i.e., repeated transmissions of uplink/downlink channels on a plurality of subframes). The specific settings of the CE configurations vary, and can include, e.g., how many repeated transmissions are allowed, how many subframes are used, etc.
(246) NB-IoT defines three operation modes to provide deployment flexibility:
(247) (i) Stand-alone (utilizing, for example, one or more GSM carriers);
(248) (ii) Guard-band (utilizing the unused resource blocks within an LTE carrier's guardband); and
(249) (iii) In-band (utilizing resource blocks within an LTE carrier).
(250) In certain aspects of the present disclosure, NB-IoT/eMTC can be deployed in the guardband of 5G systems. In one variant, the signaling for NB-IoT and eMTC can be extended to allow wider bandwidth support, e.g. indicating narrowband location within 80 MHz instead of 20 MHz. In certain aspects, NB-IoT/eMTC can be deployed at the edge of the narrow band.
(251) NB-IoT provides the following physical signals and channels in the downlink:
(252) (i) Narrowband Primary Synchronization Signal (NPSS);
(253) (ii) Narrowband Secondary Synchronization Signal (NSSS);
(254) (iii) Narrowband Physical Broadcast Channel (NPBCH);
(255) (iv) Narrowband Reference Signal (NRS);
(256) (v) Narrowband Physical Downlink Control Channel (NPDCCH); and
(257) (vi) Narrowband Physical Downlink Shared Channel (NPDSCH).
(258) Unlike LTE, these NB-IoT physical channels and signals are primarily multiplexed in time.
(259) NPSS and NSSS are used by an NB-IoT UE to perform cell search, which includes time and frequency synchronization, and cell identity detection. NPBCH carries the master information block (MIB).
(260) NPDCCH carries scheduling information for both downlink and uplink data channels. It further carries the HARQ acknowledgement information for the uplink data channel as well as paging indication and random access response (RAR) scheduling information.
(261) NPDSCH carries data from the higher layers as well as paging message, system information, and the RAR message.
(262) NRS is used to provide phase reference for the demodulation of the downlink channels.
(263) NB-IoT includes the following channels in the uplink.
(264) (i) Narrowband Physical Random Access Channel (NPRACH); and
(265) (ii) Narrowband Physical Uplink Shared Channel (NPUSCH).
(266) NB-IoT is designed to allow a UE to learn the deployment mode (stand-alone, in-band, or guard-band) as well as the cell identity (both NB-IoT and LTE) through initial acquisition. In one variant, the deployment scenario, stand-alone, in-band, or guard-band, however is transparent to a client device (e.g., UE 507, CPEe 513 or IoTG 519) when it is first turned on and searches for an NB-IoT carrier. Then the client device can determine which resource elements are used by LTE.
(267) For the stand-alone and guard-band deployments, no LTE resource needs to be protected, thus NPDCCH, NPDSCH or NRS can utilize all the resource elements in one PRB pair (defined as 12 subcarriers over one subframe). However, for in-band deployment (see discussion of
(268) When the 5G stand-alone (SA) operating mode becomes available, operation of IoT channels without the LTE components will be supported, and hence the anchor channel can be obviated, and command and control of the CPEe (and other such applications) over the IoT channel alone maintained.
(269) Referring to the architectures 1500, 1550 of
(270) In some implementations, the coaxial RF distribution network is configured to distribute the IoT channel using the desired RF channel frequency (versus use of an intermediate frequency or IF which is then upconverted/downconverted), and the CPEe 513/IoTG 519 will not modify the IoT signal (i.e., a “pass through” configuration).
(271) In other cases, the coaxial RF distribution network generates an intermediate frequency for distribution of the IoT channel, and the CPEe/IoTG upconverts/downconverts the IoT channel to the desired RF carrier frequency (see discussion of
(272) The foregoing methodologies advantageously may be applied to 3GPP LTE, 3GPP 5G NR, and non-3GPP (e.g. LoRa) IoT channels that are separate from any other channels used for eMBB and/or system control information. The 3GPP nomenclature for this configuration is “standalone” or “guardband” IoT channels.
(273) Moreover, any number of modalities or PHYs may be used for data transmission between the IoT end device(s) 556 and the CPE. For example, the exemplary “IoT” air interface spectra (i.e., BLE and IEEE Std. 802.15.4) of
(274)
(275) It will be appreciated that while the present disclosure is cast largely in terms of delivery of 3GPP-based (4G/4.5G/5G) waveforms to the recipient CPEe 413 at the user's premises, and hence a requirement for additional processing at the premises to convert these 3GPP waveforms into waveforms compliant with other air interface standards (including those capable of consumption by IoT devices, such as IEEE Std. 802.15.4 and BLE), such as via the gateway apparatus described herein, the present disclosure also contemplates the creation of such IoT-compatible waveforms directly at the transmitting nodes (e.g., nodes 401 and 411 of
(276)
(277) In the implementation of
(278)
(279) It will be recognized that in both of the above frequency domain diagrams (
(280) Referring now to
(281) Accordingly, such an in-band IoT channel can be employed within the system architecture 500 that is compatible with 3GPP IoT standards (i.e. eMTC, NB-IoT), and this channel can be used for IoT transmissions to standard IoT end devices such as those devices 556 in
(282) In some configurations, the coaxial RF distribution network will distribute the aforementioned in-band IoT channel along with its associated bearer channel (e.g., LTE channel) using the desired RF channel frequency, and the CPEe 513/IoTG 519 selectively filters the IoT signal from the associated carrier for transmission to the IoT end device 556. As such, no frequency conversion is required. This approach has the advantage of obviating the aforementioned upconversion/downconversion, but also requires the LTE or other host to coincide in frequency with the IoT carrier.
(283) In other configurations, the coaxial RF distribution network uses an intermediate frequency (IF) for distribution, and the CPEe 513 upconverts/downconverts the selectively filtered IoT channel to the desired RF carrier frequency upon receipt over the coaxial infrastructure.
(284)
(285)
(286) It will also be appreciated that designation of the IoT channel bandwidth with such architectures (and in fact others herein) may also be dynamic in nature. For instance, if no IoT channel bandwidth is required (such as when no IoT devices operable on such frequencies are operational at the served premises), then the IoT bandwidth may be collapsed for at least a period of time and utilized as e.g., LTE bandwidth, or for other purposes. To the degree signaling/control/broadcast channels are required to be maintained, these can be maintained on a time-shared basis.
(287)
(288) Methods
(289) Referring now to
(290)
(291) Next, per step 2204, the transmission node 509 generates waveforms “containing” the generated control data. As described elsewhere herein, in one embodiment, this includes generation of OFDM waveforms and time-frequency resources to carry the content data (e.g., PRBs) via one or more designated control channels, including those embedded within or using one or more LTE anchor channels. The overall waveform generation and transmission process may also include both: (i) application of frequency diversity in accordance with
(292) Note that for control data (such as for control of the CPEe 413), the frequency diversity concept may still be applied, but depending on application may be unnecessary. As with 3GPP control data being sent using so-called “transmit diversity” (i.e., wherein the same control data is coded differently for transmission across two spatially separated layers, so as to provide diversity of signal reception at the user equipment (UE) and to improve the robustness of control signaling). the control data in some cases can be mapped to different frequency resources on the coaxial cable so as to provide such benefits if required.
(293) Per step 2206, the waveforms are transmitted via the network infrastructure (e.g., coaxial cable and/or DWDM optical medium) to one or more recipient nodes. It will be appreciated that such transmission may include relay or transmission via one or more intermediary nodes, including for instance one or more N-way taps (
(294) Per step 2208, the transmitted waveforms are received at the recipient node (e.g., CPEe 513 in one instance).
(295) The waveforms are then processed to recover the transmitted control data per step 2212, and applied to the target device (e.g., CPEe 513 and/or IoTG 519) per step 2214. For instance, in one variant, the CPEe may be reconfigured via the control data to change one or more of its RF front end parameters such as MCS, frequency diversity scheme (
(296)
(297) It will also be appreciated that the frequency mapping plan for the control channel may be varied on a temporal or other basis, including based on one or more TDD slots. For instance, the same mapping may be applied on two or more contiguous slots, or per individual slot. Individual mappings may be used for one or more subsets of CPEe's 513 as well, such as where the same subset of CPEe accesses the bearer medium according to a prescribed TDD schedule, and all utilize the common frequency mapping.
(298) Likewise, IoTG TDD-based (or other) multiplexing may be used for serving the various IoTG air interfaces (and hence communicating IoT devices 556), as well as for different IoTGs (whether at the same or different premises).
(299) A serial-to-parallel conversion of the content data is then applied per step 2226. Next, the parallelized data is mapped to its resources (step 2228), and an IFFT or other such transformation operation performed to convert the frequency-domain signals to the time domain (step 2230). The transformed (time domain) data is then re-serialized (step 2232) and converted to the analog domain (step 2234) for transmission over e.g., the RF interface such as a coaxial cable plant. In the exemplary embodiment, an LTE anchor such as that shown in
(300)
(301) Per step 2244, the upconverted signals are synchronized via the recovered I/Q signals via the synchronization circuit of the CPEe, and the upconverted signals are converted to the digital domain for use by, e.g., the chipset 916 of the CPEe 513 (see
(302)
(303) Next, per step 2304, the transmission node 509 generates waveforms “containing” the identified IoT data. As described below, in one embodiment, this includes generation of OFDM waveforms and time-frequency resources to carry the content data (e.g., PRBs). As previously discussed, the waveform generation and transmission process may also include both: (i) application of frequency diversity in accordance with
(304) Per step 2306, the waveforms are transmitted via the network infrastructure (e.g., coaxial cable and/or DWDM optical medium) to one or more recipient nodes (which as noted above may be the CPEe 513 and/or IoTG 519 (whether separate or aggregated) acting as an endpoint/proxy for the IoT end device 556, or the IoT device 556 itself acting as the endpoint if suitably equipped to receive and demodulate the transmitted OFDM signals in the transmission band.
(305) It will also be appreciated that such transmission may include relay or transmission via one or more intermediary nodes, including for instance one or more N-way taps (
(306) Per step 2308, the transmitted waveforms are received at the recipient node (e.g., CPEe 513 or IoTG 519 in one instance, or IoT end device 556 in another).
(307) The waveforms are then processed (see discussion of
(308)
(309) As with the control data previously described, it will also be appreciated that the frequency mapping plan for the IoT data may be varied on a temporal or other basis, including based on one or more TDD slots. For instance, the same mapping may be applied on two or more contiguous slots, or per individual slot. Individual mappings may be used for one or more subsets of CPEe's 513/IoTG 519 (and/or IoT end devices 556 acting as endpoints to terminate the IoT channel) as well, such as where the same subset of CPEe/IoT devices accesses the bearer medium according to a prescribed TDD schedule, and all utilize the common frequency mapping.
(310) A serial-to-parallel conversion of the content data is then applied per step 2326. Next, the parallelized data is mapped to its resources (step 2328), and an IFFT or other such transformation operation performed to convert the frequency-domain signals to the time domain (step 2330). The transformed (time domain) IoT data is then re-serialized (step 2332) and converted to the analog domain (step 2334) for transmission over e.g., the RF interface such as a coaxial cable plant within the designated IoT band(s). Consistent with the exemplary embodiment, various schemes can be used (including for instance direct or pass-through transmission at the desired terminal carrier frequency, or transmission at another frequency followed by upconversion/downconversion to the desired terminal carrier), although it will be appreciated that other frequency bands (and in fact multiple different frequency bands in various portions of the spectrum) may be used for this purpose.
(311)
(312) In one particular implementation, an IoT channel which occupies a prescribed number of PRBs (e.g., either 1.08 MHz-6 PRBs, or 180 kHz-1 PRB) can be embedded within an LTE channel (e.g. 18 MHz with 100 PRBs total), and frequency domain bandpass filtering used to select the PRB(s) carrying the IoT channel.
(313) Next, per step 2352, the receiver (e.g., CPEe) performs analog-domain upconversion to the target frequency (e.g., user band), although as noted above, direct or “pass-through” transmission may be utilized alternatively or in conjunction with upconversion (i.e., one band may be direct, and another contemporaneously require upconversion/downconversion).
(314) Per step 2354, the upconverted signals are synchronized via the recovered I/Q signals via the synchronization circuit of the CPEe, and the upconverted signals are converted to the digital domain for use by, e.g., the chipset 916 of the CPEe 513 (see
(315)
(316) It will be recognized that while certain aspects of the disclosure are described in terms of a specific sequence of steps of a method, these descriptions are only illustrative of the broader methods of the disclosure, and may be modified as required by the particular application. Certain steps may be rendered unnecessary or optional under certain circumstances. Additionally, certain steps or functionality may be added to the disclosed embodiments, or the order of performance of two or more steps permuted. All such variations are considered to be encompassed within the disclosure disclosed and claimed herein.
(317) While the above detailed description has shown, described, and pointed out novel features of the disclosure as applied to various embodiments, it will be understood that various omissions, substitutions, and changes in the form and details of the device or process illustrated may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the disclosure. This description is in no way meant to be limiting, but rather should be taken as illustrative of the general principles of the disclosure. The scope of the disclosure should be determined with reference to the claims.
(318) It will be further appreciated that while certain steps and aspects of the various methods and apparatus described herein may be performed by a human being, the disclosed aspects and individual methods and apparatus are generally computerized/computer-implemented. Computerized apparatus and methods are necessary to fully implement these aspects for any number of reasons including, without limitation, commercial viability, practicality, and even feasibility (i.e., certain steps/processes simply cannot be performed by a human being in any viable fashion).