US20230300926A1 - Methods and related devices for secondary node addition - Google Patents

Methods and related devices for secondary node addition Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20230300926A1
US20230300926A1 US18/202,497 US202318202497A US2023300926A1 US 20230300926 A1 US20230300926 A1 US 20230300926A1 US 202318202497 A US202318202497 A US 202318202497A US 2023300926 A1 US2023300926 A1 US 2023300926A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
cell
rrc connection
message
configuration
secondary node
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Pending
Application number
US18/202,497
Inventor
Mei-Ju Shih
Chie-Ming Chou
Yung-Lan TSENG
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
5G IP Holdings LLC
Original Assignee
5G IP Holdings LLC
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by 5G IP Holdings LLC filed Critical 5G IP Holdings LLC
Priority to US18/202,497 priority Critical patent/US20230300926A1/en
Publication of US20230300926A1 publication Critical patent/US20230300926A1/en
Pending legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W76/00Connection management
    • H04W76/10Connection setup
    • H04W76/15Setup of multiple wireless link connections
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B17/00Monitoring; Testing
    • H04B17/30Monitoring; Testing of propagation channels
    • H04B17/382Monitoring; Testing of propagation channels for resource allocation, admission control or handover
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W48/00Access restriction; Network selection; Access point selection
    • H04W48/16Discovering, processing access restriction or access information
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W48/00Access restriction; Network selection; Access point selection
    • H04W48/20Selecting an access point
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/20Control channels or signalling for resource management
    • H04W72/23Control channels or signalling for resource management in the downlink direction of a wireless link, i.e. towards a terminal
    • H04W72/231Control channels or signalling for resource management in the downlink direction of a wireless link, i.e. towards a terminal the control data signalling from the layers above the physical layer, e.g. RRC or MAC-CE signalling
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J11/00Orthogonal multiplex systems, e.g. using WALSH codes
    • H04J11/0069Cell search, i.e. determining cell identity [cell-ID]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L41/00Arrangements for maintenance, administration or management of data switching networks, e.g. of packet switching networks
    • H04L41/50Network service management, e.g. ensuring proper service fulfilment according to agreements
    • H04L41/5003Managing SLA; Interaction between SLA and QoS
    • H04L41/5019Ensuring fulfilment of SLA
    • H04L41/5025Ensuring fulfilment of SLA by proactively reacting to service quality change, e.g. by reconfiguration after service quality degradation or upgrade
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/04Wireless resource allocation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W76/00Connection management
    • H04W76/20Manipulation of established connections
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W76/00Connection management
    • H04W76/20Manipulation of established connections
    • H04W76/27Transitions between radio resource control [RRC] states
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W92/00Interfaces specially adapted for wireless communication networks
    • H04W92/16Interfaces between hierarchically similar devices
    • H04W92/20Interfaces between hierarchically similar devices between access points

Definitions

  • the present disclosure generally relates to wireless communication technology, and more particularly, to methods and related devices for secondary node addition.
  • multi-connectivity including dual-connectivity (DC) is envisioned to support more capacity, data, and services.
  • a user equipment (UE) configured with multi-connectivity may have one master node as an anchor and one or more secondary nodes.
  • a UE in multi-connectivity may be configured with one master cell group (MCG) and one or more secondary cell groups (SCGs) for data delivery.
  • MCG master cell group
  • SCGs secondary cell groups
  • Each cell group may be formed by one or more cells. All cell groups are not necessarily the same type. For example, one can be a Long Term Evolution (LTE) or an evolved LTE (eLTE) cell group, while another one can be an NR cell group.
  • LTE Long Term Evolution
  • eLTE evolved LTE
  • E-UTRA Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access
  • the core network that E-UTRA connects to can be the Evolved Packet Core (EPC) or NextGen Core (NGC) or 5G Core Network (5GC).
  • EPC Evolved Packet Core
  • NGC NextGen Core
  • 5GC 5G Core Network
  • eLTE is also known as LTE connected to 5GC.
  • MR Multi-RAT
  • NR-NR DC e.g., NR-NR DC, EN (E-UTRAN New Radio)-DC, or New Radio E-UTRAN (NE)-DC
  • each network node may have its own Radio Resource Control (RRC) entity, but the UE's RRC entity may follow that of the master node.
  • RRC Radio Resource Control
  • a UE in multi-connectivity may maintain simultaneous connections with the master node and the secondary node(s), in some cases, the UE may not camp on a cell even though the cell may be suitable for being the UE's secondary node.
  • a UE is provided.
  • the UE includes a receiver, a processor coupled to the receiver, and a memory coupled to the processor.
  • the memory stores at least one computer-executable program that, when executed by the processor, causes the processor to control the receiver to receive an RRC connection reconfiguration message from a master node when a Signaling Radio Bearer 3 (SRB3) connection with a secondary node has not been established, the RRC connection reconfiguration message including SCG information; and establish the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • SRB3 Signaling Radio Bearer 3
  • a method performed by a UE for multi-connectivity includes receiving, from a master node, an RRC connection reconfiguration message when an SRB3 connection with a secondary node has not been established, the RRC connection reconfiguration message including SCG information; and establishing the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • a mobile communication device in a third aspect of the present disclosure, includes a receiver, at least one processor, and at least one memory.
  • the receiver is configured to receive a Radio Resource Control (RRC) connection reconfiguration message from a device when a Signaling Radio Bearer 3 (SRB3) connection with a secondary node has not been established, wherein the RRC connection reconfiguration message includes Secondary Cell Group (SCG) information.
  • RRC Radio Resource Control
  • SRB3 Signaling Radio Bearer 3
  • SCG Secondary Cell Group
  • the at least one processor is coupled to the receiver.
  • the at least one memory is coupled to the processor and stores one or more computer-executable instructions that, when executed by the at least one processor, cause the at least one processor to initiate establishing the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • the SCG information includes an SRB3 configuration and a Service Data Adaptation Protocol (SDAP) configuration.
  • SDAP Service Data Adaptation Protocol
  • the one or more computer-executable instructions when executed by the at least one processor, the one or more computer-executable instructions further cause the at least one processor to: initiate a secondary node addition procedure by transmitting a blind addition request to the device; and receive a blind addition response from the device.
  • the blind addition response indicates at least one of: a maximum number of at least one cell identity (ID) in a cell selection result; a maximum number of at least one zone ID in the cell selection result; and a maximum number of at least one area ID in the cell selection result.
  • ID cell identity
  • a method performed by a mobile communication device includes receiving, from a device, a Radio Resource Control (RRC) connection reconfiguration message when a Signaling Radio Bearer 3 (SRB3) connection with a secondary node has not been established, the RRC connection reconfiguration message including Secondary Cell Group (SCG) information; and initiating establishing the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • RRC Radio Resource Control
  • SRB3 Signaling Radio Bearer 3
  • SCG Secondary Cell Group
  • the SCG information includes an SRB3 configuration and a Service Data Adaptation Protocol (SDAP) configuration.
  • SDAP Service Data Adaptation Protocol
  • the SCG information further includes at least one of a Packet Data Convergence Protocol (PDCP) configuration, a Radio Link Control (RLC) configuration, and a Medium Access Control (MAC) configuration.
  • PDCP Packet Data Convergence Protocol
  • RLC Radio Link Control
  • MAC Medium Access Control
  • the method further includes initiating a secondary node addition procedure by transmitting a blind addition request to the device in one of an RRC connection request message and an RRC connection resume request message; and receiving a blind addition response from the device in one of an RRC connection setup message and an RRC connection resume message.
  • the method further includes transmitting a cell selection result to the device in one of an RRC connection setup complete message and an RRC connection resume complete message after transmitting the blind addition request.
  • the cell selection result includes one or more of at least one cell identity (ID), at least one zone ID and at least one area ID.
  • the blind addition response indicates at least one of: a maximum number of the at least one cell ID in the cell selection result; a maximum number of the at least one zone ID in the cell selection result; and a maximum number of the at least one area ID in the cell selection result.
  • FIG. 1 A and FIG. 1 B are schematic diagrams illustrating two multi-connectivity scenarios, in accordance with example implementations of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 2 is a flowchart illustrating a method for secondary node blind addition, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 3 is a flowchart illustrating a method for secondary node blind addition, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 4 is a message flow diagram illustrating a secondary node blind addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 5 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed between a UE and a master node, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 6 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed between a UE and a master node, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 7 is a message flow diagram illustrating a procedure for blind addition request and response, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 8 is a message flow diagram illustrating a procedure for blind addition request and response, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 9 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed among a UE, a master node and a secondary node, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 10 is a message flow diagram illustrating a normal secondary node addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 11 is a block diagram illustrating a radio communication equipment, in accordance with an exemplary implementation of the present application.
  • references to “one implementation,” “an implementation,” “example implementation,” “various implementations,” “some implementations,” “implementations of the present application,” etc., may indicate that the implementation(s) of the present application so described may include a particular feature, structure, or characteristic, but not every possible implementation of the present application necessarily includes the particular feature, structure, or characteristic. Further, repeated use of the phrase “in one implementation,” or “in an example implementation,” “an implementation,” do not necessarily refer to the same implementation, although they may.
  • any use of phrases like “implementations” in connection with “the present application” are never meant to characterize that all implementations of the present application must include the particular feature, structure, or characteristic, and should instead be understood to mean “at least some implementations of the present application” includes the stated particular feature, structure, or characteristic.
  • the term “coupled” is defined as connected, whether directly or indirectly through intervening components, and is not necessarily limited to physical connections.
  • the term “comprising,” when utilized, means “including, but not necessarily limited to”; it specifically indicates open-ended inclusion or membership in the so-described combination, group, series and the equivalent.
  • any network function(s) or algorithm(s) described in the present disclosure may be implemented by hardware, software, or a combination of software and hardware. Described functions may correspond to modules that may be software, hardware, firmware, or any combination thereof.
  • the software implementation may include computer-executable instructions stored on a computer-readable medium, such as a memory or other types of storage devices.
  • a computer-readable medium such as a memory or other types of storage devices.
  • one or more microprocessors or general-purpose computers with communication processing capabilities may be programmed with corresponding executable instructions and carry out the described network function(s) or algorithm(s).
  • the microprocessors or general-purpose computers may be formed of application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs), programmable logic arrays, and/or one or more digital signal processor (DSPs).
  • ASICs application-specific integrated circuits
  • DSPs digital signal processor
  • the computer-readable medium may include but is not limited to random access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM), erasable programmable read-only memory (EPROM), electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM), flash memory, compact disc read-only memory (CD-ROM), magnetic cassettes, magnetic tape, magnetic disk storage, or any other equivalent medium capable of storing computer-readable instructions.
  • RAM random access memory
  • ROM read-only memory
  • EPROM erasable programmable read-only memory
  • EEPROM electrically erasable programmable read-only memory
  • CD-ROM compact disc read-only memory
  • magnetic cassettes magnetic tape
  • magnetic disk storage or any other equivalent medium capable of storing computer-readable instructions.
  • a radio communication network architecture typically includes at least one base station, at least one UE, and one or more optional network elements that provide connection towards a network.
  • the UE communicates with the network (e.g., a core network (CN), an evolved packet core (EPC) network, an Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access network (E-UTRAN), a Next-Generation Core (NGC), a 5G Core Network (5GC), or an internet), through a radio access network (RAN) established by the base station.
  • CN core network
  • EPC evolved packet core
  • E-UTRAN Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access network
  • NGC Next-Generation Core
  • 5GC 5G Core Network
  • internet radio access network
  • a UE may include, but is not limited to, a mobile station, a mobile terminal or device, a user communication radio terminal.
  • a UE may be a portable radio equipment, which includes, but is not limited to, a mobile phone, a tablet, a wearable device, a sensor, or a personal digital assistant (PDA) with wireless communication capability.
  • PDA personal digital assistant
  • the UE is configured to receive and transmit signals over an air interface to one or more cells in a radio access network.
  • a base station may include, but is not limited to, a node B (NB) as in the Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS), an evolved node B (eNB) as in the LTE-A, a radio network controller (RNC) as in the UMTS, a base station controller (BSC) as in the Global System for Mobile Communication (GSM)/GSM EDGE (Enhanced Data Rate for GSM Evolution) Radio Access Network (GERAN), an ng-eNB as in an E-UTRA base station in connection with the 5GC, a next generation node B (gNB) as in the 5G Access Network (5G-AN), and any other apparatus capable of controlling radio communication and managing radio resources within a cell.
  • the base station may connect to serve the one or more UEs through a radio interface to the network.
  • a base station may be configured to provide communication services according to at least one of the following radio access technologies (RATs): Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX), GSM (often referred to as 2G), GERAN, General Packet Radio Service (GPRS), UMTS (often referred to as 3G) based on basic wideband-code division multiple access (W-CDMA), high-speed packet access (HSPA), LTE, LTE-A, eLTE (evolved LTE), New Radio (NR, often referred to as 5G), and/or LTE-A Pro.
  • RATs radio access technologies
  • WiMAX Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access
  • GSM often referred to as 2G
  • GERAN General Packet Radio Service
  • GPRS General Packet Radio Service
  • UMTS often referred to as 3G
  • W-CDMA basic wideband-code division multiple access
  • HSPA high-speed packet access
  • LTE-A Long Term Evolution
  • the base station is operable to provide radio coverage to a specific geographical area using a plurality of cells forming the radio access network.
  • the base station supports the operations of the cells.
  • Each cell is operable to provide services to at least one UE within its radio coverage. More specifically, each cell (often referred to as a serving cell) provides services to serve one or more UEs within its radio coverage, (e.g., each cell schedules the downlink and optionally uplink resources to at least one UE within its radio coverage for downlink and optionally uplink packet transmissions).
  • the base station can communicate with one or more UEs in the radio communication system through the plurality of cells.
  • a cell may allocate sidelink (SL) resources for supporting proximity service (ProSe).
  • Each cell may have overlapped coverage areas with other cells.
  • the frame structure for NR is to support flexible configurations for accommodating various next generation (e.g., 5G) communication requirements, such as enhanced mobile broadband (eMBB), massive machine type communication (mMTC), ultra-reliable communication and low latency communication (URLLC), while fulfilling high reliability, high data rate and low latency requirements.
  • 5G next generation
  • eMBB enhanced mobile broadband
  • mMTC massive machine type communication
  • URLLC ultra-reliable communication and low latency communication
  • the orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) technology as agreed in the third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) may serve as a baseline for an NR waveform.
  • the scalable OFDM numerology such as the adaptive sub-carrier spacing, the channel bandwidth, and the Cyclic Prefix (CP), may also be used in NR.
  • two coding schemes are considered for NR: (1) low-density parity-check (LDPC) code and (2) Polar Code.
  • the coding scheme adaption may be configured based on the channel conditions and/or
  • a downlink (DL) transmission data, a guard period, and an uplink (UL) transmission data should at least be included, where the respective portions of the DL transmission data, the guard period, the UL transmission data should also be configurable, for example, based on the network dynamics of NR.
  • sidelink resource may also be provided in an NR frame to support ProSe services.
  • FIG. 1 A and FIG. 1 B are schematic diagrams illustrating two multi-connectivity scenarios, in accordance with example implementations of the present application.
  • FIG. 1 A and FIG. 1 B only depict a UE 102 , a cell N 1 and a cell N 2 .
  • the multi-connectivity scenarios can be extended to include several UEs and several cells.
  • the multi-connectivity can be built by considering that the cell N 1 coordinates with multiple cells that function like the cell N 2 .
  • the cell N 1 provides a coverage area that is partially overlapped with a coverage area of the cell N 2 .
  • a coverage area of the cell N 1 encompasses the coverage area of the cell N 2 .
  • the cell N 1 and the cell N 2 may belong to the same or different Radio Access Technologies (RATs).
  • RATs Radio Access Technologies
  • the cell N 1 and the cell N 2 may be NR cells using NR RAT.
  • the cell N 1 and the cell N 2 may apply other types of RATs such as (e)LTE.
  • the UE 102 may access the cell N 1 as the master node.
  • the cell N 1 may add the cell N 2 as a secondary node to support the UE's service requirement.
  • the master node and the secondary node are exemplified as the cell N 1 and the cell N 2 , respectively.
  • the present disclosure is not limited thereto.
  • the master node and the secondary node may each include several cells.
  • the UE 102 may establish an RRC connection to another cell (e.g., cell N 1 ) as the master node, rather than the cell N 2 .
  • Another reason may be that the coverage of the cell N 1 is more extensive than that of the cell N 2 , as shown in FIG. 1 B .
  • FIG. 2 is a flowchart illustrating a method for secondary node blind addition (called “blind addition” for short), in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • blind addition is another type of secondary node addition procedure, in which the master node may be allowed to add one or more secondary nodes for a UE, without configuring the UE to perform specific measurements as a basis for selecting the secondary node(s).
  • a UE may receive an RRC connection reconfiguration message from a master node (e.g., the cell N 1 in FIG. 1 A / 1 B).
  • a master node e.g., the cell N 1 in FIG. 1 A / 1 B.
  • the RRC connection reconfiguration message may include a secondary node's (e.g., the cell N 2 in FIG. 1 A / 1 B) configuration, and/or the required information to access the secondary node.
  • the RRC connection reconfiguration message may include at least one of: a cell Identity (ID), a beam configuration of the cell N 2 , an association between Random Access Channel (RACH) resources and Channel State Information-Reference Signal (CSI-RS) configuration of the cell N 2 , an association between RACH resources and New Radio-Synchronization Signal (NR-SS) configuration of the cell N 2 , a Signaling Radio Bearer (SRB) configuration for the cell N 2 , a Data Radio Bearer (DRB) configuration for the cell N 2 , a Scheduling Request (SR) configuration of the cell N 2 , and an indication of access category in the cell N 2 .
  • the SRB configuration may include the SRB3 configuration. The SRB3 is regarded as the signal radio bearer between the UE and the secondary no
  • the UE 102 may add the cell N 2 as a secondary node in response to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to the cell N 2 .
  • the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message is transmitted by the UE 102 to the cell N 2 via SRB3.
  • FIG. 3 is a flowchart illustrating a method for secondary node blind addition, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • the method may be performed by a base station which provides at least one cell (e.g., the cell N 1 in FIG. 1 A / 1 B), and acts as (or as a part of) the master node of a UE (e.g., the UE 102 in FIG. 1 A / 1 B).
  • a base station which provides at least one cell (e.g., the cell N 1 in FIG. 1 A / 1 B), and acts as (or as a part of) the master node of a UE (e.g., the UE 102 in FIG. 1 A / 1 B).
  • the base station may transmit a secondary node addition request to a cell (e.g., cell N 2 ).
  • the base station may receive a secondary node addition response from the cell N 2 .
  • the secondary node addition response may contain the required information for the UE 102 to access the cell N 2 .
  • the secondary node addition response may include at least one of: a UE ID, a beam configuration of the cell N 2 , an association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration of the cell N 2 , an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration of the cell N 2 , an SRB configuration (e.g., an SRB3 configuration) for the cell N 2 , a DRB configuration for the cell N 2 , an SR configuration of the cell N 2 , and an indication of access category in the cell N 2 .
  • SRB configuration e.g., an SRB3 configuration
  • the base station may add the cell N 2 as a secondary node in response to the secondary node addition response.
  • the base station may transmit an RRC connection reconfiguration message to the UE 102 in response to the secondary node addition response.
  • the base station may encapsulate the secondary node addition response into the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • FIG. 4 is a message flow diagram illustrating a secondary node blind addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • the UE 102 may conduct a cell selection procedure to find suitable cell(s) for multi-connectivity. For example, before the UE 102 builds an RRC connection to the cell N 1 , the UE 102 may measure the signal quality to both the cell N 1 and the cell N 2 . The signal quality between the UE 102 to the cell N 1 and that between the UE 102 to the cell N 2 may be both acceptable and suitable for the UE 102 . In such a case, the cell N 1 and the cell N 2 may both satisfy the UE's cell (re)selection criteria (e.g., cell selection criterion S, cell ranking criterion R).
  • re cell selection criterion S
  • R cell ranking criterion
  • the UE 102 may want to access the cell N 2 instead of the cell N 1 .
  • the UE 102 is barred by the cell N 2 because of an access barring mechanism or the UE 102 has an RRC connection failure (e.g., connection establishment failure) with the cell N 2 .
  • the UE 102 may turn to the cell N 1 and successfully establish an RRC connection to the cell N 1 .
  • the cell N 1 may serve as the master node to the UE 102 .
  • the procedure in FIG. 4 can be helpful for the UE 102 to add the cell N 2 as a secondary node via the cell N 1 .
  • the procedure in FIG. 4 may be applied for the situations that the UE 102 knows the measurement results of the cell N 2 and considers it as a suitable cell for data transmission and service support. However, for some reasons (e.g., the UE 102 is barred by the cell N 2 ), the UE 102 may access another cell (e.g., the cell N 1 ), and add the cell N 2 as a secondary node via the cell N 1 .
  • the UE 102 may access another cell (e.g., the cell N 1 ), and add the cell N 2 as a secondary node via the cell N 1 .
  • the UE 102 may not know the suggested cells for the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition), or the UE 102 may implicitly report the suggested cells to the master node (e.g., the cell N 1 ). In such case, the cell N 1 may then add the secondary node (e.g., the cell N 2 ) on its own.
  • the master node e.g., the cell N 1
  • the cell N 1 may then add the secondary node (e.g., the cell N 2 ) on its own.
  • the UE 102 may measure the signal quality to a couple of cells, which may be provided by the network, and/or are previously camped to, and/or nearby cells, so as to find the suitable cells for multi-connectivity.
  • one cell may broadcast inter-frequency cell IDs, intra-frequency cell IDs, neighboring cell IDs, zone IDs, and/or area IDs. Then, the UE 102 may base on the broadcast information (e.g., provided by the cell N 1 ) to measure the signal quality of other cells. For example, the UE 102 may measure the beam quality to an NR cell via NR-Synchronization Signal (NR-SS), and/or Channel State Information-Reference Signal (CSI-RS) of each NR cell, so that the UE 102 may derive the cell quality on its own based on the measurement results of NR-SS and/or CSI-RS.
  • NR-SS NR-Synchronization Signal
  • CSI-RS Channel State Information-Reference Signal
  • the cells within a certain zone or area may broadcast the same zone ID or area ID.
  • the cell N 1 may broadcast its own zone ID and/or area ID, which may reveal the zone/area to which the cell N 1 belongs.
  • the UE 102 may perform the measurement to a group of cells with the indicated zone IDs and/or area IDs, which are in the same zone/area as the cell N 1 .
  • the cell N 1 may broadcast neighboring zone IDs and/or area IDs.
  • Such zone IDs and/or area IDs may indicate the UE 102 to perform the measurement to a group of cells with the indicated zone IDs and/or area IDs, which are in the neighboring zones/areas.
  • the UE 102 may be (pre)configured with a threshold for the cell selection procedure.
  • the UE 102 may select one or more suitable cells for multi-connectivity, or rank the cells based on the threshold. For example, a cell considered suitable for the UE 102 to camp on may be at least with a signal quality better than the threshold.
  • the UE 102 may select one to camp, and perform an RRC connection establishment procedure.
  • the UE 102 may perform an RRC connection establishment/resume procedure with the cell N 1 .
  • the UE 102 may have finished preamble transmission to the cell N 1 and random access response reception from the cell N 1 , and plan to move from an RRC idle state to an RRC connected state, or from an RRC inactive (or light connected) state to an RRC connected state.
  • the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection request message via Signaling Radio Bearer 0 (SRB0) to the cell N 1 , and the cell N 1 may reply with an RRC connection setup message via SRB0 to the UE 102 , for the RRC idle to the RRC connected transition.
  • SRB0 Signaling Radio Bearer 0
  • the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection resume request message via SRB0 to the cell N 1 , and the cell N 1 may reply with an RRC connection resume message via SRB1.
  • the UE 102 may transmit a blind addition request to the cell N 1 via an RRC message (e.g., an RRC connection request message or an RRC connection resume request message) in the RRC connection establishment/resume procedure.
  • the cell N 1 may then reply the UE 102 with a blind addition response via an RRC connection setup message (or an RRC connection resume message) in the RRC connection establishment/resume procedure.
  • the blind addition response may indicate that the blind addition request is accepted, or the relative resources for the RRC establishment is granted while the blind addition request is rejected, or both the RRC establishment and the blind addition request are rejected.
  • the blind addition request may be realized by an indicator (e.g., at least one bit) added in the RRC connection request message (or in the RRC connection resume request message). For example, “1” means that the blind addition is required, “0” means no such requirement.
  • an indicator e.g., at least one bit
  • one field in the EstablishmentCause in the RRC connection request message may be used to indicate that one of the causes of the RRC connection establishment (or RRC connection resume) is to execute the secondary addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition).
  • the secondary addition e.g., blind addition, normal addition
  • the EstablishmentCause may be reused for Narrow Band (NB) operations (e.g., NB Internet of Things (NB-IoT) in LTE network).
  • NB Narrow Band
  • the present disclosure is not limited thereto.
  • the cell N 1 may know that the UE 102 would like to report a cell selection result (e.g., a list of suitable cell IDs/zone IDs/area IDs) for the candidate secondary nodes in a subsequent RRC message (e.g., in the RRC connection setup complete message or in the RRC connection resume complete message).
  • the UE 102 may collect signal quality information for one or more cells, generate the cell selection result based on the signal quality information, and report the cell selection result to the master node (e.g., cell N 1 ) via an RRC message (e.g., the RRC connection setup complete message or the RRC connection resume complete message).
  • the cell selection result may indicate at least one candidate secondary node.
  • the cell selection result may include at least one of: cell ID, zone ID, and area ID to which the candidate secondary node corresponds.
  • the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection setup complete message to the cell N 1 to confirm that the RRC connection is established, for the RRC idle state to the RRC connected state transition.
  • the RRC connection setup complete message may include a cell selection result which contains at least one cell ID of the candidate secondary node (e.g., ID of cell N 2 ).
  • the cell ID may be, but not limited to, a physical cell ID (PCI), a global unique ID or a unique ID within the Mobility Management Entity (MME)/Access and Mobility Management Function (AMF).
  • PCI physical cell ID
  • MME Mobility Management Entity
  • AMF Access and Mobility Management Function
  • the cell N 1 may add the indicated candidate secondary cell N 2 as the UE's secondary node.
  • action 404 in FIG. 4 shows a transmission of the “RRC connection setup complete” message, the present disclosure is not limited thereto.
  • the UE 102 may reply with an RRC connection resume complete message to the cell N 1 in action 404 , to confirm that the RRC connection is resumed, for the RRC inactive (or light connected) state to the RRC connected state transition.
  • the message content included in the RRC connection setup complete message is also applicable to the RRC connection resume complete message.
  • the UE 102 may generate the cell selection result based on the signal quality information. For example, if the signal quality between the UE 102 and a cell is above a (pre)configured threshold value, the ID of the cell will be included in the cell selection result by the UE 102 .
  • the threshold value and/or other required information for the UE 102 to report the list of cell IDs/zone IDs/area IDs may be configured by the cell N 1 during the RRC connection establishment/resume procedure via the system information message (e.g., minimum System Information (SI), on demand SI, or other SIs).
  • the cell N 1 may broadcast the threshold value. If the neighboring cell's signal strength (e.g. the Received Signal Strength Indication (RSSI), the Reference Signal Received Power (RSRP), or the Reference Signal Received Quality (RSRQ)) is above the threshold value, the UE 102 may provide such cell's ID in the reporting message (e.g., in the RRC connection setup complete message or in the RRC connection resume complete message).
  • the cell selection result may include more than one cell ID/zone ID/area ID.
  • the cells indicated by the UE 102 in the RRC connection setup complete message may be the UE's suitable cells that satisfy the UE's cell (re)selection criteria for choosing the secondary nodes.
  • the cell N 1 may or may not filter them.
  • the cell N 1 may inform the UE 102 of at least one of: a maximum number of reported cell IDs in the cell selection result, a maximum number of reported zone IDs in the cell selection result, and a maximum number of reported area IDs in the cell selection result.
  • an indication such as “maxReportedCellIDs” may be configurable by the cell N 1 .
  • the cell N 1 may configure the indication maxReportedCellIDs according to the length of each cell ID and the size of the RRC connection setup complete message.
  • the cell N 1 may provide such indication via a system information broadcast message (e.g., minimum SI, on demand SI, or other SIs), or via the RRC connection setup message (or the RRC connection resume message).
  • the number of cell IDs included in the RRC connection setup complete message may not exceed the number indicated by maxReportedCellIDs.
  • the UE 102 may report at least one zone ID (or area ID) in the RRC connection setup complete message (or the RRC connection resume complete message).
  • the cell N 1 may perform the procedure of blind addition request and response with at least one cell with the reported zone IDs (or area IDs).
  • the UE 102 may report at least one zone ID (or area ID) and at least one cell ID in the RRC connection setup complete message (or in the RRC connection resume complete message).
  • the cell N 1 may guarantee the secondary node added is tagged with the reported zone ID and belonged to one of the reported cell IDs. With the information of cell ID list and/or zone ID list, the cell N 1 may perform the filtering mechanism to add the suitable cells for the UE 102 .
  • the cell N 1 may broadcast a period value (e.g., 100 millisecond (ms)).
  • the UE 102 may provide the ID of a cell with good signal quality over such period in the reporting message (e.g., in the RRC connection setup complete message or in the RRC connection resume complete message).
  • the suitable cells reported may be any cells with good signal quality since N ⁇ 100 ms, where N is the timing when the UE 102 sends the RRC connection setup complete message.
  • the cell N 1 may specify the reporting order of the suitable cells (e.g., descending or ascending by RSSI value). For instance, the indication of “ascending” or “descending” may be configured in the RRC connection setup message, minimum SI, on demand SI, or other SIs. In such a case, the cell N 1 may perform the filtering mechanism for the procedure of blind addition request and response based on the order.
  • the suitable cells e.g., descending or ascending by RSSI value.
  • the indication of “ascending” or “descending” may be configured in the RRC connection setup message, minimum SI, on demand SI, or other SIs.
  • the cell N 1 may perform the filtering mechanism for the procedure of blind addition request and response based on the order.
  • the UE 102 may inform the cell N 1 of the maximum number of secondary nodes that the UE 102 can support. For example, an indication, such as “maxAddedCells”, may be sent from the UE 102 to the cell N 1 . Such indication may be included in the UE's capability (e.g., in a UE capability message). Alternatively, the UE may provide the indication maxAddedCells together with at least one cell ID in the RRC connection setup complete message to inform the cell N 1 of the UE's maximum number of supported secondary nodes. For example, the cell N 1 may add the first “maxAddedCells” cells if the descending order is configured.
  • the cell N 1 may perform blind addition request and response with the cell (e.g., the cell N 2 ) indicated by the UE 102 . If the cell ID list/zone ID list/area ID list is filtered by the cell N 1 , in this action, the cell N 1 may only perform the procedure of blind addition request and response to the cells corresponding to the filtered cell IDs/zone IDs/area IDs.
  • the cell N 1 may perform the coordination through an X2/Xn interface to the cells indicated by the at least one cell ID in the RRC connection setup complete message (or in the RRC connection resume complete message).
  • the cells to which the cell N 1 coordinates may or may not be filtered by the cell N 1 . Further, the cells to which the cell N 1 coordinates may have an X2/Xn interface with the cell N 1 . In such case, the cell N 1 may not send the blind addition request to all cells indicated by the UE 102 .
  • the cell N 1 may transmit an RRC connection reconfiguration message to the UE 102 .
  • the RRC connection reconfiguration message may include the cell N 2 's configuration, and/or the required information to access the cell N 2 .
  • the UE 102 may further add the cell N 2 as a secondary node.
  • the cell N 1 may or may not filter the cell N 2 's information. If the filtering mechanism is applied, the cell N 1 may forward the configuration from cells not filtered or forward the configuration not filtered. For instance, the cell N 1 may receive more than one RRC resource response from different cells. The cell N 1 may only forward the information in RRC resource response from one or more (less than or equal to “maxAddedCells”) cells to the UE 102 . Based on the configuration in the RRC connection reconfiguration message, the UE 102 may further add the cell N 2 as the secondary node.
  • the UE 102 may add multiple secondary nodes.
  • one RRC connection reconfiguration message may correspond to one cell.
  • the RRC connection reconfiguration message may correspond to more than one cells that the cell N 1 receives the RRC resource response from.
  • one RRC connection reconfiguration message may include all configuration information for different cells.
  • the order of the configuration may map to the order of cell IDs in the list reported by the UE 102 .
  • the field which supposes to carry such configuration may be empty/null.
  • Table 1 shows an exemplary cell ID list reported by the UE 102 .
  • Table 2 shows fields of configurations contained in the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • the order of configuration may correspond to the order of cell ID list.
  • the cell ID #1 may correspond to the configuration #1
  • the cell ID #2 may correspond to the configuration #2.
  • the field of configuration corresponds to the cell ID #3 in the RRC connection reconfiguration message may be empty/null or a default value.
  • the cell N 1 may encapsulate the response from the cell N 2 (e.g., the RRC resource response) into the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • the RRC resource response can be considered as an inter-node RRC message.
  • the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to the cell N 1 in response to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection setup complete message to the secondary node (e.g., the cell N 2 ), and build the RRC connection with the cell N 2 .
  • the secondary node e.g., the cell N 2
  • the UE 102 may perform multi-connectivity data transmission with the cell N 1 and the cell N 2 .
  • the UE 102 may receive multiple RRC connection reconfiguration messages from one or more cells.
  • the UE 102 may or may not filter the RRC connection reconfiguration messages. If the UE 102 performs the filtering mechanism, the UE 102 may configure itself based on the RRC connection reconfiguration messages sent by the cells not filtered by the UE 102 .
  • the UE 102 may filter the RRC connection reconfiguration messages, and/or may filter even the configuration in the same RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • the cell N 1 may provide the configuration information for cell ID #1 and cell ID #2. However, the UE 102 may only build the RRC connection to the cell with the cell ID #1. In such a case, the UE 102 may reply the cell N 1 with the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message including the cell ID #2, to indicate that the cell with the cell ID #2 is not added. The cell N 1 may further instruct the cell with the cell ID #2 to reset the configuration for the UE 102 .
  • the UE 102 may reply the cell N 1 with the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message including the cell ID #1, to indicate that the cell with the cell ID #1 is successfully added.
  • the cell N 1 may further instruct the cell with the cell ID #2 to reset the configuration for the UE 102 .
  • the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) is considered unsuccessful.
  • the UE 102 may further trigger the RRC connection re-establishment procedure to the cell N 1 .
  • the UE 102 may configure itself to connect to the cell N 2 .
  • the UE 102 is provided with SRB configuration information in the cell N 2 , so that the UE 102 can build the RRC connection to the cell N 2 .
  • the RRC connection may, for instance, be SRB3.
  • the UE 102 may send RRC messages (e.g., RRC connection request message, RRC connection setup complete message, and RRC connection reconfiguration complete message) to the cell N 2 to add the cell N 2 as the secondary node following the SRB configuration.
  • the SRB configuration may include the configuration of a Packet Data Convergence Protocol (PDCP) entity, a Radio Link Control (RLC) entity, and a Medium Access Control (MAC) entity for SRB delivery.
  • PDCP Packet Data Convergence Protocol
  • RLC Radio Link Control
  • MAC Medium Access Control
  • the UE 102 may provide its UE ID or any indicators provided by the cell N 2 and forwarded by the cell N 1 as the key to recognize the UE 102 .
  • the UE 102 may be provided with a DRB configuration.
  • the UE 102 may configure its data radio bearers and/or send data to the cell N 2 based on the DRB configuration.
  • the DRB configuration may include the configuration of a Service Data Adaptation Protocol (SDAP) entity, a PDCP entity, a RLC entity, and a MAC entity for DRB delivery.
  • SDAP Service Data Adaptation Protocol
  • the UE 102 may be provided with an SR configuration to the cell N 2 .
  • the UE 102 may send scheduling request based on the SR configuration to the cell N 2 for uplink resource grants and/or uplink request.
  • the UE 102 may be configured with a beam configuration for the cell N 2 .
  • the UE 102 may configure the beams to transmit and/or receive the beam-level signal to the cell N 2 .
  • the UE 102 is configured with an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration, and/or the association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration.
  • the UE 102 may perform random access procedure to the cell N 2 .
  • the UE 102 may be provided with an indicator of special access category.
  • the UE 102 may access the cell N 2 based on the indicator in the access control mechanism.
  • the barring parameters of the special access category is looser.
  • such special access category does not go through the access control mechanism, e.g., such special access category is not indicated in the access control parameters in the system information (e.g., SIB1).
  • the configuration may, for instance, be a radio resource configuration including a physical configuration which includes a scheduling request configuration.
  • FIG. 5 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed between a UE (e.g., a UE 102 ) and a master node (e.g., a cell N 1 ), in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • a UE e.g., a UE 102
  • a master node e.g., a cell N 1
  • the UE 102 may send an RRC connection request message to the cell N 1 .
  • the RRC connection request message may include a blind addition request for the blind addition.
  • the cell N 1 may reply with an RRC connection setup message (or an RRC connection resume message, for the RRC inactive (or light connected) state to the RRC connected transition) to the UE 102 .
  • the cell N 1 may further ask the UE 102 for what it needs in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message). If the cell N 1 supports the blind addition, the cell N 1 may allow the UE 102 to set up (or resume) the RRC connection and further report its suitable cell set. For example, the cell N 1 may provide a radio resource dedicated configuration (e.g., having a radio bearer configuration, a PDCP configuration, an RLC configuration, a MAC configuration, and/or a PHY configuration) in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message), to configure the UE 102 to establish an RRC connection to the cell N 1 .
  • a radio resource dedicated configuration e.g., having a radio bearer configuration, a PDCP configuration, an RLC configuration, a MAC configuration, and/or a PHY configuration
  • the cell N 1 may configure the indication, maxReportedCellIDs, in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message) to inform the UE 102 of the maximum number of the cell IDs reported in the cell selection result.
  • the cell N 1 may add the secondary nodes based on the list of cell IDs.
  • the cell N 1 may indicate the maxReportedZoneIDs in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message) to inform the UE 102 of the maximum number of the zone IDs reported in the cell selection result. The cell N 1 may then add the secondary nodes with the provided zone IDs.
  • the cell N 1 may indicate the maxReportedAreaIDs in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message) to inform the UE 102 of the maximum number of the area IDs reported in the cell selection result. The cell N 1 may then add the secondary nodes with the provided area IDs.
  • the cell N 1 may indicate the UE 102 to add the previous secondary node in the UE context via an indicator in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection reconfiguration message).
  • the cell N 1 may already have the UE context and confirm that the secondary node is available to be added. If the UE 102 has previously added more than one secondary node, and the information of the more than one secondary node is stored in the UE context, the cell N 1 may select the more than one secondary node (but less than maxAddedCells), and instruct the UE 102 to add them. In such a case, the UE 102 may not reply the cell N 1 with the suggested (to be added) cell IDs.
  • the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection setup complete message (or an RRC connection resume complete message) including the cell selection result to the cell N 1 .
  • the cell selection result may include, for instance, a cell ID list/zone ID list/area ID list indicating one or more suitable cells for being the secondary node(s).
  • FIG. 6 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed between a UE (e.g., a UE 102 ) and a master node (e.g., a cell N 1 ), in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • a UE e.g., a UE 102
  • a master node e.g., a cell N 1
  • the cell N 1 may reject the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) with an RRC connection reject message.
  • the UE 102 may send an RRC connection request message including a blind addition request to the cell N 1 . If the cell N 1 rejects both the RRC establishment and the blind addition, then in action 604 , the cell N 1 may reply the UE 102 with an RRC connection reject message.
  • the cell N 1 may reject the secondary node addition but accept the RRC connection establishment, thereby replying the UE 102 with an RRC connection setup message.
  • the cell N 1 may grant relative resources for the RRC establishment yet no secondary node addition.
  • the cell N 1 may send the RRC connection setup message to acknowledge the admission of the RRC connection establishment, provide the radio resource configuration to build the RRC connection establishment, but only grant a sufficient radio resource size for the UE 102 to enable the UE 102 to transmit the RRC connection setup complete message without any indication for blind addition, e.g., without appending the suitable cell ID list/zone ID list/area ID list.
  • the radio resource configuration and suitable radio resource size for the RRC connection setup complete message may be included in a radio resource dedicated configuration.
  • the UE 102 may know that the secondary node addition is rejected by the cell N 1 .
  • a normal secondary node addition (called “normal addition” for short) may, by default, take place when the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) is rejected.
  • the normal addition procedure will be illustrated in reference with FIG. 10 .
  • the cell N 1 may provide an indication of secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) in the RRC connection setup message to explicitly let the UE 102 know whether it is admitted to report the cell selection result (e.g., suitable cell ID list/zone ID list/area ID list) in the following reporting RRC message by checking the indication.
  • an indication of blind addition may be one bit, e.g., “1” means accepting the blind addition, “0” means rejecting the blind addition, or “0” means that the blind addition is rejected but the normal addition takes over.
  • FIG. 7 is a message flow diagram illustrating a procedure for blind addition request and response, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • a master node may send an inter-node blind addition request to a cell (e.g., a cell N 2 ).
  • the cell e.g., cell N 2
  • the cell may be indicated by the UE 102 and not filtered out by the cell N 1 , if the cell N 1 performs the filtering mechanism.
  • the inter-node blind addition request may include at least one UE ID (e.g., ID of the UE 102 ), so as to inform the cell N 2 of which UE needs the RRC connection and/or data transmission to the cell N 2 .
  • UE ID e.g., ID of the UE 102
  • the cell N 1 may send the inter-node blind addition request to multiple cells simultaneously.
  • the cell N 2 may reply an inter-node blind addition response with a positive feedback (e.g., an ACK (acknowledgement) indication) to the cell N 1 , if the blind addition is accepted by the cell N 2 (e.g., the cell N 2 determines that it can support the UE's requirement(s)).
  • a positive feedback e.g., an ACK (acknowledgement) indication
  • the cell N 2 may, in response to the inter-node blind addition request, check with the core network about the UE's subscription and/or service requirement via the UE ID.
  • the cell N 1 may further ask for the configuration to access and/or build the RRC connection and/or perform data transmission to the cell N 2 .
  • the cell N 1 may further send an RRC resource request to the cell N 2 .
  • the cell N 1 may or may not filter the cells sending the positive feedback. For example, if the cell N 2 is filtered out by the cell N 1 , the cell N 2 may not receive the RRC resource request, even if the cell N 2 replies with an ACK in the inter-node blind addition response. On the contrast, if the cell N 2 is not filtered or the cell N 1 does not perform the filtering mechanism, the cell N 2 may receive the RRC resource request from the cell N 1 .
  • the RRC resource request may include, for instance, a UE ID for the cell N 2 to identify.
  • the cell N 2 may send an RRC resource response to the cell N 1 .
  • the information may be at least one of: a UE ID, an SRB configuration for the UE 102 , a DRB configuration for the UE 102 , an SR configuration, a beam configuration, an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration, an association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration, and an indication of special access category.
  • the purpose of the information may be to assist the UE 102 for adding the cell N 2 as a secondary node.
  • the SRB configuration may include the configuration for the UE to set up the SRB3 between the UE and the cell N 2 .
  • the cell N 2 may be configured with a timer.
  • the timer may be activated when the cell N 2 accepts the request from the cell N 1 (e.g., upon the cell N 2 sends the inter-node blind addition response with a positive feedback (e.g., ACK)), or when the cell N 2 prepares/reserves the resources for the UE 102 (e.g., upon the cell N 2 sends the RRC resource response with configurations). If the timer expires and the cell N 2 does not receive the UE's further information or response, the cell N 2 may clear the configuration and/or release the resources for the UE 102 . Alternatively, the cell N 2 may bar the UE 102 .
  • a positive feedback e.g., ACK
  • the timer is configured by the cell N 1 to the cell N 2 , e.g., via inter-node blind addition request. In one implementation, the timer is configured by the cell N 2 itself. In one implementation, the cell N 2 sends the timer to the cell N 1 via inter-node blind addition response.
  • the procedure of blind addition request and response illustrated in FIG. 7 includes four actions 702 , 704 , 706 and 708 , the present disclosure is not limited thereto.
  • the procedure may be generalized into two actions: one is that the master node (e.g., cell N 1 ) transmits the secondary node addition request to the secondary node (e.g., cell N 2 ), and the other is that the master node receives the secondary node addition response from the secondary node.
  • the secondary node addition request may be configured to request the preparation of resources for secondary node addition for a specific UE (e.g., UE 102 ).
  • the secondary node addition request may be an inter-node blind addition request or an RRC connection resource request.
  • the secondary node addition request may include at least one of the following: timer and UE ID.
  • the secondary node addition response may be configured to confirm the master node about the secondary node addition, and provide the required configuration information for the UE 102 to access the secondary node.
  • the secondary node addition response may be an inter-node blind addition response or an RRC connection resource response.
  • the secondary node addition response may include, for instance, at least one of: a timer, a UE ID, a beam configuration of the cell N 2 , an association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration of the cell N 2 , an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration of the cell N 2 , an SRB configuration for the cell N 2 , a DRB configuration for the cell N 2 , an SR configuration of the cell N 2 , and an indication of access category in the cell N 2 .
  • FIG. 8 is a message flow diagram illustrating a procedure for blind addition request and response, in accordance with another example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • the cell N 2 may reply an inter-node blind addition response with a negative feedback (e.g., an NACK indication) to the cell N 1 .
  • a negative feedback e.g., an NACK indication
  • a cell N 1 may transmit the inter-node blind addition request to a cell N 2 .
  • Action 802 may substantially correspond to action 702 in FIG. 7 , so the detailed description of this action is omitted.
  • the cell N 2 may reply an inter-node blind addition response with a negative feedback (e.g., an NACK indication) to the cell N 1 , if the cell N 2 rejects the requested secondary node addition.
  • a negative feedback e.g., an NACK indication
  • the blind addition may be rejected because the cell N 2 cannot support the UE 102 's requirement(s).
  • the cell N 2 may reply to the cell N 1 with a negative feedback (e.g., an NACK indication) in the inter-node blind addition response.
  • FIG. 9 is a message flow diagram illustrating a secondary node blind addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • a UE 102 may perform an RRC connection establishment/resume procedure with a cell N 1 , for RRC idle to RRC connected transition, or for RRC inactive (or light connected) to RRC connected transition.
  • the UE 102 may send an RRC connection setup complete message including a cell selection result to the cell N 1 .
  • the cell N 1 may perform a procedure of blind addition request and response with the cell N 2 in response to the received RRC connection setup complete message.
  • the cell N 1 may forward a first RRC connection reconfiguration message to the UE 102 .
  • the first RRC connection reconfiguration message may include an indication to add the cell N 2 (e.g., cell ID of the cell N 2 ), and/or the required information to access the cell N 2 (e.g., a beam configuration of the cell N 2 , and/or an association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration of the cell N 2 , and/or an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration of the cell N 2 , and/or an indication of special access category in the cell N 2 ).
  • the required information to access the cell N 2 e.g., a beam configuration of the cell N 2 , and/or an association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration of the cell N 2 , and/or an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration of the cell N 2 , and/or an indication of special access category in the cell N 2 ).
  • the UE 102 may then perform an RRC connection establishment procedure with the cell N 2 , as shown in action 910 .
  • the cell N 2 may configure the UE 102 with SCG/SN-specific configuration (e.g., an SRB configuration, and/or a DRB configuration, and/or an SR configuration in the cell N 2 ) via a second RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • SCG/SN-specific configuration e.g., an SRB configuration, and/or a DRB configuration, and/or an SR configuration in the cell N 2
  • the SRB configuration of the cell N 2 may include an SRB3 configuration.
  • the UE 102 may send an RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to the cell N 2 and the cell N 1 , respectively, as shown in actions 914 and 916 .
  • the UE 102 may perform data transmission with the cell N 1 and the cell N 2 for multi-connectivity.
  • the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) is not guaranteed to be successful. For example, if the UE 102 fails to build an RRC connection to the cell N 2 , the UE 102 may declare a secondary node addition failure to the cell N 1 . In another example, if the UE 102 fails to add “maxAddedCells” secondary nodes, the UE 102 may declare a secondary node addition failure to the cell N 1 .
  • the UE 102 may declare a secondary node addition failure.
  • the UE 102 may declare the secondary node addition failure in the RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, RRC connection reestablishment request message).
  • RRC message e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, RRC connection reestablishment request message.
  • one bit or a string in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message may be the indicator of the secondary node addition failure.
  • the UE 102 may further include the cell IDs of cells which cause the secondary node addition failure, and/or provide the cause of failure (e.g. insufficient channel quality, timer expiry (e.g., running out of time before sending the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message), and no response from the cell N 2 ) in the RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, RRC connection reestablishment request message).
  • the result of no response from the cell N 2 may come from a timer in the cell N 2 times out.
  • the timer may be activated by the cell N 2 when the cell N 2 grants or reserves the resources/configuration to the UE 102 , e.g., either during the RRC connection establishment/resume procedure (e.g., upon the transmission of the RRC resource response), or when the UE 102 accesses the cell N 2 .
  • the UE starts the timer when the UE receives the RRC connection reconfiguration message from the cell N 1 or cell N 2 , if this timer is included in the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • the cell N 2 may further reject or bar the UE 102 .
  • the cell N 2 may not reply to the UE 102 even when the UE 102 sends messages to the cell N 2 , resulting the secondary node addition failure.
  • the cell N 2 may reply to the UE 102 with an RRC reject message, resulting the secondary node addition failure.
  • the cell N 1 may coordinate with the unsuccessful cells and request them to release the configuration and resources for the UE 102 by using the combination of at least cell IDs and/or UE IDs.
  • the UE 102 may not provide the cell IDs in the RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, RRC connection reestablishment request message) to the cell N 1 .
  • the UE 102 may give up adding the secondary nodes, may continue on with the blind addition, or may switch to the normal addition.
  • the normal addition is based on the UE's measurement report. If the UE 102 continues on the blind addition, the UE 102 may provide the cell selection result (e.g., a list of cell IDs or zone IDs) in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message based on the latest measurement results.
  • the cell N 1 may perform the procedure of blind addition request and response to those cells indicated by the UE 102 , and/or to those cells tagged with the zone IDs (or area IDs) indicated by the UE 102 .
  • the UE 102 may provide at least one field in the reporting message to indicate its subsequent behavior(s). For example, if the field is “1”, the UE 102 may continue performing the blind addition. If the field is “0”, the UE 102 may perform the normal addition. If the field is “null” (empty), the UE 102 may not add the secondary node at this time.
  • FIG. 10 is a message flow diagram illustrating a normal addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • a UE 102 may indicate to perform a normal addition after a secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) failure.
  • a secondary node addition e.g., blind addition, normal addition
  • the UE 102 may send an RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to a cell N 1 .
  • the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message may include an indication of normal addition, e.g., 1 bit, to inform the cell N 1 .
  • the indication of secondary node addition failure may represent an indication of normal addition request.
  • the cell N 1 may configure measurements for the UE 102 in the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • the RRC connection reconfiguration message may include a measurement configuration.
  • the UE sends the RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, RRC connection reestablishment request message) including the addition failure, to the cell N 1 .
  • the cell N 1 would reply to the UE with an RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration message) including measurement configuration.
  • the UE 102 may perform the measurements based on the measurement configuration, and send a measurement report including the measurement results to the cell N 1 .
  • the cell N 1 may perform the normal addition based on the measurement report, and add a cell N 2 as a secondary node for the UE 102 accordingly.
  • the UE 102 may acknowledge the status via the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message.
  • the master node e.g., cell N 1
  • the secondary node e.g., cell N 2
  • the cell N 1 may perform the blind addition without receiving the UE's suggested cell selection result (e.g., list of cell IDs/zone IDs/area IDs). This type of blind addition can be referred to as “master-node-initiated blind addition.”
  • the cell N 1 may directly send the RRC connection reconfiguration message to the UE 102 .
  • the RRC connection reconfiguration messages may include at least one of: the cell N 2 's configuration (e.g., the SN/SCG-specific configuration), the indication to add the cell N 2 , and the required information to access the cell N 2 .
  • the SN/SCG-specific configuration may be provided by the cell N 2 .
  • the RRC connection reconfiguration message may encapsulate the SN/SCG-specific configuration sent from the cell N 2 to the cell N 1 , e.g., via inter-node SN addition response.
  • the UE 102 may already have the secondary node's information (e.g., the UE keeps the MC-related configuration in the UE context) when the UE 102 goes to the RRC inactive (or light connected) state.
  • the MC-related information can be the radio bearer configuration and/or the SCG configuration of the secondary nodes or secondary cells.
  • the cell N 1 may notify the UE 102 to add the secondary node (e.g., cell N 2 ).
  • the UE 102 may base on the configuration in the RRC connection reconfiguration message to add the secondary nodes. If the addition is successful, the UE 102 may build the RRC connection to the cell N 2 via an RRC message (e.g., RRC connection setup complete message).
  • RRC message e.g., RRC connection setup complete message
  • the master-node-initiated blind addition may include the actions since the block of “blind addition request and response” in FIG. 4 or FIG. 9 .
  • the UE 102 may send the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to indicate the success of blind addition.
  • the UE 102 may indicate the blind addition failure in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to inform the cell N 1 .
  • the failure of master-node-initiated blind addition can be handled in a manner similar to the UE-assisted blind addition.
  • a blind addition failure can be by default followed by a normal addition.
  • the UE 102 may indicate the blind addition failure to the cell N 1 , implicitly representing for the request of normal addition.
  • the UE 102 may indicate the blind addition failure in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message (e.g., by using one bit).
  • the UE 102 may further indicate the request of the blind addition or the request of the normal addition (e.g., “1” bit means the request of the blind addition, and “0” bit means the request of the normal addition).
  • the UE 102 may indicate the blind addition failure in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message (e.g., by using one bit), and the cell N 1 may initiate the normal addition by configuring relative measurements after the RRC connection establishment.
  • FIG. 11 is a block diagram illustrating a radio communication equipment, in accordance with an exemplary implementation of the present application.
  • the radio communication equipment may be a UE, a base station, or a network node as shown and described in the disclosure.
  • the radio communication equipment 1100 may include a transceiver 1106 , a processor 1108 , a memory 1102 , one or more presentation components 1104 , and at least one antenna 1110 .
  • the radio communication equipment 1100 may also include an RF spectrum band module, a base station communications module, a network communications module, and a system communications management module, input/output (I/O) ports, I/O components, and power supply (not explicitly shown in FIG. 11 ). Each of these components may be in communication with each other, directly or indirectly, over one or more buses 1124 .
  • the transceiver 1106 having a transmitter 1116 and a receiver 1118 may be configured to transmit and/or receive time and/or frequency resource partitioning information.
  • the transceiver 1106 may be configured to transmit in different types of subframes and slots including, but not limited to, usable, non-usable and flexibly usable subframes and slot formats.
  • the transceiver 1106 may be configured to receive data and control channels.
  • the radio communication equipment 1100 may include a variety of computer-readable media.
  • Computer storage media may include RAM, ROM, EEPROM, flash memory or other memory technology, CD-ROM, digital versatile disks (DVD) or other optical disk storage, magnetic cassettes, magnetic tape, magnetic disk storage or other magnetic storage devices.
  • Computer storage media may not include a propagated data signal.
  • Communication media may typically embody computer-readable instructions, data structures, program modules or other data in a modulated data signal such as a carrier wave or other transport mechanism and include any information delivery media.
  • the memory 1102 may include computer-storage media in the form of volatile and/or non-volatile memory.
  • the memory 1102 may be removable, non-removable, or a combination thereof.
  • Example memory may include solid-state memory, hard drives, optical-disc drives, etc.
  • the memory 1102 may store data 1112 and computer-readable and computer-executable instructions 1114 (e.g., software codes) that are configured to, when executed, cause the processor 1108 to perform various functions described herein.
  • the instructions 1114 may not be directly executable by the processor 1108 but be configured to cause the radio communication equipment 1100 (e.g., when compiled and executed) to perform various functions described herein.
  • the processor 1108 may include a central processing unit (CPU), a microcontroller, an ASIC, an intelligent hardware device, or any combination thereof configured to perform the functions described herein.
  • the processor 1108 may process data 1120 and instructions 1122 received from the memory 1102 , and information through the transceiver 1106 , the base band communications module, and/or the network communications module.
  • the processor 1108 may also process information to be sent to the transceiver 1106 for transmission through the antenna 1110 .
  • One or more presentation components 1104 may present data indications to a person or other devices. Examples of one or more presentation components 1104 may include a display device, speaker, printing component, vibrating component, etc.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Computer Security & Cryptography (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)

Abstract

A mobile communication device and a method performed by a mobile communication device are provided. The method includes receiving, from a device, a Radio Resource Control (RRC) connection reconfiguration message when a Signaling Radio Bearer 3 (SRB3) connection with a secondary node has not been established, the RRC connection reconfiguration message including Secondary Cell Group (SCG) information; and initiating establishing the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.

Description

    CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • This application is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/224,332, filed on Apr. 7, 2021, which is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/807,643, filed on Mar. 3, 2020, which is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/047,011, filed on Jul. 27, 2018, which claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/537,702, filed on Jul. 27, 2017. The contents of all above-named applications are hereby incorporated herein fully by reference for all purposes.
  • FIELD
  • The present disclosure generally relates to wireless communication technology, and more particularly, to methods and related devices for secondary node addition.
  • BACKGROUND
  • In the next-generation (e.g., fifth generation (5G) New Radio (NR)) wireless network, multi-connectivity (MC) including dual-connectivity (DC) is envisioned to support more capacity, data, and services. A user equipment (UE) configured with multi-connectivity may have one master node as an anchor and one or more secondary nodes. For example, a UE in multi-connectivity may be configured with one master cell group (MCG) and one or more secondary cell groups (SCGs) for data delivery. Each cell group may be formed by one or more cells. All cell groups are not necessarily the same type. For example, one can be a Long Term Evolution (LTE) or an evolved LTE (eLTE) cell group, while another one can be an NR cell group. Regarding the core network, taking E-UTRA (Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access) for example, the core network that E-UTRA connects to can be the Evolved Packet Core (EPC) or NextGen Core (NGC) or 5G Core Network (5GC). eLTE is also known as LTE connected to 5GC. In NR-NR DC case and Multi-RAT (MR)-DC (e.g., NR-NR DC, EN (E-UTRAN New Radio)-DC, or New Radio E-UTRAN (NE)-DC) case, each network node may have its own Radio Resource Control (RRC) entity, but the UE's RRC entity may follow that of the master node.
  • While a UE in multi-connectivity may maintain simultaneous connections with the master node and the secondary node(s), in some cases, the UE may not camp on a cell even though the cell may be suitable for being the UE's secondary node.
  • Thus, there is a need in the art for an improved secondary node addition mechanism for multi-connectivity.
  • SUMMARY
  • The present disclosure is directed to methods and related devices for secondary node addition. In a first aspect of the present disclosure, a UE is provided. The UE includes a receiver, a processor coupled to the receiver, and a memory coupled to the processor. The memory stores at least one computer-executable program that, when executed by the processor, causes the processor to control the receiver to receive an RRC connection reconfiguration message from a master node when a Signaling Radio Bearer 3 (SRB3) connection with a secondary node has not been established, the RRC connection reconfiguration message including SCG information; and establish the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • In a second aspect of the present disclosure, a method performed by a UE for multi-connectivity is provided. The method includes receiving, from a master node, an RRC connection reconfiguration message when an SRB3 connection with a secondary node has not been established, the RRC connection reconfiguration message including SCG information; and establishing the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • In a third aspect of the present disclosure, a mobile communication device is provided. The mobile communication device includes a receiver, at least one processor, and at least one memory. The receiver is configured to receive a Radio Resource Control (RRC) connection reconfiguration message from a device when a Signaling Radio Bearer 3 (SRB3) connection with a secondary node has not been established, wherein the RRC connection reconfiguration message includes Secondary Cell Group (SCG) information. The at least one processor is coupled to the receiver. The at least one memory is coupled to the processor and stores one or more computer-executable instructions that, when executed by the at least one processor, cause the at least one processor to initiate establishing the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • In some implementations of the third aspect of the present disclosure, the SCG information includes an SRB3 configuration and a Service Data Adaptation Protocol (SDAP) configuration.
  • In some implementations of the third aspect of the present disclosure, when executed by the at least one processor, the one or more computer-executable instructions further cause the at least one processor to: initiate a secondary node addition procedure by transmitting a blind addition request to the device; and receive a blind addition response from the device.
  • In some implementations of the third aspect of the present disclosure, the blind addition response indicates at least one of: a maximum number of at least one cell identity (ID) in a cell selection result; a maximum number of at least one zone ID in the cell selection result; and a maximum number of at least one area ID in the cell selection result.
  • In a fourth aspect of the present disclosure, a method performed by a mobile communication device is provided. The method includes receiving, from a device, a Radio Resource Control (RRC) connection reconfiguration message when a Signaling Radio Bearer 3 (SRB3) connection with a secondary node has not been established, the RRC connection reconfiguration message including Secondary Cell Group (SCG) information; and initiating establishing the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • In some implementations of the fourth aspect of the present disclosure, the SCG information includes an SRB3 configuration and a Service Data Adaptation Protocol (SDAP) configuration.
  • In some implementations of the fourth aspect of the present disclosure, the SCG information further includes at least one of a Packet Data Convergence Protocol (PDCP) configuration, a Radio Link Control (RLC) configuration, and a Medium Access Control (MAC) configuration.
  • In some implementations of the fourth aspect of the present disclosure, the method further includes initiating a secondary node addition procedure by transmitting a blind addition request to the device in one of an RRC connection request message and an RRC connection resume request message; and receiving a blind addition response from the device in one of an RRC connection setup message and an RRC connection resume message.
  • In some implementations of the fourth aspect of the present disclosure, the method further includes transmitting a cell selection result to the device in one of an RRC connection setup complete message and an RRC connection resume complete message after transmitting the blind addition request.
  • In some implementations of the fourth aspect of the present disclosure, the cell selection result includes one or more of at least one cell identity (ID), at least one zone ID and at least one area ID.
  • In some implementations of the fourth aspect of the present disclosure, the blind addition response indicates at least one of: a maximum number of the at least one cell ID in the cell selection result; a maximum number of the at least one zone ID in the cell selection result; and a maximum number of the at least one area ID in the cell selection result.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • Aspects of the exemplary disclosure are best understood from the following detailed description when read with the accompanying figures. Various features are not drawn to scale, dimensions of various features may be arbitrarily increased or reduced for clarity of discussion.
  • FIG. 1A and FIG. 1B are schematic diagrams illustrating two multi-connectivity scenarios, in accordance with example implementations of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 2 is a flowchart illustrating a method for secondary node blind addition, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 3 is a flowchart illustrating a method for secondary node blind addition, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 4 is a message flow diagram illustrating a secondary node blind addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 5 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed between a UE and a master node, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 6 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed between a UE and a master node, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 7 is a message flow diagram illustrating a procedure for blind addition request and response, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 8 is a message flow diagram illustrating a procedure for blind addition request and response, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 9 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed among a UE, a master node and a secondary node, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 10 is a message flow diagram illustrating a normal secondary node addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • FIG. 11 is a block diagram illustrating a radio communication equipment, in accordance with an exemplary implementation of the present application.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION
  • The following description contains specific information pertaining to example implementations in the present disclosure. The drawings in the present disclosure and their accompanying detailed description are directed to merely example implementations. However, the present disclosure is not limited to merely these example implementations. Other variations and implementations of the present disclosure will occur to those skilled in the art. Unless noted otherwise, like or corresponding elements among the figures may be indicated by like or corresponding reference numerals. Moreover, the drawings and illustrations in the present disclosure are generally not to scale, and are not intended to correspond to actual relative dimensions.
  • For the purpose of consistency and ease of understanding, like features are identified (although, in some examples, not shown) by numerals in the example figures. However, the features in different implementations may differ in other respects, and thus shall not be narrowly confined to what is shown in the figures.
  • References to “one implementation,” “an implementation,” “example implementation,” “various implementations,” “some implementations,” “implementations of the present application,” etc., may indicate that the implementation(s) of the present application so described may include a particular feature, structure, or characteristic, but not every possible implementation of the present application necessarily includes the particular feature, structure, or characteristic. Further, repeated use of the phrase “in one implementation,” or “in an example implementation,” “an implementation,” do not necessarily refer to the same implementation, although they may. Moreover, any use of phrases like “implementations” in connection with “the present application” are never meant to characterize that all implementations of the present application must include the particular feature, structure, or characteristic, and should instead be understood to mean “at least some implementations of the present application” includes the stated particular feature, structure, or characteristic. The term “coupled” is defined as connected, whether directly or indirectly through intervening components, and is not necessarily limited to physical connections. The term “comprising,” when utilized, means “including, but not necessarily limited to”; it specifically indicates open-ended inclusion or membership in the so-described combination, group, series and the equivalent.
  • Additionally, for the purposes of explanation and non-limitation, specific details, such as functional entities, techniques, protocols, standard, and the like are set forth for providing an understanding of the described technology. In other examples, detailed description of well-known methods, technologies, system, architectures, and the like are omitted so as not to obscure the description with unnecessary details.
  • Persons skilled in the art will recognize that any network function(s) or algorithm(s) described in the present disclosure may be implemented by hardware, software, or a combination of software and hardware. Described functions may correspond to modules that may be software, hardware, firmware, or any combination thereof. The software implementation may include computer-executable instructions stored on a computer-readable medium, such as a memory or other types of storage devices. For example, one or more microprocessors or general-purpose computers with communication processing capabilities may be programmed with corresponding executable instructions and carry out the described network function(s) or algorithm(s). The microprocessors or general-purpose computers may be formed of application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs), programmable logic arrays, and/or one or more digital signal processor (DSPs). Although some of the example implementations described in this specification are oriented to software installed and executing on computer hardware, alternative example implementations implemented as firmware, as hardware, or as a combination of hardware and software are well within the scope of the present disclosure.
  • The computer-readable medium may include but is not limited to random access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM), erasable programmable read-only memory (EPROM), electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM), flash memory, compact disc read-only memory (CD-ROM), magnetic cassettes, magnetic tape, magnetic disk storage, or any other equivalent medium capable of storing computer-readable instructions.
  • A radio communication network architecture (e.g., a long-term evolution (LTE) system, an LTE-Advanced (LTE-A) system, or an LTE-Advanced Pro system) typically includes at least one base station, at least one UE, and one or more optional network elements that provide connection towards a network. The UE communicates with the network (e.g., a core network (CN), an evolved packet core (EPC) network, an Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access network (E-UTRAN), a Next-Generation Core (NGC), a 5G Core Network (5GC), or an internet), through a radio access network (RAN) established by the base station.
  • It should be noted that, in the present application, a UE may include, but is not limited to, a mobile station, a mobile terminal or device, a user communication radio terminal. For example, a UE may be a portable radio equipment, which includes, but is not limited to, a mobile phone, a tablet, a wearable device, a sensor, or a personal digital assistant (PDA) with wireless communication capability. The UE is configured to receive and transmit signals over an air interface to one or more cells in a radio access network.
  • A base station may include, but is not limited to, a node B (NB) as in the Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS), an evolved node B (eNB) as in the LTE-A, a radio network controller (RNC) as in the UMTS, a base station controller (BSC) as in the Global System for Mobile Communication (GSM)/GSM EDGE (Enhanced Data Rate for GSM Evolution) Radio Access Network (GERAN), an ng-eNB as in an E-UTRA base station in connection with the 5GC, a next generation node B (gNB) as in the 5G Access Network (5G-AN), and any other apparatus capable of controlling radio communication and managing radio resources within a cell. The base station may connect to serve the one or more UEs through a radio interface to the network.
  • A base station may be configured to provide communication services according to at least one of the following radio access technologies (RATs): Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX), GSM (often referred to as 2G), GERAN, General Packet Radio Service (GPRS), UMTS (often referred to as 3G) based on basic wideband-code division multiple access (W-CDMA), high-speed packet access (HSPA), LTE, LTE-A, eLTE (evolved LTE), New Radio (NR, often referred to as 5G), and/or LTE-A Pro. However, the scope of the present application should not be limited to the above mentioned protocols.
  • The base station is operable to provide radio coverage to a specific geographical area using a plurality of cells forming the radio access network. The base station supports the operations of the cells. Each cell is operable to provide services to at least one UE within its radio coverage. More specifically, each cell (often referred to as a serving cell) provides services to serve one or more UEs within its radio coverage, (e.g., each cell schedules the downlink and optionally uplink resources to at least one UE within its radio coverage for downlink and optionally uplink packet transmissions). The base station can communicate with one or more UEs in the radio communication system through the plurality of cells. A cell may allocate sidelink (SL) resources for supporting proximity service (ProSe). Each cell may have overlapped coverage areas with other cells.
  • As discussed above, the frame structure for NR is to support flexible configurations for accommodating various next generation (e.g., 5G) communication requirements, such as enhanced mobile broadband (eMBB), massive machine type communication (mMTC), ultra-reliable communication and low latency communication (URLLC), while fulfilling high reliability, high data rate and low latency requirements. The orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) technology as agreed in the third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) may serve as a baseline for an NR waveform. The scalable OFDM numerology, such as the adaptive sub-carrier spacing, the channel bandwidth, and the Cyclic Prefix (CP), may also be used in NR. Additionally, two coding schemes are considered for NR: (1) low-density parity-check (LDPC) code and (2) Polar Code. The coding scheme adaption may be configured based on the channel conditions and/or the service applications.
  • Moreover, it is also considered that in a transmission time interval TX of a single NR frame, a downlink (DL) transmission data, a guard period, and an uplink (UL) transmission data should at least be included, where the respective portions of the DL transmission data, the guard period, the UL transmission data should also be configurable, for example, based on the network dynamics of NR. In addition, sidelink resource may also be provided in an NR frame to support ProSe services.
  • FIG. 1A and FIG. 1B are schematic diagrams illustrating two multi-connectivity scenarios, in accordance with example implementations of the present application. To simplify the description, FIG. 1A and FIG. 1B only depict a UE 102, a cell N1 and a cell N2. However, as can be readily appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art, the multi-connectivity scenarios can be extended to include several UEs and several cells. For example, the multi-connectivity can be built by considering that the cell N1 coordinates with multiple cells that function like the cell N2.
  • In FIG. 1A, the cell N1 provides a coverage area that is partially overlapped with a coverage area of the cell N2. In FIG. 1B, a coverage area of the cell N1 encompasses the coverage area of the cell N2. The cell N1 and the cell N2 may belong to the same or different Radio Access Technologies (RATs). For example, the cell N1 and the cell N2 may be NR cells using NR RAT. In another example, the cell N1 and the cell N2 may apply other types of RATs such as (e)LTE.
  • In the present implementation, the UE 102 may access the cell N1 as the master node. The cell N1 may add the cell N2 as a secondary node to support the UE's service requirement. For illustrative purposes, the master node and the secondary node are exemplified as the cell N1 and the cell N2, respectively. However, it should be understood that the present disclosure is not limited thereto. For example, the master node and the secondary node may each include several cells.
  • One of the reasons the UE 102 does not camp on the cell N2 directly may be because the UE 102 is barred by the cell N2, although the signal quality between the UE 102 and the cell N2 may be good and the cell N2 may support the service requirement of the UE 102. Thus, the UE 102 may establish an RRC connection to another cell (e.g., cell N1) as the master node, rather than the cell N2. Another reason may be that the coverage of the cell N1 is more extensive than that of the cell N2, as shown in FIG. 1B.
  • FIG. 2 is a flowchart illustrating a method for secondary node blind addition (called “blind addition” for short), in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure. Compared to normal secondary node addition (called “normal addition” for short) procedure, blind addition is another type of secondary node addition procedure, in which the master node may be allowed to add one or more secondary nodes for a UE, without configuring the UE to perform specific measurements as a basis for selecting the secondary node(s).
  • One of ordinary skill in the art may understand that the illustrated order of actions is illustrative only and the order of the actions may change in response to the present disclosure. Additional actions may be added, or fewer actions may be utilized, without departing from this disclosure. Moreover, for the convenience of description, the elements presented in the implementations sharing the same labeling are the same (or similar) elements, and the description of which are as aforementioned.
  • In action 202, a UE (e.g., the UE 102 in FIG. 1A/1B) may receive an RRC connection reconfiguration message from a master node (e.g., the cell N1 in FIG. 1A/1B).
  • In one implementation, the RRC connection reconfiguration message may include a secondary node's (e.g., the cell N2 in FIG. 1A/1B) configuration, and/or the required information to access the secondary node. For example, the RRC connection reconfiguration message may include at least one of: a cell Identity (ID), a beam configuration of the cell N2, an association between Random Access Channel (RACH) resources and Channel State Information-Reference Signal (CSI-RS) configuration of the cell N2, an association between RACH resources and New Radio-Synchronization Signal (NR-SS) configuration of the cell N2, a Signaling Radio Bearer (SRB) configuration for the cell N2, a Data Radio Bearer (DRB) configuration for the cell N2, a Scheduling Request (SR) configuration of the cell N2, and an indication of access category in the cell N2. In one implementation, the SRB configuration may include the SRB3 configuration. The SRB3 is regarded as the signal radio bearer between the UE and the secondary node.
  • In action 204, the UE 102 may add the cell N2 as a secondary node in response to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • In action 206, the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to the cell N2.
  • In one implementation, the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message is transmitted by the UE 102 to the cell N2 via SRB3.
  • FIG. 3 is a flowchart illustrating a method for secondary node blind addition, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure. In the present implementation, the method may be performed by a base station which provides at least one cell (e.g., the cell N1 in FIG. 1A/1B), and acts as (or as a part of) the master node of a UE (e.g., the UE 102 in FIG. 1A/1B).
  • In action 302, the base station may transmit a secondary node addition request to a cell (e.g., cell N2).
  • In action 304, the base station may receive a secondary node addition response from the cell N2.
  • In one implementation, the secondary node addition response may contain the required information for the UE 102 to access the cell N2. For example, the secondary node addition response may include at least one of: a UE ID, a beam configuration of the cell N2, an association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration of the cell N2, an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration of the cell N2, an SRB configuration (e.g., an SRB3 configuration) for the cell N2, a DRB configuration for the cell N2, an SR configuration of the cell N2, and an indication of access category in the cell N2.
  • In action 306, the base station may add the cell N2 as a secondary node in response to the secondary node addition response.
  • In action 308, the base station may transmit an RRC connection reconfiguration message to the UE 102 in response to the secondary node addition response. For example, the base station may encapsulate the secondary node addition response into the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • FIG. 4 is a message flow diagram illustrating a secondary node blind addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • In the present implementation, the UE 102 may conduct a cell selection procedure to find suitable cell(s) for multi-connectivity. For example, before the UE 102 builds an RRC connection to the cell N1, the UE 102 may measure the signal quality to both the cell N1 and the cell N2. The signal quality between the UE 102 to the cell N1 and that between the UE 102 to the cell N2 may be both acceptable and suitable for the UE 102. In such a case, the cell N1 and the cell N2 may both satisfy the UE's cell (re)selection criteria (e.g., cell selection criterion S, cell ranking criterion R). For some criteria (e.g., the signal quality between the UE 102 and the cell N2 can be better than that between the UE 102 and the cell N1), the UE 102 may want to access the cell N2 instead of the cell N1. However, it is possible that the UE 102 is barred by the cell N2 because of an access barring mechanism or the UE 102 has an RRC connection failure (e.g., connection establishment failure) with the cell N2. In such a case, the UE 102 may turn to the cell N1 and successfully establish an RRC connection to the cell N1. The cell N1 may serve as the master node to the UE 102. Thus, the procedure in FIG. 4 can be helpful for the UE 102 to add the cell N2 as a secondary node via the cell N1.
  • In one implementation, the procedure in FIG. 4 may be applied for the situations that the UE 102 knows the measurement results of the cell N2 and considers it as a suitable cell for data transmission and service support. However, for some reasons (e.g., the UE 102 is barred by the cell N2), the UE 102 may access another cell (e.g., the cell N1), and add the cell N2 as a secondary node via the cell N1.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may not know the suggested cells for the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition), or the UE 102 may implicitly report the suggested cells to the master node (e.g., the cell N1). In such case, the cell N1 may then add the secondary node (e.g., the cell N2) on its own.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may measure the signal quality to a couple of cells, which may be provided by the network, and/or are previously camped to, and/or nearby cells, so as to find the suitable cells for multi-connectivity.
  • In one implementation, one cell may broadcast inter-frequency cell IDs, intra-frequency cell IDs, neighboring cell IDs, zone IDs, and/or area IDs. Then, the UE 102 may base on the broadcast information (e.g., provided by the cell N1) to measure the signal quality of other cells. For example, the UE 102 may measure the beam quality to an NR cell via NR-Synchronization Signal (NR-SS), and/or Channel State Information-Reference Signal (CSI-RS) of each NR cell, so that the UE 102 may derive the cell quality on its own based on the measurement results of NR-SS and/or CSI-RS.
  • In one implementation, the cells within a certain zone or area may broadcast the same zone ID or area ID. For example, the cell N1 may broadcast its own zone ID and/or area ID, which may reveal the zone/area to which the cell N1 belongs. The UE 102 may perform the measurement to a group of cells with the indicated zone IDs and/or area IDs, which are in the same zone/area as the cell N1.
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may broadcast neighboring zone IDs and/or area IDs. Such zone IDs and/or area IDs may indicate the UE 102 to perform the measurement to a group of cells with the indicated zone IDs and/or area IDs, which are in the neighboring zones/areas.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may be (pre)configured with a threshold for the cell selection procedure. The UE 102 may select one or more suitable cells for multi-connectivity, or rank the cells based on the threshold. For example, a cell considered suitable for the UE 102 to camp on may be at least with a signal quality better than the threshold. Among the suitable cells, the UE 102 may select one to camp, and perform an RRC connection establishment procedure.
  • As shown in FIG. 4 , in action 402, the UE 102 may perform an RRC connection establishment/resume procedure with the cell N1.
  • In action 402, the UE 102 may have finished preamble transmission to the cell N1 and random access response reception from the cell N1, and plan to move from an RRC idle state to an RRC connected state, or from an RRC inactive (or light connected) state to an RRC connected state.
  • For example, if the UE 102 is to move from the RRC idle state to the RRC connected state, the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection request message via Signaling Radio Bearer 0 (SRB0) to the cell N1, and the cell N1 may reply with an RRC connection setup message via SRB0 to the UE 102, for the RRC idle to the RRC connected transition. In another example, when the UE 102 transitions from the RRC inactive (or light connected) state to the RRC connected state, the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection resume request message via SRB0 to the cell N1, and the cell N1 may reply with an RRC connection resume message via SRB1.
  • In the present implementation, if the UE 102 is to add a secondary node (e.g., the cell N2) via the master node (e.g., the cell N1) without measurement configurations from the master node (e.g., a UE-assisted blind addition), the UE 102 may transmit a blind addition request to the cell N1 via an RRC message (e.g., an RRC connection request message or an RRC connection resume request message) in the RRC connection establishment/resume procedure. The cell N1 may then reply the UE 102 with a blind addition response via an RRC connection setup message (or an RRC connection resume message) in the RRC connection establishment/resume procedure.
  • In one implementation, the blind addition response may indicate that the blind addition request is accepted, or the relative resources for the RRC establishment is granted while the blind addition request is rejected, or both the RRC establishment and the blind addition request are rejected.
  • In one implementation, the blind addition request may be realized by an indicator (e.g., at least one bit) added in the RRC connection request message (or in the RRC connection resume request message). For example, “1” means that the blind addition is required, “0” means no such requirement.
  • In one implementation, one field in the EstablishmentCause in the RRC connection request message (or the RRC connection resume request message) may be used to indicate that one of the causes of the RRC connection establishment (or RRC connection resume) is to execute the secondary addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition).
  • In the present implementation, the EstablishmentCause may be reused for Narrow Band (NB) operations (e.g., NB Internet of Things (NB-IoT) in LTE network). However, the present disclosure is not limited thereto. In some implementations, when the cell N1 receives the blind addition request, the cell N1 may know that the UE 102 would like to report a cell selection result (e.g., a list of suitable cell IDs/zone IDs/area IDs) for the candidate secondary nodes in a subsequent RRC message (e.g., in the RRC connection setup complete message or in the RRC connection resume complete message).
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may collect signal quality information for one or more cells, generate the cell selection result based on the signal quality information, and report the cell selection result to the master node (e.g., cell N1) via an RRC message (e.g., the RRC connection setup complete message or the RRC connection resume complete message). The cell selection result may indicate at least one candidate secondary node. For example, the cell selection result may include at least one of: cell ID, zone ID, and area ID to which the candidate secondary node corresponds.
  • As shown in action 404, the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection setup complete message to the cell N1 to confirm that the RRC connection is established, for the RRC idle state to the RRC connected state transition.
  • The RRC connection setup complete message may include a cell selection result which contains at least one cell ID of the candidate secondary node (e.g., ID of cell N2). The cell ID may be, but not limited to, a physical cell ID (PCI), a global unique ID or a unique ID within the Mobility Management Entity (MME)/Access and Mobility Management Function (AMF). In response to the RRC connection setup complete message, the cell N1 may add the indicated candidate secondary cell N2 as the UE's secondary node. Although action 404 in FIG. 4 shows a transmission of the “RRC connection setup complete” message, the present disclosure is not limited thereto. In some implementations, the UE 102 may reply with an RRC connection resume complete message to the cell N1 in action 404, to confirm that the RRC connection is resumed, for the RRC inactive (or light connected) state to the RRC connected state transition. The message content included in the RRC connection setup complete message is also applicable to the RRC connection resume complete message.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may generate the cell selection result based on the signal quality information. For example, if the signal quality between the UE 102 and a cell is above a (pre)configured threshold value, the ID of the cell will be included in the cell selection result by the UE 102.
  • The threshold value and/or other required information for the UE 102 to report the list of cell IDs/zone IDs/area IDs may be configured by the cell N1 during the RRC connection establishment/resume procedure via the system information message (e.g., minimum System Information (SI), on demand SI, or other SIs). For example, the cell N1 may broadcast the threshold value. If the neighboring cell's signal strength (e.g. the Received Signal Strength Indication (RSSI), the Reference Signal Received Power (RSRP), or the Reference Signal Received Quality (RSRQ)) is above the threshold value, the UE 102 may provide such cell's ID in the reporting message (e.g., in the RRC connection setup complete message or in the RRC connection resume complete message).
  • In one implementation, the cell selection result may include more than one cell ID/zone ID/area ID. The cells indicated by the UE 102 in the RRC connection setup complete message (or in the RRC connection resume complete message) may be the UE's suitable cells that satisfy the UE's cell (re)selection criteria for choosing the secondary nodes. Upon receiving the list of cell IDs/zone IDs/area IDs indicated by the UE 102, the cell N1 may or may not filter them.
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may inform the UE 102 of at least one of: a maximum number of reported cell IDs in the cell selection result, a maximum number of reported zone IDs in the cell selection result, and a maximum number of reported area IDs in the cell selection result. For example, an indication, such as “maxReportedCellIDs”, may be configurable by the cell N1. The cell N1 may configure the indication maxReportedCellIDs according to the length of each cell ID and the size of the RRC connection setup complete message. The cell N1 may provide such indication via a system information broadcast message (e.g., minimum SI, on demand SI, or other SIs), or via the RRC connection setup message (or the RRC connection resume message). If the UE 102 receives the indication maxReportedCellIDs, the number of cell IDs included in the RRC connection setup complete message (or the RRC connection resume complete message) may not exceed the number indicated by maxReportedCellIDs. In another example, the UE 102 may report at least one zone ID (or area ID) in the RRC connection setup complete message (or the RRC connection resume complete message). The cell N1 may perform the procedure of blind addition request and response with at least one cell with the reported zone IDs (or area IDs). In yet another example, the UE 102 may report at least one zone ID (or area ID) and at least one cell ID in the RRC connection setup complete message (or in the RRC connection resume complete message). In such a case, the cell N1 may guarantee the secondary node added is tagged with the reported zone ID and belonged to one of the reported cell IDs. With the information of cell ID list and/or zone ID list, the cell N1 may perform the filtering mechanism to add the suitable cells for the UE 102.
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may broadcast a period value (e.g., 100 millisecond (ms)). The UE 102 may provide the ID of a cell with good signal quality over such period in the reporting message (e.g., in the RRC connection setup complete message or in the RRC connection resume complete message). For example, the suitable cells reported may be any cells with good signal quality since N−100 ms, where N is the timing when the UE 102 sends the RRC connection setup complete message.
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may specify the reporting order of the suitable cells (e.g., descending or ascending by RSSI value). For instance, the indication of “ascending” or “descending” may be configured in the RRC connection setup message, minimum SI, on demand SI, or other SIs. In such a case, the cell N1 may perform the filtering mechanism for the procedure of blind addition request and response based on the order.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may inform the cell N1 of the maximum number of secondary nodes that the UE 102 can support. For example, an indication, such as “maxAddedCells”, may be sent from the UE 102 to the cell N1. Such indication may be included in the UE's capability (e.g., in a UE capability message). Alternatively, the UE may provide the indication maxAddedCells together with at least one cell ID in the RRC connection setup complete message to inform the cell N1 of the UE's maximum number of supported secondary nodes. For example, the cell N1 may add the first “maxAddedCells” cells if the descending order is configured.
  • In action 406, the cell N1 may perform blind addition request and response with the cell (e.g., the cell N2) indicated by the UE 102. If the cell ID list/zone ID list/area ID list is filtered by the cell N1, in this action, the cell N1 may only perform the procedure of blind addition request and response to the cells corresponding to the filtered cell IDs/zone IDs/area IDs.
  • During the procedure of blind addition request and response, the cell N1 may perform the coordination through an X2/Xn interface to the cells indicated by the at least one cell ID in the RRC connection setup complete message (or in the RRC connection resume complete message). The cells to which the cell N1 coordinates may or may not be filtered by the cell N1. Further, the cells to which the cell N1 coordinates may have an X2/Xn interface with the cell N1. In such case, the cell N1 may not send the blind addition request to all cells indicated by the UE 102.
  • In action 408, the cell N1 may transmit an RRC connection reconfiguration message to the UE 102. The RRC connection reconfiguration message may include the cell N2's configuration, and/or the required information to access the cell N2. Based on the configuration in the RRC connection reconfiguration message, the UE 102 may further add the cell N2 as a secondary node.
  • In one implementation, if the cell N1 receives the cell N2's configuration information, the cell N1 may or may not filter the cell N2's information. If the filtering mechanism is applied, the cell N1 may forward the configuration from cells not filtered or forward the configuration not filtered. For instance, the cell N1 may receive more than one RRC resource response from different cells. The cell N1 may only forward the information in RRC resource response from one or more (less than or equal to “maxAddedCells”) cells to the UE 102. Based on the configuration in the RRC connection reconfiguration message, the UE 102 may further add the cell N2 as the secondary node. Moreover, since the UE 102 may receive more than one RRC connection reconfiguration message, the UE 102 may add multiple secondary nodes. In such a case, one RRC connection reconfiguration message may correspond to one cell. In some implementations, the RRC connection reconfiguration message may correspond to more than one cells that the cell N1 receives the RRC resource response from.
  • In one implementation, one RRC connection reconfiguration message may include all configuration information for different cells. Thus, in such an RRC connection reconfiguration message, there may be fields to explicitly indicate the cell ID and its corresponding configuration. Alternatively, in such an RRC connection reconfiguration message, there may be fields to implicitly indicate the configuration. For example, the order of the configuration may map to the order of cell IDs in the list reported by the UE 102. In the implicit RRC connection reconfiguration message case, if the cell N1 does not provide the configuration information for one cell, the field which supposes to carry such configuration may be empty/null.
  • Table 1 shows an exemplary cell ID list reported by the UE 102. Table 2 shows fields of configurations contained in the RRC connection reconfiguration message. In this example, if the UE 102 reports the cell ID list in the RRC connection setup complete message, via the implicit RRC connection reconfiguration design, the order of configuration may correspond to the order of cell ID list. As shown in Table 1 and Table 2, the cell ID #1 may correspond to the configuration #1, and the cell ID #2 may correspond to the configuration #2.
  • TABLE 1
    Cell ID #1 Cell ID #2 Cell ID #3
  • TABLE 2
    Configuration #1 Configuration #2 Empty/Null
  • If the cell N1 is not going to add the cell with the cell ID #3 as the secondary node, the field of configuration corresponds to the cell ID #3 in the RRC connection reconfiguration message may be empty/null or a default value.
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may encapsulate the response from the cell N2 (e.g., the RRC resource response) into the RRC connection reconfiguration message. In such case, the RRC resource response can be considered as an inter-node RRC message.
  • In action 410, the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to the cell N1 in response to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • In action 412, the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection setup complete message to the secondary node (e.g., the cell N2), and build the RRC connection with the cell N2.
  • In action 414, the UE 102 may perform multi-connectivity data transmission with the cell N1 and the cell N2.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may receive multiple RRC connection reconfiguration messages from one or more cells. The UE 102 may or may not filter the RRC connection reconfiguration messages. If the UE 102 performs the filtering mechanism, the UE 102 may configure itself based on the RRC connection reconfiguration messages sent by the cells not filtered by the UE 102.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may filter the RRC connection reconfiguration messages, and/or may filter even the configuration in the same RRC connection reconfiguration message. For example, the cell N1 may provide the configuration information for cell ID #1 and cell ID #2. However, the UE 102 may only build the RRC connection to the cell with the cell ID #1. In such a case, the UE 102 may reply the cell N1 with the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message including the cell ID #2, to indicate that the cell with the cell ID #2 is not added. The cell N1 may further instruct the cell with the cell ID #2 to reset the configuration for the UE 102. In one implementation, the UE 102 may reply the cell N1 with the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message including the cell ID #1, to indicate that the cell with the cell ID #1 is successfully added. The cell N1 may further instruct the cell with the cell ID #2 to reset the configuration for the UE 102.
  • In one implementation, if none of the configurations of the secondary nodes is successfully configured, or if the “maxAddedCells” cell number is not successfully achieved, the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) is considered unsuccessful. The UE 102 may further trigger the RRC connection re-establishment procedure to the cell N1.
  • Based on the received RRC connection reconfiguration message, the UE 102 may configure itself to connect to the cell N2. In one implementation, the UE 102 is provided with SRB configuration information in the cell N2, so that the UE 102 can build the RRC connection to the cell N2. The RRC connection may, for instance, be SRB3.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may send RRC messages (e.g., RRC connection request message, RRC connection setup complete message, and RRC connection reconfiguration complete message) to the cell N2 to add the cell N2 as the secondary node following the SRB configuration. The SRB configuration may include the configuration of a Packet Data Convergence Protocol (PDCP) entity, a Radio Link Control (RLC) entity, and a Medium Access Control (MAC) entity for SRB delivery. In these RRC messages, the UE 102 may provide its UE ID or any indicators provided by the cell N2 and forwarded by the cell N1 as the key to recognize the UE 102.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may be provided with a DRB configuration. The UE 102 may configure its data radio bearers and/or send data to the cell N2 based on the DRB configuration. The DRB configuration may include the configuration of a Service Data Adaptation Protocol (SDAP) entity, a PDCP entity, a RLC entity, and a MAC entity for DRB delivery.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may be provided with an SR configuration to the cell N2. The UE 102 may send scheduling request based on the SR configuration to the cell N2 for uplink resource grants and/or uplink request.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may be configured with a beam configuration for the cell N2. The UE 102 may configure the beams to transmit and/or receive the beam-level signal to the cell N2.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 is configured with an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration, and/or the association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration. The UE 102 may perform random access procedure to the cell N2.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may be provided with an indicator of special access category. The UE 102 may access the cell N2 based on the indicator in the access control mechanism. For example, the barring parameters of the special access category is looser. For example, such special access category does not go through the access control mechanism, e.g., such special access category is not indicated in the access control parameters in the system information (e.g., SIB1). The configuration may, for instance, be a radio resource configuration including a physical configuration which includes a scheduling request configuration.
  • FIG. 5 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed between a UE (e.g., a UE 102) and a master node (e.g., a cell N1), in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • In action 502, the UE 102 may send an RRC connection request message to the cell N1. The RRC connection request message may include a blind addition request for the blind addition.
  • In action 504, the cell N1 may reply with an RRC connection setup message (or an RRC connection resume message, for the RRC inactive (or light connected) state to the RRC connected transition) to the UE 102.
  • In one implementation, if the cell N1 supports the blind addition, the cell N1 may further ask the UE 102 for what it needs in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message). If the cell N1 supports the blind addition, the cell N1 may allow the UE 102 to set up (or resume) the RRC connection and further report its suitable cell set. For example, the cell N1 may provide a radio resource dedicated configuration (e.g., having a radio bearer configuration, a PDCP configuration, an RLC configuration, a MAC configuration, and/or a PHY configuration) in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message), to configure the UE 102 to establish an RRC connection to the cell N1.
  • In one implementation, if the cell N1 is to add the secondary nodes based on the list of cell IDs provided by the UE 102, the cell N1 may configure the indication, maxReportedCellIDs, in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message) to inform the UE 102 of the maximum number of the cell IDs reported in the cell selection result. Thus, the cell N1 may add the secondary nodes based on the list of cell IDs.
  • In one implementation, if the cell N1 is to add the secondary nodes based on the list of zone IDs provided by the UE 102, the cell N1 may indicate the maxReportedZoneIDs in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message) to inform the UE 102 of the maximum number of the zone IDs reported in the cell selection result. The cell N1 may then add the secondary nodes with the provided zone IDs.
  • In one implementation, if the cell N1 would add the secondary nodes based on the list of area IDs provided by the UE 102, the cell N1 may indicate the maxReportedAreaIDs in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection resume message) to inform the UE 102 of the maximum number of the area IDs reported in the cell selection result. The cell N1 may then add the secondary nodes with the provided area IDs.
  • In one implementation, if the UE 102 is in the RRC inactive (or light connected) state and stores the previous added secondary node information in the UE context, the cell N1 may indicate the UE 102 to add the previous secondary node in the UE context via an indicator in the RRC connection setup message (or in the RRC connection reconfiguration message). The cell N1 may already have the UE context and confirm that the secondary node is available to be added. If the UE 102 has previously added more than one secondary node, and the information of the more than one secondary node is stored in the UE context, the cell N1 may select the more than one secondary node (but less than maxAddedCells), and instruct the UE 102 to add them. In such a case, the UE 102 may not reply the cell N1 with the suggested (to be added) cell IDs.
  • In action 506, the UE 102 may transmit an RRC connection setup complete message (or an RRC connection resume complete message) including the cell selection result to the cell N1. The cell selection result may include, for instance, a cell ID list/zone ID list/area ID list indicating one or more suitable cells for being the secondary node(s).
  • FIG. 6 is a message flow diagram illustrating operations performed between a UE (e.g., a UE 102) and a master node (e.g., a cell N1), in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • In the present implementation, the cell N1 may reject the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) with an RRC connection reject message. As shown in FIG. 6 , in action 602, the UE 102 may send an RRC connection request message including a blind addition request to the cell N1. If the cell N1 rejects both the RRC establishment and the blind addition, then in action 604, the cell N1 may reply the UE 102 with an RRC connection reject message.
  • In another implementation, the cell N1 may reject the secondary node addition but accept the RRC connection establishment, thereby replying the UE 102 with an RRC connection setup message. In such case, the cell N1 may grant relative resources for the RRC establishment yet no secondary node addition. For example, the cell N1 may send the RRC connection setup message to acknowledge the admission of the RRC connection establishment, provide the radio resource configuration to build the RRC connection establishment, but only grant a sufficient radio resource size for the UE 102 to enable the UE 102 to transmit the RRC connection setup complete message without any indication for blind addition, e.g., without appending the suitable cell ID list/zone ID list/area ID list. The radio resource configuration and suitable radio resource size for the RRC connection setup complete message may be included in a radio resource dedicated configuration.
  • In one implementation, if there is no indication for accepting the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) or no information required for the secondary node addition in the RRC connection setup message, the UE 102 may know that the secondary node addition is rejected by the cell N1.
  • In one implementation, a normal secondary node addition (called “normal addition” for short) may, by default, take place when the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) is rejected. Detailed description of the normal addition procedure will be illustrated in reference with FIG. 10 .
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may provide an indication of secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) in the RRC connection setup message to explicitly let the UE 102 know whether it is admitted to report the cell selection result (e.g., suitable cell ID list/zone ID list/area ID list) in the following reporting RRC message by checking the indication. For example, an indication of blind addition may be one bit, e.g., “1” means accepting the blind addition, “0” means rejecting the blind addition, or “0” means that the blind addition is rejected but the normal addition takes over.
  • FIG. 7 is a message flow diagram illustrating a procedure for blind addition request and response, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • In action 702, a master node (e.g., a cell N1) may send an inter-node blind addition request to a cell (e.g., a cell N2). The cell (e.g., cell N2) may be indicated by the UE 102 and not filtered out by the cell N1, if the cell N1 performs the filtering mechanism.
  • In one implementation, the inter-node blind addition request may include at least one UE ID (e.g., ID of the UE 102), so as to inform the cell N2 of which UE needs the RRC connection and/or data transmission to the cell N2.
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may send the inter-node blind addition request to multiple cells simultaneously.
  • In action 704, the cell N2 may reply an inter-node blind addition response with a positive feedback (e.g., an ACK (acknowledgement) indication) to the cell N1, if the blind addition is accepted by the cell N2 (e.g., the cell N2 determines that it can support the UE's requirement(s)).
  • In one implementation, the cell N2 may, in response to the inter-node blind addition request, check with the core network about the UE's subscription and/or service requirement via the UE ID.
  • After receiving the positive feedback from the cell N2, it is possible that the cell N1 may further ask for the configuration to access and/or build the RRC connection and/or perform data transmission to the cell N2. Thus, in action 706, the cell N1 may further send an RRC resource request to the cell N2.
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may or may not filter the cells sending the positive feedback. For example, if the cell N2 is filtered out by the cell N1, the cell N2 may not receive the RRC resource request, even if the cell N2 replies with an ACK in the inter-node blind addition response. On the contrast, if the cell N2 is not filtered or the cell N1 does not perform the filtering mechanism, the cell N2 may receive the RRC resource request from the cell N1. The RRC resource request may include, for instance, a UE ID for the cell N2 to identify.
  • In action 708, the cell N2 may send an RRC resource response to the cell N1.
  • In one implementation, several pieces of information may be included in the RRC resource response, for the UE 102 to access and/or build the RRC connection and/or perform data transmission with the cell N2. The information may be at least one of: a UE ID, an SRB configuration for the UE 102, a DRB configuration for the UE 102, an SR configuration, a beam configuration, an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration, an association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration, and an indication of special access category. The purpose of the information may be to assist the UE 102 for adding the cell N2 as a secondary node. The SRB configuration may include the configuration for the UE to set up the SRB3 between the UE and the cell N2.
  • In one implementation, the cell N2 may be configured with a timer. The timer may be activated when the cell N2 accepts the request from the cell N1 (e.g., upon the cell N2 sends the inter-node blind addition response with a positive feedback (e.g., ACK)), or when the cell N2 prepares/reserves the resources for the UE 102 (e.g., upon the cell N2 sends the RRC resource response with configurations). If the timer expires and the cell N2 does not receive the UE's further information or response, the cell N2 may clear the configuration and/or release the resources for the UE 102. Alternatively, the cell N2 may bar the UE 102. In one implementation, the timer is configured by the cell N1 to the cell N2, e.g., via inter-node blind addition request. In one implementation, the timer is configured by the cell N2 itself. In one implementation, the cell N2 sends the timer to the cell N1 via inter-node blind addition response.
  • Although the procedure of blind addition request and response illustrated in FIG. 7 includes four actions 702, 704, 706 and 708, the present disclosure is not limited thereto. In one implementation, the procedure may be generalized into two actions: one is that the master node (e.g., cell N1) transmits the secondary node addition request to the secondary node (e.g., cell N2), and the other is that the master node receives the secondary node addition response from the secondary node. The secondary node addition request may be configured to request the preparation of resources for secondary node addition for a specific UE (e.g., UE 102). For example, the secondary node addition request may be an inter-node blind addition request or an RRC connection resource request. In one implementation, the secondary node addition request may include at least one of the following: timer and UE ID.
  • The secondary node addition response may be configured to confirm the master node about the secondary node addition, and provide the required configuration information for the UE 102 to access the secondary node. For example, the secondary node addition response may be an inter-node blind addition response or an RRC connection resource response. As discussed in FIG. 4 , the secondary node addition response may include, for instance, at least one of: a timer, a UE ID, a beam configuration of the cell N2, an association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration of the cell N2, an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration of the cell N2, an SRB configuration for the cell N2, a DRB configuration for the cell N2, an SR configuration of the cell N2, and an indication of access category in the cell N2.
  • FIG. 8 is a message flow diagram illustrating a procedure for blind addition request and response, in accordance with another example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • In the present implementation, if the cell N2 rejects the secondary node addition, the cell N2 may reply an inter-node blind addition response with a negative feedback (e.g., an NACK indication) to the cell N1.
  • As shown in FIG. 8 , in action 802, a cell N1 may transmit the inter-node blind addition request to a cell N2. Action 802 may substantially correspond to action 702 in FIG. 7 , so the detailed description of this action is omitted.
  • In action 804, the cell N2 may reply an inter-node blind addition response with a negative feedback (e.g., an NACK indication) to the cell N1, if the cell N2 rejects the requested secondary node addition. For example, the blind addition may be rejected because the cell N2 cannot support the UE 102's requirement(s). In such a case, the cell N2 may reply to the cell N1 with a negative feedback (e.g., an NACK indication) in the inter-node blind addition response.
  • FIG. 9 is a message flow diagram illustrating a secondary node blind addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • In action 902, a UE 102 may perform an RRC connection establishment/resume procedure with a cell N1, for RRC idle to RRC connected transition, or for RRC inactive (or light connected) to RRC connected transition.
  • In action 904, the UE 102 may send an RRC connection setup complete message including a cell selection result to the cell N1.
  • In action 906, the cell N1 may perform a procedure of blind addition request and response with the cell N2 in response to the received RRC connection setup complete message.
  • In action 908, the cell N1 may forward a first RRC connection reconfiguration message to the UE 102.
  • In one implementation, the first RRC connection reconfiguration message may include an indication to add the cell N2 (e.g., cell ID of the cell N2), and/or the required information to access the cell N2 (e.g., a beam configuration of the cell N2, and/or an association between RACH resources and CSI-RS configuration of the cell N2, and/or an association between RACH resources and NR-SS configuration of the cell N2, and/or an indication of special access category in the cell N2).
  • In response to the first RRC connection reconfiguration message, the UE 102 may then perform an RRC connection establishment procedure with the cell N2, as shown in action 910.
  • In action 912, the cell N2 may configure the UE 102 with SCG/SN-specific configuration (e.g., an SRB configuration, and/or a DRB configuration, and/or an SR configuration in the cell N2) via a second RRC connection reconfiguration message. The SRB configuration of the cell N2 may include an SRB3 configuration.
  • If the UE 102 adds the cell N2 successfully, the UE 102 may send an RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to the cell N2 and the cell N1, respectively, as shown in actions 914 and 916.
  • In action 918, the UE 102 may perform data transmission with the cell N1 and the cell N2 for multi-connectivity.
  • In some cases, the secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) is not guaranteed to be successful. For example, if the UE 102 fails to build an RRC connection to the cell N2, the UE 102 may declare a secondary node addition failure to the cell N1. In another example, if the UE 102 fails to add “maxAddedCells” secondary nodes, the UE 102 may declare a secondary node addition failure to the cell N1.
  • In one implementation, if the UE 102 cannot build the RRC connection to and/or transmit data to any (to be added) secondary nodes, the UE 102 may declare a secondary node addition failure. For example, the UE 102 may declare the secondary node addition failure in the RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, RRC connection reestablishment request message). For example, one bit or a string in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message may be the indicator of the secondary node addition failure.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may further include the cell IDs of cells which cause the secondary node addition failure, and/or provide the cause of failure (e.g. insufficient channel quality, timer expiry (e.g., running out of time before sending the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message), and no response from the cell N2) in the RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, RRC connection reestablishment request message). In one implementation, the result of no response from the cell N2 may come from a timer in the cell N2 times out. The timer may be activated by the cell N2 when the cell N2 grants or reserves the resources/configuration to the UE 102, e.g., either during the RRC connection establishment/resume procedure (e.g., upon the transmission of the RRC resource response), or when the UE 102 accesses the cell N2. In one implementation, the UE starts the timer when the UE receives the RRC connection reconfiguration message from the cell N1 or cell N2, if this timer is included in the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
  • If the timer times out in the cell N2, which means the cell N2 does not receive the response from the UE 102 before the timer stops or expires, the cell N2 may further reject or bar the UE 102. In one implementation, if the timer in the cell N2 times out, the cell N2 may not reply to the UE 102 even when the UE 102 sends messages to the cell N2, resulting the secondary node addition failure. In one implementation, if the timer in the cell N2 times out, the cell N2 may reply to the UE 102 with an RRC reject message, resulting the secondary node addition failure.
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may coordinate with the unsuccessful cells and request them to release the configuration and resources for the UE 102 by using the combination of at least cell IDs and/or UE IDs.
  • In one implementation, if the secondary node addition failure is declared when all suggested secondary nodes with configurations (e.g., provided in the RRC connection reconfiguration message) fail, the UE 102 may not provide the cell IDs in the RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, RRC connection reestablishment request message) to the cell N1.
  • Once a secondary node addition fails, the UE 102 may give up adding the secondary nodes, may continue on with the blind addition, or may switch to the normal addition. The normal addition is based on the UE's measurement report. If the UE 102 continues on the blind addition, the UE 102 may provide the cell selection result (e.g., a list of cell IDs or zone IDs) in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message based on the latest measurement results. Upon receiving the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, the cell N1 may perform the procedure of blind addition request and response to those cells indicated by the UE 102, and/or to those cells tagged with the zone IDs (or area IDs) indicated by the UE 102.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may provide at least one field in the reporting message to indicate its subsequent behavior(s). For example, if the field is “1”, the UE 102 may continue performing the blind addition. If the field is “0”, the UE 102 may perform the normal addition. If the field is “null” (empty), the UE 102 may not add the secondary node at this time.
  • FIG. 10 is a message flow diagram illustrating a normal addition procedure, in accordance with an example implementation of the present disclosure.
  • In the present implementation, a UE 102 may indicate to perform a normal addition after a secondary node addition (e.g., blind addition, normal addition) failure.
  • As shown in FIG. 10 , in action 1002, the UE 102 may send an RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to a cell N1. The RRC connection reconfiguration complete message may include an indication of normal addition, e.g., 1 bit, to inform the cell N1. Alternatively, by default, the indication of secondary node addition failure may represent an indication of normal addition request.
  • Once the cell N1 receives the UE 102's normal addition requirement in an RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, in action 1004, the cell N1 may configure measurements for the UE 102 in the RRC connection reconfiguration message. For instance, the RRC connection reconfiguration message may include a measurement configuration. In one implementation, the UE sends the RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration complete message, RRC connection reestablishment request message) including the addition failure, to the cell N1. The cell N1 would reply to the UE with an RRC message (e.g., RRC connection reconfiguration message) including measurement configuration.
  • In action 1006, the UE 102 may perform the measurements based on the measurement configuration, and send a measurement report including the measurement results to the cell N1.
  • In action 1008, the cell N1 may perform the normal addition based on the measurement report, and add a cell N2 as a secondary node for the UE 102 accordingly.
  • In one implementation, when the secondary node addition is successful, the UE 102 may acknowledge the status via the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message. The master node (e.g., cell N1) may further configure relative measurements toward the secondary node (e.g., cell N2) that be successfully added during the secondary node addition procedure.
  • In one implementation, the cell N1 may perform the blind addition without receiving the UE's suggested cell selection result (e.g., list of cell IDs/zone IDs/area IDs). This type of blind addition can be referred to as “master-node-initiated blind addition.” For example, the cell N1 may directly send the RRC connection reconfiguration message to the UE 102. The RRC connection reconfiguration messages may include at least one of: the cell N2's configuration (e.g., the SN/SCG-specific configuration), the indication to add the cell N2, and the required information to access the cell N2. The SN/SCG-specific configuration may be provided by the cell N2. The RRC connection reconfiguration message may encapsulate the SN/SCG-specific configuration sent from the cell N2 to the cell N1, e.g., via inter-node SN addition response.
  • In one implementation, the UE 102 may already have the secondary node's information (e.g., the UE keeps the MC-related configuration in the UE context) when the UE 102 goes to the RRC inactive (or light connected) state. For example, the MC-related information can be the radio bearer configuration and/or the SCG configuration of the secondary nodes or secondary cells. In such a case, if the cell N1 has the UE context, the cell N1 may notify the UE 102 to add the secondary node (e.g., cell N2).
  • In the master-node-initiated blind addition, the UE 102 may base on the configuration in the RRC connection reconfiguration message to add the secondary nodes. If the addition is successful, the UE 102 may build the RRC connection to the cell N2 via an RRC message (e.g., RRC connection setup complete message).
  • In one implementation, the master-node-initiated blind addition may include the actions since the block of “blind addition request and response” in FIG. 4 or FIG. 9 . For example, if the addition is successful, the UE 102 may send the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to indicate the success of blind addition. If the blind addition fails, the UE 102 may indicate the blind addition failure in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message to inform the cell N1.
  • According to the implementation, the failure of master-node-initiated blind addition can be handled in a manner similar to the UE-assisted blind addition. For example, a blind addition failure can be by default followed by a normal addition. In such case, the UE 102 may indicate the blind addition failure to the cell N1, implicitly representing for the request of normal addition. In another example, the UE 102 may indicate the blind addition failure in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message (e.g., by using one bit). The UE 102 may further indicate the request of the blind addition or the request of the normal addition (e.g., “1” bit means the request of the blind addition, and “0” bit means the request of the normal addition). In yet another example, the UE 102 may indicate the blind addition failure in the RRC connection reconfiguration complete message (e.g., by using one bit), and the cell N1 may initiate the normal addition by configuring relative measurements after the RRC connection establishment.
  • FIG. 11 is a block diagram illustrating a radio communication equipment, in accordance with an exemplary implementation of the present application. The radio communication equipment may be a UE, a base station, or a network node as shown and described in the disclosure.
  • As shown in FIG. 11 , the radio communication equipment 1100 may include a transceiver 1106, a processor 1108, a memory 1102, one or more presentation components 1104, and at least one antenna 1110. The radio communication equipment 1100 may also include an RF spectrum band module, a base station communications module, a network communications module, and a system communications management module, input/output (I/O) ports, I/O components, and power supply (not explicitly shown in FIG. 11 ). Each of these components may be in communication with each other, directly or indirectly, over one or more buses 1124.
  • The transceiver 1106 having a transmitter 1116 and a receiver 1118 may be configured to transmit and/or receive time and/or frequency resource partitioning information. In some implementations, the transceiver 1106 may be configured to transmit in different types of subframes and slots including, but not limited to, usable, non-usable and flexibly usable subframes and slot formats. The transceiver 1106 may be configured to receive data and control channels.
  • The radio communication equipment 1100 may include a variety of computer-readable media. Computer storage media may include RAM, ROM, EEPROM, flash memory or other memory technology, CD-ROM, digital versatile disks (DVD) or other optical disk storage, magnetic cassettes, magnetic tape, magnetic disk storage or other magnetic storage devices. Computer storage media may not include a propagated data signal. Communication media may typically embody computer-readable instructions, data structures, program modules or other data in a modulated data signal such as a carrier wave or other transport mechanism and include any information delivery media.
  • The memory 1102 may include computer-storage media in the form of volatile and/or non-volatile memory. The memory 1102 may be removable, non-removable, or a combination thereof. Example memory may include solid-state memory, hard drives, optical-disc drives, etc. As illustrated in FIG. 11 , the memory 1102 may store data 1112 and computer-readable and computer-executable instructions 1114 (e.g., software codes) that are configured to, when executed, cause the processor 1108 to perform various functions described herein. Alternatively, the instructions 1114 may not be directly executable by the processor 1108 but be configured to cause the radio communication equipment 1100 (e.g., when compiled and executed) to perform various functions described herein.
  • The processor 1108 may include a central processing unit (CPU), a microcontroller, an ASIC, an intelligent hardware device, or any combination thereof configured to perform the functions described herein. The processor 1108 may process data 1120 and instructions 1122 received from the memory 1102, and information through the transceiver 1106, the base band communications module, and/or the network communications module. The processor 1108 may also process information to be sent to the transceiver 1106 for transmission through the antenna 1110.
  • One or more presentation components 1104 may present data indications to a person or other devices. Examples of one or more presentation components 1104 may include a display device, speaker, printing component, vibrating component, etc.
  • From the above description it is manifest that various techniques can be used for implementing the concepts described in the present application without departing from the scope of those concepts. Moreover, while the concepts have been described with specific reference to certain implementations, a person of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that changes can be made in form and detail without departing from the scope of those concepts. As such, the described implementations are to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive. It should also be understood that the present application is not limited to the particular implementations described above, but many rearrangements, modifications, and substitutions are possible without departing from the scope of the present disclosure.

Claims (11)

What is claimed is:
1. A mobile communication device comprising:
a receiver configured to receive a Radio Resource Control (RRC) connection reconfiguration message from a device when a Signaling Radio Bearer 3 (SRB3) connection with a secondary node has not been established, wherein the RRC connection reconfiguration message comprises Secondary Cell Group (SCG) information;
at least one processor coupled to the receiver; and
at least one memory coupled to the at least one processor, wherein the at least one memory stores one or more computer-executable instructions that, when executed by the at least one processor, cause the at least one processor to initiate establishing the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
2. The mobile communication device according to claim 1, wherein the SCG information comprises an SRB3 configuration and a Service Data Adaptation Protocol (SDAP) configuration.
3. The mobile communication device according to claim 1, wherein, when executed by the at least one processor, the one or more computer-executable instructions further cause the at least one processor to:
initiate a secondary node addition procedure by transmitting a blind addition request to the device; and
receive a blind addition response from the device.
4. The mobile communication device according to claim 3, wherein the blind addition response indicates at least one of:
a maximum number of at least one cell identity (ID) in a cell selection result;
a maximum number of at least one zone ID in the cell selection result; and
a maximum number of at least one area ID in the cell selection result.
5. A method performed by a mobile communication device, the method comprising:
receiving, from a device, a Radio Resource Control (RRC) connection reconfiguration message when a Signaling Radio Bearer 3 (SRB3) connection with a secondary node has not been established, the RRC connection reconfiguration message comprising Secondary Cell Group (SCG) information; and
initiating establishing the SRB3 connection with the secondary node according to the RRC connection reconfiguration message.
6. The method according to claim 5, wherein the SCG information comprises an SRB3 configuration and a Service Data Adaptation Protocol (SDAP) configuration.
7. The method according to claim 6, wherein the SCG information further comprises at least one of a Packet Data Convergence Protocol (PDCP) configuration, a Radio Link Control (RLC) configuration, and a Medium Access Control (MAC) configuration.
8. The method according to claim 6, further comprising:
initiating a secondary node addition procedure by transmitting a blind addition request to the device in one of an RRC connection request message and an RRC connection resume request message; and
receiving a blind addition response from the device in one of an RRC connection setup message and an RRC connection resume message.
9. The method according to claim 8, further comprising:
transmitting a cell selection result to the device in one of an RRC connection setup complete message and an RRC connection resume complete message after transmitting the blind addition request.
10. The method according to claim 9, wherein the cell selection result comprises one or more of at least one cell identity (ID), at least one zone ID and at least one area ID.
11. The method according to claim 10, wherein the blind addition response indicates at least one of:
a maximum number of the at least one cell ID in the cell selection result;
a maximum number of the at least one zone ID in the cell selection result; and
a maximum number of the at least one area ID in the cell selection result.
US18/202,497 2017-07-27 2023-05-26 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition Pending US20230300926A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US18/202,497 US20230300926A1 (en) 2017-07-27 2023-05-26 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US201762537702P 2017-07-27 2017-07-27
US16/047,011 US10631353B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2018-07-27 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition
US16/807,643 US11019671B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2020-03-03 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition
US17/224,332 US11665761B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2021-04-07 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition
US18/202,497 US20230300926A1 (en) 2017-07-27 2023-05-26 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US17/224,332 Continuation US11665761B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2021-04-07 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20230300926A1 true US20230300926A1 (en) 2023-09-21

Family

ID=65039167

Family Applications (4)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US16/047,011 Active US10631353B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2018-07-27 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition
US16/807,643 Active US11019671B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2020-03-03 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition
US17/224,332 Active 2038-11-11 US11665761B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2021-04-07 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition
US18/202,497 Pending US20230300926A1 (en) 2017-07-27 2023-05-26 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition

Family Applications Before (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US16/047,011 Active US10631353B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2018-07-27 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition
US16/807,643 Active US11019671B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2020-03-03 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition
US17/224,332 Active 2038-11-11 US11665761B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2021-04-07 Methods and related devices for secondary node addition

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (4) US10631353B2 (en)
EP (1) EP3659388A4 (en)
JP (1) JP6984921B2 (en)
KR (1) KR102277322B1 (en)
CN (1) CN110892781B (en)
WO (1) WO2019020091A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
KR102277322B1 (en) * 2017-07-27 2021-07-13 에프쥐 이노베이션 컴퍼니 리미티드 Methods and Related Devices for Secondary Node Addition
WO2019065814A1 (en) * 2017-09-27 2019-04-04 三菱電機株式会社 Communication system, base station device and communication terminal device
US10785817B2 (en) * 2017-09-28 2020-09-22 Apple Inc. Signaling radio bearer type 3 (SRB3) and secondary cell group (SCG) failure handling
EP3777298A1 (en) * 2018-03-26 2021-02-17 Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson (publ) Suspending/resuming measurements in rrc inactive state
US11540250B2 (en) * 2018-08-06 2022-12-27 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for transmitting or receiving signal in mobile communication system
KR20210127071A (en) * 2019-02-13 2021-10-21 광동 오포 모바일 텔레커뮤니케이션즈 코포레이션 리미티드 Bearer configuration method and device, network device
US11877333B2 (en) 2019-02-14 2024-01-16 Lg Electronics Inc. Fast cell setup for dual connectivity
US11122478B2 (en) 2019-03-28 2021-09-14 Qualcomm Incorporated User equipment camping in a virtual cell
CN110225546B (en) * 2019-06-26 2022-04-29 武汉信科移动通信技术有限公司 Method for controlling auxiliary node in double connection and base station
CN114223281A (en) * 2019-08-14 2022-03-22 株式会社Ntt都科摩 Primary node and secondary node
US10659978B1 (en) * 2019-08-23 2020-05-19 Sprint Spectrum L.P. Use of UE type as basis to control whether to use blind addition or rather threshold-based addition when configuring dual connectivity
US11026282B1 (en) 2019-08-23 2021-06-01 Sprint Spectrum L.P. Use of secondary-node beamwidth as basis to control whether to use blind addition or rather threshold-based addition when configuring dual connectivity
CN114205807A (en) * 2020-09-18 2022-03-18 中国移动通信有限公司研究院 Method, device and equipment for terminal-assisted multi-connection and readable storage medium
US11265943B1 (en) 2020-10-13 2022-03-01 Sprint Spectrum L.P. Use of fading as basis to control whether to use blind addition or rather threshold-based addition when configuring dual connectivity
WO2022170545A1 (en) * 2021-02-10 2022-08-18 华为技术有限公司 Radio link reestablishment method and apparatus

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20200077308A1 (en) * 2014-03-21 2020-03-05 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for transmitting/receiving signal in mobile communication system supporting a plurality of carriers
US11019671B2 (en) * 2017-07-27 2021-05-25 FG Innovation Company Limited Methods and related devices for secondary node addition

Family Cites Families (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS6030264B2 (en) 1981-02-10 1985-07-15 株式会社 浅野研究所 Sheet support device for sheet forming machine
JPH0630264B2 (en) * 1986-08-04 1994-04-20 コナツクス バツフアロウ コ−ポレ−シヨン Electrical cable connector
CN106100816B (en) * 2011-11-25 2019-10-22 华为技术有限公司 Realize method, base station and the user equipment of carrier wave polymerization
CN103546898B (en) * 2012-07-11 2017-01-25 电信科学技术研究院 Method and user equipment for differentiating signal sources
WO2014031998A1 (en) 2012-08-23 2014-02-27 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Providing physical layer resources to different serving sites
EP2888906B1 (en) * 2012-08-23 2021-03-31 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Operating with multiple schedulers in a wireless system
EP2944110B1 (en) 2013-01-11 2019-07-24 LG Electronics Inc. Method for transmitting information in wireless communication system
KR101568310B1 (en) * 2013-02-01 2015-11-12 주식회사 케이티 Methods and apparatuses for transmitting user plane data in small cell deployments
EP3313135B1 (en) * 2013-04-05 2020-05-06 Kyocera Corporation Base station coordination for dual connectivity in mobile communications
KR20140133463A (en) * 2013-05-10 2014-11-19 한국전자통신연구원 Method for configuring dual connectivity
JP6190058B2 (en) * 2013-11-01 2017-08-30 エルジー エレクトロニクス インコーポレイティド Method and apparatus for performing a double connection operation in a heterogeneous network
US9585134B2 (en) * 2013-12-13 2017-02-28 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Systems and methods for multi-connectivity operation
CN104969586A (en) * 2013-12-30 2015-10-07 华为技术有限公司 Method for transmitting small data packet, base station, and user equipment
JP6042569B2 (en) 2014-01-31 2016-12-14 京セラ株式会社 Communication control device, master base station, and user terminal
US9980159B2 (en) * 2014-09-26 2018-05-22 Mediatek Inc. RRC re-establishment on secondary eNodeB for dual connectivity
KR102309450B1 (en) * 2014-12-26 2021-10-06 주식회사 엘지유플러스 Method for setting connection between user equipment and base station in communication system supporting carrier aggregation
PT3457722T (en) * 2016-05-12 2023-04-17 Ntt Docomo Inc Wireless communication system and user device
US10367677B2 (en) * 2016-05-13 2019-07-30 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Network architecture, methods, and devices for a wireless communications network
CN107690154B (en) * 2016-08-05 2019-09-17 电信科学技术研究院 A kind of cell configuring method and device
CN109937587B (en) * 2017-03-10 2022-06-14 株式会社Kt Buffer status report transmission method and equipment thereof
US10785817B2 (en) 2017-09-28 2020-09-22 Apple Inc. Signaling radio bearer type 3 (SRB3) and secondary cell group (SCG) failure handling
US11032866B2 (en) * 2017-11-27 2021-06-08 FG Innovation Company Limited Methods and related devices for multi-connectivity

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20200077308A1 (en) * 2014-03-21 2020-03-05 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for transmitting/receiving signal in mobile communication system supporting a plurality of carriers
US11019671B2 (en) * 2017-07-27 2021-05-25 FG Innovation Company Limited Methods and related devices for secondary node addition

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CN110892781A (en) 2020-03-17
KR20200029561A (en) 2020-03-18
EP3659388A4 (en) 2021-04-21
KR102277322B1 (en) 2021-07-13
JP2020527903A (en) 2020-09-10
US11019671B2 (en) 2021-05-25
US10631353B2 (en) 2020-04-21
US20190037625A1 (en) 2019-01-31
JP6984921B2 (en) 2021-12-22
US11665761B2 (en) 2023-05-30
US20210227609A1 (en) 2021-07-22
US20200205214A1 (en) 2020-06-25
WO2019020091A1 (en) 2019-01-31
EP3659388A1 (en) 2020-06-03
CN110892781B (en) 2021-06-08

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US11665761B2 (en) Methods and related devices for secondary node addition
US11032866B2 (en) Methods and related devices for multi-connectivity
US11582651B2 (en) Method and apparatus for conditional PSCell change
US11050610B2 (en) Reporting master node radio link failure
CN111316706B (en) Method, apparatus and system for network assisted transmission with multiple component carriers
US11304122B2 (en) On-demand system information request procedure and error handling
US11589277B2 (en) User equipment and method for sidelink failure management
CN113711629A (en) Access layer management method and related device for sidelink unicast service
US20230180223A1 (en) Data transmission management in radio resource control (rrc) inactive state
EP3432678B1 (en) Device and method of configuring a secondary node and reporting in dual connectivity
US11671901B2 (en) Management of system information block segmentation
WO2023205950A1 (en) Carrier management method and apparatus, device and medium
WO2022194272A1 (en) User equipment and method for mbs service management

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: DOCKETED NEW CASE - READY FOR EXAMINATION

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NON FINAL ACTION MAILED