ISDN Architecture and Services
ISDN Architecture and Services
ISDN Architecture and Services
Architecture 2
Broadband ISDN 6
Switching technologies 7
ATM Switching 15
1
ISDN Services
ISDN - Integrated Services Digital Network -
communication technology intended to pack
all existing and arising services:
digitized voice services (caller ID, messaging,
persistent calls, redirected calls, multicast
calls, waiting calls, in-call functions)
multimedia quality exchange
enhanced digital services - computer
interconnection
entertainment services - TV, VOD (video on
demand) 2
N-ISDN Architecture
Narrowband ISDN communications are based on bi-
directional serial digital exchange (bit pipe) between
end-user devices and the public service network;
circuit switching technology
Digitized user devices: phone, fax, terminal (incl. VOD
services)
Network congestion method: time division
multiplexing over the bit stream according 2
standards:
low bandwidth: single channel for home use
high bandwidth: multiplied single channels for business
use. 3
N-ISDN Architecture
Basic ISDN configuration
Low bandwidth
2/41a NT1 - Network Terminating device by the users place
passive bus connection between NT1 and user devices
(up to 8 devices per connection) - ITU-T standard
reference point T
twisted pair between NT1 and Carriers office (up to
few km) - ITU-T standard reference point T.
Extended ISDN configuration
High bandwidth
2/41b NT1
NT2 - small ISDN switch PBX (Private Branch
Xchange) by the users office
passive connections between NT2 and user ISDN
devices - ITU-T standard reference point S
optional terminal adapter TA supporting interface to
one or more non-ISDN terminals - reference point R.
4
N-ISDN Performance
ITU-T standard allows
Basic bit pipe: 128kb/S voice/data channel +
2/42 16kb/S signaling
Primary bit pipe: combination up to 1.92Mb/s
+ 16-64 kb/S signaling (to fit in the ITU-T E1
PCM carrier of 2.048Mb/S)
Obsolete standard regarding audio/video
communications (because of the low transfer rate)
Data applications: inapplicable by open system
interconnections but still good for non-interactive
and non-real-time applications (Internet, remote
access to databases, etc.)
5
Broadband ISDN
155 Mb/S digital virtual circuit for fixed size data
packets
enough rate for hard transfer applications like digital
transmission of High Definition Television (HDTV)
ATM based technology
packet switching
high speed transmission media up to the customer device
- basically fiber optics
New switching principles differing from multistage and
time-division switches
Joint existence of PSTN, N-ISDN and B-ISDN. 6
Switching technologies
Switching technologies have been developed for
end to end routing of the data flows. The following
switching technologies are available today:
Circuit Switching which is based on the division of the
transmission capacity into fixed timeslots called as
channels or circuits. Channels are allocated end to end
between users.
Packet Switching where variable length data units (from
40 to 4000 octets) are stored and forwarded in each
network node.
Cell Switching where small fixed length data units called
cells (ATM 53 octets) are stored and forwarded.
7
Circuit Switching
Circuit switching has been the first approach to routing
communication channels between users. The originating
user request the connection establishment with the user
signaling. If the channel is available, it will be established
between the communicating parties for the complete
duration of the connection and remains occupied until
either communicating end signals a disconnect request
Circuit switching has been used in classical POTS (Plain