Darren Martz
2003-Nov-07 21:28 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Re: Asterisk-Users digest, Vol 1 #1835 - 12 msgs
Thanks Brian, and thanks again for the included definitions <grin> - that helped too. Your comments are really helping clear many questions. I suppose our intensions are to become an IXC. So if my local carrier is sporting old technology, they'll provide TDM services. So if I understood you correctly, the "in-band signaling" is typically SS7, and the alternative is typically PRI? Sounds like one carrier more of the call management tasks and the other is a more finished product - and you pay more for each PRI channel right? I know our local carrier recently upgraded the entire LD infrustructure to a Nortel VOIP solution (Telus in Canada). Perhaps they could provide VOIP channels as you indicated instead of TDM services. FYI: Telus spans across the entire Canada, and are a major carrier. They are also a major pain to deal with, and I'm not sure they'd be willing to sell a VOIP package. Hmmm.... if our target is to manage a maximum of 2000 concurrent calls (for arguement sake), I suppose a softswitch is overkill. Although I did notice that companies like MetaSwitch operate as small as 400 lines. So if our only option was a TDM based solution, and we used Asterisk as our "softswitch", what signaling would be ideal to keep the cost at a minimum? I don't recall Asterisk supporting SS7. Besides I read the Telco's only allow SS7 products they have tested and certified. I wonder what would happen if the carrier provided VOIP channels. I suppose it would still use T1s, but with what form of signaling? Cheers, Darren> Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Softswitch > From: Brian D Heaton <bdheaton@c4i2.com> > To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com > Organization: bdheaton@c4i2.com > Date: Fri, 07 Nov 2003 21:26:49 -0500 > Reply-To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com > > Darren, > > The answer (unfortunately) is "sort of" and "it depends" > > ----- Definitions ----- > LEC = Local Exchange Carrier > CLEC = Competitive LEC > IXC = Interexchange Carrier (LD company) > ----------------------- > > > In most cases a traditional phone company is going to want to hand off > TDM (circuit switched) services to you. This is true whether you are a > normal business or a CLEC/IXC. If you are a CLEC with SS7 connectivity > (and an assigned point code) they will hand off T1s and do the > signalling out of band over the SS7 connections. In-band signalling is > possible, but not common anymore. I know that in the late-90s in > SouthWestern Bell land they often wanted to hand off calls from their > 1AESS switches in MF format rather than SS7. > > A typical business would be handed either in-band signalled T1s or > PRIs. I don't know of any cases where private enterprises have gotten > their own point codes and SS7 connectivity, but someone else may have an > example. > > In the market now are firms which offer the end-user individual or > business VoIP origination/termination of both local and LD calls. While > the customer of these firms sees a VoIP interface I would bet that the > hand-off to the terminating LEC is still done via TDM circuits. This > may change in the future as the IXCs complete their transitions to VoIP > internal trunking networks. I don't expect the LECs to change rapidly > though. Their cost-recovery and depreciation models are based on their > switches lasting a loooooooong time. If anyone has an example of a > traditional US LEC offering VoIP hand-off and termination I'd love to > hear about it. I just haven't heard of a real-world example yet. > > Depending on the size of the deployment, a softswitch may be the way to > go for hand-off to a LEC. Given the size of typical carrier grade > softswitches though, I'd think that is something you'd only be looking > at if you were a very large enterprise or some type of carrier. The > size of the enterprise and the mix of traffic would determine where the > crossover is between a softswitch and another solution. Actually, you > could make a case that * is a softswitch. Really you're just talking > about scale here. > > The big question is when does a * server run out of gas? If you have 4 > quad-PRI boards in a system you can provision 368 trunks via PRIs. > Depending on the average length of call that is quite a bit of > trunking. I've seen CLEC trunk-groups to the access tandem that were > smaller than that. > > Hopefully this answers some of your questions..... > > THX/BDH > >