Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

23
Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP)

description

 

Transcript of Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Page 1: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Voice Over Internet Protocol

(VoIP)

Page 2: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Basic Components of a Telephony Network

Page 3: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Central Office SwitchesClasses of CO Switches Class 5: (C5)

-End office Switches Class 4: (C4)

-Tandem Switches• C5’s are considered

the higher layer switches at the core of the switching network.

• C4’s are more local switches and closer to the CO.

Page 4: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Analog-to-Digital Voice Encoding

Page 5: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Compression Bandwidth Requirements

Page 6: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Supervisory Signaling

Page 7: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Basic Call Setup

Page 8: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

What Is a PBX?

Page 9: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Packetized Telephony Networks

Page 10: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Packet-Switched Telephony vs.

Circuit-Switched Telephony

More efficient use of bandwidth and equipment

Lower transmission costs Consolidate network expenses Increased revenue from new services Service innovation

Page 11: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Distributed Call Control

Page 12: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Centralized Call Control

Page 13: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Packet Telephony Components

Page 14: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Real-Time vs. Best-Effort Traffic

Real-time traffic needs guaranteed delay and timing.

IP networks are best-effort with no guarantees of delivery, delay, or timing.

The Solution is end-to-end quality of service (QOS).

Page 15: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

T1 Interface

A US T1 with 1.54MB of bandwidth and 24-channels, can handle 23 voice calls at 64kbps each. One of the channels is dedicated for Data or T1 control.

In comparison, a US T3 with 45MB of bandwidth can handle 672 voice calls at 64kbps each.

Page 16: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Today’s PSTN

So why can’t our current PSTN handle the emergence of VoiP, video, and data services all on the same circuits of the original PSTN network?

=Because, you can’t run a converged network on what is primarily a network that was designed for just VOICE. Many US carriers and private companies have large data buildings just to ride VOICE traffic over a data network.

Equation VOICE + VIDEO + DATA OVER A

DATA NETWORK= CONVERGENCE

Page 17: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Requirements of

Voice in an IP Internetwork

Page 18: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

IP Internetwork

IP is a connectionless protocol IP provides multiple paths from source to

destination

Page 19: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Packet Loss, Delay, and Jitter Packet loss

Loss of packets severely degrades the voice application.

Delay VoIP typically tolerates delays up to 150 ms before

the quality of the call degrades. Jitter

Instantaneous buffer use causes delay variation in the same voice stream.

Page 20: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Reordering of Packets

IP assumes packet-ordering problems will occur RTP reorders packets into their original form

A

c

B

Page 21: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Reliability and Availability Traditional telephony networks claim 99.999%

uptime. Data networks must consider reliability and

availability requirements when incorporating voice.

Methods to improve reliability and availability include: - Redundant hardware - Redundant links - UPS Power Systems - Proactive network management/monitoring

Page 22: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

Major VoIP Protocols

Page 23: Powerpoint presentation by Carlos Colom

VoIP Protocols and the OSI Model