The Global System for Mobile communications (GSM:
originally from Groupe Special Mobile) is the most popular standard
for mobile phones in the world. GSM
service is used by over 2 billion people across more than 212
countries and territories. The ubiquity of the GSM
standard makes international roaming very common between mobile
phone operators, enabling subscribers to use their phones in many
parts of the world. GSM
differs significantly from its predecessors in that both signaling
and speech channels are Digital call quality, which means that
it is considered a second generation (2G) mobile phone system.
This fact has also meant that data communication was built into
the system from the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP).
From the point of view of the consumers, the key
advantage of GSM systems has been higher digital voice quality
and low cost alternatives to making calls such as the Short Message
Service (SMS). The advantage for network operators has been the
ability to deploy equipment from different vendors because the
open standard allows easy inter-operability. Like other cellular
standards GSM allows network operators to offer roaming services
which mean subscribers can use their phones all over the world.
As the GSM standard continued to develop, it retained
backward compatibility with the original GSM phones; for example,
packet data capabilities were added in the Release '97 version
of the standard, by means of GPRS. Higher speed data transmission
has also been introduced with EDGE in the Release '99 version
of the standard.
History of GSM
The growth of cellular telephone systems started in the early
1980s, particularly in Europe. The lack of a technological standardization
prompted the European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications
Administrations (CEPT) to create the Groupe Special Mobile (GSM)
in 1982 with the objective of developing a standard for a mobile
telephone system that could be used across Europe.
In 1989, GSM
responsibility was transferred to the European Telecommunications
Standards Institute (ETSI), and phase I of the GSM
specifications were published in 1990. The first GSM
network was launched in 1991 by Radiolinja in Finland. By the
end of 1993, over a million subscribers were using GSM
phone networks being operated by 70 carriers across 48 countries.
Network structure
The structure of a GSM networkThe network behind the GSM system
seen by the customer is large and complicated in order to provide
all of the services which are required. It is divided into a number
of sections and these are each covered in separate articles.
the Base Station Subsystem (the base stations and
their controllers).
the Network and Switching Subsystem (the part of the network most
similar to a fixed network). This is sometimes also just called
the core network.
the GPRS Core Network (the optional part which allows packet based
Internet connections).
all of the elements in the system combine to produce many GSM
services such as voice calls and SMS.
Radio interface
GSM is a cellular network, which means that mobile phones connect
to it by searching for cells in the immediate vicinity. GSM networks
operate in four different frequency ranges. Most GSM networks
operate in the 900 MHz or 1800 MHz bands. Some countries in the
Americas (including the United States and Canada) use the 850
MHz and 1900 MHz bands because the 900 and 1800 MHz frequency
bands were already allocated.
The rarer 400 and 450 MHz frequency bands are assigned
in some countries, notably Scandinavia, where these frequencies
were previously used for first-generation systems.
In the 900 MHz band the uplink frequency band is
890-915 MHz, and the downlink frequency band is 935-960 MHz. This
25 MHz bandwidth is subdivided into 124 carrier frequency channels,
each spaced 200 kHz apart. Time division multiplexing is used
to allow eight full-rate or sixteen half-rate speech channels
per radio frequency channel. There are eight radio timeslots (giving
eight burst periods) grouped into what is called a TDMA frame.
Half rate channels use alternate frames in the same timeslot.
The channel data rate is 270.833 kbit/s, and the frame duration
is 4.615 ms.
The transmission power in the handset is limited
to a maximum of 2 watts in GSM850/900 and 1 watt in GSM1800/1900.
GSM has used a variety of voice codecs to squeeze
3.1 kHz audio into between 6 and 13 kbit/s. Originally, two codecs,
named after the types of data channel they were allocated, were
used, called "Full Rate" (13 kbit/s) and "Half
Rate" (6 kbit/s). These used a system based upon linear predictive
coding (LPC). In addition to being efficient with bitrates, these
codecs also made it easier to identify more important parts of
the audio, allowing the air interface layer to prioritize and
better protect these parts of the signal.
GSM was further enhanced in 1997[7] with the GSM-EFR
codec, a 12.2 kbit/s codec that uses a full rate channel. Finally,
with the development of UMTS, EFR was refactored into a variable-rate
codec called AMR-Narrowband, which is high quality and robust
against interference when used on full rate channels, and less
robust but still relatively high quality when used in good radio
conditions on half-rate channels.
There are four different cell sizes in a GSM network
- macro, micro, pico and umbrella cells. The coverage area of
each cell varies according to the implementation environment.
Macro cells can be regarded as cells where the base station antenna
is installed on a mast or a building above average roof top level.
Micro cells are cells whose antenna height is under average roof
top level; they are typically used in urban areas. Picocells are
small cells whose diameter is a few dozen meters; they are mainly
used indoors. Umbrella cells are used to cover shadowed regions
of smaller cells and fill in gaps in coverage between those cells.
Cell horizontal radius varies depending on antenna
height, antenna gain and propagation conditions from a couple
of hundred meters to several tens of kilometers. The longest distance
the GSM specification supports in practical use is 35 km or 22
miles. There are also several implementations of the concept of
an extended cell, where the cell radius could be double or even
more, depending on the antenna system, the type of terrain and
the timing advance.
Indoor coverage is also supported by GSM and may
be achieved by using an indoor picocell base station, or an indoor
repeater with distributed indoor antennas fed through power splitters,
to deliver the radio signals from an antenna outdoors to the separate
indoor distributed antenna system. These are typically deployed
when a lot of call capacity is needed indoors, for example in
shopping centers or airports. However, this is not a prerequisite,
since indoor coverage is also provided by in-building penetration
of the radio signals from nearby cells.
The modulation used in GSM is Gaussian minimum shift
keying (GMSK), a kind of continuous-phase frequency shift keying.
In GMSK, the signal to be modulated onto the carrier is first
smoothed with a Gaussian low-pass filter prior to being fed to
a frequency modulator, which greatly reduces the interference
to neighboring channels (adjacent channel interference).
A nearby GSM handset is usually the source of the
"dit dit dit, dit dit dit, dit dit dit" signal that
can be heard from time to time on home stereo systems, televisions,
computers, and personal music devices. When these audio devices
are in the near field of the GSM handset, the radio signal is
strong enough that the solid state amplifiers in the audio chain
function as a detector. The clicking noise itself represents the
power bursts that carry the TDMA signal. These signals have been
known to interfere with other electronic devices, such as car
stereos and portable audio players. This is a form of RFI, and
could be mitigated or eliminated by use of additional shielding
and/or bypass capacitors in these audio devices[citation needed],
however, the increased cost of doing so is difficult for a designer
to justify.
GSM security
GSM was designed with a moderate level of securities. The system
was designed to authenticate the subscriber using shared-secret
cryptography. Communications between the subscriber and the base
station can be encrypted. The development of UMTS introduces an
optional USIM, that uses a longer authentication key to give greater
security, as well as mutually authenticating the network and the
user - whereas GSM only authenticated the user to the network
(and not vice versa). The security model therefore offers confidentiality
and authentication, but limited authorization capabilities, and
no non-repudiation.
GSM uses several cryptographic algorithms for security.
The A5/1 and A5/2 stream ciphers are used for ensuring over-the-air
voice privacy. A5/1 was developed first and is a stronger algorithm
used within Europe and the United States; A5/2 is weaker and used
in other countries. A large security advantage of GSM over earlier
systems is that the Key, the crypto variable stored on the SIM
card that is the key to any GSM ciphering algorithm, is never
sent over the air interface. Serious weaknesses have been found
in both algorithms, and it is possible to break A5/2 in real-time
in a ciphertext-only attack. The system supports multiple algorithms
so operators may replace that cipher with a stronger one.
Subscriber identity module
One of the key features of GSM is the Subscriber Identity Module
(SIM), commonly known as a SIM card. The SIM is a detachable smart
card containing the user's subscription information and phonebook.
This allows the user to retain his or her information after switching
handsets. Alternatively, the user can also change operators while
retaining the handset simply by changing the SIM. Some operators
will block this by allowing the phone to use only a single SIM,
or only a SIM issued by them; this practice is known as SIM locking,
and is illegal in some countries.
In the United States, Canada, Europe and Australia,
many operators lock the mobiles they sell. This is done because
the price of the mobile phone is typically subsidised with revenue
from subscriptions, and operators want to try to avoid subsidising
competitor's mobiles. A subscriber can usually contact the provider
to remove the lock for a fee, utilize private services to remove
the lock, or make use of ample software and websites available
on the Internet to unlock the handset themselves. While most web
sites offer the unlocking for a fee, some do it for free. The
locking applies to the handset, identified by its International
Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) number, not to the account (which
is identified by the SIM card). It is always possible to switch
to another (non-locked) handset if such a handset is available.
Some providers will unlock the phone for free if
the customer has held an account for a certain time period. Third
party unlocking services exist that are often quicker and lower
cost than that of the operator. In most countries, removing the
lock is legal. Cingular and T-Mobile provide free unlocking services
to their customers after 3 months of subscription.
In countries like India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Belgium,
etc., all phones are sold unlocked. However, in Belgium, it is
unlawful for operators there to offer any form of subsidy on the
phone's price. This was also the case in Finland until April 1,
2006, when selling subsidized combinations of handsets and accounts
became legal, though operators have to unlock phones free of charge
after a certain period (at most 24 months).
See
also
-ISDN BRI and ISDN PRI Services
-FXO vs FXS
-Global
System for Mobile Communications
-About VoIP
-SIP:Session Initiation Protocol
-List of commercial voice over IP
network providers
-Mobile VoIP
-FXS or FXO
-List of SIP softwares
-List of SIP software