Serving Grant

 Last updated: October 19, 2012

 This section is only applicable to the lab application or feature-licensed test application.

 To change the UE's serving grant while on a connection you can send a single shot or pattern absolute grant on the E-AGCH, perform a Transport Channel Reconfiguration (see TCR Absolute Grant ) or send the UE up/down commands on the E-RGCH.

 Relative Grant Transmission

 The test set can only transmit to the UE on the E-RGCH when it knows the UE will act on the command. Thus, the test set maintains a FIFO (First-In-First-Out) queue of relative grant commands that are transmitted on the E-RGCH as opportunities arise (the test set transmits using the alternate E-RGCH signature in all other E-RGCH frames, which signifies a "Hold" to the UE under test, see HSPA Downlink Channel Details ). At each transmission opportunity, the oldest relative grant command is removed from the relative grant queue and transmitted to the UE on the E-RGCH. Note that queued relative grant commands are not collapsed by the test set (in other words, two "Up" commands followed by one "Down" command are not transmitted as a single "Up"; the test set transmits every relative grant command).

 According to 3GPP TS 25.321 s11.8.1.3.1, the UE will only act on a relative grant command if all of the following are true:

 Thus, the test set will only transmit a relative grant command on the E-RGCH during a TTI that also includes an ack/nack on the E-HICH (for a block that does not consist of only Scheduling Information) and if the most recent E-AGCH transmission occurred more than 40 ms ago and the most recent absolute grant command was not ZERO_GRANT. Note that when AG Mode is set to Pattern , the E-AGCH is transmitted continuously unless one or more of the pattern values is set to DTX (Alt E-RNTI) , thus causing all relative grant commands to be queued.

 The relative grant queue is reset to empty when the connection is ended (or if the connection changes to a non-HSPA connection), or when the Clear Queued Relative Grants action is initiated.

 The relative grant queue holds up to 1000 relative grant commands; any additional commands are discarded and an error is posted. You can determine how many relative grant commands are in the queue using the Queued Relative Grants result.

 Serving Grant Parameters

 

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HSUPA Parameters

 UE Target Power in HSPA