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Beyond Third Generation Cellular: Convergence of Internet and Cellular Infrastructure Technologies MSC BSC VLR HLR AUC EIR GSM Core (IP-Based) GW Proxy Server Next Generation Internet HA FA BS GW Corporate Intranetwork Randy H. Katz and Reiner Ludwig1 Computer Science Division, EECS Department University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-1776 on assignment from Ericsson Radio Systems ERA/T/N 1 The Two Hottest Trends in Telecommunications Networks 700 600 Millions Mobile Telephone Users 500 400 Internet Users 300 200 100 0 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Year Source: Ericsson Radio Systems, Inc. Background • 1st generation: analog cellular • 2nd generation: digital cellular • 3rd generation: multiple, heterogeneous access technologies (WLAN, cellular, satellite) – GSM cellular evolution: data support, higher bandwidth » HSCSD, GPRS, W-CDMA (Ericsson and Nokia) – Core cellular network: evolving towards a combined circuit and packet switching infrastructure • 4th generation: – Eliminate circuit switching through “next generation Internet” integration: voice (and video) over data – New services: voice-data integration w/ multipoint capabilities, intelligent location-aware & “follow me” mobility, push-based information dissemination, ... 3rd Generation Access Technologies Wired Mbps 100 10 1 Wireless Local Area Networks 60 GHz 100 m range “Mobile Broadband Systems” Cordless “Universal Mobile Telecomms Systems” (UMTS) 0.1 Cellular 0.01 Office or Room Building Indoors Stationary Walking Outdoors Vehicle Trends • Multimedia over IP networks – Next Generation Internet with features for “soft” QoS – RSVP, Class-based Queuing, Link Scheduling • Voice over IP networks – Packet Voice and Video – RTP and ALF • Intelligence shifts to the network edges – Better, more agile software-based voice and video codecs • Programmable intelligence inside the network – Proxy servers intermixed with switching infrastructure – TACC model & Java code: “write once, run anywhere” Implications for cellular network infrastructure of the 21st century? Issues • Scalability – Must scale to support hundreds of thousands of simultaneous users in a region the size of the SF Bay Area • Functionality – Computer-phone integration – Real-time, multipoint/multicast, location-aware services, security – Home networking, “active” spaces, sensors/actuators • First Principles-based Design – Leverage evolving IP traffic models – Provisioning the network for the extrapolated traffic and services – ProActive Infrastructure » Computing resources spread among switching infrastructure » Computationally intensive services: e.g., voice-to-text » Service and server discovery Current Vision of 3rd Generation Cellular PSTN ISDN Circuit-Sw itched 64 kbit/s trunks Internet Direct IP-Access for CS Data CS-based "core-GSM network" SS7-based Signalling GSM BSS Circuit-Sw itched Voice Circuit-Sw itched Data (HSCSD) GPRS IP-Backbone UMTS BSS Packet-Sw itched Data (GPRS) 3rd Generation Radio Circuit-Switching (CS) Paket-Switching / IP-Routing Vision for Beyond 3rd Generation Cellular PSTN ISDN CS / IP Gatew ay Internet High Bandw idth Trunks IP-based "core-GSM network" IP-Sw itching Backbone Mobile-IP & RSVPbased Signalling Voice & Data ov er IP ov er GPRS GSM BSS QoS Support in GPRS IP-Multicast Proxies (Security, Transcoding) UMTS BSS 3rd Generation Radio Project Vision • How far can we go with a packetswitched cellular core network? • How do you provision an IP network for large numbers of voice users? • What new kinds of data-oriented services can be deployed? ProActive Infrastructure Source Sink Server Router Compute Node • Computing resources inside the routing topology, not just at the leaves • Paths chosen for location of operators as much as for shortest # of hops • Mobile code that specializes the services provided by servers • Focus on mobility, management of bottleneck links, “integration” services Project Areas • Mobility Management • Packet Scheduling in GPRS and W-CDMA • Proxy- and Multicast-Enabled Services Mobility Management • Mobile IP-GSM Mobility Interworking – Mobile IP-GSM authentication interworking – Scalability of Mobile IP/hierarchical agents • Multicast support for mobility – Alternative approach for mobility based on M/C addresses – Exploit multicast routing to reach mobile nodes without explicit handoff – Combine with real-time delivery of voice and video • Generalized redirection agents – Policy-based redirection: e.g., 1-800 service, email to pagers, etc. – Redirection agents collocated with multicast tree branching points Packet Scheduling • Validated ns modeling suite for GSM media access, link layer, routing, and transport layers – GSM channel error models • QoS-aware High Speed Circuit Switched Data (HSCSD), General Packet Radio System (GPRS), and Wideband CDMA (W-CDMA) link scheduling – – – – RSVP signaling integration with bottleneck link scheduling Fairness and utilization for TCP and RTP flows Delay bound scheduling for R/T streams Exploiting asymmetries in downstream/upstream slot assignment, CDMA self-interference New Services • Proxies for Telephony-Computing Integration – GSM-vat-RTP interworking: handset-computer integration – Encapsulating complex data transformations » Speech-to-text, text-to-speech – Composition of services » Voice mail-to-email, email-to-voice mail – Location-aware information services » E.g., traffic reports – Multicast-enabled information services » Multilayered multicast: increasing level of detail as number of subscribed layers increase Project Strategy GSM Infrastructure Elements -- Data over PBMS GSM Network -- GSM Base Station -- Integration with IP-infrastructure Analyze Existing Systems Prototype Elements Design -- Handset/computer integration -- Java-enabled components -- ProActive infrastructure Next Generation ns Simulations -- Ericsson channel error models -- GSM-based infrastructure -- GSM media access & link layer Implement New System Project Schedule • Year 1: 1998 – ns modeling, validation – GSM BTS-IP integration – Initial design of mobility interworking and intelligent networking services • Year 2: 1999 – GSM-Wireless LAN integration – Design of information-push applications – Implement mobility interworking • Year 3: 2000 – Extend testbed with W-CDMA and GPRS – Roaming, scheduling, new applications demonstrations – Fine-tuning and documentation