Softswitch available in Paperback

- ISBN-10:
- 0071409777
- ISBN-13:
- 9780071409773
- Pub. Date:
- 12/10/2002
- Publisher:
- McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing
- ISBN-10:
- 0071409777
- ISBN-13:
- 9780071409773
- Pub. Date:
- 12/10/2002
- Publisher:
- McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing

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Overview
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780071409773 |
---|---|
Publisher: | McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing |
Publication date: | 12/10/2002 |
Series: | McGraw-Hill Networking Professional |
Pages: | 359 |
Product dimensions: | 7.36(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.99(d) |
About the Author
Mr. Ohrtman learned to perform in-depth research and write succinct analyses during his years as a Navy Intelligence Officer (1981-1991). He is a veteran of U.S. Navy actions in Lebanon (awarded Navy Expeditionary Medal), Grenada, Libya (awarded Joint Service Commendation Medal) and the Gulf War (awarded National Defense Service Medal). Mr. Ohrtman holds a Master of Science degree in Telecommunications from Colorado University College of Engineering (master's thesis: "Softswitch As Class 4 Replacement--A Disruptive Technology") and a Master of Arts degree in International Relations from Boston University.
Table of Contents
Foreword | xiii | |
Preface | xv | |
Acknowledgments | xvii | |
Chapter 1 | Introduction | 1 |
Softswitch as an Alternative to Class 4 and Class 5 | 4 | |
Reliability | 4 | |
Scalability | 5 | |
Quality of Service (QoS) | 5 | |
Signaling | 5 | |
Features | 6 | |
Regulatory Implications | 6 | |
Economic Advantage of Softswitch | 7 | |
Disruptive or Deconstructive Technology? | 7 | |
Chapter 2 | The Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) | 9 |
Access | 10 | |
Switching | 11 | |
Class 4 and 5 Switching | 12 | |
Private Branch Exchange (PBX) | 14 | |
Centrex | 15 | |
Multiplexing | 16 | |
Voice Digitization via Pulse Code Modulation | 16 | |
Signaling | 21 | |
The Advanced Intelligent Network (AIN) | 27 | |
Features | 29 | |
Performance Metrics for Class 4 and 5 Switches | 30 | |
Transport | 34 | |
Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) | 34 | |
Optical Transmission Systems | 35 | |
Conclusion | 38 | |
Chapter 3 | Softswitch Architecture or "It's the Architecture, Stupid!" | 39 |
Softswitch and Distributed Architecture: A "Stupid" Network | 40 | |
Access | 42 | |
PC to PC and PC to Phone | 42 | |
IP Phones (IP Handsets) Phone-to-Phone VoIP | 43 | |
Media Gateways (a VoIP gateway switch) | 46 | |
Switching | 50 | |
Softswitch (Gatekeeper and Media Gateway Controller) | 50 | |
Signaling Gateway | 52 | |
Application Server | 52 | |
Applications for Softswitch | 53 | |
Class 4 Replacement Softswitch | 56 | |
Class 5 Replacement Softswitch | 58 | |
Transport | 60 | |
Legacy, Converging, and Converged Architecture | 60 | |
IP Networks | 61 | |
ATM | 63 | |
TDM | 64 | |
Conclusion | 64 | |
Chapter 4 | Voice over Internet Protocol | 67 |
What Is VoIP? | 68 | |
Origins | 68 | |
How Does VoIP Work? | 69 | |
Protocols Related to VoIP | 70 | |
Signaling Protocols | 71 | |
Routing Protocols | 79 | |
Transport Protocols | 84 | |
IPv6 | 85 | |
Conclusion | 86 | |
Chapter 5 | SIP: Alternative Softswitch Architecture? | 87 |
What Is SIP? | 89 | |
SIP Architecture | 89 | |
New Standards for SIP | 96 | |
Some SIP Configurations | 97 | |
Comparison of SIP to H.323 | 98 | |
Complexity of H.323 Versus SIP | 99 | |
Scalability | 102 | |
Extensibility | 105 | |
Services | 108 | |
H.323 Versus SIP Conclusion | 109 | |
The Big "So What?" about SIP | 109 | |
SIP on Windows XP | 109 | |
How Does That Work? | 110 | |
Conclusion | 112 | |
Chapter 6 | Softswitch: More Scalable Than CLASS 4 or 5 | 113 |
Scalability | 114 | |
Scaling Up | 115 | |
Scaling Down | 119 | |
Scaling Down for Class 4 Applications | 120 | |
Scaling Down for Class 5 or Central Office Bypass Applications | 121 | |
Scaling Down for Class 5 or Central Office Bypass from the Residence | 122 | |
Access Switching | 124 | |
Scaling Down for Class 5 or Central Office Bypass from the Enterprise | 126 | |
Scaling Down Technical Issues | 127 | |
Conclusion | 128 | |
Chapter 7 | Softswitch Is Just as Reliable as Class 4/5 Switches | 131 |
World Trade Center Attack: A Need to Redefine Reliability | 132 | |
One to Five 9s | 135 | |
Standards for Availability | 135 | |
What Is Reliability? | 135 | |
How Availability Is Calculated | 137 | |
How Does a Switch, PSTN or Softswitch, Achieve Five 9s? | 138 | |
Network Equipment Building Standards (NEBS) | 144 | |
Specifications for Softswitch Reliability | 145 | |
Software Reliability Case Study Cisco IOS | 147 | |
Power Availability | 149 | |
Typical Power Outages in a Typical Telephone Network | 149 | |
Human Error | 150 | |
Conclusion | 152 | |
Chapter 8 | Quality of Service (QoS) | 155 |
Factors Affecting QoS | 156 | |
Improving QoS in IP Routers and the Gateway | 157 | |
Sources of Delay: IP Routers | 157 | |
Sources of Delay: VoIP Gateways | 158 | |
Other Gateway Improvements | 159 | |
Perceptual Speech Quality Measurement (PSQM) | 160 | |
Improving QoS on the Network | 161 | |
Resource Reservation Setup Protocol (RSVP) | 162 | |
Differentiated Service (DiffServ) | 165 | |
MPLS-Enabled IP Networks | 167 | |
MPLS Architecture | 170 | |
MPLS Traffic Engineering | 171 | |
Measuring Voice Quality | 173 | |
Mean Opinion Score (MOS) | 173 | |
Conclusion | 174 | |
Chapter 9 | SS7 and Softswitch | 175 |
Signaling in the PSTN (SS7 or C7) | 178 | |
Message Transfer Part (MTP) | 178 | |
ISDN User Part (ISUP) | 179 | |
Signaling Connection Control Part (SCCP) | 179 | |
Transaction Capabilities Applications Part (TCAP) | 179 | |
Interworking SS7 and VoIP Networks | 180 | |
Signaling in VoIP Networks | 181 | |
Signaling Transport (SIGTRAN) | 182 | |
SIGTRAN Protocols | 183 | |
Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) | 184 | |
Transporting MTP2 over IP: M2UA | 186 | |
ISDN Q.921-User Adaptation Layer (IUA) | 189 | |
Signaling Network Architecture | 190 | |
SS7 Interworking with SIP and H.323 | 191 | |
ISUP Encapsulation in SIP | 191 | |
SIP for Telephones (SIP-T) | 192 | |
PINT and SPIRITS | 192 | |
Interworking H.323 and SS7 | 193 | |
Conclusion | 194 | |
Chapter 10 | Features and Applications: "It's the Infrastructure, Stupid!" | 195 |
Features in the PSTN | 196 | |
Features and Signaling | 198 | |
The Intelligent Network/Advanced Intelligent Network (IN/AIN) | 198 | |
Service Creation Environment | 200 | |
Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) | 202 | |
APIs and Services | 202 | |
SIP as API: International Softswitch Consortium's Architecture for Enhanced Services in a Softswitch Network | 208 | |
Media Servers | 209 | |
Application Servers | 209 | |
Architecture | 209 | |
Physical Architecture | 211 | |
Interface Between Call Control and Application Servers | 212 | |
Application Server to Media Server Interface | 216 | |
Service APIs | 216 | |
Application Server Interactions | 216 | |
Application and Media Servers Summary | 217 | |
How Softswitch Handles E911 and CALEA Requirements | 218 | |
Enhanced 911 (E911) | 218 | |
Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) | 219 | |
Next-Generation Applications Made Possible by Softswitch Features | 221 | |
Web Provisioning | 221 | |
Voice-Activated Web Interface | 222 | |
"The Big So What?" of Enhanced Features | 222 | |
Napster and i Mode: Examples of Killer Apps | 222 | |
Conclusion | 223 | |
Chapter 11 | Softswitch Economics | 225 |
A Previous Example of Disruptive Technology in the Long-Distance Industry | 226 | |
Softswitch Is More Cost Effective Than Class 4 | 229 | |
Purchase and OAM&P | 230 | |
Bandwidth Saving | 231 | |
Lower Barrier to Entry | 232 | |
Softswitch: A Smaller Footprint | 233 | |
Softswitch Advantages in Power Draw | 236 | |
Advantages of Distributed Architecture | 237 | |
Economic and Regulatory Issues Concerning Softswitch | 238 | |
Net Present Value of Softswitch | 239 | |
Considerations for the Net Present Value Models | 241 | |
Net Present Value: Midsized Long-Distance Service Provider | 249 | |
Leasing Class 4 Versus Softswitch | 250 | |
Buying Class 4 or Softswitch 4,032 DSOs | 252 | |
Buying Class 4 or Softswitch with Class 4 at $50 per DS0 | 253 | |
Net Present Value When Softswitch Generates Greater Revenue | 255 | |
Large Long-Distance Service Providers | 257 | |
Summary of Net Present Value Analyses | 259 | |
$0 per port: Subscriber Pays for Access Device Negating "Cost per Port" | 261 | |
Economics of Enterprise Softswitch Applications | 262 | |
Non-Interoffice Free Long Distance | 262 | |
Implications for Developing Economies | 265 | |
Economic Benefits of Converged Networks | 266 | |
Broadband Access and Telephone Services | 267 | |
Conclusion | 269 | |
Chapter 12 | Is Softswitch Deconstructive, Disruptive, or Both? | 271 |
Deconstruction | 272 | |
Deconstruction of Service Providers | 273 | |
Vendors | 276 | |
Disruption of the Legacy Telecommunications Value Network | 277 | |
Disruption in Class 4 Market | 277 | |
Disruption in PBX Market | 284 | |
Conclusion | 285 | |
Chapter 13 | Softswitch and Broadband | 287 |
Converged Networks Independent of ILEC Infrastructure: "We Have the Technology" | 288 | |
Access Alternatives to the PSTN and Cable TV | 289 | |
Wi-Fi (802.11b Standard) | 289 | |
Fiberless Optics | 290 | |
$500 Billion Economic Benefit of Converged Broadband Networks | 291 | |
Broadband Access and Telephone Services | 292 | |
National Defense Residential Broadband Network (NDRBN) | 295 | |
Better Living Through Telecommunications: The Social Rewards of Softswitch | 296 | |
Essay 1 | If It Hurts to Commute, Then Don't Commute | 296 |
Essay 2 | Affordable Housing Is Where You Find It | 299 |
Essay 3 | Family Values | 300 |
The Role of Softswitch in Better Living Through Telecommunications | 300 | |
Conclusion | 302 | |
Chapter 14 | Past, Present, and Future of Softswitch | 303 |
History of Softswitch | 304 | |
The Present of Softswitch: Case Studies | 305 | |
Class 4 Replacing the Class 4 Switch in Long-Distance Applications: Fusion, Sonus Networks, and NexVerse | 305 | |
Replacing the Class 5 Switch: NorVergence and MetaSwitch | 306 | |
The Future of Softswitch: ISC Reference Architecture and the ISC | 307 | |
Functional Planes | 309 | |
Transport Plane | 310 | |
Call Control & Signaling Plane | 311 | |
Service & Application Plane | 311 | |
Management Plane | 311 | |
Functional Entities | 311 | |
Media Gateway Controller Function (MGC-F) a.k.a. Call Agent or Call Controller | 312 | |
Call Routing and Accounting Functions (R-F/A-F) | 313 | |
Signaling Gateway Function (SG-F) and Access Gateway Signaling Function (AGS-F) | 314 | |
Application Server Function (AS-F) | 315 | |
Media Gateway Function (MG-F) | 316 | |
Media Server Function (MS-F) | 317 | |
Media Gateway Controller Building Blocks | 318 | |
MGC Implementation Example | 319 | |
Network Examples | 320 | |
Wireline Network | 320 | |
All-IP Network | 322 | |
VoIP Tandem Switching | 323 | |
POTS Carried over IP | 324 | |
Access Network (V5/ISDN) over IP | 324 | |
Cable Network (e.g. PacketCable) over IP | 326 | |
VoDSL and IAD over IP | 327 | |
Wireless (3GPP R99 Special Case NGN) | 327 | |
Wireless (3GPP R2000 General Case all IP) | 328 | |
WCDMA Mobile Network | 328 | |
Conclusion | 329 | |
Chapter 15 | Conclusion and Prognostications | 331 |
Softswitch and the PSTN Metrics of Performance | 333 | |
Softswitch and the PSTN Infrastructure | 334 | |
Alternatives to the Telephone Company | 335 | |
Alternative Private Service Providers | 336 | |
Alternative Public Service Providers | 336 | |
The End of the PSTN as We Know It? | 337 | |
Acronyms List | 339 | |
Index | 345 |