Title :
Gap-processing time analysis of stall avoidance mechanisms for high speed downlink packet access with parallel HARQ schemes
Author :
Wang, Li-Chun ; Chang, Chih-Wen
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Commun. Eng., Nat. Chiao Tung Univ., Hsinchu, Taiwan
Abstract :
The parallel multi-channel stop-and-wait (SAW) hybrid automatic repeat request (HARQ) mechanism is one of key technologies Tor high speed downlink packet access in the wideband code division multiple access system. However, this parallel HARQ mechanism may encounter a serious stall problem, resulted from the error of the negative acknowledgement (NACK) changing to the acknowledgement (ACK) in the control channel. In the stall situation, the receiver waits for a packet that is no longer sent by the transmitter and stops delivering the medium access control (MAC) layer packets to the upper layer. The stall issue seriously degrades the quality of service for the high speed mobile terminal owing to the high probability of NACK-to-ACK errors. In this paper, we present an analytical approach to compare three stall avoidance schemes: the timer-based, the window-based, and the indicator-based schemes. To this end, we first define a new performance metric - the gap-processing time - the duration for a nonrecoverable gap appearing in the MAC layer re-ordering buffer until it is recognized. Second, we derive the closed-form expressions for the average gap-processing time of these three stall avoidance schemes. It is shown that our analytical results match the simulations well. Further, by analysis we demonstrate that the indicator-based stall avoidance scheme outperforms the timer-based and the window-based schemes. The developed analytical approaches provide important insight into determining a proper number of processes in the parallel SAW HARQ mechanism when applying the indicator-based stall avoidance scheme. Moreover, our analysis can facilitate the physical/MAC/radio link control cross-layer design because the gap-processing time is closely related to packet error rate in the physical layer, reordering buffer size in the MAC and RLC layer.
Keywords :
automatic repeat request; broadband networks; code division multiple access; packet radio networks; quality of service; radio links; QoS; gap-processing time analysis; high speed downlink packet access; indicator-based scheme; medium access control; negative acknowledgement; packet error rate; parallel HARQ mechanism; parallel HARQ schemes; quality of service; stall avoidance mechanisms; stop-and-wait hybrid automatic repeat request mechanism; timer-based scheme; wideband code division multiple access system; window-based scheme; Automatic repeat request; Degradation; Downlink; Error correction; Media Access Protocol; Multiaccess communication; Quality of service; Radio transmitters; Surface acoustic waves; Wideband;
Conference_Titel :
Wireless Networks, Communications and Mobile Computing, 2005 International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9305-8
DOI :
10.1109/WIRLES.2005.1549388