WO2013122415A1 - 무선 통신 시스템에서 채널 액세스 방법 및 이를 위한 장치 - Google Patents
무선 통신 시스템에서 채널 액세스 방법 및 이를 위한 장치 Download PDFInfo
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- H—ELECTRICITY
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- H04W74/00—Wireless channel access
- H04W74/002—Transmission of channel access control information
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
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- H04L1/12—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel
- H04L1/16—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel in which the return channel carries supervisory signals, e.g. repetition request signals
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- H04L1/1614—Details of the supervisory signal using bitmaps
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W52/00—Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
- H04W52/02—Power saving arrangements
- H04W52/0209—Power saving arrangements in terminal devices
- H04W52/0212—Power saving arrangements in terminal devices managed by the network, e.g. network or access point is master and terminal is slave
- H04W52/0216—Power saving arrangements in terminal devices managed by the network, e.g. network or access point is master and terminal is slave using a pre-established activity schedule, e.g. traffic indication frame
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W88/00—Devices specially adapted for wireless communication networks, e.g. terminals, base stations or access point devices
- H04W88/08—Access point devices
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- Y02D—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES [ICT], I.E. INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES AIMING AT THE REDUCTION OF THEIR OWN ENERGY USE
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Definitions
- the present invention relates to a wireless communication system, and more particularly, to a channel access method and a device supporting the same in a WLAN system.
- WLAN is based on radio frequency technology, and can be used in homes, businesses, or businesses by using portable terminals such as personal digital assistants (PDAs), laptop computers, and portable multimedia players (PMPs). It is a technology that allows wireless access to the Internet in a specific service area.
- PDAs personal digital assistants
- PMPs portable multimedia players
- IEEE 802.11n supports high throughput with data throughputs up to 540 Mbps or higher, and also uses MIMO (multi-antenna) at both the transmitter and receiver to minimize transmission errors and optimize data rates.
- MIMO multi-antenna
- An object of the present invention is to propose an improved channel access method and apparatus therefor in a wireless communication system, preferably in a WLAN system.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus for allowing channel access in a channel access section of another group in a WLAN system supporting a specific channel access section for each group based on a traffic indication map (TIM). Suggest.
- TIM traffic indication map
- Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus for preventing collision with a terminal belonging to another group when allowing channel access in another channel access interval.
- An aspect of the present invention is a method for supporting channel access of a station (STA) not belonging to a group indicated by a TIM (Traffic Indication Map) in a wireless communication system, wherein the STA requests a channel access within a TIM interval. And receiving, in response to the channel access frame for the channel access frame, a step of transmitting, to the STA, a response frame including information on whether the STA permits channel access, and a channel access period of the STA belonging to the group. Is determined based on the bitmap of the TIM within the TIM interval, and channel access of the STA may be allowed only in a section other than the channel access section of the STA belonging to the group.
- a device for supporting channel access of a station (STA) not belonging to a group indicated by a TIM (Traffic Indication Map) in a wireless communication system the transceiver for transmitting and receiving radio signals and
- the processor includes a processor, the processor receives a channel access frame for a channel access request within a TIM interval from the STA, and responds to the channel access frame with a response frame including information on whether the STA permits channel access. It is configured to transmit, the channel access period of the STA belonging to the group is determined based on the bitmap of the TIM within the TIM interval, and the channel access of the STA may be allowed only in sections other than the channel access period of the STA belonging to the group.
- information about the channel access permission interval of the STA within the TIM interval may be transmitted to the STA.
- the information about the channel access permission interval may indicate an association ID (AID) related to a bit allocated to the STA among bits other than all bits indicating the STA belonging to the group in the TIM bitmap.
- AID association ID
- the information about the channel access permission interval may indicate an association ID (AID) associated with a bit allocated to the STA among bits not set to 1 in the TIM bitmap.
- AID association ID
- the information about the channel access permission interval may indicate an association ID (AID) associated with a bit allocated to the STA among bits positioned after the last bit set to 1 in the bitmap of the TIM.
- AID association ID
- the channel access frame may be one of a power save (PS) -Poll frame and an uplink data frame.
- PS power save
- a temporary Association ID may be allocated to the STA during the channel access allowance interval.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method for performing a channel access by a station (STA) not belonging to a group indicated by a TIM (Traffic Indication Map) in a wireless communication system, wherein the STA is a channel within a TIM interval. Transmitting a channel access frame for an access request to an access point (AP) and receiving a response frame including information on whether the STA permits channel access from the AP in response to the channel access frame.
- the channel access period of the STA belonging to the group may be determined based on the bitmap of the TIM within the TIM interval, and the channel access of the STA may be allowed only in a section other than the channel access period of the STA belonging to the group.
- a station (STA) device which does not belong to a group indicated by a TIM (Traffic Indication Map) in a wireless communication system, includes a transceiver and a processor for transmitting and receiving a wireless signal, The processor transmits a channel access frame for a channel access request to an access point (AP) within a TIM interval, and includes information on whether the STA permits channel access from the AP in response to the channel access frame. Configured to receive a response frame, the channel access interval of the STA belonging to the group is determined based on the bitmap of the TIM within the TIM interval, and the channel access of the STA may be allowed only in the interval other than the channel access interval of the STA belonging to the group. Can be.
- the STA may receive information on the channel access allowance interval of the STA within the TIM interval from the AP.
- the information about the channel access permission interval may indicate an association ID (AID) related to a bit allocated to the STA among bits other than all bits indicating the STA belonging to the group in the TIM bitmap.
- AID association ID
- the information about the channel access permission interval may indicate an association ID (AID) associated with a bit allocated to the STA among bits not set to 1 in the TIM bitmap.
- AID association ID
- the information about the channel access permission interval may indicate an association ID (AID) associated with a bit allocated to the STA among bits positioned after the last bit set to 1 in the bitmap of the TIM.
- AID association ID
- the channel access frame may be one of a power save (PS) -Poll frame and an uplink data frame.
- PS power save
- a temporary Association ID may be allocated to the STA during the channel access allowance interval.
- an improved channel access method and apparatus therefor in a wireless communication system preferably a wireless LAN system.
- a wireless LAN system supporting a specific channel access interval for each group based on a traffic indication map (TIM) may allow channel access in another channel access interval.
- TIM traffic indication map
- FIG. 1 is a diagram showing an exemplary structure of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied.
- FIG. 2 is a diagram illustrating another exemplary structure of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied.
- FIG. 3 is a diagram illustrating another exemplary structure of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied.
- FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating an exemplary structure of a WLAN system.
- FIG. 5 is a diagram illustrating a structure of a data link layer and a physical layer of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied.
- FIG. 6 is a diagram illustrating a general link setup process in a WLAN system to which the present invention can be applied.
- FIG. 7 illustrates a MAC frame format of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied.
- FIG. 8 illustrates the HT format of the HT Control field in the MAC frame according to FIG. 7.
- FIG. 9 illustrates the VHT format of the HT Control field in the MAC frame according to FIG. 7.
- FIG. 10 illustrates a PPDU frame format of an IEEE 802.11n system to which the present invention can be applied.
- FIG. 11 illustrates a VHT PPDU frame format of an IEEE 802.11ac system to which the present invention can be applied.
- FIG. 12 is a diagram illustrating a backoff process in a WLAN system to which the present invention can be applied.
- 13 is a diagram for describing a hidden node and an exposed node.
- FIG. 14 is a diagram for explaining an RTS and a CTS.
- 15 is a diagram for describing a power management operation.
- 16 to 18 are diagrams for describing in detail the operation of the STA receiving the TIM.
- 19 is a diagram for explaining a group-based AID.
- 20 is a diagram illustrating examples of an operation of an STA when a group channel access period is configured.
- 21 and 22 are diagrams illustrating a channel access operation of an STA according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- 23 and 24 are diagrams illustrating a channel access time point of a STA according to a deterministic access method.
- 25 to 29 are diagrams illustrating a channel access operation of an STA according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 30 is a diagram illustrating a channel access method according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 31 illustrates a block diagram of a wireless device according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- Embodiments of the present invention may be supported by standard documents disclosed in at least one of the wireless access systems IEEE 802 system, 3GPP system, 3GPP LTE and LTE-Advanced (LTE-A) system and 3GPP2 system. That is, steps or parts which are not described to clearly reveal the technical spirit of the present invention among the embodiments of the present invention may be supported by the above documents. In addition, all terms disclosed in the present document can be described by the above standard document.
- CDMA code division multiple access
- FDMA frequency division multiple access
- TDMA time division multiple access
- OFDMA orthogonal frequency division multiple access
- SC-FDMA single carrier frequency division multiple access
- CDMA may be implemented with a radio technology such as Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (UTRA) or CDMA2000.
- TDMA may be implemented with wireless technologies such as Global System for Mobile communications (GSM) / General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) / Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution (EDGE).
- GSM Global System for Mobile communications
- GPRS General Packet Radio Service
- EDGE Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution
- OFDMA may be implemented in a wireless technology such as IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi), IEEE 802.16 (WiMAX), IEEE 802-20, Evolved UTRA (E-UTRA).
- UTRA is part of the Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS).
- 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) long term evolution (LTE) is part of an Evolved UMTS (E-UMTS) using E-UTRA, and employs OFDMA in downlink and SC-FDMA in uplink.
- LTE-A Advanced is the evolution of 3GPP LTE.
- FIG. 1 is a diagram showing an exemplary structure of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied.
- the IEEE 802.11 architecture may be composed of a plurality of components, and by their interaction, a WLAN may be provided that supports transparent STA mobility for higher layers.
- the Basic Service Set (BSS) may correspond to a basic building block in an IEEE 802.11 LAN. 1 exemplarily shows that there are two BSSs (BSS1 and BSS2) and two STAs are included as members of each BSS (STA1 and STA2 are included in BSS1 and STA3 and STA4 are included in BSS2). do.
- an ellipse representing a BSS may be understood to represent a coverage area where STAs included in the BSS maintain communication. This area may be referred to as a basic service area (BSA).
- BSA basic service area
- the most basic type of BSS in an IEEE 802.11 LAN is an independent BSS (IBSS).
- the IBSS may have a minimal form consisting of only two STAs.
- the BSS (BSS1 or BSS2) of FIG. 1, which is the simplest form and other components are omitted, may correspond to a representative example of the IBSS.
- This configuration is possible when STAs can communicate directly.
- this type of LAN may not be configured in advance, but may be configured when a LAN is required, which may be referred to as an ad-hoc network.
- the membership of the STA in the BSS may be dynamically changed by turning the STA on or off, the STA entering or exiting the BSS region, or the like.
- the STA may join the BSS using a synchronization process.
- the STA In order to access all services of the BSS infrastructure, the STA must be associated with the BSS. This association may be set up dynamically and may include the use of a Distribution System Service (DSS).
- DSS Distribution System Service
- FIG. 2 is a diagram illustrating another exemplary structure of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied.
- components such as a distribution system (DS), a distribution system medium (DSM), and an access point (AP) are added in the structure of FIG. 1.
- DS distribution system
- DSM distribution system medium
- AP access point
- the station-to-station distance directly in the LAN can be limited by PHY performance. In some cases, this distance limit may be sufficient, but in some cases, communication between more distant stations may be necessary.
- the distribution system DS may be configured to support extended coverage.
- the DS refers to a structure in which BSSs are interconnected. Specifically, instead of the BSS independently as shown in FIG. 1, the BSS may exist as an extended type component of a network composed of a plurality of BSSs.
- DS is a logical concept and can be specified by the nature of the distribution system media (DSM).
- the IEEE 802.11 standard logically distinguishes between wireless medium (WM) and distribution system medium (DSM). Each logical medium is used for a different purpose and is used by different components.
- the definition of the IEEE 802.11 standard does not limit these media to the same or to different ones.
- the plurality of media logically different, the flexibility of the IEEE 802.11 LAN structure (DS structure or other network structure) can be described. That is, the IEEE 802.11 LAN structure can be implemented in various ways, the corresponding LAN structure can be specified independently by the physical characteristics of each implementation.
- the DS may support mobile devices by providing seamless integration of multiple BSSs and providing logical services for handling addresses to destinations.
- the AP means an entity that enables access to the DS through the WM to the associated STAs and has STA functionality. Data movement between the BSS and the DS may be performed through the AP.
- STA2 and STA3 illustrated in FIG. 2 have a functionality of STA, and provide a function of allowing associated STAs STA1 and STA4 to access the DS.
- all APs basically correspond to STAs, all APs are addressable entities.
- the address used by the AP for communication on the WM and the address used by the AP for communication on the DSM need not necessarily be the same.
- Data transmitted from one of the STAs associated with an AP to the STA address of that AP may always be received at an uncontrolled port and processed by an IEEE 802.1X port access entity.
- transmission data (or frame) may be transmitted to the DS.
- FIG. 3 is a diagram illustrating another exemplary structure of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied. 3 conceptually illustrates an extended service set (ESS) for providing wide coverage in addition to the structure of FIG. 2.
- ESS extended service set
- a wireless network of arbitrary size and complexity may be composed of DS and BSSs.
- this type of network is called an ESS network.
- the ESS may correspond to a set of BSSs connected to one DS. However, the ESS does not include a DS.
- the ESS network is characterized by what appears to be an IBSS network at the LLC (Logical Link Control) layer. STAs included in the ESS can communicate with each other, and mobile STAs can move from within one BSS to another BSS (within the same ESS) transparently to the LLC.
- LLC Logical Link Control
- BSSs can be partially overlapped, which is a form commonly used to provide continuous coverage.
- the BSSs may not be physically connected, and logically there is no limit to the distance between the BSSs.
- the BSSs can be located at the same physical location, which can be used to provide redundancy.
- one (or more) IBSS or ESS networks may be physically present in the same space as one (or more than one) ESS network.
- the ad-hoc network is operating at the location of the ESS network, if IEEE 802.11 networks are physically overlapped by different organizations, or if two or more different access and security policies are required at the same location. It may correspond to an ESS network type in a case.
- FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating an exemplary structure of a WLAN system.
- an example of an infrastructure BSS including a DS is shown.
- BSS1 and BSS2 constitute an ESS.
- an STA is a device that operates according to MAC / PHY regulations of IEEE 802.11.
- the STA includes an AP STA and a non-AP STA.
- Non-AP STAs generally correspond to devices that users directly handle, such as laptop computers and mobile phones.
- STA1, STA3, and STA4 correspond to non-AP STAs
- STA2 and STA5 correspond to AP STAs.
- a non-AP STA includes a terminal, a wireless transmit / receive unit (WTRU), a user equipment (UE), a mobile station (MS), and a mobile terminal. May be referred to as a mobile subscriber station (MSS).
- the AP is a base station (BS), Node-B (Node-B), evolved Node-B (eNB), and Base Transceiver System (BTS) in other wireless communication fields.
- BS base station
- Node-B Node-B
- eNB evolved Node-B
- BTS Base Transceiver System
- FIG. 5 is a diagram illustrating a structure of a data link layer and a physical layer of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied.
- the physical layer 520 may include a Physical Layer Convergence Procedure Entity 521 and a Physical Medium Dependent Entity 522.
- the PLCP entity 521 connects the MAC sub layer 510 with the data frame.
- the PMD entity 522 wirelessly transmits and receives data with two or more STAs using the OFDM scheme.
- Both the MAC sublayer 510 and the physical layer 520 may include a conceptual management entity, and may be referred to as a MAC Sublayer Management Entity (MLME) 511 and a Physical Layer Management Entity (PLME) 523, respectively.
- MLME MAC Sublayer Management Entity
- PLME Physical Layer Management Entity
- a Station Management Entity (SME) 530 may exist within each STA.
- the SME 530 is a management entity that is independent of each layer and collects layer-based state information from various layer management entities or sets values of specific parameters of each layer.
- the SME 530 may perform this function on behalf of general system management entities and may implement standard management protocols.
- FIG. 5 shows an example of exchanging GET / SET primitives.
- the XX-GET.request primitive is used to request the value of a Management Information Base attribute (MIB attribute), and the XX-GET.confirm primitive returns the value of the corresponding MIB attribute if the status is 'SUCCESS'. Otherwise, an error is displayed in the status field and returned.
- the XX-SET.request primitive is used to request that a specified MIB attribute be set to a given value. If the MIB attribute is meant for a particular action, this request requests the execution of that particular action.
- the state is 'SUCCESS' XX-SET.confirm primitive, it means that the specified MIB attribute is set to the requested value. In other cases, the status field indicates an error condition. If this MIB attribute means a specific operation, this primitive can confirm that the operation was performed.
- the MLME 511, the SME 530, the PLME 523, and the SME 530 each use various primitives through MLME_SAP (MLME_Service Access Point, 550) and PLME_SAP (PLME_Service Access Point, 560), respectively. I can exchange it.
- the primitives may be exchanged between the MLME 511 and the PLME 523 through the MLME-PLME_SAP (MLME-PLME_Service Access Point) 570.
- FIG. 6 is a diagram illustrating a general link setup process in a WLAN system to which the present invention can be applied.
- an STA In order for an STA to set up a link and transmit / receive data with respect to a network, an STA first discovers the network, performs authentication, establishes an association, and authenticates for security. It must go through the back.
- the link setup process may also be referred to as session initiation process and session setup process.
- a process of discovery, authentication, association, and security establishment of a link setup process may be collectively called an association process.
- the STA may perform a network discovery operation.
- the network discovery operation may include a scanning operation of the STA. That is, in order for the STA to access the network, the STA must find a network that can participate. The STA must identify a compatible network before joining the wireless network. A network identification process existing in a specific area is called scanning.
- the STA performing scanning transmits a probe request frame and waits for a response to discover which AP exists in the vicinity while moving channels.
- the responder transmits a probe response frame to the STA that transmits the probe request frame in response to the probe request frame.
- the responder may be an STA that last transmitted a beacon frame in the BSS of the channel being scanned.
- the AP transmits a beacon frame, so the AP becomes a responder.
- the responder is not constant.
- an STA that transmits a probe request frame on channel 1 and receives a probe response frame on channel 1 stores the BSS-related information included in the received probe response frame and stores the next channel (eg, number 2).
- Channel to perform scanning (i.e., probe request / response transmission and reception on channel 2) in the same manner.
- the scanning operation may be performed by a passive scanning method.
- passive scanning the STA performing scanning waits for a beacon frame while moving channels.
- the beacon frame is one of management frames in IEEE 802.11.
- the beacon frame is notified of the existence of a wireless network and is periodically transmitted to allow the STA performing scanning to find the wireless network and participate in the wireless network.
- the AP periodically transmits a beacon frame
- the IBSS STAs in the IBSS rotate and transmit a beacon frame.
- the STA that performs the scanning receives the beacon frame, the STA stores the information on the BSS included in the beacon frame and records beacon frame information in each channel while moving to another channel.
- the STA may store BSS related information included in the received beacon frame, move to the next channel, and perform scanning on the next channel in the same manner.
- active scanning has the advantage of less delay and power consumption than passive scanning.
- step S620 After the STA discovers the network, an authentication process may be performed in step S620.
- This authentication process may be referred to as a first authentication process in order to clearly distinguish from the security setup operation of step S640 described later.
- the authentication process includes a process in which the STA transmits an authentication request frame to the AP, and in response thereto, the AP transmits an authentication response frame to the STA.
- An authentication frame used for authentication request / response corresponds to a management frame.
- the authentication frame includes an authentication algorithm number, an authentication transaction sequence number, a status code, a challenge text, a Robust Security Network, and a finite cyclic group. Group) and the like. This corresponds to some examples of information that may be included in the authentication request / response frame, and may be replaced with other information or further include additional information.
- the STA may send an authentication request frame to the AP.
- the AP may determine whether to allow authentication for the corresponding STA based on the information included in the received authentication request frame.
- the AP may provide a result of the authentication process to the STA through an authentication response frame.
- the association process includes a process in which the STA transmits an association request frame to the AP, and in response thereto, the AP transmits an association response frame to the STA.
- the association request frame may include information related to various capabilities, beacon listening interval, service set identifier (SSID), supported rates, supported channels, RSN, mobility domain. Information about supported operating classes, TIM Broadcast Indication Map Broadcast request, interworking service capability, and the like.
- the association response frame may include information related to various capabilities, status codes, association IDs (AIDs), support rates, Enhanced Distributed Channel Access (EDCA) parameter sets, Received Channel Power Indicators (RCPI), Received Signal to Noise Information such as an indicator, a mobility domain, a timeout interval (association comeback time), an overlapping BSS scan parameter, a TIM broadcast response, and a quality of service (QoS) map.
- AIDs association IDs
- EDCA Enhanced Distributed Channel Access
- RCPI Received Channel Power Indicators
- Received Signal to Noise Information such as an indicator, a mobility domain, a timeout interval (association comeback time), an overlapping BSS scan parameter, a TIM broadcast response, and a quality of service (QoS) map.
- a security setup process may be performed in step S640.
- the security setup process of step S640 may be referred to as an authentication process through a Robust Security Network Association (RSNA) request / response, and the authentication process of step S620 is called a first authentication process, and the security setup process of step S640 is performed. It may also be referred to simply as the authentication process.
- RSNA Robust Security Network Association
- the security setup process of step S640 may include, for example, performing a private key setup through 4-way handshaking through an Extensible Authentication Protocol over LAN (EAPOL) frame. .
- the security setup process may be performed according to a security scheme not defined in the IEEE 802.11 standard.
- IEEE 802.11n In order to overcome the limitation of communication speed in WLAN, IEEE 802.11n exists as a relatively recently established technical standard. IEEE 802.11n aims to increase the speed and reliability of networks and to extend the operating range of wireless networks. More specifically, IEEE 802.11n supports High Throughput (HT) with data throughput of up to 540 Mbps or more, and also uses multiple antennas at both the transmitter and receiver to minimize transmission errors and optimize data rates. It is based on Multiple Inputs and Multiple Outputs (MIMO) technology.
- HT High Throughput
- MIMO Multiple Inputs and Multiple Outputs
- the next generation WLAN system supporting Very High Throughput is the next version of the IEEE 802.11n WLAN system (e.g., IEEE 802.11ac), which is 1 Gbps at the MAC Service Access Point (SAP).
- IEEE 802.11ac the next version of the IEEE 802.11n WLAN system
- SAP MAC Service Access Point
- the next generation WLAN system supports MU-MIMO (Multi User Multiple Input Multiple Output) transmission in which a plurality of STAs simultaneously access a channel in order to use the wireless channel efficiently.
- MU-MIMO Multi User Multiple Input Multiple Output
- the AP may simultaneously transmit packets to one or more STAs that are paired with MIMO.
- supporting the WLAN system operation in whitespace has been discussed.
- TV whitespace TV WS
- the idle frequency band eg, 54-698 MHz band
- whitespace may be referred to as a licensed band that can be preferentially used by a licensed user.
- An authorized user refers to a user who is authorized to use an authorized band and may also be referred to as a licensed device, a primary user, an incumbent user, or the like.
- an AP and / or STA operating in a WS should provide protection for an authorized user. For example, if an authorized user such as a microphone is already using a specific WS channel, which is a frequency band divided in a regulation to have a specific bandwidth in the WS band, the AP may be protected. And / or the STA cannot use a frequency band corresponding to the corresponding WS channel. In addition, the AP and / or STA should stop using the frequency band when the authorized user uses the frequency band currently used for frame transmission and / or reception.
- the AP and / or STA should be preceded by a procedure for determining whether a specific frequency band in the WS band is available, that is, whether there is an authorized user in the frequency band. Knowing whether there is an authorized user in a specific frequency band is called spectrum sensing. As the spectrum sensing mechanism, energy detection, signal detection, and the like are used. If the strength of the received signal is greater than or equal to a predetermined value, it may be determined that the authorized user is in use, or if the DTV preamble is detected, it may be determined that the authorized user is in use.
- M2M communication refers to a communication method that includes one or more machines (Machine), may also be referred to as MTC (Machine Type Communication) or thing communication.
- a machine refers to an entity that does not require human intervention or intervention.
- a device such as a meter or a vending machine equipped with a wireless communication module, as well as a user device such as a smartphone that can automatically connect to a network and perform communication without a user's operation / intervention, may be used. This may correspond to an example.
- the M2M communication may include communication between devices (eg, device-to-device (D2D) communication), communication between a device, and an application server.
- D2D device-to-device
- Examples of device and server communication include communication between vending machines and servers, point of sale devices and servers, and electricity, gas or water meter readers and servers.
- applications based on M2M communication may include security, transportation, health care, and the like. Considering the nature of these applications, M2M communication should generally be able to support the transmission and reception of small amounts of data at low speeds in the presence of very many devices.
- M2M communication should be able to support a large number of STAs.
- WLAN system it is assumed that a maximum of 2007 STAs are linked to one AP.
- methods for supporting a case where a larger number (approximately 6000 STAs) are linked to one AP are provided. Is being discussed.
- many applications are expected to support / require low data rates in M2M communication.
- an STA may recognize whether data to be transmitted to it is based on a TIM (Traffic Indication Map) element, and methods for reducing the bitmap size of the TIM are discussed. It is becoming.
- TIM Traffic Indication Map
- M2M communication is expected to be a lot of traffic with a very long transmission / reception interval. For example, very small amounts of data are required to be sent and received every long period (eg, one month), such as electricity / gas / water use. Accordingly, in the WLAN system, even if the number of STAs that can be associated with one AP becomes very large, it is possible to efficiently support the case where the number of STAs having data frames to be received from the AP during one beacon period is very small. The ways to do this are discussed.
- WLAN technology is rapidly evolving and, in addition to the above examples, technologies for direct link setup, media streaming performance improvement, support for high speed and / or large initial session setup, support for extended bandwidth and operating frequency, etc. Is being developed.
- FIG. 7 illustrates a MAC frame format of an IEEE 802.11 system to which the present invention can be applied.
- a MAC frame format includes a MAC header (MHR), a MAC payload and a MAC footer (MFR).
- MHR includes the Frame Control field, the Duration / ID field, the Address 1 field, the Address 2 field, the Address 3 field, and the Sequence Control.
- ) Field includes the Frame Control field, the Duration / ID field, the Address 1 field, the Address 2 field, the Address 3 field, and the Sequence Control.
- ) Field an Address 4 field, a QoS Control field, and an HT Control field.
- the frame body field is defined as a MAC payload, and data to be transmitted from a higher layer is located and has a variable size.
- the frame check sequence (FCS) field is defined as a MAC footer and used for error detection of MAC frames.
- the first three fields (frame control field, duration / identifier field, address 1 field) and the last field (FCS field) form the minimum frame format and are present in every frame. Other fields may exist only in a specific frame type.
- each field described above may follow the definition of the IEEE 802.11 system.
- each field described above corresponds to an example of fields that may be included in a MAC frame, and may be replaced with another field or further fields may be included.
- FIG. 8 illustrates the HT format of the HT Control field in the MAC frame according to FIG. 7.
- the HT control field includes a VHT subfield, a link adaptation subfield, a calibration position subfield, a calibration sequence subfield, and channel state information / adjustment (CSI / Steering).
- CSI / Steering channel state information / adjustment
- NDP Announcement Null Data Packet Announcement subfield
- Access Category Constraint AC Constraint
- Reverse Authorization / Additional PPDU RSG: Reverse Direction Grant / More PPDU
- RSG Reverse Direction Grant / More PPDU
- the link adaptation subfield may include a training request (TRQ) subfield, an MCS request or antenna selection indication (MAI) request or antenna selection (ASL) subdication, and an MCS feedback sequence indication (MFSI). It may include a MCS Feedback Sequence Identifier subfield, an MCS Feedback and Antenna Selection Command / data (MFB / ASELC) subfield.
- the TRQ subfield is set to 1 when requesting a responder to transmit a sounding PPDU, and is set to 0 when requesting a responder to transmit a sounding PPDU.
- the MAI subfield is set to 14 when the MAI subfield is set to 14, this indicates an ASEL indication, and the MFB / ASELC subfield is interpreted as an antenna selection command / data. Otherwise, the MAI subfield indicates an MCS request and the MFB / ASELC subfield is interpreted as MCS feedback.
- MCS request MCS Request
- the sounding PPDU refers to a PPDU carrying a training symbol that can be used for channel estimation.
- Each of the above-described subfields corresponds to an example of subfields that may be included in the HT control field, and may be replaced with another subfield or may further include additional subfields.
- FIG. 9 illustrates the VHT format of the HT Control field in the MAC frame according to FIG. 7.
- the HT control field includes a VHT subfield, an MRQ subfield, an MSI subfield, an MCS feedback sequence indication / group ID least significant bit (MFSI / GID-L: LSB of Group ID) subfield, an MFB subfield, Group ID Most Significant Bit (GID-H: MSB of Group ID) subfield, Coding Type subfield, FFC Tx Type: Transmission type of MFB response subfield, spontaneous Unsolicited MFB It may include a subfield, an AC Constraint subfield, and an RDG / More PPDU subfield.
- the MFB subfield includes a VHT Number of space time streams (N_STS) subfield, an MCS subfield, a bandwidth (BW) subfield, and a signal to noise ratio (SNR) subfield. It may include.
- Table 1 shows a description of each subfield in the VHT format of the HT control field.
- Table 1 Subfield meaning Justice MRQ MCS request Set to 1 when requesting MCS feedback (solicited MFB). Otherwise, set to 0 MSI MRQ sequence identifier If the MRQ subfield is set to 1, then the MSI subfield contains a sequence number in the range of 0 to 6 identifying the particular request. If the MRQ subfield is set to 0, the MSI subfield is reserved MFSI / GID-L MFB sequence identifier / LSB of Group ID If the unsolicited MFB subfield is set to 0, the MFSI / GID-L subfield contains the received value of the MSI contained in the frame indicated by the MFB information.
- the MFSI / GID-L subfield contains the least significant 3 bits of the group ID of the PPDU represented by the voluntary MFB.
- MFB VHT N_STS, MCS, BW, SNR feedback MFB subfield contains the recommended MFB.
- the coding type subfield includes coding information indicated by the spontaneous MFB (1 for binary convolutional code (BCC) and 0 for low-density parity check (LDPC)). Otherwise, it is reserved FB Tx Type Transmission type of MFB response If the unsolicited MFB subfield is set to 1 and the FB Tx Type subfield is set to 0, the spontaneous MFB is sent using an unbeamformed VHT PPDU or space-time block coding (STBC) VHT PPDU. Represents one of diversity.
- BCC binary convolutional code
- LDPC low-density parity check
- the spontaneous MFB represents a beamformed SU-MIMO (Single User MIMO) VHT PPDU. Otherwise, it is reserved Unsolicited MFB Unsolicited MCS feedback indicator Set to 1 if the MFB is not a response from the MRQ. Set to 0 if MFB is a response from MRQ AC Constraint Set to 0 if the response to reverse grant (RDG) includes data frames from any traffic identifier (TID), and the response to reverse grant (RDG) is from the same reverse (RD) initiator.
- RDG response to reverse grant
- TID traffic identifier
- RGD response to reverse grant
- RDG / More PPDU subfield 0 if only include frames from the same AC as the last data frame received RDG / More PPDU If the RDG / More PPDU subfield is 0, it indicates that there is no reverse acknowledgment (RDG) when transmitted by the reverse initiator (RD), and when the reverse responder transmits, the PPDU carrying the MAC frame is final. Indicates transmission. If the RDG / More PPDU subfield is 1, it indicates that there is a reverse grant (RDG) when transmitted by the reverse (RD) initiator, and other after the PPDU that carries the MAC frame when the responder transmits. Indicates that the PPDU is following
- Each of the above-described subfields corresponds to an example of subfields that may be included in the HT control field, and may be replaced with another subfield or may further include additional subfields.
- the MAC sublayer delivers a MAC protocol data unit (MPDU) as a physical service data unit (PSDU) to the physical layer.
- MPDU MAC protocol data unit
- PSDU physical service data unit
- the PLCP entity generates a PLCP protocol data unit (PPDU) by adding a PHY header and a preamble to the received PSDU.
- PPDU PLCP protocol data unit
- FIG. 10 illustrates a PPDU frame format of an IEEE 802.11n system to which the present invention can be applied.
- FIG. 10A illustrates a PPDU frame according to a Non-HT format, a HT Mixed format, and a HT-Greenfield format.
- Non-HT format represents a frame format for a legacy legacy system (IEEE 802.11 a / g) STA.
- Non-HT format PPDUs include Legacy-Short Training field (L-STF), Legacy-Long Training field (L-LTF), Legacy-Signal (L-SIG). Contains a legacy format preamble that consists of fields.
- the HT mixed format indicates a frame format for an IEEE 802.11n STA while allowing communication of an existing legacy system STA.
- HT mixed format PPDUs include legacy format preambles consisting of L-STF, L-LTF, and L-SIG, HT-Short Training field (HT-STF), HT-Long Training field (HT-LTF: HT-format preamble including HT-Long Training field) and HT-Signal (HT-SIG) field. Since L-STF, L-LTF, and L-SIG mean legacy fields for backward compatibility, they are identical to the non-HT format from L-STF to L-SIG, and STA is followed by the HT-SIG field. The STA may know that the mixed format PPDU.
- the HT-Greenfield format represents a frame format for IEEE 802.11n STA in a format incompatible with existing legacy systems.
- the HT-Greenfield Format PPDU includes a greenfield preamble consisting of HT-GF-STF (HT-Greefield-STF), HT-LTF1, HT-SIG and one or more HT-LTFs. .
- the Data field includes a SERVICE field, a PSDU, a tail bit, and a pad bit. All bits of the data field are scrambled.
- 10B illustrates a service field included in a data field.
- the service field has 16 bits. Each bit is assigned from 0 to 15, and transmitted sequentially from bit 0. Bits 0 to 6 are set to 0 and used to synchronize the descrambler in the receiver.
- FIG. 11 illustrates a VHT PPDU frame format of an IEEE 802.11ac system to which the present invention can be applied.
- the VHT format PPDU includes a legacy format preamble consisting of L-STF, L-LTF, and L-SIG, and a VHT consisting of VHT-SIG-A, HT-STF, and HT-LTF before the data field. It includes a format preamble. Since L-STF, L-LTF, and L-SIG mean legacy fields for backward compatibility, they are identical to the non-HT format from L-STF to L-SIG, and the STA is followed by the VHT-SIG field. It can be seen that it is a VHT format PPDU.
- the L-STF is a field for frame detection, auto gain control (AGC), diversity detection, coarse frequency / time synchronization, and the like.
- L-LTF is a field for fine frequency / time synchronization and channel estimation.
- L-SIG is a field for transmitting legacy control information.
- VHT-SIG-A is a VHT field for transmitting common control information of VHT STAs.
- VHT-STF is a field for AGC, beamformed stream for MIMO.
- VHT-LTFs are fields for channel estimation and beamformed streams for MIMO.
- VHT-SIG-B is a field for transmitting control information specific to each STA.
- a basic access mechanism of MAC is a carrier sense multiple access with collision avoidance (CSMA / CA) mechanism.
- the CSMA / CA mechanism is also called the Distributed Coordination Function (DCF) of the IEEE 802.11 MAC. It basically employs a "listen before talk" access mechanism.
- the AP and / or STA may sense a radio channel or medium during a predetermined time period (e.g., during a DCF Inter-Frame Space (DIFS), before starting transmission.
- DIFS DCF Inter-Frame Space
- a delay period for example, a random backoff period
- HCF hybrid coordination function
- PCF Point Coordination Function
- EDCA Enhanced Distributed Channel Access
- HCCA HCF Controlled Channel Access
- EDCA is a competition based approach for providers to provide data frames to multiple users
- HCCA uses a non-competition based channel access scheme using a polling mechanism.
- the HCF includes a media access mechanism for improving the quality of service (QoS) of the WLAN, and can transmit QoS data in both a contention period (CP) and a contention free period (CFP).
- QoS quality of service
- FIG. 12 is a diagram illustrating a backoff process in a WLAN system to which the present invention can be applied.
- the random backoff count has a pseudo-random integer value and may be determined to be one of values in the range of 0 to CW.
- CW is a contention window parameter value.
- the CW parameter is given CWmin as an initial value, but may take a double value in case of transmission failure (eg, when an ACK for a transmitted frame is not received).
- the CW parameter value is CWmax, data transmission can be attempted while maintaining the CWmax value until the data transmission is successful. If the data transmission is successful, the CW parameter value is reset to the CWmin value.
- the STA continues to monitor the medium while counting down the backoff slots according to the determined backoff count value. If the medium is monitored as occupied, the countdown stops and waits; if the medium is idle, it resumes the remaining countdown.
- the STA3 may confirm that the medium is idle as much as DIFS and transmit the frame immediately. Meanwhile, the remaining STAs monitor and wait for the medium to be busy. In the meantime, data may also be transmitted in each of STA1, STA2, and STA5, and each STA waits for DIFS when the medium is monitored idle, and then counts down the backoff slot according to a random backoff count value selected by the STA. Can be performed. In the example of FIG. 12, STA2 selects the smallest backoff count value and STA1 selects the largest backoff count value.
- the remaining backoff time of the STA5 is shorter than the remaining backoff time of the STA1 at the time when the STA2 finishes the backoff count and starts the frame transmission.
- STA1 and STA5 stop counting for a while and wait for STA2 to occupy the medium.
- the STA1 and the STA5 resume the stopped backoff count after waiting for DIFS. That is, the frame transmission can be started after counting down the remaining backoff slots by the remaining backoff time. Since the remaining backoff time of the STA5 is shorter than that of the STA1, the STA5 starts frame transmission. Meanwhile, while STA2 occupies the medium, data to be transmitted may also occur in STA4.
- the STA4 waits for DIFS, performs a countdown according to a random backoff count value selected by the STA4, and starts frame transmission.
- the remaining backoff time of STA5 coincides with an arbitrary backoff count value of STA4.
- a collision may occur between STA4 and STA5. If a collision occurs, neither STA4 nor STA5 receive an ACK, and thus data transmission fails. In this case, STA4 and STA5 may double the CW value, select a random backoff count value, and perform a countdown.
- the STA1 waits while the medium is occupied due to transmission of the STA4 and STA5, waits for DIFS when the medium is idle, and starts frame transmission after the remaining backoff time passes.
- the CSMA / CA mechanism includes virtual carrier sensing in addition to physical carrier sensing in which the AP and / or STA directly sense the medium.
- Virtual carrier sensing is intended to compensate for problems that may occur in media access, such as a hidden node problem.
- the MAC of the WLAN system may use a network allocation vector (NAV).
- the NAV is a value in which an AP and / or STA currently using or authorized to use a medium instructs another AP and / or STA how long to remain until the medium becomes available.
- the value set to NAV corresponds to a period in which the medium is scheduled to be used by the AP and / or STA transmitting the frame, and the STA receiving the NAV value is prohibited from accessing the medium during the period.
- the NAV may be set according to a value of a duration field of the MAC header of the frame.
- 13 is a diagram for describing a hidden node and an exposed node.
- FIG. 13A illustrates an example of a hidden node, in which STA A and STA B are in communication and STA C has information to transmit.
- STA A may be transmitting information to STA B, it may be determined that the medium is idle when STA C performs carrier sensing before sending data to STA B. This is because transmission of STA A (ie, media occupation) may not be sensed at the location of STA C. In this case, since STA B receives the information of STA A and STA C at the same time, a collision occurs. At this time, STA A may be referred to as a hidden node of STA C.
- FIG. 13B is an example of an exposed node
- STA B is a case in which STA C has information to be transmitted from STA D while transmitting data to STA A.
- FIG. 13B is an example of an exposed node
- STA C is a case in which STA C has information to be transmitted from STA D while transmitting data to STA A.
- FIG. 13B when STA C performs carrier sensing, it may be determined that the medium is occupied by the transmission of STA B. Accordingly, since STA C is sensed as a medium occupancy state even if there is information to be transmitted to STA D, it must wait until the medium becomes idle. However, since STA A is actually outside the transmission range of STA C, transmission from STA C and transmission from STA B may not collide with STA A's point of view, so STA C is unnecessary until STA B stops transmitting. To wait. At this time, STA C may be referred to as an exposed node of STA B.
- FIG. 14 is a diagram for explaining an RTS and a CTS.
- a short signaling packet such as a request to send (RTS) and a clear to send (CTS) may be used.
- RTS request to send
- CTS clear to send
- the RTS / CTS between the two STAs may allow the surrounding STA (s) to overhear, allowing the surrounding STA (s) to consider whether to transmit information between the two STAs. For example, when an STA to transmit data transmits an RTS frame to an STA receiving the data, the STA receiving the data may inform the neighboring terminals that it will receive the data by transmitting the CTS frame to the surrounding terminals.
- FIG. 14A illustrates an example of a method of solving a hidden node problem, and assumes that both STA A and STA C try to transmit data to STA B.
- FIG. 14A When STA A sends the RTS to STA B, STA B transmits the CTS to both STA A and STA C around it. As a result, STA C waits until data transmission between STA A and STA B is completed, thereby avoiding collision.
- FIG. 14B illustrates an example of a method for resolving an exposed node problem, and STA C overhears RTS / CTS transmission between STA A and STA B so that STA C may use another STA (eg, STA). It may be determined that no collision will occur even if data is transmitted to D). That is, STA B transmits the RTS to all the surrounding terminals, and only STA A having the data to actually transmit the CTS. Since STA C receives only RTS and not STA A's CTS, it can be seen that STA A is out of STC C's carrier sensing.
- STA C receives only RTS and not STA A's CTS
- the WLAN system channel sensing must be performed before the STA performs transmission and reception, and always sensing the channel causes continuous power consumption of the STA.
- the power consumption in the receive state is not significantly different from the power consumption in the transmit state, and maintaining the receive state is also a great burden for the power limited STA (ie, operated by a battery). Therefore, if the STA maintains a reception standby state in order to continuously sense the channel, it inefficiently consumes power without any particular advantage in terms of WLAN throughput.
- the WLAN system supports a power management (PM) mode of the STA.
- PM power management
- the power management mode of the STA is divided into an active mode and a power save (PS) mode.
- the STA basically operates in the active mode.
- the STA operating in the active mode maintains an awake state.
- the awake state is a state in which normal operation such as frame transmission and reception or channel scanning is possible.
- the STA operating in the PS mode operates by switching between a sleep state and an awake state.
- the STA operating in the sleep state operates at the minimum power, and does not perform frame scanning as well as channel scanning.
- the STA operates in the sleep state for as long as possible, power consumption is reduced, so the STA has an increased operation period. However, it is impossible to operate unconditionally long because frame transmission and reception are impossible in the sleep state. If there is a frame to be transmitted to the AP, the STA operating in the sleep state may transmit the frame by switching to the awake state. On the other hand, when the AP has a frame to transmit to the STA, the STA in the sleep state may not receive it and may not know that there is a frame to receive. Accordingly, the STA may need to switch to the awake state according to a specific period in order to know whether or not the frame to be transmitted to (or, if there is, receive it) exists.
- 15 is a diagram for describing a power management operation.
- the AP 210 transmits a beacon frame to STAs in a BSS at regular intervals (S211, S212, S213, S214, S215, and S216).
- the beacon frame includes a traffic indication map (TIM) information element.
- the TIM information element includes information indicating that the AP 210 has buffered traffic for STAs associated with the AP 210 and transmits a frame.
- the TIM element includes a TIM used to inform unicast frames and a delivery traffic indication map (DTIM) used to inform multicast or broadcast frames.
- DTIM delivery traffic indication map
- the AP 210 may transmit the DTIM once every three beacon frames.
- STA1 220 and STA2 230 are STAs operating in a PS mode.
- the STA1 220 and the STA2 230 may be configured to receive a TIM element transmitted by the AP 210 by changing from a sleep state to an awake state at every wakeup interval of a predetermined period. .
- Each STA may calculate a time to switch to an awake state based on its local clock. In the example of FIG. 15, it is assumed that the clock of the STA coincides with the clock of the AP.
- the predetermined wakeup interval may be set such that the STA1 220 may switch to the awake state for each beacon interval to receive the TIM element. Accordingly, the STA1 220 may be switched to an awake state when the AP 210 first transmits a beacon frame (S211) (S221). STA1 220 may receive a beacon frame and obtain a TIM element. When the obtained TIM element indicates that there is a frame to be transmitted to the STA1 220, the STA1 220 sends a PS-Poll (Power Save-Poll) frame requesting the AP 210 to transmit the frame. It may be transmitted to (S221a). The AP 210 may transmit the frame to the STA1 220 in response to the PS-Poll frame (S231). After receiving the frame, the STA1 220 switches to the sleep state again.
- S211 beacon frame
- S221a Power Save-Poll
- the AP 210 When the AP 210 transmits the beacon frame for the second time, the AP 210 does not transmit the beacon frame at the correct beacon interval because the medium is busy, such as another device accessing the medium. It can be transmitted at a delayed time (S212). In this case, the STA1 220 switches the operation mode to the awake state according to the beacon interval, but fails to receive the delayed beacon frame, and switches back to the sleep state (S222).
- the beacon frame may include a TIM element set to DTIM.
- the AP 210 delays transmission of the beacon frame (S213).
- the STA1 220 may operate by switching to an awake state according to the beacon interval, and may obtain a DTIM through a beacon frame transmitted by the AP 210. It is assumed that the DTIM acquired by the STA1 220 indicates that there is no frame to be transmitted to the STA1 220 and that a frame for another STA exists. In this case, the STA1 220 may determine that there is no frame to receive, and then switch to the sleep state again.
- the AP 210 transmits the frame to the STA after transmitting the beacon frame (S232).
- the AP 210 transmits a beacon frame fourthly (S214).
- the STA1 220 cannot adjust the wakeup interval for receiving the TIM element because the STA1 220 cannot obtain information indicating that there is buffered traffic for itself through the previous two times of receiving the TIM element.
- the wakeup interval value of the STA1 220 may be adjusted.
- the STA1 220 may be configured to switch the operating state by waking up once every three beacon intervals from switching the operating state for TIM element reception every beacon interval. Accordingly, the STA1 220 cannot acquire the corresponding TIM element because the AP 210 maintains a sleep state at the time when the AP 210 transmits the fourth beacon frame (S214) and transmits the fifth beacon frame (S215).
- the STA1 220 may operate by switching to an awake state and may acquire a TIM element included in the beacon frame (S224). Since the TIM element is a DTIM indicating that a broadcast frame exists, the STA1 220 may receive a broadcast frame transmitted by the AP 210 without transmitting the PS-Poll frame to the AP 210. (S234). Meanwhile, the wakeup interval set in the STA2 230 may be set in a longer period than the STA1 220. Accordingly, the STA2 230 may switch to the awake state at the time S215 at which the AP 210 transmits the beacon frame for the fifth time (S215) and receive the TIM element (S241).
- the STA2 230 may know that there is a frame to be transmitted to itself through the TIM element, and transmit a PS-Poll frame to the AP 210 to request frame transmission (S241a).
- the AP 210 may transmit the frame to the STA2 230 in response to the PS-Poll frame (S233).
- the TIM element includes a TIM indicating whether there is a frame to be transmitted to the STA or a DTIM indicating whether a broadcast / multicast frame exists.
- DTIM may be implemented through field setting of a TIM element.
- 16 to 18 are diagrams for describing in detail the operation of the STA receiving the TIM.
- the STA may switch from a sleep state to an awake state to receive a beacon frame including a TIM from an AP, interpret the received TIM element, and know that there is buffered traffic to be transmitted to the AP. .
- the STA may transmit a PS-Poll frame to request an AP to transmit a data frame.
- the AP may transmit the frame to the STA.
- the STA may receive a data frame and transmit an acknowledgment (ACK) frame thereto to the AP.
- the STA may then go back to sleep.
- ACK acknowledgment
- the AP may operate according to an immediate response method after transmitting a data frame after a predetermined time (for example, a short inter-frame space (SIFS)) after receiving a PS-Poll frame from the STA. Can be. Meanwhile, when the AP fails to prepare a data frame to be transmitted to the STA during the SIFS time after receiving the PS-Poll frame, the AP may operate according to a deferred response method, which will be described with reference to FIG. 18.
- a predetermined time for example, a short inter-frame space (SIFS)
- SIFS short inter-frame space
- the STA transitions from the sleep state to the awake state, receives a TIM from the AP, and transmits a PS-Poll frame to the AP through contention as in the example of FIG. 16.
- the AP fails to prepare a data frame during SIFS even after receiving the PS-Poll frame, the AP may transmit an ACK frame to the STA instead of transmitting the data frame.
- the AP may transmit the data frame to the STA after performing contention.
- the STA may transmit an ACK frame indicating that the data frame was successfully received to the AP and go to sleep.
- STAs may transition from a sleep state to an awake state to receive a beacon frame containing a DTIM element from the AP. STAs may know that a multicast / broadcast frame will be transmitted through the received DTIM.
- the AP may transmit data (ie, multicast / broadcast frame) immediately after the beacon frame including the DTIM without transmitting and receiving the PS-Poll frame.
- the STAs may receive data while continuously awake after receiving the beacon frame including the DTIM, and may switch back to the sleep state after the data reception is completed.
- STAs In the method of operating a power saving mode based on the TIM (or DTIM) protocol described above with reference to FIGS. 16 to 18, STAs have a data frame to be transmitted for themselves through STA identification information included in the TIM element. You can check.
- the STA identification information may be information related to an association identifier (AID), which is an identifier assigned to the STA at the time of association with the AP.
- AID association identifier
- the AID is used as a unique identifier for each STA within one BSS.
- the AID may be assigned to one of values from 1 to 2007.
- 14 bits may be allocated for an AID in a frame transmitted by an AP and / or STA, and an AID value may be allocated up to 16383, but in 2008, 16383 is set as a reserved value. It is.
- the TIM element according to the existing definition is not suitable for the application of M2M application, where a large number of (eg, more than 2007) STAs may be associated with one AP.
- the TIM bitmap size is so large that it cannot be supported by the existing frame format, and is not suitable for M2M communication considering low transmission rate applications.
- M2M communication it is expected that the number of STAs in which a received data frame exists during one beacon period is very small. Therefore, considering the application example of the M2M communication as described above, since the size of the TIM bitmap is expected to be large, but most bits have a value of 0, a technique for efficiently compressing the bitmap is required.
- bitmap compression technique there is a method of defining an offset (or starting point) value by omitting consecutive zeros in front of a bitmap.
- the compression efficiency is not high. For example, when only frames to be transmitted to only two STAs having AIDs of 10 and 2000 are buffered, the compressed bitmap has a length of 1990 but all have a value of 0 except at both ends. If the number of STAs that can be associated with one AP is small, the inefficiency of bitmap compression is not a big problem, but if the number of STAs increases, such inefficiency may be a factor that hinders overall system performance. .
- the AID may be divided into groups to perform more efficient data transmission.
- Each group is assigned a designated group ID (GID).
- GID group ID
- AIDs allocated on a group basis will be described with reference to FIG. 19.
- 19 is a diagram for explaining a group-based AID.
- FIG. 19 (a) is a diagram illustrating an example of an AID allocated on a group basis.
- the first few bits of the AID bitmap may be used to indicate a GID.
- the first two bits of the AID bitmap may be used to represent four GIDs.
- the first two bits (B1 and B2) indicate the GID of the corresponding AID.
- FIG. 19 (b) is a diagram illustrating another example of an AID allocated on a group basis.
- the GID may be allocated according to the location of the AID.
- AIDs using the same GID may be represented by an offset and a length value.
- GID 1 is represented by an offset A and a length B, it means that AIDs A through A + B-1 on the bitmap have GID 1.
- FIG. 19 (b) it is assumed that AIDs of all 1 to N4 are divided into four groups. In this case, AIDs belonging to GID 1 are 1 to N1, and AIDs belonging to this group may be represented by offset 1 and length N1.
- AIDs belonging to GID 2 may be represented by offset N1 + 1 and length N2-N1 + 1
- AIDs belonging to GID 3 may be represented by offset N2 + 1 and length N3-N2 +
- GID AIDs belonging to 4 may be represented by an offset N3 + 1 and a length N4-N3 + 1.
- channel access may be allowed only to STA (s) corresponding to a specific group during a specific time interval, and channel access may be restricted to other STA (s).
- a predetermined time period in which only specific STA (s) are allowed to access may be referred to as a restricted access window (RAW).
- RAW restricted access window
- 19 (c) illustrates a channel access mechanism according to a beacon interval when the AID is divided into three groups.
- the first beacon interval (or the first RAW) is a period in which channel access of an STA corresponding to an AID belonging to GID 1 is allowed, and channel access of STAs belonging to another GID is not allowed.
- the first beacon includes a TIM element only for AIDs corresponding to GID 1.
- the second beacon frame includes a TIM element only for AIDs having GID 2, so that only the channel access of the STA corresponding to the AID belonging to GID 2 is allowed during the second beacon interval (or second RAW).
- the third beacon frame includes a TIM element only for AIDs having GID 3, and thus only channel access of the STA corresponding to the AID belonging to GID 3 is allowed during the third beacon interval (or third RAW).
- the fourth beacon frame again includes a TIM element for only AIDs having GID 1, and thus only channel access of the STA corresponding to the AID belonging to GID 1 is allowed during the fourth beacon interval (or fourth RAW). Then, even in each of the fifth and subsequent beacon intervals (or fifth and subsequent RAWs), only channel access of the STA belonging to the specific group indicated in the TIM included in the beacon frame may be allowed.
- the order of GIDs allowed according to beacon intervals is cyclic or periodic, but the present invention is not limited thereto. That is, by including only the AID (s) belonging to a particular GID (s) in the TIM element (hereinafter referred to as " separated TIM operation "), during the particular time period (e.g., a particular RAW), The operation may be performed in a manner of allowing only channel access of the STA (s) corresponding to the specific AID (s) and not allowing channel access of the remaining STA (s). In other words, the information indicating whether the AP buffers data to STAs of the access group by a specific TIM may be limited to the access group by the TIM.
- the group-based AID allocation scheme as described above may also be referred to as a hierarchical structure of the TIM. That is, the entire AID space may be divided into a plurality of blocks, and only channel access of STA (s) (that is, STAs of a specific group) corresponding to a specific block having a non-zero value may be allowed. Accordingly, the TIM can be divided into small blocks / groups so that the STAs can easily maintain the TIM information and manage the blocks / groups according to the class, quality of service (QoS), or purpose of the STA.
- QoS quality of service
- 19 illustrates a two-level hierarchy, the hierarchical TIM may be configured in the form of two or more levels.
- the entire AID space may be divided into a plurality of page groups, each page group may be divided into a plurality of blocks, and each block may be divided into a plurality of sub-blocks.
- the first N1 bits represent a page ID (i.e., PID)
- the next N2 bits represent a block ID
- the next N3 bits Indicates a sub-block ID and may be configured in such a way that the remaining bits indicate the STA bit position within the sub-block.
- the STA is a general beacon (for example, DTIM for transmitting information about the TIM elements (for example, TIM for GID 1, 2, 3) divided for each group described above in a long cycle Beacons, long beacons).
- information on the TIM elements classified for each group from the beacons transmitted in a long period while the STA performs the association process with the AP for example, the transmission period / length of the TIM elements classified for each group) , Slot time, etc. in each group access period
- a corresponding TIM element may be received by switching to an awake state in a period in which the TIM element of the group to which the corresponding STA belongs is transmitted.
- the TIM element divided by each group may be referred to as a TIM segment.
- STAs belonging to a specific group may use the channel only in the "group channel access period" (or RAW) assigned to the group.
- the AP broadcasts that data of a specific STA exists in the buffer through a TIM bitmap indication so that the STAs included in the TIM bitmap know that their data is waiting in the buffer and wait for data reception. can do.
- the traffic for the STA may have a characteristic that occurs according to a long period (eg, tens of minutes or hours). Since the STA does not need to maintain the awake state frequently, it is preferable to operate in the sleep mode for a long time and to occasionally switch to the awake state (that is, the wakeup interval of the corresponding STA is set long). As described above, an STA having a long period of wake-up interval may be referred to as an STA operating in a "long-sleeper" or "long-sleep" mode. However, the reason why the wakeup period is set to be long is not necessarily limited to M2M communication, and the wakeup interval may be set to be long according to the state of the STA or the surrounding situation in general WLAN operation.
- the STA may determine whether the wakeup interval has been elapsed based on its local clock.
- the local clock of the STA generally uses a low-cost oscillator, there is a high probability of error, and furthermore, if the STA operates in the long-sleep mode, the error may become larger over time. Therefore, the time synchronization of the STA that wakes up from time to time may not match the time synchronization of the AP. For example, the STA calculates that it is a timing at which it can receive a beacon and switches to an awake state, but may not receive a beacon actually transmitted by the AP at that timing. That is, the STA may miss the beacon frame due to a clock drift, and this problem may occur a lot when the long-sleep mode is operated.
- the time slot for receiving downlink data by the STA (s) indicated by the TIM element and the presence of data buffered in the AP by the STA (s) indicated by the TIM element during one access group period may be an empty time slot.
- the STA that checks the TIM information transmitted from the beacon or the beacon does not belong to an access available group in the corresponding section, but the latency until the access available section is too long or checks the TIM.
- the uplink data may be transmitted. Or, in a special situation such as transmitting emergency data or power outage, the STA may arbitrarily transmit a PS-Poll frame or transmit uplink data.
- the AP may perform not only access control for PS-Poll frame transmission of the group STA (s) capable of channel access in the corresponding interval, but also access control of the STA (s) described above.
- the channel is temporarily accessed to the STA (s) described above by utilizing the remaining space except for the portion set to 1 in the TIM bitmap transmitted to schedule PS-Poll frame transmission of the group. (channel access) can be allowed.
- the bit position set to 1 in the bitmap field of the TIM element means that a time point (or time slot) associated with the corresponding bit position is assigned to the STA as a channel access period, and both uplink and downlink are associated or downlinked. Only links can be related.
- the STA corresponding to the bit set to 1 in the bitmap field receives the buffered downlink data stored in the AP in the designated channel access period or the uplink data of the STA. Can be transmitted to the AP.
- the STA corresponding to the bit set to 1 in the bitmap field may receive only buffered downlink data stored in the AP in the designated channel access period. The solution according to the invention is applicable to both situations.
- 20 is a diagram illustrating examples of an operation of an STA when a group channel access period is configured.
- the group access interval of the corresponding TIM is used. It can be applied by subdividing whether the data is buffered. That is, since the TIM element includes only indication information for STAs belonging to a specific group, in case of an STA not belonging to the group (that is, for an STA not indicated by the corresponding TIM element), the buffered data for the STA is stored in the AP. Even if it is present at, the information to be transmitted does not exist. In FIG.
- MD More Data
- an STA that does not belong to the group may transmit uplink data to the AP.
- the STA 3 may arbitrarily transmit an uplink data to the AP in the channel access period allocated to the group 1.
- the AP may inform the STA of time information of the section allowing the channel access of the STA, and may attempt to access the channel according to the section allowing the channel access of the STA. For example, in FIG. 20, when the STA 3 transmits the PS-Poll, it belongs to a channel access interval for the group 1, so the AP does not transmit data immediately after transmitting the ACK frame even though there is data to transmit to the STA 3. Time information about the channel access interval (GID 3 channel access in FIG. 20) allocated to group 3 to which 3 belongs is transmitted to transmit data to STA 3 in the channel access interval allocated to group 3.
- GID 3 channel access in FIG. 20 Time information about the channel access interval allocated to group 3 to which 3 belongs is transmitted to transmit data to STA 3 in the channel access interval allocated to group 3.
- the AP detects a situation in which the number of channel access groups is large or the time required for the STA to access its channel is long, or the channel access of the STAs belonging to the channel access group of the STA may be concentrated.
- simply informing the channel accessible interval of the STA may be difficult to support efficient channel access operation between the AP and the STA.
- a particular STA may experience a situation where it is too long to wait for its channel access, and STAs that transmit PS-Poll or data to the AP from an access group other than their own group may restrict channel access. If channel access is concentrated and delayed to a specific access group, channel access control may be inefficient for overall channel access control.
- the present invention proposes a channel access method of an STA for solving such a problem. That is, according to the present invention, in an environment supporting a separated TIM operation mode, an STA may transmit a multi-TIM over a TIM-based channel access interval allocated to another group to which the STA does not belong (or beyond one TIM-based channel access interval).
- a specific STA performs channel access in another channel access group or another channel access period that does not belong to the following access group overriding or simply overriding / overloading. This is called overloading.
- STA (s) in which downlink data is indicated by one TIM element may be referred to as an access group, and a section allowing channel access to a specific access group may be referred to as an access group section or a group access section.
- 21 is a diagram illustrating a channel access operation of an STA according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the AP is an STA (for example, access group 2 or access group 3) in which the STA does not belong to group 1 by the TIM indication, the AP allows channel access of the STA within the access group interval of the group 1. An example is shown.
- a frame for channel access to the AP (for example, PS-Poll frame) can be transmitted.
- the STA that does not correspond to the access group 1 may be an STA that does not have an association with the corresponding AP or may be an STA that has an association but does not belong to the access group 1.
- the STA may not be allocated an AID from the AP because it does not associate with the corresponding AP, or may be an STA assigned an AID belonging to an access group other than the access group 1.
- the AP is an STA that attempts to access the channel, but the STA does not belong to the access group 1, but depending on the state of the network, for example, when the channel access load of the access group belonging to the TIM-1 is not high or the STA can be operated on the TIM-1. If there is an extra space (eg, AID) of the STA, the STA may temporarily allow channel access.
- the STA may temporarily allow channel access.
- MD More Data
- the STA may perform CCA waiting until it receives data transmitted from the AP, receive data from the AP, and then transmit a corresponding response message (for example, an ACK frame) back to the AP.
- a response message for example, an ACK frame
- the AP does not allow overriding of the STA that has transmitted the channel access frame (when not storing buffered data to be transmitted to the STA at the same time)
- information indicating this (ie, allowing overriding) through a response message is allowed.
- MD 1-bit additional data
- the STA may transmit uplink data to the AP in an access group interval of an access group to which the STA does not belong, which will be described with reference to FIG. 22.
- 22 is a diagram illustrating a channel access operation of an STA according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the AP is an STA (eg, access group 2 or access group 3) in which the STA does not belong to access group 1 by a TIM indication, but the other allows the STA to access the channel within the access group 1 interval.
- STA eg, access group 2 or access group 3
- the STA does not belong to access group 1 by a TIM indication, but the other allows the STA to access the channel within the access group 1 interval.
- An example is shown.
- the STA When the STA has uplink data to be transmitted to the AP in a section other than the access group section allocated to the access group to which the STA belongs (access group 1 section), the STA is a frame for channel access (that is, an uplink data frame). ) May be transmitted to the AP.
- the STA may transmit immediate uplink data to the AP.
- the STA that does not correspond to the access group 1 may be an STA that does not have an association with the corresponding AP or may be an STA that has an association but does not belong to the access group 1.
- the STA may not be assigned an AID from the AP because it does not associate with the corresponding AP, and may be an STA belonging to an access group other than the access group 1.
- the AP is an STA that attempts to access the channel is an STA that does not belong to the access group 1, but the AP that successfully receives an uplink data frame from the STA transmits a response frame (eg, an ACK frame) to the STA.
- a response frame eg, an ACK frame
- the AP may allow overriding in a response frame for data of the corresponding STA and / or the AP transmits to the STA. If the buffered data exists, the information to be transmitted may be included and transmitted.
- the AP may provide such information (ie, whether to allow overriding) by newly defining a bit included in a frame control field of a response frame for the STA.
- a bit included in a frame control field of a response frame for the STA For example, one bit of a frame control field of an ACK frame for data transmitted by an STA may be reused (eg, a bit of a power management subfield).
- the corresponding STA may perform channel access in the overriding allowance interval.
- the PM bit when the PM bit is set to 1, the STA cannot access the channel until receiving the beacon frame (for example, the beacon frame including the TIM element for the next group).
- the information indicated by the values of 0 and 1 may be set in reverse.
- a detailed description of the overriding interval of the STA will be described later.
- the AP may provide information indicating whether to allow overriding and data to be transmitted to the STA by combining two bits included in the frame control field of the response frame with respect to the STA.
- information may be provided by combining two 1-bits (for example, PM bits and additional data (MD) bits) of a frame control field of an ACK frame for data transmitted by an STA. have.
- the STA may transmit uplink data to the AP again for the indicated overriding allowance time.
- the STA cannot access the uplink channel and indicates that a buffered frame to be transmitted to the STA is in the AP.
- the STA may include a situation in which the data to be received in the downlink is included in the buffer but the STA cannot transmit the PS-Poll frame to the AP. That is, it may mean an indication that the AP does not transmit data in the current round (ie, the current access group section) under the determination of the channel access load in the current access group section.
- the setting of the PM and MD bit values for each case supported by the system may be applied in a different order from the above-described order.
- the information indicated by the bit values 0 and 1 of the PM may be set in reverse, and the information indicated by the bit values 0 and 1 of the MD may be set in the reverse direction.
- the PM bit has been described as an example.
- any bit in the response frame may be redefined in addition to the PM bit to indicate whether the uplink channel is accessible.
- any bit of the Frame Control field may be overridden or any bit of the PLCP SIG field may be overridden to indicate whether uplink channel access is possible.
- the STA when the STA attempts to override the group to which the STA does not belong, the STA requests a request frame for requesting overriding (or permitting overriding) for channel access.
- a frame eg, PS-Poll or an uplink data frame
- the STA may transmit a request frame to the AP.
- a frame for channel access eg, PS-Poll or uplink data frame
- a control (or management) frame of a new subtype may be defined in a frame control field of a frame for accessing an existing channel to indicate whether to request an override.
- the frame control field may indicate whether to request an overriding through the power management (PM) field.
- PM power management
- a frame for channel access may be used as a frame for requesting overriding together.
- a signaling field indicating whether to request an overriding in the SIG field may be included.
- the STA may request an access group overriding from the AP by defining a new frame format for requesting overriding instead of a frame (eg, PS-Poll or uplink data frame) for channel access.
- the allowable overriding interval may be limitedly set within the access group interval of the TIM in which the STA performs the overriding.
- the configuration may be extended to multiple access group intervals.
- the overriding allowance section may be set by extending to the access group section section of the group 2. Or, it can be extended to set for a specific time predefined or signaled by the system.
- the AP may inform the STA of information on the overriding allowance interval through a specific field in the response frame for the channel access frame received from the STA.
- the information on the overriding allowable section may designate a start point and / or an end point of the section allowing overriding. For example, when a start time point and an end time point are designated, a section from a designated start time point to a designated end time point may correspond to an overriding section. In addition, when only the start time is specified, the section from the designated start time to the end time of the access group section of the corresponding TIM may correspond to an overriding allowable section. When only the end time is specified, the specified end after receiving the response frame including the corresponding information The section up to the viewpoint may correspond to the overriding allowable section.
- the AP may inform the STA of information on the overriding allowance interval by using a duration field in the ACK frame transmitted in response to the channel access frame received from the STA.
- a duration field in the MAC header of an ACK frame For example, in the duration field in the MAC header of an ACK frame, a microsecond time unit (or multiple integers) or a system defined default slot time (e.g. for backoff counting). Slot time) or a symbol value.
- the information on the overriding allowable interval within 2 octets may be informed without changing the size of the duration field in the existing MAC header.
- the AP indicates information indicating that the duration field of the ACK frame is applied differently (for example, information about an overriding allowable interval or Information indicating whether an ACK frame is present) may be indicated to the STA.
- information indicating that the duration field of the ACK frame is applied differently for example, information about an overriding allowable interval or Information indicating whether an ACK frame is present
- a control (or management) frame of a new subtype is defined so that the duration field of the corresponding ACK frame indicates an overriding interval. It may indicate that the field indicates.
- the duration field may indicate that the duration field is an overriding allowable interval through a power management (PM) field in a frame control field.
- PM power management
- the duration field of the corresponding ACK frame may be defined to be used only as the proposed overriding access offset value.
- a signaling field indicating the type (or other usage) of the ACK frame may be included in the SIG field.
- a new response frame format may be defined differently to provide the STA with information on the overriding allowable interval.
- the response frame transmitted by the AP is a RA (Receiver Address) or AID information of the STA transmitting the frame (eg, PS-Poll or uplink data frame) for channel access, and a frame control field. It may include information about the FCS field and the overriding allowable interval.
- the transmitted AID information may be AID information in a newly (re) assigned group instead of AID information previously allocated by the STA. This reassigned AID information may be valid only in the overriding allowance interval.
- the channel access method (or order) of the STA is the information of the TIM (for example, AID information associated with the indication belonging to the TIM element, the bit position in which the STA belongs to the TIM element, the number of STAs belonging to the TIM element ( A system operated in relation to the number of STAs set to 1 and / or the number of STAs whose bits are set to 0), information related to PID, etc., which may be referred to as a deterministic access way.
- the channel access time for example, a time of transmitting a PS-Poll frame or uplink data
- the channel access time for example, a time of transmitting a PS-Poll frame or uplink data
- FIG. 23 is a diagram illustrating a channel access point of a STA according to a deterministic access method.
- an access time slot of an STA indicated by a TIM element included in a beacon frame may be determined to be fully spread during a beacon interval. That is, the time of the access time slots of all STAs set to 1 bit in the bitmap of the TIM element may constitute the entire beacon interval.
- a channel access time of the STA may be determined in an interval of a beacon including the TIM element according to the bit position (or AID related thereto) of the STA in the bitmap included in the TIM element.
- the channel access time point may be mapped to a function related to the bit position (or the position of the STA) in the bitmap of the TIM element. For example, in FIG.
- the p th time slot means an actual access time slot of the STA associated with the position of bit q in the bitmap of the TIM element.
- the p-th time slot where the actual STA performs channel access may be mapped to bit q using a specific permutation function.
- a function may be determined by a parameter function such as the number of all STAs covered by the TIM element (ie, belonging to a bitmap in the TIM element) or the number of STAs set to 0/1 in the TIM element and the slot time. have.
- access time slots of STAs having a bit set to 1 are fully spread during the beacon interval, but the length of the time slot is set smaller than the example of FIG. 23, so that access time slots are fully spread. Instead, the access time slots of STAs whose bits are set to 1 are sequentially determined from the start point of the beacon interval, and the remaining beacon interval may be set.
- FIG. 24 is another diagram illustrating channel access timing of an STA according to a deterministic access way.
- an access time slot for STAs set to 1 in a bitmap of a TIM element included in a beacon frame is not completely distributed during the beacon interval, and a portion of the beacon interval is set to a channel access period of the corresponding STA.
- the STA in the group set to 1 in the bitmap of the TIM element may perform channel access to the AP within the contention window (CW).
- the size CW (n) of the contention window CW may be determined in relation to the number of bits (the number of STAs) set to 1 in the bitmap of the TIM element. Can be determined.
- n denotes the number of bits set to 1 in the TIM element
- CW (n) denotes the magnitude of CW applied to the interval of the beacon in which the number of bits set to 1 in the TIM element has n value
- T is Indicates slot time.
- any STA not belonging to the TIM may select a channel access frame.
- the rule applied to the above-described deterministic access method may be influenced to support the overriding of the corresponding STA. To solve this problem, the following method may be applied.
- the channel access method in the system supporting the deterministic access method described below may be equally applied to the channel access method described above in addition to the deterministic access method.
- 25 is a diagram illustrating a channel access operation of an STA according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- an AP may allocate an arbitrary STA (s) (overriding STA) that does not belong to a corresponding access group by using an available bitmap space (or available AID space) in a bitmap of a corresponding TIM. have.
- the channel access time of STAs not belonging to the access group may be determined by considering only the number set to 1 in the TIM bitmap and the part set to 0 in the TIM bitmap. If the number of STAs belonging to the access group is smaller than the number of STAs that can be supported by the TIM (that is, the number of bits of the bitmap that can be indicated by the TIM), the AP remains available in the entire bitmap.
- the bit (s) may be assigned to STA (s) that do not belong to the access group. Or in the corresponding bit position (access opportunity) that pre-reserves some access opportunity (or point of time) that can be used by the overriding STAs, and indicates the pre-reserved segment to the overriding STA.
- a bit ie, an AID
- Any STA that does not belong to the access group indicated by the TIM may be included. That is, all STAs belonging to the group may be considered in order to determine a channel access point for any STA not belonging to the access group indicated by the TIM.
- bits are allocated to any STA (s) not belonging to access group 1 from the next position of the bits for all STAs in access group 1. The case is illustrated.
- the channel access timing of the corresponding STAs may be determined from the location of the bit indicating the STA. have.
- the channel access time of the corresponding STAs may be mapped to the position of the bit associated with any STA using a specific permutation function.
- the AP selects an AID corresponding to an available bitmap space so that any STAs not belonging to the access group indicated by the TIM can perform channel access without affecting channel access of other STAs belonging to the group.
- the information on the (re) assigned AID may be directly transmitted by the AP to the overriding STA. That is, as information on an interval allowing channel access of an STA that does not belong to a group indicated by the TIM, it does not belong to the group among bits other than all bits (0 or 1) indicating an STA belonging to the group in the TIM bitmap.
- the AID associated with the bit allocated to the STA may be transmitted.
- an AID associated with a bit allocated to an STA not belonging to the group may be transmitted.
- the AP may directly transmit information on a channel access time so that any STAs not belonging to the access group indicated by the TIM may perform channel access. That is, information about a channel access time associated with a bit allocated to an STA not belonging to the group may be transmitted to the corresponding STA.
- the channel access time of any STAs not belonging to the access group indicated by the TIM may be referred to as an overriding access time.
- the AP may transmit information on the overriding access time determined from the bit position of the bitmap allocated to the overriding STA that does not belong to the access group indicated by the TIM, to the corresponding STA.
- the information about the AID or the information of the overriding access time may include a response frame (for example, an ACK frame or a newly defined response) for a channel access frame (for example, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame) of the overriding STA. Frame).
- the STA performing the overriding may transmit a PS-Poll frame and receive an ACK frame including information on the AID or the overriding access time information.
- the overriding STA does not immediately wait for data transmission from the AP, but waits according to channel access time or overriding access time information according to AID information transmitted by the AP, and then receives data from the AP.
- the description of the response frame is the same as described above, the detailed description is omitted.
- the interval or access opportunity for pre-reserving the overriding STA is not necessarily limited to the last available position of the bitmap in the TIM as shown in FIG. 25, but to 0. All channel access time points associated with the configured location may be used for the overriding STA, which will be described with reference to FIG. 26.
- the number of pre-reserving sections and access opportunities may be determined by a parameter of an amount set to zero (that is, the number of STAs without buffered data). Alternatively, on the contrary, it may be determined by a parameter of an amount set to 1 in the bitmap (that is, the number of STAs having buffered data).
- 26 is a diagram illustrating a channel access operation of an STA according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- a bit of a TIM bitmap may be set to 0 for STAs without buffered data among STAs belonging to the access group indicated by the TIM (second position of the TIM bitmap in the example of FIG. 25). , Second, last position of the TIM bitmap in the example of FIG. 26).
- all channel access points associated with bit positions set to 0 in the bitmap in the TIM may be used for the overriding STA, and the AP may buffer not only the bitmap space (if present) available in the bitmap of the TIM.
- the bit (s) may be allocated to the overriding STA in consideration of all the bit positions set to 0 since no data exists.
- STAs attempting to override may transmit a channel access frame (eg, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame) to the AP at a channel access time determined by a bit position set to zero.
- a channel access frame eg, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame
- a corresponding access opportunity may be obtained by a contention method (for example, a random backoff method).
- the AP has an empty access opportunity (access opportunity) (ie, a bit set to 0 because there is no buffered data) can be directly assigned to the overriding STA. That is, the AP can access an access opportunity (ie, a buffer) so that any STAs not belonging to the access group indicated by the TIM can perform channel access without affecting channel access of other STAs belonging to the group.
- access opportunity ie, a bit set to 0 because there is no buffered data
- the AID corresponding to the bit set to 0 can be temporarily (re) allocated because the specified data does not exist.
- the information on the (re) assigned AID may be directly transmitted by the AP to the overriding STA. That is, as an information on an interval allowing channel access of an STA not belonging to a group indicated by the TIM, an AID associated with a bit allocated to an STA not belonging to the group among bits not set to 1 in the TIM bitmap may be transmitted. .
- the AP may directly transmit information on a channel access time corresponding to an access opportunity so that any STAs not belonging to the access group indicated by the TIM may perform channel access.
- the AP receives information on the overriding access time determined from the bit position (bit position set to 0 because no buffered data exists) assigned to an overriding STA that does not belong to the access group indicated by the TIM. Can be sent to.
- the information about the AID or the information of the overriding access time may include a response frame (for example, an ACK frame or a newly defined response) for a channel access frame (for example, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame) of the overriding STA. Frame).
- the STA performing the overriding may transmit a PS-Poll frame and receive an ACK frame including information on the AID or the overriding access time information.
- the overriding STA does not immediately wait for data transmission from the AP, but waits according to channel access time or overriding access time information according to AID information transmitted by the AP, and then receives data from the AP.
- the description of the response frame is the same as described above, a detailed description thereof will be omitted.
- FIG. 27 is a diagram illustrating a channel access operation of an STA according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the AP does not spread the channel access time by the number n of STAs whose bits are set to 1 in the bitmap of the TIM element
- the channel access time may be spread by the number N of all STAs (regardless of the bit setting value) belonging to the bitmap.
- the total beacon interval is divided into 20 time slots associated with all the bits belonging to the bitmap of the TIM element, and the 20 time slots correspond to the 10 access time slots associated with the bit position set to 1 in the bitmap of the TIM element. It consists of ten access time slots (ie, empty time slots) associated with bit positions set to zero in the bitmap of the TIM element.
- an STA that attempts to override receives a TIM, and thus, a time point corresponding to a bit position set to 0 in a bitmap of a TIM element (ie, In a time slot, a channel access frame (eg, a PS-Poll or an uplink data frame) may be transmitted.
- the actual access application time point may be mapped to a bit position using a specific permutation function.
- a function may be determined by a parameter function such as the number of all STAs belonging to the bitmap in the TIM element or the number of STAs set to 0/1 in the TIM element and the slot time. If there is more than one STA that attempts to override in one access time slot, channel access opportunity for the corresponding access slot may be acquired by contention (eg, a random backoff scheme).
- the STA that attempts to override may not attempt to access the channel at a time corresponding to a bit position set to 0 in the bitmap of the TIM element. There is this.
- an STA attempting to override does not transmit a channel access frame (eg, a PS-Poll or an uplink data frame) at a point corresponding to a bit position set to 0 in a bitmap of a TIM element, at any point in time.
- a channel access frame eg, a PS-Poll or an uplink data frame
- the AP may directly allocate empty access time slots (eg, slots corresponding to a portion set to 0 of the TIM bitmap) to the overriding STA.
- the overriding STA may temporarily (re) allocate an AID corresponding to an empty access time slot.
- the information on the (re) assigned AID may directly transmit information of the AID to the overriding STA, and may also transmit information (ie, overriding access time information) about an accessible time associated with the AID.
- the information about the AID or information on the accessible time point may be transmitted through a response frame method for a channel access frame (eg, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame) of the overriding STA.
- a response frame method for a channel access frame eg, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame
- the STA may receive a beacon (TIM element) that is not associated with the AP but is transmitted from the AP.
- a beacon TIM element
- the channel access frame (for example, PS-Poll or uplink) is performed at a time point (ie, a time slot) corresponding to a bit position set to 0 in the bitmap of the TIM element. Data frame).
- the actual access application time point may be mapped to a bit position using a specific permutation function.
- such a function may be determined by a parameter function such as the number of all STAs belonging to the bitmap in the TIM element or the number of STAs set to 0/1 in the TIM element and the slot time. If there is more than one STA that attempts to override in one access time slot, channel access opportunity for the corresponding access slot may be acquired by contention (for example, a random backoff scheme).
- a channel access frame (eg, PS-Poll or uplink data frame) may be transmitted.
- the STA attempting to override transmits a channel access frame (eg, PS-Poll or uplink data frame) at a time point (ie, a time slot) corresponding to a bit position set to 0 in the bitmap of the TIM element.
- the AP may directly allocate empty access time slots (eg, slots corresponding to zero set portion of the TIM bitmap) to the overriding STA. have.
- the overriding STA may temporarily (re) allocate an AID corresponding to an empty access time slot.
- the information on the (re) assigned AID may directly transmit information of the AID to the overriding STA, and may also transmit information (ie, overriding access time information) about an accessible time associated with the AID.
- the information about the AID or information on the accessible time point may be transmitted through a response frame method for a channel access frame (eg, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame) of the overriding STA.
- a response frame method for a channel access frame eg, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame
- the example according to FIGS. 26 to 27 may be more effective when an access opportunity is allocated to an STA belonging to a corresponding group accessed on a TIM basis in consideration of a part set to 0 in a bitmap of the TIM. That is, when mapping an access opportunity to a certain section in time, removing the portion set to 0 (when there is no buffered data of the corresponding STA) and scheduling the predetermined section as the channel access section considering only the number of buffered STAs. In this case, collision with an overriding STA may occur.
- the access opportunity is already allocated based on the TIM bitmap at that time. Since the STA in the corresponding group can transmit the PS-Poll frame, a collision may occur between the two STAs. Therefore, to apply the above method, when an access opportunity is allocated to an STA having buffered data according to the TIM bitmap, the access opportunity may be allocated in consideration of up to a bitmap portion set to zero. That is, the part set to 0 in the TIM bitmap may not be allocated an access opportunity to STAs belonging to the group by pre-reserving for access of the overriding STAs.
- this scheme can be applied when there is an STA that checks the TIM information transmitted to the beacon or the beacon but does not belong to the corresponding access group but arbitrarily attempts to access the channel. For example, if the latency is too long or the TIM information is checked and the load of the access group of the TIM is low, the emergency or power outage may be used. In this case, it is possible to apply the channel access.
- 28 and 29 are diagrams illustrating a channel access operation of an STA according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the AP may spread a channel access time by the number n of STAs whose bits are set to 1 in the bitmap of the TIM element.
- access intervals of STAs that are overriding in the remaining part of the channel access time point distributed in the beacon or the TIM interval may be set.
- the remaining sections except for the interval (that is, the size of the contention window CW) of the channel access timing distributed in the beacon interval may be set as the channel access interval of the overriding STA.
- the information on the channel access period of the overriding STA ie, the overriding access time information
- the overriding access time information may be a response frame (for example, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame) of the overriding STA.
- the response frame for example, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame
- it may be transmitted using an ACK frame or a newly defined response frame.
- access time slots of STAs whose bits are set to 1 during the beacon interval are not fully spread, and the access time slots of the STAs whose bits are set to 1 in order from the start of the beacon interval (the previous 10 time slots).
- the remaining time slots (the last 10 time slots) may be freed for channel access of the overriding STA.
- the AP has an empty access so that overriding STAs not belonging to an access group indicated by the TIM can perform channel access without affecting channel access of other STAs belonging to the group.
- the AID corresponding to the time slot may be temporarily (re) assigned or information about a channel access time may be transmitted.
- the AP may include information on whether to allow overriding in the corresponding access group in the segment TIM beacon and transmit the information.
- STAs receiving the beacon including the TIM element may perform efficient channel access using information on an access group in which overriding is allowed or a group access period in which overriding is allowed.
- each segment TIM beacon may include information on whether or not to allow overriding for an access group to which it is paging.
- all information about an access group that allows overriding may be included and transmitted.
- the information on the access group that allows overriding may be transmitted for each segment TIM beacon, or may be periodically transmitted by being included in a general beacon (for example, DTIM beacon and long beacon).
- a 4-bit bitmap (1 octet) may include information on whether to allow overriding for each group and transmit the same.
- the AP may transmit information including a section (time) for allowing overriding in the beacon.
- the interval (time) for allowing the overriding is information previously informed to the STAs in the beacon, and is set equal to or larger than the allowable overriding interval informed when an STA not included in the corresponding access group has already attempted channel access.
- Override allowance interval information included in these beacons starts with a time offset value from when the segment TIM beacon or the general beacon including the information is transmitted until the next segment TIM beacon or the general beacon is transmitted.
- a duration up to a time offset may be set as an allowable interval.
- the above-described information may be transmitted in addition to the segment beacon or the general beacon, in addition to the probe response message or the (re) association response message transmitted to the STA.
- FIG. 30 is a diagram illustrating a channel access method according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the AP periodically transmits a beacon frame including a TIM element in a broadcasting manner according to a beacon period (S301).
- the TIM element may be divided and transmitted for each access group, and includes a bitmap indicating whether there is downlink buffered data to transmit to an STA belonging to the access group.
- the STA transmits a channel access frame (eg, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame) to the AP in order to attempt channel access in an access group period that does not belong to the AP (S303).
- a channel access frame eg, a PS-Poll frame or an uplink data frame
- the STA may be an STA that does not have an association with the corresponding AP, or may be an STA that has formed an association but does not belong to an access group indicated by the corresponding TIM element.
- the STA may transmit a channel access frame to the AP after receiving a beacon frame (or TIM element) transmitted from the AP.
- the STA may transmit the channel access frame to the AP without receiving the beacon frame (or the TIM element) transmitted from the AP, in which case the step S301 may be omitted.
- an AP When an AP receives a channel access frame in an access group section indicated by the TIM element from an STA that does not belong to the access group indicated by the TIM element, the AP in which the load and channel access point in the access group section belong to the access group belongs to the AP. In consideration of whether it is assigned to another STA, it is determined whether to allow channel access of the STA attempting channel access (S305).
- the channel access interval eg, time slot
- the AP transmits a response frame including information on whether to allow channel access to the STA attempting to access the channel (S307).
- the response frame may additionally transmit information on whether there is downlink buffered data to be transmitted to the STA that attempted channel access in the group access period to which it does not belong, or the section allowing channel access to the corresponding STA.
- FIG. 31 illustrates a block diagram of a wireless device according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the AP 310 includes a processor 311, a memory 312, and a transceiver 313.
- Processor 311 implements the proposed functions, processes, and / or methods. Layers of the air interface protocol (see FIG. 5) may be implemented by the processor 311.
- the memory 312 is connected to the processor 311 and stores various information for driving the processor 311.
- the transceiver 313 is connected to the processor 311 to transmit and / or receive a radio signal.
- the STA 320 includes a processor 321, a memory 322, and a transceiver 323.
- Processor 321 implements the proposed functions, processes, and / or methods. Layers of the air interface protocol (see FIG. 5) may be implemented by the processor 321.
- the memory 322 is connected to the processor 321 and stores various information for driving the processor 321.
- the transceiver 323 is connected to the processor 321 to transmit and / or receive a radio signal.
- the memories 312 and 322 may be inside or outside the processors 311 and 321, and may be connected to the processors 311 and 321 by various well-known means.
- the AP 310 and / or the STA 320 may have a single antenna or multiple antennas.
- each component or feature is to be considered optional unless stated otherwise.
- Each component or feature may be embodied in a form that is not combined with other components or features. It is also possible to combine some of the components and / or features to form an embodiment of the invention.
- the order of the operations described in the embodiments of the present invention may be changed. Some components or features of one embodiment may be included in another embodiment or may be replaced with corresponding components or features of another embodiment. It is obvious that the claims may be combined to form an embodiment by combining claims that do not have an explicit citation relationship in the claims or as new claims by post-application correction.
- Embodiments according to the present invention may be implemented by various means, for example, hardware, firmware, software, or a combination thereof.
- an embodiment of the present invention may include one or more application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), digital signal processors (DSPs), digital signal processing devices (DSPDs), programmable logic devices (PLDs), FPGAs ( field programmable gate arrays), processors, controllers, microcontrollers, microprocessors, and the like.
- ASICs application specific integrated circuits
- DSPs digital signal processors
- DSPDs digital signal processing devices
- PLDs programmable logic devices
- FPGAs field programmable gate arrays
- processors controllers, microcontrollers, microprocessors, and the like.
- an embodiment of the present invention may be implemented in the form of a module, procedure, function, etc. that performs the functions or operations described above.
- the software code may be stored in memory and driven by the processor.
- the memory may be located inside or outside the processor, and may exchange data with the processor by various known means.
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Abstract
Description
서브필드 | 의미 | 정의 |
MRQ | MCS request | MCS 피드백(비자발적(solicited) MFB)을 요청하는 경우 1로 설정됨. 그렇지 않은 경우, 0으로 설정됨 |
MSI | MRQ sequence identifier | MRQ 서브필드가 1로 설정되면, MSI 서브필드는 특정 요청을 식별하는 0 내지 6 범위 내 시퀀스 번호를 포함함. MRQ 서브필드가 0으로 설정되면, MSI 서브필드는 예약됨 |
MFSI/GID-L | MFB sequence identifier/LSB of Group ID | 자발적(unsolicited) MFB 서브필드가 0으로 설정되면, MFSI/GID-L 서브필드는 MFB 정보가 나타내는 프레임 내 포함된 MSI의 수신 값을 포함함. 자발적(unsolicited) MFB 서브필드가 1로 설정되면, MFSI/GID-L 서브필드는 자발적 MFB가 나타내는 PPDU의 그룹 ID의 최하위 3비트를 포함함 |
MFB | VHT N_STS, MCS, BW, SNR feedback | MFB 서브필드는 추천되는 MFB를 포함함. MCS=15, VHT N_STS=7은 피드백이 존재하지 않는 것을 지시함 |
GID-H | MSB of Group ID | 자발적(unsolicited) MFB 서브필드가 1로 설정되면, GID-H 서브필드는 자발적 MFB가 나타내는 PPDU의 그룹 ID의 최상위 3비트를 포함함 |
Coding Type | Coding type of MFB response | 자발적(unsolicited) MFB 서브필드가 1로 설정되면, 코딩 타입 서브필드는 자발적 MFB가 나타내는 코딩 정보(BCC(binary convolutional code) 경우 1, LDPC(low-density parity check) 경우 0)를 포함함. 그렇지 않은 경우, 예약됨 |
FB Tx Type | Transmission type of MFB response | 자발적(unsolicited) MFB 서브필드가 1로 설정되고 FB Tx Type 서브필드가 0으로 설정되면, 자발적 MFB는 빔포밍되지 않은(unbeamformed) VHT PPDU 또는 STBC(space-time block coding) VHT PPDU 를 사용하는 전송 다이버시티 중 어느 하나를 나타냄. 자발적(unsolicited) MFB 서브필드가 1로 설정되고 FB Tx Type 서브필드가 1로 설정되면, 자발적 MFB는 빔포밍된(beamformed) SU-MIMO(Single User MIMO) VHT PPDU를 나타냄. 그렇지 않은 경우, 예약됨 |
Unsolicited MFB | Unsolicited MCS feedback indicator | MFB가 MRQ의 응답이 아니면 1로 설정됨. MFB가 MRQ의 응답이면 0으로 설정됨 |
AC Constraint | 역방향 허용(RDG)에 대한 응답이 어떠한 트래픽 식별자(TID: traffic identifier)로부터의 데이터 프레임을 포함하면 0으로 설정되고, 역방향 승인(RDG)에 대한 응답이 동일한 역방향(RD) 개시자(initiator)로부터 수신되는 마지막 데이터 프레임과 동일한 AC로부터의 프레임만을 포함하면 1로 설정됨 | |
RDG/More PPDU | RDG/More PPDU 서브필드가 0이면, 역방향(RD) 개시자(initiator)가 전송하는 경우 역방향 승인(RDG)이 없음을 나타내고, 역방향 응답자(responder)가 전송하는 경우 MAC 프레임을 전달하는 PPDU가 최종 송신임을 나타냄. RDG/More PPDU 서브필드가 1이면, 역방향(RD) 개시자(initiator)가 전송하는 경우 역방향 허용(RDG)이 존재함을 나타내고, 응답자(responder)가 전송하는 경우 MAC 프레임을 전달하는 PPDU 이후 다른 PPDU가 후속함을 나타냄 |
Claims (16)
- 무선 통신 시스템에서 TIM(Traffic Indication Map)에 의해 지시되는 그룹에 속하지 않은 스테이션(STA: Station)의 채널 액세스를 지원하는 방법에 있어서,상기 STA으로부터 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 채널 액세스 요청을 위한 채널 액세스 프레임을 수신하는 단계; 및상기 채널 액세스 프레임에 대한 응답으로, 상기 STA의 채널 액세스 허용 여부에 대한 정보를 포함하는 응답 프레임을 상기 STA에 전송하는 단계를 포함하고,상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간은 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 상기 TIM의 비트맵을 기반으로 결정되고, 상기 STA의 채널 액세스는 상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간 이외의 구간에서만 허용되는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제1항에 있어서,상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간에서 상기 STA으로부터 상기 채널 액세스 프레임을 수신한 경우, 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 상기 STA의 채널 액세스 허용 구간에 관한 정보를 상기 STA에게 전송하는 단계를 더 포함하는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제2항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 허용 구간에 관한 정보는 상기 TIM 비트맵에서 상기 그룹에 속하는 STA을 지시하는 전체 비트 이외의 비트 중 상기 STA에게 할당되는 비트와 관련된 AID(Association ID)를 지시하는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제2항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 허용 구간에 관한 정보는 상기 TIM 비트맵에서 1로 설정되지 않은 비트 중 상기 STA에게 할당되는 비트와 관련된 AID(Association ID)를 지시하는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제2항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 허용 구간에 관한 정보는 상기 TIM의 비트맵에서 1로 설정된 마지막 비트의 다음에 위치하는 비트 중 상기 STA에게 할당되는 비트와 관련된 AID(Association ID)를 지시하는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제1항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 프레임은 PS(Power Save)-Poll 프레임 및 상향링크 데이터 프레임 중 어느 하나인, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제1항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 허용 구간 동안 임시 AID(Association ID)가 상기 STA에 할당되는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 무선 통신 시스템에서 TIM(Traffic Indication Map)에 의해 지시되는 그룹에 속하지 않은 스테이션(STA: Station)이 채널 액세스를 수행하는 방법에 있어서,상기 STA이 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 채널 액세스 요청을 위한 채널 액세스 프레임을 액세스 포인트(AP: Access Point)에 전송하는 단계; 및상기 채널 액세스 프레임에 대한 응답으로, 상기 AP로부터 상기 STA의 채널 액세스 허용 여부에 대한 정보를 포함하는 응답 프레임을 수신하는 단계를 포함하고,상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간은 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 상기 TIM의 비트맵을 기반으로 결정되고, 상기 STA의 채널 액세스는 상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간 이외의 구간에서만 허용되는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제8항에 있어서,상기 STA이 상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간에서 상기 채널 액세스 프레임을 전송한 경우, 상기 AP로부터 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 상기 STA의 채널 액세스 허용 구간에 관한 정보를 수신하는 단계를 더 포함하는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제9항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 허용 구간에 관한 정보는 상기 TIM 비트맵에서 상기 그룹에 속하는 STA을 지시하는 전체 비트 이외의 비트 중 상기 STA에게 할당되는 비트와 관련된 AID(Association ID)를 지시하는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제9항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 허용 구간에 관한 정보는 상기 TIM 비트맵에서 1로 설정되지 않은 비트 중 상기 STA에게 할당되는 비트와 관련된 AID(Association ID)를 지시하는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제9항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 허용 구간에 관한 정보는 상기 TIM의 비트맵에서 1로 설정된 마지막 비트의 다음에 위치하는 비트 중 상기 STA에게 할당되는 비트와 관련된 AID(Association ID)를 지시하는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제8항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 프레임은 PS(Power Save)-Poll 프레임 및 상향링크 데이터 프레임 중 어느 하나인, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 제8항에 있어서,상기 채널 액세스 허용 구간 동안 임시 AID(Association ID)가 상기 STA에 할당되는, 채널 액세스 방법.
- 무선 통신 시스템에서 TIM(Traffic Indication Map)에 의해 지시되는 그룹에 속하지 않은 스테이션(STA: Station)의 채널 액세스를 지원하는 장치에 있어서,무선 신호를 송수신하기 위한 송수신기; 및프로세서를 포함하고,상기 프로세서는 상기 STA으로부터 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 채널 액세스 요청을 위한 채널 액세스 프레임을 수신하고, 상기 채널 액세스 프레임에 대한 응답으로, 상기 STA의 채널 액세스 허용 여부에 대한 정보를 포함하는 응답 프레임을 상기 STA에 전송하도록 구성되고,상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간은 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 상기 TIM의 비트맵을 기반으로 결정되고, 상기 STA의 채널 액세스는 상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간 이외의 구간에서만 허용되는, 장치.
- 무선 통신 시스템에서 TIM(Traffic Indication Map)에 의해 지시되는 그룹에 속하지 않는 스테이션(STA: Station) 장치에 있어서,무선 신호를 송수신하기 위한 송수신기; 및프로세서를 포함하고,상기 프로세서는, 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 채널 액세스 요청을 위한 채널 액세스 프레임을 액세스 포인트(AP: Access Point)에 전송하고, 상기 채널 액세스 프레임에 대한 응답으로, 상기 AP로부터 상기 STA의 채널 액세스 허용 여부에 대한 정보를 포함하는 응답 프레임을 수신하도록 구성되고,상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간은 상기 TIM 인터벌 내에서 상기 TIM의 비트맵을 기반으로 결정되고, 상기 STA의 채널 액세스는 상기 그룹에 속하는 STA의 채널 액세스 구간 이외의 구간에서만 허용되는, 장치.
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