US20080181257A1 - Synchronisation in communication systems - Google Patents

Synchronisation in communication systems Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20080181257A1
US20080181257A1 US11/987,760 US98776007A US2008181257A1 US 20080181257 A1 US20080181257 A1 US 20080181257A1 US 98776007 A US98776007 A US 98776007A US 2008181257 A1 US2008181257 A1 US 2008181257A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
bus
frame
synchronisation
node
idle
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US11/987,760
Inventor
Tim Addy
Markku Vainikka
Timo Viero
William Brockington
Markku Vahataini
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Nokia Solutions and Networks Oy
Original Assignee
Nokia Oyj
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Nokia Oyj filed Critical Nokia Oyj
Priority to US11/987,760 priority Critical patent/US20080181257A1/en
Assigned to NOKIA SIEMENS NETWORKS OY reassignment NOKIA SIEMENS NETWORKS OY ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: NOKIA CORPORATION
Publication of US20080181257A1 publication Critical patent/US20080181257A1/en
Assigned to NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS OY reassignment NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS OY CHANGE OF NAME (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: NOKIA SIEMENS NETWORKS OY
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L12/00Data switching networks
    • H04L12/28Data switching networks characterised by path configuration, e.g. LAN [Local Area Networks] or WAN [Wide Area Networks]
    • H04L12/46Interconnection of networks
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J3/00Time-division multiplex systems
    • H04J3/02Details
    • H04J3/06Synchronising arrangements
    • H04J3/0635Clock or time synchronisation in a network
    • H04J3/0685Clock or time synchronisation in a node; Intranode synchronisation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J3/00Time-division multiplex systems
    • H04J3/02Details
    • H04J3/06Synchronising arrangements
    • H04J3/07Synchronising arrangements using pulse stuffing for systems with different or fluctuating information rates or bit rates

Definitions

  • the present invention is concerned with synchronisation of baseband communications in a wireless communications network.
  • a bus protocol is used to communicate between different nodes.
  • the present invention is concerned particularly but not exclusively with communication between baseband (BB) and radio frequency (RF) nodes in the base transceiver station.
  • Nodes are implemented in a plurality of different ways, and in the following description it is understood that the term “node” implies any appropriate hardware unit, for example an ASIC, processor or FPGA, etc.
  • the bus protocol used between the different nodes of the base transceiver station is used to transfer digitised transmitter (TX) and receiver (RX) samples as well as other information.
  • the present invention addresses the problem of synchronising a bus, in particular a high speed bus operating a bus protocol used for communication between different nodes in a base transceiver station.
  • It is a further aim of the present invention is to provide a frame format used in conjunction with synchronisation methods for synchronising communications on a multi-mode communications bus, which does not require complex circuitry.
  • the invention relates to bus synchronisation using idle codes, with the possibility of detecting 8bl10b decoding status.
  • initial synchronisation and synchronisation at run time is discussed.
  • the position in a frame and value of the idle code is utilised.
  • a method of transmitting data at a line rate from a wireless interface to a bus operating at a bus rate comprising transmitting the data in a packet format consisting of a plurality of frames each having a plurality of time slots, each time slot having successive message groups, wherein each message group comprises a plurality of data messages containing said data and an idle code containing no said data; wherein the number of idle codes in each frame is selected so that the bus rate matches the line rate.
  • a method of transmitting data at a line rate from a wireless interface to a bus operating at a bus rate comprising transmitting the data in a packet format consisting of a plurality of frames each having a plurality of time slots, each time slot having successive message groups, wherein each message group comprises a plurality of data messages containing said data and an idle code containing no said data; wherein the number of idle codes in each frame is selected so that the bus rate matches the line rate.
  • a communication bus operable at a bus rate and having at least a first node and a second node that are linked by communication channels for transmitting at said bus rate data generated at a line rate, said first node having a transmitting element and said second node having a receiving element, wherein the transmitting element of said first node is operable to transmit data in a packet format consisting of a plurality of frames each having a plurality of time slots, each time slot having successive message groups, wherein each message group comprises a plurality of data messages containing said data and an idle code containing no said data; wherein said number of idle codes in each frame is selected so that the bus rate matches the line rate and wherein the receiving element of the second node is arranged to detect said idle codes for synchronisation purposes.
  • a method of synchronising a data communication over a bus in a packet format said data having been generated at a line rate over a wireless interface consisting of a plurality of frames each having a plurality of time slots, each time slot having successive message groups, wherein each message group comprises a predetermined number of data messages containing said data and an idle code containing no said data, the method comprising detecting at a bus node said idle codes until a predetermined number of said idle codes have been detected indicating successful synchronisation.
  • a method of synchronising data communication via a bus connecting first and second nodes comprising: transmitting from the first node a plurality of bytes, each byte representing a 10 bit sequence as an 8 bit code; receiving and decoding said bytes at the second node, whereby any 8b10b encoding errors in a byte are detected; and indicating a synchronised status for the bus based on the detection of received bytes which do not contain 8b10b decoding errors.
  • a method of synchronising data communication via a bus connecting first and second nodes comprising: transmitting from the first node a plurality of bytes, each byte representing a 10 bit sequence as an 8 bit code; receiving and decoding said bytes at the second node, whereby any 8b10b encoding errors in a byte are detected; and indicating an unsynchronised status for the bus based on the detection of received bytes containing 8b10b decoding errors.
  • FIG. 1 shows the basic structure of a wireless communications network
  • FIG. 2 shows the context of the present invention for use at baseband frequencies
  • FIG. 3 shows an embodiment of the architecture of the physical baseband bus of the present invention
  • FIG. 4 shows the baseband bus protocol stack according to an embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 5 shows a frame format according to an embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 6 shows an embodiment of the message structure of the present invention
  • FIG. 7 shows two communicating nodes of the baseband bus
  • FIG. 8 shows a state transition diagram of the logic implemented within the receiving elements of each baseband node
  • FIG. 9 shows a state transition diagram of the logic implemented within the transmitting elements of each baseband node.
  • FIGS. 10 a and 10 b show the bit patterns for the idle codes according to an embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 1 shows the traditional elements of a wireless communications network.
  • a Mobile Switching Center (MSC) 2 acts as an interface with other networks, for example the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN).
  • PSTN Public Switched Telephone Network
  • the MSC 2 controls a plurality of Base Station Controller's (BSC) 4 , where each BSC 4 in turn controls plurality of Base Transceiver Stations (BTS) 6 .
  • BSC Base Station Controller's
  • BTS Base Transceiver Stations
  • Each BTS 6 has a certain coverage area known as a “cell”, which is used to communicate with mobile stations in their respective coverage areas.
  • FIG. 2 shows the typical components of a transceiver used in wireless networks where radio signals are transmitted and received using antennae 10 . These radio signals are transferred at a carrier frequency determined by a carrier generator 14 . Spectrum allocations are licensed and will vary depending on the country involved and the type of air interface being used, for example WCDMA, GSM, etc.
  • a typical transceiver for example as would be found at each of the BTS's 6 of FIG. 1 , there is a baseband circuitry 16 concerned with the processing of baseband signals. These baseband signals are then converted into a carrier signal by RF circuitry 12 for transmission by the antennae 10 .
  • the embodiments of the present invention discussed herein are in the context of the baseband circuitry 16 , where a bus protocol connects BB and RF nodes together.
  • FIG. 3 shows the physical architecture of the baseband bus where nodes 20 , 22 , 24 , 26 are chained in a point-to-point manner according to a first embodiment of the present invention.
  • Each of the nodes can be implemented by using an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC).
  • ASIC Application Specific Integrated Circuit
  • the nodes communicate using a first set of communication channels 28 in an Uplink direction and over a second set of communication channels in the opposite or Downlink direction 30 .
  • Each of the nodes are shown as having a plurality of communication channels referred to herein as links, i.e. 1 to k, in either direction.
  • Some of the nodes may have an RF interface.
  • Other nodes are baseband nodes with no RF interface.
  • Packetised data may be sent over the baseband bus.
  • the bus is implemented using a plurality of links. A single link is however possible.
  • the baseband bus consists of point-to-point connections forming a chained bus.
  • the point-to-point connections are achieved using Low Voltage Differential Signalling (LVDS).
  • LVDS Low Voltage Differential Signalling
  • the baseband bus uses a three-layer protocol with fixed length messages. Any information to be sent over the baseband bus is packed into messages of known type.
  • the three layers are shown in FIG. 4 .
  • the physical layer 60 is responsible for the transmission of messages and includes framing, coding and serialisation of the messages.
  • the transport layer 62 is responsible for the end-to-end delivery of the messages or routing of the messages.
  • the application layer 64 provides the mapping of different types of packets to the payload.
  • data at the application layer is continuous, but for transfer over the bus, the continuous data of the application layer is time sliced into short messages that are transferred over the high-speed physical layer. At the receiving node a continuous stream is recovered.
  • FIG. 5 shows a frame 70 of the physical layer with a certain packet format being sent over the bus in both the uplink and downlink directions.
  • the frame has a fixed 10 ms period. Frames are inserted consecutively onto the bus.
  • a frame is split into fifteen timeslots 72 where each timeslot contains a plurality of message groups 74 .
  • Each message group 74 has a fixed predetermined number of data messages 76 , one control message 78 and an IDLE message 80 .
  • FIG. 6 A preferred embodiment of the message structure 76 is shown in FIG. 6 . These messages are transmitted over the physical layer 60 shown in FIG. 4 .
  • the messages are of a fixed length of 19 bytes having a header portion 90 of 3 bytes and a payload portion 92 of 16 bytes.
  • the idle message is in the form of an idle byte.
  • the physical layer 60 transmits an empty message, which can be implemented by transmitting “1” bits for the entire message.
  • the physical layer at the receiving node will detect the existence of an empty message and rejects such messages, thereby making these messages invisible to the upper protocol layers 62 , 64 .
  • the message group 74 comprises one control message 78 inserted after every twenty data messages 76 and an IDLE byte 80 inserted after the control message 78 .
  • the same IDLE byte 80 is used at the end of each message group 74 with the exception that a special IDLE byte 82 Is used in the final timeslot to identify the end of the frame. The significance of the special IDLE byte 82 will be discussed later.
  • the bus speed is chosen to be 768 Mbps.
  • a derivative of the BTS reference system clock is used as a clock for the baseband bus and the physical layer 60 of the bus protocol is synchronised to the BTS system clock.
  • application layers of the bus protocol can operate asynchronously with respect to the timing of the physical layer, which is especially useful for GSM or EDGE application where data is not continuous but instead is transmitted in bursts and is inherently asynchronous.
  • FIG. 3 shows a plurality, i.e. 1 to k links being used to communicate in either direction.
  • FIG. 7 shows the LVDS point-to-point connections in an uplink direction 30 and a downlink direction 28 between a first node 20 and a second node 22 of the bus.
  • Each LVDS point-to-point connection corresponds to each of the 1 to k links shown in the uplink 28 or downlink directions 30 of FIG. 3 .
  • Each node 20 , 22 comprises a transmission element 40 , 48 and a receiving element 44 , 52 .
  • a transmission element 40 transmits information from a first node 20 to a receiving element 44 in a second node 22 using LVDS connections.
  • a transmitting element 48 transmits information from a second node 22 to the receiving element 52 of a first node 20 .
  • a communication channel 41 exists between the transmitter 40 and receiver 52 of the first node 20 . Also, a communication channel 43 exists between receiver 44 and transmitter 48 of the second node 22 . These communication channels may be used by receivers on a node to inform the transmitters if a loss of synchronisation occurs.
  • each of the transmitting 40, 48 and receiving elements 44 , 52 have their own respective state machine logic 42 , 46 , 50 , 54 .
  • FIG. 8 is a state transition diagram showing the state machine logic 46 , 54 of the receiving elements 44 , 52 .
  • FIG. 9 Is a state transition diagram showing the state machine logic 42 , 50 of the transmitting elements 40 , 48 . Tables 1, 2 and 3 given below can be used to interpret these state transition diagrams.
  • Table 1 below provides a definition of the signals used in the state machine for synchronisation.
  • FIG. 10 a and FIG. 10 b show the bit patterns that make up the K28.5 and K28.7 idle bytes respectively, in the 8 bit domain. These bit patterns are known as so-called “comma characters”, which are uniquely chosen to indicate possible errors.
  • codes (and other data bytes) are transmitted as 10 bits using an 8b10b encoding scheme, for example as described in “A DC-Balanced, Partitioned-Block, 8B/10B Transmission Code”, by Widmer and Franaszek, IBM J. Res. Develop. Vol. 27 No. 5, September 1983.
  • the transmitter has means for encoding the 8b bytes into 10b codes and the receiver has means for decoding the codes and for error checking.
  • Table 2 below defines the state transitions and triggers required for these transitions for the state machine logic 46 , 54 of the receiving elements 44 , 52 .
  • Table 3 below defines the state transitions and triggers required for these transitions for the state machine logic 42 , 50 of the transmitting elements 40 , 48 .
  • initial synchronisation allows an initial check on the link quality of the bus
  • frame synchronisation allows continuous monitoring of the link quality when the bus is in run time mode.
  • the synchronisation algorithms can report link status information of the bus to upper layers of the protocol stack.
  • Initial synchronisation is performed when a bus node is booting up.
  • the purpose of the initial synchronisation is to determine the status of each bus interface. That is, checking the status of a node's transmitting and receiving elements. Synchronisation may be unsuccessful due to a missing neighbouring node or a failure of the link.
  • sequence of steps for initial synchronisation is the following:
  • the state of the state machine When in the state SYNCHRONIZED and a value of UNSYNC T consecutive invalid message groups have been received, the state of the state machine then is set to the UNSYNCHRONISED state. Also, the message group counter is set to zero.
  • the state of the state machine When in the state UNSYNCHRONIZED and a value of DISABLE T message groups have been received, the state of the state machine then is set to the DISABLE state.
  • the value of DISABLE T is larger or equal to the value of UNSYNC T.
  • the above synchronization algorithm can be generalized by considering validity of consecutive received bytes instead of message groups. Furthermore, synchronization can be based on any transmitted data and the success or failure of 8b10b decoding; not just transmission and reception of IDLE bytes.
  • the physical layer 60 contains a status register 45 for each transmitting and receiving element of each node of the bus indicating the synchronisation status. For example, DISABLE (000001), UNSYNCHRONISED (000010), SYNCHRONISED (000100). Other state encodings may be used.
  • IDLE bytes are sent in UNSYNCHRONIZED and SYNCHRONIZED states. Note that during initial synchronisation, only IDLE bytes are transmitted to the bus. This is not the case in run-time operation when data is transferred over the bus.
  • parameter SET_RUN-TIME_MODE is set equal to 1
  • frame synchronisation can be performed.
  • messages e.g. data, control or even empty
  • run-time mode receiver synchronization of a transceiver is started immediately.
  • value of parameter SET_RUN-TIME_MODE is changed from 1 to 0, state of the transceiver Is changed to FRAME_DISABLE.
  • each transmitting element 40 , 48 synchronises the frame timing with the baseband bus frame clock Furthermore, the status of the frame synchronisation in each receiving element 44 , 52 is constantly monitored. The end of each frame is identified from the unique IDLE byte K28.7. This unique IDLE byte allows one to calculate the received frame offset as well as monitoring of frame synchronization status.
  • frame synchronisation is applied to all the transmitting and receiving elements of the bus nodes when entering the run time mode and the sequence of steps for frame synchronisation is the following:
  • the value of FRAME DISABLE T is always larger or equal to the value of FRAME UNSYNC T.
  • the status register 45 maintains an indication of the status of the frame where the status FRAME DISABLE, FRAME UNSYNCHRONIZED, and FRAME_SYNCHRONIZED correspond to the states 001000, 010000, and 100000 respectively. Other state encodings may also be used.
  • the transmitting or receiving elements enter the FRAME_DISABLE state, the application layer is informed by an interrupt, which can then restart the synchronization procedure.
  • valid messages are sent in the FRAME SYNCHRONIZED state, whereas empty messages are sent in the FRAME UNSYNCHRONIZED and FRAME DISABLE states.
  • the idle bytes inserted into the frames at the physical layer level are to synchronise the line rate of data transmission to the bus rate set up by the system clock.
  • synchronisation algorithms using these idle bytes to perform different types of synchronisation algorithms.
  • the quality of the communication links between the nodes are tested by transmitting message groups that consist purely of idle codes instead of data messages.
  • the receiving elements then check the received idle codes and if all idle codes (i.e. 400 idle bytes in this embodiment) have been received correctly, then that message group is said to be valid. If SYNC_T consecutive valid message groups are received then initial synchronisation has been achieved,
  • the first algorithm is when the bus is in run time mode but the frames are unsynchronised.
  • each transmitting or receiving element of each node of the bus can independently assume any of the states described herein.
  • FIG. 3 shows a plurality of links, i.e. 1 to k.
  • the present invention is scaleable to adapt to different data rates.
  • the frame structure shown in FIG. 5 is one embodiment of the present invention.
  • the special IDLE code 82 is inserted at the end of a frame 70 .
  • the baseband bus is a multi-mode bus and in conjunction with the layered protocol stack it is intended to support a variety of different air interfaces such as GSM or EDGE.
  • the IDLE bytes 80 it should be appreciated that the position of the IDLE byte within the message group 74 may vary in different implementations.
  • the special IDLE byte 82 might be implemented at other locations in each frame, for example at the start as opposed to the end of the frame 70 : all that is needed is that it is in a predetermined known location.
  • the IDLE codes are 1 byte in length in the described embodiment, however for a different embodiment these IDLE codes could be scaled in length so as to match a different frame format.
  • nodes of the communications bus are not necessarily limited to ASIC's and can also be implemented using other logical devices, for example a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) devices.
  • FPGA Field Programmable Gate Array

Abstract

A method and a communication bus are provided having nodes. Each of the nodes includes a transmitting element to transmit data to another node on the bus, and a receiving element to receive information from another node on the bus. A communication channel is between the transmitting and receiving elements within each node, a transmitter state machine logic controls the synchronisation of the transmitting element, and a receiving state machine logic to control the synchronisation of the receiving element. A storage area maintains the status of synchronisation of the bus. Communication data is synchronised via a bus connecting first and second nodes. A plurality of encoded bytes, each encoded byte represented as a 10 bit code, is transmitted from the first node. The second node receives and decodes the bytes, where any decoding errors in a byte are detected. A synchronised status is indicated.

Description

    REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • This application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/378,653 filed on Mar. 5, 2003, which claims priority to British Patent Application Serial No. 0205142.3 filed Mar. 5, 2002 in Great Britain. The subject matter of the earlier filed applications is hereby incorporated by reference.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention
  • The present invention is concerned with synchronisation of baseband communications in a wireless communications network.
  • 2. Description of the Related Art
  • Within a base transceiver station of a wireless communications network, a bus protocol is used to communicate between different nodes. The present invention is concerned particularly but not exclusively with communication between baseband (BB) and radio frequency (RF) nodes in the base transceiver station. Nodes are implemented in a plurality of different ways, and in the following description it is understood that the term “node” implies any appropriate hardware unit, for example an ASIC, processor or FPGA, etc.
  • The bus protocol used between the different nodes of the base transceiver station is used to transfer digitised transmitter (TX) and receiver (RX) samples as well as other information.
  • The present invention addresses the problem of synchronising a bus, in particular a high speed bus operating a bus protocol used for communication between different nodes in a base transceiver station.
  • It is a further aim of the present invention is to provide a frame format used in conjunction with synchronisation methods for synchronising communications on a multi-mode communications bus, which does not require complex circuitry.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • In general terms, the invention relates to bus synchronisation using idle codes, with the possibility of detecting 8bl10b decoding status. In the described embodiment initial synchronisation and synchronisation at run time is discussed. The position in a frame and value of the idle code is utilised.
  • According to one aspect of the present invention Is a provided a method of transmitting data at a line rate from a wireless interface to a bus operating at a bus rate, the method comprising transmitting the data in a packet format consisting of a plurality of frames each having a plurality of time slots, each time slot having successive message groups, wherein each message group comprises a plurality of data messages containing said data and an idle code containing no said data; wherein the number of idle codes in each frame is selected so that the bus rate matches the line rate.
  • According to a further aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of transmitting data at a line rate from a wireless interface to a bus operating at a bus rate, the method comprising transmitting the data in a packet format consisting of a plurality of frames each having a plurality of time slots, each time slot having successive message groups, wherein each message group comprises a plurality of data messages containing said data and an idle code containing no said data; wherein the number of idle codes in each frame is selected so that the bus rate matches the line rate.
  • According to yet another aspect of the present invention there is provided a communication bus operable at a bus rate and having at least a first node and a second node that are linked by communication channels for transmitting at said bus rate data generated at a line rate, said first node having a transmitting element and said second node having a receiving element, wherein the transmitting element of said first node is operable to transmit data in a packet format consisting of a plurality of frames each having a plurality of time slots, each time slot having successive message groups, wherein each message group comprises a plurality of data messages containing said data and an idle code containing no said data; wherein said number of idle codes in each frame is selected so that the bus rate matches the line rate and wherein the receiving element of the second node is arranged to detect said idle codes for synchronisation purposes.
  • According to a still further aspect there is provided a method of synchronising a data communication over a bus in a packet format, said data having been generated at a line rate over a wireless interface consisting of a plurality of frames each having a plurality of time slots, each time slot having successive message groups, wherein each message group comprises a predetermined number of data messages containing said data and an idle code containing no said data, the method comprising detecting at a bus node said idle codes until a predetermined number of said idle codes have been detected indicating successful synchronisation.
  • According to a still further aspect there is provided a method of synchronising data communication via a bus connecting first and second nodes comprising: transmitting from the first node a plurality of bytes, each byte representing a 10 bit sequence as an 8 bit code; receiving and decoding said bytes at the second node, whereby any 8b10b encoding errors in a byte are detected; and indicating a synchronised status for the bus based on the detection of received bytes which do not contain 8b10b decoding errors.
  • According to a still further aspect there is provided a method of synchronising data communication via a bus connecting first and second nodes comprising: transmitting from the first node a plurality of bytes, each byte representing a 10 bit sequence as an 8 bit code; receiving and decoding said bytes at the second node, whereby any 8b10b encoding errors in a byte are detected; and indicating an unsynchronised status for the bus based on the detection of received bytes containing 8b10b decoding errors.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • For a better understanding of the present invention and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made by way of example to the accompanying drawings in which:
  • FIG. 1 shows the basic structure of a wireless communications network;
  • FIG. 2 shows the context of the present invention for use at baseband frequencies;
  • FIG. 3 shows an embodiment of the architecture of the physical baseband bus of the present invention;
  • FIG. 4 shows the baseband bus protocol stack according to an embodiment of the present invention;
  • FIG. 5 shows a frame format according to an embodiment of the present invention;
  • FIG. 6 shows an embodiment of the message structure of the present invention;
  • FIG. 7 shows two communicating nodes of the baseband bus;
  • FIG. 8 shows a state transition diagram of the logic implemented within the receiving elements of each baseband node;
  • FIG. 9 shows a state transition diagram of the logic implemented within the transmitting elements of each baseband node; and
  • FIGS. 10 a and 10 b show the bit patterns for the idle codes according to an embodiment of the present invention.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • FIG. 1 shows the traditional elements of a wireless communications network. A Mobile Switching Center (MSC) 2 acts as an interface with other networks, for example the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN). The MSC 2 controls a plurality of Base Station Controller's (BSC) 4, where each BSC 4 in turn controls plurality of Base Transceiver Stations (BTS) 6. Each BTS 6 has a certain coverage area known as a “cell”, which is used to communicate with mobile stations in their respective coverage areas.
  • FIG. 2 shows the typical components of a transceiver used in wireless networks where radio signals are transmitted and received using antennae 10. These radio signals are transferred at a carrier frequency determined by a carrier generator 14. Spectrum allocations are licensed and will vary depending on the country involved and the type of air interface being used, for example WCDMA, GSM, etc. In a typical transceiver, for example as would be found at each of the BTS's 6 of FIG. 1, there is a baseband circuitry 16 concerned with the processing of baseband signals. These baseband signals are then converted into a carrier signal by RF circuitry 12 for transmission by the antennae 10. The embodiments of the present invention discussed herein are in the context of the baseband circuitry 16, where a bus protocol connects BB and RF nodes together.
  • FIG. 3 shows the physical architecture of the baseband bus where nodes 20, 22, 24, 26 are chained in a point-to-point manner according to a first embodiment of the present invention. Each of the nodes can be implemented by using an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC). The nodes communicate using a first set of communication channels 28 in an Uplink direction and over a second set of communication channels in the opposite or Downlink direction 30. Each of the nodes are shown as having a plurality of communication channels referred to herein as links, i.e. 1 to k, in either direction. Some of the nodes may have an RF interface. Other nodes are baseband nodes with no RF interface.
  • Packetised data may be sent over the baseband bus. As can be seen from FIG. 3 the bus is implemented using a plurality of links. A single link is however possible. In a preferred embodiment the baseband bus consists of point-to-point connections forming a chained bus. In this embodiment, the point-to-point connections are achieved using Low Voltage Differential Signalling (LVDS).
  • The baseband bus uses a three-layer protocol with fixed length messages. Any information to be sent over the baseband bus is packed into messages of known type. The three layers are shown in FIG. 4. The physical layer 60 is responsible for the transmission of messages and includes framing, coding and serialisation of the messages. The transport layer 62 is responsible for the end-to-end delivery of the messages or routing of the messages. The application layer 64 provides the mapping of different types of packets to the payload.
  • In CDMA applications, data at the application layer is continuous, but for transfer over the bus, the continuous data of the application layer is time sliced into short messages that are transferred over the high-speed physical layer. At the receiving node a continuous stream is recovered.
  • FIG. 5 shows a frame 70 of the physical layer with a certain packet format being sent over the bus in both the uplink and downlink directions. The frame has a fixed 10 ms period. Frames are inserted consecutively onto the bus. A frame is split into fifteen timeslots 72 where each timeslot contains a plurality of message groups 74. Each message group 74 has a fixed predetermined number of data messages 76, one control message 78 and an IDLE message 80.
  • A preferred embodiment of the message structure 76 is shown in FIG. 6. These messages are transmitted over the physical layer 60 shown in FIG. 4. In this embodiment, the messages are of a fixed length of 19 bytes having a header portion 90 of 3 bytes and a payload portion 92 of 16 bytes. Thus, all messages including control and data have the same message definition. For one embodiment as will be described hereafter, the idle message is in the form of an idle byte.
  • When there is no data message to transmit, that is, no message has been received from the transport layer for a given time slot, then the physical layer 60 transmits an empty message, which can be implemented by transmitting “1” bits for the entire message. The physical layer at the receiving node will detect the existence of an empty message and rejects such messages, thereby making these messages invisible to the upper protocol layers 62,64.
  • In the embodiment shown in FIG. 5, the message group 74 comprises one control message 78 inserted after every twenty data messages 76 and an IDLE byte 80 inserted after the control message 78. The same IDLE byte 80 is used at the end of each message group 74 with the exception that a special IDLE byte 82 Is used in the final timeslot to identify the end of the frame. The significance of the special IDLE byte 82 will be discussed later.
  • In the present embodiment, the bus speed is chosen to be 768 Mbps. A derivative of the BTS reference system clock is used as a clock for the baseband bus and the physical layer 60 of the bus protocol is synchronised to the BTS system clock. However, application layers of the bus protocol can operate asynchronously with respect to the timing of the physical layer, which is especially useful for GSM or EDGE application where data is not continuous but instead is transmitted in bursts and is inherently asynchronous.
  • For the present embodiment, consider the situation of a WCDMA uplink. Consider a signal described in terms of its in-phase component (I) and its quadrature component (Q) where the I and Q values are each 8 bits.
  • At a sample rate of 7.68 Msps (Mega samples per second), this gives a payload rate of 7.68M*(8*2)=122.88 Mbps (Mega bits per second). Since the packet has a 3 byte header and 16 byte payload, the packet rate is 122.88*(19/16)=145.92 Mbps. After an 8b10 coding scheme is used, the line rate is 145.92M*(10/8)=182.4 Mbps.
  • FIG. 3 shows a plurality, i.e. 1 to k links being used to communicate in either direction. Each link supports four paths so that each uplink, of the group of uplinks 28, Is required to support four uplink paths, giving a line rate of 182.4M*4=729.6 Mbps per link. if control messages are inserted every twentieth packet, this gives a line rate of 729.6*(21/20)=766.08 Mbps.
  • However, a bus speed of 768 Mbps has been chosen. Therefore an extra 768−766.08=1.92 Mbps is needed in order to match the line rate to the bus speed. 1-0 achieve this, taking into account the 8bl Ob coding, 1.92M*(8/10)=1.536 Mbps of “plain” data needs to be inserted, which is 1.536 Mbps/8=192000 “plain” bytes per second. Each frame has a time period of 10 ms, therefore 192000/100=1920 IDLE bytes per frame are inserted. Each frame has 15 time slots resulting in 1920/15=128 IDLE bytes per time slot. There are 2560 data messages per time slot, which means 128/2560=1 byte per 20 messages should be an IDLE byte in order to match the tine rate to the bus speed.
  • Therefore, by insertion of IDLE bytes it becomes possible to match the line rate to be an integer multiple of the system clock rate and alleviates the need for additional complex circuitry needed to account for a mismatch between the line rate and the bus speed.
  • FIG. 7 shows the LVDS point-to-point connections in an uplink direction 30 and a downlink direction 28 between a first node 20 and a second node 22 of the bus. Each LVDS point-to-point connection corresponds to each of the 1 to k links shown in the uplink 28 or downlink directions 30 of FIG. 3. Each node 20, 22 comprises a transmission element 40, 48 and a receiving element 44, 52. In the downlink case, a transmission element 40 transmits information from a first node 20 to a receiving element 44 in a second node 22 using LVDS connections. In the uplink direction, a transmitting element 48 transmits information from a second node 22 to the receiving element 52 of a first node 20. A communication channel 41 exists between the transmitter 40 and receiver 52 of the first node 20. Also, a communication channel 43 exists between receiver 44 and transmitter 48 of the second node 22. These communication channels may be used by receivers on a node to inform the transmitters if a loss of synchronisation occurs.
  • It can also been seen that each of the transmitting 40, 48 and receiving elements 44, 52 have their own respective state machine logic 42, 46, 50, 54. FIG. 8 is a state transition diagram showing the state machine logic 46, 54 of the receiving elements 44, 52. FIG. 9 Is a state transition diagram showing the state machine logic 42, 50 of the transmitting elements 40, 48. Tables 1, 2 and 3 given below can be used to interpret these state transition diagrams.
  • Table 1 below provides a definition of the signals used in the state machine for synchronisation.
  • TABLE 1
    Signal Definition Active state
    NdFifo Valid Node clock domain Fifo valid Active high = ‘1’,
    signal to indicate that the fifo default = ‘0’
    is passing valid bytes to the
    rx decoder
    FRAME_IDLE_VALID Frame IDLE byte (K28.7) is Active high = ‘1’ for
    received to indicate that a a single cycle when
    new frame boundary is a K28.7 IDLE byte
    present is received.
    Default = ‘0’
    SET_RUN_TIME_MODE Value ‘1’ enables run time Active high = ‘1’,
    mode, ‘0’ disables run time default = ‘0’
    mode. Messages are
    transferred over the bus in
    run-time mode.
    ENABLE_BUS_TRANSCEVER The bus transceiver is Active high = ‘1’,
    enabled by value ‘1’. This default = ‘0’
    enables the transmitter to
    start sending IDLE.
    RESTART_FROM_DISABLE This signal resets the state Single cycle Active
    machine when the state is high pulse = ‘1’,
    either DISABLE OR default = ‘0’
    FRAME_DISABLE.
  • It should be noted that the IDLE code 80 inserted at the end of each message group 74 is referred to herein as the “K28.5” IDLE byte, whereas the special IDLE code 82 inserted at the end of each frame 70 is referred to herein “K28.7” IDLE byte. FIG. 10 a and FIG. 10 b show the bit patterns that make up the K28.5 and K28.7 idle bytes respectively, in the 8 bit domain. These bit patterns are known as so-called “comma characters”, which are uniquely chosen to indicate possible errors.
  • These codes (and other data bytes) are transmitted as 10 bits using an 8b10b encoding scheme, for example as described in “A DC-Balanced, Partitioned-Block, 8B/10B Transmission Code”, by Widmer and Franaszek, IBM J. Res. Develop. Vol. 27 No. 5, September 1983. The transmitter has means for encoding the 8b bytes into 10b codes and the receiver has means for decoding the codes and for error checking.
  • Table 2 below defines the state transitions and triggers required for these transitions for the state machine logic 46, 54 of the receiving elements 44, 52.
  • TABLE 2
    Transition Trigger Comment
    1 ENABLE_BUS_TRANSCEIVER = ‘1’ Message Group counter reset.
    (values changes from ‘0’ to ‘1’)
    2 SYNC_T valid Message Groups SYNC_T message groups of valid
    received IDLE bytes have been received
    3 DISABLE_T Message Groups or Timeout counter has been
    ENABLE_BUS-TRANSCEIVER = ‘0’ reached without SYNC_T valid
    Message Groups being received
    or Application layer eforces the
    state to DISABLE.
    4 Not (2 or 3) <SYNC_T valid Message Groups
    have been received and timeout
    count has been reached
    5 RESTART_FROM_DISABLE = ‘1’ Application layer has
    acknowledged that the state
    machine is in the DISABLE state
    and restarts the synchronization
    process
    6 UN SYNC_T consecutive invalid Synchronization lost due to UN
    Message Groups received SYNC_T consecutive invalid
    Message Groups received
    7 Not (6 or 8 or 10) Physical layer synchronization is
    maintained and valid IDLE bytes
    are being received.
    8 ENABLE_BUS_TRANSCEIVER = ‘0’ The transceiver is DISABLED.
    This transition is forced by
    Application layer.
    9 RESTART_FROM_DISABLE = ‘0’ Wait in the DISABLE for the
    Application layer to generate a
    RESTART_FROM_DISABLE
    signal.
    10 SET_RUN_TIME_MODE = ‘1’ & Run time mode has been
    FRAME_IDLE_VALID activated and a K28.7 frame
    boundary IDLE byte received to
    indicate the start of empty
    messages.
    11 Not (12 or 13) Stay in the Frame_UNSYNC
    state
    12 FRAME_SYNC_T consecutive valid
    message groups are received
    13 FRAME_DISABLE_T invalid message Transition to the
    groups are received or FRAME_DISABLE state as
    ENABLE_BUS_TRANSCEIVER = ‘0’ FRAME_DISABLE_T invalid
    or SET-RUN-TIME = ‘0’ message groups have been
    received or Application layer halts
    the transceiver.
    14 Not 15 Wait for a
    RESTART_FROM_DISABLE
    signal.
    15 RESTART_FROM_DISABLE = ‘1’ The static machine has been reset
    by Application layer (i.e. restart the
    initialization process).
    16 Not (17 or 18) Valid Message Groups are being
    received. Normal message
    reception state.
    17 FRAME_UNSYNC_T consecutive Whilst in the FRAME_UNSYNC
    invalid message groups are received. state, FRAME_UNSYNC_T
    consecutive invalid message
    groups are received.
    18 ENABLE_BUS_TRANSCEIVER = 0 or Transceiver DISABLE
    SET_RUN_TIME = ‘0’
    20 GO_TO_FRAME_SYNC = 1 & For test purposes: Run time mode
    SET_RUN_TIME_MODE = 1 & has been activated and a K28.7
    FRAME_IDLE_VALID frame boundary IDLE byte
    received to indicate the start of the
    empty packet bytes.
    19 SET_RUN_TIME_MODE = ‘1’ & When in UNSYNCHRONIZED
    FRAME_IDLE_VALID state, run time mode has been
    activated and a K28.7 frame
    boundary IDLE byte received to
    indicate the start of empty
    messages.
  • Table 3 below defines the state transitions and triggers required for these transitions for the state machine logic 42, 50 of the transmitting elements 40, 48.
  • TABLE 3
    Transition Trigger Comment
    1 ENABLE_BUS_TRANSCEIVER = ‘1’ LOS in receiver is initially “1”
    (values changes from ‘0’ to ‘1’)
    2 LOS = ‘0’ Receiver has acknowledged
    that SYNC_T IDLE bytes
    have been received. Receiver
    has acknowledged the
    transition to
    SYNCHRONISED state by
    changing LOS to “0”
    3 ENABLE_BUS_TRANSCEIVER = ‘0’ Transmitter has been
    DISABLE.
    4 ENABLE_BUS_TRANSCEIVER = ‘0’ Wait for Receiver to
    and LOS = ‘1’ acknowledge receipt of
    SYNC_TIDLEs or transmitter
    DISABLE.
    19 GO TO FRAME SYNC = ‘1’ Go to Frame UNSYNC state
    5 RESTART FROM DISABLE = ‘1’ Transmitter has been reset
    and can transition to
    UNSYNCHRONISED and
    start sending IDLE.
    6 LOS = ‘1’ Receiver has generated a
    Loss Of Signal.
    7 LOS = ‘0’ AND Send IDLE bytes (with K28.7
    ENABLE SUS TRANSCEIVER = ‘1’ at Frame boundary).
    and
    SET RUN-TIME MODE
    ‘0’
    8 ENABLE BUS TRANCEIVER = Transition to the DISABLE
    ‘0’ state.
    9 RESTART FROM DISABLE = Stay in Disable state
    ‘0’
    10 SET RUN-TIME MODE = Transition to the
    ‘1’ and FClk = ‘1’ FRAME_UNSYNC when the
    transmitter has sent a K28.7
    (last byte in the frame.
    11 LOS = ‘1’ AND (ENABLE BUS Stay in Frame_Unsync state
    TRANCEIVER) = ‘1’ OR SET
    RUN-TIME MODE_‘1’)
    12 LOS = ‘0’ Receiver has acknowledged
    that it has received
    FrameUnsyncT valid
    Message Groups.
    13 ENABLE BUS TRANSCEIVER = ‘0’ Go to FrameDisa e state as
    the Transmitter has been
    DISABLE.
    14 RESTART FROM DISABLE = Stay in Disable state.
    ‘0’
    15 RESTART FROM DISABLE = Restart the transmitter go to
    ‘1’ the UNSYNCHRONISED
    state.
    16 LOS = ‘0’ AND Stay in Frame_Sync state.
    ENABLE BUS TRANSCEIVER =
    ‘1’ AND SET TUN-TIME MODE = ‘1’
    17 LOS = ‘1’ Receiver has de-asserted the
    Loss Of Signal input so the
    transmitter must send empty
    messages.
    18 ENABLE BUS TRANSCEIVER Disable Transmitter
    ‘0’ OR SET RUN-TIME MODE
    ‘0’
  • Broadly speaking, there are two synchronisation algorithms which are applied, i.e. initial synchronisation and frame synchronisation. Initial synchronisation allows an initial check on the link quality of the bus, whereas frame synchronisation allows continuous monitoring of the link quality when the bus is in run time mode. The synchronisation algorithms can report link status information of the bus to upper layers of the protocol stack.
  • Initial synchronisation is performed when a bus node is booting up. The purpose of the initial synchronisation is to determine the status of each bus interface. That is, checking the status of a node's transmitting and receiving elements. Synchronisation may be unsuccessful due to a missing neighbouring node or a failure of the link.
  • In the present embodiment, the sequence of steps for initial synchronisation is the following:
      • Set state to UNSYNCHRONIZED.
      • Reset the message group counter to zero.
      • Start transmitting a constant stream of IDLE bytes from the transmitting element of any node, e.g. 20.
      • Start reading the IDLE bytes at the receiving element of any node, e.g. 22.
      • A message group is considered to be valid when all the IDLE bytes are properly received and there are no 8b10b decoding errors. Otherwise, a message group is considered to be invalid. It should be appreciated that there are (21 messages*19 bytes per message)+1 IDLE byte=400 bytes in a message group.
  • When in the state UNSYNCHRONIZED and a value of SYNC T consecutive valid message groups have been received, the state of the state machine then is set to the SYNCHRONISED state.
  • When in the state SYNCHRONIZED and a value of UNSYNC T consecutive invalid message groups have been received, the state of the state machine then is set to the UNSYNCHRONISED state. Also, the message group counter is set to zero.
  • When in the state UNSYNCHRONIZED and a value of DISABLE T message groups have been received, the state of the state machine then is set to the DISABLE state. The value of DISABLE T is larger or equal to the value of UNSYNC T. When either of the transmitting or receiving elements of a node enter the DISABLE state, the application layer 64 is informed by an interrupt which then can restart the synchronization procedure.
  • The above synchronization algorithm can be generalized by considering validity of consecutive received bytes instead of message groups. Furthermore, synchronization can be based on any transmitted data and the success or failure of 8b10b decoding; not just transmission and reception of IDLE bytes.
  • The physical layer 60 contains a status register 45 for each transmitting and receiving element of each node of the bus indicating the synchronisation status. For example, DISABLE (000001), UNSYNCHRONISED (000010), SYNCHRONISED (000100). Other state encodings may be used. Regarding the operation of the transmitter during initial synchronization, IDLE bytes are sent in UNSYNCHRONIZED and SYNCHRONIZED states. Note that during initial synchronisation, only IDLE bytes are transmitted to the bus. This is not the case in run-time operation when data is transferred over the bus.
  • After the physical layer 60 has been configured into a run-time mode by the application layer (parameter SET_RUN-TIME_MODE is set equal to 1), frame synchronisation can be performed. In run-time mode, messages (e.g. data, control or even empty) are transferred over the bus. In run-time mode, receiver synchronization of a transceiver is started immediately. When the value of parameter SET_RUN-TIME_MODE is changed from 1 to 0, state of the transceiver Is changed to FRAME_DISABLE.
  • In frame synchronisation, each transmitting element 40, 48 synchronises the frame timing with the baseband bus frame clock Furthermore, the status of the frame synchronisation in each receiving element 44, 52 is constantly monitored. The end of each frame is identified from the unique IDLE byte K28.7. This unique IDLE byte allows one to calculate the received frame offset as well as monitoring of frame synchronization status.
  • In the present embodiment, frame synchronisation is applied to all the transmitting and receiving elements of the bus nodes when entering the run time mode and the sequence of steps for frame synchronisation is the following:
      • Set the state of the state machine to FRAME UNSYNCHRONIZED.
      • Reset the message group counter to zero.
      • Start transmitting empty or other valid messages from the transmitting element 40, 48.
      • With reference to the baseband bus frame clock, read the IDLE byte of each message group from the received byte stream using the receiving element 44, 52. The IDLE byte must be the last byte of the message group and any other IDLE bytes are considered to be errors.
      • When the IDLE byte of a message group has been properly received and no 8b10b decoding errors are present, consider that message group to be valid. Otherwise, the received message group is invalid.
      • When in the state FRAME UNSYNCHRONIZED and FRAME SYNC T consecutive valid message groups have been received, set the state to FRAME SYNCHRONISED.
      • When in the state FRAME SYNCHRONIZED and FRAME UNSYNC T consecutive invalid Message Groups have been received, set the state to FRAME UNSYNCHRONISED and reset the message group counter to zero.
  • When in the state FRAME UNSYNCHRONIZED and FRAME DISABLE T message groups have been received, set the state to FRAME DISABLE.
  • The value of FRAME DISABLE T is always larger or equal to the value of FRAME UNSYNC T. The status register 45 maintains an indication of the status of the frame where the status FRAME DISABLE, FRAME UNSYNCHRONIZED, and FRAME_SYNCHRONIZED correspond to the states 001000, 010000, and 100000 respectively. Other state encodings may also be used. When the transmitting or receiving elements enter the FRAME_DISABLE state, the application layer is informed by an interrupt, which can then restart the synchronization procedure. Regarding the operation of the transmitting elements during frame synchronization, valid messages are sent in the FRAME SYNCHRONIZED state, whereas empty messages are sent in the FRAME UNSYNCHRONIZED and FRAME DISABLE states.
  • The synchronisation operation is now described for each respective state.
  • UNSYNCHRONISED
      • Restart the message group counter.
      • The transmitting element starts sending IDLE bytes.
      • The LOS is set to ‘1 ’.
      • The receiving element waits to receive data.
      • Valid bytes are beginning to be passed.
      • Initial byte synchronization is performed using the consecutive K28.5 idle code
      • The receiving element will start counting valid message groups. If SYNC T consecutive valid message groups are received, then the state machine transitions to the SYNCHRONIZED state.
      • If DISABLE T message groups are received (with 400 bytes in each), then the state machine transitions to the DISABLE state and the Receiver and Transmitters are disabled.
      • If ENABLE BUS TRANSCEIVER=O is received, then the state machine transitions to the DISABLE state.
      • If SET RUN TIME MODE=1, then the state machine transitions to the FRAME UNSYNCHRONISED state.
  • SYNCHRONISED
      • Reset the message group counter.
      • Set the LOS to ‘0’
      • If UNSYNC_T consecutive invalid message groups are received, then the state machine transitions to the UNSYNCHRONISED state.
      • If SET RUN TIME MODE=1, then the state machine transitions to the FRAME UNSYNCHRONISED state.
      • If ENABLEBUS_TRANSCEIVER=O, then the state machine transitions to the DISABLE state.
  • DISABLE
      • Stop all counters.
      • Set the LOS to
      • In this state, the state machine of the receiving element can only transfer to the UNSYNCHRONISED state when RESTART FROM DISABLE=1.
  • FRAME SYNC
      • Set the LOS to ‘0’.
      • Restart the message group counter.
      • Constantly check the frame synchronization using the K28.7 IDLE byte.
      • If FRAME UNSYNC T consecutive invalid message groups are received, then the state machine transitions to the FRAME UNSYNCHRONISED state.
      • If ENABLE BUS TRANSCEIVER=0 or SET RUN TIMEMODE=0, then the state machine transitions to the FRAME DISABLE state.
      • In the FRAME SYNC state, a valid message group exists when a K28.5 or K28.7 IDLE byte code is at byte 399 and there are no invalid IDLE codes in bytes 0 to 398 and no 8bl Ob decoding errors are present.
  • FRAME UNSYNC
      • Set the LOS to ‘1’.
      • Restart the message group counter.
      • If FRAME_SYNC_T consecutive valid message groups are received, then the state machine transitions to the FRAME SYNCHRONIZED state.
      • If FRAME DISABLE T invalid message groups are received, then the state machine transitions to the FRAME DISABLE state.
      • In the FRAME_UNSYNC state, a valid message group exists when a K28.5 or K28.7 IDLE byte code is at byte 399 and there are no invalid
      • IDLE codes in bytes 0 to 398 and no 8b106 decoding errors are present.
      • If ENABLE_BUSTRANSCEIVER=O or SET RUN TIME MODE=O, then the state machine transitions to the FRAME DISABLE state.
  • FRAME DISABLE
      • Stop all counters.
      • Set the LOS to ‘1’.
  • In summary, the idle bytes inserted into the frames at the physical layer level are to synchronise the line rate of data transmission to the bus rate set up by the system clock. Also, synchronisation algorithms using these idle bytes to perform different types of synchronisation algorithms. For initial synchronisation, before run time mode, the quality of the communication links between the nodes are tested by transmitting message groups that consist purely of idle codes instead of data messages. The receiving elements then check the received idle codes and if all idle codes (i.e. 400 idle bytes in this embodiment) have been received correctly, then that message group is said to be valid. If SYNC_T consecutive valid message groups are received then initial synchronisation has been achieved, For frame synchronisation, the first algorithm is when the bus is in run time mode but the frames are unsynchronised. Data messages and an idle message now make up the message groups that are transmitted. However, now a message group is considered to be valid when an idle code exists (either K28.5 or K28.7) at the last byte of the message group (i.e. byte 399) and there are no invalid IDLE codes in the remainder of the message group (i.e. bytes 0 to 398) and no 8b10b decoding errors are present in the message group. Frame synchronisation is once FRAME_SYNC_T valid consecutive message groups have been received. Also, once frame synchronisation has been achieved it is important to maintain synchronisation. This is accomplished by using the unique idle byte (K28.7) at the end of each frame, which allows one to calculate the received frame offset.
  • It should be appreciated that each transmitting or receiving element of each node of the bus can independently assume any of the states described herein.
  • It should also be appreciated that FIG. 3 shows a plurality of links, i.e. 1 to k. Thus, it should be understood that the present invention is scaleable to adapt to different data rates.
  • It should be appreciated that the frame structure shown in FIG. 5 is one embodiment of the present invention. In this embodiment is that the special IDLE code 82 is inserted at the end of a frame 70. It should be appreciated that the baseband bus is a multi-mode bus and in conjunction with the layered protocol stack it is intended to support a variety of different air interfaces such as GSM or EDGE. With regards to the IDLE bytes 80, it should be appreciated that the position of the IDLE byte within the message group 74 may vary in different implementations. Furthermore, the special IDLE byte 82 might be implemented at other locations in each frame, for example at the start as opposed to the end of the frame 70: all that is needed is that it is in a predetermined known location. Also, the IDLE codes are 1 byte in length in the described embodiment, however for a different embodiment these IDLE codes could be scaled in length so as to match a different frame format.
  • It should be appreciated that the implementation of the nodes of the communications bus, shown in FIG. 3, are not necessarily limited to ASIC's and can also be implemented using other logical devices, for example a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) devices.

Claims (4)

1. A communication bus having nodes that are linked by communications channels, wherein a first set of said channels transfers information in one direction while a second set of channels transfers information in the opposite direction, each of said nodes comprising:
a transmitting element for transmitting data to another node on said bus;
a receiving element for receiving information from another node on said bus;
a communication channel between said transmitting and receiving elements within each node;
transmitter state machine logic for controlling the synchronisation of said transmitting element;
receiving state machine logic for controlling the synchronisation of said receiving element; and
a storage area for maintaining the status of synchronisation of said bus.
2. A communication bus according to claim 1, wherein the transmitter and receiving state machine logic are configured to report the link status of the communication bus.
3. A method of synchronising data communication over a communication bus, the communication bus having nodes that are linked by communication channels, wherein a first set of channels transfers information in one direction while a second set of channels transfers information in the opposite direction the method comprising:
transmitting data from a first node on the communication bus over a communication channel;
receiving data at a second node in the communication bus;
controlling synchronising transmitting the data with transmitter state machine logic;
controlling synchronising receiving the data with receiving state machine logic;
maintaining the status of synchronisation of the communication bus;
4. A method of synchronising data communication according to claim 3 wherein the method further comprises reporting link status of the communication bus.
US11/987,760 2002-03-05 2007-12-04 Synchronisation in communication systems Abandoned US20080181257A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/987,760 US20080181257A1 (en) 2002-03-05 2007-12-04 Synchronisation in communication systems

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GBGB0205142.3A GB0205142D0 (en) 2002-03-05 2002-03-05 Synchronisation in communication systems
GB0205142.3 2002-03-05
US10/378,653 US7324549B2 (en) 2002-03-05 2003-03-05 Synchronisation communication systems
US11/987,760 US20080181257A1 (en) 2002-03-05 2007-12-04 Synchronisation in communication systems

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/378,653 Division US7324549B2 (en) 2002-03-02 2003-03-05 Synchronisation communication systems

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20080181257A1 true US20080181257A1 (en) 2008-07-31

Family

ID=9932312

Family Applications (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/378,653 Active 2025-07-21 US7324549B2 (en) 2002-03-02 2003-03-05 Synchronisation communication systems
US11/822,570 Abandoned US20080019401A1 (en) 2002-03-02 2007-07-06 Synchronisation in communication systems
US11/987,760 Abandoned US20080181257A1 (en) 2002-03-05 2007-12-04 Synchronisation in communication systems

Family Applications Before (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/378,653 Active 2025-07-21 US7324549B2 (en) 2002-03-02 2003-03-05 Synchronisation communication systems
US11/822,570 Abandoned US20080019401A1 (en) 2002-03-02 2007-07-06 Synchronisation in communication systems

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (3) US7324549B2 (en)
EP (3) EP1865667A3 (en)
CN (3) CN1233182C (en)
AT (1) ATE410862T1 (en)
DE (1) DE60323895D1 (en)
GB (1) GB0205142D0 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080159743A1 (en) * 2007-01-03 2008-07-03 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for controlling remote in a TDD optical repeater
WO2011022735A1 (en) * 2009-08-21 2011-02-24 Aviat Networks, Inc. Synchronization distribution in microwave backhaul networks
US20220231901A1 (en) * 2017-08-18 2022-07-21 Maxlinear, Inc. High-speed serial interface for orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (ofdm) cable modems

Families Citing this family (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP4852963B2 (en) * 2005-10-14 2012-01-11 株式会社日立製作所 Transmission equipment
US7822070B2 (en) * 2005-11-29 2010-10-26 St-Ericsson Sa Bus station and system and method of maintaining synchronizing of a bus station
US7689610B2 (en) * 2006-12-01 2010-03-30 Computer Associates Think, Inc. Automated grouping of messages provided to an application using string similarity analysis
US7917911B2 (en) * 2006-12-01 2011-03-29 Computer Associates Think, Inc. Automated grouping of messages provided to an application using execution path similarity analysis
CN101193093B (en) * 2007-01-30 2011-04-20 中兴通讯股份有限公司 Automatic recovery method and device and using system for bidirectional serial communication disconnection
CN101374112B (en) * 2008-10-28 2011-02-09 华为技术有限公司 Method, system and apparatus for transmitting packet
CN102195736B (en) * 2010-03-15 2015-11-25 中兴通讯股份有限公司 The processing method of time synchronized, system and OLT in EPON
CN107085174B (en) * 2017-05-18 2019-12-17 北京兴迪仪器有限责任公司 high-precision time synchronization method of distributed partial discharge detection system
CN114726479A (en) * 2017-07-18 2022-07-08 华为技术有限公司 Method, network equipment and system for sending and receiving detection block

Citations (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4569062A (en) * 1984-06-28 1986-02-04 Dellande Brian W Interface circuit for interfacing between asynchronous data in start/stop format and synchronous data
US5577047A (en) * 1993-11-10 1996-11-19 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson System and method for providing macrodiversity TDMA radio communications
US6041047A (en) * 1992-10-05 2000-03-21 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson Digital control channels having logical channels supporting broadcast SMS
US6147963A (en) * 1996-07-11 2000-11-14 4 Links For Technical Help Communications system for driving pairs of twisted pair links
US6212176B1 (en) * 1992-10-05 2001-04-03 Telefonaktiebolget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Digital control channels having logical channels for multiple access radiocommunication
US6477181B1 (en) * 1996-05-07 2002-11-05 Yamaha Corporation Data communication method and system
US6674750B1 (en) * 1999-09-24 2004-01-06 Paradyne Corporation Apparatus and method for communicating time-division multiplexed data and packet data on a shared bus
US20070058593A1 (en) * 1998-04-07 2007-03-15 Nec Corporation Mobile communication system, communication control method, and base station and mobile station to be employed in the same
US7194010B2 (en) * 2001-05-02 2007-03-20 Strix Systems, Inc. Wireless base station to base station synchronization in a communication system, such as a system employing a short range frequency hopping or time division duplex scheme
US7551898B2 (en) * 2002-02-19 2009-06-23 Qualcomm Incorporated Channel quality feedback mechanism and method

Family Cites Families (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP3057934B2 (en) * 1992-10-30 2000-07-04 日本電気株式会社 Shared bus arbitration mechanism
NL9302040A (en) * 1993-11-25 1995-06-16 Nederland Ptt Method and devices for transferring data over a network operating according to the synchronous digital hierarchy (SDH).
SE506540C2 (en) 1995-06-13 1998-01-12 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Synchronization of data transfer via a bidirectional link
EP0905941B1 (en) * 1997-02-13 2006-12-27 Ntt Mobile Communications Network Inc. Frame synchronizing circuit
CN1158809C (en) 2000-01-20 2004-07-21 华为技术有限公司 Method and device for transmitting and receiving data via data bus
FR2805694B1 (en) * 2000-02-25 2003-06-20 Sagem METHOD FOR TRANSMITTING SIGNALS BETWEEN TWO LOCAL AREA NETWORKS
KR100329713B1 (en) * 2000-05-18 2002-03-21 김철환 Data Transceiver for Transmitting and Receiving Data and Voice Signal over Telephone Line

Patent Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4569062A (en) * 1984-06-28 1986-02-04 Dellande Brian W Interface circuit for interfacing between asynchronous data in start/stop format and synchronous data
US6041047A (en) * 1992-10-05 2000-03-21 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson Digital control channels having logical channels supporting broadcast SMS
US6212176B1 (en) * 1992-10-05 2001-04-03 Telefonaktiebolget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Digital control channels having logical channels for multiple access radiocommunication
US6252868B1 (en) * 1992-10-05 2001-06-26 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Digital control channels having logical channels supporting broadcast SMS
US5577047A (en) * 1993-11-10 1996-11-19 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson System and method for providing macrodiversity TDMA radio communications
US6477181B1 (en) * 1996-05-07 2002-11-05 Yamaha Corporation Data communication method and system
US6147963A (en) * 1996-07-11 2000-11-14 4 Links For Technical Help Communications system for driving pairs of twisted pair links
US20070058593A1 (en) * 1998-04-07 2007-03-15 Nec Corporation Mobile communication system, communication control method, and base station and mobile station to be employed in the same
US6674750B1 (en) * 1999-09-24 2004-01-06 Paradyne Corporation Apparatus and method for communicating time-division multiplexed data and packet data on a shared bus
US7194010B2 (en) * 2001-05-02 2007-03-20 Strix Systems, Inc. Wireless base station to base station synchronization in a communication system, such as a system employing a short range frequency hopping or time division duplex scheme
US7551898B2 (en) * 2002-02-19 2009-06-23 Qualcomm Incorporated Channel quality feedback mechanism and method

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080159743A1 (en) * 2007-01-03 2008-07-03 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for controlling remote in a TDD optical repeater
US7826430B2 (en) * 2007-01-03 2010-11-02 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for controlling remote in a TDD optical repeater
WO2011022735A1 (en) * 2009-08-21 2011-02-24 Aviat Networks, Inc. Synchronization distribution in microwave backhaul networks
US20110080985A1 (en) * 2009-08-21 2011-04-07 Philip Secker Synchronization Distribution in Microwave Backhaul Networks
US8565361B2 (en) 2009-08-21 2013-10-22 Aviat U.S., Inc. Synchronization distribution in microwave backhaul networks
US8983015B2 (en) 2009-08-21 2015-03-17 Aviat U.S., Inc. Synchronization distribution in microwave backhaul networks
US9609610B2 (en) 2009-08-21 2017-03-28 Aviat U.S., Inc. Synchronization distribution in microwave backhaul networks
US20220231901A1 (en) * 2017-08-18 2022-07-21 Maxlinear, Inc. High-speed serial interface for orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (ofdm) cable modems

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP1343279B1 (en) 2008-10-08
EP1343279A1 (en) 2003-09-10
US20080019401A1 (en) 2008-01-24
CN1665214A (en) 2005-09-07
EP1865667A2 (en) 2007-12-12
DE60323895D1 (en) 2008-11-20
CN1450819A (en) 2003-10-22
GB0205142D0 (en) 2002-04-17
US20040042430A1 (en) 2004-03-04
US7324549B2 (en) 2008-01-29
CN1233182C (en) 2005-12-21
EP1865667A3 (en) 2008-10-29
CN101188782A (en) 2008-05-28
EP1865666A2 (en) 2007-12-12
CN100396047C (en) 2008-06-18
ATE410862T1 (en) 2008-10-15

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20080181257A1 (en) Synchronisation in communication systems
US9344207B2 (en) Techniques for time transfer via signal encoding
CA2247534C (en) An improved technique for jointly performing bit synchronization and error detection in a tdm/tdma system
JP4639345B2 (en) Communication interface, communication apparatus, and communication method between radio apparatus controller node and remote radio apparatus node in radio base station
US20110032910A1 (en) Interface, apparatus, and method for communication between a radio eqipment control node one or more remote radio equipment nodes
JPH10257097A (en) Communication method in wide band digital radio system and wide band digital radio communication terminal
US9479277B2 (en) Mechanism for channel synchronization
GB2366161A (en) Communications apparatus and method of communicating timing information
US10531330B2 (en) Frame start optimizing in telecommunications systems
CN115982083A (en) Method, device and system for transmitting data between FPGA chips and storage medium
US6930990B2 (en) Serial communications link for a base stations
US8576704B2 (en) Communication system, communication device, integrated circuit, and communication method
EP1838054B1 (en) Method of hitless radio protection switching over ethernet and a system for carrying out the method
CN114846766B (en) Baseband radio frequency interface, communication system and signal receiving method
O'Connell et al. Switched Telemetry System (SwTS) Standard For Bidirectional Telemetry Interoperability
FI107203B (en) Method and apparatus for exchanging parallel clock signals of a digital data transmission propagation control signal
US20070058760A1 (en) Apparatus and method for transmitting data in a communication system
CN1777136A (en) Synchronisation of data communication through bus

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: NOKIA SIEMENS NETWORKS OY, FINLAND

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:NOKIA CORPORATION;REEL/FRAME:020550/0001

Effective date: 20070913

Owner name: NOKIA SIEMENS NETWORKS OY,FINLAND

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:NOKIA CORPORATION;REEL/FRAME:020550/0001

Effective date: 20070913

AS Assignment

Owner name: NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS OY, FINLAND

Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:NOKIA SIEMENS NETWORKS OY;REEL/FRAME:034294/0603

Effective date: 20130819

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION