1 / 18

STA MU-MIMO Group Management Signaling Design

STA MU-MIMO Group Management Signaling Design. Authors:. Date: 2010-07-13. Abstract. We discuss on methods of MU-MIMO Group ID management and MAC signaling. We also give some options of MAC signaling design and compare properties of each option. Group ID extension [3] (1/4).

rance
Télécharger la présentation

STA MU-MIMO Group Management Signaling Design

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. STA MU-MIMO Group Management Signaling Design Authors: Date: 2010-07-13 Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  2. Abstract We discuss on methods of MU-MIMO Group ID management and MAC signaling. We also give some options of MAC signaling design and compare properties of each option. Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  3. Group ID extension [3] (1/4) • Extend the Group ID concept in order to support larger number of STAs • Extend PHY Group ID with (logical) MAC Grouping Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  4. Group ID extension [3] (2/4) MAC Extended Group ID = aaa MAC Extended Group ID = bbb MAC Extended Group ID = ccc • Gives the AP possibility to allocate and manage more combinations of STAs • STA-A, STA-B, etc can correspond to MAC Address, Associated ID, or some other unique identifier • If AP only operates the system with 1 MAC extended Group ID for a given PHY Group ID, then the operation should be equivalent to Group ID proposal in 11-10/0073r3 Group ID = xxx STA A STA B STA C STA D STA A STA E STA F STA G ... STA H STA B STA F STA G Multiple extended Group can be defined as long as relative position for a given STAs is not changed under PHY group ID = x Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  5. Group ID extension (3/4) • Example operation #1 (essentially Group ID based approach [2]) Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  6. Group ID extension (4/4) • Example operation #2 (essentially SS Paging ID based approach [1]) Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  7. MAC Signal Field Design (1/4) • Assuming multiple grouping of STAs for a given single Group ID, multiple methods of MAC signaling is possible • MAC signaling methods can be classified depending on the size of the target entity • Option 1 : Signaling addressing entire (multiple ‘extended’ groups) grouping of STAs for a given Group ID • Option 2 : Signaling addressing a single ‘extended’ group of STAs for a given Group ID • Option 3 : Signaling addressing a single STA Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  8. MAC Signal Field Design (2/4) • Option 1 : Signaling addressing entire (multiple ‘extended’ groups) grouping of STAs for a given Group ID • Assuming Max 4 STAs per MU-MIMO transmission • Some restrictions of multiple STA signaling for different ‘extended’ group needed (possibly mandated in specification) • Total “1+6*N” bytes of information per signaling Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  9. MAC Signal Field Design (3/4) • Option 2 : Signaling addressing a single ‘extended’ group of STAs for a given Group ID • Assuming Max 4 STAs per MU-MIMO transmission • Total “6~7” bytes of information per ‘extended’ group signaling • Mechanism to allow multiple Group ID assignments may be needed • e.g. if STA#a (pre) assigned with Group ID #1, receives MAC signaling with Group ID #1 without itself as NOT part of Group ID #1 still needs to retain pre-assignment of Group ID #1 Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  10. MAC Signal Field Design (4/4) • Option 3 : Signaling addressing a single STA • Flexibility of modifying/changing grouping of a single STA • No restriction of STA grouping necessary in specification (although probably needed in implementation) • 3 Bytes per STAs Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  11. Examples of Signaling Methods (1/2) • Assuming AP needs to signal 2 groups (GroupID) with 8 extended groups each, with 4 STAs in each extended group. Also assume there is only 8 STA • Option 1 : 2 x ( 1 byte + 8 x 6 byte ) = 98 bytes • Option 3 : 2 x 8 x 3 byte = 48 byte Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  12. Examples of Signaling Methods (2/2) • Assuming AP needs to signal 4 groups (GroupID) with 6 extended groups each, with 4 STAs in each extended group. Also assume there is only 16 STA • Option 1 : 4 x ( 1 byte + 6 x 6 byte ) = 148 bytes • Option 3 : 2x16x3 byte = 96 bytes (may depend on exact grouping) Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  13. Observations from examples • If AP needs to signal large amounts of exclusive STA groups (i.e. groups of STA which do not have same STAs in each group) • Option 1 may save signaling overhead • If AP needs to signal (extended) groups of STAs with overlapping STAs in each (extended) groups • Option 3 may save signaling overhead Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  14. Signaling Flexibility Aspect • Unicast and Broadcast of control elements • in general broadcast information is costly in terms of system throughput since lowest MCS needs to be used • in general it is inefficient to replicate information in unicast • if information element is self-contained so that information for different STAs does not necessary be multiplexed together then it would be possible for a given information element be transmitted in either unicast or broadcast • In general having the possibility of modifying STA grouping per STA in unicast or broadcast been beneficial in terms of flexibility Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  15. MAC Signal Field Design Observations • General Observation • Single Group ID assignment MAC signaling field seems beneficial • Option 1 requires entire grouping assignment to be signaled when logical grouping of a single STA is needed (potential overhead) • Option 2 requires additional mechanisms or STA behaviors defined in order to efficiently support ‘extended’ groups • Option 3 seems to be most robust in terms of STA group assignment flexibility and overhead • If the specification is to only support 1 method of Group ID assignment, then strongly propose option 3 to be the single candidate • Else the specification should at least support option 3 to be robust, additional signaling mechanisms could be considered further Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  16. Summary • MU-MIMO support will be the major differentiation between 11ac and 11n. MU-MIMO should be designed to support wide range of scenarios allowing optimization of MU-MIMO performance in different target usage scenarios • It will be important to study further relations between grouping and sounding procedures needed for MU-MIMO transmissions • Allowing AP to manage large pool of potential MU-MIMO capable STAs is needed • Allow preemptive grouping of STA at the AP allows effective grouping management protocol and enhances overall MU-MIMO performance • Propose to strongly consider Group ID extension methods in order to support efficient MU-MIMO operations • Propose to support Group ID assignment signaling method ‘option 3’ in Framework document Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  17. Strawpoll • Do you support adopting Group ID management MAC signaling field as described in Slide 10 of 11-10-0782r0 and editing the spec framework document, 11-09-0992, accordingly? • Note this does not preclude the possibility of supporting additional Group ID management MAC signaling fields later in the specification.) • Yes • No • Abstain Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

  18. Reference • [1] Lee D.W., et. al., “MU-MIMO STA scheduling strategy and Related PHY signaling,” IEEE 802.11-10/0362r02 • [2] Kim J., et. al., “GroupID Concept for Downlink MU-MIMO Transmission,” IEEE 802.11-10/0073r02. • [3] Lee D.W., et. al., “STA Group Management for MU-MIMO,” IEEE 802.11-10/581r00. Daewon Lee, LG Electronics

More Related