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GB2504698A - Faster cell reselection by user equipment upon receiving a RRC connection rejection message - Google Patents

Faster cell reselection by user equipment upon receiving a RRC connection rejection message
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GB2504698A
GB2504698AGB201213964AGB201213964AGB2504698AGB 2504698 AGB2504698 AGB 2504698AGB 201213964 AGB201213964 AGB 201213964AGB 201213964 AGB201213964 AGB 201213964AGB 2504698 AGB2504698 AGB 2504698A
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layer
cell
cells
serving
connection
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Tero Henttonen
Brian Alexander Martin
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Broadcom International Ltd
Broadcom Corp
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Broadcom Corp
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Publication of GB2504698ApublicationCriticalpatent/GB2504698A/en
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Abstract

A user equipment UE determines from a Radio Resource Connection (RRC) connection setup reject message received from a serving cell currently serving the UE, at least one layer comprising a frequency layer or a radio access technology layer, then measures received signal strength of cells that are neighbours of the serving cell at available layers after de-prioritising the determined at least one layer associated with the serving cell, and ordering the neighbour cells based on the measuring. The UE then initiates a procedure to establish a connection with a highest-ordered one of the neighbor cells. In one specific embodiment the determined layer(s) are identified in an information element of the connection reject message. In one embodiment the de-prioritising triggers the UE to do a cell selection to measure the received signal strength from neighbour cells (as opposed to remaining on the current cell and performing reselection evaluation), and in another embodiment the threshold for reselection measurements is modified by setting a threshold purposely to exceed measured received power from its serving cell to force the signal strength measurements.

Description

Method and Apparatus for Fast Cell Reselection
Technical Field
The exemplary and non-limiting embodiments of this invention relate S generally to wireless communication systems, methods, devices and computer programs and, more specifically, relate to cell reselection in response to a connection reject message from a user equipment's wireless network, and related signaling.
Background
Congestion in cellular radio networks is a continuing concern as both the number of users and especially the volume of data being handled continues to increase. In a typical cell there will be a number of user equipments (UEs) in a connected state with the cell and a number of other UEs in an idle state. Only those in the connected state can send and receive user data, those in the idle state listen at prescribed times in case there is an incoming call to them. While different radio access technologies (RATs) use different terms for the idle and the connected states, the salient difference is that the UE in a connected state have an allocated data channel and those in an idle state do not.
A problem arises when a IJE in the idle state wishes to establish a connection to the cell on which it is camped when that cell is congested. To address this, the third Generation Partnership projcct (3GPP) has identified the need to perform selection from the Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access Network (E-UTRAN) to another RAT or to another E-IJTRAN frequency when the cell (eNodeB or alternatively eNB) is congested, or when another frequency or RAT may be more suitable for the particular service being requested. In the E-UTRAN system this requires modification of the Radio Resource control (RRC) Connection Reject procedure, which can currently not be used to re-direct a TIE to another cell or frequency. In current practice the congested eNB can either reject the connection request, or grant it and immediately hand over the newly connected UE to another cell or frequency. But when the eNB is congested it may not be possible to provide an RRC Connection to the IJE in order to redirect using RRC Connection Release. Even if the eNB could provide the new UE connection, this simply adds to its congestion.
A more thorough examination of this problem in E-UTRAN is set forth at document R2-121063 entitled: LS on RR failures and network reseleetion (3GPP TSG RAN WG2 Meeting #77bis; Jeju, Korea; 26-30 March 2012).
S
Summary
The foregoing and other problems are overcome, and other advantages are realized, by the use of the exemplary embodiments of this invention.
In a first exemplary embodiment of the invention there is provided a method for controlling a user equipment, the method comprising: determining, from a connection reject message received from a serving cell currently serving the user equipment, at least one layer comprising a frequency layer or a radio access technology layer; measuring received signal strength of cells that arc neighbors of the serving cell at available layers after de-prioritising the determined at least one layer associated with the serving cell, and ordering the neighbor cells based on the measuring; and initiating a procedure to establish a connection with a highest-ordered one of the neighbor cells.
In a second exemplary embodiment of the invention there is an apparatus for controlling a user equipment. This apparatus includes at least a processing system, which may be embodied by at least one memory storing computer program code and at least one processor. In this embodiment the processing system is configured to cause the apparatus at least to: determine, from a connection reject message received from a serving cell currently serving the user equipment, at least one layer comprising a frequency layer or a radio access technology layer; measure received signal strength of cells that are neighbors of the serving cell at available layers after de-prioritising the determined at least one layer associated with the serving cell, and order the neighbor cells based on the measuring; and initiate a procedure to establish a connection with a highest-ordered one of the neighbor cells.
In a third exemplary embodiment of the invention there is a computer readable memory comprising a set of instructions, which, when executed by a user equipment, causes the user equipment to perform the steps of determining, from a connection reject message received from a serving ccli currently serving the user equipment, at least one layer comprising a frequency layer or a radio access technology layer; measuring received signal strength of cells that are neighbors of the serving cell at available layers after de-prioritising the determined at least one layer associated with S the sewing cell, and ordering the neighbor cells based on the measuring; and initiating a procedure to establish a connection with a highest-ordered one of the neighbor cells.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Figurc 1 is a schematic diagram of a UE proximal to four neighbour cells which is an exemplary radio environment in which these teachings can be used to advantage.
Figure 2 is a signaling diagram illustrating messages and functions for a liE, a serving cell and a highest-ranked neighbour cell according to a first non-limiting embodiment of these teachings.
Figure 3 is a signaling diagram illustrating messages and functions for a liE, a serving cell and a highest-ranked neighbour cell according to a second non-limiting embodiment of these teachings.
Figure 4 is a simplified block diagram of a user equipment in communications with the serving cell and one of the neighbour cells of Figures 1-3, which arc exemplary electronic devices suitable for use in practicing the exemplary embodiments of these teachings.
Detailed Description
Currently two potential solutions have been proposed to the 3GPP for solving the connection redirect problem sct forth in the background section. Document R2- 122609 entitled: Redirection/Reseleetion on RRC Connection Reject (3GPP TSG-RAN WG2 Meeting #72; Prague, Czech Republic; 21-25 May 2102) proposes that the network reply to the liE's RRC Connection Request with a RRC Connection Reject message that redirects the UE to an alternative cell or frequency on which to establish its desired connection. This has met some resistance since in current procedures, when receiving the idle state liE's RRC Connection Request message the network would have no knowledge of what specific frequency bands the DIE supports and so there is a possibility of redirecting the TiE to a frequency layer with which it is incompatible. For convenience, each different frequency and RAT may be considered a different layer on which a cell operates with the UEs that it is serving, or may serve.
S The second potential solution is set forth at document R2-121 118 entitled: UE reaction on RRC Connection Rejection (3GPP TSG-RAN WG2 Meeting #77bis; Jeju, Korea; 26-30 March 2012) and concerns de-prioritising the current camped frequency using the RRC Connection Reject message, which consequently raises the priority of other ncighbour frcqucncics or RATs which thc DIE scarchcs.
This second potential solution has its own unresolved issues. For example, assigning the current frequency the lowest absolute priority leaves all other layers with a higher priority, but the current measurement performance requirement is that the DIE should perform a search every N x 60 seconds, where N is the number of inter-frequency or inter-RAT layers configured for the DIE. The TiE following these requirements may take several minutes to establish its connection on another frequency/RAT layer. Further, this second proposal sets a time limit for the deprioritisation which means the problem will re-assert itself after the time expires and the (congested) camped frequency again becomes the highest priority (which follows from the point above where the liE's search takes quite a long time).
One resolution suggested for these issues is to include a note in the governing radio specifications that the TiE should rcsclcct as soon as possible, but this does not enable any faster reselection and is not an objectively testable requirement. The TiE might start performing a higher priority search immediately after the RRC Connection Reject message but procedurally there is still a requirement to modify the performance requirements in the relevant radio specifications. The 3GPP is a responsive organization but even so this would take awhile to implement. The teachings below resolve the above dcprioritisation issues within the existing radio
specification framework of E-UTRAN.
Figure 1 is a schematic diagram of a TiE with four cells and representing an exemplary radio environment in which these teachings can be used to advantage.
Assume the liE 20 is in an idle state while traversing through the cell controlled by the serving eNB 22 and listens periodically for pages by that serving eNB 22 on a first frequency and a first RAT. The UE 20 is moving in the direction of the arrow toward the neighbour base stations 23, 24 and 25 which each operates on a neighbour frequency and/or a neighbour RAT, different from the first frequency and first RAT.
They are termed base stations since if in another RAT they may not be properly characterized as eNBs, but any or all may be eNBs if in the same/first RAT as the serving eNB 22. The first frequency has become congested and the idle-state UE 20 sends to the serving eNB 22 a RRC Connection Request message in order to establish a conncction to make a call. Thc scrving cNB 22 prefcrs not to congest its first frequency further and would rather the UE 20 established that RRC connection with some other neighbour base station 23, 24, 25.
Figure 1 is a straightforward deployment so the reader may more clearly understand the teachings herein. In other relevant radio scenarios one or more neighbour frequencies may also be operated by the serving eNB 22. One or more of the neighbour base stations 23-25 may also be embodied as a remote radio head operated by the serving cNB 22. One of the neighbour cells may operate on the first frequency and the second RAT. So as not to foreclose these other possibilities the description below teaches in terms of the first and neighbour frequencies and RATs, the first frequency and first RAT being that on which the liE 20 is camped and either or both of the neighbour frequency or neighbour RAT being one on which the liE 20 is not.
Figures 2-3 are signaling diagrams illustrating by non-limiting example two specific approaches to resolve the above issues within the existing E-UTRAN framework so as to enable the liE 20 to perform a fast reselection to another frequency or RAT. Both show only onc of thc neighbour base station 23 (shown as neighbour eNB 23 but in another embodiment it may be operating in a neighbour/second RAT), and use fI to represent the first frequency and £2 to represent the neighbour frequency utilized by the neighbour cell 23 (or neighbour/second RAT).
The description explains where more than one neighbour cell might be involved, but the exchanges between the TJE 20 and any additional neighbour cells are similar to that shown for the illustrated neighbour cell 23.
Figure 2 illustrates a first embodiment according to these teachings and begins with the idle state UE 20 sending to the network/serving cell 22 a RRC connection request message 202. The sewing cell 22 sends to the UE 20 a RRC Connection Reject message 204 which includes a new information element (IE) to de-prioritise S the current frequency 11. This IE may optionally also de-prioritise other frequencies beyond fI, may additionally de-prioritise the first RAT, and/or may also have a timer to specify the time interval during which the dcprioritisation will be in effect. This RRC Connection Reject message 204 with the new IE triggers the tiE 20 to perform at block 206 a cell selection (but excluding the deprioritiscd frequency/frequencies and/or RAT), as opposed to remaining on the current cell and performing reselection evaluation.
The cell selection enables the tiE 20 to immediately measure and rank the available frequencies, excluding the frequency/frequencies and/or RAT which was deprioritised. In the cell search procedure the UE acquires time and frequency synchronization with a cell by first listening to its primary synchronization signal (i.e. PSS in LTE, PSC in IJMTS) and then listening to its secondary synchronization signal (i.e. SSS in LTE, SSC in UMTS). After detecting both primary and secondary synchronization signals, the UE will have acquired the physical layer identity (in LTE) or the CPICH scrambling group (in UMTS) of that cell, along with knowledge of the cell's common reference symbol pattern (for LTE; in UMTS, another step is still needed after this, to detect the exact scrambling code out of the detected CPICH scrambling code group). For cell reselection detailed at 3GPP TS 36.304 the ranking also takes into account the absolute priority of the layers. In the E-UTRAN system a given cell transmits both PSS and SSS twice per 10 ms radio frame, so the tiE can idcntif' the frame timing of a cell from only the PSS with a maximum ambiguity of 5 ms and acquire the full physical cell identity (PCI) as fast as possible. From the PSS the UE 20 can also lock its local oscillator frequency to the base station carrier frequency, find an identity within the cell, and can also obtain partial knowledge about the cell's reference signal structure. The UE 20 can also listen to the secondary synchronization signal (SSS) to detect the cell identity group and to determine the frame timing more precisely. The tiE 20 can then coarsely rank the cells by measuring received signal strength of the PSS or of the SSS, or the UE 20 can more comprehensively measure the cell for ranking by measuring the reference signals which each cell transmits (for example, by measuring reference signal received power RSRP and/or reference signal received quality RSRQ of the common reference S signals CRSs). The UE 20 can learn the reference signal structure from the PSS and SSS. The cell search procedure is thus a fast way for the UE 20 to find and rank the neighbour cells whether they are inter-frequency or inter-RAT.
Figure 2 assumes that the neighbour eNB 23 operating on frequency f2 is the highest ranked neighbour from the UE's cell selection proccss. At message exchange 208 the UE 20 then performs some procedure on the second layer f2 with that neighbour eNB 23, such as for example establishing a connection via a random access channel (RACH) procedure. If the timer has not expired and the IJE 20 has selected a cell (eNB 23 in Figure 2), normal cell reselection procedures apply with the priorities as adjusted from the RRC connection reject message 204 and with the cell selection of block 206 until the timer expires.
Figure 2 assumes the IJE 20 established a new connection with the neighbour eNB 23 on 12, Then the timer expires, and at block 210 the TiE 20 performs cell selection again but this time the frequency/frequencies/RAT that was deprioritised for the earlier cell selection at block 206 is no longer deprioritised. Assuming the IJE 20 is still in the coverage area of the serving cell 22 and not yet too close to the coverage edge, then typically frequency fi will be the highest rankcd cell after the new cdl selection at block 210. Note that when the timer expires and the original frequency fI is returned to a high rank at block 210, the UE triggers cell selection again instead of the normal reselection measurements. The UE 20 then performs a procedure at message exchange 212 with the highest ranking cell as determined by the most recent cell selection done at block 210. For example, the UE 20 may send a new RRC Connection Request to the serving cell 22 at message exchange 212 if the UE has been returned to the idle mode with cNB 23 and again needs a connection. If the IJE remains in the connected mode with eNB 23 it will maintain that connection and will do the cell selection at some later time.
S
Now consider the second exemplary embodiment at Figure 3 which begins similar to Figure 2; the idle state UE 20 sends to the network/serving cell 22 a RRC Connection Request message 302 and the serving cell 22 sends to the UE 20 a RRC Connection Reject message 304 which includes a new information element (IE) to de-prioritise the cunent frequency fi. That new IE is detailed above for Figure 2.
The RRC Connection Reject message 304 with the new IE triggers the UE 20 to set the absolute priority of the serving cell layer (frequency fi) to be lower than the priority of the other layers. Specific for the current E-UTRAN system the IJE 20 does this in the non-limiting Figure 3 embodiment by setting a high value for the parameter SnonJntraSechP and/or the parameter SnotilnuaSearcliQ. In one specific implementation the IJE 20 sets the value of 5nonIntra5echP and/or 5nonJitaSec1iQ to infinity (or some other arbitrary value).
As defined at section 5.2.4.7 of 3GPP TS 36.304 vll.0.0 (2012-06), the parameter 5noidm5easchP specifies the Sj,jev (received signal power, based on the reference symbols in LTE) threshold in dB for E-IJTRAN inter-frequency and inter-RAT measurements, and the parameter SnnTntraSLTCI1Q specifies the Sql (received signal quality, also based on reference symbols in LTE) threshold in dB for E-IJ[RAN inter-frequency and inter-RAT measurements. Paragraph 5.2.4.2 of that same TS 36.304 specifies that if the serving cell fulfills 5ixlev > 5nonlntra5earclip and 5qual > Snonintrascaitl,Q then the UE may choose not to perform measurements of E-IJTRAN inter-frequency and inter-RAT frequency cells of equal or lower priority, otherwise the UE shall perform measurements of inter-frequencies or inter-RAT frequency cells of equal or lower priority. But the above allows a faster reselection because as specified in 3GPP TS 36.133 the rate of measurement is adjusted based on the above parameters, so when the current layer is deprioritized in this manner the resulting faster measurements lead to a faster reselection.
So when temporarily modifying the current frequency priority, one or both of those parameters/thresholds arc changed to a high (or infinite) value. It follows that 5ixiev will be less than (or equal to) the new higher threshold and so the above-cited clause from TS 36.304 causes the TJE 20 to start performing measurements of all the other layers at a faster rate. Importantly, these neighbour cell measurements arc configured according to a tightcr performance requirement since they are normally used to assure basic coverage for the UE, as opposed to expanding the services that may be available to the UE (which have more relaxed tolerances since the assumption for service-based measurements is that basic coverage is not at S risk of being lost).
Like Figure 2, the non-limiting embodiment of Figure 3 has the neighbour cell 23 as an eNB so it is on thc same/first RAT with thc scrving ccli 22. Figure 3 assumcs that after rcsctting thc priority at block 306 following its de-prioritising of thc currcnt frcqucncy or RAT that was indicated in mcssagc 304), thc ncighbour cell 23 operating on frequency ±2 is now the highest priority cell/layer. At message exchange 308 the tiE 20 then performs some procedure on the second layer f2 with that neighbour eNB 23, such as for example establishing a connection via a RACH proccdurc.
As for Figure 2, Figure 3 assumes the UE 20 established a new connection with thc neighbour cell 23 in thc proccdurc of mcssagc cxchangc 308 bcforc thc timer cxpircs. Then, whcn thc timer cxpircs at block 310, thc tiE 20 scts thc absolutc priority of the serving cell fi back to its original value and now sets high the value of the threshold Snonjntra5e&clil' for the new cell 23 (±2) so the UE 20 is again forced to make measurcments of inter-frequency and inter-RAT ncighbours. Assuming thc liE 20 is still in thc covcragc arca of thc serving cell 22 and not yct too close to thc covcragc cdgc, thcn typically frcqucncy fi will bc thc highcst priority cdl afIcr thc new absolute priorities are calculated at block 310. So when the timer expires and the original frequency fI is returned to a high priority, the liE temporarily sets the threshold of the currently camped frequency (i.e., ±2 since the assumption above is that the procedure at message exchange 308 established a new connection on ±2 with cell 23) to a high value in order to quickly find another layer, which in the Figure 3 non-limiting example is the original layer fI since the LIE 20 is assumed to still be in the same area. The message exchange 312 then has the liE 20 performing some procedure with the new highest-priority layer fi, such as a RRC Connection Request or RACH procedure to establish a connection if as with Figure 2 the further assumption is that the TiE 20 enters again the idle mode with cell 23 and then wants to establish yet another new connection.
The adjustments needed to implement the above teachings for the E-UTRAN system involves a new rule to trigger the above behaviour in the circumstances shown S by example at Figures 2-3 (modi'ing the threshold for reselection measurements and/or triggering a cell selection rather than a reselection), and liEs operating in the E-IJTRAN system are already compatible with that behaviour (under different circumstances when they arc in an idlc state). For example, such a rule can be writtcn into 3GPP TS 36.331 or 36.304.
Certain embodimeilts of these teachings provide the technical effect of re-using for a new purpose and under different conditions the conventional E-IJTRAN implementation of cell selection/reselection measurements. Implementing these teachings in tim E-U'TRAN systcm is seen to imposc no adversc impact to tim E-IJTRAN performance requirements while providing the advantage of a faster rcselcction by thc UF upon rccciving a RRC Conncction Rejcct message whcn the current frequency is deprioritiscd, as compared to the proposed deprioritisation method outlined at document R2-121 118. Additionally, the UE behaviour according to these teachings is both objectively testable and predictable.
The elements shown at Figures 2-3 for the serving eNB 22 and for the UE 20 may be considered as reprcsenting a logic flow diagram for those respectiye deyices, and further may bc considercd to represent the opcration of a method, and a result of execution of a computer program stored in a computer readable memory, and a specific manner in which components of an electronic deyice such as a liE or network access node (or one or more components thereof) are configured to cause that electronic device to operate. The various different steps shown in Figures 2-3 may also be considered as a plurality of coupled logic circuit elements constructed to carry out thc associatcd function(s), or spccific rcsult of strings of computcr program code stored in a memory.
The steps of Figures 2-3 and the frmnctions they represent are non-limiting examples, and may be practiced in various components such as integrated circuit chips and modules, and that the exemplary embodiments of this invention may be rcalizcd in an apparatus that is cmbodicd as an integratcd circuit. Thc intcgrated circuit, or circuits, may comprise circuitry (as well as possibly firmware) for embodying at least one or more of a data processor or data processors, a digital signal processor or processors, baseband circuitry and radio frequency circuitry that are S configurable so as to operate in accordance with the exemplary embodiments of this invention.
Wherc thc intcr-frcqueney layers (same RAT, diffcrcnt frcqucncy) and the intra-frequcney layers (different RAT, same or different frequencies) are understood as layers, the RRC Connection Reject message can be understood as dc-prioritizing one or more layers of which the serving frequency is one of those one or more de-prioritized layers. The more general features of Figures 2-3 may, from the UE's perspective (that is, a method for controlling a liE), can then be summarized as: * determining from a connection reject message 204, 304 received from a serving cell currently serving the user equipment, at least one layer (fi in the examples) comprising a frequency layer or a radio access technology layer * measuring received signal strength of cells that are neighbors of the serving cell at available layers after de-prioritising the determined at least one layer associated with the sewing cell and ordering the neighbor cells based on the measuring, and * initiating a procedure 208, 308 to establish a connection with a highest-ordered one of the neighbor cells (the neighbor cell 23 at frequency layer f2 in
the examples).
Tn both Figures 2-3, each of the at least one layer, which is identified in an TE of the connection reject message.
Specific to the Figure 2 embodiment, the above measuring of the received signal strength comprises performing cell selection of the neighbor cells at the available layers after the de-prioritising, in which the cell selection is triggered by the TIE 20 in response to receiving the IE in the connection reject message 204. As further detailed above for the Figure 2 embodiment, the received signal strength for each cell at the available layers is measured on at least a primary synchronization signal.
For thc case in which thc conncction rcjcction mcssage includcs a timcr, thcn the Figure 2 embodiment further includes, after expiration of the timer: performing a new cell selection of cells at the available layers without de-prioritising the determined at least one layer associated with the previously serving cell; ordering S again the cells at the available layers from the new cell selection; and initiating a procedure to establish a connection with a highest-ordered cell of the ordered-again ccli s.
Specific to thc Figure 3 cmbodiment, thc abovc dc-prioritising compriscs: sctting absolutc priority of thc detcrmined at least onc layer associatcd with thc serving cell lower than each other layer not dc-prioritized by the received connection reject message; and setting a value of a threshold parameter to exceed received signal power measured from a serving frequency layer, where the serving frequency layer of thc serving cell is the dc-prioritizcd layer or one of thc dc-prioritizcd layers. As detailed further above for the Figure 3 embodiment, the threshold parameter is Snonintrascarciip which is sct to infinity or some othcr arbitrarily high value, and the receivcd signal powcr measured from a serving frequency laycr is Srxi,.
For the case in which the connection rejection message includes a timer, then the Figure 3 embodiment further includes, after expiration of the timer: while the valuc of thc threshold paramctcr rcmains sct to cxcccd thc rcccivcd signal power measurcd from a new serving frequency layer of a ncw serving cdl, setting again absolutc priority of all of thc layers including at least thc onc laycr associated with the previously serving cell that was dc-prioritized by the received connection reject message; measuring again received signal strength of the cells at all of the layers; ordering again the cells at all of the layers from the again measured received signal strcngth; and initiating a proccdurc to establish a connection with a highcst-ordercd cell of the again ordered cells.
Reference is now made to Figure 4 for illustrating a simplified block diagram of various electronic devices and apparatus that are suitable for use in practicing the exemplary embodiments of this invention. In Figure 2 there is a serving celliserving network access node 22 such as a base transceiver station (the eNB 22 of Figures 1-3 for the E-UTRAN system) which is adapted for communication over a wireless link 21A with an apparatus 20 such as a mobile terminal or tilE 20 in the idle state/mode.
Figure 3 also illustrates a neighbour cell 23 such as that shown in Figures 1-3 which has a wireless link 21B with the tiE 20, and that link 21B is unidirectional downlink for the idle-mode IJE taking measurements and bi-directional for connection S establishment as detailed above. Also as noted above, the serving cell 22 and the neighbour cell 23 represent different frequency and/or RAT layers. While not shown, the serving cell 22 and the neighbour cell 23 may each be further communicatively coupled via respective data and control links to a higher network node such as a mobility management entity/serving gateway MME/S-GW in the case of the E- 1J[RATh4 system, or to different higher network nodes for the case they are in different RATs. There may be a direct interface between the serving cell 22 and the neighbour cell 23, or if they are in different RATs they may be connected only via a control link between their respective but different high network nodes.
The TiE 20 includes processing means such as at least one data processor (DP) 20A, storing means such as at least one computer-readable memory (MEM) 20B storing at least one computer program (PROG) 20C, communicating means such as a transmitter TX 20D and a receiver RX 20E for bidirectional wireless communications with the serving cell 22 and at least for receiving signals from the neighbour cell 23 via one or more antennas 20E. Within the memory 20B of the liE 20 but shown separately as reference number 200 is also a computer program for de-prioritising one or more layers identified in a connection reject message, for ordering the layers after that de-prioritising, and taking fast measurements of the ordered layers as is detailed above in the various embodiments.
The serving cell 22 also includes processing means such as at least one data processor (DP) 22A, storing means such as at least one computer-readable memory (MEM) 22B storing at least one computer program (PROG) 22C, and communicating means such as a transmitter TX 22D and a receiver RX 22E for bidirectional wireless communications with its associated user devices 20 via one or more antennas 22F and a modem. The serving cell 22 also has stored in its memory at 22G software to de-prioritise the one or more layers via an IF inserted into the connection eject message it sends to the liE 20, as is detailed by example above.
The neighbour cell/neighbour network access node 23 is similarly functional with blocks 23A, 23B, 23C, 23D, 23E and 23F, which are similar in function to those blocks having a same suffix and described for the serving cell/serving network access node 22.
S While not particularly illustrated for the UE 20 or cells 22, 23, those devices are assumed to include as part of their wireless communicating means a modem which may in one exemplary but non limiting embodiment be inbuilt on an RE front end chip so as to carry the respective TX 20D/22D/23D and RX 20E/22E/23E.
At least one of the PROGs 20C. 22C in the UE 20 and in the serving cell 22 is assumed to include program instructions that, when executed by the associated DP 20A, 22A, enable the device to operate in accordance with the exemplary embodiments of this invention as detailed more fully above. In this regard the exemplary embodiments of this invention may be implemented at least in part by computer software stored on the MEM 20B, 22B which is executable by the DP 20A, 22A of the respective devices 20, 22; or by hardware; or by a combination of tangibly stored software and hardware (and tangibly stored firmware). Electronic devices implementing these aspects of the invention need not be the entire UE 20, or serving cell 22, but exemplary embodiments may be implemented by one or more components of same such as the above described tangibly stored software, hardware, firmware and DP, or a system on a chip Soc or an application specific integrated circuit ASIC or a digital signal processor DSP or a modem or a subscriber identity module commonly referred to as a SIM card.
Various embodiments of the UE 20 can include, but are not limited to: cellular telephones; data cards, USB dongles, laptop computers, personal portable digital devices having wireless communication capabilities including but not limited to laptop/palmtop/tablet computers, digital cameras and music devices, and Internet appliances.
Various embodiments of the computer readable MEM 20B, 22B, 23B include any data storage technology type which is suitable to the local technical environment, including but not limited to semiconductor based memory devices, magnetic memory devices and systems, optical memory devices and systems, fixed memory, removable memory, disc memory, flash memory, DRAM, SRAM, EEPROM and the like.
Various embodiments of the DP 20A, 22A, 23A include but are not limited to general purpose computers, special purpose computers, microprocessors, digital signal processors (DSPs) and multi-core processors.
S Various modifications and adaptations to the foregoing exemplary embodiments of this invention may become apparent to those skilled in the relevant arts in view of the foregoing description. While the exemplary embodiments have been described above in the context of the E-IJTRAN system with other RATs as possibly other layers, it should be appreciated that the exemplary embodiments of this invention are not limited for use with only this one particular type of wireless communication system, and that they may be used to advantage in other wireless communication systems such as for example the GSM or GERAN or wideband code division multiple access (WCDMA) version of Uf RAN, as some non-limiting further
examples.
Some of the various features of the above non-limiting embodiments may be used to advantage without the corresponding use of other described features. The foregoing description should therefore be considered as merely illustrative of the principles, teachings and exemplary embodiments of this invention, and not in limitation thereof

Claims (14)

  1. 14. The apparatus according to claims 9 or 10, wherein the processing system is configured to cause the apparatus to de-prioritise each of the at least one layer by: setting absolute priority of the determined at least one layer associated with the serving cell lower than each other layer not dc-prioritized by the received connection reject message; and setting a value of a threshold parameter to exceed received signal power measured from a serving frequency layer of the serving cell, where the serving frequency layer is the dc-prioritized layer or one of the dc-prioritized layers.5. The apparatus according to claim 4, wherein the threshold parameter is Snonjrnrascarchp and the processing system is configured to cause the apparatus to set said threshold parameter to an arbitrarily high value, and the received signal power measured from a serving frequency layer is S11.16. The apparatus according to claims 14 or 15, wherein the processing system is configured to cause the apparatus to further, after expiration of a timer received in the connection rejection message: while the value of the threshold parameter remains set to exceed the received signal power measured from a new serving frequency layer of a new serving cell, set again absolute priority of all of the laycrs including at least the onc layer associated with the previously serving cell that was dc-prioritized by the received connection reject message; measure again received signal strength of the cells at all of the layers; order again the cells at all of the layers from the again measured received signal strength; and initiate a procedure to establish a connection with a highest-ordered cell of the again ordered cells.17. A computer readable memory comprising a set of instructions, which, S when executed by a user equipment, causes the user equipment to perform the steps of: detcrmining, from a connection reject message received from a serving cell currently serving the uscr equipment, at least one layer comprising a frequency layer or a radio acccss technology layer; measuring received signal strength of cells that are neighbors of the serving cell at available layers after de-prioritising the determined at least one layer associated with the serving cell, and ordering the neighbor cells based on the measuring; and initiating a procedure to establish a connection with a highest-ordered one of the neighbor cells 18. The computer readable memory according to claim 17, in which each of the at least one layer is identified in an information element of the connection reject message.19. The computer readable memory according to claim 18, wherein the set of instructions, when executed by the user equipment causes the user equipment to perform cell selection of the or each neighbor cell at the available layers after the de-prioritising, in which the cell selection is triggered by the user equipment in response to receiving the information element in the connection reject message.20. The computer readable memory according to any one of claims 17 to 19, wherein the received signal strength for each cell at the available layers is measured on at least a primary synchronization signal.21. The computer readable memory according to claim 20, wherein the set of instructions, when executed by the user equipment, further causes the user equipment, after expiration of a timer received in the connection rejection message, to: perform a new cell selection of cells at the available layers without de-prioritising the determined at least one layer associated with the previously serving S cell; order again the cells at the available layers from the new cell selection; and initiate a procedure to establish a connection with a highest-ordered cell of the ordered again cells.22. The computer readable memory according to claims 17 or 18, wherein the set of instructions, when executed by the user equipment, causes the user equipment to de-prioritise each of the at least one layer by: setting absolute priority of the determined at least one layer associated with the serving cell lower than each other layer not dc-prioritized by the received connection reject message; and setting a value of a threshold parameter to exceed received signal power measured from a serving frequency layer of the serving cell, where the serving frequency layer is the dc-prioritized layer or one of the dc-prioritized layers.23. The computer readable memory according to claim 22, wherein the thrcshold parameter is SflonJnse&chp, which is set to an arbitrarily high value and the received signal power measured from a serving frequency layer is Siev.24. The computer readable memory according to claims 22 or 23, wherein the set of instructions, when executed by the user equipment, further causes the user equipment, after expiration of a timer received in the connection rejection message, to: while the value of the threshold parameter remains set to exceed the received signal power measured from a new serving frequency layer of a new serving cell, set again absolute priority of all of the layers including at least the one layer associated with the previously serving cell that was dc-prioritized by the received connection reject message; measure again received signal strength of each cell at all of the layers; order again the cells at all of the layers from the again measured received S signal strength; and initiate a procedure to establish a cotmection with a highest-ordered one of the again ordered cells.
GB201213964A2012-08-062012-08-06Faster cell reselection by user equipment upon receiving a RRC connection rejection messageWithdrawnGB2504698A (en)

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