US20170273130A1 - Device-to-device (d2d) transmit behavior - Google Patents
Device-to-device (d2d) transmit behavior Download PDFInfo
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- US20170273130A1 US20170273130A1 US15/610,939 US201715610939A US2017273130A1 US 20170273130 A1 US20170273130 A1 US 20170273130A1 US 201715610939 A US201715610939 A US 201715610939A US 2017273130 A1 US2017273130 A1 US 2017273130A1
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- H04W76/023—
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W72/00—Local resource management
- H04W72/12—Wireless traffic scheduling
- H04W72/121—Wireless traffic scheduling for groups of terminals or users
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- H04W76/064—
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W76/00—Connection management
- H04W76/10—Connection setup
- H04W76/14—Direct-mode setup
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W76/00—Connection management
- H04W76/30—Connection release
- H04W76/34—Selective release of ongoing connections
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W8/00—Network data management
- H04W8/005—Discovery of network devices, e.g. terminals
Definitions
- Example 57 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 56, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-1 operation wherein an evolved NodeB (eNB) is to allocate resources for the T-RPT.
- eNB evolved NodeB
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Abstract
In embodiments, apparatuses, methods, and storage media may be described for mapping media access control (MAC) protocol data units (PDUs) that are used to transmit scheduling assignment (SA) discovery, and/or device-to-device (D2D) data. Embodiments herein may describe how one or more MAC PDUs may be mapped into a time resource pattern for transmissions (T-RPT). Embodiments herein may further describe examples of how and when a UE may skip subframes in transmissions of the SA and/or data. Additionally, embodiments herein may further describe examples of how a UE may behave if the UE cannot transmit one or more scheduled instances of SA or data. Additionally, embodiments herein may describe resolution of collisions of D2D discovery messages in the time domain. Other embodiments may be described and/or claimed.
Description
- This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/701,423, filed Apr. 30, 2015, which claims the benefit of U.S. Patent Application No. 62/075,611, filed Nov. 5, 2014, entitled “METHOD FOR D2D INTERFERENCE RANDOMIZATION AND D2D TX BEHAVIOR IN CASE OF COLLISION WITH WAN TRANSMISSIONS,” the contents and disclosures of which are herein incorporated in their entireties.
- Embodiments of the present invention relate generally to the technical field of user equipment (UE) device-to-device (D2D) transmission behavior in wireless networks.
- The background description provided herein is for the purpose of generally presenting the context of the disclosure. Work of the presently named inventors, to the extent it is described in this background section, as well as aspects of the description that may not otherwise qualify as prior art at the time of filing, are neither expressly nor impliedly admitted as prior art against the present disclosure. Unless otherwise indicated herein, the approaches described in this section are not prior art to the claims in the present disclosure and are not admitted to be prior art by inclusion in this section.
- In device-to-device (D2D) communication, the following two-step transmission of direct data may be used. First, a scheduling assignment (SA) or a physical sidelink control channel (PSCCH) transmission that includes control information may be transmitted from a transmitting user equipment (UE) to a receiving UE. The SA or PSCCH transmission may include control information that the receiving UE may need to receive a data transmission from the transmitting UE. Next, the transmitting UE may transmit data according to the SA or PSCCH control information. In some cases, the UE transmissions of the SA, PSCCH, and/or data may be based on resources allocated by an evolved NodeB (eNB), which is referred to herein as Mode-1 operation. In other cases, the transmissions of the SA, PSCCH, and/or data may be based on resources allocated by the UE, which is referred to herein as Mode-2 operation.
- As used herein, D2D communication may also be referred to as “sidelink” communication. Such communication shall be referred to herein as D2D communication for the sake of consistency.
- Embodiments will be readily understood by the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. To facilitate this description, like reference numerals designate like structural elements. Embodiments are illustrated by way of example and not by way of limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings.
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FIG. 1 schematically illustrates a high-level example of a network that includes a user equipment (UE) and an evolved NodeB (eNB), in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 2 illustrates a high-level example of a network that includes an eNB and multiple UEs, in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 3 illustrates an example framework for D2D transmission, in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 4 illustrates an example transmission scheme for D2D transmission, in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 5 illustrates an alternative example transmission scheme for D2D transmission, in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 6 illustrates an example D2D logic scheme, in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 7 illustrates several alternative example transmission schemes in the event of transmission collision, in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 8 illustrates additional alternative example transmission schemes in the event of transmission collision, in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 9 schematically illustrates an example system that may be used to practice various embodiments described herein. -
FIG. 10 illustrates an example process that may be performed by a UE, in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 11 illustrates example electronic device circuitry, in accordance with various embodiments. -
FIG. 12 illustrates an example system, in accordance with various embodiments. - As noted above, D2D communication may include a two-step transmission of direct data. First, a transmitting UE may send control information via an SA and/or PSCCH transmission to a receiving UE. The control information may include information that the receiving UE needs to receive a corresponding data transmission from the transmitting UE. Secondly, the transmitting UE may send data via a D2D transmission that is in accordance with the control information. In some embodiments, the resources for the D2D transmission may be allocated by an eNB (Mode-1 operation). In other embodiments, the resources for the D2D transmission may be allocated by the transmitting UE (Mode-2 operation). In this description, only SA transmissions of control information may be described, but in some embodiments the SA transmissions may be considered to be a generic description of control information that may be transmitted by the SA and/or PSCCH.
- In embodiments herein, media access control (MAC) protocol data units (PDUs) may be used to transmit the SA and/or D2D data. Embodiments herein may describe how one or more MAC PDUs may be mapped into a time resource pattern for transmissions (T-RPT). Embodiments herein may further describe examples of how and when a transmitting UE may skip resources such as subframes and/or transmission time intervals (TTIs) in transmissions of the SA and/or data. Additionally, embodiments herein may further describe examples of how a UE may behave if the UE cannot transmit one or more scheduled instances of SA or data.
- Embodiments herein may also relate to D2D discovery transmission. Generally, D2D discovery may include transmission of discovery MAC PDUs. In embodiments, resources for discovery transmission may be allocated by eNodeB (Type 2B discovery) or by a UE (
Type 1 discovery). Generally, as used herein, D2D communications may refer to both D2D communication and D2D discovery. - Embodiments of this disclosure may describe D2D transmission behavior that may optimize system level performance. Generally, eNB control may be increased in Mode-1 operation, and performance degradation may be reduced or minimized in Mode-1 and Mode-2 operation by applying one or more transmission opportunity dropping and postponing rules for SA and data as described herein.
- Embodiments herein may be described with respect to a transmission opportunity bundle (TOB). A TOB may be a series of four consecutive transmission opportunities with a T-RPT wherein the starting transmission opportunity index is a multiple of 4 (e.g., 0, 4, 8, etc.) A TOB may be described more fully below.
- In the following detailed description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, which form a part hereof wherein like numerals designate like parts throughout, and in which is shown by way of illustration embodiments that may be practiced. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural or logical changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. Therefore, the following detailed description is not to be taken in a limiting sense.
- Various operations may be described as multiple discrete actions or operations in turn, in a manner that is most helpful in understanding the claimed subject matter. However, the order of description should not be construed as to imply that these operations are necessarily order dependent. In particular, these operations may not be performed in the order of presentation. Operations described may be performed in a different order than the described embodiment. Various additional operations may be performed and/or described operations may be omitted in additional embodiments.
- For the purposes of the present disclosure, the phrase “A and/or B” means (A), (B), or (A and B). For the purposes of the present disclosure, the phrase “A, B, and/or C” means (A), (B), (C), (A and B), (A and C), (B and C), or (A, B and C).
- The description may use the phrases “in an embodiment,” or “in embodiments,” which may each refer to one or more of the same or different embodiments. Furthermore, the terms “comprising,” “including,” “having,” and the like, as used with respect to embodiments of the present disclosure, are synonymous.
- As discussed herein, the term “module” may be used to refer to one or more physical or logical components or elements of a system. In some embodiments a module may be a distinct circuit, while in other embodiments a module may include a plurality of circuits.
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FIG. 1 schematically illustrates a wireless communication network 100 (hereinafter “network 100”) in accordance with various embodiments. Thenetwork 100 may include aUE 110 that is communicatively coupled with aneNB 105. In embodiments, thenetwork 100 may be a third generation partnership project (3GPP) long term evolution (LTE), LTE Advanced (LTE-A) and/or LTE-Unlicensed (LTE-U) network. In other embodiments, thenetwork 100 may be some other type of wireless communication network. - As shown in
FIG. 1 , theUE 110 may include atransceiver module 130, which may also be referred to as a multi-mode transceiver chip. Thetransceiver module 130 may be configured to transmit and receive signals using one or more protocols such as LTE, LTE-A, and/or LTE-U protocols. Specifically, thetransceiver module 130 may be coupled with one or more of a plurality ofantennas 125 of theUE 110 for communicating wirelessly with other components of thenetwork 100, e.g.,eNB 105 or another UE via D2D communication. Theantennas 125 may be powered by apower amplifier 135 which may be a component of thetransceiver module 130 as shown inFIG. 1 , or separate from but coupled with thetransceiver module 130. In one embodiment, thepower amplifier 135 may provide the power for all transmissions on theantennas 125. In other embodiments, there may be multiple power amplifiers on theUE 110. The use ofmultiple antennas 125 may allow for theUE 110 to use transmit diversity techniques such as spatial orthogonal resource transmit diversity (SORTD), multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO), or full-dimension MIMO (FD-MIMO). - In certain embodiments the
transceiver module 130 may include acommunication module 137, which may be referred to as a baseband module, which may contain both transmitcircuitry 140 configured to cause theantennas 125 to transmit one or more signals from theUE 110, and receivecircuitry 145 configured to process signals received by theantennas 125. In other embodiments, thecommunication module 137 may be implemented in separate chips or modules, for example, one chip including the receivecircuitry 145 and another chip including the transmitcircuitry 140. In some embodiments, the transmitted or received signals may be cellular signals transmitted to or received fromeNB 105. In some embodiments, thetransceiver module 130 may include or be coupled withD2D circuitry 120. In embodiments, theD2D circuitry 120 may be to facilitate the transmission or reception of D2D signals from another UE viaantennas 125 and/orcommunication module 137. In embodiments, theD2D circuitry 120 may be to identify one or more D2D signals to transmit, and/or identify the specific time frame, TTI, TOB, or resource on which to transmit the one or more D2D signals. In some embodiments theD2D circuitry 120 may include or be coupled with aD2D buffer 121. In embodiments, theD2D buffer 121 may be configured to receive and/or store one or more MAC PDUs for D2D transmission, as described below. - Similar to the
UE 110, theeNB 105 may include atransceiver module 150. Thetransceiver module 150 may be further coupled with one or more of a plurality ofantennas 175 of theeNB 105 for communicating wirelessly with other components of thenetwork 100, e.g.,UE 110. Theantennas 175 may be powered by apower amplifier 160 which may be a component of thetransceiver module 150, as shown inFIG. 1 , or may be a separate component of theeNB 105. In one embodiment, thepower amplifier 160 may provide the power for all transmissions on theantennas 175. In other embodiments, there may be multiple power amplifiers on or coupled to theeNB 105. The use ofmultiple antennas 175 may allow for theeNB 105 to use transmit diversity techniques such as SORTD, MIMO, or FD-MIMO. In certain embodiments thetransceiver module 150 may contain both transmitcircuitry 165 configured to cause theantennas 175 to transmit one or more signals from theeNB 105, and receivecircuitry 170 to process signals received by theantennas 175. In embodiments, the transmitcircuitry 165 and receivecircuitry 170 may be elements of acommunication module 180 of thetransceiver module 150, as described above with respect to theUE 110. In other embodiments, thetransceiver module 150 may be replaced by transmitcircuitry 165 and receivecircuitry 170 which are separate from one another or separate from thetransceiver module 150 and/or communication module 180 (not shown). In some embodiments, theeNB 105 may includeD2D allocation circuitry 115 which may be to allocate one or more resources for D2D transmission to aUE 110, for example, in Mode-1 operation. -
FIG. 2 depicts a high-level example of anetwork 200. Thenetwork 200 may includeUEs UE 110 ofFIG. 1 . Thenetwork 200 may further include aneNB 205, which may be similar toeNB 105 ofFIG. 1 . In embodiments, theeNB 205 may be configured to transmit or receive one or more signals to or fromUEs FIG. 2 . In some embodiments, thenetwork 200 may be considered to be a wide area network (WAN), and transmissions between theeNB 205 and theUEs UEs UEs -
FIG. 3 depicts an example of a T-RPT 300. The T-RPT 300 may span one or more SA periods as shown inFIG. 3 . The T-RPT 300 may include a number of transmission time intervals (TTIs), which are sequentially numbered inFIG. 3 (1, 2, 3, etc.). The TTIs may represent a specific time period during which a transmission may be sent with a network such asnetwork 200. In embodiments, each TTI may be 1 subframe andspan 1 millisecond (ms) of time. TTIs within an SA period of a T-RPT 300 may be split into threeseparate TOBs TOB 305 may span TTIs 1-8,TOB 310 may span TTIs 9-16, andTOB 315 may span TTIs 17-24. Although a TOB such asTOB 305 may span eight TTIs, TheTOB 305 may only be available for data transmission on four of the TTIs, for example,TTIs FIG. 3 .TTIs TTIs UE 110 by an eNB such aseNB 105. Specifically, theeNB 105 may allocate the TTIs for D2D transmission in a downlink control information (DCI)format 5 transmission to theUE 110. In Mode-2 operation,TTIs UE 110, and specifically byD2D circuitry 120 ofUE 110. Generally, the TOB may be considered as four consecutive transmission opportunities, i.e.,TTIs - A MAC PDU such as
MAC PDUs UE 110 and stored in a D2D buffer such asD2D buffer 121. The MAC PDU may include SA control information related to a D2D transmission, or it may include D2D data. Information from the MAC PDU (e.g., the SA control information or the D2D data) may be allocated to one or more TOBs. For example,MAC PDU 320, which may be received prior to the start of the T-RPT 300, may be allocated toTOB 305.MAC PDU 325, which may be received duringTOB period 305, may be allocated toTOB 310.MAC PDU 330, which may be received duringTOB 315, may be allocated to a subsequent SA period. - It will be understood that the numbering of the TTIs in T-
RPT 300 is merely for the sake of discussion and example, and in other embodiments the various TTIs may be numbered and/or referred to differently. Additionally, although only threeTOBs RPT 300, in other embodiments the T-RPT 300 may include more or fewer TOBs than shown inFIG. 3 . - As noted above, in Mode-1 operation, an eNB such as
eNB 205 may control D2D transmission between UEs such asUE DCI Format 5 transmission. Specifically, theeNB 205 may transmit an indication of the T-RPT 300 in aDCI Format 5 transmission. In some cases, an amount of the allocated TTIs for a T-RPT 300 may be larger than the amount of TTIs required to transmit buffered data in the T-RPT 300. For example, T-RPT 300 may include 3TOBs MAC PDUs D2D buffer 121. As shown inFIG. 3 , all of theavailable TOBs RPT 300 may not be necessary to transmitMAC PDUs - In one embodiment, a UE such as
UE 201 may transmit SA control data and/or D2D data on all T-RPT resources and/or TTIs. In some cases, this transmission may not occur if transmission on a TTI conflicts with transmission using WAN resources. However, assuming that there is no conflict, if theUE 201 does not have SA control data or D2D data to transmit in aD2D buffer 121 of theUE 201, theUE 201 may fill empty TTIs of the T-RPT 300 with “dummy” bits that include either un-necessary or repetitive data. Alternatively, theUE 201 may repeat transmission of a previous MAC PDU until new data is available. The transmission of repeated or dummy bits may simplify link adaptation and interference control, because theeNB 205 may know the interference source at each subframe during a given SA period and/or T-RPT 300. However, the transmission of repeated data and/or dummy bits may introduce un-necessary interference to ongoing parallel transmissions of either the WAN or D2D transmission, increase energy consumption of the transmittingUE 201, and potentially reduce a time reuse factor in case of low data rates. - In an alternative embodiment, instead of transmitting dummy bits or repeating transmissions of previous MAC PDUs, the
UE 201 may not transmit on allocated TTIs of the T-RPT 300 if theUE 201 does not have SA control data or D2D data to transmit on those TTIs. In this embodiment, the modulation and coding scheme (MCS) that may be taken into account by the eNB and/or UE to decide and/or identify the T-RPT may be set by one or more signals from theeNB 205 such as higher layer signal or theDCI Format 5 signal described above. Specifically, theeNB 205 may control and/or know the instantaneous transmit data rate of theUE 201, and it may adjust the amount of allocated resources (e.g., TTIs) in the T-RPT 300 according to the UE buffer status reports. Alternatively, the MCS may be decided by theUE 201. In this case, theeNB 205 may not be able to control the instantaneous transmit data rate of theUE 201. Therefore, if transmit behavior of theUE 201 is not specified, theUE 201 may skip the transmission opportunity bundles if theD2D buffer 121 ofUE 201 is empty. In scenarios where theeNB 205 signals the MCS or theUE 201 decides the MCS, theD2D buffer 121 may be fully empty and, in this situation, it may be desirable for theUE 201 to not transmit in any of theTOBs RPT 300. - In some situations, once a
UE 201 has begun transmission in a T-RPT, an additional MAC PDU may be stored in theD2D buffer 121 of theUE 201. For example,MAC PDUs TOBs UE 201 may have identified that it is not to transmit on TTIs ofTOB 315, or it is to transmit repeated or dummy bits on TTIs ofTOB 315. An additional MAC PDU may be identified concurrently with, for example,TTI 11 of T-RPT 300. In some embodiments, theUE 201 may wait to transmit the additional MAC PDU until the next SA period of the T-RPT. In some embodiments, theUE 201 may transmit the data of the new MAC PDU inTOB 315. In some embodiments, this decision may be based on direction by theeNB 205, while in other embodiments the decision to transmit or not transmit onTOB 315 may be made by theUE 201. - As discussed above, in some cases, an amount of the allocated TTIs for a T-
RPT 300 may be larger than the amount of TTIs required to transmit buffered data in the T-RPT 300. Also, as discussed above, in Mode-2 operation a UE such asUE 201 may be able to autonomously (that is, without input from an eNB such as eNB 205) identify D2D resources such as TTIs and TOBs in a T-RPT such as T-RPT 300. - In embodiments where the
UE 201 is in accordance with Mode-2 operation, theUE 201 may be able to utilize TOB skipping in a fashion similar to that described above with respect to Mode-1 operation. In particular, theUE 201 may intentionally skip transmission on one or more TOBs of a T-RPT such as T-RPT 300 subject to the status of theD2D buffer 121 of theUE 201 and latency constraints of thenetwork 200. - In one embodiment, the
UE 201 may simply transmit a received MAC PDU in the next available TOB.FIG. 4 depicts an example diagram of a transmit-upon-arrival scheme. Specifically,FIG. 4 may include a T-RPT 400 that may be similar to T-RPT 300 ofFIG. 3 . T-RPT 400 may include an SA period that includes threeTOBs MAC PDUs MAC PDUs D2D circuitry 120, theUE 201 may transmit the MAC PDU in the nearest TOB within the T-RPT 400. This scheme assumes the possibility to send SA control information even if there are no MAC PDUs in theD2D buffer 121, but theD2D circuitry 120 expects one or more MAC PDUs to arrive at theD2D buffer 121. In this case, theUE 201 may transmit the MAC PDU once it is available, and may skip data transmission on any TOB within T-RPT. - In the example of
FIG. 4 ,MAC PDU 420 may arrive at theD2D buffer 121 prior to the beginning ofTOB 405, and so it may be transmitted on the resources ofTOB 405.MAC PDU 425 may arrive duringTOB 410, and so it may be transmitted on the resources ofTOB 415. Notably, inFIG. 4 , it may be seen that because there is no data to transmit on the resources ofTOB 410, theUE 201 does not transmit on the resources ofTOB 410. - In an alternative embodiment, the
UE 201 may store received MAC PDUs in theD2D buffer 121 to be transmitted on TOBs of an SA period subsequent to the SA period in which the MAC PDUs were received at theD2D buffer 121.FIG. 5 depicts an example of a buffer-before-transmission scheme. Specifically,FIG. 5 depicts a T-RPT 500 that may be similar to T-RPT 300 ofFIG. 3 . The T-RPT 500 may include an SA period that includes threeTOBs FIG. 5 , aMAC PDU 520 may be received prior to the start of the SA period. TheUE 201 may then transmitMAC PDU 520 in thefirst TOB 505 of the SA period.MAC PDU 525 may be received during the SA period, and so it may be transmitted on a TOB of the next SA period in the T-RPT 500. - Generally, in the buffer-before-transmission scheme, the UE may send SA control data or D2D data only if it has one or more MAC PDUs stored in the D2D buffer, and then transmit all of the stored PDUs without skipping transmission on subsequent TOBs of the T-
RPT 500, starting from the first available TTI of the SA period. Similarly to the Mode-1 operation behavior described above, theUE 201 may stop D2D transmission if theD2D buffer 121 is empty, and resume D2D transmission at the next SA period. - As shown in
FIG. 5 , if theUE 201 operates in the buffer-before-transmission scheme, then interference load may be concentrated in the beginning of an SA period while theUE 201 is transmitting the buffered MAC PDUs, and the remainder of the SA period may be under-utilized by thenetwork 200. To mitigate this underuse, theUE 201 may insert gaps within T-RPT if the latency budget is not concerned. That is, a TOB such asTOB 505 may be expanded to include portions ofTOB 510, and one or more TTIs ofTOBs MAC PDU 520 may be transmitted onTTIs network 200 in some embodiments. - In other embodiments, the
UE 201 may pseudo-randomly skip transmission (i.e., insert a transmission gap) on the TOBs of the T-RPT 500. The behavior of theUE 201 in terms of skipping transmissions may ensure that all of the MAC PDUs in theD2D buffer 121 fit into the T-RPT 500 without violating latency requirements. In one embodiment, this may be assured by first estimating the number of MAC PDUs for transmission in a given SA period. This number of MAC PDUs may be designated as NPDU. Next the number of TOBs of T-RPT that can be skipped within an SA period may be calculated as -
- where M is the total number of available TTIs for a given T-RPT within an SA period, and NG refers to the number of TOBs of T-RPT that can be skipped for an SA period. Finally, the
UE 201 may pseudo-randomly select NG TOBs within the SA period. In some embodiments, the start transmission opportunity index of each skipped TOB may be a multiple of 4. That is, theUE 201 may only begin transmission every fourth available TTI. - In some cases, a transmission to or from the
eNB 205 to one ormore UEs UEs - In some embodiments, a UE such as
UE 201 may transmit SA control information at two instances within an SA period of a T-RPT such as T-RPT 300, for example, at two different TTIs of a TOB such asTOB 305 ofFIG. 3 . The TTIs ofTOB 305 will be referred to herein as SA control TTIs. In some cases the WAN transmission may collide with one or both of the SA control TTIs. - In one optional embodiment, if the WAN transmission collides with the first SA control TTI, then the UE may not transmit any further SA control information or D2D data in the
TOB 305 and/or the SA period. In another optional embodiment, if the WAN transmission collides with the first SA control TTI, then the UE may still transmit the second SA control TTI and transmit data inTOB 305 and/or other TOBs of the SA period. In another optional embodiment, if the WAN transmission collides with the second SA control TTI, then the UE may still transmit D2D data inTOB 305 and/or remaining TOBs of the SA period. In another optional embodiment, if the WAN transmission collides with the second SA control TTI, then the UE may not transmit data inTOB 305 and/or other TOBs of the SA period. Generally, if the WAN transmission conflicts with both of the SA control TTIs ofTOB 305, then the UE may not transmit data inTOB 305 and/or other TOBs of the SA period. - In some embodiments, the behavior of the UE receiving the D2D transmission such as
UE 202 may be useful in identifying which of the above optional embodiments should be selected forUE 201. For example, if the receivingUE 202 detects a first transmission of SA control information, then it may act in accordance with the SA control information. For example, the receivingUE 202 may, based on the SA control information, identify and decode further transmissions of D2D data. However, if D2D data does not follow the SA control information, then the receivingUE 202 may waste energy in searching for D2D data and processing empty or missing transmissions. - In some additional embodiments where the D2D transmissions are in accordance with Mode-1 operation, the
eNB 205 may be controlling both the WAN transmissions and the D2D transmissions. In this embodiment, theUE 201 may transmit a second transmission of SA control information at, for example,TOB 310 if the first transmission of SA control information at, for example,TOB 305 collides with a WAN transmission. Alternatively, if the D2D transmissions are in accordance with Mode-2 operation, theUE 201 may identify that a first transmission of SA control information collides with a WAN transmission. TheUE 201 may then identify whether to skip remaining transmissions with the SA period of either SA control information or D2D data based on, for example, latency considerations or other considerations. -
FIG. 6 depicts an example oflogic 600 that may be used to identify UE behavior in the case of collision of a first and/or second SA transmission with a WAN transmission. Thelogic 600 may be performed by, for example, the transmittingUE 201. Initially, the transmittingUE 201 may identify at 605 whether only the first SA transmission collides with the WAN transmission. If so, theUE 201 may identify at 610 whether the D2D transmissions are operating in accordance with Mode-1 operation or Mode-2 operation. If the D2D transmissions are in accordance with Mode-1 operation, theUE 201 may continue transmission of the second SA control information and subsequent D2D data at 615. If the D2D transmissions are in accordance with Mode-2 operation, theUE 201 may autonomously decide at 620 whether to transmit the second SA control transmission or skip further transmissions in the SA period based, for example, on network conditions, latency requirements, or some other basis. - If the
UE 201 identifies that it's not only the first SA transmission colliding with the WAN transmission at 605, theUE 201 may identify at 625 whether only the second SA transmission is colliding with the WAN transmission. If so, theUE 201 may still continue transmission of subsequent D2D data in the SA period at 630. - If the
UE 201 identifies at 625 that it's not only the first or only the second SA transmissions colliding at 605 and 625, theUE 201 may identify at 635 whether both the first and second SA transmissions are colliding at 635. If so, theUE 201 may skip subsequent transmissions with the SA period at 640, for example, of D2D data. - In some cases, a WAN transmission to or from eNB 205 (or some other transmission with a higher priority than a D2D transmission) may conflict with transmission of D2D data within an SA period. As noted previously, the
UE 201 may transmit the D2D data over multiple TTIs within a given TOB. Therefore, it may be possible that the WAN transmission conflicts with one of the TTIs with the TOB, and different behaviors may be considered. -
FIG. 7 depicts an example of different behaviors if the WAN transmission collides with a first TTI of a TOB.FIG. 8 depicts an example of different behaviors if the WAN transmission collides with a TTI of a TOB that is not the first TTI of the TOB. Specifically,FIGS. 7 and 8 depict a T-RPT TOBs 705/805, 710/810, and 715/815, which may be respectively similar to T-RPT 300 andTOBs TOBs MAC PDUs MAC PDU 320.TOBs MAC PDUs MAC PDU 325. The collided TTI in the examplealternative behaviors alternative behaviors MAC PDUs 720/820 are intended in this example, prior to detection of the collision, to be transmitted inTOBs 705/805, andMAC PDUs 725/825 are intended in this example, prior to detection of the collision, to be transmitted inTOBs 710/810. - As a first alternative behavior shown at 730 and 830, the
UE 201 may continue to transmitMAC PDUs 720/820 in the non-collided TTIs ofTOBs 705/805. This behavior may be desirable in sparse Mode-2 configurations because there may not be any other opportunities to transmit theMAC PDU 720/820 with a given latency budget. Specifically, sparse Mode-2 resource pool configurations may refer to configurations where only a small fraction of subframes in the Mode-2 resource pool are allowed for D2D communications. - As a second alternative behavior shown at 735 and 835, the
UE 201 may continue to transmitMAC PDUs 720/820 in the non-collided TTIs ofTOBs 705/805, and then restart transmission of theMAC PDUs 720/820 in the next available TOB. For example,MAC PDUs 720/820 may be transmitted in bothTOBs 705/805 (where the collision occurs) and 710/810 (the next available TOBs).MAC PDUs 725/825 may be transmitted inTOBs 715/815. - As a third alternative behavior shown at 740 and 840, the
UE 201 may drop transmission of the MAC PDU within the TOB with the collided TTI. For example, as shown at 740, the collision may occur atTTI 2 ofTOB 705, and so the remaining TTIs of TOB 705 (TTIs MAC PDU 720 may be transmitted in a subsequent SA period. Similarly, as shown at 840,MAC PDU 820 may be transmitted atTTIs TTI 5. TheUE 201 may not transmit any data on TTI 8 (the remaining TTI of TOB 805).MAC PDU 820 may be retransmitted (if necessary) in a subsequent SA period. - As a fourth alternative behavior shown at 745 and 845, the
UE 201 may drop transmission of the MAC PDU within the TOB with the collided TTI, and then retransmit the MAC PDU in a following TOB. For example, as shown at 745, a collision may occur atTTI 2 ofTOB 705, and so the remaining TTIs of TOB 705 (TTIs MAC PDU 720 may be retransmitted inTOB 710, and thenMAC PDU 725 may be transmitted inTOB 715. Similarly, as shown at 845,MAC PDU 820 may be transmitted atTTIs TTI 5. TheUE 201 may not transmit any data on TTI 8 (the remaining TTI of TOB 805), and then retransmitMAC PDU 820 inTOB 810.MAC PDU 825 may be transmitted inTOB 815. - In some embodiments, the
UE 201 may not be able to restart MAC PDU transmission in a subsequent TOB as shown inalternatives 735/835 and 745/845 due to transmission latency requirements. Therefore, it may be desirable for theUE 201 to continue transmission in remaining TTIs of a TOB in the event of a collision (as shown in 730/830 and 735/835) to maximize coverage. However, if latency requirements permit, retransmission of a collided TTI as shown in 735/835 or 745/845 may be desirable to ensure that theMAC PDU 720 is successfully transmitted. - In some cases, the choice of the four alternatives described above may be based on whether the D2D transmissions are in accordance with Mode-1 operation or Mode-2 operation, because in Mode-1 operation the postponement of a MAC PDU transmission may result in a mismatch between resources allocated by the
eNB 205 and resources used by theUE 201. Generally,alternatives 735/835 may satisfy both coverage and latency requirements in a majority of situations. - In some cases, a discovery message may be transmitted by one or both of
UEs - For example, in some embodiments physical random access channel (PRACH) transmissions in the
network 200 may be prioritized over discovery message transmission if there is a time-domain collision between the PRACH transmission and the transmission of the discovery MAC PDU such that the PRACH transmission and the discovery MAC PDU attempt to use the same TTI. - Additionally, time-domain collisions may be possible between
D2D Type 1 and Type 2B discovery transmissions. Generally,Type 1 discovery may refer to discovery wherein resources are identified and allocated by the UE. Type 2B discovery may refer to discovery wherein the discovery resources are assigned by the eNB. In some embodiments, theUE 201 may intend to transmit a first discovery message that includes one or more D2D discovery MAC PDUs according toType 1 operation. TheUE 201 may be further scheduled to transmit a second discovery message that includes one or more D2D discovery MAC PDUs according to Type 2B operation. In some embodiments one or both of the D2D discovery MAC PDUs may be MAC PDUs related to a sidelink channel such as a physical sidelink discovery channel (PSDCH). In some cases, the first and second discovery messages may collide with one another, that is, they may be scheduled to use the same time-domain resource(s) such as the same TTI, subframe, TOB, slot, resource within a slot, or some other resource within a resource period such as a subframe. In these embodiments, the Type 2B discovery transmission may be prioritized, and theType 1 discovery transmission on the subframe where the collision occurred may be dropped, that is the UE may not generate the waveform related to the discovery message or transmit the discovery message according toType 1 operation. - In some embodiments, for Type 2B discovery where the discovery resources may be assigned by the
eNB 205, theUE 201 may continue D2D transmission of discovery MAC PDUs on other TTIs of a TOB in which a collision occurred. Doing so may ensure effective use of allocated resources and facilitate opportunistic reception at a receiving UE such asUE 202. The opportunistic reception may allow the receivingUE 202 to successfully decode the discovery message based on reception of only a subset of repeated transmissions of the discovery MAC PDU within the discovery period. - For
Type 1 discovery, because the discovery resource allocation may be periodic and/or non-UE-specific, subsequent transmissions of the discovery MAC PDU may be dropped once an initial or repeated transmission of the discovery MAC PDU is dropped due to time-domain conflicts with a WAN transmission or a higher priority D2D transmission. However, if the time-domain conflict occurs for one of the repeated transmissions, it may not be possible inType 1 discovery for the transmittingUE 201 to predict whether another time-domain conflict may occur. Therefore, forType 1 discovery, the transmittingUE 201 may continue transmission of a discovery MAC PDU on other TTIs or subframes of a discovery resources period irrespective of whether one or more of the transmissions of the discovery MAC PDU are dropped. -
FIG. 10 depicts anexample process 1000 that may be performed by a UE such asUE 201. Initially, the process may include identifying that a first D2D transmission is to use a resource at 1005. Specifically, the process may include identifying at 1005 that a D2D transmission by the UE of a first discovery MAC PDU on a resource of a discovery period is to occur. Theprocess 1000 may then include identifying that a second transmission is to use the time-resource at 1010. For example, a WAN transmission of a second MAC PDU and/or a second D2D transmission of a second MAC PDU may also intend to use the same time-resource. In some embodiments, the first D2D transmission may be configured according to Type 2B discovery, and the second transmission may be a D2D discovery transmission configured according toType 1 discovery. Theprocess 1000 may then include identifying that the first D2D transmission and the second transmission will collide because the first D2D transmission and the second transmission may either be scheduled or be autonomously selected by theUE 201 to use the same resource at 1015. Based on the collision, theprocess 1000 may then include identifying that the first D2D transmission has a higher priority than the second transmission at 1020. For example, if the first D2D transmission is configured according to Type 2B discovery, and the second transmission is configured according toType 1 discovery, then the first D2D transmission may have higher priority. Theprocess 1000 may then include dropping, based on the identification of the priority, the second transmission and transmitting the first D2D transmission on the resource at 1025. - Embodiments of the present disclosure may be implemented into a system using any suitable hardware and/or software to configure as desired.
FIG. 9 schematically illustrates anexample system 900 that may be used to practice various embodiments described herein.FIG. 9 illustrates, for one embodiment, anexample system 900 having one or more processor(s) 905,system control module 910 coupled to at least one of the processor(s) 905,system memory 915 coupled tosystem control module 910, non-volatile memory (NVM)/storage 920 coupled tosystem control module 910, andinterface control circuitry 925 coupled tosystem control module 910. - In some embodiments, the
system 900 may be capable of functioning as theUEs system 900 may be capable of functioning aseNBs system 900 may include one or more computer-readable media (e.g.,system memory 915 or NVM/storage 920) having instructions and one or more processors (e.g., processor(s) 905) coupled with the one or more computer-readable media and configured to execute the instructions to implement a module to perform actions described herein. -
System control module 910 for one embodiment may include any suitable interface controllers to provide for any suitable interface to at least one of the processor(s) 905 and/or to any suitable device or component in communication withsystem control module 910. -
System control module 910 may includememory controller module 930 to provide an interface tosystem memory 915. Thememory controller module 930 may be a hardware module, a software module, and/or a firmware module. -
System memory 915 may be used to load and store data and/or instructions, for example, forsystem 900.System memory 915 for one embodiment may include any suitable volatile memory, such as suitable dynamic random access memory (DRAM), for example. In some embodiments, thesystem memory 915 may include double data rate type four synchronous dynamic random-access memory (DDR4 SDRAM). -
System control module 910 for one embodiment may include one or more input/output (I/O) controller(s) to provide an interface to NVM/storage 920 andinterface control circuitry 925. - The NVM/
storage 920 may be used to store data and/or instructions, for example. NVM/storage 920 may include any suitable non-volatile memory, such as flash memory, for example, and/or may include any suitable non-volatile storage device(s), such as one or more hard disk drive(s) (HDD(s)), one or more compact disc (CD) drive(s), and/or one or more digital versatile disc (DVD) drive(s), for example. - The NVM/
storage 920 may include a storage resource physically part of a device on which thesystem 900 may be installed or it may be accessible by, but not necessarily a part of, the device. For example, the NVM/storage 920 may be accessed over a network via theinterface control circuitry 925. -
Interface control circuitry 925 may provide an interface forsystem 900 to communicate over one or more network(s) and/or with any other suitable device. Thesystem 900 may wirelessly communicate with the one or more components of the wireless network in accordance with any of one or more wireless network standards and/or protocols. In some embodiments theinterface control circuitry 925 may include thetransceiver modules interface control circuitry 925 may be coupled with theD2D circuitry 120 ofFIG. 1 , for example theinterface control circuitry 925 and theD2D circuitry 120 may be integrated on the same die to form a System on Chip (SoC) (not shown). Specifically, theinterface control circuitry 925 may be configured to transmit and/or receive, or facilitate the transmission and/or reception, of one or more signals discussed herein. In some embodiments, theinterface control circuitry 925 may be configured to encode and/or decode the signals prior to or subsequent to the transmission and/or reception of the signals. - For one embodiment, at least one of the processor(s) 905 may be packaged together with logic for one or more controller(s) of
system control module 910, e.g.,memory controller module 930. For one embodiment, at least one of the processor(s) 905 may be packaged together with logic for one or more controllers ofsystem control module 910 to form a System in Package (SiP). For one embodiment, at least one of the processor(s) 905 may be integrated on the same die with logic for one or more controller(s) ofsystem control module 910. For one embodiment, at least one of the processor(s) 905 may be integrated on the same die with logic for one or more controller(s) ofsystem control module 910 to form a SoC. - In some embodiments the processor(s) 905 may include or otherwise be coupled with one or more of a graphics processor (GPU) (not shown), a digital signal processor (DSP) (not shown), wireless modem (not shown), digital camera or multimedia circuitry (not shown), sensor circuitry (not shown), display circuitry (not shown), and/or global positioning satellite (GPS) circuitry (not shown).
- In various embodiments, the
system 900 may be, but is not limited to, a server, a workstation, a desktop computing device, or a mobile computing device (e.g., a laptop computing device, a handheld computing device, a tablet, a netbook, a smartphone, a gaming console, etc.). In various embodiments, thesystem 900 may have more or fewer components, and/or different architectures. For example, in some embodiments, thesystem 900 includes one or more of a camera, a keyboard, liquid crystal display (LCD) screen (including touch screen displays), non-volatile memory port, multiple antennas, graphics chip, application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), and speakers. -
FIG. 11 illustrateselectronic device circuitry 1100 that may be eNB circuitry, UE circuitry, or some other type of circuitry in accordance with various embodiments. In embodiments, theelectronic device circuitry 1100 may include radio transmitcircuitry 1105 and receivecircuitry 1110 coupled to controlcircuitry 1115. In embodiments, the transmitcircuitry 1105 and/or receivecircuitry 1110 may be elements or modules of transceiver circuitry (not shown). Theelectronic device circuitry 1100 may be coupled with one or more plurality of antenna elements of one ormore antennas 1120. Theelectronic device circuitry 1100 and/or the components of theelectronic device circuitry 1100 may be configured to perform operations similar to those described elsewhere in this disclosure. - As used herein, the term “circuitry” may refer to, be part of, or include an ASIC, an electronic circuit, a processor (shared, dedicated, or group), and/or memory (shared, dedicated, or group) that execute one or more software or firmware programs, a combinational logic circuit, and/or other suitable hardware components that provide the described functionality. In some embodiments, the electronic device circuitry may be implemented in, or functions associated with the circuitry may be implemented by, one or more software or firmware modules.
- Embodiments described herein may be implemented into a system using any suitably configured hardware and/or software.
FIG. 12 illustrates, for one embodiment, anexample system 1200 comprising radio frequency (RF)circuitry 1205,baseband circuitry 1210,application circuitry 1215, memory/storage 1220,display 1225,camera 1230,sensor 1235, and input/output (I/O)interface 1240, coupled with each other at least as shown. - The
application circuitry 1215 may include circuitry such as, but not limited to, one or more single-core or multi-core processors. The processor(s) may include any combination of general-purpose processors and dedicated processors (e.g., graphics processors, application processors, etc.). The processors may be coupled with memory/storage and configured to execute instructions stored in the memory/storage to enable various applications and/or operating systems running on the system. - The
baseband circuitry 1210 may include circuitry such as, but not limited to, one or more single-core or multi-core processors. The processor(s) may include abaseband processor 1212. In some embodiments, thebaseband circuitry 1210 may include theD2D circuitry 120. Thebaseband circuitry 1210 may handle various radio control functions that enables communication with one or more radio networks via theRF circuitry 1205. The radio control functions may include, but are not limited to, signal modulation, encoding, decoding, radio frequency shifting, etc. In some embodiments, thebaseband circuitry 1210 may provide for communication compatible with one or more radio technologies. For example, in some embodiments, thebaseband circuitry 1210 may support communication with an evolved universal terrestrial radio access network (EUTRAN) and/or other wireless metropolitan area networks (WMAN), a wireless local area network (WLAN), a wireless personal area network (WPAN). Embodiments in which thebaseband circuitry 1210 is configured to support radio communications of more than one wireless protocol may be referred to as multi-mode baseband circuitry. - In various embodiments,
baseband circuitry 1210 may include circuitry to operate with signals that are not strictly considered as being in a baseband frequency. For example, in some embodiments,baseband circuitry 1210 may include circuitry to operate with signals having an intermediate frequency, which is between a baseband frequency and a radio frequency. -
RF circuitry 1205 may enable communication with wireless networks using modulated electromagnetic radiation through a non-solid medium. In various embodiments, theRF circuitry 1205 may include switches, filters, amplifiers, etc. to facilitate the communication with the wireless network. - In various embodiments,
RF circuitry 1205 may include circuitry to operate with signals that are not strictly considered as being in a radio frequency. For example, in some embodiments,RF circuitry 1205 may include circuitry to operate with signals having an intermediate frequency, which is between a baseband frequency and a radio frequency. - In various embodiments, the transmit
circuitry 1105,control circuitry 1115, and/or receivecircuitry 1110 discussed herein with respect toFIG. 11 may be embodied in whole or in part in one or more of theRF circuitry 1205, thebaseband circuitry 1210, and/or theapplication circuitry 1215. - In some embodiments, some or all of the constituent components of the
baseband circuitry 1210, theapplication circuitry 1215, and/or the memory/storage 1220 may be implemented together on a system on a chip (SOC). - Memory/
storage 1220 may be used to load and store data and/or instructions, for example, for system. Memory/storage 1220 for one embodiment may include any combination of suitable volatile memory (e.g., dynamic random access memory (DRAM)) and/or non-volatile memory (e.g., Flash memory). - In various embodiments, the I/
O interface 1240 may include one or more user interfaces designed to enable user interaction with thesystem 1200 and/or peripheral component interfaces designed to enable peripheral component interaction with thesystem 1200. User interfaces may include, but are not limited to a physical keyboard or keypad, a touchpad, a speaker, a microphone, etc. Peripheral component interfaces may include, but are not limited to, a non-volatile memory port, a universal serial bus (USB) port, an audio jack, and a power supply interface. - In
various embodiments sensor 1235 may include one or more sensing devices to determine environmental conditions and/or location information related to thesystem 1200. In some embodiments, the one or more sensing devices may include, but are not limited to, a gyro sensor, an accelerometer, a proximity sensor, an ambient light sensor, and a positioning unit. The positioning unit may also be part of, or interact with, thebaseband circuitry 1210 and/orRF circuitry 1205 to communicate with components of a positioning network, e.g., a global positioning system (GPS) satellite. - In various embodiments, the
display 1225 may include a display (e.g., a liquid crystal display, a touch screen display, etc.). - In various embodiments, the
system 1200 may be a mobile computing device such as, but not limited to, a laptop computing device, a tablet computing device, a netbook, an ultrabook, a smartphone, etc. In various embodiments,system 1200 may have more or less components, and/or different architectures. - Example 1 may include a user equipment (UE) comprising: device to device (D2D) circuitry to: identify that a first sidelink transmission by the UE is to be transmitted in a same subframe as a second sidelink transmission by the UE; and identify, based on a type of the first sidelink transmission and a type of the second sidelink transmission, that the UE is to continue to transmit the first sidelink transmission and that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission; and interface control circuitry coupled with the D2D circuitry, the interface control circuitry to transmit, based on the identification that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission, the first sidelink transmission on the resource.
- Example 2 may include the UE of example 1, wherein the D2D circuitry is to identify that the first sidelink transmission by the UE is to be transmitted in the same subframe as the second sidelink transmission based on an identification that the first sidelink transmission is to collide in the time domain with the second sidelink transmission.
- Example 3 may include the UE of examples 1 or 2, wherein the first sidelink transmission is a Type 2B D2D discovery transmission, and the second sidelink transmission is a
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 4 may include the UE of example 3, wherein the D2D circuitry is further to identify, in a message received from an evolved NodeB (eNB), an allocation of resources for the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission.
- Example 5 may include the UE of example 3, wherein the D2D circuitry is further to identify that a priority of the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is higher than a priority of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 6 may include the UE of example 3, wherein the D2D circuitry is further to select one or more physical resources for transmission of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 7 may include the UE of example 3, wherein the first sidelink transmission and the second sidelink transmission are D2D transmissions.
- Example 8 may include the UE of examples 1 or 2, further comprising a non-volatile memory (NVM) coupled with the interface control circuitry.
- Example 9 may include a processor comprising: device-to-device (D2D) circuitry to: identify that a first sidelink transmission by a user equipment (UE) on a resource of a discovery resource period is to collide in a time domain with a second sidelink transmission by the UE; identify, based on a type of the first sidelink transmission and a type of the second sidelink transmission, that the UE is to continue to transmit the first sidelink transmission and that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission; and transmit, based on the identification that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission, the first sidelink transmission on the resource; and a baseband processor coupled with the D2D circuitry, the baseband processor to perform signal modulation and encoding.
- Example 10 may include the processor of example 9, wherein the discovery resource period is a subframe.
- Example 11 may include the processor of examples 9 or 10, wherein the first sidelink transmission is a Type 2B D2D discovery transmission, and the second sidelink transmission is a
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 12 may include the processor of example 11, wherein the D2D circuitry is further to identify, in a message received from an evolved NodeB (eNB), an allocation of resources for the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission.
- Example 13 may include the processor of example 11, wherein the processor is further to identify that a priority of the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is higher than a priority of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 14 may include the processor of example 11, wherein the processor is further to select one or more physical resources for transmission of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 15 may include the processor of example 11, wherein the first sidelink transmission and the second sidelink transmission are D2D transmissions.
- Example 16 may include one or more non-transitory computer-readable media comprising instructions to cause a user equipment (UE), upon execution of the instructions by one or more processors of the UE, to: identify that a first sidelink transmission by the UE on a resource of a discovery resource period is to collide in a time domain with a second sidelink transmission by the UE; identify, based on a type of the first sidelink transmission and a type of the second sidelink transmission, that the UE is to continue to transmit the first sidelink transmission and that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission; and transmit, based on the identification that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission, the first sidelink transmission on the resource.
- Example 17 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 16, wherein the discovery resource period is a subframe.
- Example 18 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of examples 16 or 17, wherein the first sidelink transmission is a Type 2B device-to-device (D2D) discovery transmission, and the second sidelink transmission is a
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 19 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 18, wherein the instructions are further to identify, in a message received from an evolved NodeB (eNB), an allocation of resources for the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission.
- Example 20 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 18, wherein the instructions are further to identify that a priority of the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is higher than a priority of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 21 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 18, wherein the instructions are further to select one or more physical resources for transmission of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 22 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 18, wherein the first sidelink transmission and the second sidelink transmission are D2D transmissions.
- Example 23 may include a user equipment (UE) comprising: means to identify that a first sidelink transmission by the UE on a resource of a discovery resource period is to collide in a time domain with a second sidelink transmission by the UE; means to identify, based on a type of the first sidelink transmission and a type of the second sidelink transmission, that the UE is to continue to transmit the first sidelink transmission and that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission; and means to transmit, based on the identification that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission, the first sidelink transmission on the resource.
- Example 24 may include the UE of example 23, wherein the discovery resource period is a subframe.
- Example 25 may include the UE of examples 23 or 24, wherein the first sidelink transmission is a Type 2B device-to-device (D2D) discovery transmission, and the second sidelink transmission is a
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 26 may include the UE of example 25, wherein the instructions are further to identify, in a message received from an evolved NodeB (eNB), an allocation of resources for the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission.
- Example 27 may include the UE of example 25, wherein the instructions are further to identify that a priority of the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is higher than a priority of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 28 may include the UE of example 25, wherein the instructions are further to select one or more physical resources for transmission of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 29 may include the UE of example 25, wherein the first sidelink transmission and the second sidelink transmission are D2D transmissions.
- Example 30 may include a method comprising: identifying, by a user equipment (UE), that a first sidelink transmission by the UE on a resource of a discovery resource period is to collide in a time domain with a second sidelink transmission by the UE; identifying, by the UE based on a type of the first sidelink transmission and a type of the second sidelink transmission, that the UE is to continue to transmit the first sidelink transmission and that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission; and transmitting, by the UE based on the identification that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission, the first sidelink transmission on the resource.
- Example 31 may include the method of example 30, wherein the discovery resource period is a subframe.
- Example 32 may include the method of examples 30 or 31, wherein the first sidelink transmission is a Type 2B device-to-device (D2D) discovery transmission, and the second sidelink transmission is a
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 33 may include the method of example 32, further comprising identifying, by the UE in a message received from an evolved NodeB (eNB), an allocation of resources for the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission.
- Example 34 may include the method of example 32, further comprising identifying, by the UE, that a priority of the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is higher than a priority of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 35 may include the method of example 32, further comprising selecting, by the UE, one or more physical resources for transmission of the
Type 1 D2D discovery transmission. - Example 36 may include the method of example 32, wherein the first sidelink transmission and the second sidelink transmission are D2D transmissions.
- Example 37 may include a user equipment (UE) comprising: device-to-device (D2D) circuitry to: identify a time resource pattern for transmissions (T-RPT) that includes a scheduling assignment (SA) period with one or more transmission opportunity bundles (TOBs) that respectively include a plurality of transmission time intervals (TTIs) that are to be used for D2D transmission by the UE; map a medium access control (MAC) protocol data unit (PDU) to one or more TTIs of a first TOB of the one or more TOBs; and identify, based on the mapping, a second TOB of the one or more TOBs with unmapped TTIs; and transmit circuitry coupled with the D2D circuitry, the transmit circuitry to: transmit the MAC PDU via the first TOB; and skip transmission on the second TOB.
- Example 38 may include the UE of example 37, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-1 operation wherein an evolved NodeB (eNB) is to allocate resources for the T-RPT.
- Example 39 may include the UE of example 38, further comprising: receive circuitry coupled with the transmit circuitry, the receive circuitry to receive an indication of the T-RPT from the eNB.
- Example 40 may include the UE of example 39, wherein the MAC PDU is a first MAC PDU and the SA period is a first SA period, and wherein the D2D circuitry is further to: identify, after the skipping, a second MAC PDU; and map the second MAC PDU to one or more TTIs of a TOB of a second SA period that follows the first SA period.
- Example 41 may include the UE of example 37, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-2 operation such that the D2D circuitry is further to allocate resources for the T-RPT.
- Example 42 may include the UE of example 41, wherein the MAC PDU is a first MAC PDU, and wherein the D2D circuitry is further to: identify a second MAC PDU; and map the second MAC PDU to a third TOB of the one or more TOBs, wherein the third TOB does not immediately follow the first TOB in the SA period.
- Example 43 may include the UE of any of examples 37-42, further comprising a display coupled with the D2D circuitry.
- Example 44 may include a method comprising: identifying, by a user equipment (UE), a time resource pattern for transmissions (T-RPT) that includes a scheduling assignment (SA) period with one or more transmission opportunity bundles (TOBs) that respectively include a plurality of transmission time intervals (TTIs) that are to be used for device-to-device (D2D) transmission by the UE; mapping, by the UE, a medium access control (MAC) protocol data unit (PDU) to one or more TTIs of a first TOB of the one or more TOBs; identifying, by the UE based on the mapping, a second TOB of the one or more TOBs with unmapped TTIs; transmitting, by the UE, the MAC PDU via the first TOB; and skipping, by the UE, transmission on the second TOB.
- Example 45 may include the method of example 44, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-1 operation wherein an evolved NodeB (eNB) is to allocate resources for the T-RPT.
- Example 46 may include the method of example 45, further comprising receiving, by the UE, an indication of the T-RPT from the eNB.
- Example 47 may include the method of example 46, wherein the MAC PDU is a first MAC PDU and the SA period is a first SA period, and further comprising: identifying, by the UE after the skipping, a second MAC PDU; and mapping, by the UE, the second MAC PDU to one or more TTIs of a TOB of a second SA period that follows the first SA period.
- Example 48 may include the method of example 44, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-2 operation and the method further comprises allocating, by the UE, resources for the T-RPT.
- Example 49 may include the method of example 48, wherein the MAC PDU is a first MAC PDU, and further comprising: identifying, by the UE, a second MAC PDU; and mapping, by the UE, the second MAC PDU to a third TOB of the one or more TOBs, wherein the third TOB does not immediately follow the first TOB in the SA period.
- Example 50 may include a user equipment (UE) comprising: means to identify a time resource pattern for transmissions (T-RPT) that includes a scheduling assignment (SA) period with one or more transmission opportunity bundles (TOBs) that respectively include a plurality of transmission time intervals (TTIs) that are to be used for device-to-device (D2D) transmission by the UE; means to map a medium access control (MAC) protocol data unit (PDU) to one or more TTIs of a first TOB of the one or more TOBs; means to identify, based on the mapping, a second TOB of the one or more TOBs with unmapped TTIs; means to transmit the MAC PDU via the first TOB; and means to skip transmission on the second TOB.
- Example 51 may include the UE of example 50, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-1 operation wherein an evolved NodeB (eNB) is to allocate resources for the T-RPT.
- Example 52 may include the UE of example 51, further comprising means to receive an indication of the T-RPT from the eNB.
- Example 53 may include the UE of example 52, wherein the MAC PDU is a first MAC PDU and the SA period is a first SA period, and further comprising: means to identify, after the skipping, a second MAC PDU; and means to map the second MAC PDU to one or more TTIs of a TOB of a second SA period that follows the first SA period.
- Example 54 may include the UE of example 50, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-2 operation and further comprising means to allocate resources for the T-RPT.
- Example 55 may include the UE of example 54, wherein the MAC PDU is a first MAC PDU, and further comprising: means to identify a second MAC PDU; and means to map the second MAC PDU to a third TOB of the one or more TOBs, wherein the third TOB does not immediately follow the first TOB in the SA period.
- Example 56 may include one or more non-transitory computer-readable media comprising instructions to cause a user equipment (UE), upon execution of the instructions by a processor of the UE, to: identify a time resource pattern for transmissions (T-RPT) that includes a scheduling assignment (SA) period with one or more transmission opportunity bundles (TOBs) that respectively include a plurality of transmission time intervals (TTIs) that are to be used for device-to-device (D2D) transmission by the UE; map a medium access control (MAC) protocol data unit (PDU) to one or more TTIs of a first TOB of the one or more TOBs; identify, based on the mapping, a second TOB of the one or more TOBs with unmapped TTIs; transmit the MAC PDU via the first TOB; and skip transmission on the second TOB.
- Example 57 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 56, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-1 operation wherein an evolved NodeB (eNB) is to allocate resources for the T-RPT.
- Example 58 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 57, wherein the instructions are further to cause the UE to receive an indication of the T-RPT from the eNB.
- Example 59 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 58, wherein the MAC PDU is a first MAC PDU and the SA period is a first SA period, and the instructions are further to cause the UE to: identify, after the skipping, a second MAC PDU; and map the second MAC PDU to one or more TTIs of a TOB of a second SA period that follows the first SA period.
- Example 60 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 56, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-2 operation and the instructions are further to cause the UE to allocate resources for the T-RPT.
- Example 61 may include the UE of example 60, wherein the MAC PDU is a first MAC PDU, and the instructions are further to cause the UE to: identify a second MAC PDU; and map the second MAC PDU to a third TOB of the one or more TOBs, wherein the third TOB does not immediately follow the first TOB in the SA period.
- Example 62 may include a method comprising: identifying, by a user equipment (UE), a scheduling assignment (SA) cycle that includes a first portion of transmission time intervals (TTIs) for device-to-device (D2D) transmission of a first SA, a second portion of TTIs for D2D transmission of a second SA, and a third portion of TTIs for D2D transmission of data; identifying, by the UE, a collision of the D2D transmission of the first SA or the second SA with a concurrent transmission; and determining, by the UE based on the collision, whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data.
- Example 63 may include the method of example 62, wherein the first SA and the second SA are identical to one another and include scheduling information related to the third portion of TTIs.
- Example 64 may include the method of examples 62 or 63, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the first SA with the concurrent transmission.
- Example 65 may include the method of example 64, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-1 operation wherein an evolved NodeB (eNB) is to allocate resources for the SA cycle, and wherein determining whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data includes determining, by the UE, to transmit the second SA and the data.
- Example 66 may include the method of examples 62 or 63, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the second SA with the concurrent transmission, and wherein the determining whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data includes determining, by the UE, to transmit the data.
- Example 67 may include the method of examples 62 or 63, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the first SA and the second SA with the concurrent transmission, and wherein the determining whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data includes determining, by the UE, not to transmit the data.
- Example 68 may include a user equipment (UE) comprising: means to identify a scheduling assignment (SA) cycle that includes a first portion of transmission time intervals (TTIs) for device-to-device (D2D) transmission of a first SA, a second portion of TTIs for D2D transmission of a second SA, and a third portion of TTIs for D2D transmission of data; means to identify a collision of the D2D transmission of the first SA or the second SA with a concurrent transmission; and means to determine, based on the collision, whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data.
- Example 69 may include the UE of example 68, wherein the first SA and the second SA are identical to one another and include scheduling information related to the third portion of TTIs.
- Example 70 may include the UE of examples 68 or 69, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the first SA with the concurrent transmission.
- Example 71 may include the UE of example 70, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-1 operation wherein an evolved NodeB (eNB) is to allocate resources for the SA cycle, and wherein the means to determine whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data include means to determine to transmit the second SA and the data.
- Example 72 may include the UE of examples 68 or 69, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the second SA with the concurrent transmission, and wherein the determining whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data includes determining, by the UE, to transmit the data.
- Example 73 may include the UE of examples 68 or 69, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the first SA and the second SA with the concurrent transmission, and wherein the means to determine whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data include means to determine not to transmit the data.
- Example 74 may include one or more non-transitory computer-readable media comprising instructions to cause a user equipment (UE), upon execution of the instructions by one or more processors of the UE, to identify a scheduling assignment (SA) cycle that includes a first portion of transmission time intervals (TTIs) for device-to-device (D2D) transmission of a first SA, a second portion of TTIs for D2D transmission of a second SA, and a third portion of TTIs for D2D transmission of data; identify a collision of the D2D transmission of the first SA or the second SA with a concurrent transmission; and determine, based on the collision, whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data.
- Example 75 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 74, wherein the first SA and the second SA are identical to one another and include scheduling information related to the third portion of TTIs.
- Example 76 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of examples 74 or 75, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the first SA with the concurrent transmission.
- Example 77 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of example 76, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-1 operation wherein an evolved NodeB (eNB) is to allocate resources for the SA cycle, and the instructions to cause the UE to determine whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data include instructions to cause the UE to determine to transmit the second SA and the data.
- Example 78 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of examples 74 or 75, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the second SA with the concurrent transmission, and wherein the instructions to cause the UE to determine whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data include instructions to cause the UE to determine to transmit the data.
- Example 79 may include the one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of examples 74 or 75, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the first SA and the second SA with the concurrent transmission, and wherein the instructions to cause the UE to determine whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data include instructions to cause the UE to determine not to transmit the data.
- Example 80 may include a user equipment (UE) comprising: device-to-device (D2D) circuitry to: identify a scheduling assignment (SA) cycle that includes a first portion of transmission time intervals (TTIs) for device-to-device (D2D) transmission of a first SA, a second portion of TTIs for D2D transmission of a second SA, and a third portion of TTIs for D2D transmission of data; identify a collision of the D2D transmission of the first SA or the second SA with a concurrent transmission; and determine, UE based on the collision, whether to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data; and interface control circuitry coupled with the D2D circuitry, the interface control circuitry to transmit the first SA, the second SA, or the data.
- Example 81 may include the UE of example 80, wherein the first SA and the second SA are identical to one another and include scheduling information related to the third portion of TTIs.
- Example 82 may include the UE of examples 80 or 81, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the first SA with the concurrent transmission.
- Example 83 may include the UE of example 82, wherein the UE is to operate according to Mode-1 operation wherein an evolved NodeB (eNB) is to allocate resources for the SA cycle, and wherein the D2D circuitry is to determine to transmit the second SA and the data.
- Example 84 may include the UE of examples 80 or 81, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the second SA with the concurrent transmission, and wherein the D2D circuitry is to determine to transmit the data.
- Example 85 may include the UE of examples 80 or 81, wherein the collision is a collision of the transmission of the first SA and the second SA with the concurrent transmission, and wherein the D2D circuitry is to determine not to transmit the data.
- Example 86 may include a method for a User Equipment (UE) to transmit Device-to-Device (D2D or Sidelink) data comprising of: handling, by the UE, of Scheduling Assignment (SA or Physical Sidelink Control Channel (PSCCH)) transmission collision with more prioritized operation; handling, by the UE, of D2D data transmission with more prioritized operation; handling, by the UE, of MAC Packet Data Unit (PDU) transmission inside allocated spectrum resources; and handling, by the UE, of D2D discovery transmission collision with more prioritized operation.
- Example 87 may include the method of example 86, wherein a Transmission Opportunity Bundle (TOB) is 4 consecutive transmission opportunities within time resource pattern for transmissions (T-RPT) where the starting transmission opportunity index is multiple of 4 (e.g. 0, 4, 8 . . . ).
- Example 88 may include the method of example 87, wherein the UE handles a situation of empty data buffer during an SA period in Mode-1 (evolved NodeB (eNB) controlled mode) D2D operation.
- Example 89 may include the method of example 88, wherein the UE transmits padding bits in the remaining allocated resources in case it has no data in the buffer.
- Example 90 may include the method of example 88, wherein the UE retransmits already transmitted MAC PDU(s) in the remaining allocated resources in case it has no data in the buffer.
- Example 91 may include the method of example 88, wherein the UE stops transmission in the remaining allocated resources in case it has no data in the buffer.
- Example 92 may include the method of example 87, wherein the UE handles MAC PDU transmission currently in the buffer when operating in autonomous resource allocation mode (Mode-2).
- Example 93 may include the method of example 92, wherein the UE transmits MAC PDU in the nearest allocated TOB when MAC PDU arrives to the buffer.
- Example 94 may include the method of example 92, wherein the UE stops transmission in a given SA period if it has no data in the buffer.
- Example 95 may include the method of example 92, wherein the UE decides about a TOB for a given MAC PDU transmission taking into account its latency budget and the resources remained in SA period.
- Example 96 may include the method of example 95, wherein the UE is not mandated to stop transmission in a given SA period if it has empty buffer.
- Example 97 may include the method of example 87, wherein an SA transmission comprised of 2 instances collides with more prioritized operation.
- Example 98 may include the method of example 97, wherein an eNB allocates the collided SA instances.
- Example 99 may include the method of example 98, wherein the first SA instance collides with more prioritized operation and the UE does not transmit the second instance of SA and the corresponding data.
- Example 100 may include the method of example 98, wherein the first SA instance collides with more prioritized operation and the UE transmits the second instance of SA and the corresponding data.
- Example 101 may include the method of example 97, wherein the UE selected the collided SA instances.
- Example 102 may include the method of example 101, wherein the first SA instance collides with more prioritized operation and the UE does not transmit the second instance of SA and the corresponding data.
- Example 103 may include the method of example 101, wherein the first SA instance collides with more prioritized operation and the UE transmits the second instance of SA and the corresponding data.
- Example 104 may include the method of example 101, wherein the first SA instance collides with more prioritized operation and the UE decides to transmit the second instance of SA and the corresponding data if it has no latency budget to drop transmission and restart it in the next SA period.
- Example 105 may include the method of example 98, wherein the second SA instance collides with more prioritized operation and the UE does not transmit the corresponding data.
- Example 106 may include the method of example 98, wherein the second SA instance collides with more prioritized operation and the UE transmits the corresponding data.
- Example 107 may include the method of example 101, wherein the second SA instance collides with more prioritized operation and the UE does not transmit the corresponding data.
- Example 108 may include the method of example 101, wherein the second SA instance collides with more prioritized operation and the UE transmits the corresponding data.
- Example 109 may include the method of example 87, wherein a data transmission comprised of 4 instances collided with more prioritized operation on the current TOB.
- Example 110 may include the method of example 109, wherein an eNB allocated the collided data instances.
- Example 111 may include the method of example 110, wherein any one or more instances of a data transmission collide with more prioritized operation.
- Example 112 may include the method of example 111, wherein the UE decides to transmit non-collided data instances and retransmit all 4 data instances on the next TOB.
- Example 113 may include the method of example 111, wherein the UE decides to transmit non-collided data instances and not retransmit the collided data instances on the next TOB.
- Example 114 may include the method of example 111, wherein the UE decides to not transmit the remaining non-collided data instances on the current TOB and retransmit all 4 data instances on the next TOB.
- Example 115 may include the method of example 111, wherein the UE decides to not transmit the remaining non-collided data instances on the current TOB and not retransmit all 4 data instances on the next TOB.
- Example 116 may include the method of example 109, wherein the UE allocates himself the collided data instances.
- Example 117 may include the method of example 116, wherein any one or more instances of a data transmission collide with more prioritized operation.
- Example 118 may include the method of example 117, wherein the UE decides to transmit non-collided data instances and retransmit all 4 data instances on the next TOB.
- Example 119 may include the method of example 117, wherein the UE decides to transmit non-collided data instances and not retransmit the collided data instances on the next TOB.
- Example 120 may include the method of example 117, wherein the UE decides to not transmit the remaining non-collided data instances on the current TOB and retransmit all 4 data instances on the next TOB.
- Example 121 may include the method of example 117, wherein the UE decides to not transmit the remaining non-collided data instances on the current TOB and not retransmit all 4 data instances on the next TOB.
- Example 122 may include the method of example 86, at the D2D discovery transmitting (Tx) UE, wherein the discovery message transmission within a discovery period comprises of an initial and one or more repeated transmissions, and at least one of the initial or repeated transmissions within the discovery period collides in time-domain from the Tx UE's perspective with another higher priority WAN or D2D channel/signal.
- Example 123 may include the method of example 122, at the D2D discovery Tx UE, wherein a Type 2B discovery message transmission instance has a time-domain conflict with a
Type 1 discovery message transmission, and the Type 2B discovery message transmission is prioritized andType 1 discovery transmission is dropped. - Example 124 may include the method of example 122, at the D2D discovery Tx UE, wherein a
Type 1 discovery transmission has a time-domain conflict with another higher priority WAN or D2D signal or channel and at least one of the initial or repeated transmissions within the discovery period is dropped. - Example 125 may include the method of example 124, at the D2D discovery Tx UE, wherein the Tx UE continues
Type 1 discovery message transmission according to the specified redundancy version order on the other subframes irrespective of whether one or a plurality of the transmissions (possibly including the initial transmission) is/are dropped. - Example 126 may include the method of example 122, at the D2D discovery Tx UE, wherein a Type 2B discovery transmission has a time-domain conflict with another higher priority WAN or D2D signal or channel and at least one of the initial or repeated transmissions within the discovery period is dropped.
- Example 127 may include the method of example 126, at the D2D discovery Tx UE, wherein the Tx UE continues Type 2B discovery message transmission according to the specified redundancy version order on the other subframes irrespective of whether one or a plurality of the transmissions (possibly including the initial transmission) is/are dropped.
- Example 128 may include an apparatus comprising means to perform the method of any of examples 86-127.
- Example 129 may include one or more non-transitory computer-readable media comprising instructions to cause an electronic device, upon execution of the instructions by one or more processors of the electronic device, to perform the method of any of examples 86-127.
- Example 130 may include an electronic device comprising receive circuitry, transmit circuitry, and/or control circuitry to perform one or more elements of the method of any of examples 86-127.
- Although certain embodiments have been illustrated and described herein for purposes of description, this application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the embodiments discussed herein. Therefore, it is manifestly intended that embodiments described herein be limited only by the claims.
- Where the disclosure recites “a” or “a first” element or the equivalent thereof, such disclosure includes one or more such elements, neither requiring nor excluding two or more such elements. Further, ordinal indicators (e.g., first, second or third) for identified elements are used to distinguish between the elements, and do not indicate or imply a required or limited number of such elements, nor do they indicate a particular position or order of such elements unless otherwise specifically stated.
Claims (20)
1-22. (canceled)
23. A method comprising:
identifying, by a user equipment (UE), that a first sidelink transmission by the UE on a resource of a discovery resource period is to collide in a time domain with a second sidelink transmission by the UE;
identifying, by the UE based on a type of the first sidelink transmission and a type of the second sidelink transmission, that the UE is to continue to transmit the first sidelink transmission and that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission; and
transmitting, by the UE based on the identification that the UE is to drop the second sidelink transmission, the first sidelink transmission on the resource;
wherein the first sidelink transmission is a Type 2B device-to-device (D2D) discovery transmission, and the second sidelink transmission is a Type 1 D2D discovery transmission.
24. The method of claim 23 , wherein the discovery resource period is a subframe.
25. The method of claim 23 , further comprising identifying, by the UE in a message received from an evolved NodeB (eNB), an allocation of resources for the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission.
26. The method of claim 23 , further comprising identifying, by the UE, that a priority of the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is higher than a priority of the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission.
27. The method of claim 23 , further comprising selecting, by the UE, one or more physical resources for transmission of the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission.
28. The method of claim 23 , wherein the first sidelink transmission and the second sidelink transmission are D2D transmissions.
29. A user equipment (UE) comprising:
device-to-device (D2D) circuitry to identify, based on a type of a Type 2B D2D discovery transmission and a type of a Type 1 D2D discovery transmission that are to be transmitted in a same subframe, that the UE is to continue to transmit the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission and that the UE is to drop the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission; and
interface control circuitry coupled with the D2D circuitry, the interface control circuitry to transmit the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission on the subframe.
30. The UE of claim 29 , wherein the D2D circuitry is to identify that the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission by the UE is to be transmitted in the same subframe as the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission based on an identification that the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is to collide in a time domain as the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission.
31. The UE of claim 29 , wherein the D2D circuitry is further to identify, in a message received from an evolved NodeB (eNB), an allocation of resources for the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission.
32. The UE of claim 29 , wherein the D2D circuitry is further to identify that a priority of the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is higher than a priority of the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission.
33. The UE of claim 29 , wherein the D2D circuitry is further to select one or more physical resources for transmission of the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission.
34. The UE of claim 29 , further comprising a non-volatile memory (NVM) coupled with the interface control circuitry.
35. The UE of claim 29 , wherein the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission and the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission are sidelink transmissions.
36. One or more non-transitory computer-readable media comprising instructions to cause a user equipment (UE), upon execution of the instructions by one or more processors of the UE, to:
identify, based on a type of a Type 2B D2D discovery transmission and a type of a Type 1 D2D discovery transmission that are to be transmitted in a same subframe, that the UE is to continue to transmit the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission and that the UE is to drop the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission; and
transmit the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission on the subframe.
37. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 36 , further comprising instructions to identify that the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission by the UE is to be transmitted in the same subframe as the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission based on an identification that the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is to collide in a time domain as the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission.
38. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 36 , further comprising instructions to identify, in a message received from an evolved NodeB (eNB), an allocation of resources for the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission.
39. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 36 , further comprising instructions to identify that a priority of the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission is higher than a priority of the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission.
40. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 36 , further comprising instructions to select one or more physical resources for transmission of the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission.
41. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 36 , wherein the Type 1 D2D discovery transmission and the Type 2B D2D discovery transmission are sidelink transmissions.
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TW201808048A (en) | 2018-03-01 |
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EP3657830A1 (en) | 2020-05-27 |
JP6437646B2 (en) | 2018-12-12 |
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JP2019050606A (en) | 2019-03-28 |
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