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101 689-3
Transmission and Multiplexing (TM); Terms and definitions in transport networks; Part 3: Fixed Radio Systems
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/10168903/01.01.01_60/tr_10168903v010101p.pdf
The present document lists the preferred definitions and abbreviations relevant to fixed radio system standardization within ETSI Working Group TM4. The definitions and abbreviations have been extracted from the documents shown in clause 2.
101 672-1
Management services provided by Public Network Operators (PNOs) or service providers; Review of user needs for standardization; Part 1: Tutorial and recommendations
TR
1.1.5
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/10167201/01.01.05_60/tr_10167201v010105p.pdf
The present document aims to identify the user's needs regarding the management of networks and services provided by the PNOs or Service providers, how this information should be presented and what are the tools needed for managing this information properly. At the same time relevant information is provided to the users as a guidance. Part 2 of this Technical Report will propose functional specifications and the data model about the minimum set of users' requirements for telecommunications electronic billing. This standardization requirement does not preclude any operator from differentiating its marketing strategy built upon the standardized minimum set. As usual interest and requirements in this area may differ strongly depending upon the category of user. It is clear that the business users are the most interested in this issue but, with the development of competition, other categories of users should also adopt at least some of these requirements in the near future,.
101 689-1
Transmission and Multiplexing (TM); Terms and definitions in transport networks; Part 1: Core networks
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/10168901/01.01.01_60/tr_10168901v010101p.pdf
The present document lists the preferred definitions and abbreviations relevant to core network standardization within ETSI Working Group TM1. The definitions and abbreviations have been extracted from the documents shown in clause 2 with the following exceptions: - ETS 300 681 [1] is not included as this will be taken into account in TR 101 689-2. - In the case of ETS 200 232 [2], the definitions and abbreviations given in ITU-T Recommendation G.957 [3] apply. - All the work on optical fibre and optical components (see [23]-[32]) has been excluded since, once published by ETSI, the output is taken over by CENELEC and the relevant I-ETSs are withdrawn. It is assumed that CENELEC resolve any issues related to definitions and abbreviations in those documents. - ETR 247 [36] is not included as this is a highly specialized report, the definitions and abbreviations of which only apply within that particular document. - [37] is also excluded as no electronic version exists and it is felt that the content would be more relevant to the work of CENELEC. The definitions and abbreviations relevant to the work of working party B of former working group TM3 will be included in the present document at a later date.
101 686
Hybrid Fibre Coax (HFC) access networks; Interworking with B-ISDN networks
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101686/01.01.01_60/tr_101686v010101p.pdf
The present document defines the interworking between HFC networks on one side and the B-ISDN on the other side.
101 685
Transmission and Multiplexing (TM); Timing and synchronization aspects of Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) networks
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101685/01.01.01_60/tr_101685v010101p.pdf
The present document gives guidance on timing and synchronization aspects and defines requirements for ATM Networks. This includes a model of network interactions as well as a simplified model of the function on which most requirements will be assigned, i.e., the Interworking Function (IWF). In relation to the models and requirements, different synchronization methods are described on an overview level. The present document provides recommendations on the applications when different methods are most suitable.
101 689-2
Transmission and Multiplexing (TM); Terms and definitions in transport networks; Part 2: Access networks
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/10168902/01.01.01_60/tr_10168902v010101p.pdf
The present document lists the definitions and abbreviations relevant to access network standardization, found in publicly available documents prepared by ETSI working groups TM6 and former working group TM3, working party A. For each of the ETSI documents shown in clause 2, the definitions and abbreviations have been extracted and placed in the present document. If there are any amendments to a document, the definitions, symbols and abbreviations used in this amendment are listed under the subclause referring to the main document Following this, the definitions, symbols and abbreviations have each been sorted in alphabetical order and exact duplications have been deleted. Definitions of general terms, re-defined in one document in a specific way for the purpose of the present document have been written in a more generic form, possible restrictions concerning to this specific document however, have been added. If the same acronym is used for different terms used in different environments, both of the acronyms are printed in bold letters. All organizational abbreviations (e.g. CENELEC, ITU) have been removed.
101 731
Access and Terminals (AT); Digital access to the public telecommunications network; Publication of interface specification under Directive 1999/5/EC;
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101700_101799/101731/01.01.01_60/tr_101731v010101p.pdf
The present document assists the public network operators and public service providers in producing publications that describe their public interfaces in accordance with article 4.2 of Directive 1999/5/EC [1]. The present document lists the characteristics of a non-radio digital interface to the public telecommunications network which could be necessary for a description of that interface but does not give guidance on the style of presentation of interface publications. Indirect access to services and networks are also covered in the present document. The process of publication is not covered in the present document. This document is applicable to interface specifications for new, modified and existing interfaces.
101 730
Publication of interface specification under R&TTE directive 1999/5/EC; Guidelines for describing analogue interfaces
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101700_101799/101730/01.01.01_60/tr_101730v010101p.pdf
The purpose of the present document is to assist the public network operators and public service providers in producing interface publications according to Article 4.2 of Directive 1999/5/EC [1]. The present document lists the parameters of the analogue interface to the public telecommunications network which could be necessary for a description of that interface.The present document does not give guidance on the presentation format of interface publications to be made by PNOs The interface types dealt with are as follows: • Analogue Access to PSTN. • Analogue leased lines, 2 wire and 4 wire. Indirect access to services and networks are also covered in the present document. The timing and other administrative issues of publications are not covered in the present document.
101 655
IMS Network Testing (INT); Report on the automatic conformance review during the IMS plugtest 2012; TTCN-3 based trace analysis of SIP and Diameter messages
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101655/01.01.01_60/tr_101655v010101p.pdf
The present document presents a summary of experiences collected from the use of automatic interoperability testing in a real-world interoperability testing event at the RCS/VoLTE interoperability event held in Kranj (Slovenia) from 1st to 12th October, 2012. More specifically it addresses the use of test systems which have been developed based on the methodology and framework for automated interoperability testing for distributed systems EG 202 810 [i.1].
101 728
Access and Terminals (AT); Study for the specification of low pass filter section of POTS/ADSL splitters
TR
1.2.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101700_101799/101728/01.02.01_60/tr_101728v010201p.pdf
The present document provides the basis for specification of requirements and test methods for the low pass section of POTS/ADSL splitters. These splitters are intended to be installed at the Local Exchange side of the local loop and at the user side near the NTP. The splitter at the user side may be part of the network or part of the user installation but will be always used to connect an access network using ADSL technology as described in ETR 328 [1] with a typical home installation. The present document does not cover the possible advantages and disadvantages of the ownership of the splitter e.g. by the network operator, the user or a third party. The present document covers most common situations to ensure a reasonable performance of this technology and facilitate the launch of such systems. The high pass filter function of the splitter is not within the scope of the present document.
101 714
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Performance Characterization of the GSM Adaptive Multi-Rate (AMR) speech codec (GSM 06.75 version 7.2.0 Release 1998)
TR
7.2.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101700_101799/101714/07.02.00_60/tr_101714v070200p.pdf
The present document provides background information on the performances of the GSM Adaptive Multi-Rate (AMR) speech codec. Experimental test results from the Verification and Characterisation phases of testing are reported to illustrate the behaviour of the GSM AMR in multiple operational conditions.
101 667
Methods for Testing and Specification (MTS); Network Integration Testing (NIT); Interconnection; Reasons and goals for a global service testing approach
TR
1.1.2
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101667/01.01.02_60/tr_101667v010102p.pdf
The goal of the present document is to provide basic information on the goals and possible areas of application of the Network Integration/Interconnection Testing (NIT) methodology. NIT is a network specific testing approach, originally defined by EURESCOM, according to which NIT Test Suites can be designed, implemented, and eventually used for tests and trials, in different network contexts and with different goals. NIT can be used, at an extent, also for Network Interconnection Testing purposes, following bilateral agreements from Network Operators, and could be considered in a future in the framework of a possible regulation of such issues. NIT encompasses two basic types of testing, End to End and Node to Node, which are both discussed in detail in the present document.
101 666
Information technology Open Systems Interconnection Conformance testing methodology and framework; The Tree and Tabular Combined Notation (TTCN) (Ed. 2++)
TR
1.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101666/01.00.00_60/tr_101666v010000p.pdf
The present document defines an informal test notation, called the Tree and Tabular Combined Notation (TTCN), for OSI conformance test suites, which is independent of test methods, layers and protocols, and which reflects the abstract testing methodology defined in ISO/IEC 9646-1 and ISO/IEC 9646-2. It also specifies requirements and provides guidance for using TTCN in the specification of system-independent conformance test suites for one or more OSI standards. It specifies two forms of the notation: one, a human-readable form, applicable to the production of conformance test suite standards for OSI protocols; and the other, a machine- processable form, applicable to processing within and between computer systems. The present document applies to the specification of conformance test cases that can be expressed abstractly in terms of control and observation of protocol data units and abstract service primitives. Nevertheless, for some protocols, test cases may be needed which cannot be expressed in these terms. The specification of such test cases is outside the scope of the present document, although those test cases may need to be included in a conformance test suite standard. For example, some static conformance requirements related to an application service may require testing techniques, which are specific to that particular application. The specification of test cases in which more than one behaviour description is to be run in parallel is dealt with by the concurrency features (particularly involving the definition of Test Components and Test Component Configurations). The present document specifies requirements on what a test suite standard may specify about a conforming realization of the test suite, including the operational semantics of TTCN test suites. The present document applies to the specification of conformance test suites for OSI protocols in OSI layers 2 to 7, specifically including Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) based protocols. The following are outside the scope of the present document: a) the specification of conformance test suites for Physical layer protocols; b) the relationship between TTCN and formal description techniques; c) the means of realization of executable test suites (ETS) from abstract test suites. The present document defines mechanisms for using concurrency in the specification of abstract test cases. Concurrency in TTCN is applicable to the specification of test cases: a) in a multi-party testing context; b) which handle multiplexing and demultiplexing in either a single-party or multi-party testing context; c) which handle splitting and recombining in either a single-party or multi-party testing context; d) in a single-party testing context when the complexity of the protocol or set of protocols handled by the IUT is such that concurrency can simplify the specification of the test case. TTCN modules are defined to allow sharing of common TTCN specifications between test suites.
101 734
Internet Protocol (IP) based networks; Parameters and mechanisms for charging
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101700_101799/101734/01.01.01_60/tr_101734v010101p.pdf
The present document gives guidance in selecting charging parameters and the appropriate charging mechanisms in the IP (Internet Protocol) based networks of the future. In the today's Internet there is no detailed collection of charges implemented. Users are charged by the Internet Service Provider (ISP) either: • a flat rate; • a time dependent rate; or • a volume class dependent rate. In addition the telecommunication service to access the ISP is charged by the Telecommunication Network Operator. Such charging schemes will persist but with the emergence of the Internet - especially with the evolution towards commercial operation - the need arises to collect charging information for diverse services. These charges may be composed of various parameters and components according to the service split among several operators. The present document concentrates on such cases only where parameters are collected. Therefore, the present document describes a first set of parameters relevant for charging and the mechanisms needed for collection of charging information in IP based networks. The general principles for charging are listed which apply to IP based networks. These parameters are applicable to all types of IP based services. Nevertheless an appropriate set of parameters can be selected for each type. Collection of charging information will be done both by network operators and service providers for the usage of resources. The present document describes parameters and mechanisms from a technical point of view. Therefore, the term "operator" is used throughout the present document where it is applicable to service providers, to network operators, or to both service providers and network operators. Accounting, tariffing and billing of IP based services are outside the scope of the present document. Nevertheless these issues are also of great interest for IP based networks and services. Accounting (or settlement) is currently discussed in ITU-T Study Group 3 and for the Internet Telephony Service in ETSI Project TIPHON.
101 683
Broadband Radio Access Networks (BRAN); HIPERLAN Type 2; System Overview
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101683/01.01.01_60/tr_101683v010101p.pdf
........................................................................................................................................................5
101 680
Methods for Testing and Specification (MTS); A harmonized integration of ASN.1, TTCN and SDL
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101680/01.01.01_60/tr_101680v010101p.pdf
The present document defines the changes that need to made to ASN.1, SDL and TTCN in order to harmonize these three languages in a consistent and compatible manner. The technical solutions to achieve this harmonization are based on the initial analysis of TR 101 114 [8]. The present document is restricted to documenting in broad terms the changes necessary to each of the three languages. The actual changes to the relevant standards (if accepted) will need to be performed by the relevant committees in ETSI, the ITU-T and ISO. While the present document offers complete technical solutions for harmonization, it is not written in the form of detailed amendments to the relevant standards. The present document is restricted to harmonizing the versions of ASN.1, SDL and TTCN as listed in the references clauses.
101 673
Technical Framework for the Provision of Interoperable ATM Services; Overview
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101673/01.01.01_60/tr_101673v010101p.pdf
The present document is an overview of a set of specifications [1] to [5] defining the network-network interface to enable service interoperability between ATM networks. This will be achieved through adequate specification of network-network interfaces in the following planes: - the Network User and Control Planes; - the Network Management Plane. NOTE: The Network User, Control and Management planes are in accordance with the ITU-T Recommendation I.321 [6] defining the B-ISDN Protocol Reference Model. In particular the aims of the project are: - to focus on interoperable interfaces between networks, for the transport of User plane information, network control and network management information; - to allow for the interoperability of ATM networks by means of gateway functions, so that these networks can be developed independently; - to identify minimum technical standards to ensure secure interoperability; - to set up pragmatic phases to allow the systematic introduction of network and management capabilities.
101 672
Management services provided by Public Network Operators (PNOs) or service providers; Review of user needs for standardization; Tutorial and recommendations
TR
1.1.6
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101672/01.01.06_60/tr_101672v010106p.pdf
The present document aims to identify the user's needs regarding the management of networks and services provided by the PNOs or Service providers, how this information should be presented and what are the tools needed for managing this information properly. At the same time relevant information is provided to the users as a guidance. As usual interest and requirements in this area may differ strongly depending upon the category of user. It is clear that the business users are the most interested in this issue but, with the development of competition, other categories of users should also adopt at least some of these requirements in the near future.
101 698
Number Portability Task Force (NPTF); Administrative support of service provider portability for geographic and non-geographic numbers
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101698/01.01.01_60/tr_101698v010101p.pdf
The present document considers the inter-operator/service provider processes required to support Number Portability, in particular, the information transfer requirements. Processes include: - service establishment (including initial contact, planning, implementation & testing); - impact upon number administration; - customer porting (including requests, validation, scheduling, contingency planning, porting); - subsequent portability, cessation; - service maintenance (including network changes, introduction of new number ranges); - fault handling; - ancillary system processes (which may include billing, directory enquiries, emergency; - services, numbering plan administration and law enforcement agencies). The subsequent amendment to a porting order, or postponement to a porting order is outside the scope of the present document.
101 697
Number Portability Task Force (NPTF); Guidance on choice of network solutions for service provider portability for geographic and non-geographic numbers
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101697/01.01.01_60/tr_101697v010101p.pdf
The present document is to analyse the interrelationships of the various technical components involved in providing service provider number portability and provide guidance on use in Europe between networks. NOTE: For the purpose of the present document, the term "Service Provider Number Portability" is used to describe Service Provider Portability for geographic and non-geographic numbers.
101 648
Telecommunications Management Network (TMN); Managed object modelling guidelines;
TR
1.2.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101648/01.02.01_60/tr_101648v010201p.pdf
The present document provides guidelines for the definition of additional Managed Object Classes, the use of existing Managed Object Class definitions and the inclusion of these objects in existing inheritance and containment hierarchies. The present document: • Provides general rules for defining Managed Objects. • Provides general rules for defining Generic Object Classes. • Provides additional Guidelines on the use of GDMO. • Identifies relevant standards containing modelling guidelines, and identifies which clauses are recommended for use in ETSI models (for example where options exist). The present document does not: • Imply any specific system implementation. • Include testing the Information model.
101 643
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); General network interworking scenarios (GSM 09.01 version 8.0.0 Release 1999)
TR
8.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101643/08.00.00_60/tr_101643v080000p.pdf
The present document serves as an introduction to the GSM 09.xx-series. In clause 4, the technical requirements for Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN) interworking are introduced, and in clause 5 there is a summary of the contents of the GSM 09.xx-series.
101 643
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); General network interworking scenarios (GSM 09.01 version 7.0.0 Release 1998)
TR
7.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101643/07.00.00_60/tr_101643v070000p.pdf
The present document serves as an introduction to the GSM 09.xx-series. In clause 4, the technical requirements for Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN) interworking are introduced, and in clause 5 there is a summary of the contents of the GSM 09.xx-series.
101 643
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); General network interworking scenarios (GSM 09.01 version 6.0.0 Release 1997)
TR
6.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101643/06.00.00_60/tr_101643v060000p.pdf
The present document serves as an introduction to the GSM 09.xx-series. In clause 4, the technical requirements for Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN) interworking are introduced, and in clause 5 there is a summary of the contents of the GSM 09.xx-series.
101 641
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Half rate speech; Performance characterization of the GSM half rate speech codec (GSM 06.08 version 8.0.0 Release 1999)
TR
8.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101641/08.00.00_60/tr_101641v080000p.pdf
The present document gives background information on the performance of the GSM half rate speech codec. Experimental results from the characterization and verification tests carried out during the selection process by the Traffic CHannel Half rate Speech (TCH-HS) expert group are reported to give a more detailed picture of the behaviour of the GSM half rate speech codec under different conditions of operation.
101 641
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Half rate speech; Performance characterization of the GSM half rate speech codec (GSM 06.08 version 7.0.0 Release 1998)
TR
7.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101641/07.00.00_60/tr_101641v070000p.pdf
The present document gives background information on the performance of the GSM half rate speech codec. Experimental results from the characterization and verification tests carried out during the selection process by the Traffic CHannel Half rate Speech (TCH-HS) expert group are reported to give a more detailed picture of the behaviour of the GSM half rate speech codec under different conditions of operation.
101 641
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Half rate speech; Performance characterization of the GSM half rate speech codec (GSM 06.08 version 6.0.0 Release 1997))
TR
6.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101641/06.00.00_60/tr_101641v060000p.pdf
The present document gives background information on the performance of the GSM half rate speech codec. Experimental results from the characterization and verification tests carried out during the selection process by the Traffic CHannel Half rate Speech (TCH-HS) expert group are reported to give a more detailed picture of the behaviour of the GSM half rate speech codec under different conditions of operation.
101 640
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+); GSM Electro Magnetic Compatibility (EMC) considerations (GSM 05.90 version 6.0.1 Release 1997)
TR
6.0.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101640/06.00.01_60/tr_101640v060001p.pdf
A considerable amount of work has been conducted, mainly in the UK, to investigate the effect of wanted radio frequency transmissions from GSM MS and BTS on other equipment. The present document aims to summarize this work and to look at the implications for GSM. Since GSM EMC considerations extend outside the GSM arena, it is thought essential that GSM considers the implications of EMC and produces the present document.
101 665
Intelligent Network (IN); Service capability modelling for IN-CS4
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101665/01.01.01_60/tr_101665v010101p.pdf
The present document is a first study on service capability modelling for IN CS-4. Clause 4 identifies the requirements for IN service modelling. Clause 5 lists some shortcomings of using IN CS-2 SIBs for IN service modelling. Clause 6 explains the rationale for applying object oriented techniques, followed by the introduction of some of these techniques in clause 7. Finally, clause 8 shows as an example how the object oriented approach can be applied to Video-on-Demand.
101 664
Intelligent Network (IN); IN interconnect security features
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101664/01.01.01_60/tr_101664v010101p.pdf
The present document describes security features which may be used in conjunction with the interconnection of two IN structured networks. The purpose of the present document is to establish a set of technical requirements in order to meet the threats identified and analysed in a previous document. Those main threats due to IN interworking between IN structured network operators and/or service providers using CS2 and CS3 are listed in clause 5. IN CS4 will not be taken into consideration. The security implications of the use of the SCF-SSF interface for interconnection have not been studied in the present document. That interface is studied in detail in DTR/NA-061208. The present document follows the successive steps: - listing important threats; - description of possible and existing security measures; - discussion on which security measures to use in order to meet the threats. The management aspects except those related to security policy are not included. They will be covered in EP TMN. From the list of threat extracted from TR 101 365 [3], it is important to meet the most important ones in order to get a secure IN interworking. The aim of the present document is to select a good set of security features in order to build a security architecture for IN wich is described in TR 101 365 [3].
101 662-1
Internet Access; V5.2 controlled Internet access in the Access Network (AN), phase 1; Part 1: Interface Specification
TR
1.1.2
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/10166201/01.01.02_60/tr_10166201v010102p.pdf
The present document describes scenarios whereby Internet traffic could bypass the local exchange by being routed in the Access Network directly to the Internet access services.
101 635
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Example protocol stacks for interconnecting Service Centre(s) (SC) and Mobile-services Switching Centre(s) (MSC) (GSM 03.47 version 6.0.0 Release 1997)
TR
6.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101635/06.00.00_60/tr_101635v060000p.pdf
No mandatory protocol between the Service Centre (SC) and the Mobile Switching Centre (MSC) below the transfer layer is specified by GSM; this is a matter of agreement between SC and PLMN operators. The present document specifies three approaches to the specification of protocol stacks of communication protocols for the purpose of relaying short messages and alerts between Short Message Service Centres and Gateway/Interworking MSCs (GMSC) for the Short Message Service (SMS). One approach is based upon use of the complete OSI reference model (see X.200), another approach is based upon the use of only the lower three OSI layers, and another approach is based upon the use of CCITT Signalling System No. 7 (see Q.700). Alternative protocol stacks are specified via ASN.1 encoding rules (see X.208 and X.209). These alternative protocol stacks are examples for the implementation of the Short Message Relay Layer (SM-RL). The requirements placed upon the Short Message Relay Layer are briefly described in clause 9 of GSM 03.40. Specifications are based upon individual contributions. Any judgement concerning functionality, completeness and advantages/disadvantages of implementation is intentionally omitted.
101 634
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Support of Teletex in a GSM Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN) (GSM 03.44 version 7.0.0 Release 1998)
TR
7.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101634/07.00.00_60/tr_101634v070000p.pdf
The present document describes the support of the teletex service by a GSM Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN).
101 634
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Support of Teletex in a GSM Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN) (GSM 03.44 version 6.0.0 Release 1997)
TR
6.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101634/06.00.00_60/tr_101634v060000p.pdf
The present document describes the support of the teletex service by a GSM Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN).
101 633
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Support of Videotex (GSM 03.43 version 7.0.0 Release 1998)
TR
7.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101633/07.00.00_60/tr_101633v070000p.pdf
The present document describes the support of Videotex service within the GSM PLMN network, taking into account the service definition as per CCITT Recommendation F.300 and Bearer Services specified in GSM 02.02 for a GSM PLMN.
101 633
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Support of Videotex (GSM 03.43 version 6.0.0 Release 1997)
TR
6.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101633/06.00.00_60/tr_101633v060000p.pdf
The present document describes the support of Videotex service within the GSM PLMN network, taking into account the service definition as per CCITT Recommendation F.300 and Bearer Services specified in GSM 02.02 for a GSM PLMN.
101 631
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Technical performance objectives (GSM 03.05 version 8.0.0 Release 1999)
TR
8.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101631/08.00.00_60/tr_101631v080000p.pdf
The present document contains technical performance objectives that should be met for the fixed infrastructure of GSM PLMNs. Concerning transmission delay for the PLMN in clause 4, the requirements should also be met by GSM Mobile Stations (MS)s. These performance design objectives are applicable to all implementations at all points in the growth cycle up to the maximum size. These reference loads and performance objectives may be used by manufacturers in designing GSM PLMNs and by Administrations or Recognised Private Operating Agencies (RPOA)s in evaluating a specific design or for comparing different designs for potential use in the Administration's or RPOA's intended implementation.
101 631
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Technical performance objectives (GSM 03.05 version 7.0.0 Release 1998)
TR
7.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101631/07.00.00_60/tr_101631v070000p.pdf
The present document contains technical performance objectives that should be met for the fixed infrastructure of GSM PLMNs. Concerning transmission delay for the PLMN in clause 4, the requirements should also be met by GSM Mobile Stations (MS)s. These performance design objectives are applicable to all implementations at all points in the growth cycle up to the maximum size. These reference loads and performance objectives may be used by manufacturers in designing GSM PLMNs and by Administrations or Recognised Private Operating Agencies (RPOA)s in evaluating a specific design or for comparing different designs for potential use in the Administration's or RPOA's intended implementation.
101 631
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Technical performance objectives (GSM 03.05 version 6.0.0 Release 1997)
TR
6.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101631/06.00.00_60/tr_101631v060000p.pdf
The present document contains technical performance objectives that should be met for the fixed infrastructure of GSM PLMNs. Concerning transmission delay for the PLMN in clause 4, the requirements should also be met by GSM Mobile Stations (MS)s. These performance design objectives are applicable to all implementations at all points in the growth cycle up to the maximum size. These reference loads and performance objectives may be used by manufacturers in designing GSM PLMNs and by Administrations or Recognised Private Operating Agencies (RPOA)s in evaluating a specific design or for comparing different designs for potential use in the Administration's or RPOA's intended implementation.
101 619
Network Aspects (NA); Considerations on networks mechanisme for charging and revenue accounting
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101619/01.01.01_60/tr_101619v010101p.pdf
Whether the present document is applicable to a national environment and/or can be used for inter-network purposes, depends on regulatory demands and/or bilateral agreements. It should be noted that there are network requirements and signalling limitations that are not covered because they are outside the scope of the present document. Examples of these are as follows: a) capabilities that require for translation function of currencies or for the translation of currencies into metering pulses; b) with an analogue access with pulse metering no distinction can be made between pulses resulting from charges imposed by different operators; c) the on-line provided advice of charge information may not accurately reflect the correct charging rate due to discount rates, special charging arrangements, etc.; d) in association with these charging procedures also changes of the ISDN AOC supplementary services may be required for the identification of the network operator; e) new services like B-ISDN and new IN concepts are not fully considered in the present document; f) no interworking is covered with existing implementations making use of implicit information elements pointing to local available charging data; g) complaint handling between operators in case of incorrect advice of charge information; h) explicit encryption or special security mechanisms are outside the scope of the present document; i) which currency is used is outside the scope of the present document. Due to an increasing need for tools for flexible and efficient charging in a deregulated European telecommunications market with many telecommunication services available, it has been decided to study charging, billing and revenue accounting mechanisms in ETSI. The scope and background includes the reasons and intentions for the task. It should be stated that guidelines given in the present document by no means would be mandatory for ETSI members. These are common guidelines for solutions within the domain of the present document, and do not exclude alternatives. During the studies it has been decided that Billing is not relevant for this ETSI study. The billing process in this context is the task to organize the payment information for the user in a prepared billing layout and transfer this information to the user. Billing is regarded as an administrative procedure only, not fitted for ETSI recommendations and standardization. Nevertheless the activities providing the inputs for the billing process are included in the study. The present document considers general matters and gives an overview of the total domain of charging and revenue accounting. The present document aims to cover the aspects of the domain for all networks within ETSI's responsibility. The present document is intended to be the main document of a family dealing with charging and revenue accounting. It is important to state that the subjects of setting prices, tariffs, harmonization of tariffs or charging levels and administrative principles for revenue accounting between network operators/service providers (NO/SP), are outside the scope of the task. These matters are purely within the responsibility of the network operators and service providers and may be subject to national regulation.
101 618
Network Aspects (NA); Number Portability Task Force (NPTF); Working package 8; Location portability
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101618/01.01.01_60/tr_101618v010101p.pdf
The present Working Package of the NPTF has the responsibility to study the issue of Location Portability utilizing to the greatest possible degree the work already done in the NPTF on Service Provider Portability. The different variants of Location Portability [1] should be investigated against a representative choice of scenarios for numbering scheme, charging structure, and regulation, e.g. to show the consequences for tariff and geographical information in the Directory Numbers. The combination of location portability together with Service Provider Portability should be considered. The present document should evaluate the need for further standardization.
101 617
Network Aspects (NA); Considerations on network mechanisms for charging and revenue accounting for European Telephony Numbering Space (ETNS) services
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101617/01.01.01_60/tr_101617v010101p.pdf
The present document intends to describe a basic frame for charging and revenue accounting for ETNS Services. The main frame and the technical conditions for ETNS (European Telephony Numbering Space) Services are described from different points of view in the documents referred to in clause 2 References. The European Commission has initiated the issue of ETNS Services to be offered to the public by providers. ETNS calls are routed and transferred in the network operator's telecommunication network. The provision of ETNS Services, the translation of European Number (EN) to Routeing Number (RN) as well as the carrier connection through the public networks shall be managed by providers in competition. In general ETNS Services shall be accessible worldwide by all customers in public networks. It means, that either the network operator (NO) per default or some of the NOs, which can be accessed e.g. by access code, should provide routeing capabilities to the ETNS Services. The provisioning of the ETNS Registrar Database, the entity administrating the linking between the European Numbers and the Routeing Numbers, might be licensed to a service company. To call a European Service (an EN call), the Calling Party shall dial a European Number. The call will be transferred to a switch, which can enquire an ETNS Translation Database to translate this into a Routeing Number. The switch is then able to route the call to a switch, which can enquire an ETNS Service Provider Database in which the Routeing Number will be translated to a Terminating Number. The call can then be routed to the termination. In some cases the last translation can be omitted. The complete documentation for ETNS Services should include the issues: • Description by the responsible authorities of the ETNS service concept; • Management of the European Telephony Numbering Space [1]; • Number portability for ETNS Services [2]; • Routeing of calls to ETNS Services [3]; • Guidelines to the Administrator (ECTRA); • Descriptions of the relationship between commercial entities within the provision of ETNS Services; • Charging alternatives relating to (1) the ETNS services themselves and (2) to call related issues; • Technical requirements on charging; • Technical requirements on revenue accounting between the commercial entities providing elements to the ETNS service provision. Assumptions concerning ETNS Services: • Calling Parties in Europe (and outside) should as a minimum be offered routeing capabilities to ETNS Services by one of the accessible NOs. • Capabilities should be provided to allow the NOs to bar the ETNS service for a number of payment related reasons. • Acknowledge procedures for Calling Parties may exist for certain ETNS Services either somewhere in the network or outside the network at the gate to the service. • Number portability is automatically taken into account by the relationship EN/RN/TN. • The Calling Party is by default accessing his own NO. He might also be able to access alternative NOs by an appropriate access code. The accessed NO should be responsible for establishment of European Service calls, i.e. that NO is the Call Contractor. • The Call Contractor will by default be responsible for the charging. ETSI TR 101 617 V1.1.1 (1998-12) 6 • The Call Contractor might have possibilities to choose between alternative routeing of EN calls. • The ETNS Service is consisting of the service itself and the access traffic from the Calling Party to the service location including the supporting services for that traffic.
101 616
Network Aspects (NA); Intelligent Network (IN); Feasibility of standardization of aspects of Service Creation Environment (SCE) output to network elements via the Service Management Function (SMF)
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101616/01.01.01_60/tr_101616v010101p.pdf
The present document analyses the service aspects and management aspects which are needed at the SCEF-SMF interface and identifies which of them would be feasibile to standardize in order to enable service creation for a multi-vendor environment. The scope of this feasibility study is to: a) identify and select requirements on the standardization of SCE interfaces (technical issues and commercial/business issues). Considering both functional architecture and business role models to clarify and prioritize the requirements; b) identify possible technical solutions; c) identify feasibility and acceptability of the possible technical solutions in the time frame of IN CS-3. The scope of the work includes the SCEF-SMF interfaces. The scope of the work does not include the SMF-FE interfaces. However, the logical relationship between SCEF and the Functional Entities (FEs) can impact the SCEF-SMF interface. The basic rationale for this work is to be able to create services using all involved (and possibly multivendor) IN Functional Entities - not only using the SCF, but extending also to other IN Functional entities, such as SDF, SRF or SSF. This work is actually carrying out recommendation 5 of the PAC EG2 report [3].
101 615
Network Aspects (NA); Services and networks architecture evolution for telecommunications
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101615/01.01.01_60/tr_101615v010101p.pdf
The present document examines the relationship between the telecommunication services platform, the end user applications support platforms and the other platforms (as defined in the EII Enterprise Model [2]), and the GMM Architectural Framework [5]. The requirements of these are specified in architectural terms. The following aspects are included: - relationship with GII as defined by ITU-T JRG GII and ISO/IEC JTC1 SWP GII; - relationship with the EII as defined by EPIC; - relationship with IP-based networks; - relationship with UMTS and IMT-2000; - support for Applications; - service interworking; - U and V reference points; - information flows between platforms; - evolution of DASH principles and extension to applications in the context of network interconnection. This model should include current IN and TMN functions. The resulting architecture should be consistent with that proposed for the GII and should be within the context set up by regulators. The present document represents the current state of the work. It provides a framework within which further work can be undertaken on specific aspects of the architecture. This will be covered in other documents.
101 613
Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS); Cross Layer DCC Management Entity for operation in the ITS G5A and ITS G5B medium; Validation set-up and results
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101613/01.01.01_60/tr_101613v010101p.pdf
The present document covers the overall validation of the cross layer DCC functionality of the ETSI ITS architecture. It considers the cross layer DCC specification developed in ETSI TS 103 175 [i.1] and the cross layer concept described in ETSI TR 101 612 [i.2] and all other relevant DCC components in the communication stack.
101 612
Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS); Cross Layer DCC Management Entity for operation in the ITS G5A and ITS G5B medium; Report on Cross layer DCC algorithms and performance evaluation
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101612/01.01.01_60/tr_101612v010101p.pdf
The present document provides a preliminary technical overview of the cross-layer decentralized congestion control (DCC) architecture to be implemented in the ITS-S. It describes DCC functions and testable DCC limits and includes initial performance evaluation results based on simulations. In addition, reference scenarios and parameters used for performance evaluation purposes and the corresponding evaluation metrics are summarized. It will be completed by a Technical Report with validation set-up and results. Both will serve as a basis for the Technical Specification of the Cross Layer DCC control entity in the ITS G5A and ITS G5B media.
101 611
Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS); Testing; Conformance test specification for CALM Fast Services; FNTP/FSAP/IICP validation report
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101611/01.01.01_60/tr_101611v010101p.pdf
The present document is the validation report of the FNTP, FSAP and IICP conformance tests and it provides statistics of executed and validated FNTP, FSAP and IICP conformance tests. The information provided has been produced by validation against two prototype implementations from industry. Furthermore, identified issues related to the base specifications ISO 29281-1 [i.5], ISO 24102-5 [i.4], ISO 24102-4 [i.3] and test specification TS 102 985-1 [i.6], TS 102 985-2 [i.7], TS 102 985-3 [i.8], TS 102 797-1 [i.9], TS 102 797-2 [i.10], TS 102 797-3 [i.11] are listed in the present document.
101 651
Classification of the electromagnetic environment conditions for equipment in telecommunication networks
TR
2.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101651/02.01.01_60/tr_101651v020101p.pdf
The present document provides information on the electromagnetic environmental conditions encountered where telecommunications equipment is installed and is a compilation of data concerning electromagnetic environmental conditions. In the present document only locations for equipment that are in the telecommunication network are considered. Only some of the data is based on comprehensive environmental surveys. Such surveys are rarely reported in available literature. Consequently, estimated values are often used when the electromagnetic environmental conditions are stated. In order to characterize the electromagnetic environment, it is necessary to make certain assumptions on the installation practice. If these assumptions are not satisfied in a particular case, the environmental characteristic may not apply. Each environment is characterized in two ways: • by a short verbal description of its assumed attributes; • by a quantitative statement of the characteristic severities of the crucial environmental phenomena. It is only possible to specify the appropriate EMC requirements following the assessment of the severity of the electromagnetic environment. This in turn will be helpful in ensuring that the telecommunications network equipment has the sufficient intrinsic immunity to enable it to operate as intended in its environment.
101 651
ElectroMagnetic Compatibility and Radio Spectrum Matters (ERM); Classification of the electromagnetic environment conditions for equipment in telecommunication networks
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101651/01.01.01_60/tr_101651v010101p.pdf
The present document provides information on the electromagnetic environmental conditions encountered where telecommunications equipment is installed and is a compilation of data concerning electromagnetic environmental conditions. In the present document only locations for equipment that are in the telecommunication network are considered. Only some of the data is based on comprehensive environmental surveys. Such surveys are rarely reported in available literature. Consequently, estimated values are often used when the electromagnetic environmental conditions are stated. In order to characterize the electromagnetic environment, it is necessary to make certain assumptions on the installation practice. If these assumptions are not satisfied in a particular case, the environmental characteristic may not apply. Each environment is characterized in two ways: • by a short verbal description of its assumed attributes; • by a quantitative statement of the characteristic severities of the crucial environmental phenomena. It is only possible to specify the appropriate EMC requirements following the assessment of the severity of the electromagnetic environment. This in turn will be helpful in ensuring that the telecommunications network equipment has the sufficient intrinsic immunity to enable it to operate as intended in its environment.
101 639
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Radio link management in hierarchical networks (GSM 05.22 version 8.0.0 Release 1999)
TR
8.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101639/08.00.00_60/tr_101639v080000p.pdf
The present document gives examples for the Radio sub-system link control to be implemented in the Base Station System (BSS) and Mobile Switching Centre (MSC) of the GSM and DCS 1 800 systems in case hierarchical cell structures are employed. Unless otherwise specified, references to GSM also include DCS 1 800, and multiband systems if operated by a single operator.
101 639
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Radio link management in hierarchical networks (GSM 05.22 version 7.0.0 Release 1998)
TR
7.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101639/07.00.00_60/tr_101639v070000p.pdf
The present document gives examples for the Radio sub-system link control to be implemented in the Base Station System (BSS) and Mobile Switching Centre (MSC) of the GSM and DCS 1 800 systems in case hierarchical cell structures are employed. Unless otherwise specified, references to GSM also include DCS 1 800, and multiband systems if operated by a single operator.
101 639
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Radio link management in hierarchical networks (GSM 05.22 version 6.0.0 Release 1997)
TR
6.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101639/06.00.00_60/tr_101639v060000p.pdf
The present document gives examples for the Radio sub-system link control to be implemented in the Base Station System (BSS) and Mobile Switching Centre (MSC) of the GSM and DCS 1 800 systems in case hierarchical cell structures are employed. Unless otherwise specified, references to GSM also include DCS 1 800, and multiband systems if operated by a single operator.
101 635
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+) (GSM); Example protocol stacks for interconnecting Service Centre(s) (SC) and Mobile-services Switching Centre(s) (MSC) (GSM 03.47 version 7.0.0 Release 1998)
TR
7.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101635/07.00.00_60/tr_101635v070000p.pdf
No mandatory protocol between the Service Centre (SC) and the Mobile Switching Centre (MSC) below the transfer layer is specified by GSM; this is a matter of agreement between SC and PLMN operators. The present document specifies three approaches to the specification of protocol stacks of communication protocols for the purpose of relaying short messages and alerts between Short Message Service Centres and Gateway/Interworking MSCs (GMSC) for the Short Message Service (SMS). One approach is based upon use of the complete OSI reference model (see X.200), another approach is based upon the use of only the lower three OSI layers, and another approach is based upon the use of CCITT Signalling System No. 7 (see Q.700). Alternative protocol stacks are specified via ASN.1 encoding rules (see X.208 and X.209). These alternative protocol stacks are examples for the implementation of the Short Message Relay Layer (SM-RL). The requirements placed upon the Short Message Relay Layer are briefly described in clause 9 of GSM 03.40. Specifications are based upon individual contributions. Any judgement concerning functionality, completeness and advantages/disadvantages of implementation is intentionally omitted.
101 621
Network Aspects (NA); Number Portability Task Force (NPTF); Consequences of mobile number portability on the PSTN/ISDN and synergy between geographic and mobile number portability
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101621/01.01.01_60/tr_101621v010101p.pdf
The scope of the present document is to describe the consequences of mobile number portability in GSM networks on PSTN/ISDN networks, and to describe how these consequences can be handled such that the PSTN/ISDN and GSM users can be provided with the same services as before the introduction of number portability. The present document also discusses possibilities for synergy between solutions employed in GSM networks for mobile number portability, and solutions employed in PSTN/ISDN networks for geographic number portability. The present document is limited to the aspects of geographic and/or mobile number portability that affect PSTN/ISDN networks. Aspects that concern GSM networks only are not dealt with. The scope of the present document is limited to the network aspects. Service management and inter-operator procedures are outside the scope of the present document. The present document only treats service provider portability. Service portability between telephone service (fixed) and mobile telephone service (PLMN) is excluded from consideration.
101 607
Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS); Cooperative ITS (C-ITS); Release 1
TR
1.2.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101600_101699/101607/01.02.01_60/tr_101607v010201p.pdf
The present document identifies the documents that form Release 1 of Cooperative ITS (C-ITS).
101 599
Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum matters (ERM) System Reference Document (SRDoc); Broadband Direct-Air-to-Ground Communications System employing beamforming antennas, operating in the 2,4 GHz and 5,8 GHz bands
TR
1.1.3
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101599/01.01.03_60/tr_101599v010103p.pdf
The present document describes a system designed to provide broadband DA2G communications, which may require a change of the present frequency designation / utilisation within CEPT or some changes to the present regulatory framework for the proposed band(s) regarding either intended or unwanted emissions. The preferred regulatory approach would be for this system to operate on a non-interference and unprotected basis within the bands 2 400 MHz to 2 483,5 MHz and/or 5 855 MHz to 5 875 MHz. However, it is recognised that there is a high density and large variety of licence-exempt applications already deployed in the 2,4 GHz band in CEPT countries and a number of important applications (including ITS applications and BFWA) also are deployed or planned in, or adjacent to the 5,8 GHz band. The present document includes, in particular: • Market information. • Technical information. • Regulatory issues.
101 593
Satellite Earth Stations and Systems (SES); Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) based location systems; Minimum performance and features
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101593/01.01.01_60/tr_101593v010101p.pdf
The present document addresses location systems combining telecommunication networks with Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) and other navigation technologies in order to deliver location based services. The analysis contained in the present document is intended to highlight the growing use of complex location systems in order to deal with the expansion of location based applications in a mass market. The objective is thus to demonstrate both relevancy and achievability of standardising a high-level architecture for these systems, and the associated minimum performance. In order to achieve this objective, the present document first provides a reminder of the types of applications which rely on location information provided by such systems in order to provide services. Secondly, it describes these location systems, in terms of key functions to be fulfilled (also called key features) and available enabling technologies at system components level (navigation sensors, hybridization techniques). It also focuses on the definition of operation environments applicable to such systems (depending on the type of application). Finally, preliminary location systems architecture, interfaces and performances are defined. It is highlighted that the scope of this technical work specifically excludes standardisation of safety of life applications related to civil aviation, which are already addressed through, in particular, Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics (RTCA) standards.
101 590
IMS Network Testing (INT); IMS/NGN Security Testing and Robustness Benchmark
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101590/01.01.01_60/tr_101590v010101p.pdf
The present document aims to introduce the basic principles and value of robustness testing, and highlight the importance of negative testing in a complex surroundings like IMS. It will introduce some guidelines for performing fuzz testing and provide a template for creating a test plan.
101 589
Broadband Radio Access Networks (BRAN); Very high capacity density BWA networks; Protocols
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101589/01.01.01_60/tr_101589v010101p.pdf
The present document describes the specific protocols for systems providing a throughput of 1 Gbit/s/km2. Such systems include features such as self-backhauling in both licensed and un-licensed bands, cognitive-radio based self-organization, etc.
101 584
<empty>
TR
2.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101584/02.01.01_60/tr_101584v020101p.pdf
The present document is motivated by the fact that within the ETSI M2M System semantic information needs to be available on M2M data that is transferred within the M2M system. Through such semantic information M2M data can be discovered by applications that do not have prior knowledge on them. The capability of the ETSI M2M System to enable applications to discover, interpret and use M2M data from different sources is considered essential for creating high-level M2M services and to develop open markets for M2M data. • In this study pre-normative work is conducted in order to facilitate normative specification work in ETSI M2M Rel.-2 or later. • The study analyses benefit, feasibility and potential requirements for the support of semantic information on application related M2M Resources in the M2M system. The ETSI M2M system would, however, only provide a means to create and handle such semantic information in the ETSI M2M system; ETSI M2M continues to stay independent of 'vertical' markets who in general would define the semantics of M2M data related to their field of expertise. • The study creates use cases that illustrate provisioning and usage of such semantic information and that demonstrate the benefit for the M2M ecosystem. • It investigates on the kind and amount of semantic information that would become available in the M2M system, keeping in mind a trade-off between complexity and usability. • It investigates discovery mechanisms for semantic information in the ETSI M2M System. This should take into account how existing solutions from other standards or research could be used within the ETSI M2M architecture. • It considers on issues of ownership/responsibility for application related M2M Resources in the case that the M2M system can provide semantic information on them. This needs to take into account the need for support of different levels of data privacy and confidentiality. This study relates to WI 0014 (TR 102 966 [i.11] - Interworking between the M2M Architecture and M2M Area Network technologies), as a further step in the abstraction of LAN technologies and devices. Existing relevant standards are taken into account and the study aspires to benefit from inputs of related research projects.
101 583
Methods for Testing and Specification (MTS); Security Testing; Basic Terminology
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101583/01.01.01_60/tr_101583v010101p.pdf
The present document defines terminology and an ontology which together provide the basis for a common understanding of security testing techniques which can be used in testing communication products and systems. The terminology and ontology have been derived from latest research, but also current standards and best practices specified by a broad range of standards organizations and industry bodies. The present document aims to provide information to practitioners on techniques used in testing, and assessment of security, robustness and resilience throughout the product and systems development lifecycle. The present document lists terms and methods for the following security testing approaches: • Verification of security functions and risk-based testing. • Load, stress and performance testing. • Resilience and robustness testing (fuzzing). • Penetration testing. Static Application Security Testing (SAST) tools and techniques are out of scope for the present document.
101 582
<empty>
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101582/01.01.01_60/tr_101582v010101p.pdf
The present document reports on the application of model-based security testing in different industrial domain. Relevant case studies and their results are described in terms of system under test, applied tool chain, together with an overview of the technical requirements. The case studies were conducted as part of ITEA2 DIAMONDS project (http://www.itea2-diamonds.org/index.html) and SPaCIoS project (http://www.spacios.eu/). The document concentrates on the results and conclusions from this work, giving an insight into how applicable such methods are today for testing and indicating the current strengths and weaknesses.
101 578
Speech and multimedia Transmission Quality (STQ); QoS aspects of TCP-based video services like YouTubeTM
TR
1.3.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101578/01.03.01_60/tr_101578v010301p.pdf
The present document focuses on Quality of Service (QoS) measurements for IP-based video services with reliable transport where downloading and viewing takes place in parallel. In principle the presented measurement approach can be used for all video services, where the video is embedded in a HTML context as of video on demand services like e.g. YouTube™. Similar applications are also available on social networks. In the following, QoS parameters to be used for such video service measurements are presented. The underlying procedure consists of two phases: first requesting a control script containing among other information a link to the content, and second, requesting this content. In the present document, YouTube™ serves as the default example but the described QoS parameters can easily be applied to other IP-based video services based on reliable transport. Furthermore, the present document also offers practical guidance for measurement execution and evaluation of HTTP/HTTPS streaming QoS measurement. The present document covers the video request and playout of the video. Other services offered by content providers such as e.g. uploading video or managing the private account are not covered.
101 577
<empty>
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101577/01.01.01_60/tr_101577v010101p.pdf
The present document describes terminology and concepts of performance tests with a generalized view of performance characteristics as the starting point. What kind of characteristics are indicators of a product's performance and what kind of measurement data is captured and processed to provide relevant figures on requested performance is in this view the kernel of performance testing. Methods for performance testing will consequently be guided by the requirements on expected output. A set of following documents will describe strategies, methodologies and techniques of performance testing.
101 576
<empty>
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101576/01.01.01_60/tr_101576v010101p.pdf
The present document describes the Recommendations for the applicability of environmental classes in outdoor cabinet environment. The present document applies for the powering of all equipment of the access network (copper, fibre or radio networks) located outside telecommunications centres. The present document is intended to be applicable to empty cabinets which can be equipped for installation in an outdoor location. The recommendations for outdoor equipment also apply, where relevant, to empty outdoor enclosures supplied for housing Information technology equipment to be installed in an outdoor location. The recommendations for humidity, vibration, shock, biologic conditions, chemical active substances and mechanically active substances (sand, dust, etc.) and mechanical conditions including earthquake contained within relevant standards of intended use according to EN 300 019 series [i.2] to [i.7].
101 569
<empty>
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101569/01.01.01_60/tr_101569v010101p.pdf
The present document assesses the current status of Cable Equipment standards that are implemented and deployed in the components that comprise integrated broadband cable and television networks and the approaches for their transition to IPv6. Since the time-to-market is a factor considering the depletion of IPv4 addresses, the present document accommodates an urgent need in the industry and provides the fundamental analysis for further standardization work. The present document assesses the IPv6 transition technologies to support basic customer services, voice and data.
101 568
Human Factors (HF); A study of user context dependent multilingual communications for interactive applications
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101568/01.01.01_60/tr_101568v010101p.pdf
The present document gives an introduction to and an analysis of the most important issues and areas of relevance to context dependent multilingual communications for interactive applications. It provides a clear description of the most common difficulties and problems faced by application designers and localisers today, and how they solve or work around these. The scope of the present document is summarised through the following statements about the study: 1) It defines localisation and explains what is involved in the localisation process of interactive application, including the management of interactive and non-interactive applications translations. 2) It describes in detail problems and issues related to the localisation of interactive applications, to help understand the limitations, needs and existing solutions or work-around used in the field. 3) It identifies the different industrial and technical domains that are directly concerned by the issue. It looks at several innovation activities related to the domain and provides a state-of-art presentation of languages technologies and research in the domain of multilingual applications, translation management and localisation. 4) It collects information from the different industry sectors identified, examining their needs, their localisation process, their management of translations, and potentially, specific tools or processes they are using for solving or working around the problem. 5) It provides a generic analysis of the situation, plus a specific analysis related to each identified industry sector. The present document addresses the localisation process, which covers a large spectrum of issues and activities. However, the study, after providing an exhaustive description of what localisation means, will focus on the localisation aspects relevant to the highly interactive applications heavily using context variables. The present document had an initial focus on the game industry but it does not restrict its scope to video games. On the contrary, it will expand its vision beyond games, aiming at identifying all other technical and economical sectors facing similar issues. LOCALISATION COMPLEXITY LOCALISATION SENSITIVE INDUSTRY SCOPE Social and Cultural Context Variables and high interaction Grammar correctness Basics Figure 1: Technical Report Scope diagram Finally, the present document will not provide an exhaustive analysis of advanced research projects and techniques, but it will review the main existing or known areas of innovation and analyse whether they may help solving our problem. ETSI ETSI TR 101 568 V1.1.1 (2012-02) 8
101 567
Lawful Interception (LI); Cloud/Virtual Services for Lawful Interception (LI) and Retained Data (RD)
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101567/01.01.01_60/tr_101567v010101p.pdf
The present document provides an overview of Cloud/virtual services and studies. This includes Lawful Interception (LI) and Retained Data (RD) aspects of these services in the converged Cloud/virtual service environment, the challenges and obstacles of complying with those obligations, what implementations can be achieved under existing ETSI LI standards and what new work may be required to achieve needed Lawful Interception capabilities. Cloud Services, in whichever forms they take (Infrastructure, Software, Platform or combinations of these), are often trans-border in nature and the information required to maintain LI and RD capability or sufficient coverage for LI/RD support may vary in different countries or within platforms of different security assurance levels. The present document aims to ensure capabilities can be maintained while allowing business to utilize the advantages and innovations of Cloud Services and was undertaken cooperatively with relevant Cloud security technical bodies.
101 565
Speech and multimedia Transmission Quality (STQ); Guidelines and results of video quality analysis in the context of Benchmark and Plugtests for multiplay services
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101565/01.01.01_60/tr_101565v010101p.pdf
The present document presents the results obtained on technological platform where Triple Play offers are available. These results concern the quality evaluation of IPTV video streams produce by the offers available on the platform. The determinate indicators are presented in the main part of the document. The results were obtained during a specific test campaign for SD streams analysis. Note that determinate indicators are presented in ES 202 765-4 [i.1]. So the present document represents an implementation report for some metrics and associated methods defined in ES 202 765-4 [i.1]. The main part of the present document presents the performed indicators and charts used for results presentation. Annex A presents the methodology implemented in a first series of tests and the results.
101 562-3
<empty>
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/10156203/01.01.01_60/tr_10156203v010101p.pdf
MIMO PLT Channel and noise is reviewed and statistical analysis performed, which takes into account earthing variations, country variation, operator differences, phasing and distribution topologies, domestic, industrial and residential types, as well as local network loading.
101 562-2
<empty>
TR
1.3.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/10156202/01.03.01_60/tr_10156202v010301p.pdf
MIMO PLT EMI is a review and statistical analysis which takes into account such matters as earthing variation, country variation, operator differences, phasing and distribution topologies, domestic, industrial and housing types along with local network loading.
101 562-1
<empty>
TR
1.3.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/10156201/01.03.01_60/tr_10156201v010301p.pdf
Convential PLT modems (SISO) use only the phase and neutral wire of the mains grid. MIMO PLT utilizes additionally the protective earth wire. The present document is an overview of the prevalence of the third wire in private homes and a description of the measurement setup and equipment used to perform EMI, channel and noise measurements.
101 561
IMS Network Testing (INT); Enhancement of Automated Interoperability Testing Framework in IMS core networks: Test adapter And codec design suited for TTCN-3 interoperability testing
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101561/01.01.01_60/tr_101561v010101p.pdf
The purpose of the present document is to present and describe issues and design choices made while developing a generic test adapter and codec suited for TTCN-3 interoperability testing within both STF370 and STF407. For further information, the reader is referred to EG 202 810 [i.3] for global view of methodology and framework for automated interoperability testing and TR 102 788 [i.4] for an overall view of the IMS interoperability test architecture which has served as the main source for design requirements. The present document has been written with the assumption that the reader is well versed in C++ and TTCN-3 (ES 201 873-1 [i.2]) programming. Also good knowledge of the operation of ES 201 873-5 [i.7] and ES 201 873-6 [i.6] standards is assumed.
101 560
IMS Network Testing (INT); IMS NNI Interworking Test Scripts for RCS Release 2.0
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101560/01.01.01_60/tr_101560v010101p.pdf
The present document describes the Abstract Test Suite (ATS) to test interoperability at IMS NNI for IP multimedia call control protocol based on TS 124 229 [i.1] including Rich Communication Suite (RCS) release 2.0. The ATS has been specified on the basis of the Test Descriptions for IMS NNI interoperability testing for RCS presented in TS 102 901 [i.2] and extents TS 186 011-3 [i.3]. It defines a TTCN-3 framework as well as codec and adapter requirements for analysing interoperability test execution traces generated from the manual or automatic execution of IMS interoperability tests. The scope of this ATS is not to cover all requirements specified in TS 124 229 [i.1]. It only assesses requirements that are observable at the NNI between two IMS core network implementations specified in TS 102 901 [i.2].
101 557
Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); System Reference document (SRdoc); Medical Body Area Network Systems (MBANSs) in the 1 785 MHz to 2 500 MHz range
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101557/01.01.01_60/tr_101557v010101p.pdf
The present document describes Medical Body Area Network Systems (MBANSs), which will require a change of the present frequency designation within CEPT. The types of devices that can belong to MBANSs are on-body and off-body medical sensors, patient monitoring devices and medical actuators covered by the Medical Device Directive (Directive 93/42/EEC [i.30]). Implantable devices do not fall within the scope of MBANSs. The present document includes in particular: • Market information. • Technical information including expected sharing and compatibility issues. • Regulatory issues.
101 552
Guidance for the application of conformity assessment to accessibility requirements for public procurement of ICT products and services in Europe
TR
1.0.0
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101552/01.00.00_60/tr_101552v010000p.pdf
101 551
Guidelines on the use of accessibility award criteria suitable for public procurement of ICT products and services in Europe
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101551/01.01.01_60/tr_101551v010101p.pdf
........................................................................................................................................................ 5
101 550
Documents relevant to EN 301 549 (V1.1.1) "Accessibility requirements suitable for public procurement of ICT products and services in Europe"
TR
1.1.3
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101550/01.01.03_60/tr_101550v010103p.pdf
The present document lists the documents used in the creation of EN 301 549 (V1.1.1) [i.3] on accessibility requirements for public procurement of ICT products and services in Europe and provides a source reference for any other documents needed to implement the test procedures specified in that document. As well as identifying the sources for the EN content, the present document also provides additional explanation to assist users of the EN with clarifications and supporting information about measurement methods, particularly where no globally agreed test presently exists. Where there are any test gaps, these are identified and test descriptions and evaluation methodologies are developed. In those exceptional cases where it is not possible to do so, recommendations are given on how the gaps should be filled. The present document does not address additional sources or issues raised during the creation of later versions of the EN.
101 537
Electromagnetic compatibility and radio spectrum matters (ERM); Second co-existence test between ER-GSM with RFID
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101537/01.01.01_60/tr_101537v010101p.pdf
The present document describes a series of tests that were undertaken to determine the parameters necessary to permit RFID to share the band 918 MHz to 921 MHz with ER-GSM. The tests were undertaken at the BNetzA Test Laboratory at Kolberg. The main purpose of these tests was to find answers to a number of important questions that had been raised during some earlier tests and to gather additional information.
101 534
Broadband Radio Access Networks (BRAN); Very high capacity density BWA networks; System architecture, economic model and derivation of technical requirements
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101534/01.01.01_60/tr_101534v010101p.pdf
The present document addresses the architecture, the economic model and the derivation of technical requirements for a BWA system, providing 1 Gbit/s/km2, using 40 MHz of licensed spectrum and including self-backhauling in both licensed and un-licensed bands, network MIMO, cognitive-radio based self-organization, etc.
101 532
End-to-End Network Architectures (E2NA); Mechanisms addressing interoperability of multimedia service and content distribution and consumption with respect to CA/DRM solutions
TR
1.1.2
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101532/01.01.02_60/tr_101532v010102p.pdf
The present document about "Mechanisms addressing interoperability of multimedia service and content distribution and consumption with respect to CA/DRM solutions" gives an overview and provides guidance on several CA/DRM subjects, presents related activities in standardization bodies and discusses implementation issues. Special attention is paid to existing solutions already introduced to the market with regard to interoperability as well as to emerging software-based solutions, all operated under a trusted environment. Analysis of solutions for interoperable multimedia content distribution and consumption with respect to CA/DRM, suitable for Multimedia platforms (broadcast, broadband or hybrid) and to the content/services delivered over them is the main focus of the present document, addressing: • A review of the status of existing and emerging standards together with other attempts to produce interoperable and interchangeable CA/DRM solutions suitable for multimedia consumption across multiple networks and platforms. • A presentation of the practical framework required for implementation and operation of a CA/DRM system. • An analysis of the interoperability available using current solutions and lessons from all the attempts reviewed. • Emerging market needs. • Concepts for market implementation including business roles, liability and trust. • Regulatory and legal issues. The present document covers all aspects of interoperability involving standardized elements concerning Conditional Access (CA) and Digital Rights Management (DRM) solutions associated with content distribution and consumption across various technical platforms for conventional Broadcast TV (DVB-C/C2, -S/S2, -T/T2) as well as for Broadband TV (including IPTV, WEB-TV) and Mobile TV.
101 516
Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+); Abbreviations and acronyms (GSM 01.04 version 5.0.2 Release 1996)
TR
5.0.2
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101516/05.00.02_60/tr_101516v050002p.pdf
The present document provides the abbreviations and acronyms to be used throughout the GSM specifications. All abbreviations are presented in the singular, but are equally applicable to the plural.
101 510-1
Intelligent Network (IN); Security aspects of Switching Control Function (SCF) - Service Switching Function (SSF) interconnection between networks; Part 1: Capability Set 1 (CS1) based operations
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/10151001/01.01.01_60/tr_10151001v010101p.pdf
The present document describes security aspects in conjunction with the interconnection of two IN structured networks. The present document concentrates on the SCF - SSF interconnection. The purpose of the present document is to describe the security aspects of interconnection of SCF to SSF. The operations considered in this interconnection are a subset of CS1. For the time being CAMEL is the only application of SCF - SSF interconnection, therefore the present document considers only CAMEL phase 1 operations. A later edition may also consider other CS1 operations. Future parts of the present document will investigate the security aspects of operation sets that are a subset of CS2 and CS3.
101 506
Fixed Radio Systems; Generic definitions, terminology and applicability of essential requirements covering article 3.2 of Directive 2014/53/EU to Fixed Radio Systems
TR
2.2.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101506/02.02.01_60/tr_101506v020201p.pdf
The present document, is intended for complementing the ETSI EG 203 336 [i.1] for specific guidance related to Digital Fixed Radio Systems (DFRS) in the production of candidate harmonised standards covering Directive 2014/53/EU [i.2]. Consequently the present document should always be used in conjunction with ETSI EG 203 336 [i.1] whenever DFRS are concerned. NOTE: The previous versions of the present document were developed for similar purpose related to the now superseded ETSI EG 201 399 [i.10] V2.1.1 and Directive 1999/5/EC [i.11] repealed in June 2016 by Directive 2014/53/EU [i.2]. The present document identifies, among the generic technical parameters, relevant for the article 3.2 of the Directive, presently quoted by ETSI EG 203 336 [i.1], those which are relevant and applicable and those that are considered not applicable, for the various typologies of DFRS. Taking also into account the general principle of avoiding overregulation, they are justified through specific peculiarities of the DFRS technologies employed. Moreover it gives the cross reference from the generic terminology used in ETSI EG 203 336 [i.1] and that currently used within the Fixed Radio technical community. Considerations about technical parameters related to article 3.1 (health, safety and EMC) and article 3.3 (interworking and other special requirements) of Directive 2014/53/EU [i.2] are outside the scope of the present document.
101 506
Fixed Radio Systems; Generic definitions, terminology and applicability of essential requirements under the article 3.2 of 1999/05/EC Directive to Fixed Radio Systems
TR
1.3.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101506/01.03.01_60/tr_101506v010301p.pdf
The present document, is intended for complementing the ETSI EG 203 336 [i.1] for specific guidance related to Digital Fixed Radio Systems (DFRS) in the production of candidate harmonised standards covering Directive 2014/53/EU [i.2]. Consequently the present document should always be used in conjunction with ETSI EG 203 336 [i.1] whenever DFRS are concerned. NOTE: The previous versions of the present document were developed for similar purpose related to the now superseded ETSI EG 201 399 [i.10] V2.1.1 and Directive 1999/5/EC [i.11] repealed in June 2016 by Directive 2014/53/EU [i.2]. The present document identifies, among the generic technical parameters, relevant for the article 3.2 of the Directive, presently quoted by ETSI EG 203 336 [i.1], those which are relevant and applicable and those that are considered not applicable, for the various typologies of DFRS. Taking also into account the general principle of avoiding overregulation, they are justified through specific peculiarities of the DFRS technologies employed. Moreover it gives the cross reference from the generic terminology used in ETSI EG 203 336 [i.1] and that currently used within the Fixed Radio technical community. Considerations about technical parameters related to article 3.1 (health, safety and EMC) and article 3.3 (interworking and other special requirements) of Directive 2014/53/EU [i.2] are outside the scope of the present document.
101 495
Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB); Guide to DAB standards
TR
2.2.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101400_101499/101495/02.02.01_60/tr_101495v020201p.pdf
The present document provides brief explanations about the many different standards and guidelines for Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB), what they cover and how they interrelate. The present document seeks to provide a useful guide to allow implementers to determine which aspects of the DAB system are in common use, and which are more specialized, for both consumer and professional equipment. Those specifications that are no longer considered to be in mainstream use (and are identified as "Historical" in the ETSI Work Programme) are also detailed.
101 546
<empty>
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101546/01.01.01_60/tr_101546v010101p.pdf
The present document is intended to provide an introduction to the Converged Cable Access Platform (CCAP) architecture. The CCAP architecture has been specified in an integrated and a modular implementation. The present document describes both the integrated and modular architectures and discusses the various specifications that contain normative requirements pertaining to the CCAP. In addition, the present document describes the architectural entities and interfaces that make up the integrated and modular implementations, as well as the protocols they support. For the modular implementation, the present document provides an overview of the operation of Packet Shelf and Access Shelf devices, as well as the interface between them.
101 545-5
Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); Second Generation DVB Interactive Satellite System (DVB-RCS2); Part 5: Guidelines for the Implementation and Use of TS 101 545-3
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/10154505/01.01.01_60/tr_10154505v010101p.pdf
The present document provides implementation and usage guidelines for higher-layer functions in DVB-RCS2 interactive satellite networks, which is defined in [i.2]. The lower-layer specification and implementation guidelines for DVB-RCS2 networks are presented in [i.3] and [i.4], respectively. The present document covers on transparent star, regenerative mesh, and transparent mesh overlay network topologies. The recommendations and examples provided in the present document are informative.
101 545-4
Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); Second Generation DVB Interactive Satellite System (DVB-RCS2); Part 4: Guidelines for Implementation and Use of EN 301 545-2
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/10154504/01.01.01_60/tr_10154504v010101p.pdf
The present document provides implementation guidelines for equipment and systems intended to comply with [i.1]. It also provides designs that may be used to supplement the normative specifications provided in [i.1]. Such designs could evolve into being a part of the normative specifications in the future.
101 543
Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); RFID evaluation tests undertaken in support of M/436 Phase 1
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101543/01.01.01_60/tr_101543v010101p.pdf
The present document describes some RFID Evaluation Tests that were carried to evaluate the characteristics and performance of RFID equipment operating at their three principal frequencies of use. The information derived from the tests is directly relevant to the work of STF 396 in preparing their response to EC Mandate M/436 [i.1].
101 542
Satellite Earth Stations and Systems (SES); Comparison of candidate radio interfaces performances in MSS context
TR
1.2.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101542/01.02.01_60/tr_101542v010201p.pdf
The present document aims to compare the link level performances of several radio interfaces (HSPA, LTE and mobile WiMAX) in geostationary based mobile satellite systems operating in S band or L band. The present document provides a high level description of the radio interfaces to be compared. It then identifies their key characteristics and defines the propagation channel used for the comparison. Link level performances are compared in terms of required signal to noise ratio ( o b N E ) for a given block error rate (BLER) and data rate. The present document concludes on the respective qualitative benefits and drawbacks of the considered radio interfaces.
101 540
<empty>
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101540/01.01.01_60/tr_101540v010101p.pdf
The present document describes the DVB-H Small Gap Fillers intended for consumer use. These devices are low-power on-channel repeaters of a DVB-H multiplex, with the aim of improving indoor reception in areas where outdoor reception is available. It includes in particular: • Market information. • Technical information. • Regulatory issues.
101 538
Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Short Range Devices (SRD); UWB location tracking devices in the railroad environment
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101500_101599/101538/01.01.01_60/tr_101538v010101p.pdf
The present document describes a railway application utilizing ultra wideband technology operating in the preferred frequency ranges from 3,1 GHz to 4,8 GHz and from 6 GHz to 8,5 GHz. Operation is foreseen for indoor and outdoor applications, including either mobile devices installed onboard the train cars and fixed devices installed on ground, as reference stations. These stations, belonging to the fixed infrastructure, will be allowed to operate as UWB emitters only in the lower frequency band, from 3,1 GHz to 4,8 GHz, in compliance with the compatibility studies and with the latest recommendation [i.9] proposed by ECC/CEPT, as this provision would allow the deployment of such fixed UWB devices in the railway environment according to the "registration and coordination" process recently proposed by ECC/CEPT 167 [i.10]. In railway applications, location tracking is performed within specified areas, called as an Area-Of-Interests (AOIs), which are areas around Point-Of-Interests (POIs). The POIs are listed below: • Point in passenger platform • Railway signal • Railway crossing • Generic POI The UWB radio technology is required to track with sub-meter accuracy any rail vehicle to the purpose of stopping it in the appropriate POI. The length of AOI is defined by the braking distance of a rail vehicle, and it is typically hundreds of meters. The generic regulation on UWB technology for use in rail and road vehicles onboard applications, such as - for instance - in subway underground stations, within the frequency ranges of 3,1 GHz to 4,8 GHz and 6 GHz to 8,5 GHz has been recently updated in the last Electronic Communication Committee (ECC) amended ECC/DEC(06)04 [i.1] including the suitable reference to mitigation techniques. According to [i.2], underground station should be considered as an indoor environment because surrounding structures shields any emitted radio signal, providing the necessary attenuation to protect primary radio communication services against harmful interference. However, in railway stations and trackside signalling installations there may not be structures blocking the propagation of emitted signals, and therefore the outdoor environment regulation should apply. The outdoor usage of UWB devices in location and tracking applications such as person and object tracking in industrial, automotive and transportation environments are described in [i.4] and [i.5]. Nevertheless, these applications do not include the location / tracking specific application in railway environments, which may occur at many points across a public rail or tram network. Actually, the latest generic ECC regulation [i.11] for the deployment of UWB devices in vehicles and the ECC/REC(11)09 [i.9] on provisions relevant to fixed UWB infrastructures do not deal with specific railway application issues, but are actually permitting the deployment of such UWB, respectively, onboard the trains and along the wayside of railway infrastructures. Therefore, the present document describes the railway application of UWB devices and collects specific information, including: • Market information (annex A). • Technical information (annex B). ETSI ETSI TR 101 538 V1.1.1 (2012-10) 7
101 445
Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Short-Range Devices (SRD) intended for operation in the 862 MHz to 870 MHz band; System Reference Document for Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) equipment
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101400_101499/101445/01.01.01_60/tr_101445v010101p.pdf
The present document applies to RFID systems operating in the UHF band. RFID belong to the family of non-specific SRDs. It is anticipated that the frequency band proposed in the present document will be dedicated to non-specific SRDs. The present SR Doc is intended to define RFID systems that are used in item management and logistic applications. These applications require reading ranges of at least 2 m that cannot be provided by alternative technologies and at other frequencies. The operation of SRDs in the UHF band is covered by the generic standard EN 300 220-1 [2]. Some of the requirements proposed in this System Reference Document - particularly those relating to power levels - fall outside the generic standard. It will be necessary therefore to raise a new Work Item for the generation of suitable documentation to deal with these issues. The present document contains the technical characteristics for radio equipment referencing CEPT/ERC Decisions and Recommendation CEPT/ERC/REC 70-03 [1]. Table 1 Power class Power level (conducted or radiated) mW 11 100 12 500 xx 2 000 The following information is given in the Annexes • Annex A: Detailed market information; • Annex B: Technical information; • Annex C: Anticipated compatibility issues.
101 398
Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS); High level requirements relevant for the definition of the UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access (UTRA) concept (UMTS 21.02 version 3.0.1).
TR
3.0.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101300_101399/101398/03.00.01_60/tr_101398v030001p.pdf
101 397
Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS); Concept groups for the definition of the UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access (UTRA) (UMTS 30.04 version 3.0.1)
TR
3.0.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101300_101399/101397/03.00.01_60/tr_101397v030001p.pdf
SMG2 have according to the UTRA definition procedure elaborated proposal for concept groups for the definition of the UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access UTRA. This work have resulted in the following five concept groups: α - concept: Wideband CDMA Allocated to this groups are the following original proposals: - FRAMES FMA mode 2 (CSEM/Pro Telecom, Ericsson, France Telecorn/CNET, Nokia, Siemens) - Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (W-CDMA) (Fujitsu Europe Telecom R&D Centre) - Wideband Direct Sequence (DS) CDMA, (NEC Technologies (UK) Ltd) - DS-CDMA Utilising FDD and TDD, (Panasonic (Matsushita Europe & Matsushita Comm. Ind. Ltd)) β- concept: OFDM Allocated to this groups are the following original proposals: - Band Division Multiple Access (BDMA) (OFDM & SFH-TDMA), (Sony International (Europe) Gmbh) - Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) (Telia Research) - OFDMA (Lucent Technologies) γ - concept: Wideband TDMA Allocated to this groups are the following original proposals: - Frames FMA mode 1 without spreading (CSEM/Pro Telecom, Ericsson, France Telecom/CNET, Nokia, Siemens) δ - concept: Wideband TDMA/CDMA Allocated to this groups are the following original proposals: - Code Time Division Multiple Access (CTDMA) (Swiss Telecom PTT) - Frames FMA mode 1 with spreading (CSEM/Pro Telecom, Ericsson, France Telecom/CNET, Nokia, Siemens) ε - concept: ODMA Allocated to this groups are the following original proposals: - Opportunity Driven Multiple Access (ODMA) (Vodafone LTD., Salbu R&D (Pty) Ltd.) The following proposals are considered relevant for more than one Concept Group: For the β, γ, δ concept groups are allocated the proposal Flexible Frames Structure (Philips Consumer Communications/Philips Research Laboratories). For all concept groups are allocated the proposal Multi-Dimensional Packet Reservation Multiple Access (MD PRMA) (NEC technologies (UK) Ltd., Kings College London). Templates describing the key attributes of the proposals contained in the five concept groups follow. ETSI TR 101 397 V3.0.1 (1998-10) 6 UMTS 30.04 version 3.0.1 2 Concept Group Alpha -Wideband Direct-Sequence CDMA ETSI SMG2#22 Tdoc SMG2 234/97 In the procedure to define the UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access (UTRA), the wideband DS-CDMA concept group will develop and evaluate a multiple access concept based on direct sequence code division. This group currently includes the DS-CDMA proposals from FRAMES Mode 2, Fujitsu, NEC and Panasonic. The main radio transmission technology (RTT) parameters of these proposals are described in Table 1 below. The proposals are designed to operate with multiple bandwidths, including bandwidths supporting wideband services. Glossary of abbreviations used: BS Base station DL Downlink (forward link) DS-CDMA Direct-Sequence Code Division Multiple Access FDD Frequency Division Duplexing Mcps Mega chips per second TDD Time Division Duplexing UL Uplink (reverse link) ETSI TR 101 397 V3.0.1 (1998-10) 7 UMTS 30.04 version 3.0.1 Table 1: Wideband DS-CDMA proposals FRAMES FMA Mode 2 Fujitsu W-CDMA NEC W-CDMA Panasonic Multiple access method DS-CDMA DS-CDMA DS-CDMA DS-CDMA Duplexing method FDD FDD FDD FDD/TDD Channel spacing 4.8/9.6 MHz 1 5/20 MHz 1.25/5 MHz 1.25/5/10/20 MHz Carrier chip rate 3.84/7.68 Mcps 1 4.096/16.384 Mcps 1.024/4.096 Mcps 1.024/4.096/8.192/16.384 Mcps Frame length 10 ms 10 ms 20 ms 10 ms Multirate concept UL: Variable spreading DL: Multicode UL & DL: Variable spreading and/or multicode UL & DL: Variable spreading and/or multicode UL & DL: Variable spreading and/or multicode FEC codes UL: Convolutional code, rate1/2, puncturing/repetition DL: Convolutional code, rate 1/3, puncturing/repetition Convolutional code, rate 1/3 for 4.096 Mcps, rate 1/2 for 16.384 Mcps UL & DL: Convolutional code, rate 1/3 (+ Outer Reed-Solomon code option) Convolutional code, rate 1/3 or 1/2, K=9 Puncturing/repetition for variable rate Reed-Solomon coding added for data Interleaving Intra-frame/inter frame interleaving Intra-frame/inter-frame interleaving Intra-frame/inter-frame interleaving Intra-frame interleaving for convolutional Inter-frame interleaving for Reed-Solomon Spreading factors 2 to 256 8 to 512 16 to 64 4 to 64 @ 1.024 Mcps, 4 to 256 @ 4.096 Mcps, 4 to 512 @ 8.192 Mcps, 4 to 1024 @ 16.384 Mcps Spreading codes Short codes Extended Gold sequences for short and long codes Short codes and long codes Short codes and long codes Modulation UL: O-QPSK DL: QPSK UL: O-QPSK DL: QPSK UL: π/4 - QPSK DL: QPSK UL: QPSK DL: QPSK Pulse shaping Root Raised Cosine, roll-off = 0.2 Root Raised Cosine, roll-off = 0.22 Root Raised Cosine, roll-off = 0.22 Root Raised Cosine, roll-off = 0.22 Handover Mobile controlled soft handover Soft handover supported Soft handover Diversity handover IF handover Supported within specification [TBD] Supported within specification Fast handover Detection UL: Coherent detection (reference symbol based) DL: Coherent detection (pilot code or reference symbol based) UL: Coherent detection (pilot symbol assisted) DL: Coherent detection (pilot channel or pilot symbol assisted) UL & DL: Coherent detection (reference symbol based) UL & DL: Coherent detection (based on time multiplexed pilot symbol) Interference reduction Short codes supports multi-user detection Interference canceller (option) Digital beamforming (option) Multi-user detection (option) Interference canceller for UL (option) Digital beamforming (option) Power control UL: Open loop and fast closed loop DL: Fast closed loop Open loop and closed loop UL: Open loop and fast closed loop DL: At least open loop FDD UL: SIR based fast closed loop DL: SIR based fast closed loop Outer loop added TDD UL: fast open loop DL: slow closed loop Outer loop added Diversity RAKE, UL antenna diversity UL & DL: RAKE and antenna diversity UL & DL: RAKE and antenna diversity UL: path, antenna ,site DL: path, antenna, site UL: path, antenna, site DL: path, antenna, site, BS TX antenna diversity Base station synchronisation Asynchronous operation Asynchronous operation Asynchronous operation Asynchronous Synchronised 1 Harmonisation with FMA Mode 1 parameters has been taken into account in the choice of these parameters. ETSI TR 101 397 V3.0.1 (1998-10) 8 UMTS 30.04 version 3.0.1 3 β-The OFDM concept group ETSI SMG2#22 Tdoc SMG2 __/97 Introduction The OFDM concept group will develop and evaluate a multiple access concept based on the use of a discrete Fourier transform for modulation and demodulation, the group currently includes complete proposals from Telia and Sony, and a proposal for some aspects of the system from Lucent Technologies. The main RTT parameters of these proposals are described in the table below. This document is intended as a starting point for work within the OFDM concept group. ETSI TR 101 397 V3.0.1 (1998-10) 9 UMTS 30.04 version 3.0.1 Key parameters for OFDM concept group SONY TELIA LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES Multiple Access Method BDMA (OFDM & SFH- TDMA) OFDMA OFDMA Duplexing Method FDD (TDD option) FDD FDD (TDD option) Required bandwidth to support a 2 Mbit/s peak bit rate Minimum 1.6 MHz with 8DPSK modulation 4 MHz Channel Spacing 100 kHz (Multiple of 100 kHz supported) 125 kHz (Multiples of 125 kHz supported) Maximum User Bitrate at least 2Mbit/s 2.5 Mbit/s1 at least 2 Mbit/s Subcarrier Spacing 4.167 kHz (=100kHz/24) 5 kHz Symbol Duration 288.46 µs 235.6 µs Frame Length 4.6154/4ms (4-TDMA), 4.6154/2 (8-TDMA), 4.6154ms (16-TDMA) 15.5 ms Multirate concept Multi-Bandslot & Multi- Timeslot Variable block allocation Variable block/slot allocation FEC codes Convolutional Codes, RS-Codes, BCH-Codes Rate 1/2, Constraint length 7, conv.code PAPR reducing coding schemes Interleaving Bearer/Service specific (e.g. voice 18.46 ms) Bearer/Service specific Modulation Frequency Domain Differential QPSK (multilevel modulation possible) Coherent QPSK QPSK + QAM option for suitable channels Windowing Full Cosine Roll Off (a=0.036) Raised Cosine (Tukey) Conventional + Peak Windowing Detection Differential Detection (Coherent possible) Coherent, Pilot assisted Coherent in suitable channels Power Control Closed Loop Power Control (Step: -1, 0, +1dB;1.153ms/control) For Further Study Diversity Time-, Frequency-, Interference Diversity Antenna Diversity recommended for Up- & Downlink Time and Frequency Handover Seamless handover (soft handover not required) Seamless handover (soft handover not required) IF Handover Supported Supported Supported Base Station Synchronisation Preferable Not needed Not required for unlicensed use. Preferable for licensed use. Interference Reduction Interference Diversity (by SFH) DCA (OFDM orthogonal within one cell) SFH for licensed use. DRA (DCA) for unlicensed use. Frequency Reuse Factor 1 Frequency Reuse supported (also 3, 5, 7, 9,...) Not applicable due to DCA 1 Frequency Reuse supported (also 3, 5, 7, 9, ...) 1 Assuming a 5 MHz bandwidth for each cell layer, 10 % guardband and 20 % signalling overhead. ETSI TR 101 397 V3.0.1 (1998-10) 10 UMTS 30.04 version 3.0.1
101 380
Digital Terminals and Access (DTA); Definitions, abbreviations and symbols
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101300_101399/101380/01.01.01_60/tr_101380v010101p.pdf
The present document presents a list of the definitions, abbreviations and symbols used in the documents prepared by ETSI Project Digital Terminals and Access (DTA). The purpose of the present document is primarily to give guidance to DTA rapporteurs in the preparation of their documents, and to assist the usability of these documents through the use of a consistent terminology. Furthermore it is intended to align as far as possible the definitions abbreviations and symbols with the corresponding ones from ITU and make them available within ETSI for other Technical Bodies, membership and clients. The definitions, abbreviations and symbols given are not intended to be exclusive. Other definitions, abbreviations and symbols different from those given here may be found in some EP-DTA documents. However, the definitions given in the present document are generally to be preferred.
101 378
Broadband Radio Access Networks (BRAN); Common ETSI - ATM Forum reference model for Wireless ATM Access Systems (WACS)
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101300_101399/101378/01.01.01_60/tr_101378v010101p.pdf
The present document describes a Common Reference Model for Broadband Radio Access Networks (BRAN) supporting ATM, also know as Wireless ATM Access Systems (WACS). WACS provide wireless local and remote access to ATM networks. In the ETSI BRAN Project, the scope of the standards for such specific systems is limited to the air interface, the service interfaces of the wireless subsystem, interworking functions for specified user and network interfaces, and supporting capabilities required to realize these services. The air interface and the interworking functions for HIPERLAN/2 provide multi-vendor interoperation capabilities at the air interface and at those supported network interfaces. Interfaces and protocols between the signalling functions in ATM terminal devices and the signalling functions in the ATM switch are outside the scope of BRAN, but may be in the scope of the present document where they relate to radio mobility. The following describes a reference model to be used as basis for the development of a set of functional standards for WACS. It should be noted that for many purposes, there is no need to distinguish between WACS compliant systems serving mobile user nodes and those serving stationary access nodes. In the latter case, the same node may be visible to more than one access point and the radio link conditions may require a "handover" in order to maintain communications in changing radio environments.
101 375
Security Algorithms Group of Experts (SAGE); Report on the specification, evaluation and usage of the GSM GPRS Encryption Algorithm (GEA)
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101300_101399/101375/01.01.01_60/tr_101375v010101p.pdf
The present document is a description of the work undertaken by SAGE STF123 to design the GSM GPRS Encryption Algorithm (GEA), and to approve its release to the ETSI Secretariat, acting as custodian for GEA on behalf of ETSI SAGE. The present document also provides some background information concerning the need for and usage of the algorithm and a summary of the procedures that are to be used by the ETSI Secretariat to distribute the algorithm specification and test data. With regard to the design of the algorithm, the scope of the present document is confined to a description of the design criteria, the design methodology and an outline of the content and structure of the specification and test data reports. The algorithm specification and associated test data are documented in the Specification of GEA which consists of the following three documents. • Document 1: Algorithm Specification; • Document 2: Design Conformance Test Data; • Document 3: Algorithm Input / Output Test Data. The first two parts are confidential and their distribution will be restricted by the algorithm custodian, the ETSI secretariat, to a group of approved recipients. With regard to the evaluation of the algorithm, the scope of the present document is restricted to a description of the evaluation criteria, the method of evaluation, the scope of the internal SAGE evaluation report and the conclusions from the evaluation that led to the technical committee approving the specification. Details of the results of the evaluation are recorded in a report which is confidential to ETSI SAGE.
101 374-2
Satellite Earth Stations and Systems (SES); Broadband satellite multimedia; Part 2: Scenario for standardization
TR
1.1.1
http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_tr/101300_101399/10137402/01.01.01_60/tr_10137402v010101p.pdf
The scope of this work is to consider a standardization scenario for Broadband Satellite Multimedia: • Phase 2: TR 101 374-2, "Standardization Objectives for Broadband Satellite Multimedia: The Standardization Scenario"; based upon the report: • Phase 1: TR 101 374-1 [2], "Survey on Standardization Objectives for Broadband Satellite Multimedia". The standardization approach, relevant issues, actions and further work that should be undertaken within ETSI is analysed and presented. This Phase 2 analyses the various possibilities of harmonized and voluntary standardization, based on among other issues, the GMM report [19] and the GMM companion document [20], and taking into account the R&TTE directive 1999/05/EC [22]. The standardization scenario also addresses issues mentioned in the Phase 1 report, as: Fixed Mobile Convergence, Virtual Home Environment, Number Portability, Radio Air Interface, I-F Interface, Application, User Interface, and Gateway Interface. The conclusions define the Standardization scenario, including identification of standards proposed to be produced by ETSI.