You can test the interoperability of your Citizens Broadband Radio Service Device (CBSD) with Spectrum Access System (SAS) and simulate different types of incumbents.
To do this, the test SAS environment offers the following:
- Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations
- A suspension zone
- Priority Access License (PAL) testing zones
- A termination zone
- A Grandfathered Wireless Protection Zone (GWPZ)
Suspension zone
The test SAS environment provides a suspension zone to help with testing scenarios related to grant requests, grant authorization, and grant suspension. This zone is defined as a rectangle with corners at the following locations:
- 63° North, -156° East
- 62° North, -156° East
- 62° North, -155° East
- 63° North, -155° East
The frequency range associated with the suspension zone is from 3550 MHz to 3620 MHz. All grants, whether partially or fully overlapping this frequency range, are affected by the suspension zone. The zone is active every hour between 5–10, 15–25, and 35–50 minutes past the hour—for example, from 12:05 PM to 12:10 PM, 12:15 PM to 12:25 PM, and 12:35 PM to 12:50 PM.
PAL testing zones
The test SAS environment provides zones to support PAL testing. The equipment manufacturers receive information by email about the zone where the testing takes place. SAS customers can only perform PAL testing after their official PAL assignments are made public.
Some tests require a CBSD configuration
with the intermittent PAL user ID called
test_pal_user_id
. This ID is a special user ID that results in intermittent,
scheduled PAL behavior in specific geographic areas in the test environment.
During certain times of the day, CBSDs registered with
test_pal_user_id
are PAL-qualified. At other times, these CBSDs
act as GAA-only.
The time schedule for the intermittent PAL user ID is as follows:
- Between 14:30 to 22:30 UTC, no PALs are associated with
test_pal_user_id
. - At all other times of the day, the ID is linked with test PALs in specific South Dakota counties.
Termination zone
The test SAS environment provides a periodic termination zone for testing purposes. This zone is defined as a rectangle with corners at the following locations:
- 67° North, -159° East
- 66° North, -159° East
- 66° North, -158° East
- 67° North, -158° East
The frequency range associated with the termination zone is from 3550 MHz to 3620 MHz. All grants partially or fully overlapping this frequency range are affected by the zone. The termination zone is active every hour between 5–10, 15–25, and 35–50 minutes past the hour—for example, 12:05 PM to 12:10 PM, 12:15 PM to 12:25 PM, and 12:35 PM to 12:50 PM.
For CBSDs that have grants and are registered inside the termination zone,
SAS terminates all active grants that partially or fully
overlap with the 3550 MHz to 3620 MHz frequency range at 5, 15, and
35 minutes after every hour. SAS also suggests a new frequency
range from 3620 MHz to 3700 MHz in the heartbeat response, which
notifies the CBSD of grant termination. For example, if the
CBSD starts at minute 0 (zero), it receives a grant and a heartbeat.
At 5 minutes past the hour, SAS terminates the grant. The next
heartbeat response contains responseCode 500
(Terminated_grant
) and the
suggested operation parameters.
The following example shows a response:
"operationParam": { "operationFrequencyRange": { "lowFrequency": 3620000000, "highFrequency": 3700000000 } }
While the termination zone is active, any requested grants that partially or fully overlap with the 3550 MHz–3620 MHz frequency range are automatically rejected. This facilitates verification of correct CBSD behavior through observation of the radio frequency output.
GWPZ
An example of GWPZ defined in the test SAS environment is available as a circle centered at 70° North, -162° East with a radius of 18 km.
The frequency range associated with the GWPZ is from 3650 MHz to 3700 MHz. Unlike the other zones described in the test plan, the GWPZ is always protected from interference.
What's next
- Learn about PAL interoperability test suite.
- Learn about CBSD interoperability with SAS.
- Learn about Spectrum Access System.
- Learn about key SAS terms.
- Troubleshoot SAS issues.