5G-CRG

5G Cable Residential Gateway

Other →
Introduced in Rel-16

5G-CRG is a converged network device that integrates 5G access with cable broadband infrastructure, serving as a bridge to enable residential 5G services over existing cable wiring.

Category
Other
Introduced
Rel-16
Where
Core Network › 5G Core
Specifications
8 specs
5G-CRG Description Purpose Related Classification Detected Changes Specifications

Description

The 5G Cable Residential Gateway is a standardized network function defined by 3GPP that combines the capabilities of a 5G User Equipment (UE) with those of a traditional cable modem termination system (CMTS) client or a DOCSIS modem. Architecturally, it resides at the customer premises and contains both a 5G modem and a cable modem component. The 5G-CRG establishes a connection to the 5G Core Network (5GC) via the 5G Radio Access Network (NG-RAN) using standard 5G protocols and interfaces, such as the N1 interface for control plane signaling and the N3/N6 interfaces for user plane data. Simultaneously, it connects to the cable network, typically using DOCSIS (Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification) protocols, to provide broadband connectivity to devices within the home via Ethernet or Wi-Fi.

Internally, the 5G-CRG implements a convergence layer that manages the integration between the 5G and cable domains. This involves traffic steering, quality of service (QoS) mapping, and session management functions. The gateway acts as a single point of authentication and policy enforcement for the user, presenting itself to the 5G network as a UE with specific subscription credentials (SUPI/SUCI). To the cable network, it appears as a standard cable modem. The 5G-CRG supports dual connectivity scenarios where traffic can be routed over either the 5G or cable path based on network conditions, policies, or application requirements, enabling load balancing and redundancy.

Key components within the 5G-CRG architecture include the 5G protocol stack (NAS, RRC), the cable modem stack (DOCSIS MAC and PHY layers), a convergence and routing function, and the local network interfaces (LAN switch, Wi-Fi access point). The device is managed through both 5G network management systems (like the Network Slice Selection Function - NSSF and Policy Control Function - PCF) and cable network management systems (like the Cable Modem Termination System - CMTS). Its role in the network is to facilitate Fixed Mobile Convergence (FMC), allowing operators to leverage their 5G spectrum and infrastructure to deliver high-speed internet to homes without requiring a full fiber rollout, thus accelerating the deployment of gigabit broadband services.

Purpose & Motivation

The 5G-CRG was created to address the growing demand for high-bandwidth residential internet services and the need for more efficient network deployment strategies. Traditional approaches to delivering home broadband, such as deploying new fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) infrastructure, are often costly and time-consuming, especially in suburban or rural areas. The 5G-CRG enables operators to use their 5G wireless networks as a 'last-mile' solution, delivering broadband to homes over the air and then using the existing in-home coaxial cable wiring for distribution. This solves the problem of the 'last meter' inside the home, avoiding the need to install new Ethernet or Wi-Fi equipment in every room.

Historically, fixed and mobile networks operated in silos with separate core networks, management systems, and customer premises equipment. The 5G-CRG, introduced in 3GPP Release 16 as part of the broader 5G System (5GS) enhancements for wireline convergence, breaks down these barriers. It addresses limitations of previous fixed-wireless solutions, which were often proprietary or required separate modems for cellular and home networking, leading to complex setups and suboptimal user experiences. By standardizing a converged gateway, 3GPP enables a seamless, operator-managed service that combines the high capacity and low latency of 5G with the reliability and ubiquity of cable networks. This is particularly motivated by the rise of Fixed Wireless Access (FWA) as a primary 5G use case, allowing mobile network operators to compete directly with traditional internet service providers (ISPs) for home broadband customers.

Classification

Part ofFWA
Related approachesDOCSIS

Detected Changes Across Releases

from 3GPP Change Requests

Specific changes extracted from the „Change history“ tables of 3GPP specifications (7 CRs across 2 releases). Complements the general historical overview above with the evidence-based evolution of this function.

Rel-16 3 changes

In Release 16, the 5G-CRG function was formally introduced with specific identifiers and location parameters for cable access. This included defining a new Global Cable Identifier (GCI) to uniquely identify the cable line and specifying that User Location information must include both this GCI and an HFC Node ID. Furthermore, the release defined the structure for the Permanent Equipment Identifier (PEI) for these gateways and provided necessary access-related corrections.

  • PEI for 5G-CRG and FN-CRG TS 24.501CR0937
  • CableLabs, Charter Communications TS 23.316CR0032
  • Cable access related corrections TS 23.316CR1835
Rel-18 4 changes

In Release 18, the 5G-CRG function was enhanced to include specific User Location Information (ULI) for AUN3 devices connected behind the gateway, requiring the inclusion of both the Global Cable Identifier (GCI) and the HFC Node ID. Support for the GCI format as a type of SUPI (Subscription Permanent Identifier) was also formalized for the 5G-CRG. Furthermore, the mandatory use of the "502 Bad Gateway" error code was added to the specification.

  • ULI of AUN3 device connected behind the 5G-CRG TS 23.003CR0688
  • SUPI for 5G-CRG support TS 23.316CR2123
  • Adding the mandatory error code 502 Bad Gateway TS 29.507CR0230
  • Adding the mandatory error code 502 Bad Gateway TS 29.525CR0227

Explore further

Broader topics and technologies where 5G-CRG plays a role.

Defining Specifications

3GPP specifications that define or reference 5G-CRG, with the latest known release. Sourced from the 3GPP document catalog — see methodology.

SpecificationTitleRelease
TS 23.003 vj50 Numbering, addressing and identification in 3GPP Rel-19
TS 23.316 vj30 Wireline and Wireless Convergence Access Support Rel-19
TS 23.501 vk00 5G System Architecture Stage 2 Rel-20
TS 23.716 vg00 Wireline and Trusted Non-3GPP Access to 5G Core Rel-16
TS 24.501 vj50 5G NAS Protocols Specification Rel-19
TS 29.507 vj40 5G Access & Mobility Policy Control Service Rel-19
TS 29.525 vj40 5G UE Policy Control Service Stage 3 Rel-19
TS 29.561 vj30 5G Interworking with External Data Networks Rel-19