Abstract

AbstractThis paper analyses the performance of DS‐CDMA networks in the presence of call handoffs. We show that a handoff may violate the SINR requirements for other users, and thus cause an outage in the target cell. We propose to use the probability of such events as a possible metric for quality of service in networks with multiple traffic types, and derive the corresponding QoS parameters. A two‐level admission policy is defined: in tier 1 policy, the network capacity is calculated on the basis of the bound on outage probability. However, this policy does not suffice to prevent outage events upon handoffs for various traffic types, and henceforth, we propose an extension that reserves extra bandwidth for handoff calls, thus ensuring that handoff calls will not violate the outage probability bound. The overhead imposed by the extension is negligible, as the complete two‐tier admission control algorithm is executed only when a call is admitted into the network. Once admitted, calls can freely execute handoffs using the reserved bandwidth. The modified second‐tier bandwidth reservation policy is adaptive with respect to the traffic intensity and user's mobility and we show that it can provide satisfactory call (flow) quality during its lifetime. Analytical results for the QoS have been verified by the simulations. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call