Integrated Services Digital Network: Public Networks Are Used For A Variety of Services
Integrated Services Digital Network: Public Networks Are Used For A Variety of Services
Integrated Services Digital Network: Public Networks Are Used For A Variety of Services
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ISDN
Users have a variety of equipment to connect
to public networks
Telephones
Private Branch Exchanges
Computer Terminals or PCs
Mainframe Computers
A variety of physical interfaces and access
procedures are required for connection
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ISDN
The telephone network has evolved into a
digital one with digital exchanges and links
The signalling system has become a digital
message-oriented common channel
signalling system (SS#7)
The term Integrated Digital Network is
used to describe these developments
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ISDN
The Public Switched Telephone network is
still analogue from the subscriber to the local
exchange
The need has arisen to extend the digital
network out to subscribers and to provide a
single standardised interface to all different
users of public networks
ISDN fulfils that need
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Integrated Services Digital
Network Packet
switched
network
Telephone
Circuit
Data switched
terminal network
Customer ISDN
ISDN central
PBX
Interface office
Databases
Alarm Digital
pipe Other
LAN Networks
& services
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ISDN
In Practice there are multiple networks
providing the service nationally
The user however, sees a single network
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Benefits to Subscribers
Single access line for all services
Ability to tailor service purchased to suit
needs
Competition among equipment vendors due
to standards
Availability of competitive service
providers
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Architecture
Integrated Digital Network
Digital circuit-
switched backbone
Common ISDN
physical central
Packet-switched network
interface office
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ISDN Standards
Contained in the I-series recommendations
Issued by CCITT (now ITU-T)
Six main groupings I.100 to I.600 series
I.100 series - General Concepts
I.200 series - Service Capabilities
I.300 series - Network Aspects
I.400 series - User-Network Interfaces
I.500 series - Internetwork Interfaces
I.600 series - Maintenance Principles
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ISDN Channels
The Digital pipe is made up of channels -
one of three types
B channel, D channel or H channel
Channels are grouped and offered as a
package to users
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B Channel
B channel-64 kbps
B is basic user channel
can carry digital data or PCM-encoded voice
or mixture of lower rate traffic.
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B Channel
Four kinds of connection possible
Circuit-switched
Packet-switched - X.25
Frame mode - frame relay (LAPF)
Semipermanent - equivalent to a leased line
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D Channel
D Channel - 16 or 64 kbps
Carries signalling information to control
circuit-switched calls on B channels
Can also be used for packet switching or
low-speed telemetry
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H Channel
Carry user information at higher bit rates
384kbps or 1536kbps or 1920kbps
Can be used as a high-speed trunk
Can also be subdivided as per users own
TDM scheme
Uses include high speed data, fast
facsimile, video, high-quality audio
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ISDN Channels and their
Applications
B Channel D Channel H Channel
(64 kbps) (16/64 kbps) (384/1536 kbps)
Digital voice Signalling High-speed trunk
(using SS#7)
High-speed data Low- speed Very high speed
(e.g. packet and data, (e.g. data
circuit switched packet, terminal,
data) videotex)
Other (e.g. fax, Other (e.g. Other (e.g. fast
slow video) telemetry) fax. Video)
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ISDN Channel Groupings
Basic Access -
two 64 kbps B channels
plus one 16kbps D channel
B channels can be used for voice and data
simultaneous calls to separate destinations
supported
D channel used for signalling and also for data
using X.25
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ISDN Basic Access
Intended for small business and residential
use
A single physical interface is provided
Data rate is 144kbps plus 48kbps overhead
bits totalling 192 kbps
Most existing subscriber loops can support
basic access
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ISDN Primary Access
Intended for users with greater capacity
requirements
Example would be a digital PBX
Two standards exist
1.544 Mbps American
2.048 Mbps European
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ISDN Primary Access
Typically it is structured as 30 B channels
plus one 64kbps D channel (Europe)
Can also be structured as H channels
5H0 +D for a 2.048 Mbps interface
or 1H12 +D
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ISDN Frame Structure Basic Rate Access
48 bits in 250 usec
TE to NT
F
FL B1 LD L L B2 LDL B1 LDL B2 LDL
a
F
FL B1 EDA N B2 E DM B1 ED S B2 EDL
a
8 bits NT to TE
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D Channel Contention
Incoming Traffic
LAPD protocol resolves contention
Outgoing Traffic
Multiple devices share D channel
Contention resolution algorithm required
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D Channel Contention
Idle TEs sends binary 1s on D channel
This means no signal (pseudoternery)
NT echos received binary value back as echo bit
When NT wishes to send on D channel, it listens
to echo bits
If it hears a string of 1s equal in length to a
threshold value Xi, it may transmit
Otherwise it must wait
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D Channel Contention
If two TEs start transmitting
simultaneously a collision occurs
This is detected by each TE by monitoring
E bits
If E bits are identical to D bits sent then no
collision
If discrepency detected TE stops and listens
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D Channel Contention
Priority mechanisms based on threshold
values
Control information has priority over user data
When TE has sent data its priority is lowered
until other terminals transmit
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D Channel Priorities
Control Information
Normal Priority X1 =8
Lower Priority X1 =9
User Data
Normal Priority X2 =10
Lower Priority X2 =11
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ISDN Primary Interface
Multiple channels multiplexed on single
medium
Only point to point configuration is allowed
Typically supports a digital PBX and
provides a synchronous TDM facility
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ISDN Primary Access Frame Formats
125 micro-seconds 193 bits
F
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Interface at 2.048Mbps 28
User Access
Defined using two concepts
Functional groupings of equipment
Reference points to separate functional
groupings
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Typical User Access Layout
ISDN
Tele - NT
phone 2-wire
4-wire Subscriber
S-bus Loop
PC with
ISDN
Interface
Card
User/network
Interface
Integrated
Voice/data
Terminal
Up to 8 devices
point to multi-point mode 30
ISDN Protocol Architecture
Application
Presentation End-end
user
Session signalling
Transport
I.451/Q.931 X.25 for further X.25
Network call control packet level study packet level
Frame
Datalink LAPD (Q921)
Relay
LAPB
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ISDN Data Link Layer
Link Access Protocol for the D channel
(LAPD) defined for ISDN
Three applications are supported
Control Signalling
Packet Switching
Telemetry
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Network Layer Above LAPD
Control Signalling
Call Control Protocol (I.451 / Q.931)
Establishes, maintains and terminates
connections on B channels
Possibility of user - user control signalling
above this layer
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B-Channel
Uses
Circuit Switching
Semi-permanent circuits
Packet switching
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B-Channel
Circuit Switching
Circuit is set up on B-channel on demand
D-channel call control protocol is used
Transparent full-duplex digital data path
established between users
Layers 2 to 7 are not visible to ISDN or
specified
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B-Channel
Semipermanent circuit can be set up by prior
agreement between users and network operator
Can be for indefinite time or at specified
times during day or week
As with circuit switched connection, full
duplex digital data path is established
Layers 2 to 7 are not visible to ISDN or
specified
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B-Channel Packet Switching
Circuit-switched connection is established
between user and packet-switched node using
D-channel call control protocol
The packet switching node can be integrated
into ISDN or be a separate network
User then employs X.25 layers 2 and 3 to
establish virtual circuit to other user
Frame relay can also be used instead of X.25
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D-Channel Packet Switching
Integrated X.25 service can be accessed by
D-Channel in addition to B-Channel
ISDN provides a semi-permanent connection
to a packet switching node within ISDN
The X.25 level 3 protocol is used for the
packet layer
LAPD is used for the link layer
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ISDN Call Control Protocol
Defined in recommendation I.451/Q.931
Network layer protocol
Uses services of LAPD link layer
Specifies procedures for establishing,
maintaining clearing connections on B-
channels sharing D-channel
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ISDN Call Control Protocol
Message Types
Call establishment messages to set up a call
Call information messages during a call ( e.g.
suspend a call and resume a call)
Call clearing messages to clear a call
Miscellaneous messages (congestion control,
requesting supplementary services etc)
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I.451 Formats
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Protocol Discriminator
Length of call
0 0 0 0 reference value
Flag
Call reference value
0 Message type
Mandatory and additional
information elements
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LAPD Format
Flag 1
Flag 1
Length in octets
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ISDN Physical Interface
There are no separate control circuits
Transmit and receive circuits carry data and
control signals
Pseudoternery coding scheme is used for
basic access signals
Voltage level is + or - 750 mV
Data rate is 192 kbps
HDB3 code is used for 2.048 Mbps access
B8ZS code is used for 1.544 Mbps access
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ISDN INTERFACE PLUG PINOUT
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Broadband ISDN
Recommendations to support video services
as well as normal ISDN services
Provides user with additional data rates
155.52 Mbps full-duplex
155.52 Mbps / 622.08 Mbps
622.08 Mbps full-duplex
Exploits optical fibre transmission
technology
Very high performance switches
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B-ISDN Architecture
BISDN Narrowband
Capabilities
Broadband
TE LFC Capabilities LFC TE
User to Network
Inter-exchange
Signalling
Signalling
Capabilities
TE = Terminal equipment 47
LFC = Local function capabilities
B-ISDN
ATM is specified for Information transfer
across the user-network interface
Fixed size 53 octet packet with a 5 octet
header
Implies that internal switching will be
packet-based
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BISDN Protocol Structure
Plane management function
Control Plane User Plane
Higher Layers: Higher Layers:
protocols and functions protocols and functions
Adaptation Layer
ATM Layer
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