Splitting a single virtual channel connection (VC) into two VCs on a constant bit rate asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) network involves:
1) Configuring a shared HSDPA allocation below the original VC's peak cell rate and setting the selection method to multiple VCs.
2) Entering the cell concatenation and ordering (COCO) configuration and reducing the bandwidth egress to half the original.
3) Creating a new VC using the existing VC configuration, then logging into the NodeB ATM configuration to create a new traffic descriptor with half the original peak cell rate and changing the virtual channel traffic descriptor element to the new constant bit rate traffic descriptor.
Splitting a single virtual channel connection (VC) into two VCs on a constant bit rate asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) network involves:
1) Configuring a shared HSDPA allocation below the original VC's peak cell rate and setting the selection method to multiple VCs.
2) Entering the cell concatenation and ordering (COCO) configuration and reducing the bandwidth egress to half the original.
3) Creating a new VC using the existing VC configuration, then logging into the NodeB ATM configuration to create a new traffic descriptor with half the original peak cell rate and changing the virtual channel traffic descriptor element to the new constant bit rate traffic descriptor.
Splitting a single virtual channel connection (VC) into two VCs on a constant bit rate asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) network involves:
1) Configuring a shared HSDPA allocation below the original VC's peak cell rate and setting the selection method to multiple VCs.
2) Entering the cell concatenation and ordering (COCO) configuration and reducing the bandwidth egress to half the original.
3) Creating a new VC using the existing VC configuration, then logging into the NodeB ATM configuration to create a new traffic descriptor with half the original peak cell rate and changing the virtual channel traffic descriptor element to the new constant bit rate traffic descriptor.