Voip/Ip Telephony: Switching Technologies
Voip/Ip Telephony: Switching Technologies
Voip/Ip Telephony: Switching Technologies
Switching
Technologies
WHY VoIP/IP TELEPHONY
n Circuit (CKT)
n Frame Relay (VoFR)
n Internet Protocol (IP)
SWITCHING
Circuit (CKT)
Once a call is established (whether it’s a voice call or a data call) there is a
continuous path from one end of the call to the other. This path is
dedicated solely to that call.
Frame Relay was most popular from 1985 to 2003 and was a great
alternative to costly leased lines. However, due to changes in
technology and improved bandwidth options, Frame Relay is being
replaced with Private IP Networks and even the Internet.
SWITCHING
Voice over Frame Relay (VoFR)
n The ones that are most commonly used are, Frame Relay
Fragmentation, Prioritization, and Traffic Shaping.
The Internet, the grandest IP Network of all, promised only “Best Effort”
delivery. This means the network layer of the TCP/IP stack cannot
guarantee delivery of packets in sequence and without delay
Once on the other side the steps are reversed and an analog signal is
presented to the end caller.
SWITCHING
Internet Protocol (IP)
MPLS label forwarding occurs when the Label Switch Router (LSR) performs
a label look-up on an incoming packet, swaps the incoming label and
forwards the packet to the next LSR along the label switched path.
SWITCHING
Internet Protocol (IP)
n Policy-based routing
n All Packets group into the same LSR receive similar treatment along the
LSP path
IP TELEPHONY
Session Initiated Protocol (SIP)
n The ITU-T Standard for call control and system set-up is SIP (Session
Initiation Protocol) an open standard.
n SIP components:
n SIP Server (Network)
n SIP Messages:
n Creating VLANS on the network provides the most flexible QOS. On the
same Ethernet port 2 or more VLANS can be created on the Layer 3
routers or switches – one for voice and the other for data. For example
you can create 2 VLANs VLAN 101 (voice) and VLAN 105 (data).
n So, you can have all of your voice traffic on VLAN 101 and within this
VLAN you will give priority to the voice packets.
n For example for all voice packet traversing VLAN 101 you can set the
TOS (Type of Service) in the IP header to the number 5, which is the
highest priority.
n Next we will address what QOS can be implemented when the voice
packet needs to traverse a Wide Area Network.
n Because your WAN will have limited bandwidth you must use
compression when the voice packet reaches the edge of the network.
For this we can use G.729a an 8K CODEC.
n When your voice packet reaches the gateway or edge router of the
WAN you will need to transcode from G.711 (PCM 64K) to G.729a.
DSP or Digital Signaling Processing will be used for the transcoding of
the 2 CODECS.
QUALITY OF SERVICE (QOS)
n The ITU-T Speed standard for voice packets is 150ms one way or
300ms round-trip. Anything over this standard will cause the voice
quality to suffer.
CONCLUSION
IP Telephony/VoIP
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