ATIS 0100032-2011 Relation Between ITU-T (Y 1541 Y 1221) and 3GPP UMTS LTE QoS Classes.pdf
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1、 TECHNICAL REPORT ATIS-0100032 RELATION BETWEEN ITU-T (Y.1541/Y.1221) AND 3GPP UMTS/LTE QOS CLASSES ATIS is the leading technical planning and standards development organization committed to the rapid development of global, market-driven standards for the information, entertainment and communication
2、s industry. More than 200 companies actively formulate standards in ATIS Committees, covering issues including: IPTV, Cloud Services, Energy Efficiency, IP-Based and Wireless Technologies, Quality of Service, Billing and Operational Support, Emergency Services, Architectural Platforms and Emerging N
3、etworks. In addition, numerous Incubators, Focus and Exploratory Groups address evolving industry priorities including Smart Grid, Machine-to-Machine, Networked Car, IP Downloadable Security, Policy Management and Network Optimization. ATIS is the North American Organizational Partner for the 3rd Ge
4、neration Partnership Project (3GPP), a member and major U.S. contributor to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Radio and Telecommunications Sectors, and a member of the Inter-American Telecommunication Commission (CITEL). ATIS is accredited by the American National Standards Institute (
5、ANSI). For more information, please visit . Notice of Disclaimer second, some parameters like delay are defined and measured completely differently; and third, the ITU-T QoS classes are end-to-end but the 3GPP classes are not. Recognizing these incompatibilities, Committee T1 previously considered b
6、-3A175 one possible mapping between the Y.1541 QoS classes (and associated traffic descriptors) and a corresponding set of values for 3GPP “bearer service attributes” defined for the four UMTS classes . This Technical Report provides a formal documentation of the earlier Committee T1 effort b-3A175
7、(sections 6 to 9). It then provides descriptions of the newer 3GPP LTE QoS classes (section 10) and demonstrates inconsistencies between the LTE and Y.1541 classes similar to those observed between the UMTS and Y.1541 classes (section 11). Conclusions and recommendations are provided in section 12 a
8、ll in the context of addressing a good interworking solutiona critical precursor to achieving truly harmonized end-to-end QoS as wireless and wireline networks converge. For convenience, a summary of conclusions is presented here as follows. There are two major incompatibilities in deriving a meanin
9、gful and consistent mapping between the Y.1541 classes and the 3GPP UMTS/LTE: Transfer Delay - The 3GPP Transfer Delays are defined as maxima whereas the Y.1541 Transfer Delays are expressed as mean values. Also, the 3GPP Transfer Delays are defined for the 3GPP domain only whereas the Y.1541 Transf
10、er Delays are expressed as end-to-end, but the ITU experts were never able to agree on an allocation to segments like wireless access. Delay Variation Delay Variation in the packet stream is specified for the Y.1541 classes (a distribution statistic) but is not addressed in any way for the 3GPP clas
11、ses. 4As an example of the concerns expressed, b-3P149 states in part: “The QoS Parameters, Parameter Values and QoS Classes defined in 3GPP specifications are different from, and may be incompatible with those in ITU-T specifications. This may result in interoperability problems between 3GPP-based
12、wireless networks and ITU-T based wireline networks. Adversely impacted services may include Voice over IP, Video Streaming, and multimedia services such as Telecommunications for Disaster Relief. Either alignment of specifications or the definition of standardized interworking that will not adverse
13、ly impact service delivery between networks based on 3GPP and ITU-T specifications is therefore required.” ATIS-0100032 4 Going forward, it is recommended to approach the end-to-end QoS problem by developing a detailed specification of interworking between different network segments (e.g., between L
14、TE and optical IP backbones). This would necessitate, for example, developing an industry-wide default markings between things such as LTE QCI-related markings and Diffserv Code Points, or alternatively, development of interworking guidelines that can be used to derive appropriate Service Level Agre
15、ements (SLA) between service providers. 6 COMPARISON OF Y.1541 AND UMTS QOS CLASSES The content of sections 6 through 9 are based on earlier ATIS Committee T1 work by Neal Seitz. The content in these sections is taken from Neals earlier ATIS contributions b-3A175. Table 1 illustrates the Y.1541 QoS
16、classes and associated network performance objectives. These specifications apply between user-network interfaces that delimit end-to-end IP flows. The objectives are designed to be achievable on common IP network implementations. Classes 0 and 1 place upper bounds on packet transfer delay and packe
17、t loss. They also limit packet delay variation. Classes 2 and 3 place upper bounds on packet transfer delay and packet loss, but do not limit packet delay variation. Classes 0 and 2 differ from Classes 1 and 3 in their packet transfer delay objectives. Class 4 limits packet loss and provides a very
18、loose upper bound on delay. A single packet error ratio objective is specified for classes 0-4; this value is chosen to ensure that packet loss is the dominant cause of defects presented to upper layers. Y.1541 also defines a “best effort” QoS class (Class 5) with no specific performance guarantees.
19、 Y.1541 assumes that the user and network provider have agreed on a traffic profile that applies to one or more packet flows in a QoS class. At present, the agreeing parties may use whatever capacity specifications they consider appropriate so long as they allow both enforcement and verification. Fo
20、r example, peak bit rate (including lower layer overhead) may be sufficient. When protocols and systems supporting dynamic requests are available, users may negotiate a traffic contract that specifies one or several traffic parameters. ITU-T Recommendation Y.1221 Y.1221 defines the traffic parameter
21、s in the context of three fundamental types of flows IP-based networks can support (dedicated bandwidth, statistical bandwidth, and best effort). The Y.1221 traffic parameters and corresponding UMTS service attributes are discussed below. Table 1 IP QoS class definitions and network performance obje
22、ctives (footnotes omitted) QoS Classes Network Performance Parameter Nature of Network Performance Objective Class 0 Class 1 Class 2 Class 3 Class 4 Class 5 (Un-specified) IPTD Upper bound on the mean IPTD 100 ms 400 ms 100 ms 400 ms 1 s U IPDV Upper bound on the 1-10-3quantile of IPTD minus the min
23、imum IPTD 50 ms 50 ms U U U U IPLR Upper bound on the packet loss probability 1*10-31*10-31*10-31*10-31*10-3U IPER Upper bound 1*10-4U ATIS-0100032 5 Table 2 identifies some typical applications for each Y.1541 QoS class, and some typical node mechanisms and network techniques that could be used to
24、implement them. For example, the node mechanisms could involve separate queues with preferential servicing and different drop priorities, or traffic grooming; the network techniques could involve constrains on routing and distance.5Y.1541 emphasizes that these guidelines are discretionary; network p
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