Main standardization areas
description
Transcript of Main standardization areas
International Telecommunication Union
ITU-T Seminar – Kasane, 24-26 July 2002
Main standardization Main standardization areasareas
Greg JonesITU Telecommunication Standardization
Sector (ITU-T)[email protected]
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Overview
o Study groupso Lead study groupso Special projectso Focus groupso Intersector coordination groups
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ITU-T study groups
o SG 2 Operational aspects of service provision, networks and performance
o SG 3 Tariff and accounting principles including related telecommunications economic and policy issues
o SG 4 Telecommunication management, including TMN o SG 5 Protection against electromagnetic environment effects o SG 6 Outside plant o SG 9 Integrated broadband cable networks and television and sound
transmission o SG 11 Signalling requirements and protocols o SG 12 End-to-end transmission performance of networks and terminals o SG 13 Multi-protocol and IP-based networks and their internetworking o SG 15 Optical and other transport networks o SG 16 Multimedia services, systems and terminals o SG17 Data networks and software for Telecommunicationo SSG Special Study Group IMT o TSAG Telecommunication Standardization Advisory Group
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What are lead study groups?
o Defined in WTSA Resolution 1• Designated by WTSA or TSAG• Study core Questions• Prioritization• Consultation & Coordination
o Listed in WTSA Resoulution 2o Updated by TSAG
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Lead study groups
o SG 2 service definition, numbering and routing o SG 4 TMN o SG 9 integrated broadband cable and television
networkso SG 11 intelligent networks o SG 12 Quality of Service and performanceo SG 13 IP related matters, B-ISDN, Global Information
Infrastructure and satellite matterso SG 15 access network transport and optical technologyo SG 16 multimedia services, systems and terminals and on
e-business and e-commerceo SG17 communication system security, frame relay,
languages and description techniqueso SSG IMT 2000 and beyond and for mobility
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What are special projects?
o Important standardization domains
o Work sharing amongst study groups
o Correspond to urgent market needs
o Coordination of activitieso Clarify areas of study
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List of special projects
o IMT-2000 Network Aspects (SSG)o Call Back (SG 3)o Accounting Rate Reform (SG 3)o TMN (SG 4)o IP Cablecom (SG 9)o Quality of service and performance (SG
12) o IP (SG 13)o Global Information Infrastructure (SG 13)o Access Networks (SG 15)o Optical Networks (SG 15)o Mediacom 2004 (SG 16)o E-commerce and E-business (SG 16)o ASN.1 & Language coordination (SG 17)o Communication system security (SG 17)
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Accounting rate reform
o Transition from accounting rates to cost orientation• to develop general principles and guidelines for the establishment
of accounting rates; • to determine cost components to be included in the telephone
accounting rates; • to expedite work on developing appropriate costing
methodologies; • to establish a transition period to avoid drastic changes,
particularly for the developing countries.
o termination charge procedure, allows governments or operators to establish a single charge for terminating traffic in their country, provided the charge meets certain multilaterally agreed criteria.
o the settlement rate procedure, allows them to negotiate cost-orientated and asymmetric settlement rates, better suited to the new market situation.
o commercial arrangement, between countries that have introduced liberalization. Recognized operating agencies will agree bilaterally on the remuneration procedure that is most appropriate to their needs.
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Callback
o ITU Resolutions o Resolution 21 - Plenipotentiary
Conference Kyoto 1994 o Resolution 21 (Minneapolis 1998) o Resolution 1099 - ITU Council (1996) o Resolution 29 - WTSC, October 1996 o Resolution 29 (Montreal 2000)
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TMN project
o TMN related project includes standardization work covering TMN architecture, methodology, common requirements, communication protocols, TMN resource information modeling for generic, switching, V5/VB5 access, transport network view and service management.
o TMN standards have to cope with changes in the industry while also satisfying current needs.
o TMN Recommendations will result from cooperation with regional and national bodies and industry forums
o The specification of information to be exchanged is the essence of TMN.
o Requirements need to be understandable to management experts and not necessarily to the modeling experts.
o SG 4 work plan addresses IP and to create a TMN framework for the unified management of integrated hybrid circuit-switched (PSTN) and packet-based networks.
o The study of TMN requires various expertise and TMN-related Recommendations are being developed in various Study Groups within ITU-T.
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TMN project areas
o Architectureo Interface specification methodologyo Management serviceso Management functions (protocol independent)o Management information models and catalogueo Management information registrationo Communication protocolso Systems management services and management
messageso Conformance requirementso International standard profileso Terminologyo Security
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IPcablecom project
o Time-critical interactive services over cable television network using IP-protocol, in particular Voice and Video over IP
o Services• Residential/Business IP Telephony• Video IP telephony• Voice/data/video unified messaging• Enhanced conferencing and media
services• Entertainment Services• Real-time multiplayer interactive gaming
o www.itu.int/itudoc/itu-t/com9/ipcable
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IP project
o Y.1000 to Y.9999 reserved for IP-related Recommendations.
o For each area, the IP Project identifies:• scope and focus of the work area• issues for consideration• status of current work within ITU-T• related work within IETF
http://www.itu.int/ITU-T/studygroups/com13/ip
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IP projectAreas and Questions
Management - SG 4, 6/SSG, 4/15, 3/16
Naming, Numbering, Addressing and Routing - SG 2
Overall Network Architecture and Framework - Qs 1, 11, 14 and16/13
IP andnon-IP
Access -Qs 12/13,
14/13,SGs 15 and 16
IP andnon-IP
Access -Qs 12/13,
14/13,SGs 15and 16
IP Transport – Qs10/13, 16/13, SG 15
IP Performance - Q 6/13, SGs 2 and 12
Interworking – Q5/13, SG16 and SSG
Network Capabilities Qs 1, 2, and 3/13, SG 9
Signalling Support - SG 11
IP ApplicationsIncluding Multi media - Q 3/13 and SG 10 and SG16
Service InterworkingQs 2/13, 5/13
3
1
5
9
6
8
3
11
72
2
4
= Work area
7
12 10Operational Issues - SGs 2, 3, and 7
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Global Information Infrastructure
o Global Information Infrastructure – a set of 38 Projects to ensure:• Global standards, which are needed because
of the globalization of business• Enable users to manage the creation, storage,
delivery & use of information• Technological convergence & interconnection
of telecommunications equipment with computers
• Satisfaction of the new demands on the communications infrastructure by information providers and users
o http://www.itu.int/ITU-T/studygroups/com13/gii
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QoS overview
o QoS framework/definitions exist (E.800, G.1000), application requirements are well known (G.1010), assessment/monitoring methods well underway.
o Different approaches to QoS taken by different ITU-T study groups tend to be as follows: SG12 provides the user application requirements; SG13 provides UNI-UNI IP network QoS classes capable of supporting most use applications; SG 16 provides a third-party “agent” control and signaling of QoS using future vertical protocols
o NI-NI QoS classes capable of supporting most user applications exist for ATM (I.356) and IP (Y.1541), although new signaling is needed for the IP case.
o SG 16 has a futuristic QoS Architecture direction to deliver QoS dynamically, over multiple networks.
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QoS viewpoints
CUSTOMER
SERVICE PROVIDER
Customer’s QoS
Requirements
QoS Offered By
Provider
QoS Achieved by Provider
QoS Perceived
By Customer
There are four viewpoints of QoS that make the definitions and frameworks meaningful and practical for everyone – users, vendors, network operators, service providers etc.
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QoS
o The relationship between service and network reliability will be addressed due to the critical need with the rapid deployment of IP-based network and services.
o SGs 2, 4, 11, 12, 13 & 16 must make this work converge
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OTNT project
o The standards area covered relates to optical transport networks and technologies. The optical transport functions include:• multiplexing• cross connect, including grooming and configuration• management• physical media
o An Optical Transport Network (OTN) is composed of a set of Optical Network Elements connected by optical fibre links, able to provide functionality of transport, multiplexing, routing, management, supervision and survivability of optical channels carrying client signals, according to the requirements given in ITU-T Rec. G.872.
o See http://www.itu.int/itudoc/itu-t/com15/otn
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ANT project
o Based on definitions specified in G.902o Provides transport bearer capabilities for the
provision of telecommunications services inside the AN between a service node interface (SNI) providing customer access to a service node and each of the associated interfaces towards the Customer Premises Network(s) which are being grouped as XNI interfaces (this would include ISDN UNIs)
o Comprises transmission media and access NEs entities.
o See http://www.itu.int/itudoc/itu-t/com15/ant/
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Work topics
o Refinement of the concept (objectives, architecture)
o Refinement of the study areas (IP,GII,IMT-2000 …)o Standardization of services, systems and
terminals for multimedia applications over existing and future platforms, providing end-to-end interoperability.
o Co-ordination of the studies within ITU-T and ITU-R o Coordination with relevant standardization bodieso Promotion of workshops to increase public
awareness on the subject and to improve coordination
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Scope of MEDIACOM 2004
o End-to-end multimedia systems and services over all network types including the Internet: videophone/videoconference, multipoint/multicast multimedia systems, multimedia on demand, electronic commerce, distance learning, telemedicine, interactive TV services, web-casting, MBone, etc, including their distribution within the home environment.
o End-to-end multimedia systems and services using wireless access, e.g. IMT-2000, Wireless Application Protocol Forum, Bluetooth, HomeRF, IrDA, etc. In this environment, computer or consumer information appliance devices can be used.
o Security infrastructure in multimedia systems and services (watermark in audio-visual contents, authentication, user verification, non-repudiation, etc).
o Multimedia broadcasting systems that interactively handle audio, video, and data (e.g. Internet browsing, electronic business, etc).
o The extension of E-mail and the WWW for the exchange of multimedia ‘documents’
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MEDIACOM 2004Framework Study Areas
o Project MediaCom 2004o MM Architectureo MM Applications and Serviceso Interoperability of MM Systems and
Serviceso Media Codingo QoS & E-to-E performance in MM
Systemso Security of MM Systems and Serviceso Accessibilityo Emergency Telecommunications
(Q.A/16)(Q.B/16)(Q.C/16)(Q.D/16)(Q.E/16) (Q.F/16) (Q.G/16)(Q.H/16) (Q.ETS/16)
www.itu.int/ITU-T/studygroups/com16/mediacom2004
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What are Focus Groups?
o Defined by ITU-T Rec. A.7o Help advance the work of the
ITU-T parent study groupo Encourage the participation of
members of other SDOso Participation of any individual
from a country which is a member of ITU
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Checklist criteria for the creation of a focus group
o The output will help advance the work of the study group
o A parent study group has been determined
o Clear terms of referenceo Deliverables planned to be completed
prior to next parent study group meeting
o Realistic plan for financing its activities
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Full Service – VDSL (FS-VDSL) Focus Group
o ITU-T has agreed to establish under SG 16 o Follows the initiatives taken by ITU-T to develop closer
cooperation with external Forums and Consortiao the FS-VDSL Committee requested ITU-T to establish
such a Focus Group to enable its specifications to be migrated to ITU-T.
o The FS-VDSL Committee defines specifications for a multi-service video-centric service platform based upon VDSL access technology.
o Made up of over 70 companieso First meeting planned for 4-6 September 2002, in San
Francisco.o Creation of the Focus Group was approved by a Focus
Group Review Committee and will be formally approved at the next meeting of Study Group 16 in October 2002.
o See also: itu.int/ITU-T/studygroups/com16/fs-vdsl
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ICG on Satellite Matters
o Performance and availability of satellite networks
o Interconnection of satellite networks including GMPCS with public switched networks
o Routing, signalling, numbering, protocolso IP over satelliteo The multimedia services and systemso Satellite terminal portabilityo Convergenceo Secure Time Stamping
Coordination areas
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Next Generation Networks
o The concept of Global Information Infrastructure (GII) enables people to securely use a set of communication services supporting an open multitude of applications and embracing all modes of information, any time, anywhere, and at an acceptable cost and quality.
o The term Next Generation Network represent certain technologies, on which the GII concept can be based.
o The general principles for NGN can be found in various Y‑Series Recommendations. NGN’s are considered to be part of the GII’s “federation of networks”.
o See:http://www.itu.int/ITU-T/studygroups/com13/ngn2004