1 / 13

Realities of Multi-Domain Gateway Network Management

Realities of Multi-Domain Gateway Network Management. Jonathan Rosenberg Chief Scientist. Single Provider VoIP Networks are a Barrier to Entry Difficult for a single carrier to get national or international coverage Wide coverage needed for cost advantages

gen
Download Presentation

Realities of Multi-Domain Gateway Network Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Realities of Multi-Domain Gateway Network Management Jonathan Rosenberg Chief Scientist

  2. Single Provider VoIP Networks are a Barrier to Entry Difficult for a single carrier to get national or international coverage Wide coverage needed for cost advantages Capital investment of many international POPs is significant Solution - Multi-Provider Each provider owns a set of POPs Calls originating in POP of one provider can terminate in POP of another Limitations of Single Provider VoIP A B C D

  3. Multi-Provider Case Requires Agreements Between Entities Many Possible Organizations of Agreements Peer to peer bilateral Settlement House (star) Confederation (full mesh) Each Organizational Arrangement is a Series of Bilateral Agreements Results in a Requirement of Bilateral Information Flow Multi-Provider Agreements P2P Settlement House Confederation

  4. Information Exchange • Main Question: Where to Route an Incoming Call? • Depends on a Number of Factors: • The set of phone numbers each provider is willing to terminate • Cost/billing/pricing arrangements • Preferences for a particular provider • POLICY • Decision Must be Made Quickly • Affects call setup time • How is it Accomplished?

  5. Solution: TRIP • Telephony Routing over IP • Being Developed in IP Telephony Working Group in IETF • Specification is Mature, RFC Shortly • What does it do? • Exchange of routing information between peer providers • Exchange happens outside of call setup • Routing information consists of phone prefixes and associated data • Allows for aggregation and redistribution • Strong policy support

  6. Internet Telephony Administrative Domain (ITAD) Owner of GW, LS, users Location Server (LS) Primary component Exchanges routing information with internal and external peers Front End Protocol mechanism used to access TRIP data Typically SIP TRIP Components Gateways Location Server ITAD B TRIP End Users ITAD A Front End

  7. What are its main features? • Based on Scalable IP Routing Technology • Combination of BGP4 and IS-IS • Proven algorithms and operation • Support for LNP and Routing Numbers • includes international codes with hex values • Works for both SIP and H.323 • Can even enable routing through conversion boxes

  8. What are its Main Features cont. • Capabilities Exchange • Agree upon address family for routing • Send Only, Receive Only, Bidirectional Modes • Allows for domains that wish to only export or import routes • Extensibility • Support for new attributes built in • Attributes provide parameters for a route

  9. An LS is Statically Configured with its Internal and External peers No autodiscovery External relationships need to be driven from business needs LS Connects to Peers TCP connection Basic capabilities negotiation Address families Send/Receive/Send-only Agree on keepalive interval Route Exchange Complete synchronization of routing tables with external peers Sharing of learned routes with internal peers Only happens initially Keepalives After route exchange, period keepalives Small in size Updates If route changes, modified route is sent Incremental updates How does it work?

  10. An LS Will Receive Routes from Many Sources External Peers Internal Peers Statically configured Needs to Generate Local Telephony Routing Information Base (TRIB) Routes to send to peers Accomplished with Decision Process Combines routes from sources Generates Local TRIB Outputs Routes Location Server Processing Internal Routes Adj. TRIB Adj. TRIB Local Routes Adj. TRIB In Decision Process Policy Local TRIB Adj. TRIB Out Adj. TRIB Out Adj. TRIB Out

  11. Summary • Problem: • Single provider cannot own all gateways • Need for a way to support multi-provider operation • Solution: • Telephony Routing over IP (TRIP) • Protocol for inter-domain exchange of routes bilaterally

  12. Information Resource • Jonathan Rosenberg • jdrosen@dynamicsoft.com • +1 732.741.7244

More Related