METHOD AND ARRANGEMENT FOR CONTROLLING CELL CHANGE AND A TERMINAL OF A CELLULAR SYSTEM
The invention relates to an improved method and arrangement for controlling a cell change performed by a terminal of a cellular radio system. In particular the invention relates to a cell change in a situation where the terminal is connected to a special service provided by its current cell, e.g. to the GPRS service (General Packet Radio Service). An essential idea of the invention is that in conjunction with a cell change order a base station sends to the terminal information about whether the terminal is allowed not to carry out the cell change order if the terminal does not know the timing information of the new cell assigned to it. This information is advantageously sent in a signalling message of a certain service, such as the GPRS service. It is an advantage of the invention that a terminal connected to a certain service will not make unnecessary cell change attempts which are doomed to fail. The invention helps direct the cell change in such a manner that the load caused by possible repeated cell change attempts on the terminal and radio signalling is low.
This application is a continuation of and claims priority to, U.S. application Ser. No. 09/812,932, status pending.
The invention relates to a method for controlling cell change in a service network, in which method a terminal performs neighbour cell measurements for cell change, the network makes a decision about the cell change on the basis of the results of said measurements, current network load and the service needs of the terminal, and the network sends to the terminal a cell change order instructing it to switch over to a new cell. The invention additionally relates to a base station of a cellular radio system, which base station comprises means for providing service and means for receiving signalling messages from a terminal as well as means for generating signalling messages and sending them to terminals. Furthermore, the invention relates to a terminal of cellular radio system, which terminal is equipped with means for connecting to a certain service and which comprises means for receiving signalling messages from base stations and means for performing cell specific measurements in order to find a suitable serving cell. In addition, the invention relates to a cellular radio system comprising base stations and associated cells as well as terminals, wherein the base stations are equipped with means for conveying signalling messages between the base station and a terminal, and the terminals are equipped so as to operate at a certain service level and to convey signalling messages between the terminal and base station.
To provide background for the invention we will next describe some examples of prior-art solutions for changing the active cell in GSM (Global System for Mobile telecommunications) and in the General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) associated with it.
A terminal of a cellular radio system always attempts to choose a base station in the coverage area, or cell, of which it camps. In the exemplary situation depicted by
Terminals have to measure the reception levels of the received broadcast signals in order to be able to calculate the C1 values of the cells. The cell with the highest C1 value is the most advantageous for the radio connection. In order to optimize cell changes the network may also send additional parameters which make possible to use so-called C2 values. A more detailed description of the use of these parameters is given in reference [1]. The base stations also send to terminals information about the BCCH frequencies used in the adjacent cells so that the terminals know what frequencies they have to listen to in order to find the BCCH broadcasts of the adjacent cells.
GSM system cells provide users with basic services: audio transmission, slow data transmission, and various short message services. GSM operation has been standardized by the European Telecommunication Standardization Institute (ETSI). In GSM, the cells overlap with respect to their coverage areas, so at a cell boundary a decision has to be connection the decision is based on other factors, too, such as the traffic load of the different cells of the network, for instance. In the active state, the decision about which cell the terminal is to use, as well as the decision about the cell change timing is made by the network, which then informs the terminal. According to an ETSI standard, a terminal in the active state cannot by itself make a decision to start using the service of another cell. A terminal in the idle state makes the decision about which cell it belongs to based on the cells' C1/C2 values which it has calculated. From the terminal's standpoint the moment of cell change is then not of great significance as all the system's cells offer the same basic services and the user of the terminal will not notice the cell change.
The prior-art approach described above has many drawbacks. The cell change fails if the terminal does not know the timing information of the new cell. If the cell change fails, a service used by the terminal, which is above the basic service, such as e.g. GPRS, may be disconnected because of the failed cell change. In any case the terminal may have to make several attempts to change cells, which adds to the cell change related signalling between the terminal and the base station in the serving cell.
An object of this invention is to provide a cell change procedure which minimizes unsuccessful cell change attempts to cells with which the operation of the terminal cannot be immediately synchronized at the moment of receiving the cell change order.
The objects of the invention are achieved by a procedure in which a terminal constantly monitors the timing information of the neighbour cells known to it and conveys that information to the network if the network orders the terminal to switch over to a cell the timing information of which is unknown to the terminal. As soon as the network becomes aware of the conflict, it selects on the basis of the neighbour cell information sent by the terminal another cell to which the terminal can immediately switch over without problems. The network may then consequently send to the terminal a new cell change order, instructing it to switch over to a cell with which the terminal has internal synchronization and thereby can be synchronized without problems.
It is characteristic of the cell change method according to the invention that if the new serving cell assigned to a terminal in a cell change order is a cell the timing information of which is unknown to the terminal after neighbour cell measurements, the cell change may not take place but instead the terminal may send to the base station a cell change failure message which may include various information such as the cause of the failure as well as neighbour cell information.
It is characteristic of the base station according to the invention that it comprises means for receiving and processing information coming from a terminal, which information is adapted so as to convey to the base station information about those neighbour cells known to the terminal the internal timing information of which is known to the terminal.
It is characteristic of the terminal according to the invention that it is equipped with means for determining neighbour cell timing information and means for sending neighbour cell information to the base station of its current cell when the timing information of the base station of the new cell assigned in a cell change order to the terminal by the serving base station is unknown to the terminal.
It is characteristic of the cellular radio system according to the invention that it comprises information, which is known to a terminal, about a set of neighbour cells of said terminal, the timing information of the base stations of which neighbour cells the terminal has determined, whereby said system is adapted so as to convey, after a cell change order addressed to the terminal, said information from the terminal to a base station in a signalling message for the purpose of selecting a new serving cell if the target cell assigned to the terminal in the cell change order is not included in the set of neighbour cells determined by the terminal.
Advantageous embodiments of the invention are presented in the dependent claims.
The basic idea of the invention is as follows: A cellular phone is allowed not to make a cell change attempt to a cell the timing information of which is unknown to it. This behaviour may be either set as a default in the terminal or it may be enabled in the terminal separately for each case by means of a message sent to it by the network. In practical operation, a cellular phone measures the neighbour cell information according to the prior art. This way it determines the transmission frequencies used by the base stations of neighbour cells, as well as the timing information, if possible. Thus it is possible for the terminal at any given time to know which base stations in the network can be chosen as new serving cells without problems. As a cell change order comes from the network, the timing information of which is known to the terminal and with which it is thus possible to synchronize without problems. In the case where the switch should be made to a cell with which terminal has no internal timing, the terminal, instead of attempting a cell change, uses a cell change failure message according to the invention to inform the network about the cells/base stations with which a cell change would be immediately successful. At this stage the terminal stays with the original cell until either the network assigns to it by means of a new cell change order another cell with which the terminal can synchronize immediately or until other cell change constraints/rules are fulfilled. After that, the cell change takes place as in the prior art.
An advantage of the invention is that the number of failed cell change attempts is reduced.
Another advantage of the invention is that the load caused by failed cell change attempts on network signalling is reduced.
A further advantage of the invention is that possible service breaks caused by failed cell change attempts are reduced.
A yet further advantage of the invention is that the availability of certain services (such as GPRS) is improved as unnecessary failed cell change attempts are eliminated or reduced and the terminal can be directly assigned to a cell that can immediately provide the service needed by the terminal.
The invention is described in detail in the following. Reference is made to the attached drawings in which
When a terminal according to the invention sends a message about the fact that it does not know the timing information of the cell assigned to it, the terminal may convey said information advantageously using a CELL_CHANGE_FAILURE, PACKET_CELL_CHANGE_FAILURE or HANDOVER_FAILURE message. Into the message the terminal adds information about the neighbour cells the timing information of which the terminal knows and with which a cell change would be immediately successful. On the basis of this information the network can address to the terminal a new cell change order in which the target cell is one of the neighbour cells indicated by the terminal.
Below it is shown by way of example how the permission/information enabling operation according to the invention can be conveyed to a terminal in a RR_CELL_CHANGE_ORDER or PACKET_CELL_CHANGE_ORDER message. The information may also be conveyed in other messages used in the communication between the terminal and the network, such as e.g. system information (SI) and packet system information (PSI) messages. The following shows by way of example how the additional information required by the invention can be conveyed in the GPRS service to a terminal in a PACKET_CELL_CHANGE_ORDER, as expressed by its information elements:
The message tells, using three bits in the information element “Packet_cell_change_order_options” according to the invention, how the terminal is allowed to operate when it receives a cell change order. The other information elements comply with the standard. The bit combinations in the additional information according to the invention may be interpreted advantageously according to Table 1, for instance.
Bit combination 0-0-0 in Table 1 corresponds to operation according to the prior art, whereby the terminal shall obey the cell change order it has received. If one of bit combinations from 0-0-1 to 1-0-0 is assigned to the terminal, the terminal shall not in uncertain cases perform a cell change but shall instead send a combination determines the maximum number of neighbour cells the information of which shall be included by the terminal in said reply message. Combination 0-0-1 means that the information of one neighbour cell will be sent, combination 0-1-0 means that the information of two neighbour cells will be sent, combination 0-1-1 means that the information of three neighbour cells will be sent, and combination 1-0-0 means that the information of four neighbour cells will be sent. Combination 1-1-1 causes the transmission of a PACKET_CELL_CHANGE_FAILURE message that does not include neighbour cell measurement data. The other combinations may be used for other cell change related functions if necessary.
The Packet_cell_change_order_options information element may be shorter than the three bits mentioned above. In that case the number of different bit combinations naturally becomes smaller, and the number of possible neighbour cells included in the message may advantageously be none for a certain bit combination and e.g. three for a certain second bit combination.
Below it is shown by way of example how the information according to the invention can be conveyed from a terminal to the network in a PACKET_CELL_CHANGE_FAILURE or HANDOVER_FAILURE message, expressed as their information elements, in a situation where the probability of a successful cell change is small because the timing information of the new cell is unknown to the terminal.
The new information element “Neighbour_cell_reporting” according to the invention may have the same basic structure as that described in a table presented in the ETSI document Reference [2]. In the operation according to the invention the information element in question has then the structure illustrated in Table 2:
Table 2 shows a measurement report according to the invention which report advantageously comprises eight octets. The first four bits of the first octet advantageously indicate the cause of the cell change failure. Operation according to the invention can possibly use the already existing cause codes but it is possible to add to them a new code for the operation according to the invention. The next two bits in the first octet indicate the number of those neighbour cells NO-OF-NCELLS in the report the timing information of which is known to the terminal on the basis of the neighbour cell measurements performed by it. In this example case the data of three neighbour cells are advantageously transmitted. The last two bits in the first octet are used to convey the frequency information of a first neighbour cell BCCH-FREQ-NCELL 1, and the first three bits in the second octet are also used for this same purpose. The frequency information can be advantageously conveyed through either the absolute radio frequency carrier number ARFCN the different values of given by the network to the terminal. The rest of the bits in the second octet are used to convey part of the neighbour cell identity information BSIC-NCELL 1, and the rest of that information is conveyed through the first bit of the third octet. Next six bits in the third octet are used to convey the level measurement data of the first neighbour cell RXLEV-NCELL 1. The data for the two other neighbour cells are transmitted in the following octets in the order described above. The last octet to be used is octet number eight, and its first bit is used to convey the last bit of the level measurement data of the third neighbour cell RXLEV 3.
In an advantageous embodiment no ARFCN information is transmitted as such in the measurement report but the ARFCN data in question are indexed in the cellular system in a manner known to both the terminal and the network. In this case it suffices to include the indices in question in the measurement report according to the invention transmitted to the base station.
In another advantageous embodiment the terminal arranges the neighbour cell data in the measurement report advantageously in the order according to the received RX level (RXLEV) measured by it. In that case the level measurement data may either be included in the measurement report according to the invention or they may be left out of it. By leaving the level measurement data out it is possible to reduce the amount of data transmitted in the cellular system, while still being able to convey to the network the information about the order which from the cell change standpoint is best for the terminal.
In the terminal of
The hardware requirements caused by the invention on prior art base stations are minimal. Base station 551 and/or base station controller 552 have access to a database (not shown in
Naturally the embodiments described above are exemplary only and do not limit the application of the invention. Particularly it should be noted that although the examples described above relate to the GSM and GPRS systems, the invention is applicable to any other digital cellular system as well. Especially we could mention the DCS1800 (Digital Communications System at 1800 MHz), IS-54 (Interim Standard 54) and PDC (Personal Digital Cellular) and in particular the forthcoming third-generation digital cellular UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System). In addition, the inventional idea can be applied in many ways within the limits defined by the claims.
REFERENCES[1] ETSI 05.08 version 6.4.0
[2] ETSI 04.08 version 6.2.0 section 10.5.2.20
Claims
1.-15. (canceled)
16. A base station (BS, 551) in a cellular radio system, comprising means for providing a service (GSM, GPRS) and means for receiving signalling messages from a terminal (MS, 500) as well as means for generating signalling messages and sending them to terminals, characterized in that it further comprises means for receiving and processing information obtained from a terminal, which information is arranged so as to convey to the base station the data of those neighbour cells known to the terminal the timing information of which is known to the terminal.
17. The base station according to claim 16, characterized in that said service is the GPRS data packet transmission service.
18. The base station according to claim 16, characterized in that said signalling messages are signalling messages of the GPRS data packet transmission service.
19. A terminal (MS, 500) in a cellular radio system, equipped with means for connecting to a certain service (GSM, GPRS) and comprising means for receiving signalling messages from base stations (BS, 551) and means for performing cell specific measurements in order to find a suitable serving cell, characterized in that it is further equipped with means for determining the timing information of neighbour cells and means for sending neighbour information to the base station of the current cell in the case that the timing information of the base station of the new cell assigned to the terminal in a cell change order by the serving base station is unknown to the terminal.
20. The terminal according to claim 19, characterized in that said certain service is the GPRS data packet transmission service.
21. The terminal according to claim 19, characterized in that said signalling messages are signalling messages of the GPRS data packet transmission service.
22. A cellular radio system comprising base stations (BS, 551) and associated cells (1-11) and terminals (MS, 500), in which system
- the base stations are equipped with means for conveying signalling messages between a base station and a terminal, and
- the terminals are adapted so as to operate at a certain service level (GSM, GPRS) and to convey signalling messages between a terminal and a base station,
- characterized in that it further comprises information, which is known to a terminal, about a set of neighbour cells of said terminal, the timing information of the base stations of which neighbour cells the terminal has determined, whereby said system is adapted so as to convey, after a cell change order addressed to the terminal, said information in a signalling message from the terminal to a base station for the purpose of selecting a new serving cell if the target cell assigned to the terminal in the cell change order is not included in the set of neighbour cells determined by the terminal.
23. The cellular radio system according to claim 22, characterized in that said certain service is the GPRS data packet transmission service.
24. The cellular radio system according to claim 22, characterized in that said signalling messages are signalling messages of the GPRS data packet transmission service.
Type: Application
Filed: Sep 1, 2006
Publication Date: Oct 25, 2007
Inventor: Lars Dalsgaard (Oulu)
Application Number: 11/469,579
International Classification: H04Q 7/00 (20060101);