WO2010063127A1 - Multiple redundant gnss synchronization system - Google Patents

Multiple redundant gnss synchronization system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2010063127A1
WO2010063127A1 PCT/CA2009/001797 CA2009001797W WO2010063127A1 WO 2010063127 A1 WO2010063127 A1 WO 2010063127A1 CA 2009001797 W CA2009001797 W CA 2009001797W WO 2010063127 A1 WO2010063127 A1 WO 2010063127A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
time
base station
system node
internal clock
clock
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/CA2009/001797
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Charles Nicholls
Michel Ouellette
Original Assignee
Nortel Networks Limited
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 Nortel Networks Limited filed Critical Nortel Networks Limited
Priority to JP2011538813A priority Critical patent/JP2012510763A/en
Priority to US13/132,464 priority patent/US20120082188A2/en
Priority to BRPI0923156A priority patent/BRPI0923156A2/en
Priority to RU2011126897/07A priority patent/RU2529181C2/en
Priority to EP09829939A priority patent/EP2361487A1/en
Priority to CN200980156351.9A priority patent/CN102308643B/en
Priority to CA2745369A priority patent/CA2745369A1/en
Publication of WO2010063127A1 publication Critical patent/WO2010063127A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W56/00Synchronisation arrangements
    • H04W56/001Synchronization between nodes
    • H04W56/0015Synchronization between nodes one node acting as a reference for the others
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L7/00Arrangements for synchronising receiver with transmitter
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01SRADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
    • G01S19/00Satellite radio beacon positioning systems; Determining position, velocity or attitude using signals transmitted by such systems
    • G01S19/01Satellite radio beacon positioning systems transmitting time-stamped messages, e.g. GPS [Global Positioning System], GLONASS [Global Orbiting Navigation Satellite System] or GALILEO
    • G01S19/13Receivers
    • G01S19/24Acquisition or tracking or demodulation of signals transmitted by the system
    • G01S19/25Acquisition or tracking or demodulation of signals transmitted by the system involving aiding data received from a cooperating element, e.g. assisted GPS
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • H04B7/24Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts
    • H04B7/26Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts at least one of which is mobile
    • H04B7/2662Arrangements for Wireless System Synchronisation
    • H04B7/2671Arrangements for Wireless Time-Division Multiple Access [TDMA] System Synchronisation
    • H04B7/2678Time synchronisation
    • H04B7/2687Inter base stations synchronisation
    • H04B7/2693Centralised synchronisation, i.e. using external universal time reference, e.g. by using a global positioning system [GPS] or by distributing time reference over the wireline network
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01SRADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
    • G01S19/00Satellite radio beacon positioning systems; Determining position, velocity or attitude using signals transmitted by such systems
    • G01S19/38Determining a navigation solution using signals transmitted by a satellite radio beacon positioning system
    • G01S19/39Determining a navigation solution using signals transmitted by a satellite radio beacon positioning system the satellite radio beacon positioning system transmitting time-stamped messages, e.g. GPS [Global Positioning System], GLONASS [Global Orbiting Navigation Satellite System] or GALILEO
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01SRADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
    • G01S5/00Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more direction or position line determinations; Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more distance determinations
    • G01S5/0009Transmission of position information to remote stations
    • G01S5/0081Transmission between base stations

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to time synchronization in wireless communications.
  • GNSS global navigation satellite system
  • GPS global positioning system
  • Many base station deployments that are reliant on GNSS (global navigation satellite system) systems, such as the GPS (global positioning system) system, for timing synchronization are subject to loss of synchronization as a result of interference in the GPS signalling band or damage to the GPS receiving antenna system at a base station.
  • the base station clock oscillator which is normally disciplined by the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service, will go into a holdover state in which a local oscillator model is used to control the base station clock oscillator to try to maintain timing accuracy while waiting for return of the GPS service.
  • the radio standard under which the base station is operating defines the required time accuracy during holdover.
  • the synchronization accuracy must be maintained within a 10 ⁇ window defining the holdover period.
  • the ability of the base station clock to meet the holdover timing specification is typically dependent on the degree to which the local oscillator model has been trained.
  • interferences such as loss of the GPS service, can occur at the time of deployment of the base station preventing sufficient training of the adaptive algorithms that are used as part of the oscillator model during a holdover event, thereby potentially reducing the available holdover time.
  • the base station quality of service is typically diminished with respect to soft handoff capability because of the relaxed timing accuracy that is typically allowed during a holdover event. Furthermore, if the holdover duration is exceeded, the base station functionality typically continues to decline as the base station clock oscillator drifts further out of synchronization with the external time epoch reference, and thus out of synchronization with the rest of the system that is synchronized to the external time epoch reference, to the point where calls may be dropped during handoff.
  • a method in a system node comprising: providing time information to, and receiving time information from, each of the plurality of base stations; generating a system time reference based on at least some of the time information; and for a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference, providing time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference.
  • generating a system time reference based on at least some of the time information comprises: generating a system time reference based on at least some of the time information received from at least one base station that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
  • providing time information to, and receiving time information from, each of the plurality of base stations comprises: for each base station: providing time stamp information to, and receiving time stamp information from, the base station, wherein the system node generates time stamp information based on the system time reference and the base station generates time stamp information based on its internal clock .
  • generating the system time reference comprises synchronizing a system node clock at the system node with the external time epoch reference based on the at least some of the time information.
  • generating the system time reference comprises: for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, determining a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the system node clock at the system node,- and controlling the system node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with internal clocks synchronized to the external time epoch reference; and generating the system time reference based on an output of the system node clock.
  • generating the system time reference comprises: for each base station, generating a respective system node clock at the system node and controlling the respective system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from the base station to synchronize the respective system node clock with the internal clock of the base station; and generating the system time reference based on an average of the respective system node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference .
  • providing time information to, and receiving time information from, each of the plurality of base stations comprises: providing and receiving the time information using a two-way time transfer protocol
  • providing time synchronization information to a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference comprises : providing time synchronization information to the base station pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
  • the method further comprises; determining that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
  • providing and receiving time information and providing time synchronization information comprises communicating via packet-based communication.
  • a system node comprising: a communication interface configured to provide time information to, and receive time information from, a plurality of base stations, each having an internal clock; a system node clock; and a system node clock controller configured to: control the system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from at least one of the plurality of base stations,- generate a system time reference based on an output of the system node clock; and for a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference, provide time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference.
  • the system node clock controller is configured to control the system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from each base station that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
  • the communication interface is configured to provide time information to, and receive time information from the plurality of base stations by providing and receiving time stamp information, wherein the communication interface is configured to generate time stamp information based on the system time reference and receive time stamp information from each base station generated based on the base station's internal clock.
  • system node clock controller is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing the system node clock with the external time epoch reference based on at least some of the time information received from at least one base station of the plurality of base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with the external epoch time reference.
  • the system node clock controller is configured to: for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the system node clock at the system node; and control the system node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
  • the system node clock comprises a respective system node clock for each base station, and wherein the system node clock controller is configured to: for each base station, control the respective system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from the base station to synchronize the respective system node clock with the internal clock of the base station; and generate the system time reference based on an average of the respective system node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
  • the communication interface comprises a respective two-way time transfer protocol interface for each base station.
  • the system node clock controller is configured to provide the time synchronization information to a base station pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
  • the system node clock controller is configured to determine that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
  • the communication interface is configured to communicate using packet -based communication.
  • a communication system comprising: a system node; and a plurality of base stations, each having an internal clock and a respective communication link with the system node, wherein the system node is configured to: exchange time information with each of the plurality of base stations; generate a system time reference based on at least some of the time information,- and for a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference, provide time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference.
  • the system node is configured to generate the system time reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of the base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
  • system node and the plurality of base stations are configured to exchange time information by exchanging time stamp information, wherein the system node generates time stamp information based on the system time reference and each base station generates time stamp information based on its internal clock.
  • the system node is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing a system node clock at the system node with the external time epoch reference based on the at least some of the time information exchanged with the at least one of the base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
  • the system node is configured to: for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the system node clock at the system node; and control the system node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with internal clocks synchronized to the external time epoch reference; and generate the system time reference based on an output of the system node clock.
  • the system node is configured to: for each base station, generate a respective system node clock at the system node and control the respective system node clock based on at least some of the time information exchanged with the base station to synchronize the respective system node clock with the internal clock of the base station; and generate the system time reference based on an average of the respective system node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
  • system node and the plurality of base stations are configured to exchange the time information using a two-way time transfer protocol .
  • the system node is configured to provide the time synchronization information to a base station of the plurality o£ base stations pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
  • the system node is configured to determine that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
  • system node and the plurality of base stations are configured to communicate using packet-based communication
  • At least one but not all of the plurality of base stations is located such that it is unable to receive a global navigation satellite system GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference.
  • the plurality of base stations comprises a plurality of femto cells, and wherein, for at least one of the plurality of femto cells, the respective communication link between the femto cell and the system node comprises an asynchronous digital subscriber line ADSL communication link.
  • a method in a base station having an internal clock comprising: providing time information to, and receiving time information from, a system node having communication links with a plurality of base stations inclusive of the instant base station; and xn an indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode • receiving time synchronization information from the system node,- and controlling the internal clock of the base .station based on the time synchronization information to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with a system time reference generated by the system node, wherein the system time reference is synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a global navigation satellite system GNSS.
  • the method further comprises: xn a direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode: receiving a GNSS signal from the GNSS system, the GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference; and controlling the internal clock of the base station based on the external time epoch reference to synchronize the internal clock with the external time epoch reference
  • the method further comprises: switching from the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been established; and switching from the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been lost .
  • the method further comprises : sending an external time epoch reference lock status message to the system node indicative of whether the base station is locked to the GNSS signal.
  • exchanging time information with the system node comprises exchanging time information according to a two-way time transfer protocol.
  • communication between the base station and the system node is packet -based.
  • a base station comprising: a communication interface configured for communication with a system node; a local oscillator; and an internal clock controller configured to: control the local oscillator; generate an internal clock based on an output of the local oscillator; provide time information to, and receive time information from, the system node via the communication interface; and in an indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode: receive time synchronization information from the system node via the communication interface; and control the local oscillator based on the time synchronization information to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with a system time reference generated by the system node, wherein the system time reference is synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a global navigation satellite system GNSS.
  • the base station further comprises: a global navigation satellite system GNSS receiver configured to receive a GNSS signal from the GNSS system, the GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference, wherein in a direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode, the internal clock controller is configured to receive a GNSS signal from the GNSS system and control the local oscillator based on the external time epoch reference contained in the GNSS signal to synchronize the internal clock with the external time epoch reference.
  • a global navigation satellite system GNSS receiver configured to receive a GNSS signal from the GNSS system, the GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference, wherein in a direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode, the internal clock controller is configured to receive a GNSS signal from the GNSS system and control the local oscillator based on the external time epoch reference contained in the GNSS signal to synchronize the internal clock with the external time epoch reference.
  • the GNSS receiver comprises an assisted-Global Positioning System A-GPS receiver.
  • the internal clock controller is configured to: switch from the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been established; and switch from the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been lost .
  • the internal clock controller is configured to send an external time epoch reference lock status message via the communication interface to the system node indicative of whether the GNSS receiver is locked to the GNSS signal .
  • the communication interface is configured to provide time information to, and receive time information from, the system node according to a two- way time transfer protocol. In some embodiments, the communication interface is configured for packet -based communication.
  • a primary synchronization reference applied at each base station such as an external time epoch reference provided by a GNSS service.
  • Figure 1 is a schematic diagram of a communication system in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram of another communication system in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
  • Figure 3 is a block diagram of a system node and two base stations configured and arranged in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
  • Figure 4 is a flowchart of an example of a method in a system node in communication with a plurality of base stations, each having an internal clock, according to an embodiment of the invention.
  • GNSS global navigation satellite system
  • the techniques of the present invention enable the comparison of GNSS disciplined base station clocks at a system node that is common to all base stations, such as a backhaul switch node common to all base stations.
  • Some embodiments utilize a comparison of the base station clock phases, i.e. relative time offsets, in addition to lock information messages from GNSS receivers to determine if a base station clock is in time error. If a time error is detected, i.e. the base station clock has lost synchronization with an external time epoch reference provided by the GNSS service, the common switch node provides time synchronization information to the base station that is in time error.
  • the time synchronization information is based on a system time reference generated at the common switch node based on time information communicated with those base stations that are still synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
  • Embodiments of the present invention leverage the existing redundancy of multiple existing GNSS disciplined internal clocks located respectively at a plurality of base stations to potentially increase operational robustness of the base stations against loss of GNSS service.
  • At least some embodiments of the present invention may overcome the current single point of failure mechanism present in many conventional base station GNSS -based architectures by utilizing the availability of surrounding base station clocks that are still synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by the GNSS service, to generate time synchronization information for one or more base stations that have lost the GNSS service and/or are located such that the GNSS service is unavailable, for example, in a tunnel. Accordingly, some embodiments of the present invention may facilitate the extension of system time synchronization to base stations deployed in locations that are unable to directly receive GNSS synchronization signals .
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a communication system loo arranged and configured in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.
  • Communication system 100 includes a common switch node 108 and a plurality of base stations, BTS llOA to BTS HOD.
  • Common switch node 108 is one example of a system node in which embodiments of the present invention might be realized.
  • Common switch node 108 has a respective communication link, 116A to 116D respectively, with each of BTS IIOA to BTS HOD.
  • common switch node 108 is connected to a core network 102 via an optical ring 106 and a routing switch 104. More generally, common switch node 108 may be connected to core network 102 through any backhaul network topology.
  • Each of BTS 11 OA to BTS HOD has a respective internal clock, 112A to 112D respectively.
  • BTS HOA, BTS HOB and BTS HOC each have a respective GNSS receiver,
  • ETS HOD does not have a GNSS receiver.
  • common switch node 108 exchanges time information with each of BTS HOA to BTS HOD via respective communication links 116A to 116D, and generates a system time reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of BTSs HOA to BTS HOD that has its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a GNSS system.
  • common switch node 108 For a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference contained within a GN ⁇ S synchronization signal received via a GNSS receiver, Such as GNSS receivers 114A to 114C, common switch node 108 provides time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference. For example, at the instant depicted in Figure 1, BTS HOA has lost GNSS service due to local GNSS antenna interference, generally indicated at 115 in Figure l. As such, internal clock 112A is likely to lose synchronization with the external time epoch reference provided by the GNSS service.
  • common switch node 108 Upon determining that BTS HOA haa lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference, which may be indicated, for example, by an external time epoch reference lock status message generated by BTS llOA or by a determination at common switch node 108 that the time information received from BTS llOA has deviated from the system time reference generated based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of the base stations that has retained synchronization with the external time epoch reference, common switch node 108 provides BTS llOA with time synchronization information to synchronize internal clock 112A with the system time reference. Generating the system time reference based on at least some of the time information from at least one BTSs that is still synchronized with the external time epoch reference means that the system time reference will be synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
  • BTS 11OJD does not have an GNSS receiver, and thus is incapable of directly receiving a GNSS synchronization signal to discipline internal clock 112D. Accordingly, because BTS HOD is unable to synchronize to the external time epoch reference by receiving a GNSS synchronization signal, common switch node 108 provides time synchronization information to BTS HOD via communication link 116D to synchronize internal clock 112D with the system time reference generated by common switch node 108, which , as noted above, is generated based on time information exchanged with at least one base station, such as BTS HOB and/or BTS HOC, that are still locked to the GNSS synchronization signal and synchronized with the external time epoch reference contained therein, so that the system time reference is synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
  • BTS HOD which is not provided with a GNSS receiver, may be deployed in a location in which it is not possible to directly receive a GNSS synchronization signal, such as a roadway tunnel.
  • common switch node 108 and
  • BTS HOA to HOD are configured to exchange time information via communication links 116A to 116D by exchanging time stamp information, wherein common switch node 108 generates time stamp information based on the system time reference and each base station BTS HOA to HOD generates time stamp information based on its internal clock 112A to 112D.
  • common switch node 108 and BTSs HOA to HOD are configured to exchange time information using a two-way time transfer protocol .
  • common switch node 108 includes a switch node clock (not shown in Figure 1) and common switch node 108 is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing the switch node clock with the external time epoch reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of BTSs
  • common switch node 108 for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, common switch node 108 is configured to determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the switch node clock at the common switch node. Common switch node 108 then controls the switch node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference and generates the system time reference based on an output of the switch node clock.
  • common switch node 108 for each of BTS HOA to HOD, common switch node 108 generates a respective switch node clock (not shown in Figure 1) and controls the respective switch node clock based on at least some of the time information exchanged with the respective base station to synchronize the respective switch node clock with the internal clock of the respective base station. In some cases / common switch node 108 generates the system time reference based on an average of the respective switch node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
  • common switch node 108 may generate the system time reference based on an average of the respective switch node clocks corresponding to BTS HOB and HOC-
  • common switch node 108 and
  • BTSs HOA to HOD are configured to communicate via communication links 116A to 116D respectively using packet - based communication.
  • BTSs HOA to HOD are assumed to be macrocell base transceiver stations.
  • embodiments of the present invention may be implemented in any base station deployment application including, but not limited to WiMAX, AG, CDMA, femtocell, Long Term Evolution (LTE) base stations and combinations thereof.
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a communication system 200 arranged and configured in accordance with another embodiment of the present invention.
  • Communication system 200 includes a common switch node 208 and a plurality of femto cell base stations, PEMTO cells 210A to 210C.
  • Common switch node 208 has a respective communication link, 216A to 216C respectively, with each of FEMTO cells 210A to 210C.
  • communication links 216A to 216C are assumed to be digital subscriber line DSL communication links. in some embodiments, these may be asynchronous digital subscriber line ADSL communication links.
  • Each of FEMTO cells 210A to 210C has a respective internal clock, internal clocks 212A to 212C respectively, and a respective GNSS receiver, which in the illustrated embodiment are implemented as assisted GPS A-GPS receivers 214A to 214C respectively.
  • assisted GPS a GPS receiver not only receives GPS signals from one or more GPS satellites, but also receives assistance information from one or more network servers to assist in acquiring GPS satellite signals and/or processing acquired GPS satellite signals to lessen the processing that is done at the receiver and to potentially improve start up performance of the GPS receiver.
  • assisted GPS A more complete description of assisted GPS is omitted here for the sake of conciseness.
  • common switch node 208 is connected to a core network 202 via a backhaul network communication link.
  • Common switch node 208 includes a DSL access multiplexer DSLAM 207.
  • DSLAM 207 multiplexes information destined for core network 202 that is received via DSL communication links 216A to 216C and transmits it via the backhaul network communication link to the core network 202.
  • the backhaul network communication link may be an optical link.
  • common switch node 208 operates in the same way as common switch node 108 described above with reference to Figure 1 in order to maintain GPS synchronization of FEMTO cells 210A to 210C That is, common switch node 208 exchanges time information with FEMTO cells 210A to 210C and generates a system time reference synchronized with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of FEMTO cells 210A to 210C that is still synchronized with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service.
  • common switch node 208 provides time synchronization information to the femto cell to synchronize the internal clock of the femto cell with the system time reference, which is synchronized to the external time epoch reference, thereby indirectly re-synchronizing the femto cell with the external time epoch reference.
  • common Switch node 208 Upon determining that FEMTO cell 210A has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service, common Switch node 208 provides FEMTO cell 210A with time synchronization information to synchronize internal clock 212A with the system time reference generated at common switch node 208.
  • generating the system time reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of the femto cells that is still synchronized with the external time epoch reference means that the system time reference will be synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
  • Figure 3 is a block diagram of a communication system 300 that includes a common switch node 308 and two base stations BTS 310A and 310B configured and arranged in accordance with an example embodiment of the present invention.
  • Common switch node 308 includes two communication interfaces 322A and 322B, a switch node clock controller 324, two digital to analog converters DACs 326A and 326B, two oscillators 328A and 328B and a backhaul network interface 330.
  • Communication interfaces 322A and 322B are functionally connected to switch node clock controller 324.
  • Switch node clock controller 324 has respective functional connections to DACs 326A and 326B, which are in turn functionally connected to oscillators 328A and 328B respectively.
  • Oscillators 328A and 328B each have a respective output functionally connected to switch node clock controller 324,
  • Network interface 330 provides a communication interface to a core network (not shown in Figure 3 ) .
  • Each of BTSs 310 includes a respective GPS receiver 314A and 314B respectively, a respective internal clock 312A and 312B respectively and a respective communication interface 320A and 320B respectively.
  • Internal clock 312A includes an internal clock controller 318A, a DAC 323A and an oscillator 325A
  • internal clock 312B includes an internal clock controller 318B, a DAC 323B and an oscillator 325B.
  • Internal clock controller 318A is functionally connected to DAC 323A, which is in turn functionally connected to oscillator 325A.
  • An output of oscillator 325A is functionally connected to an input of internal clock controller 318A.
  • GPS receiver 314A is also functionally connected to GPS receiver 314A and communication interface 320A.
  • the elements of BTS 310B are arranged in the same manner as the corresponding elements of BTS 310A.
  • Communication interfaces 320A and 320B of BTS 310A and BTS 310B respectively are functionally connected to communication interface 322A and communication interface 322B of common switch node 308 respectively via communication links 316A and 316B respectively -
  • the internal clock controllers 318A and 318B discipline the oscillators 325A and 325B based on the external time epoch reference contained in GPS synchronization signal received via GPS receivers 314A and 314B respectively. This maintains internal clocks 312A and 312B in time-alignment with the external time epoch reference.
  • internal clock controllers 318A and 318B generate digital control signals, which DACs 323A and 323E convert into analog control signals to apply to analog control inputs of the oscillators 325A and 325B respectively.
  • Communication interfaces 320A and 320B exchange time information with communication interfaces 322A and 322B of common switch node 308 via communication links 316A and 316B respectively.
  • common switch node 308 includes a respective oscillator, oscillators 328A and 328B respectively, for BTSs 310A and 310B.
  • Switch node clock controller 324 generates a respective switch node clock based on an output of each oscillator 328A and 328B.
  • switch node clock controller 324 controls the respective oscillator based on the time information exchanged with the base station to synchronize the respective switch node clock, which the switch node clock controller generates based on the output of the respective oscillator, with the internal clock of the base station.
  • Switch node clock controller 324 also generates a system time reference based on an average of the respective switch node clocks corresponding to those base stations that remain synchronized to the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service. For example, while both BTS 310A and BTS 320B are receiving GPS synchronization signals such that their internal clocks 312A and 312B respectively are synchronized with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service, switch node clock controller 324 synchronizes oscillators 328A and 328B with oscillators 325A and 325B respectively, and generates a system time reference as an average of the switch node clocks generated based on the outputs of oscillators 328A and 328B.
  • switch node clock controller 324 If, for example, BTS 310A loses GPS service, while GPS service is maintained at BTS 310B, then switch node clock controller 324 generates the system time reference based on the switch node clock generated based on the output of oscillator 328B and sends time synchronization information to BTS 310A via communication link 316A for use by internal clock controller 318A to control oscillator 325A so that internal clock 312A is synchronized with the system time reference generated at common switch node 308, Because the system time reference generated at common switch node 308 is based on an output of oscillator 328B, which is synchronized to oscillator 325B through the exchange of time information between switch node 308 and BTS 310B, synchronization of oscillator 325A in BTS 310A with the system time reference will also synchronize oscillator 325A with the external time epoch reference, as long as BTS 310B continues to receive GPS service and oscillator 310B is synchronized
  • the communication interfaces 320A, 320B, 322A and 322B are configured to exchange time information by exchanging time stamp information.
  • the communication interfaces 322A and 322B are configured to generate time stamp information based on the switch node clocks generated from outputs of the oscillators 328A and 328B respectively and receive time stamp information from the communication interfaces 320A and 320B of BTSs 310A and 310B respectively, which are generated based on the internal clocks 312A and 312B respectively.
  • common switch node 308 includes a respective oscillator for each base station. In another embodiment, common switch node 308 includes only one oscillator, regardless of the number of base stations. In such an embodiment, switch node clock controller 324 is configured to generate a switch node clock from an output of that oscillator. Furthermore, switch node clock controller 324 is configured to generate the system time reference based on an output of the switch node clock.
  • the communication interfaces 322A and 322B are configured to exchange time information with the plurality of base stations by exchanging time stamp information, wherein the communication interfaces 322A and 322B are configured to generate time stamp information based on the system time reference generated by switch node clock controller 324 and receive time stamp information from each base station generated based on the base station's internal clock.
  • the switch node clock controller 324 is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing the switch node clock with the external time epoch reference based on. at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one base station that is still synchronized with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service.
  • switch node clock controller 324 is configured to determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the switch node clock at the common switch node and control the switch node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
  • the communication interfaces are configured to communicate with the communication interfaces.
  • 322A, 322B, 320A and 320B are two-way time transfer protocol interfaces.
  • the internal clock controller 318A and 318B of BTSs 310A and 310B are configured to send an external time epoch reference lock status message via their respective communication interface 320A and 320B to common switch node 308 indicative of whether their respective GPS receiver 314A and 314B is locked to a GPS signal .
  • switch node clock controller 324 is configured to provide the time synchronization information to a base station pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
  • switch node clock controller 324 is configured to determine that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
  • BTSs 310A and 3lOB are configured to operate m two modes: an indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode and direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode.
  • the internal clock controllers 318A and 318B are configured to receive time synchronization information from common switch node 308 and control their respective local oscillators based on the time synchronization information to synchronize their respective internal clocks with the system time reference generated by the common switch node.
  • the internal clock controllers 318A and 318B are configured to control their local oscillator based on the external time epoch reference contained in a GPS signal received by their respective GPS receivers to synchronize their respective internal clocks with the external time epoch reference.
  • internal clock controllers 318A and 318B are configured to switch from the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GPS signal has been established.
  • 318A and 318B are configured to switch from the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been lost.
  • the time information exchanged between common switch node 308 and BTSs 310A and 310B may be time stamp information generated based on the oscillators 325A and 325B of BTSs 310A and 310B respectively and time stamp information generated based on outputs of oscillators 328A and 328B of common switch node 308.
  • communication interfaces 322A, 322B, 320A and 320B are implemented as MAC/PHY interfaces operated in accordance with a two-way time transfer protocol, such as that defined in IEEE Standard 1588 for synchronizing clocks.
  • IEEE Standard 1588 is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
  • the oscillators 328A and 328B are implemented as numerical oscillators, which may be implemented, for example, in a logic device such as an FPGA or any other hardware/firmware implementation, or combination of hardware/firmware and software implementation, suitable for implementing the logical operations of a numerical oscillator.
  • the functionality of switch node clock controller 324 may be implemented in the same or different hardware/ firmware or combination of hardware/firmware and software implementation .
  • the system node provides time information to, and receives time information from, each of the plurality of base stations. This may, for example, involve exchanging time stamps with each of the base stations.
  • the switch node and the base stations may exchange time stamp information using a two-way time transfer protocol.
  • the backhaul switch node generates a system time reference that is synchronized to an external time epoch reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one base station of the plurality of base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a GNSS service.
  • the backhaul switch node provides time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference, which is synchronized, with the external time epoch reference.
  • the backhaul switch node uses the GNSS synchronized internal clock of at least one base station that is synchronized with the external time epoch signal, to generate time synchronization information for a base station that has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
  • the device elements and circuits are connected to each other as shown in the Figures, for the sake of simplicity.
  • elements, circuits, etc. may be connected directly to each other.
  • elements, circuits etc. may be connected indirectly to each other through other elements, circuits, etc., necessary for operation of the devices or apparatus.
  • the elements and circuits are directly or indirectly coupled with or connected to each other.
  • some embodiments may compensate for the asymmetric delay that can potentially be introduced by an intervening node that is located between a base station and the system node.
  • An asymmetric delay in exchange of time information between the system node and a base station i.e. a difference in the time taken to send time information from the base station to the system node relative to the time taken to send time information from the system node to the base station, can potentially lead to a degradation in the time accuracy of the synchronization that is achievable.
  • some degree of asymmetry may be tolerated without any need to compensate for it.
  • the asymmetry introduced by an intervening node may be modelled at the system node to account for the asymmetry when generating the system time reference and providing the time synchronization information.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Radar, Positioning & Navigation (AREA)
  • Remote Sensing (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)
  • Synchronisation In Digital Transmission Systems (AREA)
  • Time-Division Multiplex Systems (AREA)
  • Electric Clocks (AREA)
  • Treating Waste Gases (AREA)

Abstract

Methods and apparatus are provided for multiple redundant global navigation satellite system GNSS synchronization of a plurality of base stations via a system node that is in communication with the plurality of base stations. At the system node, time information is provided to and received from the plurality of base stations and a system time reference is generated based on at least some of the time information, such that the system time reference is synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by the GNSS. If a base station is unable to receive the GNSS service, the system node provides time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the base station with the system time reference, which itself is synchronized to the external time epoch reference provided by the GNSS service.

Description

MULTIPLE REDUNDANT GNSS SYNCHRONIZATION SYSTEM
Related Application
The present patent application claims the benefit of United States Provisional Patent Application No. 61/119,628 filed December 3, 2008, the entire content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to time synchronization in wireless communications.
Background
Many base station deployments that are reliant on GNSS (global navigation satellite system) systems, such as the GPS (global positioning system) system, for timing synchronization are subject to loss of synchronization as a result of interference in the GPS signalling band or damage to the GPS receiving antenna system at a base station. In many conventional systems, in the event that GPS service as interrupted, the base station clock oscillator, which is normally disciplined by the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service, will go into a holdover state in which a local oscillator model is used to control the base station clock oscillator to try to maintain timing accuracy while waiting for return of the GPS service.
In many cases, the radio standard under which the base station is operating defines the required time accuracy during holdover. For example, in 3GPP2, the synchronization accuracy must be maintained within a 10 με window defining the holdover period.
The ability of the base station clock to meet the holdover timing specification is typically dependent on the degree to which the local oscillator model has been trained. In some instances, interferences, such as loss of the GPS service, can occur at the time of deployment of the base station preventing sufficient training of the adaptive algorithms that are used as part of the oscillator model during a holdover event, thereby potentially reducing the available holdover time.
Even in the event that the holdover specification can be met, the base station quality of service is typically diminished with respect to soft handoff capability because of the relaxed timing accuracy that is typically allowed during a holdover event. Furthermore, if the holdover duration is exceeded, the base station functionality typically continues to decline as the base station clock oscillator drifts further out of synchronization with the external time epoch reference, and thus out of synchronization with the rest of the system that is synchronized to the external time epoch reference, to the point where calls may be dropped during handoff.
Summary of the Invention
According to one broad aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method in a system node, the system node in communication with a plurality of base stations each having an internal clock, the method comprising: providing time information to, and receiving time information from, each of the plurality of base stations; generating a system time reference based on at least some of the time information; and for a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference, providing time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference.
In some embodiments, generating a system time reference based on at least some of the time information comprises: generating a system time reference based on at least some of the time information received from at least one base station that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, providing time information to, and receiving time information from, each of the plurality of base stations comprises: for each base station: providing time stamp information to, and receiving time stamp information from, the base station, wherein the system node generates time stamp information based on the system time reference and the base station generates time stamp information based on its internal clock .
In some embodiments, generating the system time reference comprises synchronizing a system node clock at the system node with the external time epoch reference based on the at least some of the time information.
In some embodiments, generating the system time reference comprises: for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, determining a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the system node clock at the system node,- and controlling the system node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with internal clocks synchronized to the external time epoch reference; and generating the system time reference based on an output of the system node clock.
In some embodiments, generating the system time reference comprises: for each base station, generating a respective system node clock at the system node and controlling the respective system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from the base station to synchronize the respective system node clock with the internal clock of the base station; and generating the system time reference based on an average of the respective system node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference .
In some embodiments, providing time information to, and receiving time information from, each of the plurality of base stations comprises: providing and receiving the time information using a two-way time transfer protocol
In some embodiments, providing time synchronization information to a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference comprises : providing time synchronization information to the base station pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the method further comprises; determining that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
In some embodiments, providing and receiving time information and providing time synchronization information comprises communicating via packet-based communication.
According to another broad aspect of the present invention, there is provided a system node comprising: a communication interface configured to provide time information to, and receive time information from, a plurality of base stations, each having an internal clock; a system node clock; and a system node clock controller configured to: control the system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from at least one of the plurality of base stations,- generate a system time reference based on an output of the system node clock; and for a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference, provide time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference. In some embodiments, the system node clock controller is configured to control the system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from each base station that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the communication interface is configured to provide time information to, and receive time information from the plurality of base stations by providing and receiving time stamp information, wherein the communication interface is configured to generate time stamp information based on the system time reference and receive time stamp information from each base station generated based on the base station's internal clock.
In some embodiments, the system node clock controller is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing the system node clock with the external time epoch reference based on at least some of the time information received from at least one base station of the plurality of base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with the external epoch time reference.
In some embodiments, the system node clock controller is configured to: for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the system node clock at the system node; and control the system node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference. In some embodiments, the system node clock comprises a respective system node clock for each base station, and wherein the system node clock controller is configured to: for each base station, control the respective system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from the base station to synchronize the respective system node clock with the internal clock of the base station; and generate the system time reference based on an average of the respective system node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the communication interface comprises a respective two-way time transfer protocol interface for each base station.
In some embodiments, the system node clock controller is configured to provide the time synchronization information to a base station pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the system node clock controller is configured to determine that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference. In some embodiments, the communication interface is configured to communicate using packet -based communication.
According to yet another broad aspect of the present invention, there is provided a communication system comprising: a system node; and a plurality of base stations, each having an internal clock and a respective communication link with the system node, wherein the system node is configured to: exchange time information with each of the plurality of base stations; generate a system time reference based on at least some of the time information,- and for a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference, provide time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference.
In some embodiments, the system node is configured to generate the system time reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of the base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the system node and the plurality of base stations are configured to exchange time information by exchanging time stamp information, wherein the system node generates time stamp information based on the system time reference and each base station generates time stamp information based on its internal clock.
In some embodiments, the system node is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing a system node clock at the system node with the external time epoch reference based on the at least some of the time information exchanged with the at least one of the base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the system node is configured to: for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the system node clock at the system node; and control the system node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with internal clocks synchronized to the external time epoch reference; and generate the system time reference based on an output of the system node clock.
In some embodiments, the system node is configured to: for each base station, generate a respective system node clock at the system node and control the respective system node clock based on at least some of the time information exchanged with the base station to synchronize the respective system node clock with the internal clock of the base station; and generate the system time reference based on an average of the respective system node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the system node and the plurality of base stations are configured to exchange the time information using a two-way time transfer protocol . X O
In some embodiments, the system node is configured to provide the time synchronization information to a base station of the plurality o£ base stations pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the system node is configured to determine that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
In some embodiments, the system node and the plurality of base stations are configured to communicate using packet-based communication,
In some embodiments, at least one but not all of the plurality of base stations is located such that it is unable to receive a global navigation satellite system GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the plurality of base stations comprises a plurality of femto cells, and wherein, for at least one of the plurality of femto cells, the respective communication link between the femto cell and the system node comprises an asynchronous digital subscriber line ADSL communication link.
According tσ a further broad aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method in a base station having an internal clock, the method comprising: providing time information to, and receiving time information from, a system node having communication links with a plurality of base stations inclusive of the instant base station; and xn an indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode receiving time synchronization information from the system node,- and controlling the internal clock of the base .station based on the time synchronization information to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with a system time reference generated by the system node, wherein the system time reference is synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a global navigation satellite system GNSS.
In some embodiments, the method further comprises: xn a direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode: receiving a GNSS signal from the GNSS system, the GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference; and controlling the internal clock of the base station based on the external time epoch reference to synchronize the internal clock with the external time epoch reference
In some embodiments, the method further comprises: switching from the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been established; and switching from the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been lost . In some embodiments, the method further comprises : sending an external time epoch reference lock status message to the system node indicative of whether the base station is locked to the GNSS signal.
In some embodiments, exchanging time information with the system node comprises exchanging time information according to a two-way time transfer protocol.
In some embodiments, communication between the base station and the system node is packet -based.
According to still another broad aspect of the present invention, there is provided a base station comprising: a communication interface configured for communication with a system node; a local oscillator; and an internal clock controller configured to: control the local oscillator; generate an internal clock based on an output of the local oscillator; provide time information to, and receive time information from, the system node via the communication interface; and in an indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode: receive time synchronization information from the system node via the communication interface; and control the local oscillator based on the time synchronization information to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with a system time reference generated by the system node, wherein the system time reference is synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a global navigation satellite system GNSS.
In some embodiments, the base station further comprises: a global navigation satellite system GNSS receiver configured to receive a GNSS signal from the GNSS system, the GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference, wherein in a direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode, the internal clock controller is configured to receive a GNSS signal from the GNSS system and control the local oscillator based on the external time epoch reference contained in the GNSS signal to synchronize the internal clock with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the GNSS receiver comprises an assisted-Global Positioning System A-GPS receiver.
In some embodiments, the internal clock controller is configured to: switch from the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been established; and switch from the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been lost .
In some embodiments, the internal clock controller is configured to send an external time epoch reference lock status message via the communication interface to the system node indicative of whether the GNSS receiver is locked to the GNSS signal .
In some embodiments, the communication interface is configured to provide time information to, and receive time information from, the system node according to a two- way time transfer protocol. In some embodiments, the communication interface is configured for packet -based communication.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided:
a technique to enable base transceiver stations to communicate synchronization and syntonization information over a backhaul connection;
a technique to use synchronization alarm signals from base transceiver stations to transfer the alarmed base transceiver station clock reference to a network clock signal delivered from an alternate functional base transceiver station so as to maintain system synchronization;
a technique to compare the time alignment of an array of base station clocks at a common node in the backhaul network of the base transceiver stations ;
a technique of using the comparison of N base station clocks in phase at a common network node for the purpose of identifying clock signals that are not time aligned to a system time defined by an external time epoch reference such as GPS; and
a technique to transfer synchronization information over the backhaul between N base transceiver stations for the purpose of maintaining synchronization information of the base transceiver stations in the event that one to N-I base transceiver stations lose synchronization to a primary synchronization reference applied at each base station, such as an external time epoch reference provided by a GNSS service.
Other aspects and features of the present invention will become apparent, to those ordinarily skilled in the art, upon review of the following description of the specific embodiments of the invention.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Embodiments of the invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a schematic diagram of a communication system in accordance with an embodiment of the invention;
Figure 2 is a block diagram of another communication system in accordance with an embodiment of the invention;
Figure 3 is a block diagram of a system node and two base stations configured and arranged in accordance with an embodiment of the invention; and
Figure 4 is a flowchart of an example of a method in a system node in communication with a plurality of base stations, each having an internal clock, according to an embodiment of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
In the following detailed description of sample embodiments, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, which form a part hereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration specific sample embodiments in which the present invention may be practised. These embodiments are described in sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention/ and it is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and that logical, mechanical, electrical, and other changes may be made without departing from the scope of the invention. The following detailed description is, therefore, not to be taken in a limiting sense, and the scope is defined by the appended claims.
Various methods and apparatus are provided for multiple redundant global navigation satellite system (GNSS) synchronization of base stations in a communication system.
The techniques of the present invention enable the comparison of GNSS disciplined base station clocks at a system node that is common to all base stations, such as a backhaul switch node common to all base stations. Some embodiments utilize a comparison of the base station clock phases, i.e. relative time offsets, in addition to lock information messages from GNSS receivers to determine if a base station clock is in time error. If a time error is detected, i.e. the base station clock has lost synchronization with an external time epoch reference provided by the GNSS service, the common switch node provides time synchronization information to the base station that is in time error. The time synchronization information is based on a system time reference generated at the common switch node based on time information communicated with those base stations that are still synchronized with the external time epoch reference. Embodiments of the present invention leverage the existing redundancy of multiple existing GNSS disciplined internal clocks located respectively at a plurality of base stations to potentially increase operational robustness of the base stations against loss of GNSS service. In this manner, at least some embodiments of the present invention may overcome the current single point of failure mechanism present in many conventional base station GNSS -based architectures by utilizing the availability of surrounding base station clocks that are still synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by the GNSS service, to generate time synchronization information for one or more base stations that have lost the GNSS service and/or are located such that the GNSS service is unavailable, for example, in a tunnel. Accordingly, some embodiments of the present invention may facilitate the extension of system time synchronization to base stations deployed in locations that are unable to directly receive GNSS synchronization signals .
An example of a communication system arranged and configured in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention will now be described with reference to Figure 1.
Figure 1 is a block diagram of a communication system loo arranged and configured in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. Communication system 100 includes a common switch node 108 and a plurality of base stations, BTS llOA to BTS HOD. Common switch node 108 is one example of a system node in which embodiments of the present invention might be realized. Common switch node 108 has a respective communication link, 116A to 116D respectively, with each of BTS IIOA to BTS HOD.
In the embodiment illustrated in Figure 1, common switch node 108 is connected to a core network 102 via an optical ring 106 and a routing switch 104. More generally, common switch node 108 may be connected to core network 102 through any backhaul network topology.
Each of BTS 11 OA to BTS HOD has a respective internal clock, 112A to 112D respectively. BTS HOA, BTS HOB and BTS HOC each have a respective GNSS receiver,
114A, 114B and 114C respectively. ETS HOD does not have a GNSS receiver.
In operation, common switch node 108 exchanges time information with each of BTS HOA to BTS HOD via respective communication links 116A to 116D, and generates a system time reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of BTSs HOA to BTS HOD that has its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a GNSS system.
For a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference contained within a GNΞS synchronization signal received via a GNSS receiver, Such as GNSS receivers 114A to 114C, common switch node 108 provides time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference. For example, at the instant depicted in Figure 1, BTS HOA has lost GNSS service due to local GNSS antenna interference, generally indicated at 115 in Figure l. As such, internal clock 112A is likely to lose synchronization with the external time epoch reference provided by the GNSS service. Upon determining that BTS HOA haa lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference, which may be indicated, for example, by an external time epoch reference lock status message generated by BTS llOA or by a determination at common switch node 108 that the time information received from BTS llOA has deviated from the system time reference generated based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of the base stations that has retained synchronization with the external time epoch reference, common switch node 108 provides BTS llOA with time synchronization information to synchronize internal clock 112A with the system time reference. Generating the system time reference based on at least some of the time information from at least one BTSs that is still synchronized with the external time epoch reference means that the system time reference will be synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
Furthermore, it is noted that BTS 11OJD does not have an GNSS receiver, and thus is incapable of directly receiving a GNSS synchronization signal to discipline internal clock 112D. Accordingly, because BTS HOD is unable to synchronize to the external time epoch reference by receiving a GNSS synchronization signal, common switch node 108 provides time synchronization information to BTS HOD via communication link 116D to synchronize internal clock 112D with the system time reference generated by common switch node 108, which , as noted above, is generated based on time information exchanged with at least one base station, such as BTS HOB and/or BTS HOC, that are still locked to the GNSS synchronization signal and synchronized with the external time epoch reference contained therein, so that the system time reference is synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, BTS HOD, which is not provided with a GNSS receiver, may be deployed in a location in which it is not possible to directly receive a GNSS synchronization signal, such as a roadway tunnel.
In some embodiments, common switch node 108 and
BTS HOA to HOD are configured to exchange time information via communication links 116A to 116D by exchanging time stamp information, wherein common switch node 108 generates time stamp information based on the system time reference and each base station BTS HOA to HOD generates time stamp information based on its internal clock 112A to 112D. In some embodiments, common switch node 108 and BTSs HOA to HOD are configured to exchange time information using a two-way time transfer protocol .
In some embodiments, common switch node 108 includes a switch node clock (not shown in Figure 1) and common switch node 108 is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing the switch node clock with the external time epoch reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of BTSs
HOA to HOD. In some cases, for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, common switch node 108 is configured to determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the switch node clock at the common switch node. Common switch node 108 then controls the switch node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference and generates the system time reference based on an output of the switch node clock.
In some embodiments, for each of BTS HOA to HOD, common switch node 108 generates a respective switch node clock (not shown in Figure 1) and controls the respective switch node clock based on at least some of the time information exchanged with the respective base station to synchronize the respective switch node clock with the internal clock of the respective base station. In some cases / common switch node 108 generates the system time reference based on an average of the respective switch node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference. For example, assuming that BTS HOB and BTS HOC are currently receiving GNSS service via their respective GNSS receivers 114B and 114C, then common switch node 108 may generate the system time reference based on an average of the respective switch node clocks corresponding to BTS HOB and HOC-
In some embodiments, common switch node 108 and
BTSs HOA to HOD are configured to communicate via communication links 116A to 116D respectively using packet - based communication. In the example embodiment illustrated m Figure 1, BTSs HOA to HOD are assumed to be macrocell base transceiver stations. However, more generally, embodiments of the present invention may be implemented in any base station deployment application including, but not limited to WiMAX, AG, CDMA, femtocell, Long Term Evolution (LTE) base stations and combinations thereof.
An example of a communication system that includes femto cell base stations in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention will now be described with reference to Figure 2.
Figure 2 is a block diagram of a communication system 200 arranged and configured in accordance with another embodiment of the present invention. Communication system 200 includes a common switch node 208 and a plurality of femto cell base stations, PEMTO cells 210A to 210C. Common switch node 208 has a respective communication link, 216A to 216C respectively, with each of FEMTO cells 210A to 210C. In the embodiment illustrated in Figure 2, communication links 216A to 216C are assumed to be digital subscriber line DSL communication links. in some embodiments, these may be asynchronous digital subscriber line ADSL communication links.
Each of FEMTO cells 210A to 210C has a respective internal clock, internal clocks 212A to 212C respectively, and a respective GNSS receiver, which in the illustrated embodiment are implemented as assisted GPS A-GPS receivers 214A to 214C respectively. In an assisted GPS system a GPS receiver not only receives GPS signals from one or more GPS satellites, but also receives assistance information from one or more network servers to assist in acquiring GPS satellite signals and/or processing acquired GPS satellite signals to lessen the processing that is done at the receiver and to potentially improve start up performance of the GPS receiver. A more complete description of assisted GPS is omitted here for the sake of conciseness.
In the embodiment illustrated in Figure 2, common switch node 208 is connected to a core network 202 via a backhaul network communication link. Common switch node 208 includes a DSL access multiplexer DSLAM 207. DSLAM 207 multiplexes information destined for core network 202 that is received via DSL communication links 216A to 216C and transmits it via the backhaul network communication link to the core network 202. In some embodiments, the backhaul network communication link may be an optical link.
In operation, common switch node 208 operates in the same way as common switch node 108 described above with reference to Figure 1 in order to maintain GPS synchronization of FEMTO cells 210A to 210C That is, common switch node 208 exchanges time information with FEMTO cells 210A to 210C and generates a system time reference synchronized with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of FEMTO cells 210A to 210C that is still synchronized with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service. If a femto cell loses synchronization with the external time epoch reference, common switch node 208 provides time synchronization information to the femto cell to synchronize the internal clock of the femto cell with the system time reference, which is synchronized to the external time epoch reference, thereby indirectly re-synchronizing the femto cell with the external time epoch reference.
In the instant depicted in Figure 2, PEMTO cell
210 is unable to receive GPS service due to local GPS antenna interference generally indicated at 215. Upon determining that FEMTO cell 210A has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service, common Switch node 208 provides FEMTO cell 210A with time synchronization information to synchronize internal clock 212A with the system time reference generated at common switch node 208. As noted above, generating the system time reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of the femto cells that is still synchronized with the external time epoch reference means that the system time reference will be synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
A discussion of components that may be included as part of a common switch node and a base station in accordance with an example embodiment of the present invention will now be provided with reference to Figure 3.
Figure 3 is a block diagram of a communication system 300 that includes a common switch node 308 and two base stations BTS 310A and 310B configured and arranged in accordance with an example embodiment of the present invention.
Common switch node 308 includes two communication interfaces 322A and 322B, a switch node clock controller 324, two digital to analog converters DACs 326A and 326B, two oscillators 328A and 328B and a backhaul network interface 330. Communication interfaces 322A and 322B are functionally connected to switch node clock controller 324. Switch node clock controller 324 has respective functional connections to DACs 326A and 326B, which are in turn functionally connected to oscillators 328A and 328B respectively. Oscillators 328A and 328B each have a respective output functionally connected to switch node clock controller 324, Network interface 330 provides a communication interface to a core network (not shown in Figure 3 ) .
Each of BTSs 310 includes a respective GPS receiver 314A and 314B respectively, a respective internal clock 312A and 312B respectively and a respective communication interface 320A and 320B respectively. Internal clock 312A includes an internal clock controller 318A, a DAC 323A and an oscillator 325A, while internal clock 312B includes an internal clock controller 318B, a DAC 323B and an oscillator 325B.
Internal clock controller 318A is functionally connected to DAC 323A, which is in turn functionally connected to oscillator 325A. An output of oscillator 325A is functionally connected to an input of internal clock controller 318A. GPS receiver 314A is also functionally connected to GPS receiver 314A and communication interface 320A. The elements of BTS 310B are arranged in the same manner as the corresponding elements of BTS 310A. Communication interfaces 320A and 320B of BTS 310A and BTS 310B respectively are functionally connected to communication interface 322A and communication interface 322B of common switch node 308 respectively via communication links 316A and 316B respectively -
In operation, when BTS 310A and 310B are both receiving GPS synchronization signals and are synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service, the internal clock controllers 318A and 318B discipline the oscillators 325A and 325B based on the external time epoch reference contained in GPS synchronization signal received via GPS receivers 314A and 314B respectively. This maintains internal clocks 312A and 312B in time-alignment with the external time epoch reference. In the illustrated embodiment, internal clock controllers 318A and 318B generate digital control signals, which DACs 323A and 323E convert into analog control signals to apply to analog control inputs of the oscillators 325A and 325B respectively.
Communication interfaces 320A and 320B exchange time information with communication interfaces 322A and 322B of common switch node 308 via communication links 316A and 316B respectively.
In the illustrated embodiments, common switch node 308 includes a respective oscillator, oscillators 328A and 328B respectively, for BTSs 310A and 310B. Switch node clock controller 324 generates a respective switch node clock based on an output of each oscillator 328A and 328B. For each base station, switch node clock controller 324 controls the respective oscillator based on the time information exchanged with the base station to synchronize the respective switch node clock, which the switch node clock controller generates based on the output of the respective oscillator, with the internal clock of the base station. Switch node clock controller 324 also generates a system time reference based on an average of the respective switch node clocks corresponding to those base stations that remain synchronized to the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service. For example, while both BTS 310A and BTS 320B are receiving GPS synchronization signals such that their internal clocks 312A and 312B respectively are synchronized with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service, switch node clock controller 324 synchronizes oscillators 328A and 328B with oscillators 325A and 325B respectively, and generates a system time reference as an average of the switch node clocks generated based on the outputs of oscillators 328A and 328B.
If, for example, BTS 310A loses GPS service, while GPS service is maintained at BTS 310B, then switch node clock controller 324 generates the system time reference based on the switch node clock generated based on the output of oscillator 328B and sends time synchronization information to BTS 310A via communication link 316A for use by internal clock controller 318A to control oscillator 325A so that internal clock 312A is synchronized with the system time reference generated at common switch node 308, Because the system time reference generated at common switch node 308 is based on an output of oscillator 328B, which is synchronized to oscillator 325B through the exchange of time information between switch node 308 and BTS 310B, synchronization of oscillator 325A in BTS 310A with the system time reference will also synchronize oscillator 325A with the external time epoch reference, as long as BTS 310B continues to receive GPS service and oscillator 310B is synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the communication interfaces 320A, 320B, 322A and 322B are configured to exchange time information by exchanging time stamp information. For example, in some embodiments the communication interfaces 322A and 322B are configured to generate time stamp information based on the switch node clocks generated from outputs of the oscillators 328A and 328B respectively and receive time stamp information from the communication interfaces 320A and 320B of BTSs 310A and 310B respectively, which are generated based on the internal clocks 312A and 312B respectively.
In Figure 3, common switch node 308 includes a respective oscillator for each base station. In another embodiment, common switch node 308 includes only one oscillator, regardless of the number of base stations. In such an embodiment, switch node clock controller 324 is configured to generate a switch node clock from an output of that oscillator. Furthermore, switch node clock controller 324 is configured to generate the system time reference based on an output of the switch node clock.
In some embodiments, the communication interfaces 322A and 322B are configured to exchange time information with the plurality of base stations by exchanging time stamp information, wherein the communication interfaces 322A and 322B are configured to generate time stamp information based on the system time reference generated by switch node clock controller 324 and receive time stamp information from each base station generated based on the base station's internal clock.
In some embodiments, the switch node clock controller 324 is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing the switch node clock with the external time epoch reference based on. at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one base station that is still synchronized with the external time epoch reference provided by the GPS service.
In some embodiments, for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, switch node clock controller 324 is configured to determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the switch node clock at the common switch node and control the switch node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, the communication interfaces
322A, 322B, 320A and 320B are two-way time transfer protocol interfaces.
In some embodiments, the internal clock controller 318A and 318B of BTSs 310A and 310B are configured to send an external time epoch reference lock status message via their respective communication interface 320A and 320B to common switch node 308 indicative of whether their respective GPS receiver 314A and 314B is locked to a GPS signal . In some embodiments, switch node clock controller 324 is configured to provide the time synchronization information to a base station pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, switch node clock controller 324 is configured to determine that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
BTSs 310A and 3lOB are configured to operate m two modes: an indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode and direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode.
In the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode, the internal clock controllers 318A and 318B are configured to receive time synchronization information from common switch node 308 and control their respective local oscillators based on the time synchronization information to synchronize their respective internal clocks with the system time reference generated by the common switch node.
In the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode, the internal clock controllers 318A and 318B are configured to control their local oscillator based on the external time epoch reference contained in a GPS signal received by their respective GPS receivers to synchronize their respective internal clocks with the external time epoch reference.
In some embodiments, internal clock controllers 318A and 318B are configured to switch from the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GPS signal has been established.
In some embodiments, internal clock controllers
318A and 318B are configured to switch from the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been lost.
In some embodiments, the time information exchanged between common switch node 308 and BTSs 310A and 310B may be time stamp information generated based on the oscillators 325A and 325B of BTSs 310A and 310B respectively and time stamp information generated based on outputs of oscillators 328A and 328B of common switch node 308.
In some embodiments, communication interfaces 322A, 322B, 320A and 320B are implemented as MAC/PHY interfaces operated in accordance with a two-way time transfer protocol, such as that defined in IEEE Standard 1588 for synchronizing clocks. The IEEE Standard 1588 is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
In some embodiments, the oscillators 328A and 328B are implemented as numerical oscillators, which may be implemented, for example, in a logic device such as an FPGA or any other hardware/firmware implementation, or combination of hardware/firmware and software implementation, suitable for implementing the logical operations of a numerical oscillator. In some embodiments, the functionality of switch node clock controller 324 may be implemented in the same or different hardware/ firmware or combination of hardware/firmware and software implementation .
An example of a method in a system node, such a backhaul switch node, for multiple redundant GNSS synchronization of a plurality of base stations in communication with the system node will now be described with reference to the flowchart of Figure 4.
At block 401, the system node provides time information to, and receives time information from, each of the plurality of base stations. This may, for example, involve exchanging time stamps with each of the base stations. In some embodiments, the switch node and the base stations may exchange time stamp information using a two-way time transfer protocol.
At block 402, the backhaul switch node generates a system time reference that is synchronized to an external time epoch reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one base station of the plurality of base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a GNSS service. At block 403, for a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference, the backhaul switch node provides time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference, which is synchronized, with the external time epoch reference. In this way, the backhaul switch node uses the GNSS synchronized internal clock of at least one base station that is synchronized with the external time epoch signal, to generate time synchronization information for a base station that has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
In the embodiments described above, the device elements and circuits are connected to each other as shown in the Figures, for the sake of simplicity. In practical applications of the present invention, elements, circuits, etc. may be connected directly to each other. As well, elements, circuits etc. may be connected indirectly to each other through other elements, circuits, etc., necessary for operation of the devices or apparatus. Thus, in actual configuration of devices and apparatus, the elements and circuits are directly or indirectly coupled with or connected to each other.
Although the embodiments discussed herein have assumed a direct connection between each base station and the system node, some embodiments may compensate for the asymmetric delay that can potentially be introduced by an intervening node that is located between a base station and the system node. An asymmetric delay in exchange of time information between the system node and a base station, i.e. a difference in the time taken to send time information from the base station to the system node relative to the time taken to send time information from the system node to the base station, can potentially lead to a degradation in the time accuracy of the synchronization that is achievable. Depending on the required time accuracy, some degree of asymmetry may be tolerated without any need to compensate for it. In some embodiments, the asymmetry introduced by an intervening node may be modelled at the system node to account for the asymmetry when generating the system time reference and providing the time synchronization information.
The foregoing description includes many detailed and specific embodiments that are provided by way of example only, and should not be construed as limiting the scope of the present invention. Alterations, modifications and variations may be effected to the particular embodiments by those of skill in the art without departing from the scope of the invention, which is defined solely by the claims appended hereto.

Claims

Claims :
1. A method in a system node, the system node in communication with a plurality of base stations each having an internal clock, the method comprising:
5 providing time information to, and receiving time information from, each of the plurality of base stations ;
generating a system time reference based on at least some of the time information; and
for a base station of the plurality of base
ZC stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference, providing time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference.
15 2. The method of claim 1, wherein generating a system time reference based on at least some of the time information comprises:
generating a system time reference based on at least some of the time information received from at least 20 one base station that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
3- The method of claim 2, wherein providing time information to, and receiving time information from, each of the plurality of base stations comprises :
25 for each base station: providing time stamp information to, and receiving time stamp information from, the base station, wherein the system node generates time stamp information based on the system time reference and the base station generates time stamp information based on its internal clock.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein generating the system time reference comprises synchronizing a system node clock at the system node with the external time epoch reference based on the at least some of the time information.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein generating the system time reference comprises:
for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, determining a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the system node clock at the system node; and
controlling the system node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with internal clocks synchronized to the external time epoch reference; and
generating the system time reference based on an output of the system node clock.
6. The method of claim 3, wherein generating the system time reference comprises:
for each base station, generating a respective system node clock at the system node and controlling the respective system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from the ba.se station to synchronize the respective system node clock with the internal clock of the base station,- and
generating the system time reference based on an average of the respective system node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
7. The method of any one of claims 1 to S, wherein providing time information to, and receiving time information from, each of the plurality of base stations comprises:
providing and receiving the time information using a two-way time transfer protocol.
8. The method of any one of claims 1 to 7 , wherein providing time synchronization information to a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference comprises:
providing time synchronization information to the base station pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
9. The method of any one of claims 1 to 8, further comprising : determining that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
10. The method of any one of claims 1 to 9, wherein providing and receiving time information and providing time synchronization information comprises communicating via packet -based communication.
11. A system node comprising:
a communication interface configured to provide time information to, and receive time information from, a plurality of base stations, each having an internal clock;
a system node clock; and
a system node clock controller configured to:
control the system node clock based on at least some of the time information, received from at least one of the plurality of base stations,-
generate a system time reference based on an output of the system node clock; and
for a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference, provide time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference.
12. The system node of claim 11, wherein the system node clock controller is configured to control the system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from each base station that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference .
13. The system node of claim 12, wherein the communication interface is configured to provide time information to, and receive time information from the plurality of base stations by providing and receiving time stamp information, wherein the communication interface is configured to generate time stamp information based on the system time reference and receive time stamp information from each base station generated based on the base station's internal clock.
14. The system node of claim 13, wherein the system node clock controller is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing the system node clock with the external time epoch reference based on at least some of the time information received from at least one base station of the plurality of base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with the external epoch time reference.
15. The system node of claim 14, wherein the system node clock controller is configured to:
for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the system node clock at the system node ; and control the system node clock based, on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
16. The system node of claim 13, wherein the system node clock comprises a respective system node clock for each base station, and wherein the system node clock controller is configured to: for each ba.se station, control the respective system node clock based on at least some of the time information received from the base station to synchronize the respective system node clock with the internal clock of the base station; and
generate the system time reference based on an average of the respective system node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference. 17. The system node of any one of claims 11 to 16, wherein the communication interface comprises a respective two-way time transfer protocol interface for each base station.
13. The system node of any one of claims 11 to 17, wherein the system node clock controller is configured to provide the time synchronization information to a base station pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
19. The system node of any one of claims 11 to 18, wherein the system node clock controller is configured to determine that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
20. The system node of any one of claims 11 to 19, wherein the communication interface is configured to communicate using packet -based communication.
21. A communication system comprising:
a system node; and a plurality of base stations, each having an internal clock and a respective communication link with the system node, wherein the system node is configured to: exchange time information with each of the plurality of base stations ; generate a system time reference based on at least some of the time information; and
for a base station of the plurality of base stations that does not have its internal clock synchronized with an external time epoch reference, provide time synchronization information to the base station to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with the system time reference.
22. The communication system of claim 21, wherein the system node is configured to generate the system time reference based on at least some of the time information exchanged with at least one of the base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference .
23. The communication system of claim 22, wherein the system node and the plurality of base stations are configured to exchange time information by exchanging time stamp information, wherein the system node generates time stamp information based on the system time reference and each base station generates time stamp information based on its internal clock.
24. The communication system of claim 23, wherein the system node is configured to generate the system time reference by synchronizing a system node clock at the system node with the external time epoch reference based on the at least some of the time information exchanged with the at least one of the base stations that has its internal clock synchronized with the external time epoch reference.
25. The communication system of claim 24, wherein the system node is configured to:
for each base station with its internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference, determine a respective time offset between the internal clock of the base station and the system node clock at the system node; and control the system node clock based on an average of the respective time offsets for those base stations with internal clocks synchronized to the external time epoch reference; and generate the system time reference based on an output of the system node clock.
26. The communication system of claim 23, wherein the system node is configured to: for each base station, generate a respective system node clock at the system node and control the respective system node clock based on at least some of the time information exchanged with the base station to synchronize the respective system node clock with the internal clock of the base station; and generate the system time reference based on an average of the respective system node clocks corresponding to those base stations with their internal clock synchronized to the external time epoch reference.
27. The communication system of any one of claims 21 to 26, wherein the system node and the plurality of base stations are configured to exchange the time information using a two-way time transfer protocol.
28. The communication system of any one of claims 21 to 27, wherein the system node is configured to provide the time synchronization information to a base station of the plurality of base stations pursuant to receiving an external time epoch reference lock status message from the base station that indicates that the internal clock of the base station has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference.
29. The communication system of any one of claims 21 to 28, wherein the system node is configured to determine that the internal clock of a base station of the plurality of base stations has lost synchronization with the external time epoch reference based on a deviation of the time information received from the base station relative to the system time reference.
30. The communication system of any one of claims 21 to 29, wherein the system node and the plurality of base stations are configured to communicate using packet -based communication .
31. The communication system of any one of claims 21 to 30, wherein at least one but not all of the plurality of base stations is located such that it is unable to receive a global navigation satellite system GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference.
32. The communication system of any one of claims 21 to 31, wherein the plurality of base stations comprises a plurality of femto cells, and wherein, for at least one of the plurality of femto cells, the respective communication link between the femto cell and the system node comprises an asynchronous digital subscriber line ADSL communication link.
33. A method in a base station having an internal clock, the method comprising:
providing time information to, and receiving time information from, a system node having communication links 5 with a plurality of base stations inclusive of the instant base station; and
in an indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode: receiving time synchronization information from0 the system node; and
controlling the internal clock of the base station based on the time synchronization information to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with a system time reference generated by the system node, wherein the system5 time reference is synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a global navigation satellite system GNSS.
34. The method of claim 33, further comprising: in a direct external time epoch reference 'J disciplined mode: receiving a GNSS signal from the GNSS system, the GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference; and controlling the internal clock of the base station5 based on the external time epoch reference to synchronize the internal clock with the external time epoch reference.
35. The method of claim 34, further comprising:
switching from the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been established; and
switching from the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been lost.
36. The method of claim 35, further comprising:
sending an external time epoch reference lock status message to the system node indicative of whether the base station is locked to the GNSS signal.
37. The method of any one of claims 33 to 36 , wherein exchanging time information with the system node comprises exchanging time information according to a two-way time transfer protocol.
38. The method of any one of claim 33 to 37, wherein communication between the base station and the system node is packet-based.
39. A base station comprising: a communication interface configured for communication with a system node;
a local oscillator; and
an internal clock controller configured to: control the local oscillator,-
generate an internal clock based on an output of the local oscillator;
provide time information to, and receive time information from, the system node via the communication interface; and
m an indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode:
receive time synchronization information from the system node via the communication interface; and
control the local oscillator based on the time -synchronization information to synchronize the internal clock of the base station with a system time reference generated by the system node, wherein the system time reference is synchronized with an external time epoch reference provided by a global navigation satellite system GNSS.
40. The base station of claim 39, further comprising:
a global navigation satellite system GNSS receiver configured to receive a GNSS signal from the GNSS system, the GNSS signal containing the external time epoch reference, wherein in a direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode, the internal clock controller is configured to receive a GNSS signal from the GNSS system and control the local oscillator based on the external time 5 epoch reference contained in the GNSS signal to synchronize the internal clock with the external time epoch reference.
41. The base station of claim 40, wherein the GNSS receiver comprises an assisted-Global Positioning System A- GPS receiver. C 42. The base station of any one of claims 40 to 41, wherein the internal clock controller is configured to:
switch from the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on5 the GNSS signal has been established; and
switch from the direct external time epoch reference disciplined mode to the indirect external time epoch reference disciplined mode upon determining that a lock on the GNSS signal has been lost. 0 43. The base station of claim 42, wherein the internal clock controller is configured to send an external time epoch reference lock status message via the communication interface to the system node indicative of whether the GNSS receiver is locked to the GNSS signal. 5
44. The base station of any one of claims 39 to 43, wherein the communication interface is configured to provide time information to, and receive time information from, the system node according to a two-way time transfer protocol .
45. The method of any one of claim 39 to 44, wherein the communication interface is configured for packet -based communication.
PCT/CA2009/001797 2008-12-03 2009-12-03 Multiple redundant gnss synchronization system WO2010063127A1 (en)

Priority Applications (7)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP2011538813A JP2012510763A (en) 2008-12-03 2009-12-03 Multiple redundant GNSS synchronization systems
US13/132,464 US20120082188A2 (en) 2008-12-03 2009-12-03 Multiple redundant gnss synchronization system
BRPI0923156A BRPI0923156A2 (en) 2008-12-03 2009-12-03 multi-redundancy global satellite navigation (gnss) synchronization system
RU2011126897/07A RU2529181C2 (en) 2008-12-03 2009-12-03 Multiple backup time synchronisation system
EP09829939A EP2361487A1 (en) 2008-12-03 2009-12-03 Multiple redundant gnss synchronization system
CN200980156351.9A CN102308643B (en) 2008-12-03 2009-12-03 Multiple redundant GNSS synchronization system
CA2745369A CA2745369A1 (en) 2008-12-03 2009-12-03 Multiple redundant gnss synchronization system

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11962808P 2008-12-03 2008-12-03
US61/119,628 2008-12-03

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2010063127A1 true WO2010063127A1 (en) 2010-06-10

Family

ID=42232850

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/CA2009/001797 WO2010063127A1 (en) 2008-12-03 2009-12-03 Multiple redundant gnss synchronization system

Country Status (9)

Country Link
US (1) US20120082188A2 (en)
EP (1) EP2361487A1 (en)
JP (2) JP2012510763A (en)
KR (1) KR20110102894A (en)
CN (1) CN102308643B (en)
BR (1) BRPI0923156A2 (en)
CA (1) CA2745369A1 (en)
RU (1) RU2529181C2 (en)
WO (1) WO2010063127A1 (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN102075317A (en) * 2011-01-24 2011-05-25 博威通讯系统(深圳)有限公司 Reliable time frequency synchronization method and system in home base station system
WO2022111787A1 (en) * 2020-11-24 2022-06-02 Nokia Technologies Oy Method, apparatus and computer program

Families Citing this family (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP5391503B2 (en) * 2009-09-28 2014-01-15 京セラ株式会社 Radio base station, reference signal supply device, radio base station system, and radio base station system operation method
US8451814B2 (en) * 2010-06-11 2013-05-28 Clearwire Ip Holdings Llc Carrier signals for synchronization
US9844014B2 (en) 2010-06-11 2017-12-12 Sprint Spectrum L.P. Alternatives to satellite signals for synchronization in macro network
US9674807B2 (en) 2010-06-11 2017-06-06 Clearwire IP Holdings, LLC Subcarrier signal for synchronization in macro network
US9182493B2 (en) * 2011-03-11 2015-11-10 Texas Instruments Incorporaed Fine time assistance for global navigation satellite systems
US8867404B2 (en) * 2012-02-03 2014-10-21 Futurewei Technologies, Inc. Node level vectoring synchronization
CN102869085B (en) * 2012-09-12 2015-05-20 大唐移动通信设备有限公司 System and method for clock synchronization in base station
KR101415067B1 (en) * 2012-11-12 2014-07-04 국방과학연구소 Method and apparatus for dual-mode time synchronization
DE102014208266A1 (en) 2014-04-30 2015-11-05 Continental Teves Ag & Co. Ohg Timestamp generation without GNSS signal
JP6301752B2 (en) * 2014-06-25 2018-03-28 株式会社日立製作所 Information service display system and time synchronization method
KR101596756B1 (en) * 2014-11-03 2016-03-07 현대자동차주식회사 Method and apparatus for providing in-vehicle network time synchronization using redundant GrandMaster
US10775749B2 (en) * 2015-04-17 2020-09-15 The Mitre Corporation Robust and resilient timing architecture for critical infrastructure
US10015216B2 (en) * 2015-08-06 2018-07-03 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and systems for virtual conference system using personal communication devices
US11160040B2 (en) * 2016-11-01 2021-10-26 Lg Electronics Inc. Method and apparatus for transmitting a D2D signal by applying offset in wireless communication system
CN109005679B (en) * 2017-04-07 2020-08-04 深圳市泰德创新科技有限公司 Audio synchronization system for redundant design of conference discussion system
DE102017217051A1 (en) * 2017-09-26 2019-03-28 Spinner Gmbh Apparatus and method for transferring data between two physical interfaces
CN110034829B (en) * 2019-03-13 2020-11-06 深圳大学 Anti-interference method and device for multi-user wireless communication system
WO2021005517A1 (en) * 2019-07-08 2021-01-14 Abb Schweiz Ag Industrial device supporting multiple time synchronization protocols
KR102328672B1 (en) * 2020-12-17 2021-11-18 주식회사 지오플랜 Method And System for Providing Hybrid Synchronization
KR102328671B1 (en) * 2020-12-17 2021-11-18 주식회사 지오플랜 Method And System for Providing Wireless Synchronization
US11604439B2 (en) * 2020-12-28 2023-03-14 Waymo Llc GNSS time synchronization in redundant systems
CN113259044B (en) * 2021-06-02 2024-09-03 安科讯(福建)科技有限公司 5G (fourth generation) extension type pico-base station redundancy time service synchronization device and control method thereof
CN115022956B (en) * 2022-04-27 2024-01-12 海能达通信股份有限公司 Synchronization method, system, electronic equipment and storage medium of self-organizing network

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2000038338A1 (en) * 1998-12-18 2000-06-29 Neopoint, Inc. Real time clock system and method
US7043265B2 (en) * 2000-03-30 2006-05-09 Cellguide Ltd. Providing time sychronization to a GPS locator
WO2006083777A2 (en) * 2005-01-31 2006-08-10 Jasper Systems Paging for non-real-time communications wireless networks
US20080161014A1 (en) * 2004-11-30 2008-07-03 Alcatel Device for Locating a Mobile Terminal by Means of Corrected Time-Stamping Signals from Base Stations of an Asynchronous Mobile Network

Family Cites Families (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6134234A (en) * 1996-07-19 2000-10-17 Nokia Telecommunications Oy Master-slave synchronization
US6243372B1 (en) * 1996-11-14 2001-06-05 Omnipoint Corporation Methods and apparatus for synchronization in a wireless network
JPH10190562A (en) * 1996-12-26 1998-07-21 Toshiba Corp Inter-base station frame synchronizing system of mobile communication system and base station device adapting the same
US6590881B1 (en) * 1998-12-04 2003-07-08 Qualcomm, Incorporated Method and apparatus for providing wireless communication system synchronization
JP3379698B2 (en) * 1999-06-16 2003-02-24 日本電気株式会社 Synchronization method between base stations and synchronizing apparatus between base stations
FI115494B (en) * 1999-09-08 2005-05-13 Nokia Corp Base station frequency synchronization
JP3764025B2 (en) * 2000-03-21 2006-04-05 三菱電機株式会社 Inter-base station synchronization system
US6577872B1 (en) * 2000-08-08 2003-06-10 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Base station oscillator regulation independent of transport network clocks in cellular telecommunications network
RU2218667C2 (en) * 2002-01-25 2003-12-10 Самсунг Электроникс Method for base station signal synchronization in radio communication system
JP2005136748A (en) * 2003-10-30 2005-05-26 Kyocera Corp Mobile communication system, mobile apparatus and base station apparatus
KR20060096471A (en) * 2003-12-10 2006-09-11 닛본 덴끼 가부시끼가이샤 Transmission time difference measurement method and system thereof
JP4252488B2 (en) * 2004-04-28 2009-04-08 三菱電機株式会社 Base station, inter-base station synchronization system, and inter-base station synchronization method
FR2871006B1 (en) * 2004-05-28 2008-09-12 Thales Sa METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR DISTRIBUTED SYNCHRONIZATION
US8345658B2 (en) * 2006-10-18 2013-01-01 Nec Corporation Mobile communication terminal with GPS function, positioning system, operation control method, and program
JP2008182385A (en) * 2007-01-24 2008-08-07 Nec Corp Mobile communication system, time server and intra-station synchronization method used for the same
JP2008187340A (en) * 2007-01-29 2008-08-14 Kyocera Corp Radio communication system, base station, and synchronization method
US9467958B2 (en) * 2007-08-23 2016-10-11 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for mitigating temporary loss of synchronization in a wireless communication system

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2000038338A1 (en) * 1998-12-18 2000-06-29 Neopoint, Inc. Real time clock system and method
US7043265B2 (en) * 2000-03-30 2006-05-09 Cellguide Ltd. Providing time sychronization to a GPS locator
US20080161014A1 (en) * 2004-11-30 2008-07-03 Alcatel Device for Locating a Mobile Terminal by Means of Corrected Time-Stamping Signals from Base Stations of an Asynchronous Mobile Network
WO2006083777A2 (en) * 2005-01-31 2006-08-10 Jasper Systems Paging for non-real-time communications wireless networks

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN102075317A (en) * 2011-01-24 2011-05-25 博威通讯系统(深圳)有限公司 Reliable time frequency synchronization method and system in home base station system
WO2022111787A1 (en) * 2020-11-24 2022-06-02 Nokia Technologies Oy Method, apparatus and computer program

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CN102308643A (en) 2012-01-04
KR20110102894A (en) 2011-09-19
JP2012510763A (en) 2012-05-10
CA2745369A1 (en) 2010-06-10
US20120082188A2 (en) 2012-04-05
CN102308643B (en) 2015-02-25
RU2011126897A (en) 2013-01-20
JP2015008545A (en) 2015-01-15
RU2529181C2 (en) 2014-09-27
EP2361487A1 (en) 2011-08-31
US20110243196A1 (en) 2011-10-06
BRPI0923156A2 (en) 2016-02-10

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
WO2010063127A1 (en) Multiple redundant gnss synchronization system
EP3599729B1 (en) Method and apparatus of clock transmission between networks
CN101971557B (en) Systems and methods for distributing GPS clock to communications devices
EP1810534B1 (en) Communication between a radio equipment control node and multiple remote radio equipment nodes
EP2774290B1 (en) Clock synchronization in shared baseband deployments
SE509836C2 (en) Procedure and arrangement in a radio communication system
US20040090935A1 (en) Communications protocol to facilitate handover in a wireless communications network
KR20090048507A (en) Gateway device, base station device, communication network and synchronization method
WO2017152412A1 (en) Device and method for supporting clock transfer in multiple clock domains
EP3180876B1 (en) Method and apparatus for synchronising a plurality of distributed devices with a network
EP3099124B1 (en) Cellular network synchronization methods and apparatus under separation architecture
CN111373691A (en) Synchronization and fault management in distributed antenna systems
EP2250744B1 (en) Synchronization of call traffic in the forward direction over backhaul links
JPH11146444A (en) Synchronization establishing system for mobile communication base station network
KR101224297B1 (en) Apparatus and method for controlling timing and mobile telecommunication system for the same
EP2837117B1 (en) Clock switching algorithm based on preferred clock source
US8054860B2 (en) Method, system and apparatus for synchronizing time in time-division multiplexing system
AU2019433219B2 (en) Time transfer system and method for satellite-independent, phase and frequency synchronization over traditional IP core network without full or partial timing support

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 200980156351.9

Country of ref document: CN

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 09829939

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2745369

Country of ref document: CA

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2011538813

Country of ref document: JP

Ref document number: 13132464

Country of ref document: US

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 4229/CHENP/2011

Country of ref document: IN

REEP Request for entry into the european phase

Ref document number: 2009829939

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2009829939

Country of ref document: EP

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: 20117015364

Country of ref document: KR

Kind code of ref document: A

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2011126897

Country of ref document: RU

REG Reference to national code

Ref country code: BR

Ref legal event code: B01A

Ref document number: PI0923156

Country of ref document: BR

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: PI0923156

Country of ref document: BR

Kind code of ref document: A2

Effective date: 20110603