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ChARM: NextG Spectrum Sharing Through Data-Driven Real-Time O-RAN Dynamic Control

Luca Baldesi, Francesco Restuccia, Tommaso Melodia

2022IEEE INFOCOM 2022 - IEEE Conference on Computer Communications45 citationsDOI

Abstract

Today’s radio access networks (RANs) are monolithic entities which often operate statically on a given set of parameters for the entirety of their operations. To implement realistic and effective spectrum sharing policies, RANs will need to seamlessly and intelligently change their operational parameters. In stark contrast with existing paradigms, the new O-RAN architectures for 5G-and-beyond networks (NextG) separate the logic that controls the RAN from its hardware substrate, allowing unprecedented real-time fine-grained control of RAN components. In this context, we propose the Channel-Aware Reactive Mechanism (ChARM), a data-driven O-RAN-compliant framework that allows (i) sensing the spectrum to infer the presence of interference and (ii) reacting in real time by switching the distributed unit (DU) and radio unit (RU) operational parameters according to a specified spectrum access policy. ChARM is based on neural networks operating directly on unprocessed I/Q waveforms to determine the current spectrum context. ChARM does not require any modification to the existing 3GPP standards. It is designed to operate within the O-RAN specifications, and can be used in conjunction with other spectrum sharing mechanisms (e.g., LTE-U, LTE-LAA or MulteFire). We demonstrate the performance of ChARM in the context of spectrum sharing among LTE and Wi-Fi in unlicensed bands, where a controller operating over a RAN Intelligent Controller (RIC) senses the spectrum and switches cell frequency to avoid Wi-Fi. We develop a prototype of ChARM using srsRAN, and leverage the Colosseum channel emulator to collect a large-scale waveform dataset to train our neural networks with. To collect standard-compliant Wi-Fi data, we extended the Colosseum testbed using system-on-chip (SoC) boards running a modified version of the OpenWiFi architecture. Experimental results show that ChARM achieves accuracy of up to 96% on Colosseum and 85% on an over-the-air testbed, demonstrating the capacity of ChARMto exploit the considered spectrum channels.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceContext (archaeology)Control channelRanController (irrigation)Computer networkBase stationBiologyAgronomyPaleontologyAdvanced MIMO Systems OptimizationFull-Duplex Wireless CommunicationsEnergy Harvesting in Wireless Networks
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