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6.2 Interworking Control of ETSI BRAN HiperLAN/2 and IEEE 802.11

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It then schedules the next HiperLAN/2 MAC frame, now within the CP. By transmitting the QoS CF-Poll, the CCHC can force all the stations within the QBSS to refrain from access during the period it wants to reserve for the HiperLAN/2 MAC frames. The NAV setting from the poll frame is indicated in the figure.

The CCHC schedules the time instances in advance where HiperLAN/2 frames would need access to the channel. Since the TXOPlimit is system widely known the CCHC must allocate the channel when a CP transmission has ended and the time instance of the next HiperLAN/2 MAC frame is closer than a duration of TXOPlimit apart. Some unused time interval of a duration less than TXOPlimit might result after the CF-Poll before the HiperLAN/2 frame starts.

There are alternative possibilities available for the CCHC to allocate radio resources. One alternative possibility is to transmit downlink frames (i.e., CCHC to an 802.11 station, with or without RTS/CTS), or to transmit a QoS CF-Poll frame to grant a resource within a TXOP directly to an associated station. Once the CCHC allocated radio resources, it can continue to allocate resources by not allowing more than PIFS time between two resource allocations.

Another alternative possibility for allocating radio resources with highest priority during the CP is to follow a proposal by Sobrinho and Krishnakumar (1996, 1999). They propose an energy signal to be transmitted by the CCHC, as soon as the channel gets idle, for the support of real time traffic. The energy signal results in all contending stations to detect the channel as busy and therefore to defer from access. In the CCHC approach, the duration of this energy signal must be chosen such that the HiperLAN/2 frame to be started after this signal ends at the scheduled point in time.

6.2.2Requirements for QoS Support

The proposed interworking concept requires that the CCHC has full control over the stations of the co-located 802.11a/e and HiperLAN/2 networks. This requires both protocols implemented in the CCHC. Because the HiperLAN/2 standard requires periodic transmissions of beacons every 2 ms, the HiperLAN/2 MAC frames have to be allocated according to fixed periods of multiples of 2 ms. All stations have to be located in the receive range of the beacon for understanding the management and control frames from the CCHC. Legacy stations operating in the same radio channel must be prevented, for example by using the schemes described in Section 6.2.1.2.