Andrew Seybold, W6AMS, is a frequent contributor to Urgent
Communications. He is on the Board of SBARC and serves as VP External
Affairs.
Boston bombings raise sharing questions for FirstNet
Mon,
2013-04-22 16:28
Network-congestion issues during the aftermath of the Boston bombings
should spur FirstNet members to ask some hard questions before agreeing
to potential sharing arrangements with commercial operators.
By Andrew Seybold
The bombings during the Boston Marathon
were a terrible tragedy, and the news media got a lot of things wrong in
the first few hours after the blasts. One report, later retracted by the
Boston Globe, was that the federal government had ordered all
commercial networks to be shut down. No one knew if the bombs had been
set off via
cell phones, which is one of many ways they could have been
detonated. The idea was that the networks were shut down was based on a
fear that there could be more bombs, and the networks could be used to
detonate them.
The real story was that the networks were not ordered to shut down, but
they were so overcrowded that many call requests could not be put
through. So many people being denied access to the networks led to the
assumption that they had been shut down.
Even so, the fact that the networks were overloadedas they are in times
of major incidentsshould be of concern to
FirstNet. Because FirstNet is exploring the possibility of sharing
the Nationwide Public Safety Broadband Network (NPSBN) with commercial
operators, which will in turn make use of excess capacity on the network,
the following questions need to be considered in the final network
design. These questions are applicable during commercial-network
overload, as well as whenand ifcommercial networks are ever ordered to
shut down.
1) If the commercial networks were to be
shut down or become overcrowded, and the network operators had a sharing
agreement to use the FirstNet network, would all of the users on the
commercial networks be shifted over to FirstNet, causing increased
traffic and congestion on the NPSBN when it is needed most by the first
responders?
2) If commercial users had access to
FirstNet and the commercial networks were shut down, does this also mean
that the NPSBN would have to shut down, because a commercial device on
this network would also be capable of detonating a bomb by remote
control?
3) Whatif anysafeguards will be built
into the sharing agreements between FirstNet and the commercial network
operators, and how will the load between FirstNet first responders and
commercial users be monitored and managed? Will it be possible to shut
down access to the NPSBN for secondary users (commercial users) when the
commercial networks are shut down or are overloaded?
The FirstNet system design is based on public safety having pre-emptive
access to the network. In theory, pre-emption would occur in two phases.
The first would be to limit the bandwidth and capacity available to
non-first-responder users during incidents. The second would be ‘ruthless
pre-emption,’ in which a first responder who accesses the NPSBN would be
granted that access instantly, even if it meant terminating a commercial
(secondary) user’s connection.
This sounds great in theory, but in today’s real world, any type of true
pre-emption might not be possible. One of the committees I serve on is
made up of some of the brightest
LTE engineers in the business. They have participated in the
standards body work for LTE, designed LTE systems, worked with LTE
systems, and have more knowledge and hands-on LTE experience than any
other group I have worked with or talked with. When I raised the
following issues, they dug into them, and their top-line answers are
shown after the statements.
Assertion 1:If the signaling channel is overloaded, then a User
(UE) with maximum priority and pre-emptive rights may not be able to
access the network.
Top-Line Answer:This is essentially a true statement, especially in
a network that is shared with commercial users.
Assertion 2: LTE provides a way around this problem (as
stated in Assertion #1) that can be implemented to ensure full priority
access when needed.
Top-Line Answer: Mitigation tools exist in the
3GPP standards, but due to a wide range of potential scenarios and
causes, to characterize this as “solved” would be an
oversimplification.
There is much more to the response from this group that I will publish
soon in my Public Safety Advocate e-newsletter, but the reason for
the response is based on the following overlying characteristics of LTE
(or any cellular-like network):
1) In order to make a call (or get onto the
network), the device must send a request for access to the network. The
network then verifies that this unit is permitted access and attaches the
device to the network.
2) The signaling channel input is located
at each cell site, and it sends the request to the network. If the number
of requests for service exceeds the capacity on the signaling channel,
some of the requests will not be processed.
If the request for service or pre-emptive service is not delivered to the
cell site and transmitted to the network, the network has no way of
knowing the request was even made. Further, if the requests overload a
number of cell sites, they may not travel from the cell site to the
network for processing. In other words, if the LTE signaling channel
(RACH) is congested, the level of priority makes no difference. If the
cell site does not receive the request for service, it cannot be
processed. So in reality, there is no true pre-emption in LTE
today.
Note: One of the arguments we used with Congress to have the D Block
allocated to Public Safety was the fact that pre-emptive access on
commercial networks was neither practical nor feasible to accomplish. The
earthquake centered in Virginia and the following hurricane proved our
point, becausewhile the commercial networks remained operationalthere
were many instances when access was totally blocked because the signaling
channels were overloaded.
The bottom line is that implementing the public-safety LTE system
will be a real challenge. I am sure the FirstNet is up to it, but the
solution will need to be carefully focused on the needs of public safety
during incidents when access to the NPSBN will be critical for the
public-safety community. serves as your VP
Wireless communications consultant Andrew Seybold is a communications
advisor to both the National Sheriffs Association, and the International
Association of Chiefs of Police.
Source URL:
http://urgentcomm.com/blog/boston-bombings-raise-sharing-questions-firstnet