Mobile Communications Systems Development. Rajib Taid

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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_6e7fc266-46ef-520d-8af1-232b14e20006">Section 3.8.

      Protocol layer termination refers to the making available of the various services by the concerned protocol layer to its adjacent layers at the same time facilitating a peer‐to‐peer communication between two network elements over a logical interface. To understand a protocol layer termination, start from the UE/MS end and proceed toward the radio access or CN. A protocol layer terminates at the destination or peer network element or domain. Find and look at the corresponding network element containing the terminated protocol layer. Next, look at its position, e.g. Layer #2, Layer #3, and so on, within the protocol layers’ organization supported by the concerned network element. The protocol stack and its particular layer termination also identify the network elements that exchange various messages using the concerned layer protocol specification. For example, as mentioned in Section 3.3, the AS protocols terminate at the UMTS UTRAN or LTE E‐UTRAN or 5G NG‐RAN, whereas the NAS protocols terminate at the respective CN end. For more examples of protocol layer terminations, refer to TS 25.301 [49].

      

       CM

       MM

       Radio Resources Control and Management (RR)

      Similarly, the UMTS and LTE system air interface protocol stack, Layer #2, i.e. the data link layer in terms of the OSI reference model, has three sublayers, as mentioned below:

       Packet Data Convergence Protocol (PDCP)

       RLC

       MAC

      In the case of the GPRS/Enhanced Data for Global Evolution (EDGE) system protocol stack also, Layer #2, i.e. the data link layer in terms of OSI reference model, has three sublayers, as mentioned below:

       Logical Link Control (LLC)

       RLC

       MAC

      Note that in the case of UMTS and LTE systems, sublayers of a protocol layer may spread across the AS as well as NAS groups of protocols. For example, consider the UMTS and LTE air interface Layer 3 protocol and its sublayers. Here, the RRC is the Layer 3 protocol that terminates at the UTRAN or E‐UTRAN, but it is placed as part of the AS group of protocols. On the other hand, the sublayers of LTE/EPS or GPRS SM, MM, and CM are part of the NAS group of protocols that terminates at the CN, i.e. GPRS SGSN or LTE/EPC MME. Further, as illustrated, the 5G New Radio (NR) Layer 2 contains a new sublayer called the Service Data Adaptation Protocol (SDAP).

Schematic illustration of air interface sublayers: GSM, GPRS, UMTS, LTE, and 5G. Schematic illustration of protocol information conversions in a cellular system.

      In Figure 3.16, consider that a user wants to access the Internet (e.g. www, FTP, ping, and so on) through the GPRS or LTE/EPS network. The UE will send the user's request to the RAN using RLC/MAC protocol across the air interface. The RAN will collect the RLC/MAC layer block, in the case of GPRS, or RLC layer PDU, in the case of LTE. The RAN will format the RLC/MAC layer information into an appropriate protocol layer format of the concerned CN logical interface, for example, GPRS Gb interface Frame Relay format for SGSN, or LTE/EPS S1‐U format, and forward it to the SGSN or S‐GW. As an analogy with a traditional IP network/Internet, in a mobile communication network also, the user data or signaling data packets pass through different protocol layers and intermediate devices between a source and destination.

Schematic illustration of working model of protocol layer.

      Consider the LTE air interface Layer 2 RLC protocol layer operating between the UE and the E‐UTRAN. The RLC layer provides services for transferring higher‐layer information

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