Wireless System with Configurable Radio and Antenna Resources
A wireless access device, system and method are disclosed for provisioning multiple concurrent radio services and adaptive management of multi-radio access points or multi-radio small cell base stations.
This patent application is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/332,946, filed Oct. 24, 2016, which is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/519,086, filed Oct. 20, 2014, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/893,266, filed Oct. 20, 2013, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
TECHNICAL FIELDThis disclosure is related generally to wireless communication systems.
BACKGROUNDWireless access points used in for example Wireless Fidelity (“WiFi”) communications may be employed individually or a multiplicity of wireless access points may be deployed in a wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) system. An access point (AP) requires management of its mandatory functions and management of optional functions that may be implemented. A WLAN system also requires a coordination function to manage the cooperation and interoperation of APs in a WLAN system to provide, for example, seamless coverage throughout the network, authentication of a motive user on a WLAN, management of RF interference and optimal use of the WLAN resource. This coordination function is undertaken by what is commonly referred to as a network controller. The principle purpose of a network controller is to optimally control the individual elements on the network.
SUMMARYA universally flexible AP architecture is disclosed. In some implementations, the architecture includes: a communication interface; a multiplicity of processors in a backplane processor bank; a radio bank comprising a multiplicity of radios which can be dynamically assigned to a multiplicity of independently configurable antennas; an interface matrix to dynamically interconnect the multiplicity of radios in the radio bank to the multiplicity of configurable antennas in the antenna bank; and an antenna bank comprising a multiplicity of configurable antennas which can be independently configured.
In some implementations, a hypervisor optimally assigns and configures the multiplicity of radios in the radio bank, the interface matrix, the multiplicity of configurable antennas in the antenna bank, and the association of a wireless device to a radio in the radio bank to maximally utilize the available spectrum, provide optimal use of the radio resources and deliver a multitude of network services to wireless client devices. It is a feature of the configurable antennas that each antenna is independently configurable to emit directive RF into one spatial sector, and alternatively configured to radiate into a different spatial sector, or alternatively configured to radiate and the spatial sector being defined by the beam pattern of said antenna.
The hypervisor bases its assignments of resource upon a multiplicity of inputs such as, the measured RF signals at a multiplicity of radios from a multiplicity of other radios, the traffic and quality of service requirements from the user, the network configuration and coverage required from the service provider, the capabilities of the multiplicity of radios in the radio bank, the number of radios in the radio bank, the capabilities of the interface matrix, the capabilities of the multiplicity of configurable antennas in the antenna bank, the number of configurable antennas in the antenna bank, the capabilities of the wireless devices that want to connect to the radios, etc. The information used by the hypervisor to make its decision can pertain to the universally flexible AP where the hypervisor is implemented or from a multiplicity of other universally flexible AP, or a combination of both. The hypervisor can be implemented in software and/or hardware entirely locally in the bank of processors, or in a distributed implementation over a multiplicity of universally flexible AP arranged in a cluster and, optionally, on a remote server.
Particular implementations of the universally flexible AP architecture disclosed herein provide one or more of the following advantages. The universally flexible AP architecture provides scaled capacity, using a multiplicity of radios that optimally utilizes all the radios to adapt to changing usage of the unit. It is further advantage that this functionality is provided in a compact footprint with low power consumption and that the multiple antennas are low profile analog planar antennas, such as travelling wave antennas.
Some of the advantages of the distributed hypervisor include but are not limited to: (1) self-organized network (SON) functionality: universally flexible AP 1501 units self-configured using distributed algorithms; (2) scalable (each universally flexible AP 1501 units brings its own hardware and more processing power to the network); (3) less traffic in the backbone network in the presence of mobility; (4) not a single point of failure; (5) support coordinated multipoint (CoMP) management of channel assignment, power levels, antenna configuration in a cluster 1505 which offers better network performance than local resource management per universally flexible AP 1501; (6) provisioning of fast universally flexible AP 1501 reconfiguration for dynamic traffic demand and RF interference due to the smaller number of universally flexible AP 1501 in a cluster 1505 than in a complete network, as managed by the cloud hypervisor 1402; (7) energy-efficiency management by turning on/off units/radios as required and no cooling required as for a rack-based hardware WLAN controller; and (8) reduced backbone network messaging overhead.
The universally flexible AP architecture and hypervisor disclosed herein can be deployed and used in various network topologies ranging in scale and service function: e.g. a WLAN to a Wide Area Network (WAN) and a WiFi network and a cellular/LTE network or combination.
The details of the one or more implementations disclosed herein are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, aspects and advantages will become apparent from the description, the drawings and the claims.
Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTIONThere are various methods of implementing control and management of APs in a WLAN. For example, the controller may be embedded in one AP; the controller may be abstracted from the APs and centralized in the WLAN; or the controller may be distributed amongst the APs within the WLAN. The manager may similarly be embedded on one AP, may be abstracted from the AP into a separate management console that signals to and from the APs in the WLAN. In addition the manager and the controller may reside outside the WLAN, and interface to the WLAN over a WAN or intranet, or via the Internet, commonly called “being in the cloud.”
In a WLAN, a class of network elements to be controlled by a wireless controller are the radios embedded within the AP or APs. Each AP will typically have a multiplicity of radios and can be configured by the manager to operate individually or in cooperation, for example in Single Input Single Output (SISO) or in Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) modes of operation. By way of generalization, a transmitting radio on an AP operating in MIMO mode, of order M×N, would have a multiplicity of M antennas, M radio chains and M interfaces to a unitary radio. On the client receiver side, the client would have N antennas, N radio chains and N interfaces to a unitary radio. The antennas employed in such a unit may have a diversity of radiating characteristics, either being omnidirectional antennas or fixed directional antennas or configurable directional antenna radiators or any combination of these. The number of spatial streams established by an array of antennas can also be managed and controlled during operation, but the extent of the reconfiguration will be determined by physical choice of antennas and how they operate. In particular, directional antennas capable of beamforming, using digital beamforming and beamsteering methods, as distinguished from analog beamforming and beamsteering methods or analog fixed directional beams, have a natural compromise between the number of antennas and the number of spatial streams that can be constructed digitally, such that the maximum number of spatial streams is always fewer than the number of antennas.
Analog arrays, specifically analog antenna arrays constructed from antennas that are analog beamforming or directional antennas, are not limited by this compromise, allowing the maximum number of spatial streams to be equated to the number of analog antennas. It is thus preferential, where possible, to employ a multiplicity of analog beam forming and beam steering antennas, or a multiplicity of analog fixed directional antennas, rather than digital beam forming and beam steering means, in situations where the maximum number of simultaneous spatial streams are required with the fewest antennas and the antennas are planar antennas that can be fabricated into planar arrays.
Integrating a multiplicity of radios can expand the raw capacity of a WiFi access point. An architecture for achieving such is shown in
Operationally, in the WiFi mode of operation, this architecture would be configured so that each sector would provide radio service in a particular WiFi spectral band, either 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz band, with a maximum transmit power and a particular channel of 20 MHz width or bonded-channel of 40 MHz or 80 MHz or even 160 MHz within the chosen spectral band, whilst operating in 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n or 802.11ac modes (hereafter also referred to as 802.11x), consistent with the various modes of operation permitted by the IEEE 802.11 standard. However, whilst offering capacity expansion, this architecture has particular limitations to its scalability and flexibility for reconfiguration.
Each sectorized AP of the array comprises a dedicated radio and radio chain to antennas, e.g. to provide 3×3 MIMO operation requires a unitary radio and 3 dedicated antennas. Each radio is permanently affixed to a dedicated antenna array to service a fixed sector, and can provide radio service to that sector only, and in a configuration that is 802.11x, preferentially in MIMO operating mode if the radio is so capable. Because there is only one radio dedicated to a sector, a sector can provision service only on one wireless channel at a time, or conversely, one sector can only be assigned one dedicated channel at a time. By permanently dedicating a radio to a particular sector, the radio resource of that sector cannot be reassigned to another sector that may be servicing a spatial region that has more users and requires more data throughput provisioning. The raw cumulative data handling capacity of the unit is directly proportional to the number of sectors, and thus the physical size of the unit is expansive with number of sectors.
The directional antennas radiate and receive from an angular arc that is prescribed by the width of the sectors. A user 105 might not associate with the AP which is geometrically the closest or that offers the best link quality due to various factors such as load balancing between radios, the radio configurations in the different sectors and the user device capabilities. In an indoor mode of operation, in a radio scattering rich environment, the AP to user wireless link would be achieved for radiating sectors not in the line of sight of the client device user but by multi path reflections r. However, the average link quality would be lower than for the closest AP due the longer propagation path and additional RF signal absorption for each multipath reflection. The wireless link statistics achieved by the same AP unit disclosed in the architecture of
The traffic or usage on one side of an AP unit can be different to that in another side of an AP unit. In this circumstance, the architecture of
The communication interface 201 provides the interface between the processors in the processor bank 202 and the backbone network. The communication interface is used to receive and transmit from the backbone network the control plane information to control and manage, via the processor bank 202, the universally flexible AP 200 and the data plane information to be transmitted to or received from the users connected to the universally flexible AP 200. A particular embodiment of the communication interface 201 is an Ethernet switch connected to an optical or twisted pair Ethernet physical interface. Another embodiment is an Ethernet switch connected to a DOCSIS cable modem. Another embodiment of the communication interface 201 is a Common Packet Radio Interface (CPRI).
The backplane processor bank 202 consists of a multiplicity of processors. The processors are used to implement the local or distributed functions for the management of the mandatory and optional functions of the radios, the local or distributed functions of the wireless network controller, and the local or distributed functions of a means of dedicating and rededicating the assignment of specific radios to specific antennas and configuring the antennas. The processors also implement the necessary communication protocols to interface with the other network elements in the wireless backbone network and wireless client devices.
The radio bank 203 consists of a multiplicity of radios 205. The various parameters of each radio in the radio bank, such as TX power, channel, bandwidth, SSIDs, security, etc., can be independently configured. Each radio comprises a multiplicity of transceivers, and optionally all or parts of the physical layer baseband signal processing, of the link layer functions and of the multiple access control layer functions. Each radio in the radio bank can also belong to different wireless technologies such as 802.11a/b/g/n/ac/ad, GSM, WCDMA, LTE, 802.16, 802.22, proprietary or standardized wireless backhaul technologies, etc. Each radio interfaces with a processor in the processor bank 202. More than one radio can interface with a processor. In some particular cases, the radio can interface directly with the communication interface 201. A particular embodiment of a radio that may be used in this architecture is a PCIe WiFi module card.
The interface matrix 206 interconnects the RF ports from the multiplicity of radios 205 to the ports of the multiplicity of configurable antennas 207. The interconnections are set up dynamically as a function of the control signals from the multiplicity of processors in the processor bank 202 and/or multiplicity of radios in the radio bank 203. The interface matrix also interconnects some of the control signals to the control ports of the multiplicity of configurable antennas 207. The interface matrix 206 can enable the interconnections from all, part or a single RF ports of the radios 205 in the radio bank 203 to all, part or a single configurable antenna 207 ports. In one extreme case, the interface matrix 206 can enable the interconnection of any RF port of the multiplicity of radios 205 in the radio bank 203 to any port of the multiplicity of configurable antennas 207 in the antenna bank 204. For the other extreme case, the interface matrix consists of fixed interconnections between a RF port from a radio 205 and a port for a reconfigurable antenna 207.
The antenna bank 204 comprises a multiplicity of configurable antennas 207. Each configurable antenna 207 has a RF signal port and, optionally, a control signals port. Each configurable antenna 207 in the antenna bank 204 can be independently configured. Each configurable antenna can also have different characteristics such as operating band, radiation pattern beamwidth, antenna gain, number of radiation patterns, continuous or discrete beam steering, polarization type, fixed or switched orthogonal polarization, etc.
A particular embodiment is an antenna bank comprising a multiplicity of fixed directive antennas, or steerable directive antennas, or antennas for which the radiation pattern and/or the polarization can be reconfigured in real-time, or any combinations of those antennas. In this case, the universally flexible AP 200 architecture illustrated in
The use of travelling wave antennas of the form described herein enables a compact planar array design with low power consumption for the antenna bank 204. A multiplicity of travelling wave analog antennas, such as employed in an array, can provide the requisite functionality of a directive beam from each antenna that can be configured to switch to an alternative beam. It will be recognized that any analog or digital beamforming antenna array with said characteristics of being composed of fixed directive, directive and steerable, directive and switchable to another radiative angle would provide a configurable antenna array suitable for the antenna bank 204. A preferred characteristic of the antenna bank is that it is composed of a multiplicity of low profile planar antenna arrays wherein each array comprises a multiplicity of fixed directive antennas, or steerable directive antennas, or antennas for which the radiation pattern and/or the polarization can be reconfigured in real-time, or any combinations of those antennas.
A particular embodiment of the configurable antenna 207 for use in the antenna bank 204, is travelling wave antennas, such as passive leaky wave antennas, electronic leaky-wave antennas, end-switch passive leaky wave antennas, and end-switch electronic leaky-wave antennas, said antennas being microstrip form of antennas. By way of exemplification, a leakywave antenna that is directive, steerable and switchable, are described in publication: “Beam-switchable scanning leaky-wave antenna” Electronics Letters, 30 Mar. 2000, Vol. 36, no. 7, pg. 596-7 and “Performance-Enhanced and Symmetric Full-Space Scanning End-Switched CRLH LWA”, IEEE Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters, Vol. 10, 2011, p. 709-712 and described variously in D. R. Jackson, C. Caloz, and T. Itoh, “Leaky-wave antennas,” Proc. IEEE, vol. 100, no. 7, pp. 2194-2206, July 2012.
An alternative embodiment of 207 is the electronic leaky-wave antenna, in which steering of the beam with backfire-to-endfire capability can be established by electronically altering the properties of the travelling wave guide of the leaky wave antenna, and is described in Liu, L., C. Caloz, and T. Itoh, “Dominant mode leaky-wave antenna with backfire-to-endfire scanning capability,” Electronics Letters, Vol. 38, 1414-1416, 2002.
Polarization diversity can be realized because the LWA can be excited by two modes, common and differential. If the LWA is excited in common-mode, then horizontal polarization is achieved, and if the LWA is excited in differential-mode, then vertical polarization is achieved. Thus, either horizontal or vertical polarization is achieved in one angular direction based on the LWA's frequency. If the RF frequency is changed, then the angular direction changes. For example, if the LWA is excited in common-mode in the LH region, then a backward beam is radiated with horizontal polarization, and if the LWA is excited in differential-mode in the RH region, then a forward beam is radiated with vertical polarization. Thus, a sector as defined by the arc of one beam, can be serviced with an alternate beam, at the same RF frequency, and if the mode isolation is sufficient this one sector can have two data streams at the same RF frequency that are sufficiently distinguishable for data communications applications.
A further embodiment of the antenna bank 204 is an array constructed from a multiplicity of passive leakywave antennas or electronic leakywave antennas or a combination of these configurable antennas that have an alternative, preferentially orthogonal, polarization. An example of a 4-port LWA capable of providing either vertical or horizontal polarization in one quadrant is described in M. R. Hashemi and T. Itoh, “Dual-Mode Leaky-Wave Excitation in Symmetric Composite Right/Left-Handed Structure with Center Vias”. Microwave Symposium Digest (MTT), 2010 IEEE MTT-S International, vol., no., pp. 9, 12, 23-28 May 2010 IMS2010.
It will be understood that a multiplicity of antennas 207, being LWA's in general, and either passive leakywave antennas or electronic leakywave antennas, can be fabricated as a plurality of configurable antennas as arrays on a common printed circuit board, and or a multiplicity of said arrays can be fabricated on a multiplicity of printed circuit board and assembled or conjoined, to construct the antenna bank 204. In a preferred embodiment of the universally flexible AP 200, the physical elements 201, 202, 203, 205 are internalized in the physical body of the unit 200, and 204 is internal to the unit to achieve the maximum compactness of the unit whilst provide the requisite spatial beam coverage desired for the unit 200.
The total number of configurable antennas 207 in the antenna bank 204 can differ from the number of radios in the radio bank 205. The number of configurable antennas assigned to each radio 205 in the radio bank 203 can differ. The characteristics and configuration of each configurable antenna 205 assigned to a radio 203 can differ. The number of sectors provisioned by the universally flexible AP 200 can differ from the number of radios 205 in the radio bank 203. The number of sectors can also differ from the number of configurable antennas 207 in the antenna bank 204. Each sector or more than one sector may have individual SSIDs, or all sectors may have a common SSID.
By way of generalization, a universally flexible AP 200 unit will have S sectors, and M radios in the radio bank 203, L configurable antennas 207 in the antenna bank 204 and Lm reconfigurable antennas assignable to radio m. It is a specific feature of the universally flexible AP 200 that more than one radio 205 and more than one configurable antenna 207 is able to provide simultaneous radio service to one sector or more than one sector. This configuration thus permits multiple concurrent radios providing multiple radios of the same technology providing differentiated services on the same band. By way of example, with S=4 sectors, and two pairs of radios per sector, and all radios operate on the same band, e.g. the 5 GHz WiFi band, this allows first sector to concurrently provide service on two non-overlapping channels in the same band, the second sector to concurrently provide service on two non-overlapping channels in the same band, the third sector to concurrently provide service on two non-overlapping channels in the same band and the fourth sector concurrently provide service on two non-overlapping channels in the same band. It will be understood that the dedication and rededication of radios from one sector to an alternative sector is established by the interface matrix 206 or by reconfiguring the configurable antennas 207 and permits load balancing of the universally flexible AP. It is thus a distinguishing feature of the universally flexible AP that fewer sectors are required to provide the same capacity, for example 4 sectors with 2 radios per sector operating on two isolated channels in the same band would be concurrently operated, whereas in the prior art 8 sectors with a unitary radio per sector would be required for concurrent operation of all radios in the same channel plan.
A wireless access device manager implements the method of dedicating and rededicating the assignment of specific radios to specific antennas and configuring the antennas. Hereinafter, the wireless access device manager is also referred to as a hypervisor. The hypervisor can be implemented in software, hardware or a combination of software and hardware. The hypervisor can be implemented as instructions stored on a non-transitory, computer-readable storage medium (e.g., memory, hard disk, flash), which, when executed by one or more hardware processors of, for example, a server computer, causes the one or more hardware processors to perform operations. These operations include but are not limited to: optimally assigning and configuring the multiplicity of radios 205 in the radio bank 203, the interface matrix 206, the multiplicity of configurable antennas 207 in the antenna bank 204, and the association of a wireless device to a radio 205 in the radio bank 203 to maximally utilize the available spectrum, provide optimal use of the radio resources and deliver a multitude of network services. The hypervisor bases its decision upon one or more inputs such as, the measured RF signals at a multiplicity of radios 205 from a multiplicity of other radios, the traffic and quality of service requirements from the user, the network configuration and coverage required from the service provider, the capabilities of the multiplicity of radios 205 in the radio bank 203, the number of radios 205 in the radio bank 203, the capabilities of the interface matrix 206, the capabilities of the multiplicity of configurable antennas 207 in the antenna bank 204, the number of configurable antennas 207 in the antenna bank 204, the capabilities of the wireless devices that want to connect to the radios, etc. The information used by the hypervisor to make its decision can pertain to the universally flexible AP 200 where the hypervisor is implemented or from a multiplicity of other universally flexible AP 200, or a combination of both. The hypervisor can be implemented entirely locally in the bank of processors, or in a distributed implementation over a multiplicity of universally flexible AP 200 arranged in a cluster and, optionally, on a remote server. When the entirety of parts of the hypervisor functions are implemented in a multiplicity of other universally flexible AP 200 or a remote server, the communication interface and the processors are used to receive and interpret the messages from the other network entities, and to send messages from the universal flexible AP 200 to the other network entities.
One can appreciate that using the disclosed universally flexible AP 200 architecture illustrated in
We now disclose specific examples of embodiment, by way of illustration, to show the flexibility of the architecture disclosed.
In the universal AP unit 401 configuration described in
The hypervisor for this particular embodiment can implement a multiplicity of configurations. For example, four radios can be enabled and the multiplicity of configurable antennas configured such that a single 5 GHz radio cover each of the sector 402 to 405. Another example is to enable the eight radios, and configure the multiplicity of configurable antennas such that there are two radios covering each sector 402 to 405. The configuration of the two radios associated with a multiplicity of configurable antennas configured to cover the same sector can differ. In another example, the eight radios are enabled and the multiplicity of configurable antennas are configured such that three radios are associated with a multiplicity of configurable antennas configured to cover the front right sector 404, one radio is associated with a multiplicity of configurable antennas configured to cover the front left sector 405, three radios are associated with a multiplicity of configurable antennas configured to cover the back right sector 402 and one radio is associated with a multiplicity of configurable antennas configured to cover the back left sector 403. The configuration of the radios can differ. One can appreciate that this embodiment offers a large number of possible configurations to adapt the universally flexible AP 401 unit's resources to meet instantaneous traffic demand, efficiently manage network interference and exploit available spectrum and minimize unit power consumption. The universally flexible AP 401 unit can be configured to have a multiplicity of radios associated with a multiplicity of configurable antennas configured to cover the same sector 402 to 405 and configured for different services and capabilities.
Another embodiment of the universally flexible AP 701 unit is illustrated in
A particularity of this embodiment is that the hypervisor can configure the multiplicity of configurable antennas for each transmission or reception. By way of an example, each of three configurable antennas 301 assigned to radio 8 of the universally flexible AP 1001 can be configured with one of the seven configurations 302 to 308 illustrated in
Another embodiment of the universally flexible AP 1301 unit is illustrated in
In one possible embodiment of the distributed hypervisor implementation, the cluster head 1506 gathers messages concerning the traffic measurements, RF measurements, sessions services, client device capabilities, universally flexible AP's 1501 capabilities, universally flexible AP's 1501 current configuration, etc. transmitted from a multiplicity of universally flexible AP's 1501 in its cluster 1505. It can also receive the same or a subset of this information from other cluster head 1506 in the network or universally flexible AP's 1501 in the network or the top-level hypervisor 1502. The universally flexible AP 1501 units only report either directly or thought the cluster head 1506 essential information to the cloud top-level hypervisor 1502 (traffic for billing info, traffic profiles, unit status, etc.). Network configuration, user information, QoS level, etc. are provided by the cloud top-level hypervisor 1502 to the cluster head 1506. Based on this information, the hypervisor finds the optimal assignment of specific radios 205 to specific configurable antennas 207 and configuring the configurable antennas 207 so assigned in each of the universally flexible AP's 1501 in the cluster 1505. The cluster head 1506 then sends the radio bank 203, interface matrix 206 and antenna bank 203 configuration commands over the virtual links 1503 to the universally flexible AP's 1501 in the cluster 1505. It can also communicate this configuration or a subset of it to other cluster heads 1506 or universally flexible AP's 1501 in the network or the top-level hypervisor 1502 through the backbone network.
In another possible embodiment, there is no cluster head in the cluster 1505. Some or all of the universally flexible AP's 1501 in the cluster 1505 exchanges messages concerning the traffic measurements, RF measurements, sessions services, client device capabilities, universally flexible AP's 1501 capabilities, universally flexible AP's 1501 current configuration, etc. transmitted from a multiplicity of universally flexible AP's 1501 in its cluster. The universally flexible AP's 1501 in the cluster 1505 can also receive the same or a subset of the information from other cluster head 1506 or universally flexible AP's 1501 in the network or the top-level hypervisor 1502. Network configuration, user information, QoS level, etc. are provided by the cloud top-level hypervisor 1502 to the universally flexible AP's 1501. The universally flexible AP 1501 units only report essential information to the cloud top-level hypervisor 1502 (traffic for billing info, traffic profiles, unit status, etc.). Based on those information, the hypervisor instantiation in each universally flexible AP's 1501 in the cluster 1505 finds the complete or partial optimal solution for the assignment of specific radios 205 to specific configurable antennas 207 and configuring the configurable antennas 207 so assigned in the universally flexible AP's 1501 where the hypervisor instantiation is implemented, or a in multiplicity of universally flexible AP's 1501 the cluster 1505, or both, or in no universally flexible AP's 1501 the cluster 1505. The universally flexible AP's 1501 in the cluster 1505 then exchanges messages over the virtual links 1503 to optimally configure the radio bank 203, interface matrix 206 and antenna bank 203 of all universally flexible AP's 1501 in the cluster 1505. Some or all universally flexible AP's 1501 in the cluster 1505 can also communicate this configuration or a subset of it to other cluster heads 1506 or other universally flexible AP's 1501 or the top-level hypervisor 1502 through the backbone network.
A third embodiment is a hybrid of the two previous embodiments where there is a designated cluster head 1506 in the cluster 1505. The cluster head 1506 will implement a larger subset of the hypervisor functions, such as communication with other cluster head 1506 other universally flexible AP's 1501 in the network, or deciding the radios that will be enabled in all universally flexible AP's 1501 in the cluster 1505.
In some implementations, process 1600 can begin by assigning, by one or more processors of a wireless access device, a multiplicity of independently configurable radios of the wireless access device to a multiplicity of independently configurable antennas of the wireless access device (1602), as described in reference to
Claims
1-3. (canceled)
4. The wireless system of claim 27, wherein the wireless access device further comprises:
- a communication interface coupled to one or more of the radios and configured to receive and transmit information from a network for dedicating and rededicating assignment of specific radios to specific antennas and configuring the assigned antennas.
5. The wireless system of claim 29, where one or more radios interface directly with the communication interface.
6. The wireless system of claim 28, where more than one radio can interface with a single processor.
7. The wireless system of claim 27, where multiple radios are assigned to one spatial sector and configured to provide services to the one spatial sector.
8. The wireless system of claim 27, where the interface matrix is configured to enable interconnections from all, part or a single radio frequency (RF) port of the radios in the radio bank to all, part or a single configurable antenna in the antenna bank.
9. The wireless system of claim 27, where one or more antennas in the antenna bank include planar antennas for which a radiation pattern or polarization is dynamically configured to radiate into one or more spatial sectors.
10. The wireless system of claim 27, where the antenna bank includes a beam forming antenna array.
11. The wireless system of claim 27, where one or more antennas are traveling wave antennas.
12. The wireless system of claim 27, where one or more antennas are planar antennas.
13-15. (canceled)
16. The wireless system of claim 27, where the antenna bank comprises one or more antenna arrays where each array includes a multiplicity of configurable antennas.
17. The wireless system of claim 27 wherein the wireless access device comprises configurable antennas operating at different frequencies.
18. The wireless system of claim 27 wherein the wireless access device comprises a multiplicity of radios implementing more than one wireless technology.
19. The wireless system of claim 16, where the configurable antennas in an array are planar antennas and are fabricated on a common printed circuit board.
20. The wireless system of claim 28, where the processor bank, radio bank and interface matrix are enclosed in a physical unit and the antenna bank is external to the physical unit.
21. The wireless system of claim 27, where more than one radio and more than one antenna are configured to provide different services to one or more spatial sectors.
22. The wireless system of claim 27, where the radio bank and antenna bank are configured based on a function of traffic demand and radio frequency (RF) interference.
23-26. (canceled)
27. A wireless system with configurable radio and antenna resources, comprising:
- a remote server computer;
- a network coupled to the remote server computer;
- a plurality of wireless access devices coupled to the network, each wireless access device including: a radio bank including a plurality of independently configurable radios; an interface matrix coupled to the radio bank, the interface matrix configurable to interconnect the plurality of radios to a plurality of independently configurable antennas; and an antenna bank coupled to the interface matrix, the antenna bank including the plurality of independently configurable antennas,
- wherein a hypervisor is implemented in part on the remote server computer and in part on at least one of the plurality of wireless access devices.
28. The system of claim 27, wherein the wireless access device further comprises:
- a processor bank including one or more processors, the one or more processors for configuring one or more of the radios, interface matrix and antennas.
29. The system of claim 28, wherein the wireless access device further comprises:
- a communication interface coupled to the processor bank and configured to receive and transmit information from a network for dedicating and rededicating assignment of specific radios to specific antennas and configuring the assigned antennas.
30-47. (canceled)
Type: Application
Filed: Nov 9, 2018
Publication Date: Jun 6, 2019
Inventor: Arbinder Singh Pabla (Fremont, CA)
Application Number: 16/185,785