All trademarks are trademarks of their respective owners. Rather than put a trademark symbol after every occurrence of a trade- marked name, we use names in an editorial fashion only, and to the benefit of the trademark owner, with no intention of infringe- ment of the trademark. Where such designations appear in this book, they have been printed with initial caps.
McGraw-Hill eBooks are available at special quantity discounts to use as premiums and sales promotions, or for use in corporate training programs. For more information, please contact George Hoare, Special Sales, at [email protected] or (212) 904-4069.
TERMS OF USE
This is a copyrighted work and The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. (“McGraw-Hill”) and its licensors reserve all rights in and to the work. Use of this work is subject to these terms. Except as permitted under the Copyright Act of 1976 and the right to store and retrieve one copy of the work, you may not decompile, disassemble, reverse engineer, reproduce, modify, create derivative works based upon, transmit, distribute, disseminate, sell, publish or sublicense the work or any part of it without McGraw-Hill’s prior con- sent. You may use the work for your own noncommercial and personal use; any other use of the work is strictly prohibited. Your right to use the work may be terminated if you fail to comply with these terms.
THE WORK IS PROVIDED “AS IS”. McGRAW-HILL AND ITS LICENSORS MAKE NO GUARANTEES OR WARRANTIES AS TO THE ACCURACY, ADEQUACY OR COMPLETENESS OF OR RESULTS TO BE OBTAINED FROM USING THE WORK, INCLUDING ANY INFORMATION THAT CAN BE ACCESSED THROUGH THE WORK VIA HYPERLINK OR OTHERWISE, AND EXPRESSLY DISCLAIM ANY WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. McGraw-Hill and its licensors do not warrant or guarantee that the functions contained in the work will meet your requirements or that its operation will be uninterrupted or error free. Neither McGraw-Hill nor its licensors shall be liable to you or anyone else for any inaccuracy, error or omission, regardless of cause, in the work or for any damages resulting therefrom. McGraw-Hill has no responsibility for the con- tent of any information accessed through the work. Under no circumstances shall McGraw-Hill and/or its licensors be liable for any indirect, incidental, special, punitive, consequential or similar damages that result from the use of or inability to use the work, even if any of them has been advised of the possibility of such damages. This limitation of liability shall apply to any claim or cause what- soever whether such claim or cause arises in contract, tort or otherwise.
The material in this eBook also appears in the print version of this title: 0-07-134648-1.
DOI: 10.1036/0071346481.21
Contents
Chapter 21 Global Services Mobile Communications (GSM) 351
Introduction 352
GSM Concept and Services 353
The GSM Architecture 354
The Air and Link Interfaces 356
The Modulation Techniques Used 357
Traffic Channel Capacities 357
Control Functions 358
The Data Burst 359
Speech Coding Formats 359
The Network Structured Protocols and Interfaces 359
Final Thoughts on GSM 361
Copyright 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies. Click Here for Terms of Use.
Global Services Mobile
Communications (GSM)
CHAPTER
21 21
Copyright 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies. Click Here for Terms of Use.
Introduction
In the early 1980s, analog cellular telephony systems were rapidly growing in the European marketplace, particularly in the UK, France, Germany, and Scandinavia. In each country, the providers had developed their own internal operating systems to support this new mobile communications rev- olution. Unfortunately, these locally developed country systems were incom- patible from system to system, country by country. Obviously, this was the least desirable of all situations for the introduction of a new system, leav- ing operators and users equally dissatisfied. Something had to be done to create a unified approach to the wireless networking and communications systems to bring them into harmony.
In 1982, the Conference of European Post and Telegraph (CEPT) created a study group to analyze what could be done. This study group was named Groupe Spècial Mobile (GSM), whose charter it was to develop a system that would work across the European market. The systems they proposed had to be capable of meeting certain criteria such as the following:
■ Good quality speech
■ Low cost for the equipment
■ Efficient in the use of RF
■ Capable of supporting the newer handheld telephones
■ Transparent roaming capabilities
■ ISDN compatible
The committees did their job well and quickly endorsed the standards and specifications to create a special mobile communications system capable of working across the international boundaries that had heretofore been blocked. These specifications were handed over to the European Telecommu- nications Standards Institute (ETSI) in late 1989. By 1990, GSM specifica- tions were published. This turnover happened relatively quickly, considering the fact that political and economic in-fighting typifies standards setting in this industry. However, the setting of specifications led to the rollout of many GSM systems, so in 1993, 36 networks were operational in 22 countries, sig- nifying the rapid acceptance and development of a single, standards-based network. Now over 300 operators in 133 countries have already endorsed and accepted the GSM specification for their local and national wireless net- working standard.
In the graph shown in Figure 21-1, estimates highlight the growth of the
GSM industry around the globe. Recently, in North America, several carri-
ers have introduced the use of GSM in their networks, showing a unified
approach to the worldwide standardization. In some cases, the GSM instal- lations in North America use a derivative of GSM called PCS 1900.
GSM amounts to approximately 38% of the world’s wireless implemen- tations spanning the 900, 1800 and 1900 MHz bands. In North America (the United States, and Canada) there are approximately two million users spanning 17 operators in over 1,550 cities across the continent.
GSM Concept and Services
Planning a GSM specification was not a simple task for the developers. They initially wanted to overcome all the pitfalls of the older telecommunications technologies and networks. One of the areas the developers sought to address was the use of a 64 Kbps channel capacity for ISDN integration.
However, when using a wireless communications system, the in-band sig- naling and the robbing of bits were not conducive to delivering a full 64 Kbps channel. The basic architecture of GSM is to support one primary service, that being telephony from a mobile perspective. No matter what architec- tural model is used, speech-encoding techniques are used to transmit the voice as a string of digital ones and zeros. GSM accommodates an emer- gency response system similar to the North American 911 services, whereby the local emergency response agency is notified via a three-digit number.
Other services are automatically included in the operation of a GSM service and network, such as:
■ Circuit switched data
■ Packet switched data
160,000,000 140,000,000 120,000,000 100,000,000 80,000,000 60,000,000 40,000,000 20,000,000 0
1993 1995 1997 1999 2000
Figure 21-1
Subscribers on GSM
worldwide
■ Voice
■ Short Message Services (SMS)
■ ISDN
■ Facsimile using an ITU Group 3-fax service
The GSM Architecture
The network is comprised of several components, not unlike the analog cel- lular networks of old. The functionality of each of the components describes the overall complexity and the degree of robustness built into the network.
The pieces are shown in Figure 21-2, depicting the layout of the service elements and their interrelationship with each other. The figure shows the component, whereas the actual function that each piece performs is described below. Three major components come into play with the GSM net- work. These three components are the following: mobile unit, mobile base station, and mobile switching system.
■ The Mobile Unit: The mobile unit, or mobile station, consists of the mobile telephone unit and typically a smart card called the subscriber interface module or Subscriber Identity Module (SIM). The SIM
provides mobility for the individual so that a user can roam seamlessly and have all the services contracted for, regardless of the end user terminal device. By inserting the SIM into the set, the set takes on the personality of the end user. The user is then able to make and receive calls and receive the features allowed by contract, even if the set is a temporary one.
The mobile unit has a specific identifier called the International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI). The SIM contains the International Mobile
C.O.
Base PSTN Station Controller
AU
EIR HLR
VLR
Mobile Switching Center
Mobile Switching System Base Station Subsystem
The Mobile Unit 1
2 3
Base Station
Figure 21-2
Architecture of the
GSM Network
Subscriber Identity (IMSI) used to identify the individual subscriber to the mobile system. Further, the IMSI contains authentication
information in the form of an encrypted key. Any other pertinent information required by the systems operator is also contained in the IMSI. Because the two sets of identifiers are unique yet independent, mobility is assured for the individual.
■ The Base Station Subsystem: The base station subsystem consists of two additional parts. The first part is the Base Transceiver Station (BTS). The second part is the Base Station Controller (BSC). These devices communicate between the components of the system or to disparate manufacturer’s equipment through a standards-based interface (the Abis interface). The BTS is where the radio systems are located for the air interfaces to the subscriber mobile unit. Radio link protocols for GSM are used between the BTS and the mobile unit. The typical GSM air interface uses Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) radio protocols.
The BSC manages the radio resources for at least one, but possibly many, base transceiver units. The BSC is also the interface between the mobile unit and the Mobile Switching Center (MSC). The combination of the BTS and the BSC are defined as the Base Station Subsystem.
■ The Network Subsystem: At the core of the Network Subsystem is the MSC. It acts like the class 5 Central Office of the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN). Moreover, the MSC provides all the necessary switching and call processing functions for the mobile unit, as well as additional functions like authentication, mobile handoff, registration onto the network, and a group of database functions. The MSC also provides the interface to the backbone signaling networks for call setup and teardown through the CCS7 (SS7) networks.
Residing at the MSC is the Home Location Register (HLR), which is a database of the registered users to a specific network system. The HLR is the owner of the SIM for each subscriber of a specific network operator. When a user moves from one system to another, the Visitor Location Register (VLR) is enacted. The VLR is a temporary database of visiting devices in a system’s area of operation. The VLR will notify the individual owner’s HLR that the device is temporarily in a new location and that all requests for service can be handled by the VLR.
Logically, there is only one Home Location register per GSM network,
although it can be distributed across many locations. The VLR also
contains selected information from the HLR, to provide all the
necessary call control information for the subscriber.
It should therefore be noted that the MSC does not play into the information on specific devices because the information resides in the databases (registers) rather than in the switching system. Additional registers are used for enhanced control, such as the Authentication Center register (AuC) and the Equipment Inventory Register (EIR). The authentication center is an authentication server used to verify the user’s specific information, such as password and authentication keys.
The special keys and passwords are used in an over-the-air interface, so the authentication server validates the information and protects the information. The EIR is a database of the vendor specific information for all the radio sets used on the network, by manufacturer, and by IMEI. If the set is stolen or suspected of fraud, its IMEI is flagged as invalid in the database, denying a user with a clone or stolen set from using the network.
The Air and Link Interfaces
Internationally, the ITU allocated radio frequency spectrum in the 890—915 MHz band for the uplink and 935—960 MHz for the downlink in Europe.
Figure 21-3 shows the frequency used in the specific up-and-down link structures. The uplink is from the mobile unit to the base station, whereas the downlink is from the base station to the mobile unit as shown in this figure. Because these same frequencies were already in use by the initial
890 - 915 MHz uplink
Mobile to Base Station
935 - 960 MHz downlink Base Station to Mobile
Figure 21-3
The up-and-down
link spectrum
allocated
analog networks, the CEPT reserved the top 10MHz of each band for the GSM network, which was still being developed at the time. Over time the analog networks will decline, and the full 25 MHz in each band will be allot- ted to the GSM networks.
The Modulation Techniques Used
GSM, as stated earlier, uses TDMA in the air interface. In reality, GSM uses a combination of TDMA and Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA).
Where a 25 MHz band is allotted for GSM, FDMA is used to break the 25 MHz spectrum down into a total of 124 carrier frequencies spaced at 200 kHz apart. One or more of these carrier frequencies is assigned to each of the base stations. From there, each of the carrier frequencies is subdivided in time division, using TDMA. The basic element of the TDMA is a burst of data during a burst period of 0.577 ms. There are 8 burst periods grouped into a frame. The TDMA frame is approximately 4.615 ms. This framing forms the basis of a logical channel. One physical channel is one burst period in a TDMA frame. The number and position of its corresponding burst period defines the channels. All definitions operate on a cycle of pat- terns that repeat every three hours.
Traffic Channel Capacities
A Traffic Channel (TCH) carries speech or data traffic. Traffic channels are defined by using groups of 26 TDMA frames called multiframes. A multi- frame is 120 ms long (120 ms/26 frames/8 burst periods per frame). The multiframe is broken down into the following pieces:
■ 24 frames carry traffic
■ 1 frame carries a Slow Associated Control Channel (SACCH)
■ 1 frame is unused
The frame breakdown is shown in Figure 21-4. The traffic channels are separated between the up-and-down link by 3 burst periods, so the mobile does not have to send and receive simultaneously.
GSM also has provisions for half-rate channels, although their imple-
mentation is not fully common. Half rate TCHs will ultimately double the
capacity of a system. To do this, half rate speech coders will be used (using
7 kbps of speech instead of the normal 13 kbps).
Control Functions
Many of the aspects of the GSM use common control channels for either idle mode or dedicated mobile channels. These common channels are used by idle sets to exchange signaling information between the base and the mobile in order to change from an idle to a dedicated mode. A dedicated channel is allocated to a specific mobile while engaged in conversation, whereas an idle mode is used when the mobile is not engaged in talk.
Mobiles that are in a dedicated mode monitor all the surrounding bases sta- tions for handoff and other control information. To separate the common and dedicated channels, the common channels are defined in a 51-frame multiframe. This way a dedicated mobile can use the 26-frame multiframe for speech and traffic, yet can still listen to the monitor channels. Several different common channels are defined:
1. Broadcast Control Channel-A constant broadcast of information regarding frequencies, frequency hopping patterns, and other downlink information
2. Frequency Control and Synchronization Channel-Time
synchronization patterns used to align the time slots for the cells.
The cells use one of each of these channels allotted to channel slot number 0 in a TDMA frame.
3. Random Access Channel-A slotted aloha channel used by the mobile unit to request access to the network.
4. Paging Channel-The paging channel is used to signal a mobile unit of an incoming call request.
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
3 57 1 26 1 57 3 8.25
25
7
SACCH Not used
26 Frame (Multi-frame)= 120
Burst Period TDMA Frame= 4.615 ms
Burst Period= .577 ms
Trailer Bits Data Bits Robbed Bit
Training Sequence
Data Bits
Robbed Bit Trailer Bits Guard Bits
Figure 21-4
TDMA frames and
multiframe allocation
5. Access Grant Channel-This channel is used to allocate a stand-alone dedicated control channel to a mobile for signaling, usually following a request to access the network.
The Data Burst
The format of a TDMA frame is shown in Figure 21-4. Also shown in this figure is the organization of the data bursts. The normal burst carries data and signaling information. This burst lasts for 156.25 bit times, consisting of two separate 57-bit data patterns, a 26-bit training sequence for equal- ization, a robbed bit for forward synchronization in each block of data, 3 trailer bits at each end and 8.25 bit times guard band. The 156.25 bits are transmitted in the allotted 0.577 ms yielding a data rate of 270.833 Kbps.
Speech Coding Formats
When the speech is to be coded onto GSM, it is a digital transmission sys- tem. Therefore, the analog voice is converted to digital before transmission.
The normal telephony architectures use standard PCM techniques to digi- tally encode a voice signal at a data rate of 64 Kbps. However, 64 Kbps is too difficult to accomplish across the radio signals. A speech compression and coding technique using a form of linear predictive coding (LPC) produces a 13 Kbps speech pattern. The speech is actually divided into 20 ms samples, encoded as 260 bits each, yielding the 13 Kbps speech.
The Network Structured Protocols and Interfaces
When using GSM, there is a layered protocol approach for the several inter- faces and the protocols necessary to provide transparency across the medium.
Figure 21-5 portrays the protocol stack at the different components of the net- work architecture. In the leftmost portion of the figure is the “protocols stack”
for the mobile station. The TDMA protocol resides at the physical layer
interface (the air interface). Link Access Protocol Data for mobile (LAP-Dm)
protocol, which is a derivative of the ISDN LAP-D data link layer, works at layer 2. The GSM layer (layer 3) is subdivided into three separate sublayers;
the radio resources management sublayer, the mobility management sub- layer, and the communications management sublayer.
As the information is passed between the mobile unit and the base trans- ceiver station, the layers are similar but only used from the TDMA layer up to the radio resource management sublayer. The upper sublayers of layer three are not used at the user to mobile interface. This is shown in the next part of the drawing in stack number two from the left.
Between the base transceiver systems and the Base Station Controller, the Abis interface is used. Here at the protocol stack, the layer 1 protocol is the Mobile/Message Transfer Part (MTP), which acts at the bottom three layers of the typical OSI interfaces. The Signal Connection Control Part (SCCP) and the Base Station System Mobile Application Part (BSSMAP) combine to form the equivalent of an SS7 protocol stack. This is shown in the third stack from the left.
The BSSMAP is the equivalent of a TCAP as shown in Figure 21-6, which is merely a comparison of the SS7 protocol stack.
What is left is the stack on the right-hand side of Figure 21-5 (above), showing the Mobile Switching Center protocols as the signal is passed to the MSC. In this case, the Mobility Management and the Communication Management parts are shown on the upper layers of the stack.
These additional pieces include such added features and functionality in the protocol stack to support the following;
TDMA LAPDm Radio Resource
Mobility Management Communication
Management
Message Transfer Part SCCP BSSMAP Mobility Management
Communication Management
TDMA LAPDm RR
Message Transfer Part SCCP BSSMAP
GSM Layer 3
Layer 2
Layer 1
Um Abis A
Mobile BTS BSC MSC
Figure 21-5
The protocol stack for
GSM interfaces
■ Radio Resource Management-Deals with link establishment and maintenance, the handoff between different base stations and the coordination of the necessary spectrum used in a particular base station operation. This is also used in setting up the necessary channel assignment when a call is incoming or a page is initiated across the wireless interface.
■ Mobility Management-Deals with the constant location updates between the HLR and VLR function. Also included in the mobility management are the authentication, equipment inventory, and security capabilities.
■ Communications Management-Deals with the control of call setup, routing, and teardown functions. The call control function attempts to use a point of Q.931 for routing and delivery of calls. GSM protocols are similar but unique from the standard wired telephony network.
This is the equivalent of the ISUP from an SS7 standpoint.
Final Thoughts on GSM
What GSM brings to the table is a standardized platform for communica- tions within the mobile environment. In North America, several different
MTP-1 MTP-2 MTP-3 SCCP
MAP
SS7
MTP-1 MTP-2 MTP-3 SCCP TCAP
GSM-MSC
MTP 1-3 SCCP
CM
RR BSSMAP
Figure 21-6
Comparing the TCAP
and the GSM BSSMAP
approaches were used to implement mobile and personal communications services. The rest of the world has lock-stepped into a global means of pro- viding the transparency and seamless roaming capability needed to provide true communications spirit. While in Europe, a user can rent a telephone set (or buy one) and install the smart card into it. Immediately, the set takes on the identity of the individual installing the smart card. From billing information, features, and subscribed services, to credit validation and authentication, the mobile telephone is now the individual. This, in fact, is true portability, because the smart card can also carry with it the telephone number of the person it is associated with. From country to country, roam- ing occurs on a daily basis overseas. Yet in North America, the seamless roaming only occurs within specific carriers and networks where reciprocal agreements are in place. This means that there are still different standards being used in both parts of the world.
Most of the international countries have adopted GSM as the global plat- form. The North American community has many standards in place; most are not compatible with each other. This is the sad truth on a recurring basis. If a user chooses to change suppliers, then the technology in the handset may have to be changed, which is not the case in the international market.
The ITU is now working on a “third generation mobile” standard. Unfor- tunately, this has been somewhat of a figment of our imagination because the standards are different in countries around the world. The North Amer- ican market accounts for over 60 million wireless users, who are all moving toward a broadband communications network and the personal communi- cations services that follow. This is a fairly significant portion of the global installations (57%) for wireless communications
1. One cannot ignore the multiple standards such as:
■ GSM-TDMA
■ North American-TDMA (IS 54)
■ CDMA (IS 95)
■ TDMA (IS 136)
■ AMPS
■ DECT
Many other standards have been rolled out or implemented on a sporadic basis. The one standard that has truly been implemented around the world
1