Title :
Call control signaling for personal communications over interconnected metropolitan area networks
Author :
Leung, Victor C M ; Qian, Nanjian
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., British Columbia Univ., Vancouver, BC, Canada
Abstract :
A distributed personal communication network (PCN) architecture employing interconnected IEEE 802.6 metropolitan area networks (MAN´s) has been proposed as a means of handling the anticipated heavy traffic and call processing load of future PCN´s employing microcellular wireless access. It employs pre-arbitrated (PA) isochronous access with silence detection for voice transport, and high priority queue-arbitrated (QA) packet access for signaling. Efficient and reliable signaling procedures are required for call control. Particularly for call setups and handoffs. These procedures are presented and analyzed in this paper, along with the supporting system architecture. Simulation results show that the network capacity is constrained by the call setup delay performance. Alternative signaling system architectures, involving different placements of call control network elements, are evaluated. The overlap inter-MAN call setup procedure is proposed to reduce delays. Different call handoff procedures are formulated according to the type of handoff and the resulting change in call connectivity. Most handoffs are intra-MAN, requiring simple procedures with short delays
Keywords :
cellular radio; internetworking; metropolitan area networks; personal communication networks; telecommunication signalling; telecommunication traffic; telecommunications control; IEEE 802.6 MAN; PCN architecture; call connectivity; call control network elements; call handoff; call processing; call setup delay performance; call setups; interconnected metropolitan area networks; microcellular wireless access; network capacity; personal communication network; pre-arbitrated isochronous access; queue-arbitrated packet access; signaling system architectures; silence detection; simulation results; system architecture; telecommunication traffic; voice transport; Access protocols; Communication system control; Communication system signaling; Communication system traffic control; Delay; Integrated circuit interconnections; Metropolitan area networks; Personal communication networks; Switches; Traffic control;
Conference_Titel :
Networks for Personal Communications, 1994. Conference Proceedings., 1994
Conference_Location :
Long Branch, NJ
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-1913-3
DOI :
10.1109/NPC.1994.337949