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Integrated Service Digital Network
Integrated Service Digital Network
Introduction
$1$ Integrated Service Digital Network (ISDN) was being introduced in the 1980. After the introduction of PCM in 1960s digitalization of telecommunication network started and CCITT has been pioneering and guiding the eorts towards the the development of ISDN. $2$ CCITT sets up a study group called Special Study Group D in 1968 to look at the issues related to the use of digital technology in telephone network. This study group is the forerunner of todays Study Group XVIII set up in 1976, and has the responsibility for all ISDN related activities within the CCITT. $3$ The rst formal denition of ISDN was given by the Study Group D and adopted by CCITT in 1972. $4$ Denition : Integrated Service Digital Network is an integrated digital network in which same digital switches and digital paths are used to establish dierent services, for example, telephony and data. $5$ At the very beginning the group started with the research on digital technology in voice channel, but soon it emphasis its work on Integrated Digital Network and within a period of four years IDN evolves as ISDN. The rst ISDN standard, emerged in 1980, is G. 705 which laid down six conceptual principles on which ISDN should be based. 1. ISDN will be based on and will be evolve from the telephony IDN by progressively incorporating additional functions and network features including those of any other dedicated network so as to provide for existing and new services Example: Audio and video conferencing, E-mail and browsing, all are the examples of additional functions and network features have been incorporated into a channel which shares both the voice and data. 2. New services introduced into the ISDN should be so arranged as to be compatible with 64 kbps switched digital connection
Example: The maximum voice bandwidth is being considered as 4 khz. Sampling it by Niquist rate of 8 khz and coding each sample into 8 bits provides us total bandwidth of 64 kbps. So the data required to be transfered must be within this limit 3. The transition from one the existing networks to a comprehensive ISDN may require a period of time extending over one or two decades 4. During the transition period, arrangements must be made for the inter networking of services on ISDNs and services on other networks 5. The ISDN will contain intelligence for the purposes of providing service features, maintenance and network management functions. This intelligence may not be sucient for some new services and may have t be supplemented by either additional intelligence within the network or possible compatible intelligence in the customer terminals. 6. A layered functional set of protocols appears desirable for the various access arrangements to ISDN. Access from the customer to ISDN resources may vary, depending upon the service required and on the status of the evolution of national ISDNs $6$ Pursuance of this conceptual principles listed above led to an arrangement of the old denition and a new denition has been given in 1984 as ... New denition : An ISDN is a network, in general evolving from a telephony IDN, that provides end-to-end digital connectivity to support a wide range of services, including voice and non-voice services, to which users have access by a limited set of standard multipurpose user-network interfaces. $7$ The new denition distinctly states about the property or key features of ISDN which can be categorized as ... Property 1. ISDN should support a wide variety of services and it has not been designed for any specic services Property 2. The end-to-end digital connectivity implies that the digitization process begins right at the user premises Property 3. ISDN should support any conceivable service for both voice or non-voice Property 4. A small set of carefully chosen interface should enable the support of all possible services. The users of ISDN should not be burdened with too many specialized interfaces, and at the same time an expensive universal interface should be avoided
3. Using an ISDN line the data transfer rate with another ISDN system on dial up basis is 64 kbps and it can go up to 128 kbps 4. With an ISDN line the video conferencing can be done with another ISDN subscriber on dial up basis (a) ordinary video conferencing of 128 kbps on one ISDN line (b) High quality video conferencing of 384 kbps on three ISDN line (a) Three consecutive public switch telephone network [PSTN] connection can be arranged in a single ISDN line (b) Two simultaneous tasks can be done on a single ISDN connection such as internet and video conferencing etc. (c) A maximum of 8 terminals can be connected to the network terminator [NT] of ISDN
Before the ISDN there ware two stage of transitions named as segregated network and integrated digital network (IDN) as shown in Fig.1 and Fig.2. Figure 1, the rst step towards ISDN, shows the integrated type features combining the simple single type network. It was the function of Integrator End (IE) to identify the information intended to which network and routing the the information to its intended network.
USER
Basically the IE performs four functions 1. Multiplexing and demultiplexing of the signals 4
USER USER
IE
NONSWITCHED NETWORK
IE
SIGNALLING NETWORK
USER
IE
IE
2. Providing the identication to the information to which it is intended 3. security 4. error detection The second stage towards ISDN was IDN. The main dierence between IDN and ISDN is IDN follows the synchronous data transfer (SDT) and ISDN strictly follows asynchronous data transfer (ADT). Figure 3 explains a sample ISDN conguration. ISDN devices include terminals, terminal adapters (TAs), network-termination devices, line-termination equipment, and exchange-termination equipment. ISDN terminals come in two types. Specialized ISDN terminals are referred to as terminal equipment type 1 (TE1). Non-ISDN terminals, such as DTE, that predate the ISDN standards are referred to as terminal equipment type 2 (TE2). TE1s connect to the ISDN network through a four-wire, twisted-pair digital link. TE2s connect to the ISDN network through a TA. The ISDN TA can be either a stand-alone device or a board inside the TE2. If the TE2 is implemented as a stand-alone device, it connects to the TA via a standard physical-layer interface. Examples include EIA/TIA-232-C (formerly RS-232-C), V.24, and V.35. Beyond the TE1 and TE2 devices, the next connection point in the ISDN network is the network termination type 1 (NT1) or network termination type 2 (NT2) device. These are network-termination devices that connect the four-wire subscriber wiring to the conventional two-wire local loop. In North America, the NT1 is a customer premises equipment (CPE) device. In most other parts of the world, the NT1 is part of the network provided by the carrier. The NT2 is a more
Figure 3: Sample ISDN Conguration Illustrates Relationships Between Devices and Reference Points complicated device that typically is found in digital private branch exchanges (PBXs) and that performs Layer 2 and 3 protocol functions and concentration services. An NT1/2 device also exists as a single device that combines the functions of an NT1 and an NT2. ISDN species a number of reference points that dene logical interfaces between functional groups, such as TAs and NT1s. ISDN reference points include the following: 5
R The reference point between non-ISDN equipment and a TA. S The reference point between user terminals and the NT2. T The reference point between NT1 and NT2 devices. U The reference point between NT1 devices and line-termination equipment in the carrier network. The U reference point is relevant only in North America, where the NT1 function is not provided by the carrier network. Figure 3 illustrates a sample ISDN conguration and shows three devices attached to an ISDN switch at the central oce. Two of these devices are ISDN-compatible, so they can be attached through an S reference point to NT2 devices. The third device (a standard, non-ISDN telephone) attaches through the reference point to a TA. Any of these devices also could attach to an NT1/2 device, which would replace both the NT1 and the NT2. In addition, although they are not shown, similar user stations are attached to the far-right ISDN switch.
ISDN Services
There are main two ISDN services 1. Basic Rate Interface (BRI) 2. Primary Rate Interface (PRI) ISDN BRI Services The ISDN Basic Rate Interface (BRI) service oers two B channels and one D channel (2B+D). BRI B-channel service operates at 64 kbps and is meant to carry user data; BRI D-channel service operates at 16 kbps and is meant to carry control and signaling information, although it can support user data transmission under certain circumstances. The D channel signaling protocol comprises Layers 1 through 3 of the OSI reference model. BRI also provides for framing control and other overhead, bringing its total bit rate to 192 kbps. The BRI physical layer specication is International Telecommunication UnionTelecommunications Standards Section (ITU-T) (formerly the Consultative Committee for International Telegraph and Telephone [CCITT]) I.430. ISDN PRI Services ISDN Primary Rate Interface (PRI) service oers 23 B channels and 1 D channel in North America and Japan, yielding a total bit rate of 1.544 Mbps (the PRI D channel runs at 64 kbps). ISDN PRI in Europe, Australia, and other parts of the world provides 30 B channels plus one 64-kbps D channel and a total interface rate of 2.048 Mbps. The PRI physical layer specication is ITU-T I.431. 6
The ISDN Protocol Layer Architecture ISDN protocol shows a three layer architecture corresponding to OSI seven layers. The three important layers used in ISDN are 1. Physical Layer (a) Encoding and decoding of information (b) Transmission of channel data (c) Multiplexing to form basic and primary rate (d) Making and breaking of physical circuit (as a circuit switch) 2. Data link layer (a) Establishing and clearing data links (b) Error, ow and congestion control (c) Synchronization: matching the clocking frequency, phase of information at receiver side. 3. Network Layer (a) Addressing and routing (b) User-to-user signalling (c) Activation and deactivation of network level connections. (d) Multiplexing between dierent networks.
A P S T
N Routing Between user signalling D Data link form Flow & congestion control Bearer Service n/w
Layer 1 Operation ISDN physical layer (Layer 1) frame formats dier depending on whether the frame is outbound (from terminal to network) or inbound (from network to terminal). Both physical layer interfaces are shown in Figure 5 The frames are 48 bits long, of which 36 bits represent data. The bits of an ISDN physical layer frame are used as follows: F Provides synchronization L Adjusts the average bit value E Ensures contention resolution when several terminals on a passive bus contend for a channel A Activates devices S Is unassigned B1, B2, and DHandle user data Multiple ISDN user devices can be physically attached to one circuit. In this conguration, collisions can result if two terminals transmit simultaneously. Therefore, ISDN provides features to determine link contention. When an NT receives a D bit from the TE, it echoes back the bit in the next E-bit position. The TE expects the next E bit to be the same as its last transmitted D bit. Terminals cannot transmit into the D channel unless they rst detect a specic number of ones (indicating no signal) corresponding to a pre-established priority. If the TE detects a bit in the echo (E) channel that is dierent from its D bits, it must stop transmitting immediately. This simple technique ensures that only one terminal can transmit its D message at one time. After successful D-message transmission, the terminal has its priority reduced by requiring it to detect more continuous ones before transmitting. Terminals cannot raise their priority until all other devices on the same line have had an opportunity to send a D message. Telephone connections have higher priority than all other services, and signaling information has a higher priority than non signaling information.
Figure 5: ISDN Physical Layer Frame Formats Dier Depending on Their Direction H0 channel, 384 kbps H11 channel, 1536 kbps H12 channel, 1920 kbps (a) B channel [Basic Rate Interface] 2B+D channels B : 64 kbps D : 16 kbps data and voice channels D : 16 kbps control signal B channel is full duplex and used for encoding of digital voice, multiplexing of lower rate data streams. Multiplexing is limited to 8, 16, 32 kbps streams. (b) P channel [Primary Rate Interface] 30B+D Channels [European countries] 23B+D Channels [Japan] B: 64 kbps data and voice channels D: 64 kbps control signal P channel is extensively used in USA, Canada, Japan, Europe, India etc (c) D channel Its primary function is to carry signalling information for the control of circuit switched connections involving one or more B channels. Otherwise it can be used for following purposes: 1. Transport of user signalling information 2. Low bit rate packet data 3. Telemetry
(d) H channel It is used to carry user information at data rate in excess of 64 kbps in : 1. video teleconferencing 2. high resolution graphics 3. high resolution digital video/audio for transport of television 4. fast FAX services H0 and H11 are used in the North American Version of ISDN, H12 is used in European version. H21 and H22 are intended for broadband ISDN Relation Between Channel Parameters S : Frame size I : Information stream rate in bps R : No. of information bits in each frame RF : Frame rate in frames/sec Frame size and frame rate are so chosen that: I=RF*D; R=RF*S
Telephone
Tickit Agencies
Stock market
Alarm
LAN
Other services
Figure 6: ISDN
ISDN services
Bearer service
Tele service
A packet of data transmission is a typical example of bearer service while telephony, telex, videotext and facimile are some tele-services. Supplementary services are oered in conjunction with either a bearer service or tele-service.
A List of Supplementary Services 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Abbreviated dialling 7. Dont disturb Closed user group 8. Reverse charging Call waiting display 9. Call bearing Three party conference 10.Direct dialling city wide centrex 11.Conference call Credit card calling 12.Call forwarding
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Limitations of ISDN
There are some limitations associated with using ISDN single step call transfer with WebSphere Voice Response. These limitations are: 1. The two calls involved in the transfer (the original inbound call and the outbound call to the third party) must be connected to WebSphere Voice Response from the same switch. The specications allow the two calls to be on dierent trunks, provided that both trunks support ISDN single step call transfer. If the WebSphere Voice Response system has a mixture of CAS, SS7, and ISDN trunks, the user application should ensure that the outbound call is made on the correct trunk for a ISDN single step call transfer to be successful. 2. No user access is given to the information elements on the transfer. 3. ISDN single step call transfer is not totally compatible with the WebSphere Voice Response signaling model, so application changes will be required when porting applications that involve transfer operations from dierent telephony congurations.
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