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Voice Over Internet Protocol VoIP

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Title: Voice Over Internet Protocol VoIP


1
Voice Over Internet ProtocolVoIP
  • Yan Li
  • Arsalan Khalid
  • March 14th 2002
  • This report was prepared for Professor L.
    Orozco-Barbosa in partial fulfillment of the
    requirements for the courseCEG 4183

2
Contents
  • Telephony standards
  • How the PSTN works
  • PSTN Components
  • VoIP Network
  • VoIP Components
  • VoIP Protocols and Standards
  • Emerging Technologies
  • Business Model for VoIP
  • Questions?
  • References

3
Telephony Standards
  • The International Telecommunications Union (ITU)
    plays a major role in standardizing the
    technology of the PSTN.
  • The ITU includes a specific division known as the
    Telecommunications Standardization Sector, or
    ITU-T.
  • G Transmission systems and media, digital
    systems and networks
  • H Audiovisual and multimedia systems
  • P Telephone transmission quality, telephone
    installations, local line networks
  • The Category letter is followed by a period and a
    number, such as G.711 or H.323. An ITU-T standard
    recommendation is said to be In Force when the
    standard has been approved by ITU-T membership.
  • Standards are absolutely crucial to the success
    of technologies like VoIP. Without standards,
    your phone call would very likely be dropped when
    it passed from Vendor As network toVendor Bs
    network. Accordingly, many VoIP vendors have
    drawn on the expertise of the ITU-T and built
    VoIP products based on well-known standards.

4
How the PSTN works
5
Components of PSTN
  • Voice encoding
  • Switches
  • Private Branch Exchange (PBX)
  • Signaling
  • Telephones

6
VoIP Network
  • The caller enters a telephone number, which will
    be mapped to the IP address of the callee.
  • 2) Call setup protocols are invoked to locate
    the callee and send a signal to produce a ring.
  • 3) The destination phone rings, indicating to
    the callee that a call has arrived.
  • 4) The callee picks up the telephone handset and
    begins a two-way conversation. The audio
    transmission is encoded using a codec and travels
    over the IP network using a voice streaming
    protocol.
  • 5) The conversation ends, call teardown occurs,
    and billing is performed.

7
VoIP Components
  • Codecs
  • TCP/IP and VoIP Protocols
  • IP telephony servers and PBXs
  • VoIP gateways and Routers
  • IP phones and softphones

8
Codecs
  • A codec (which stands for compressor/decompressor
    or coder/decoder) is the hardware or software
    that samples analog sound and converts it to
    digital bits, which it outputs at a predetermined
    data rate. The codec often performs compression
    as well, to save bandwidth.There are dozens of
    available codecs, each with its own
    characteristics.

9
TCP/IP and VoIP Protocols
  • Call Setup
  • Voice Streaming

10
IP Telephony Servers and PBXs
  • An IP PBX typically serves as the core IP
    telephony server. On the PSTN, the PBX is often a
    closed-box systemit provides all the voice
    functions and features you need, but usually in a
    proprietary manner. Management of the closed-box
    platform is left up to the PBX vendor. With VoIP,
    an IP PBX can be built on a PC platform running
    on an operating system like Microsoft Windows,
    Linux, or Sun Solaris.

11
VoIP Gateways and Routers
VoIP gateways and IP routers move RTP voice
datagrams through an IP network. VoIP gateways
provide a connection between the VoIP network and
the PSTN.
12
IP Phones and Softphones
  • Where are the codecs located?
  • Older analog telephones, the codecs are located
    in the IP PBX. Incoming calls are digitized
    there, before being forwarded onto the IP
    network.
  • Codecs can be located in the telephones
    themselves. These new digital telephones are
    called IP phones.
  • Have an Ethernet LAN connection. An IP phone
    makes data connections to an IP telephony server,
    which does the call setup processing.
  • Another ChoiceThe PC.

13
VoIP Protocols and Standards
  • More than One choice
  • H.323 ITU standard, implementations
  • SIP IETF developed protocol
  • MGCP
  • Client server, telephony device
  • Used in Cable network
  • Not really adequate for mobility support
  • H.248

14
H.323 Protocol Stack
  • H.323 Architecture
  • terminals,
  • gateways,
  • gatekeepers
  • multipoint control units(MCU)

GATEKEEPERS
  • Provide call control services to registered end
    points.
  • One gatekeeper can serve multiple LANs
  • Admission Control Authorization
  • Bandwidth management (Limit number of calls on
    the LAN)
  • Zone Management Serve all registered users
    within its zone of control
  • May optionally handle Q.931 call control

15
SIP Session Initiation Protocol
  • Application Layer Protocol
  • Overcome H.323s Shortcomings
  • Enable VoIP clients, gateways and PBXs to
    communicate
  • In Conjunction with RSVP, RTP, RTSP, SAP, SDP
  • Low Overhead

16
MGCP (Media Gateway Control Protocol)
  • Conversion of signals from PSTN to data packets
  • Enables media controllers and media gateways to
    communicate
  • Master/Slave
  • Losing ground to H.248

17
H .248
  • Successor to MGCP
  • Peer to peer interoperability
  • Control for IP phones in Master/Slave
  • Breaks down H.323 and sets protocols for each
    component
  • Leverages existing PSTN

18
Emerging TechnologiesVoIP over Wireless (VoIPoW)
  • IMT-2000(ITU)
  • UMTS
  • EDGE (ETSI/3GPP)
  • Challenges for VoIPoW
  • ________________________________________
  • Quality
  • Spectrum efficiency

19
QoS Role to support VoIP
  • Delay variation (jitter)
  • Packet Loss
  • Excessive Delay
  • Different Codec, Different Bandwith Requirements
  • Call Provisioning

20
Business Model for VoIP
  • Cost Savings
  • Long Distance Savings
  • Single Network Infrastructure Savings
  • Productivity Savings
  • Management and support savings.
  • Maintenance, upgrades, and additions.
  • Obstacles
  • Capital Investent
  • Business Risk
  • New Features
  • Unified messaging.
  • Advanced call routing.
  • Integration into business applications.
  • Easier to add new features.

21
Questions?
  • What does VoIP stand for?
  • Voice Over Internet Protocol
  • VoIP is in which layer?
  • Application layer
  • How many protocols for VoIP?
  • a. 1 b. 2 c. 3 d. 4
  • d

22
Questions?
  • What are the differences between PSTN and VoIP?
  • What are the components of VoIP?

23
References
  • Good TCP/IP primers
  • 1. Comer, D. E. Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.
    I Principles, Protocols, and Architecture.
    Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 2000. (ISBN
    0-13-018380-6).
  • 2. Stevens, W. R. TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1.
    Addison-Wesley, Reading MA, 1994 (ISBN
    0-201-63346-9).
  • 3. Walker II, J. Q. and J. T. Hicks. Protocol
    ensures safer multimedia delivery, Network
    World, volume 16, number 44, November 1, 1999,
    page 53.
  • Good VoIP overviews
  • 1. Davidson, J. and J. Peters. Voice over IP
    Fundamentals. Cisco Press, Indianapolis, IN,
    2000. (ISBN 1-57870-168-6).
  • 2. Newton, Harry. Newtons Telecom Dictionary.
    CMP Books, New York, New York, 2001. (ISBN
    1-57820-069-5).
  • 3. Checklist of VoIP Network Design Tips, John Q.
    Walker, NetIQ Corporation, April 2001,
    www.netiq.com/products/chr/whitepapers.asp.
  • 4. What You Need to Know before You Deploy VoIP,
    Scott Hamilton and Charles Bruno, Tolly Research,
    April 2, 2001, www.netiq.com/products/chr/whitepap
    ers.asp.
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