ISDN
Overview
back
| next | index
What
is ISDN?
The Integrated
Services Digital Network (ISDN) is a set of international standards for
access to advanced, all-digital public telecommunications networks. The
key elements of this definition are:
Integrated
Services
Voice
Video
Image
Data
Mixed
media at a number of standard data rates
Digital
Digital
terminal equipment
Digital
local loops
Digital
trunks
Digital
switching
Digital
signaling
Network
Worldwide,
interoperating communications fabric under distributed control using
common standards
ISDN standards
have been defined by the ITU-T, a branch of the United Nations' International
Telecommunications Union (ITU), in the series I and Q recommendations.
Integrated
Services . . .
The current
telephone network uses a mixture of analog and digital transmission methods
and diverse access techniques and standards to provide different services:
Switched
voice telephony
Centrex
Dedicated
point-to-point data carrier
Packet-switched
data carrier
Dedicated
point-to-point digital carrier
Future telephone networks
will also provide full-motion video, voice/video/graphics conferencing,
high-speed facsimile, and electronic mail.
ISDN integrates
all these services by providing a small set of standard interfaces and
access protocols that apply to all services. Because ISDN is an international
standard, the same interfaces and access protocols should be available
anywhere in the world, across international boundaries, and among equipment
from any set of vendors.
.
. . Digital . . .
ISDN provides
all of its services over an entirely digital transmission system. In pre-ISDN
telephony, only interoffice trunks and certain high-capacity dedicated
customer circuits use digital transmission.
ISDN employs
digital transmission from the customer-premises equipment (CPE; i.e.,
telephones, data terminals, fax machines, etc.), through the local access
loop , and across the carrier's trunk network. All central- and end-office
switching is performed by digital switches, and all signalling (call establishment,
"dial tone," ringing, on-hook/off-hook, service requests) occurs
through digital protocols.
.
. . Network
Finally,
ISDN defines a NETWORK, not a loose collection of standards for private-line
services. Ultimately, ISDN defines a single worldwide fabric of transmission
and switching services operating under a common set of standards, with
control distributed among all the various operating companies and national
telecommunications authorities.
Components
of ISDN
While individual
operating companies and ministries will define the specific services,
within the ISDN architecture the ITU standards define a number of component
parts and functions:
ISDN
CHANNELS
ACCESS
TYPES
DEVICES
INTERFACES
PROTOCOLS
ISDN
Channels
A CHANNEL
is the basic unit of ISDN service. The ISDN Standards define three basic
types of channels:
Bearer
channels (B channels)
Delta
(or "Demand") channels (D channels)
High-capacity
channels (H channels)
B
Channel
A B channel
is a 64-Kbps unit of clear digital bandwidth. Based on the data rate required
to carry one digital voice conversation, a B channel can carry any type
of digital information (voice, data, or video) with no restrictions on
format or protocol imposed by the ISDN carrier.
D
Channel
A D channel
is a signalling channel. It carries the information needed to connect
or disconnect calls and to negotiate special calling parameters (i.e.,
automatic number ID, call waiting, data protocol). The D channel can also
carry packet-switched data using the X.25 protocol.
The D channel
is not a clear channel. It operates according to a well-defined pair of
layered protocols:
Q.921
(LAPD) at the Data Link Layer (Layer 2)
Q.931
at the upper layers (Layers 3 and above)
The data rate of a
D channel varies according to the type of access it serves: a Basic Rate
Access D channel operates at 16 Kbps and a Primary Rate Access D channel
operates at 64 Kbps.
Signalling
on the D Channel
The ISDN
D channel carries all signalling between the customer's terminal device
and the carrier's end switching office.
Signalling information
with end-to-end significance (i.e., which must be received by the terminal
device at a call's destination, such as Automatic Calling Number Identification
information) travels between the carrier's switching offices on the carrier's
common-channel signalling network and on to the destination terminal through
the receiving user's D channel.
H Channel
An H channel
is a special, high-speed clear channel. H channels, designed primarily for
full-motion color video, are not yet in common use. There are currently
three kinds of H channel:
H0
("H-zero")
H11
("H-one-one")
H12
("H-one-two")
An H0 channel operates
at 384 Kbps (roughly one fourth of a North American Primary Rate Access
or one fifth of a European Primary Rate Access). An H1 channel operates
at 1.536 Mbps and occupies one whole North American Primary Rate Access.
An H12 channel occupies an entire European Primary Rate Access.
ISDN
Access Types
ISDN offers
two general types of access:
BASIC
RATE ACCESS (BRA)
PRIMARY
RATE ACCESS (PRA)
These differ from
one another by the amount of information they can carry.
Basic
Rate Access
Basic Rate
Access is based on new technology conceived especially for ISDN. Designed
to provide service to individual users or small businesses, Basic Rate
Access provides two 64-Kbps B channels and one 16-Kbps D channel (referred
to as 2B+D). In other words, it provides transmission facilities for one
voice conversation (one B channel), one medium-speed data session (the
other B channel), and the signalling exchanges needed to make them work
(the D channel).
Two B channels
at 64 Kbps plus one D channel at 16 Kbps equals 144K bps. The ISDN Basic
Rate transmission protocol uses an additional 48 Kbps of bandwidth for
maintenance and synchronization, so an ISDN Basic Rate Access actually
uses 192 Kbps.
Primary
Rate Access
Primary
Rate Access, which is based on pre-ISDN digital carrier technology, is
designed to provide high-capacity service to large customers for applications
such as PBX-to-PBX trunking. There are two kinds of Primary Rate Access:
23B+D and 30B+D. Each depends on the kind of digital carrier available
in a given country.
In North America and Japan, 23B+D Primary Rate Access operates at 1.544
Mbps and offers 23 B channels plus 1 64-Kbps D channel (usually located
in time-slot 23), or 4 H0 channels, or 1 H11 channel. In most of the rest
of the world, 30B+D Primary Rate Access operates at 2.048 Mbps and offers
30 B channels plus 1 64-Kbps D channel (located in time-slot 16), or 5
H0 channels, or 1 H12 channel.
ISDN
Devices
In the context
of ISDN standards, STANDARD DEVICES refers not to actual hardware, but
to standard collections of functions that can usually be performed by
individual hardware units. The ISDN Standard Devices are:
Terminal
Equipment (TE)
Terminal
Adapter (TA)
Network
Termination 1 (NT1)
Network
Termination 2 (NT2)
Exchange
Termination (ET)
Terminal
Equipment (TE)
A TE is any
piece of communicating equipment that complies with the ISDN standards.
Examples include: digital telephones, ISDN data terminals, Group IV Fax
machines, and ISDN-equipped computers.
In most cases,
a TE should be able to provide a full Basic Rate Access (2B+D), although
some TEs may use only 1B+D or even only a D channel.
Terminal
Adapter (TA)
A TA is
a special interface-conversion device that allows communicating devices
that don't conform to ISDN standards to communicate over the ISDN.
The most common
TAs provide Basic Rate Access and have one RJ-type modular jack for voice
and one RS-232 or V.35 connector for data (with each port able to connect
to either of the available B channels). Some TAs have a separate data
connector for the D channel.
Network
Termination (NT1 and NT2)
The NT devices,
NT1 and NT2, form the physical and logical boundary between the customer's
premises and the carrier's network. NT1 performs the logical interface
functions of switching and local-device control (local signalling). NT2
performs the physical interface conversion between the dissimilar customer
and network sides of the interface.
In most cases,
a single device, such as a PBX or digital multiplexer, performs both physical
and logical interface functions. In ISDN terms, such a device is called
NT12 ("NT-one-two") or simply NT.
Exchange
Termination (ET)
The ET forms
the physical and logical boundary between the digital local loop and the
carrier's switching office. It performs the same functions at the end
office that the NT performs at the customer's premises.
In
addition, the ET:
- Separates the B
channels, placing them on the proper interoffice trunks to their ultimate
destinations
- Terminates the
signalling path of the customer's D channel, converting any necessary
end-to-end signalling from the ISDN D-channel signalling protocol to
the carrier's switch-to- switch trunk signalling protocol
ISDN
Interfaces (Standard Reference Points)
The ISDN
standards specify four distinct interfaces in the customer's connection
to the network: R, S, T, and U.
From the standards
viewpoint, these are not "real" physical interfaces, but simply
STANDARD REFERENCE POINTS where physical interfaces may be necessary.
However, in common practice, the names of reference points are used to
refer to physical interfaces.
The
R Interface
The interface
at reference point R is the physical and logical interface between a non-ISDN
terminal device and a terminal adapter (TA). The R interface is not really
part of the ISDN; it can conform to any of the common telephone or data
interface standards.
The
S Interface
The interface
at reference point S is the physical and logical interface between a TE
(or TA) and an NT. The S interface uses four wires and employs a bipolar
transmission technique known as Alternate Mark Inversion (AMI).
A special feature
of the S interface is the "Short Passive Bus" configuration,
which allows up to eight ISDN devices (TE or TA) to contend for packet
access to the D channel in a prioritized, round-robin fashion. Only one
device at a time can use a given B channel.
The
T Interface
The interface
at reference point T is the physical and logical interface between NT1
and NT2, whenever the two NTs are implemented as separate pieces of hardware.
The specification for the T interface is identical to the specification
for the S interface.
In most implementations,
NT1 and NT2 exist in the same physical device, so there is no real T interface.
The
U Interface
The interface
at reference point U is the physical and logical interface between NT
(or NT2) and the ISDN carrier's local transmission loop. It is also the
legal demarcation between the carrier's loop and the customer's premises.
The U interface
is implemented with two wires and uses a special quaternary signal format
(i.e., four possible electrical states, with one pulse encoding a predefined
combination of 2 bits) called 2B1Q. Quaternary encoding allows the U interface
to carry data with a logical bit rate of 192 Kbps over a signal with a
physical pulse rate of only 96 Kbps. The slower pulse rate is better suited
to the less-predictable environment of the outside-plant loop carrier
system.
ISDN
Protocols
The ISDN
protocols are signalling protocols that govern the exchange of data on
the D channel. The two ISDN signalling protocols make up a layered protocol
stack, with the Link Access Protocol for the D Channel (LAPD, also known
as Q.921) providing Layer 2 data-link services and the Q.931 protocol
providing higher-layer services.
LAPD is a simple,
bit-oriented data-link protocol similar in structure and operation to
HDLC and SDLC. The Q.931 signalling protocol is one of the most complex
and feature-rich communication protocols ever designed.
LAPD
(Q.921)
The LAPD
protocol operates between TE and NT over the D channel of an ISDN S interface.
In traditional data communications terms, the TE acts as DTE and the NT
acts as DCE.
The unit of
LAPD transmission is a FRAME. As in other bit- oriented protocols, frames
are demarcated from an idle circuit and from other frames by a FLAG pattern.
Like HDLC, LAPD can operate with either a Modulo 8 or a Modulo 128 frame
window. A
LAPD frame contains the following fields:
ADDRESS
COMMAND/RESPONSE
BIT
CONTROL
INFORMATION
(only in frames carrying higher-layer data)
FRAME
CHECK SEQUENCE
Refer to the INTERVIEW
Technical Manual for information about decoding LAPD frames.
LAPD
vs. Other Bit-Oriented Protocols
The principal
differences between LAPD and other bit-oriented protocols are the structure
of the address field and the optional exchange of Sequenced Information
(SI0 and SI1) frames.
- LAPD
Address Field
- A LAPD address
is 16 bits long and contains two parts: the SERVICE ACCESS POINT IDENTIFIER
(SAPI) and the TERMINAL ENDPOINT IDENTIFIER (TEI). The SAPI identifies
the specific service (i.e., voice, circuit- switched data, network management,
etc.) to which the frame refers. The TEI identifies the TE itself, especially
in situations such as Primary Rate Access or the Basic Rate Access short
passive bus, where a single physical link might terminate at more than
one TE.
- Sequenced INFORMATION
Frames
- For applications
that require a quicker response to frame errors than the normal MOD
8 or MOD 128 sequence numbering offers, LAPD provides a Sequenced Information
service which uses a MOD 2 "frame window." Sequenced Information
frames traveling in the same direction alternate between SI0 and SI1,
reducing the LAPD frame window to one outstanding frame for special
situations.
Q.931:
The ISDN D-Channel Signalling Protocol
In fulfilling
the ISDN goal of Integrated Services over common facilities, the Q.931 D-channel
signalling protocol does much of the integrating. The principal job of Q.931
is to carry signalling information about the nature of the ISDN service
required for specific calls (or data sessions) between the end user's terminal
equipment and the ISDN carrier's end office.
The following
is a short list of some critical information the Q.931 protocol MUST convey:
- SERVICE
INFORMATION
- Information on
the nature of the service requested for the call: voice, D-channel packet
switched data, B-Channel packet switched data, circuit-switched data,
electronic mail, facsimile, video, or others.
- TERMINAL
CAPABILITIES
- Information on
the capabilities of the terminal equipment originating and receiving
the call: the type of signalling required (i.e., stimulus signalling
for simple digital telephones or functional signalling for full- featured
ISDN terminals) and the terminal's ability to handle special features
and services [e.g., Automatic Number Identification (ANI), ANI blocking,
800-service, call screening, call forwarding, data rate adaptation,
conference calling].
- HANDSHAKING
- Negotiations between
the originating and receiving terminals on the nature of information
to be exchanged
In addition to these
mandatory features, the Q.931 protocol must support the wide range of
OPTIONAL features offered by all possible vendors of ISDN terminal and
switching equipment. While ISDN provides a standard architecture and common
interfaces, it necessarily leaves much room for invention, innovation,
and just plain market differentiation among the products and services
that implement the standard.
No single device
supports the whole range of possible Q.931 messages. The ITU Q.931 standard
provides only a minimally functional subset that allows different manufacturers
and ISDN carriers to provide a rich variety of features and services.
To support this
variety of features and functions, the Q.931 has several features of its
own that make it a uniquely complex protocol:
OPTIONAL
FIELDS
VARIABLE-LENGTH
FIELDS
CODESET
SHIFTING
PROTOCOL
SHIFTING
- OPTIONAL
FIELDS
- Most protocols
offer some options in the structure of a message to allow for efficiency
in ordinary operation (i.e., short packets for common functions). The
Q.931 protocol provides a broad hierarchy of OPTIONAL fields whose appearance
in a given message depends on the nature of the service requested, the
nature of the terminal device, and sometimes even the specific application
being served.
- VARIABLE-LENGTH
FIELDS
- Most optional fields
in Q.931 messages can vary in length. A Q.931 message can contain a
large amount of information designed simply to allow terminal equipment
to find specific fields in the message.
-
- CODESET
SHIFTING
- Different national
ISDNs, equipment vendors, and private carriers require special ways
of encoding signalling information. The Q.931 protocol allows for shifting
among several CODESETS to accommodate this variation.
-
- PROTOCOL
SHIFTING
- Because the ISDN
standards require that the D channel be able to carry packet-switched
data as well as signalling information, the Q.931 protocol contains
features that allow shifting into an entirely different protocol from
message to message. These features take the form of a shift indicator
that states that the rest of the current message should be interpreted
as X.25 (or another alternative protocol).
Q.931
AND SS#7
The Q.931
protocol operates only on the D channel of the ISDN interface between
the customer's terminal equipment and the ISDN carrier's Exchange Termination
(ET). It does not provide end-to-end signalling over the public telephone
network, although certain features of the protocol (such as terminal handshaking)
do have end-to-end significance.
The carrier's
ET locates those Q.931 messages that have end- to-end significance and
translates them onto the carrier's own common-channel signalling network,
which uses ITU Common Channel Signalling System Number 7 (SS#7) for signalling
among end-office and central-office switches. At a call's destination
end office, the ET retranslates end-to-end signalling information and
adds it to the local signalling in the Q.931 data stream between the ET
and the terminal equipment on the receiving end of the call.
Testing
ISDN
Like any
digital communications facility, ISDN can be tested at any of several
levels. ISDN tests can operate strictly at the physical level, at the
level of the logical transmission path, and at the higher levels of logical
protocol. All of these tests can provide valuable information in testing
ISDN circuits and equipment.
Physical
Testing
PAIR QUALIFICATION
is the most common reason for testing ISDN at the physical level. ISDN
circuits must often use pre-ISDN local-loop facilities designed to carry
more-robust analog transmissions. A high-speed digital transmission technique
is sensitive to signal degradation from such common local-loop features
as bridge taps and echo cancellers.
Before installing
ISDN, carrier craftspeople must qualify the wire pairs to handle the ISDN
signal. Purely physical parameters such as continuity, impedance, and
electrical loading are especially important.
At a slightly
higher level, digital tests such as Bit Error Rate and Error-Free Seconds
Rate can be used to qualify the local loop.
Protocol
Testing
There are
four basic reasons for performing protocol tests on ISDN circuits:
CONFORMANCE
TESTING
INTEROPERABILITY
TESTING
PERFORMANCE
TESTING
TROUBLESHOOTING
Conformance
Testing
Conformance
testing is designed to prove whether a given device, service, feature,
or implementation of ISDN conforms to a specific standard. The standard
may be the ITU I- and Q- series references or may be a carrier's or manufacturer's
own technical reference.
Conformance
tests are usually run automatically in long series of short, very specific
tests with pass/fail results provided in stages along the way. Many ISDN
providers, especially telecommunications ministries, require conformance
testing before a given product or service can be operated on their networks.
A given product or service is usually tested once for conformance.
Interoperability
Testing
Interoperability
testing is designed to prove whether two ISDN products or services (i.e.,
one vendor's terminal and another vendor's switch) can perform together
according to specification. Any ISDN product needs to be tested for interoperability
with any other ISDN product with which it may communicate.
A maxim in interoperability
testing is that, "The commutative law does not apply." In other
words, if A interoperates with B and B interoperates with C, A does not
necessarily interoperate with C. ISDN products must be tested for conformance
and interoperability at every major revision.
Performance
Testing
Performance
testing requires the gathering and display of statistics on the numbers
of protocol units (i.e., frames, packets, messages) transmitted and received
over time between units. The goal of performance testing is to discover
deviations (from a specification or from normal operation) that point
to underlying problems in the terminal or switching equipment or in the
operation of the protocols themselves.
For ISDN, degrading
performance of the D channel protocols (such as longer and longer Call
Setup times) can indicate a number of protocol problems that ranges from
user error at the terminal to traffic overloading on the carrier's network.
Degrading data communications performance on a B channel might point to
a failure to negotiate Calling parameters on the D channel.
In general,
performance testing uncovers operational problems that might otherwise
pass interoperability testing.
Troubleshooting
Once the
user has determined that a problem has occurred on a circuit, troubleshooting
finds the problem's cause. For ISDN circuits to date, the principal cause
of circuit problems has been user error.
ISDN defines
many new ways of performing familiar tasks (e.g., making a telephone call).
Practices that were once common sense can now cause protocol problems.
Failure of terminal
and switching equipment to interoperate properly despite passing interoperability
tests is another major ISDN worry, especially in end-to-end signalling
between similar but not identical terminals.
ISDN also adds
a new layer of complexity to straightforward protocol testing of data
communications over the B channels. Users must now look for subtle effects
of D-channel Call Setup procedures, such as failure to complete the call
over the D channel before link startup begins on the B channel.
Multichannel
Protocol Monitoring
These descriptions
of ISDN problems and testing techniques illustrate the need for Multichannel
protocol testing on ISDN circuits. Protocols on the D channel control
much of what happens on the B channels, and events on the B channels can
highlight protocol problems on the D channel.
In order to
test ISDN properly, a protocol analyzer must be able to monitor at least
the D channel and one of the B channels simultaneously. It should also
be able to correlate events in time on the separate channels.
Monitoring
and Emulation
An ISDN
protocol analyzer should also be able to monitor on one channel and emulate
on another.
Monitoring a
B channel while simulating a Call Setup on the D channel allows an operator
to see the intended (or unintended) results of D-channel actions on the
B channel under control. Monitoring the D channel while emulating on a
B channel can illustrate important signalling events, such as how the
D channel responds to an abnormal termination on the B channel.
Multichannel
Emulation
Emulating
a switch or terminal device on both the D channel and a B channel allows
the protocol analyzer to control an ISDN communication completely, both
to verify normal operation and to test the effects of abnormal conditions.
All conformance and interoperability testing of ISDN protocols should
be performed as dual-channel emulations.
Additional
Information
This document
only gives a general overview of Integrated Systems Digital Networks.
For more detailed information on ISDN standards and technologies, see
the documents available from the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU). For information on specific implementations,
consult the manufacturers' or carriers' reference documents and technical
advisories.
back
| next | index
|