This document outlines the performance analysis of the Radio Link Control/Medium Access Control (RLC/MAC) protocol in General Packet Radio Service (GPRS).
It describes the key components of GPRS including the Logical Link Control (LLC), RLC, and MAC layers. The RLC operates between the mobile station and base station, using fixed size blocks and selective retransmission. The MAC uses a slotted-ALOHA approach to resolve collisions on the Packet Random Access Channel (PRACH) and dynamically assigns the Packet Data Traffic Channel (PDTCH).
The document presents an analytical model and assumptions for throughput-delay analysis of the GPRS RLC/MAC protocol, including modeling the
This document outlines the performance analysis of the Radio Link Control/Medium Access Control (RLC/MAC) protocol in General Packet Radio Service (GPRS).
It describes the key components of GPRS including the Logical Link Control (LLC), RLC, and MAC layers. The RLC operates between the mobile station and base station, using fixed size blocks and selective retransmission. The MAC uses a slotted-ALOHA approach to resolve collisions on the Packet Random Access Channel (PRACH) and dynamically assigns the Packet Data Traffic Channel (PDTCH).
The document presents an analytical model and assumptions for throughput-delay analysis of the GPRS RLC/MAC protocol, including modeling the
This document outlines the performance analysis of the Radio Link Control/Medium Access Control (RLC/MAC) protocol in General Packet Radio Service (GPRS).
It describes the key components of GPRS including the Logical Link Control (LLC), RLC, and MAC layers. The RLC operates between the mobile station and base station, using fixed size blocks and selective retransmission. The MAC uses a slotted-ALOHA approach to resolve collisions on the Packet Random Access Channel (PRACH) and dynamically assigns the Packet Data Traffic Channel (PDTCH).
The document presents an analytical model and assumptions for throughput-delay analysis of the GPRS RLC/MAC protocol, including modeling the
This document outlines the performance analysis of the Radio Link Control/Medium Access Control (RLC/MAC) protocol in General Packet Radio Service (GPRS).
It describes the key components of GPRS including the Logical Link Control (LLC), RLC, and MAC layers. The RLC operates between the mobile station and base station, using fixed size blocks and selective retransmission. The MAC uses a slotted-ALOHA approach to resolve collisions on the Packet Random Access Channel (PRACH) and dynamically assigns the Packet Data Traffic Channel (PDTCH).
The document presents an analytical model and assumptions for throughput-delay analysis of the GPRS RLC/MAC protocol, including modeling the
Packet Radio Service K. Premkumar and A. Chockalingam Wireless Research Lab (http://wrl.ece.iisc.ernet.in) Department of Electrical Communication Engineering Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560012, INDIA Outlines Introduction LLC/RLC/MAC in GPRS Throughput-Delay analysis Results and discussions Introduction of GPRS A packet mode wireless system Dynamically share radio resources with GSM Uplink CHs are shared by request-reservation GSM RF Libis MS BSS SGSN GGSN RLC MAC IP/X.25 SNDCP LLC Application BSSGP Relay Um Gb Gn GSM RF RLC MAC Network Service Libis Network Service BSSGP LLC SNDCP Relay GTP UDP/ TCP IP L2 L1 GTP UDP/TCP IP L2 L1 IP/X.25 Gi LLC/RLC/MAC in GPRS Logical Link Control Operates between MS and SGSN Variable size frames Stop-and-wait Automatic Repeat reQuest Radio Link Control Operates between MS and BSS Fixed size blocks depending on CH coding ACK mode provides selective retransmission Media Access Control Slotted-ALOHA Resolve collision of request packets GPRS MAC protocol Packet Random Access Channel (PRACH) Contention basis Random backoff Packet Data Traffic Channel (PDTCH) Dynamically assigned by base station M uplink CHs, L PRACHs N mobile users Assumption before analysis New request packet generation is Bernoulli process with arrival prob A new PDU is accepted only after the completion of previous one PDU length, measured in #slots, is geometric with 0<g d < 1 Loss of request is only due to collision Retransmission attempts is geometrically delayed with 0 < g r <1 Propagation and processing delay are negligible Mobile station state transition ,...}} 3 , 2 , 1 { ); , , ( { t k j i Z t One step transition probability Throughput-Delay analysis Results and discussions (1/2) Results and discussions (2/2)