wireless personal area networks (wpan) part-2: ieee802.15 bluetooth

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Wireless Personal Area Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth IT351: Mobile & Wireless IT351: Mobile & Wireless Computing Computing Objectives: – To introduce Ad Hoc networking and discuss its application domain. – To provide a detailed study of the Bluetooth Wireless Technology including its architecture and protocol.

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IT351: Mobile & Wireless Computing. Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth. Objectives: To introduce Ad Hoc networking and discuss its application domain. To provide a detailed study of the Bluetooth Wireless Technology including its architecture and protocol. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN)Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN)Part-2: IEEE802.15 BluetoothPart-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

IT351: Mobile & Wireless ComputingIT351: Mobile & Wireless Computing

Objectives:– To introduce Ad Hoc networking and discuss its application domain.– To provide a detailed study of the Bluetooth Wireless Technology including its

architecture and protocol.

Page 2: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

OutlineOutline

• Motivation• History• Application and usage scenarios• Network architecture

– Piconets

– Scatternets

• Protocol stack– Core protocols

– Cable replacement and telephony control protocols

– Profiles

• Future developments• Wi-Fi vs. Bluetooth

Page 3: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Bluetooth - MotivationBluetooth - Motivation• A technology that aims at ad-hoc piconets -- LAN with very

limited coverage without the need for infrastructure

• To connect small devices in close proximity (about 10 m)

• The envisaged gross data rate is 1 Mbits/s

• Both asynchronous (data) and synchronous (voice) services

• Transceiver should be very cheap

• Low power consumption chip

• Replace IrDA and solve its main problems: – limited range – 2m for built-in interfaces– line of sight– usually limited to two users, only point-to-point connections are

supported– no internet working functions– has no MAC– Big advantage: COST

Page 4: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

BluetoothBluetooth• History

– 1994: Ericsson (Mattison/Haartsen) initiated “MC-link” (multi communicator link) project

– Renaming of the project: Bluetooth according to Harald “Blåtand” Gormsen [son of Gorm], King of Denmark in the 10th century

– 1998: foundation of Bluetooth SIG, www.bluetooth.org

– 1999: erection of a rune stone at Ercisson/Lund ;-)

– 2001: first consumer products for mass market, spec. version 1.1 released

– 2005: 5 million chips/week

• Special Interest Group– Original founding members: Ericsson, Intel, IBM, Nokia, Toshiba

– Added promoters: 3Com, Agere (was: Lucent), Microsoft, Motorola

– > 10000 members

– Common specification and certification of products

• Same time, an IEEE study group for a WPAN specifications started IEEE802.15 – Requirements fulfilled by Bluetooth

(was: )

Page 5: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

History and hi-tech…History and hi-tech…

1999:Ericsson mobile communications AB reste denna sten till minne av Harald Blåtand, som fick ge sitt namn åt en ny teknologi för trådlös, mobil kommunikation.

Page 6: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

……and the real rune stoneand the real rune stoneLocated in Jelling, Denmark,erected by King Harald “Blåtand”in memory of his parents.The stone has three sides – one sideshowing a picture of Christ.

This could be the “original” colors of the stone.Inscription:“auk tani karthi kristna” (and made the Danes Christians)

Inscription:"Harald king executes these sepulchral monuments after Gorm, his father and Thyra, his mother. The Harald who won the whole of Denmark and Norway and turned the Danes to Christianity."

Btw: Blåtand means “of dark complexion”(not having a blue tooth…)

Page 7: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Bluetooth Was Originally a Cable-Replacement Technology

Page 8: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

You arrive at the office …

In the Office …

While in a meeting, …

When inspecting equipment, …

Page 9: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

On the road …

You arrive at the airport …

You enter the airport waiting lounge, …

You get on the rent-a-car bus, …

Page 10: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Bluetooth - overviewBluetooth - overview

• Consortium: Ericsson, Intel, IBM, Nokia, Toshiba…• Scenarios:

– connection of peripheral devices• loudspeaker, joystick, headset

– support of ad-hoc networking• small devices, low-cost

– bridging of networks• e.g., GSM via mobile phone - Bluetooth - laptop

• Simple, cheap, replacement of IrDA, low range, lower data rates, low-power– Worldwide operation: 2.4 GHz– Available globally for unlicensed users– Resistance to jamming and selective frequency fading:

• FHSS over 79 channels (of 1MHz each), 1600hops/s

– Coexistence of multiple piconets: like CDMA– Links: synchronous connections and asynchronous connectionless– Interoperability: protocol stack supporting TCP/IP, OBEX, SDP– Range: 10 meters, can be extended to 100 meters

• Documentation: over 1000 pages specification: www.bluetooth.com

Page 11: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

BluetoothBluetooth• Universal radio interface for ad-hoc wireless connectivity

• Interconnecting computer and peripherals, handheld devices, PDAs, cell phones – replacement of IrDA

• Embedded in other devices, goal: 5€/device (already < 1€)

• Short range (10 m), low power consumption, license-free 2.45 GHz ISM

• Voice and data transmission, approx. 1 Mbit/s gross data rate

• Supports open-ended list of applications

– Data, audio, graphics, videos

One of the first modules (Ericsson).

Page 12: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

CharacteristicsCharacteristics

• 2.4 GHz ISM band, 79 (23) RF channels, 1 MHz carrier spacing– Channel 0: 2402 MHz … channel 78: 2480 MHz

– G-FSK modulation, 1-100 mW transmit power

• FHSS and TDD– Frequency hopping with 1600 hops/s

– Hopping sequence in a pseudo random fashion, determined by a master

– Time division duplex for send/receive separation

• Voice link – SCO (Synchronous Connection Oriented)– FEC (forward error correction), no retransmission, 64 kbit/s duplex,

point-to-point, circuit switched

• Data link – ACL (Asynchronous ConnectionLess)– Asynchronous, fast acknowledge, point-to-multipoint, up to 433.9

kbit/s symmetric or 723.2/57.6 kbit/s asymmetric, packet switched

• Topology– Overlapping piconets (stars) forming a scatternet

Page 13: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth
Page 14: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Bluetooth Application AreasBluetooth Application Areas• Data and voice access points

– Real-time voice and data transmissions• Cable replacement

– Eliminates need for numerous cable attachments for connection

• Ad hoc networking– Device with Bluetooth radio can establish connection with

another when in range

• Developed in late 90s– V1.2 → 1Mbps– V2.0 → 3Mbps– V3.0 → 24Mbps

Page 15: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Bluetooth ArchitectureBluetooth Architecture• Piconets and Scatternets

– Piconet is the basic unit of networking– One master device and seven slaves– Slave can only communicate with its Master– Slave can be master of another piconet

• This is called a scatternet

Piconet 1

Master

Master

Piconet 2

Scatternet

Slave

Page 16: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Piconets and ScatternetsPiconets and Scatternets

• Piconet– Basic unit of Bluetooth networking

– Master and one to seven slave devices

– Master determines channel and phase

• Scatternet– Device in one piconet may exist as master or slave in

another piconet

– Allows many devices to share same area

– Makes efficient use of bandwidth

Page 17: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

PiconetPiconet• Collection of Bluetooth devices connected in an

ad hoc fashion and synchronizes to a master node

• One unit acts as master and the others as slaves for the lifetime of the piconet

• All devices have the same network capabilities• The node establishing the piconet automatically

becomes the master• Master determines hopping pattern, slaves

have to synchronize• Each piconet has a unique hopping pattern• Participation in a piconet = synchronization to

hopping sequence• Each piconet has one master and up to 7

simultaneous slaves (> 200 could be parked)– Parked device is an inactive device (can be

reactivated in milliseconds)– Standby device do not participate in piconet

• If a parked device wants to communicate and there are 7 active slaves, then one of the slaves has to switch to park mode

M=MasterS=Slave

P=ParkedSB=Standby

M

S

P

SB

S

S

P

P

SB

Page 18: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Forming a piconetForming a piconet• All devices in a piconet hop together

– Master gives slaves its clock and device ID

• Hopping pattern: determined by device ID (48 bit, unique worldwide)

• Phase in hopping pattern determined by clock

• Addressing– Active Member Address (AMA, 3 bit, 8 nodes) for all active nodes

– Parked Member Address (PMA, 8 bit, 256) for parked nodes

– SB devices do not need address

SB

SB

SB

SB

SB

SB

SB

SB

SB

M

S

P

SB

S

S

P

P

SB

Page 19: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

ScatternetScatternet• Linking of multiple co-located piconets through the sharing of

common master or slave devices– Devices can be slave in one piconet and master of another

– Master-slave can switch roles

• Communication between piconets– Devices jumping back and forth between the piconets

• Overlapping piconets experience collisions

M=MasterS=SlaveP=ParkedSB=Standby

M

S

P

SB

S

S

P

P

SB

M

S

S

P

SB

Piconets(each with a capacity of 720 kbit/s)

Page 20: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Bluetooth Network ArchitectureBluetooth Network Architecture

Page 21: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Piconets & ScatternetsPiconets & Scatternets

M

S S S S S S S M/S

S S S S S S SS

Page 22: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Bluetooth StandardsBluetooth Standards

• Details of various layers of Bluetooth protocol architecture

• Bluetooth v1.1 ratified in 2002 as IEEE 802.15.1 • Bluetooth v2.0 goes to up to 3Mbps – 2004• Bluetooth v2.1 adopted July 2007• Wibree, an ultra low power Bluetooth technology

adopted as part of the Bluetooth specification – 2007.

• Bluetooth v3.0 adopted April 2009. up to 24Mbps

Page 23: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Protocol ArchitectureProtocol Architecture

• Bluetooth is a layered protocol architecture– Core protocols– Cable replacement and telephony control protocols– Adopted protocols (using profiles)

• Core protocols– Radio– Baseband– Link manager protocol (LMP)– Logical link control and adaptation protocol (L2CAP)– Service discovery protocol (SDP)

Page 24: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Protocol ArchitectureProtocol Architecture

• Cable replacement protocol– RFCOMM

• Telephony control protocol– Telephony control specification – binary (TCS BIN)

• Adopted protocols– PPP– TCP/UDP/IP– OBEX– WAP

• ProfilesSpecifications of how to support applications

Specify which parts of the total specification are mandatory, optional, or not applicable

• No point having all functionality in all chips

Helps interoperability between vendors

Page 25: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Bluetooth protocol stackBluetooth protocol stack

Radio

Baseband

Link Manager

Control

HostControllerInterface

Logical Link Control and Adaptation Protocol (L2CAP)Audio

TCS BIN SDP

OBEX

vCal/vCard

IP

NW apps.

TCP/UDP

BNEP

RFCOMM (serial line interface)

AT modemcommands

telephony apps.audio apps. mgmnt. apps.

AT: attention sequenceOBEX: object exchangeTCS BIN: telephony control protocol specification – binaryBNEP: Bluetooth network encapsulation protocol

SDP: service discovery protocolRFCOMM: radio frequency comm.

PPP

Page 26: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Establishing a connection: BT – StatesEstablishing a connection: BT – States

• Standby: unconnected but awake

• Inquiry: listening or wanting to connect

• Page: setting up connections

• Active: Connected or Transmitting

Page 27: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Inquiry ProcedureInquiry Procedure• Goal: aims at discovering other neighboring devices

– Potential master or inquiring node identifies devices in range that wish to participate

– Transmits ID packet with inquiry access code – Sends an inquiry message (packet with only the access code). This

message is sent over a subset of all possible frequencies.– Listen for inquiry response – Occurs in Inquiry state

• Device receives inquiry: to be discovered node:– Enters an inquiry_scan mode– When hearing the inquiry_message enter an inquiry_response mode:

send a Frequency Hop Sync (FHS) packet with address and timing information

– Moves to page scan state

After discovering the neighbors and collecting information on their address and clock, the inquiring node can start a page routine to setup a piconet

Page 28: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Page ProcedurePage Procedure

• Goal: e.g., setup a piconet after an inquiry• Paging node (master):

– uses devices address to calculate a page frequency-hopping sequence

– Sends a page message (i.e., packet with only Device Access Code (DAC) of paged node)

– Repeated until a response is received– When a response is received send a FHS message to allow

the paged node to synchronize

• Paged node (slave):– Listens on its hopping sequence– When receiving a page message, send a page_response

and wait for the FHS of the pager– When receiving, slave moves to connection state

Page 29: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Slave Connection State ModesSlave Connection State Modes• Active – participates in piconet

– Listens, transmits and receives packets– the device is uniquely identified by a 3bits AM_ADDR and is fully

participating

• Sniff – only listens on specified slots• Hold – does not support ACL packets

– Reduced power status– May still participate in SCO exchanges

• Park – does not participate on piconet– Still retained as part of piconet– Release AM_ADDR,

but have PM_ADDR

• Low Power– Park (PM_Address): still a member of piconet, loses AM_Address– Hold (AM_Address): not active but wants to keep AMA– Sniff (AM_Address): listens to parts of the signals for activity

Page 30: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Example (without security)Example (without security)• A Person in a hotel wants to access her email over a

BT enabled PDA. The device will automatically carry out the following steps1. Inquiry

• The device initiate an inquiry to find out access points (Masters) within its range

• All nearby access points respond with their addresses• The device picks one out of the responding devices

2. Paging• The device will invoke paging procedure• It synchronizes with the access point in terms of clock,

phase and frequency hop

3. Link establishment• The LMP will establish a link with the master• ACL link will be used (email)

Page 31: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Example (cont.)Example (cont.)4. Service discovery

• The LMP will use SDP to discover what services are available at the master (email access to the host possible?)

• Assume the service is available, else it would stop• Other available services will be presented to the user

5. L2CAP channel• With information obtained from SDP, an L2CAP

channel will be created to the master

6. RFCOMM channel• An RFCOMM channel will be created over The L2CAP

channel. This emulates serial port so applications can run without modifications

7. Network Protocols• The network protocols like TCP/IP can now send and

receive data over the link

Page 32: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Wi-Fi v BluetoothWi-Fi v Bluetooth

• Wi-Fi– LAN (local area)– Medium range– 54Mbps (a/g)– Infrastructure

• LAN extension– Simple connection– Secure authentication

via WPA2 (considered safe)

– Layer 1+2 only

• Bluetooth– PAN (personal area)– Short range– 1-3Mbs (v1+2)– Ad Hoc

• Cable replacement– Complex connection– Secure authentication

via SSP (known problems)

– Integrates (profiles)

Page 33: Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN) Part-2: IEEE802.15 Bluetooth

Bluetooth versionsBluetooth versions

• Bluetooth 1.1– also IEEE Standard 802.15.1-2002– initial stable commercial standard

• Bluetooth 1.2– also IEEE Standard 802.15.1-2005– eSCO (extended SCO): higher, variable bitrates,

retransmission for SCO– AFH (adaptive frequency hopping) to avoid interference

• Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR (2004, no more IEEE)– EDR (enhanced date rate) of 3.0 Mbit/s for ACL and eSCO– lower power consumption due to shorter duty cycle

• Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR (2007)– better pairing support, e.g. using NFC– improved security

• Bluetooth 3.0 + HS (2009)– Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR + IEEE 802.11a/g = 54 Mbit/s