Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Status
Confidential Confidential Confidential
Date
2003-12-12 20046-07 20047-20
Author
Approved By
CDMA Team, ZTE CDMA Team, ZTE CDMA Team, ZTE Technical Technical Technical
Remarks
Copyright Notice:
Copyright 2004 ZTE Corporation Shenzhen P. R. China
All rights reserved. No part of this documentation may be excerpted, reproduced, translated, annotated or duplicated, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of ZTE Corporation.
Table of Contents
1 BTS Overview ............................................................................................................................... 1 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 2 2.1 2.2 3 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 4 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 5 5.1 5.2 Position of BTS in the CDMA System ............................................................................... 1 Basic Functions................................................................................................................... 1 System Features .................................................................................................................. 2 Standards Complied ............................................................................................................ 2 System Operating Environment Indices ............................................................................. 4 Performance Indices............................................................................................................ 7 Overview........................................................................................................................... 12 EBDS_HS Subsystem....................................................................................................... 13 EBDS_IP Subsystem ........................................................................................................ 17 RFS ................................................................................................................................... 21 TFS.................................................................................................................................... 29 PS ...................................................................................................................................... 32 LFM in the Transmission Subsystem................................................................................ 34 Overview........................................................................................................................... 35 CCM Software .................................................................................................................. 36 TRX Software ................................................................................................................... 39 CHM Software .................................................................................................................. 40 TRX Software ................................................................................................................... 41 BTS Networking ............................................................................................................... 43 BTS Configuration............................................................................................................ 44
BTS Hardware............................................................................................................................ 12
II
Tables
Table 1 Weight of the ZXC10-BTS ................................................................................ 6 Table 2 DC Power Supply Indices of the ZXC10-BTS .................................................. 6 Table 3 Power Consumption of the ZXC10-BTS .......................................................... 6 Table 4 Performance of 800M/450M TX ....................................................................... 7 Table 5 Performance of 800M/450M RX ....................................................................... 8 Table 6 Performance of 1.9G/2.1G TX........................................................................... 9 Table 7 Performance of 1.9G/2.1G RX......................................................................... 10 Table 8 Outband Suppression ....................................................................................... 10 Table 9 Types of DSM.................................................................................................. 19 Table 10 Recommended Site Types and Number of Traffic Channels......................... 47 Table 11 Site Types and Number of Boards ................................................................. 48 Table 12 Abbreviation in this document ....................................................................... 50
III
1
1.1
BTS OVERVIEW
Position of BTS in the CDMA System
The position of the ZXC10-BTS in the Base Station Subsystem (BSS) is shown below.
MS
Um in terface
R F S BTS
B D S
C D S U
C D S U
S V I C M
A in terface
MSC
Ab is in terface
BSC
A1 0/A1 1 in terface
MS
R F S
Um in terface
B D S
BTS
C D S U
C D S U
P C F
PDSN
1.2
Basic Functions
Functions of the BTS rack: Conforming to EIA/TIA IS-2000, EIA/TIA IS-95A and TSB74 air interface specifications; CDMA 450MHz, 800MHz ,1900MHz and 2100MHz frequency configurations; Cell breathing function of the CDMA cellular system; Blossoming and wilting functions of the CDMA cells;
Transmit Power Trace Loop (TPTL) control of the CDMA cellular system; General call services and call functions such as Markov and TDSO; Terrestrial circuit management and radio resource management functions; Handover control, including intra-BTS soft handoff, inter-BTS soft handoff and semisoft handoff within one BSC, and inter-BSC soft and hard handoff; Operation and Maintenance (O&M) functions, including performance management, alarm management, configuration management, diagnosis test and security management.
1.3
System Features
Each rack can be configured with two carriers and three sectors or simply six carriers, and every two racks can be expanded to accommodate four carriers and three sectors. Flexible configuration: Any combination of 1/2/3/4 carriers and omni/2 sectors/3 sectors. The channel elements of the same carrier can be shared among all sectors, that is, all the channel elements of one carrier form a shared pool. The relative independence of the module functions allows flexible configuration for capacity expansion. Inter-BTS daisy chain connection is supported, with each E1 providing 192 channels and supporting up to 4 base stations (one-carrier omnidirectional BTS).
1.4
Standards Complied
The product conforms to the following standards: Physical Layer Standard for cdma2000 Spread Spectrum Systems Release 0 Medium Access Control (MAC) Standard for cdma2000 Spread Spectrum Systems Release 0 Signaling Link Access Control (LAC) Specification for cdma2000 Spread Spectrum Systems Release 0 Upper Layer (Layer 3) Signaling Standard for cdma2000 Spread Spectrum Systems Release 0 Air interfaces comply with EIA/TIA IS-2000 Release A, EIA/TIA IS97-C and TSB74 Specifications QB/CU 001-99, Technical Mechanism of 800MHz CDMA Digital Cellular Mobile Communications Network (On probation), China Unicom, 1999 QB/CU 003-99, General Technical Specifications for 800MHz CDMA Digital Cellular Mobile Communications System Equipment BSS Part (On probation), China Unicom, 1999
QB/CU 006-99, Technical Requirements on Interface between 800MHz CDMA Digital Cellular Mobile Communications Network MSC and BSS (On probation), China Unicom, 1999 QB/CU 007-99, Technical Requirements on Air Interfaces of 800MHz CDMA Digital Cellular Mobile Communications Network (On probation), 1999
2
2.1
2.1.1 2.1.1.1
TECHNICAL INDICES
System Operating Environment Indices
Physical Indices
Dimensions
The dimensions of the ZXC10-BTS rack comply with the 44.45mm (1U) series international standard. Rack dimensions: WDH = 700mm600mm1800mm. Mounting base dimensions: WDH = 700mm600mm100mm.
2.1.2
Profile
The outlook appearance of the ZXC10-BTS is shown in Fig.2.
2.1.3
Weight
The equipment room floor is required to have the load-bearing capacity of 450kg/m2.
2.1.4 2.1.5
Power Supply
Working Voltage
The DC power supply indices of the ZXC10-BTS equipment are shown in Table 2.
Table 2 DC Power Supply Indices of the ZXC10-BTS Item
Nominal value Allowed fluctuation -48V -40~-57V
DC Voltage
2.1.6
Power Consumption
The power consumption of the ZXC10-BTS refers to the total power consumption of the equipment when it works at the -48V DC voltage with each Power Amplifier (PA) outputting 20W of power, as shown in Table 3.
Table 3 Power Consumption of the ZXC10-BTS Configuration
Single-carrier sector Single-carrier two-sector Single-carrier sector Two-carrier single-sector Two-carrier two-sector Two-carrier three-sector Three-carrier three-sector Four-carrier three-sector threesingle-
Working Voltage
-48V -48V -48V -48V -48V -48V -48V -48V
Power Consumption
850W 1150W 1400W 1100W 1650W 2200W 3600W 4400W
Remarks
Total power consumption of two racks Total power consumption of two racks
2.1.7
Grounding
The grounding requirement of the ZXC10-BTS is follows:
2.1.8
2.1.9
Cleanness
The cleanness requirements are as follows: The density of the dust particles of a diameter more than 5m shall be less than or equal to 3105granules/m3. The dust particles shall be non-conductive, non-magnetic and non-corrosive.
2.2
2.2.1
Performance Indices
Reliability
The reliability indices of the ZXC10-BTS are as follows: Full configuration: Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) 35000 hours and MTBCF 100000 hours. Mean Time To Recovery (MTTR): 0.25 hours. Availability A (%): 99.9308%. Average interruption duration per year: 0.05 hours.
Note: MTBCF is short for Mean Time Between Critical Failures. Critical failures are failures that can result in the deterioration of the system performance and the loss of system functions.
2.2.2 2.2.2.1
RF Indices
Band Class 0 (800M) and Band Class 5 (450M)
Table 4 Performance of 800M/450M TX
Working band Tolerance of the transmitters frequency Channel bandwidth Modulation mode Suppression of the spurious conduction and spurious radiation Band Class 0 (869MHz ~ 894MHz) Band Class 5 (460~467.5MHz) 510-8 1.23MHz QPSK In Band Class 0 < -45dBc @750kHz offset Center Freq (RBW 30kHz) < -60dBc @1.98MHz offset Center Freq(RBW 30kHz) < -60dBc @ other out-band( RBW 30kHz) or -13dBm, whichever is
2.2.2.2
< -60dBc @ other out-band ( RBW 30kHz) or -13dBm, whichever is less. This applies when the continuous multiple-carrier offset is to the center of the border carriers.
See the table 8 The code domain power of the non-active channel should be less than the total power and should be 32dB The total launch power should be within +2dB and -4dB of the manufacturers rated power (See IS-97D for the definition of the total power and the testing). Cross correlation efficient >0.98 Less than 3us and should not be greater than 10us. The pilot time tolerance of all the CDMA channels in the same BTS should be within 1us. In case the external system clock is interrupted, the timing error between the BTS and the CDMA system should not be over 10us.
Time tolerance between the pilot channel and the code division channel Phase tolerance between the pilot channel and the code division channel Pilot power Power amplifier (PA) output power Range of the dynamic linear output
< 50ns in the same CDMA channel <0.05 radian in the same CDMA channel The pilot power to total power ratio should be within 0.5dB of the configuration value 20W > 30 dB
Test Bandwidth
1 kHz 10 kHz 100 kHz 1MHz 100 kHz 100 kHz 100 kHz 100 kHz 100 kHz 100 kHz
Threshold
-36dBm -36dBm -36dBm -30dBm -67dBm -67dBm -47dBm -47dBm -47dBm -22dBm
Detecting Method
Peak value Peak value Peak value Peak value Valid value Valid value Peak value Peak value Peak value Valid value
10
2.2.3 2.2.4
Clock
BTS Clock
The technical indices for the BTS clock are as follows: The frequency reference is 10MHz. The precision should be higher than 10-11 in the GPS locked mode or 10-10 in the holdover mode. The temperature variation is required to be less than 0.510-9.
2.2.5
2.2.6
2.2.7
Noise
Environmental noise: 55dBA.
11
3
3.1
BTS HARDWARE
Overview
ZXC10-BTS is the radio part of the BSS. On one hand, it implements the radio transmission and radio channel control for its subscribers (MSs) through the IS2000 air interface. On the other hand, it provides the wired interface functions to BSC. BTS is the radio transceiver controlled by the BSC to serve a certain cell. It can be regarded as a modem with rather complicated functions and structure. Each cell covered by a BTS can be an omnidirectional site or a 2-sector/3-sector one. The ZXC10-BTS comprises a TFS (Timing & Frequency Subsystem), a EBDS_HS/EBDS_IP (Enhanced Baseband Digital Subsystem) and an RFS (Radio Frequency Subsystem), as shown in Fig.3.
BTS
RFS
EBDS_HS
EBDS_IP
PS
TFS
Subsystem
CHM HPA
CCM
SAM
CCM CHM
PPM PSMB
TCM
RFIM
PSMD
PSMC
FDM
CDSU
GPSTM
As shown in the above figure, the BTS comprises the RFS, EBDS_HS, EBDS_IP, PS, and TFS. Its working principles are shown in Fig.4.
TRX
RFE
RIM
SNM
DSM
Module
12
RFE (ALPHA)
RFE (ALPHA)
RFE (BETA)
RFE (BETA)
RFE (GAMMA)
RFE (GAMMA)
HPA
T X
R X 0
R X 1
R X 1
R X 0
HPA
T X
HPA
T X
R X 0
R X 1
R X 1
R X 0
HPA
T X
HPA
T X
R X 0
R X 1
R X 1
R X 0
HPA
T X
TRX
TRX
TRX
TRX
TRX
TRX
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
Serial DISCO
HIRS _Baseband_
RFIM
Small HIRS
T F S
SIM0
PECL
MLVDS
RIM2
RF Interface
IP
HDLC
CCM CHM1
CCM
RS422
SAM
RS232
RS485 RS232
CCM1
DSM0
HW 8XE1
SNM0
STM 1
HIRS_ABIS
IP_ABIS
3.2
3.2.1
EBDS_HS Subsystem
Overview
The EBDS_HS (Baseband Digital Subsystem) best represents the CDMA features, involving many of the kernel CDMA techniques such as the diversity technique, RAKE, softer handoff and power control. As the control center and communication platform of BTS, it implements the Abis interface communications and the CDMA modem functions.
13
3.2.2
Working Principles
Logically, the HIRS_BDS consists of four modules: CCM, CHM, RFIM and SAM. Physically, it comprises four boards: CCM, CHM, RFIM and BTS-CDSU (the CDSU module is incorporated here just for the convenience of description). The following figure shows its overall architecture.
E1
CDSU
RS422
RS485
SAM
Dual Buses
CHM1
CHM2
RFIM
CHM3
CHM4
RFIM
The EBDS_HS provides the following functions: Forward modulation, summation and equalized filtering of the CDMA digital baseband. Reverse demodulation of the CDMA digital baseband. Providing data and signaling interfaces to RFS. Providing the Abis interface to BSC.
3.2.3
Features
The EBDS_HS can be flexibly configured by using different kinds of Channel Processing Modules (CHMs) to support up to two carriers and three sectors. And two EBDS_HSs support the BTS configuration of four carriers and three sectors. One EBDS_HS provides four nonchannelized E1 interfaces (Abis interfaces) at the speed of 2Mb/s for load sharing and six interfaces to TRX at most.
3.2.4
Hardware Composition
The EBDS_HS hardware physically resides in one shelf, including 4 Channel Processing Modules (CHMs), 2 Communication Control Modules (CCMs), 2 Radio Frequency Interface Modules (RFIMs), 1 Site Alarm Module (SAM) and 1 Channel/Data Service Unit (BTSCDSU). The EBDS_HS shelf has totally 12 slots, sequentially numbered 1~12 from left to right: Slots 3~4 are occupied by the 2 CHMs for the first carrier, slots 9~10 by the 2 CHMs for the second carrier, slots 4 and 11 by the two RFIMs, slot 5 by SAM, slot 8 by CDSU, slots 6 and 7 by the two CCM boards in 1+1 hot backup mode, while slots 1 and 12 by the power boards. The layout of the slots in the EBDS_HS shelf is shown as in Fig.6.
14
10
11
12
P S M B
R R C C C S C C C C F F D H H A C C H H I I S M M M M M M M M M U
P S M B
Input/output interfaces: Two or four E1 interfaces to BSC Interfaces to connect at most six TRXs via cables Two RS232 interfaces to read TOD messages for the initialization, management and maintenance of the GPSTM. One RS485 interface to communicate with the SAM
3.2.5
CCM
CCM is the communication control module in the EBDS_HS shelf of ZXC10-BTS, controlling the data/signaling routing, signaling processing, resource management and maintenance of the whole EBDS_HS in the centralized mode. The CCM provides the following functions: Signaling processing and forwarding. Maintaining, managing and reporting radio channel resources. Managing and maintaining the modules of the EBDS_HS. Reading TOD messages, and maintaining & managing the GPSTM. Software download and data distribution.
3.2.6 3.2.6.1
CDSU
Overview
In the CDMA system, the interface between BSC and BTS is called the Abis interface, which connects BSC and BTS via an E1 trunk. The CDSU board is the module that implements the Abis interface functions. It has two types of panels. One is relatively narrow, used on the BTS side. The other one is relatively broad, used on the BSC side. Classified by the capacity, there are the 2-E1 CDSU boards and the 4-E1 CDSU boards.
15
3.2.6.2
Basic Functions
CDSU provides the Abis interface functions, implementing the conversion between the BSS internal serial buses and the E1 serial links. Its performance indices are as follows: 1. 2. 2-E1 CDSU board 32-frame buffer per E1 channel 4-level flow control per E1 buffer Star networking Load sharing and backup of the two E1s 4-E1 CDSU board Data of each E1 interface are given different priorities. For data of a higher priority, 500 frames of buffer space are provided. For data of a lower priority, 1000 frames of buffer space are provided. Broadcast data support Star networking Daisy chain networking Load sharing and backup between E1 links Delay test on the Abis interface and the large HIRS Fully compliant with the 2-E1 CDSU board
3.2.7
SAM
The SAM (Site Alarm Module) resides in the EBDS_HS shelf on the BTS side. Its major function is to monitor the running status of the power modules and fans, detect such environmental signals as entrance control, flood, temperature, humidity and smoke, and report these results via CCM to the O&M console at the background for processing. In addition, it provides RS232 and RS485 interfaces for the connections with external monitoring devices. The SAM board has the following major functions: Actively reports alarm signals to and receives/executes the control commands from the CCM board. Collects the power and fan alarm signals from the power boards via a half-duplex RS485 bus. Communicates with external environment monitoring devices via two RS232 interfaces and one full-duplex RS485 interface. Monitors and gives alarms for entrance control, smoke and flood. Monitors the humidity inside the rack, the equipment room temperature & humidity, and the temperature at the upper, middle and lower parts of the rack.
16
Provides four standby input ports and two standby output ports.
3.2.8
RFIM
RFIM is an EBDS_HS component in BTS to connect the digital subsystem and the RFS. It communicates with CCM via the transceiver bus and is controlled by CCM. RFIM has the following basic functions: Forward/reverse transmission and processing of baseband data; Transmission and processing of control signals (like configuration control and status alarm); Distributing 16CHIP and PP2S clock signals to the CHMs.
3.2.9
CHM
CHM resides in the EBDS_HS shelf. Its major function is to modulate and demodulate the CDMA channels. It connects to CCM via the transceiver bus and to RFIM via the baseband data bus. CHM has the following basic functions: Provides transceiver interfaces to CCM; The forward link modulates the voice and data frames sent by CCM via the transceiver interface and sends them to RFIM; The reverse link receives the antenna signals distributed by RFIM via the baseband data interface, demodulates them into voice and data frames and then sends them to CCM via the transceiver interface; Supports the physical layer of CDMA-2000: IS-2000-2 RELASE 0.
3.3
3.3.1
EBDS_IP Subsystem
Overview
As a control center and communication platform of the BTS, EBDS_IP susbsystem implements communication with Abis interface and CDMA baseband modulation/demodulation to achieve EV-DO even EV-DV functions.
3.3.2
Basic Functions
Described below are basic functions of the EBDS_IP: Forward modulation, summation and equalized filtering of the CDMA digital baseband; Reverse demodulation of the CDMA digital baseband; Providing data and signaling interfaces to RFS;
17
3.3.3
Features
Supporting 2-carrier 3-sector at most. One EBDS_IP provides 8 non-channelized E1 interfaces (Abis interfaces) at a rate of 2Mb/s for load sharing. One EBDS_IP provides a maximum of 6 interfaces to be connected to TRX. Built-in SDH (STM-1) transmission. Supporting daisy chain connection with the EBDS_HS.
3.3.4
Hardware Composition
Physically the EBDS_IP is composed of one EBDS_IP shelf, two CHMs, two CCMs, one RIM, one SIM, one DSM and one SDH transmission board SNM, as shown in Fig.7.
EBDS_HS
EBDS_IP
P R C R P C C S C C C C C C R C C S D S S F D F S H H A C C H H H H I C C I S N M I S I M MM MMM MM MM M MMMMM B M U M B
EBDS_HS
Fig. 7 EBDS_IP Position Schematic Diagram
EBDS_IP
3.3.5
CCM
As the core of signaling processing, resource management and O&M of the whole BTS, Communication Control Module (CCM) is located in the main BDS shelf and responsible for routing of data and signaling in the BTS. Also, it is the center for the acknowledgement of signaling transfer. Signaling are transferred via the CCM between modules of BTS, and between modules of BTS and modules of BSC (such as SDM, VBM, CPM, etc). It provides two basic functions: constructing BTS communication platform, and BTS centralized control center. CCM_1 is made up of CCM2 motherboard, MPB (Middle Level Processor Board), and ESB2 (Ethernet Switch Board-Type2).
3.3.6
CHM_0
CHM_0 is responsible for modulation and demodulation of the physical layer of CDMA2000 1X, based on ASIC chip CSM5000 made by QUALCOMM. It provides a maximum configuration of forward 512 CEs and reverse 256 CEs, i.e., supports baseband processing of nearly 6 sectors of CDMA2000 1X.
18
CHM_0 is made up of one CHM0 motherboard, one MPB(Middle Level Processor Board) of CPU and seven CEB0s (Channel Element Boards) of CSM5000. There is one CSM5000 on the CHM0 motherboard.
3.3.7
CHM_1
CHM_1 is responsible for modulation and demodulation of the physical layer of CDMA2000 1X EV-DO, based on ASIC chip CSM5500 made by UALCOMM. It provides a maximum configuration of forward 192 CEs and reverse 96 CEs, i.e., supports baseband processing of 3 sectors of CDMA2000 1X EV-DO. CHM_1 is made up of one CHM1 motherboard, and CEB1 (Channel Element Board) of CSM5500. There are four CSM5500 on the CHM1 motherboard.
3.3.8 3.3.8.1
DSM
Overview
DSM (Data Service Module) located in the EBDS_IP shelf is responsible for communication at ABIS interface between BTS and BSC. Based on the all-IP structure recommended by 3GPP2, DSM will implement two-way communication of protocols such as IP/CUDP/PPPmux/MP/HDLC, and provide HDLC/E1 interface. When configured with built-in SDH, it can provide HW interfaces.
3.3.8.2
Composition
There are various types of DSM boards, as shown in Table 9.
Table 9 Types of DSM No.
1 2 3 4 DSM_0 DSM_1 DSM_2 DSM_3
Name
Composition
DSM_0=DSM0+LPB0+2 CIB0+OWB0 DSM_1=DSM0+LPB0+CIB1+CIB0+OWB0 DSM_2=DSM0+LPB0+CIB0+CIB1+OWB0 DSM_3=DSM0+LPB0+2 CIB1+OWB0 Data Service Module Motherboard (8E1)
DSM0
Note: LPB0: Low Level Processor Board Type 0 CIB0: 4E1/T1 (E1/T1 Circuit Interface Board) CIB1: 8E1/T1 (E1/T1 Circuit Interface Board) OWB: Order Wire Board
3.3.9
Basic Functions
Supporting broadband processing of two-way 8XE1 links to meet the requirement of link bandwidth at ABIS interface for a maximum configuration of 2-carrier 3-sector of DO service in IP + HIRS system;
19
Providing orderwire phone and switching function; Supporting daisy chain cascade; Supporting built-in SDH.
3.3.10
SNM
SNM (SDH Network Module) located in the EBDS_IP shelf is responsible for SDH transmission at ABIS interface between BTS and BSC. It connects with DSM through the HW, and can provide 48*E1=6*16M HW at most at BTS side. For EBDS_IP solution, only one 16M HW can meet the maximum configuration requirement of the system. Belows are basic Functions of SNM module A maximum configuration of four pairs of optical interfaces can support various complicated networkings such as four-fibre ring networking, dual-ring networking, tree networking, etc., two pairs of which are mandatary configuration supporting basic twofibre ring networking, and the other two pairs can be added in subcard mode. SNM interacts with CCM at BTS side via FE line; SNM clock processing involves extracting the clock source from the line for DSM that sends it to GCM. Meanwhile GCM provides highly reliable circuit clock as a unified clock reference for BTS and distributes it to all ABIS interfaces of the BDS shelves; Built-in SNM exchanges data with ABIS interface (DSM); Providing access to orderwire phone at BTS by using the network management path of SDH to facitate maintance personnel at BTS side to communication with BSC or other BTS.
3.3.11
RIM
RIM (Radio Interface Module) located in the EBDS_IP shelf is responsible for providing interface between CDMA baseband processing with RF processing. It performs linear summation of baseband data to achieve CE sharing, establishes data transmission interface between baseband and RF, distributes system clock of BDS, and completes communication between baseband CCM and RF CCM.
3.3.12
SIM
SIM_0 (System Interface Module) located in the EBDS_IP shelf is responsible for processing of all system interfaces of the IP-BDS. Its basic functional interfaces involve: Uplink 8*E1 match network connected to BSC and the protection circuit; Downlink 8*E1 match network cascaded with BTS daisy chain or accessing ABIS transmission via the external extended device and the protection circuit; Interconnection interface between the EBDS_IP and the EBDS_HS;
20
Interconnection interface between the EBDS_IP and the HIRS_TFS: When an independent EBDS_IP is configured in the main BTS rack, CCM_1 of the EBDS_IP implements communication and control over GPSTM of the HIRS-TFS; As for other configuration, IP-BDS receives TOD messages; Interconnection interface between the EBDS_IP and the HIRS_RFS: The EBDS_IP provides the same cable interface as the HIRS_RFS.
3.4
3.4.1
RFS
Overview
BTS is an inseparable part of the CDMA cellular network system to implement the air interface functions. And yet, BTS must depend on its RFS component to exchange radio signals, especially when the CDMA system has adopted such techniques as power control, cell breathing, soft handoff, GPS timing, and numerous diversity reception means. This feature has distinguished the BTS RFS of the CDMA system from the RFSs of other systems. The major role of the RFS is to implement the air interface functions via the antenna and provide the interface to the BDS via the interface module. In addition, it modulates/demodulates CDMA signals in sending/receiving, implements the relevant detection, monitoring, configuration and control functions, and provides such flower functions as cell breathing, blossoming and wilting.
3.4.2
Working Principles
Based on the BTS structure in the CDMA system, RFS can be divided into two subsystems: The external antenna feeder subsystem and the internal transceiver subsystem. Of them, the antenna feeder subsystem is again composed of the antenna, the feeder and other structural installation parts. The specific model and composition of this subsystem greatly depend on the actual network plan. Typically, an antenna feeder subsystem consists of antenna, antenna jumpers, main feeders, a lightning arrester, cabinet-top jumpers and the grounding parts. The transceiver system is composed of an RF TRX, a High Power Amplifier (HPA), and an Radio Front End (RFE). The specific RFS configuration is subject to the overall BTS configuration. A single BTS rack can be flexibly configured to provide as few as only one sector with a single carrier or as many as three sectors with two carriers. In the case of combined cabinets, up to three sectors with four carriers can be configured. The RFS configuration is also very flexible, adjusting to the different BTS configuration schemes of different users. The following text will explain the system architecture of RFS by use of three configuration examples: 1-carrier 3sector configuration; 2-carrier 3-sector configuration, and 4-carrier 1-sector configuration. The 1-carrier 3-sector configuration of RFS is shown in Fig.8. Each sector has one TRX, one RFCM (resides in the same shielding box as TRX, forming the TRX board), one HPA, one RFE-DUP that specially adapts to this type of configuration, one RFE-DIV and two antennae (one transceiver antenna and the other diversity receiving antenna).
21
RFEDUP
RFEDIV
RFEDUP
RFEDIV
RFEDUP
RFEDIV
HPA T X
R X 0
R X 1
HPA T X
R X 0
R X 1
HPA T X
R X 0
R X 1
TRX
TRX
TRX
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
EBDS shelf
Fig. 8 Working Principles of the 1-Carrier 3-Sector RFS
The 2-carrier 3-sector configuration of RFS is shown in Fig.9. Each sector has two TRXs, two RFCMs, two HPAs, two RFE-DUPs that specially adapt to this type of configuration and two antennae. One of the antennae functions as the transceiver of the first carrier and the diversity receiver of the second carrier at the same time, while the other antenna functions as the transceiver of the second carrier and the diversity receiver of the first carrier.
22
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
HPA R R X X T0 1 X TRX
R X 1
R HPA X 0 T X TRX
HPA R X T0 X TRX
R X 1
R R HPA X X 1 0 T X TRX
HPA R X T 0 X TRX
R X 1
R R HPA X X 1 0 T X TRX
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
EBDS shelf
The 4-carrier 1-sector configuration of RFS is shown in the Fig. 10. Each sector has four TRXs, four RFCMs, four HPAs, two antennae, two RFE-COM-DUPs and two RFE-COM PA cavity combiners that specially adapt to this type of configuration. One of the antennae functions as the transceiver of the first carrier and the diversity receiver of the second carrier at the same time, while the other antenna functions as the transceiver of the second carrier and the diversity receiver of the first carrier.
23
RFE-DUP
RFE-COM
RFE-DUP
RFE-COM
HPA R R X X 1 0 T X TRX
R R HPA X X T 1 0 X TRX
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
RFCM
EBDS shelf 0
EBDS shelf 1
3.4.3
Features
RFS has the following features: Providing the air interface for the ZXC10-BSS system. Flexible configuration: The RFS configuration directly decides how many carriers and sectors the ZXC10-BSS system can provide. Determining the main forward/reverse RF indices of the ZXC10-BSS system. Modular design to guarantee that the heat under high forward output power and high power consumption be dissipated evenly for enhanced reliability. Decentralized cavity design and highly selective receiver, ensuring secure separation, high sensitivity and high selectivity.
24
Fine EMC&EMI design, conforming to all the relevant national and international standards.
3.4.4
Hardware Composition
The RFS hardware resides in three shelves, TRX, HPA and RFE, as shown in the following figures. In the 2-carrier 3-sector configuration, there is only one rack, but in the configurations with more carriers, there are two racks.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
TRX
TRX
TRX
F D M
GPSTM
T C M
GPSTM
TRX
TRX
TRX
HPA
HPA
HPA
BTM
HPA
HPA
HPA
RFE
RFE
RFE
RFE
RFE
RFE
RFS provides the following input/output interfaces: Antenna interfaces of the antenna feeder subsystem Data interfaces of the EBDS_HS Alarm and configuration & maintenance interfaces of the EBDS_HS
25
3.4.5
TRX
TRX ties RF signals with baseband signals. Each TRX corresponds to one sector and one carrier. On one hand, it receives the main and diversity receiving signals of the two RFEs of this sector, conducts down conversion, median frequency filtering, AGC processing and I/Q demodulation on these signals to convert the received modulated RF signals into baseband I/Q signals. On the other hand, it receives the forward baseband I/Q signals, and conducts I/Q modulation, median frequency filtering and up conversion on these signals to convert them into modulated RF signals. In addition, it executes the TPTL power control operations. Therefore, TRX is critical to RFS for the processing of Tx/Rx signals. TRX comprises two receiving units, one transmitting unit, one Frequency Synthesizer unit (FS), one TPM and one RF Control Module (RFCM), as shown in Fig.14.
RX0-I RX0-Q IQ0 RX0
TX-I TX-Q TX
3.4.6
HPA
HPA is used to amplify the power of the forward Tx signals from TRX, send them to RFE for filtering and then to the antenna for transmission. Its working current is strong and its temperature is high in working. In addition, the CDMA signals are non-constant envelope ones. To prevent the regeneration of frequency spectrum from occurring to the signals, the requirement on the linearity of HPA is very high. HPA provides the following functions: Amplifies the forward Tx signals output by TRX. Responds to the enable/disable control signals from the system. Detects the internal RF signals, temperature, and others. Monitors the running status and reports an alarm when necessary according to the detection results.
26
3.4.7
DUP
DUP is an important module in RFE that has the transceiver function. When this module is used, only one antenna is needed for the transmitting/receiving of RF signals. It is commonly adopted in Frequency Division Duplex (FDD) systems. DUP provides the following functions: Implements the duplex function for transmitting and receiving signals. Filters the forward Tx signals. Executes the wave-filtering and low-noise amplification of the reverse signals received by the antenna and outputs the signals to separate circuits. Detects the power and reports the detected power value. Detects the VSWR of the antenna feeder subsystem and reports the VSWR alarm information. Monitors the status of the Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) and reports an alarm when necessary.
LNA
Rx FWD
ANT
DUPLEXER
Tx REV
VSWR
PSI
HPA
PDET
3.4.8
DIV
DIV is an important module in RFE that has the diversity receiving function. DIV provides the following functions: Executes the wave-filtering and low-noise amplification of the reverse signals received by the antenna and outputs the signals to separate circuits. Monitors the status of the low-noise amplifier and reports an alarm when necessary.
27
3.4.9
COM
RFE-COM is a component in the RFE module. It implements the important combiner function in each sector when three or four carriers are configured. COM provides the following functions: Combines the signals transmitted by two carriers of different power. Detects and reports the power of the signals transmitted by different carriers.
HPA1
COM
COM
PSI
HPA2
PDET2
3.4.10
COM-DUP
COM-DUP is an important module used jointly with COM in the RFE module and has the transceiver function. COM-DUP provides the following functions: Implements the duplex function for both transmitting and receiving signals. Filters the forward Tx signals. Executes the wave-filtering and low-noise amplification of the reverse signals received by the antenna and outputs the signals to separate circuits. Detects the total output power of the antenna and gives low-power alarms. Detects the VSWR of the antenna feeder subsystem and reports the VSWR information. Monitors the status of the low-noise amplifier and reports an alarm when necessary. Injects and fetches BTM signals.
28
3.5
3.5.1
TFS
Overview
TFS is an important subsystem of the CDMA system and provides the timing and frequency references. The EBDS_HS and RFS subsystems depend on it to provide the baseband and RF clock signals. TFS generates the synchronous timing reference signal source and the frequency reference signal source in the CDMA system. It receives signals from the GPS satellite system, extracts the 1PPS and pilot signals, generates the PP2S, 19.6608MHz and 12MHz signals and relevant TOD messages by using the 1PPS signals as the phase-locking reference, and distributes the clock signals. For the network security of the CDMA system, TFS can receive signals both from a GPS satellite and from a GLONASS satellite.
3.5.2
Working Principles
TFS consists of three boards, GPSTM, TCM and FDM, as shown in Fig.17.
GP Santenna
FDM
GPSTM
PP2S 16CHIP
TCM
PP2S 16CHIP
GPSTM
10MHz
TFS provides the following functions: Provides 16CHIP and PP2S baseband clocks for the baseband subsystem. Provides 12MHz frequency source for the RFS subsystem. Provides timing reference for the CDMA system, that is, TOD messages.
29
3.5.3
Features
TFS (Timing & Frequency Subsystem) provides the PP2S timing reference, the system clock, the TOD messages and the 12MHz reference clock in the BTS; therefore, it is the timing and frequency reference at the wireless synchronization part of the whole CDMA system and is also the standard time provider of the whole system. As the clock part of the whole CDMA system, TFS is critical to the reliability and stability of the system, so its major module GPSTM is required to be in hot backup configuration for enhanced system stability.
3.5.4
Hardware Composition
The TFS in a BTS physically consists of two GPSTM boards, one TCM board and one FDM board, as shown in Fig.31. Each GPSTM outputs two channels of 16CHIP signals, two channels of PP2S signals and two channels of TOD messages, one for the local rack and the other for the extended rack. Each TCM outputs two channels of 10MHz signals, four channels of 16CHIP signals and four channels of PP2S signals, two for the local rack and the other for the extended rack. FDM outputs six channels of 12MHz signals. One or two GPSTMs can be configured in TFS as required. The TFS hardware occupies slots 4~7 in the TRX shelf in the BTS cabinet (as shown in the Fig.18). Slots 1~3 and 8~10 are for TRX boards.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
TRX
TRX
TRX
F D M
GPSTM
T C M
GPSTM
TRX
TRX
TRX
TFS provides the following output interfaces: Four channels of 16CHIP signals and four channels of PP2S signals carried by shielded twisted pairs to RFIM, with the signal level being PECL. Six channels of 12MHz signals carried by coaxial cables to the TRX module, with the signal level being SINE. Two channels of TOD messages carried by shielded twisted pairs from the local rack and the extended rack to CCM.
The signals input to TFS are: GPS satellite signals, which are received by the GPS antenna and transmitted in the coaxial shielded twisted pairs. IIC bus signals, carried by shielded twisted pairs to CCM.
30
3.5.5
GPSTM
GPSTM is important for the CDMA system. In the CDMA mobile communication system, both the transmission and radio networks need to be synchronized. For the transmission, the active/standby synchronization mode is generally adopted. For the radio network, the GPS synchronization mode is adopted, which requires all the radio interfaces of the whole cellular system to synchronize to the same standard clock provided by the GPS system. The synchronous timing solution for the CDMA system proposed by ZTE requires that BTS and BSC synchronize to the standard clock signals provided by GPS. GPSTM is the module to provide the standard clock signals and relevant system references to the BTS and BSC. The GPSTM in a BS is to provide the 16CHIP clock signals and PP2S signals to the BDS subsystem, the 10MHz sine reference signals to the RFS subsystem and the TOD messages to the whole system. GPSTM provides the following functions: Receives GPS signals and outputs the PP2S, 16CHIP, 10MHz signals and TOD signals via phase locking. Guarantees through the holdover function that the drift is no more than 10s within 24 hours when it fails to capture any satellite signal. The GPSTM of the ZXC10-BTS can even guarantee the drift is no more than 10s within 72 hours. Allows active/standby switchover Detects and reports the running status of the board.
3.5.6
TCM
TCM receives and merges the 10MHz signals from the active and standby GPSTMs and then distributes the merged signals. On the other hand, it also receives the PP2S and 16CHIP frequencies from the active and standby GPSTMs to lock their phases and then generates the new PP2S and 16CHIP frequencies. TCM functions just like a hinge between the active and standby GPSTMs to guarantee the continuance of PP2S and 16CHIP frequencies when active and standby GPSTMs switch over, thus avoiding call drops at switchover. For enhanced reliability, the module has been designed in such a way as to contain the least unreliable components, thus maintaining the simplicity of circuitry. At the same time, such aspects as heat dissipation and electromagnetic compatibility have been taken into consideration in the design. TCM provides the following functions: Receives the clock signals from the active and standby GPSTMs. Merges the 10MHz signals and then distributes them. Receives the 16CHIP and PP2S signals from the active and standby GPSTMs. Locks the phase of the 16CHIP signals. Regenerates the PP2S signals.
31
3.5.7
FDM
FDM is inserted in the TRX shelf of the BTS cabinet. In a 1.9G system, it receives and merges the 10MHz signals from TCM and then distributes the merged signals. In an 800MHz system, it receives and locks the phase of the 10MHz signals from TCM and outputs 12 MHz signals to TRX. As the active/standby switchover can result in the discontinuity of the 10MHZ signals, to avoid call drops, FDM first locks the phase and then buffers the 10MHz signals to output continuous 12MHz signals. For enhanced reliability, the module has been designed in such a way as to contain the least unreliable components, thus maintaining the simplicity of circuitry. At the same time, such aspects as heat dissipation and electromagnetic compatibility have been taken into consideration in the design. FDM provides the following functions: Receives the clock signals from TCM. Distributes the 10MHz signals or first locks the phase of and then distribute the 10MHz signals. Reports the working state of the FDM board via its I2C.
3.6
3.6.1
PS
Overview
PS (Power Subsystem) supplies power to the boards of BTS. It also monitors itself and will inform the background of any fault if detected.
3.6.2
Features
PSMD distributes one line of -48V DC input power to the BTS shelves, and at the same time monitors and controls the working states of the PS and fans. PPM supplies 27V DC power to RFS. It is configured in the N+1 backup mode and is of a temperature-control forced air cooling structure for heat dissipation. Its parallel load sharing function can ensure the requirement of the current equalization even when there are as many as five modules. Both PSMC and PSMB are configured in the 1+1 backup mode for enhanced reliability. In normal situation, the two power boards together shoulder the power supply responsibility. If either one becomes faulty, the other one will shoulder the entire power supply responsibility alone.
3.6.3
Working Principles
The power distribution plug-in box supplies the 48V DC power to the ZXC10-BTS rack and monitors its power supply. The working principles are illustrated in Fig.19.
32
Communication interface
-48VDC powersupply
3.6.4
Hardware Composition
The PS of ZXC10-BTS consists of an input protection unit and a plug-in box shelf. The plug-in box shelf comprises four types of modules: PSMD, PSMC, PPM and PSMB, as illustrated in Fig.36. They shoulder the +27V, 12V and -48V power distribution functions and there are totally five PPMs, two PSMCs and one PSMD. The input protection unit comprises a feed-through filter. The power monitoring signals are reported via the RS485 communication interface of PSMD.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
PSMD
PPM
PPM
PPM
PPM
PPM
PSMC
PSMC
Fig. 20 PS Shelf
3.6.5
PSMD
PSMD is inserted in the power distribution shelf of BTS. PSMD provides the following functions: Distributes one channel of -48V DC input power to all shelves.
33
Monitors and controls the running status of the PS and fans. Provides one RS485 interface to the SAM board for communications.
3.6.6
PPM
PPM is inserted in the PS shelf of the BTS cabinet to supply 27V DC power to RFS. It is configured in the N+1 backup mode and is of a temperature-control forced air cooling structure for heat dissipation. Its parallel load sharing function can ensure the requirement of current equalization even when there are as many as 5 modules. For the power input, its pre-charge soft startup mechanism can guarantee a small dash current. As for the power output, its diodes can prevent back flow. Therefore, the PPM is hot swappable.
3.6.7
PSMC
PSMC is inserted in the PS shelf of the BTS cabinet to supply 12V power. Its core component is a commercial DC/DC transformer module. Plus the peripheral circuits that implement the protection, filtering and detection functions, it actually serves as a stable and reliable power board to convert the -48V input power to the 12V output power.
3.6.8
PSMB
PSMB is inserted in the EBDS_HS shelf of the BTS cabinet to supply power to the digital subsystem. To guarantee the reliable performance of the digital subsystem, PSMB is configured in the 1+1 backup mode. In normal situation, the two power boards supply power in parallel to the BDS. If either one becomes faulty, the other one is to supply power to the entire shelf. At the same time, PSMB needs to report its own working state to the system monitoring unit, so it also provides the 485 interface for communications between them. PSMB provides the following functions: Converts the -48V DC input power to the +5V DC power for the BDS shelf. Adopts the 1+1 backup mode. Outputs over-/under-voltage alarm information via the RS485 interface with its built-in CPU.
3.7
34
4
4.1
BTS SOFTWARE
Overview
The ZXC10-BTS software resides in three modules: CCM, CHM and TRX. The 800MHz, 450MHz,1900MHz and 2100MHz base stations use the same system software, which does not reside in the remote RF station. The software system is divided into four subsystems: Operating System Subsystem (OSS), Service Processing Subsystem (SPS), Operation & Maintenance Subsystem (OMS) and Data Base Subsystem (DBS), as shown in Fig.21.
SPS
OMS
DBS
OSS
Inside BSS, the suite of software is composed of the programs that are distributed on the boards and background processors, that is, a distributed processing mode is applied. SPS: Based on the standards of the Um interface (IS-2000), it implements cdma2000 1X cellular mobile services. OMS: It provides interfaces to the authorized administrators and the upper-level NMS, thus achieving operation and maintenance of the entire BSS. EBDS: It manages the BSS data in a centralized way, and is the support system of the upper-layer applications (SPS and OMS).
35
OSS: As the natural extension of the hardware and commercial-purpose embedded operating system, it encapsulates details of the bottom-layer hardware and operating system and provides the operation and communication mechanisms necessary for the upper-layer applications (SPS, OMS and DBS).
Due to their different functions, the subsystems have different characteristics and positions. From the software hierarchy perspective, OSS is the bottom-layer BTS software that serves as the extension of the hardware system and the commercial-purpose realtime multi-task operating system to encapsulate the bottom-layer information and to provide a virtual machine platform for the operation and communication of the upper-layer software. SPS, OMS and EBDS are applications that run on the OSS software. In the application layer, DBS, as the data collector and manager, passively provides services to the other two applications, SPS and OMS. It is system support software. The purpose of BSS is to implement the CDMA service functionalities. The OMS application provides the system management functions while the SPS application is an object under the management of OMS. They are two independent networks: One is the service network, the other, the O&M network. They interact with each other via the O&M primitives.
4.2
4.2.1
CCM Software
Overview
CCM is the signaling processing, resource management and O&M center of the entire EBDS subsystem. It is also responsible for data signaling routes of the EBDS. And at the same time, it is the central point for signaling transmission acknowledgement. The signaling transmitted between any module inside the EBDS and that outside the EBDS is always forwarded by CCM.
4.2.2
DBS
The DBS that resides on CCM manages the data at the ZXC10- BTS in the centralized mode. It is a database embedded in real time to satisfy the requirements of the foreground applications for real-time data operations, characteristic of concise structure and small capacity. The foreground DBS on the CCM provides the following functions: Data organization and management: DBS organizes and manages some general BTSrelated data, including the hardware configuration data and radio resource management data. Data loading and maintenance:DBS is responsible for the creation and maintenance of the memory databases, data loading and storage, synchronization of the active and standby databases, performance statistics, dynamic data observation and others. Providing the access interface:The other subsystems need to use the access interface provided by DBS to access the databases.
36
4.2.3
Functional Distribution
The foreground DBS on the CCM maintains two types of data, the hardware configuration data and the radio configuration data. It comprises four components, as shown in Fig.22.
D_S
D_M
D_V
D_K
D_S: Service, database maintenance module D_M: Method, relational database table method module D_V: View, access interface module D_K: Kernel, kernel module D_V: access interface module
To guarantee the data security and consistency, the database users are not allowed to manipulate the databases directly, but through D_V, which receives the data manipulation requests, executes the required operations and then returns the results. D_M: relational database table method module
D_M can create objects by invoking the primitives provided by the kernel module. It can also load/add data to the objects and delete/modify the data of the objects to maintain the integrity of the database table relations. D_K: kernel module
D_K provides the primitives for the manipulations of the relations, index and queue objects. These primitives can be used to construct specific methods to manipulate the instances of the objects. D_S: database maintenance module
D_S can implement tasks such as database initialization, regular database backup, database loading, active/standby database synchronization and dynamic database monitoring.
37
4.2.4
RCM
The RCM hardware resides on the CCM board, as illustrated in Fig.23. RCM connects with the RFCM of the RFS through RFIM, which only implements the forwarding function. Therefore, RCM is regarded as being directly connected with RFCM logically.
BSC RFS
CCM RFIM
Abisc BSSAP
RFCM
RCM Am CEC
Abisd DSCHP
CHM
Fig. 23 Connections Between RCM and Other ModulesThe S_RCM software is a module of the
SPS. It configures and manages the CHMs and CEs, and is responsible for the RFS parameter configuration and status control. S_RCM provides the following functions: 1. 2. CE-related functions CHM initialization at power-on. CE enable/disable control, configuration, parameter modification. Overhead message construction. CHM/CE reconfiguration. Establishment, parameter configuration and release of the traffic channels. Radio resource allocation. Flexible F-SCH scheduling. Control channel handshaking. RFCM-related functions RFCM parameter configuration and modification. HPA control.
38
3.
RFCM state/alarm query. RFCM alarm. Sending/receiving link attenuation control. Auto calibration.
Cell-related control: TPTL enable/disable. Cell blooming and wilting control. Cell breathing control. Other functions: FDM and TCM configurations. Active/standby switchover. BTS overload control.
4.3
TRX Software
The TRX software runs on the single-chip microcomputer of the RFCM board, able to be downloaded from the background. It is the monitoring center of RFS and implements the communications between EBDS and RFS. Its major functions are as follows: 1. Signaling reception, processing, generation and transmission
The RFCM chip reads the CCM signaling data through the FPGA interrupt, analyzes the signaling contents, sets appropriate flag bits or assigns specific parameter values for them to be processed by the main program. It can generate signaling messages based on the detected status information of the functional modules and send them to the CCM. These signaling data are sent to and processed by FPGA. 2. Controlling and monitoring the functional units in RFS via the IIC bus
The RFCM chip, as the main node of the I2C bus, controls the bus operations. It controls and monitors the relevant functional units by reading from or writing to the interface devices on the bus, such as I2C I/O expansion, EEPROM and I2C ADC/DAC. The details are as follows: TRX configuration, status detection and functional control HPA enable/disable control HPA status check RFE status check
VSWR alarm, LNA fault detection and forward transmitting power monitoring in the mode of interrupt or regular query.
39
3. RFCM monitors the entire RFS and reports the alarms produced by its modules, including: 4. 5. HPA over-power alarm HPA over-temperature alarm HPA component failure alarm HPA VSWR alarm RFE VSWR alarm LNA over-/under-current alarm of RFE Rx signals I2C component alarm Status information report RFE transmitting power RSSI values of the main and diversity receiving links Forward TX attenuation values Reverse RX attenuation values (main & diversity) The instantaneous error, average and integral values of I2+Q2 Remote software download
The RFCM software may report the following status parameters to the RCM software:
The TRX software can be downloaded from the background remotely, thus providing a highspeed reliable means for future board software upgrading.
4.4
CHM Software
The CES (Channel Element Subsystem) is based on the CEM code developed by Qualcomm. It drives the CSM chip and implements the coding/decoding and modulation/demodulation of the physical layer of the air interface. The CES software resides on the CHM board. As illustrated in Fig.24, the CES comprises the CEM and CEC modules.
40
S_CEC
Alarm proxy
OSS
Fig. 24 Software Modules of the CESDrive: The drive layer software module of CEM; its
source code is developed by Qualcomm. Application: The application layer software module. Riop: Running information observation module. PAM: Performance measurement module. Dmp: diagnosis & test proxy module.
Both Drive and Application are based on commercial operating systems. Their part related with the operating system is encapsulated in a class definition so that platform-independent modularization is possible through change of this part. The other modules are all based on OSS.
4.5
TRX Software
The TRX software runs on the single-chip microcomputer of the RFCM board, able to be downloaded from the background. It is the monitoring center of RFS and implements the communications between EBDS and RFS. Its major functions are as follows: 1. Signaling reception, processing, generation and transmission
The RFCM chip reads the CCM signaling data through the FPGA interrupt, analyzes the signaling contents, sets appropriate flag bits or assigns specific parameter values for them to be processed by the main program.
41
It can generate signaling messages based on the detected status information of the functional modules and send them to the CCM. These signaling data are sent to and processed by FPGA. 2. Controlling and monitoring the functional units in RFS via the IIC bus
The RFCM chip, as the main node of the IIC bus, controls the bus operations. It controls and monitors the relevant functional units by reading from or writing to the interface devices on the bus, such as IIC I/O expansion, EEPROM and IIC ADC/DAC. The details are as follows: TRX configuration, status detection and functional control
FS configuration and PLL state detection EEPROM data query Control of the special-purpose attenuators (TPTL, Blossoming & Wilting and cell breathing) in the TRX HPA enable/disable control HPA status check RFE status check: VSWR alarm, LNA fault detection and forward transmitting power monitoring in the mode of interrupt or regular query.
3. RFCM monitors the entire RFS and reports the alarms produced by its modules, including: 4. 5. HPA over-power alarm HPA over-temperature alarm HPA component failure alarm HPA VSWR alarm RFE VSWR alarm LNA over-/under-current alarm of RFE Rx signals I2C component alarm Status information report RFE transmitting power RSSI values of the main and diversity receiving links Forward TX attenuation values Reverse RX attenuation values (main & diversity) The instantaneous error, average and integral values of I2+Q2 Remote software download
The RFCM software may report the following status parameters to the RCM software:
The TRX software can be downloaded from the background remotely, thus providing a highspeed reliable means for future board software upgrading.
42
5
5.1
5.1.1
Star Networking
BTS0 BTS1 BSC BTS2 BTS3
In star networking, several BTSs are directly connected to one BSC via several E1 PCM links. Due to the simplicity of this mode, both maintenance and engineering can be easily implemented. Since the signals are transmitted through fewer intermediate links along the path, the reliability of transmission is quite high. This is also the mode commonly adopted at densely populated areas.
5.1.2
Chain Networking
Chain networking is also applicable for a site with multiple BTSs. In this mode, there are relatively more intermediate nodes along the path of signals, and the transmission reliability is therefore much lower. This mode will be a good choice for a ribbon-like area sparsely populated, for it can reduce investment in transmission equipment. In practice, due to the dispersibility of the sites, a variety of transmission devices are usually applied as repeaters to connect the BTSs to the BSC. Among them, those typical ones are
43
microwave transmission, fiber transmission, HDSL transmission and coaxial cable transmission devices.
BSC
BTS0
BTS1
BTS2
5.1.3
Hybrid Networking
BTS0 BTS1 BTS3 BTS4 BTS2
BSC
5.1.4
BTS+Remote RF Station
LFM BTS
5.2
5.2.1
BTS Configuration
Key Indices
In the BTS configuration, the following indices are very important:
44
Flexible 6-carrier*sector configuration of a single rack: 2-carrier 3-sector or 1-carrier 6sector Common networking mode: star networking Maximum number of reverse channels: 384 Four Types of channel element boards supported: CHM32, CHM64, CHM96 and CHM128.
5.2.2
Single-Carrier Configuration
The single-carrier configuration of one BTS rack is shown in Fig.29.
RFE-DIV
RFE-DUP
RFE-DIV
RFE-DUP
RFE-DIV
RFE-DUP
HPA
HPA
HPA
BTM
PSMD
PPM
PPM
PPM
PSMC
PSMC
TRX
TRX
TRX
F D M
G P S T M
9 10
T C M
G P S T M
12 13 14 15 16 17 1 8 19 20
11
P S M B
R C C C S C C F D H H A C C I S M M M M M M U
P S M B
45
5.2.3
Dual-Carrier Configuration
The dual-carrier configuration of one BTS rack is shown in Fig.30.
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
RFE-DUP
HPA
HPA
HPA
BTM
HPA
HPA
HPA
PSMD
PPM
PPM
PPM
PPM
PPM
PSMC
PSMC
TRX
TRX
TRX
F D M
G P S T M
9 10
T C M
G P S T M
12 13
TRX
TRX
TRX
11
14
15
16
17
1 8
19
20
P S M B
R C R C C S C C C C F D F H H A C C H H I S I M M M M M M M M U M
P S M B
5.2.4
Site Types
By the allocation of frequency resources and cell planning, a cellular mobile network can be divided into a number of cells that are adjacent to one another, as shown in Fig.31.
46
Each cell is covered by a number of radio channels. When the omnidirectional antennae are adopted, each cell is likely to have one base station in its center position (as shown in Fig. A). When the directional antennae are adopted, each base station is positioned in the joint of three cells (as shown in Fig. B), covering the three adjacent cells at the same time. Actually, the base station will consist of at least three TRXs. That is, a base station that uses an omnidirectional antenna covers only one cell, yet a base station that uses a directional antenna covers three cells at the same time. Accordingly, the sites can be divided into two types: O-type and S-type. An O-type site refers to an omnidirectional cell, that is, all the carriers provided by this O-type site serve this cell only. An S-type site refers to sectorized cells, usually three sectors. Each sector can support multiple TRXs at the same time. For the models of an O-type site and an S-type site, as shown in Fig.32.
O-type
S-type
5.2.5
47
Note: O1 is recommended for medium- to small-sized, sparsely populated cities. It is an indoor model that has strict requirements on the equipment room. M1 is recommended for medium- to small-sized, sparsely-populated cities (or for further coverage). It is of a small size and can be installed either indoors or outdoors. Since it does not have strict requirements on the equipment room, it is a more economical solution.
5.2.6
Name
A. BDS shelf CHM CHM RFIM SAM CCM CDSU HIRS_BDS backplane Power board B. TRX shelf
Model
CHM32 CHM64 RFIM SAM CCM BTS-CDSU HIRS_BDS backplane PSMB Tx, Rx, CIQU, FS, RFCM FDM TCM GPSTM
O1
S1
S11
S111
O2
S2
S22
S222
1 1 2 1 1 2
1 1 2 1 1 2
1 1 2 1 1 2
1 1 2 1 1 2
2 1 2 1 1 2
2 1 2 1 1 2
2 1 2 1 1 2
2 1 2 1 1 2
8 9 10 11 12
TRX module FDM TCM GPSR TRX backplane C. PPM shelf RF power
1 1 1 1 1
1 1 1 1 1
2 1 1 1 1
3 1 1 1 1
2 1 1 1 1
2 1 1 1 1
4 1 1 1 1
6 1 1 1 1
13
board (+27V)
PPM
48
Name
Power (12V) Power distribution board PPM backplane D. HPA shelf HPA E. RFE shelf RFE (Duplexer) FE (Receiver) RFE backplane F. feeder subsystem GPS antennae, Antenna HPA board
Model
PSMC
O1
2
S1
2
S11
2
S111
2
O2
2
S2
2
S22
2
S222
2
15
PSMD
16
17
18 19 20
RFE-DUP RFE-DIV
1 1 1
1 1 1
2 2 1
3 3 1
2 0 1
2 0 1
4 0 1
6 0 1
21
feeders others
and
49
APPENDIX A: ABBREVIATION
Table 12 Abbreviation in this document Abbreviation AGC AUC BSC BSS BTM BTS CCM CE CES CHM COM CSM DBS DSM DUP EBDS_IP EV-DO FA FDM FE FER F-SCH GPSTM HDLC HLR HPA I/O LFM LNA MS MSC MTBCF MTBF MTTR NMS OMS OSS Full Name Automatic Gain Control Authentication Center Base Station Controller Base Staion System BTS Test Module Base Transceiver Station Communication Control Module Channel Element Channel Element Subsystem Channel Processing Module Contribute Module Code-site Module Data Base Subsystem Digital Service Module Duplexer IP Enhanced Baseband Digital Subsystem Evolution Data Only Foreign Agent Frequency Distribution Module Fast Ethernet Frame Error Rate Forward Supplementary Channel GPS Timing Module High-level Data Link Control Home Location Register High Power Amplifier Input/Output Local Fiber Module Low Noise Amplifier Mobile Station Mobile Switch Center Mean Time Between Critical Failures Mean Time Between Failures Mean Time To Recovery Network Management System Operation & Maintenance Subsystem Operating System Subsystem
50
Technical Description Of ZXC10-BTS Abbreviation PCF PDSN PS RF RFCM RFE RFM RFS RIM SAM SDH SIM SNM SPS TCM TFS TOD Full Name Packet Control Function Packet Data Serving Node Power Subsystem Radio Frequency Radio Frequency Control Module Radio Front End Remote Fiber Module Radio Frequency Subsystem Radio Interface Module Site Alarm Module Synchronous Digital Hirerachy System Interface Module SDH Network Module Service Processing Subsystem Time Control Module Timing & Frequency Subsystem Time Of Date
51