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Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also...

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TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITÄT ILMENAU Integrated Hard and Software Systems http://www.tu-ilmenau.de/ihs Media Access Schemes Motivation limits of CSMA/CD hidden and exposed terminals near-far problem SDMA, FDMA, TDMA overview TDMA Aloha, slotted Aloha Demand Assigned Multiple Access (DAMA) Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance: MACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice SAMA (Spread Aloha Multiple Access) Comparison
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Page 1: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITÄTILMENAU

Inte

grat

ed H

ard

and

Softw

are

Syst

ems

http

://w

ww

.tu-il

men

au.d

e/ih

sMedia Access Schemes

Motivationlimits of CSMA/CDhidden and exposed terminalsnear-far problem

SDMA, FDMA, TDMA overviewTDMA

Aloha, slotted AlohaDemand Assigned Multiple Access (DAMA)Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance: MACA, Polling, etc.

CDMA theory and practiceSAMA (Spread Aloha Multiple Access)Comparison

Page 2: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 2Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

Media Access: Motivation

The problem: multiple users compete for a common, shared resource (medium)

Can we apply media access methods from fixed networks?

Example: CSMA/CDCarrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection (IEEE 802.3)send as soon as the medium is free (carrier sensing – CS)listen to the medium, if a collision occurs stop transmission and jam (collision detection – CD)

Problems in wireless networkssignal strength decreases (at least) proportional to the square of the distancethe sender would apply CS and CD, but the collisions happen at the receiverit might be the case that a sender cannot “hear” the collision, i.e., CD does not workfurthermore, CS might not work if, e.g., a terminal is “hidden”

Page 3: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 3Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

Hidden terminalsA sends to B, C cannot receive A C wants to send to B, C senses a “free” medium -> CS failscollision at B, A cannot receive C -> CD failsA is “hidden” for C

Exposed terminals

B sends to A, C wants to send to another terminal (not A or B)C has to wait, CS signals a medium in usebut A is outside the radio range of C, therefore waiting is not necessaryC is “exposed” to B

Motivation - hidden and exposed terminals

BA C

BA C

Page 4: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 4Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

Terminals A and B send, C receivessignal strength decreases proportional to the square of the distancethe signal of terminal B therefore drowns out A’s signalC cannot receive A

If C for example was an arbiter for sending rights, terminal B would drown out terminal A already on the physical layer

Also severe problem for CDMA-networks – precise power control needed!

Motivation - near and far terminals

A B C

Page 5: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 5Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA

SDMA (Space Division Multiple Access)segment space into sectors, use directed antennas cell structure

FDMA (Frequency Division Multiple Access)assign a certain frequency to a transmission channel between a sender and a receiverpermanent (e.g., radio broadcast), slow hopping (e.g. GSM), fasthopping (FHSS, Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum)

TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access)assign the fixed sending frequency to a transmission channel between a sender and a receiver for a certain amount of time

The multiplexing schemes presented previously are now used to control medium access!

Page 6: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 6Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

Communication link types

Each terminal needs an uplink and a downlink channel

Types of communication links:

Simplex unidirectional link transmission

Half DuplexBi-directional (but not simultaneous)

Duplex simultaneous bi-directional link transmission, two types:

Frequency division duplexing (FDD)Time division duplexing (TDD)

downlink

uplink

Page 7: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 7Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

Duplex modes

Frequency Division Duplex (FDD)

Separate frequency bands for up- and downlink

+ separation of uplink and downlink interference

- no support for asymmetric traffic

Examples: UMTS, GSM, IS-95, AMPS

Fd

Fu

TdTu

TdTu

Time Division Duplex (TDD)

Separation of up- and downlink traffic on time axis

+ support for asymmetric traffic

- mix of uplink and downlink interference on single band

Examples: DECT, WLAN, UMTS (TDD)

Page 8: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 8Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

FDD/FDMA - general scheme, example GSM

f

t

124

1

124

1

20 MHz

200 kHz

890.2 MHz

935.2 MHz

915 MHz

960 MHz

Page 9: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 9Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

TDD/TDMA - general scheme, example DECT

1 2 3 11 12 1 2 3 11 12

tdownlink uplink

417 µs

Page 10: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 10Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

Mechanismrandom, distributed (no central arbiter), time-multiplexSlotted Aloha additionally uses time-slots, sending must always start at slot boundaries

Aloha

Slotted Aloha

TDMA: Aloha/slotted aloha

sender A

sender B

sender C

collision

sender A

sender B

sender C

collision

t

t

Page 11: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 11Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

TDMA: Demand Assigned Multiple Access (DAMA)

Channel efficiency only 18% for Aloha, 36% for Slotted Aloha (assuming Poisson distribution of packet arrivals and packet lengths)

Reservation can increase efficiency to 80%a sender reserves a future time-slotsending within this reserved time-slot is possible without collisionreservation also causes higher delaystypical scheme for satellite links (long round-trip-times)application to packet data, e.g. in GPRS and UMTS

Examples for reservation algorithms:Explicit Reservation (Reservation-ALOHA)Implicit Reservation (PRMA)Reservation-TDMA

Page 12: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 12Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

TDMA: DAMA - Explicit Reservation

Explicit Reservation (Reservation Aloha):Two modes:

ALOHA mode for reservation:competition for small reservation slots, collisions possible reserved mode for data transmission within successful reserved slots (no collisions possible)

synchronisation: it is important for all stations to keep the reservation list consistent at any point in time and, therefore, all stations have to synchronize from time to time

Aloha reserved Aloha reserved Aloha reserved Aloha

collision

t

Page 13: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 13Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

TDMA: DAMA – Packet Reservation (PRMA)

Implicit reservation (PRMA - Packet Reservation MA):a certain number of slots form a frame, frames are repeatedstations compete for empty slots according to the slotted aloha principleonce a station reserves a slot successfully, this slot is automatically assigned to this station in all following frames as long as the station has data to sendcompetition for this slots starts again as soon as the slot was empty in the last frame

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 time-slot

frame2 A C A B A

frame3 A B A F

frame4 A B A F D

frame5 A C E E B A F Dt

frame1 A C D A B A FACDABA-F

ACDABA-F

AC-ABAF-

A---BAFD

ACEEBAFD

reservations

collision at reservation attempts

ACEEBAFD

New successful reservation attempts are in bold letters

Page 14: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 14Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

TDMA: DAMA - Reservation-TDMA

Reservation Time Division Multiple Access every frame consists of N mini-slots and x data-slotsevery station has its own mini-slot and can reserve up to k data-slots using this mini-slot (i.e. x = N * k)other stations can send data in unused data-slots according to a round-robin sending scheme (best-effort traffic)

N mini-slots N * k data-slots

reservationsfor data-slots

other stations can use free data-slotsbased on a round-robin scheme

e.g. N = 6 stations, k = 2 data slots per station

Advantage: (small) guaranteed bandwidth with small latency for each station

Disadvantages: fixed number of stations (mini slots); global coordination

Page 15: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 15Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

TDMA: Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance (MACA)

Motivation: deal with hidden terminals without a base station (central controller)

MACA (Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance) uses short signaling packets for collision avoidance

RTS (request to send): a sender requests the right to send from a receiver with a short RTS packet before it sends a data packetCTS (clear to send): the receiver grants the right to send as soon as it is ready to receiveall other stations listen to the signal

Signaling packets containsender addressreceiver addresspacket size

Collision may occur during transmission of RTS signal only but this is small compared to the data transmission

Variants of this method can be found in IEEE 802.11 (DFWMAC – Distributed Foundation Wireless MAC)

Page 16: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 16Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

MACA avoids the problem of hidden terminalsA and C want to send to BA sends RTS firstC waits after receiving CTS from B

MACA avoids the problem of exposed terminalsB wants to send to A, C to another terminalB sends RTS, A replies with CTSC does not receive CTSfrom A

=> C concludes that it is not within receiving range of AC can start its transmission

Disadvantage:overhead where data packets are small

TDMA: MACA examples

A B C

RTS

CTSCTS

A B C

RTS

CTS

RTS

Page 17: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 17Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

TDMA: MACA variant: DFWMAC in IEEE 802.11

idle

wait for the right to send

wait for ACK

sender receiver

packet ready to send; RTS

time-out; RTS

CTS; data

ACK

RxBusy

idle

wait fordata

RTS; RxBusy

RTS; CTS

data; ACK

time-out ∨incorrect data; NAK

ACK: positive acknowledgementNAK: negative acknowledgement

RxBusy: receiver busy

time-out ∨NAK;RTS

Simplified state machine

Page 18: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 18Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

TDMA: Polling mechanisms

If one terminal can be heard by all others, this “central” terminal (e.g. a base station) can poll all other terminals according to a certain scheme

now all schemes known from fixed networks can be used (typical mainframe - terminal scenario, round-robin, random, reservation-based)

Example: Randomly Addressed Pollingbase station signals readiness to all mobile terminalsterminals ready to send can now transmit a random number withoutcollision with the help of CDMA or FDMA (the random number can be seen as dynamic address)the base station now chooses one address for polling from the list of all received random numbers (collision if two terminals choose the same address) the base station acknowledges correct packets and continues polling the next terminalthis cycle starts again after polling all terminals of the list

Application to Bluetooth and 802.11 (possible access function)

Page 19: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 19Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

TDMA: ISMA (Inhibit Sense Multiple Access)

Current state of the medium is signaled via a “busy tone”the base station signals on the downlink (base station to terminals) if the medium is free or not terminals must not send if the medium is busy terminals can access the medium as soon as the busy tone stopsthe base station signals collisions and successful transmissions via the busy tone and acknowledgements, respectively (media access is not coordinated within this approach)mechanism used, e.g. for CDPD (AMPS)

Page 20: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 20Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

CDMA access method

CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access)all terminals send on the same frequency probably at the same time and can use the whole bandwidth of the transmission channel each sender has a unique random number, the sender XORs the signal with this random numberthe receiver can “tune” into this signal if it knows the pseudo random number, tuning is done via a correlation function

Advantages: all terminals can use the same frequency, less planning neededhuge code space (e.g. 232) compared to frequency spaceinterference (e.g. white noise) is not codedforward error correction and encryption can be easily integrated

Disadvantages:higher complexity of a receiver (receiver cannot just listen into the medium and start receiving if there is a signal)all signals should have the same strength at a receiver (power control)

Page 21: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 21Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

CDMA principle

Code 0

Code 1

Code 2

Σ

data 0

data 1

data 2

Code 0

Code 1

Code 2

data 0

data 1

data 2

sender (base station) receiver (terminal)

Transmission viaair interface

Page 22: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 22Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

CDMA by example

Source 2

Source 1

data stream A & B

Code 2

Code 1

spreading

Source 2 spread

Source 1 spread

spreaded signal

Page 23: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 23Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

CDMA by example

Sum of Sources Spread

+

overlay of signals

Sum of Sources Spread + Noise

transmission and distortion (noise and interference)

Despread Source 2

Despread Source 1

decoding and despreading

Page 24: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 24Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

CDMA in theory

Sender A

sends Ad = 1, key Ak = 010011 (i.e. -1 1 -1 -1 1 1)

sending signal As = Ad * Ak = (-1, +1, -1, -1, +1, +1)

Sender B

sends Bd = 0, key Bk = 110101 (i.e. 1 1 -1 1 -1 1)

sending signal Bs = Bd * Bk = (-1, -1, +1, -1, +1, -1)

Both signals superimpose in space

interference neglected (noise etc.)

As + Bs = (-2, 0, 0, -2, +2, 0)

Receiver wants to receive signal from sender A

apply key Ak bitwise (inner product)

Ae = (-2, 0, 0, -2, +2, 0) • Ak = 2 + 0 + 0 + 2 + 2 + 0 = 6

result greater than 0, therefore, original bit was „1“

receiving B

Be = (-2, 0, 0, -2, +2, 0) • Bk = -2 + 0 + 0 - 2 - 2 + 0 = -6, i.e. „0“

Page 25: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 25Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

CDMA on signal level I

data A

key A

signal A

data ⊕ key

keysequence A

Real systems use much longer keys resulting in a larger distancebetween single code words in code space

1 0 1

10 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 101 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0

Ad

Ak

As

Page 26: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 26Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

CDMA on signal level II

signal A

data B

key Bkey

sequence B

signal B

As + Bs

data ⊕ key

1 0 0

00 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 111 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1

Bd

Bk

Bs

As

10-1

Page 27: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 27Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

CDMA on signal level III

Ak

(As + Bs) * Ak

integratoroutput

comparatoroutput

As + Bs

data A

1 0 1

1 0 1 Ad

10-1

1

-1

10-1

Page 28: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 28Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

CDMA on signal level IV

integratoroutput

comparatoroutput

Bk

(As + Bs) * Bk

As + Bs

data B

1 0 0

1 0 0 Bd

10-11

-110-1

Page 29: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 29Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

comparatoroutput

CDMA on signal level V

wrongkey K

integratoroutput

(As + Bs) * K

As + Bs

(0) (0) ?

Assumptionsorthogonality of keysneglectance of noiseno differences in signal level => precise power control

10-11

-1

10-1

Page 30: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 30Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

MotivationAloha has a very low efficiencyCDMA needs complex receivers to be able to receive different senders with individual codes at the same time

Idea: use spread spectrum with only one single code (chipping sequence) for spreading for all senders accessing according to aloha

Spread Aloha Multiple Access (SAMA)

1sender A0sender B

01

t

narrowband

send for a shorter periodwith higher power

spread the signal e.g. using the chipping sequence 110101 („CDMA without CD“)

Problem: find a chipping sequence with good characteristics• good autocorrelation for ϕ=0• low autocorrelation for cases where phase ϕ differs from 0

11

collision

Page 31: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 31Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

Comparison SDMA/TDMA/FDMA/CDMA

Approach SDMA TDMA FDMA CDMA Idea segment space into

cells/sectors segment sending time into disjoint time-slots, demand driven or fixed patterns

segment the frequency band into disjoint sub-bands

spread the spectrum using orthogonal codes

Terminals only one terminal can be active in one cell/one sector

all terminals are active for short periods of time on the same frequency

every terminal has its own frequency, uninterrupted

all terminals can be active at the same place at the same moment, uninterrupted

Signal separation

cell structure, directed antennas

synchronization in the time domain

filtering in the frequency domain

code plus special receivers

Advantages very simple, increases capacity per km²

established, fully digital, flexible

simple, established, robust

flexible, less frequency planning needed, soft handover

Dis-advantages

inflexible, antennas typically fixed

guard space needed (multipath propagation), synchronization difficult

inflexible, frequencies are a scarce resource

complex receivers, needs more complicated power control for senders

Comment only in combination with TDMA, FDMA or CDMA useful

standard in fixed networks, together with FDMA/SDMA used in many mobile networks

typically combined with TDMA (frequency hopping patterns) and SDMA (frequency reuse)

higher complexity, typically integrated with FDMA

Page 32: Media Access Schemes - tu- · PDF fileMACA, Polling, etc. CDMA theory and practice ... Also severe problem for CDMA-networks ... Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA SDMA

Wireless Internet 32Andreas Mitschele-Thiel 6-Apr-06

References

Jochen Schiller: Mobile Communications (German and English), Addison-Wesley, 2000(most of the material covered in this chapter is based on the book)

Ramjee Prasad, Marina Ruggieri: Technology Trends in Wireless Communications, Artech House, 2003


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