Transcript Lecture 1
QOS
Lecture 1: The Evolution of Telephony in the Enterprise
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Basic Telephone System
A telephone system has four elements:
A telephone set to convert sound to electrical signals and back to
sound
One or more central switching facilities
Connections to the central switching facilities
Connections among multiple switching centers across telephone
networks
Subscribers connect to the telephone network using:
Dedicated wire connections in overhead or underground cables
Radio waves (cellular, satellite, or radiotelephone)
VoIP
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Basic Components of a Modern Telephone
System
Long Distance and
International Connections
IP
Central Office
with Switches
Fiber
Local
Loop
POTS and
ADSL
Home Office with
Corporate VPN
including VoIP
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Cellular Phone
System
Traditional POTS Services
PSTN or PTT (POTS) has remained practically
unchanged for over 100 years offering:
Bi-directional, or full duplex, voice path to carry sound both
ways at once
Dial tone and ringing signals
Subscriber dialing
Operator services, such as directory assistance, long distance,
and conference calling assistance
Power
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ISDN and T1 Services
ISDN: A set of standards that allow data and voice to
be carried on copper wire from the telephone exchange
to customer premises:
BRI: 2 B-channels and 1 D-channel for control
PRI: 23 B-channels (30 in Europe) and 1 D-channel for control
T1 Carrier System: Specification for digital transmission
between telephone exchanges and sometimes directly
to customer premises. T1 uses copper wire or fiber.
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Digital Telephone Services
Digital Telephone Services include:
Voice mail
Caller ID
Call waiting
Reminder calls
(Three-way) conference calling
Enhanced 911 (in North America)
Centrex
A number of other similar services
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
PBX and Centrex
Centrex (a virtual PBX):
Call Transfer
Call Divert – on no reply and on busy calls
Call Waiting
Three-Party Conference
Call Pick Up (Group)
Ring Back
Reminder or Alarm Call
Typical Centrex telephone. Note the
Recall button and the Message
Last Number Redial
Waiting lamp.
Centrex Hotline (non-dialed connection)
Centrex Warm Line (delayed Hotline)
Centrex Hunt Groups, with optional bypass numbers
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Long-Distance Calling Challenges
May I have a line
to Chicago?
Is this a
business call?
PSTN
Yes it is.
Thank you. One
second please.
Chicago Office
PBX
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Long-Distance and WATS
Long-distance trunk lines connect telephone
exchanges.
Long-distance services include:
OUT-WATS: Flat-rate long-distance calling
IN-WATS: Toll-free calling using 1-8xx numbers
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Separate Voice, Video, and Data Networks
London
Office
San Jose
Office
PBX
PBX
Tokyo
Office
PBX
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Converged Voice, Video, and Data Network
PSTN
IP WAN
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Traditional Hierarchical Model
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Cisco Enterprise Architecture
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Campus Architecture
Campus Architecture combines a core infrastructure
of intelligent switching and routing including:
IP Communications
mobility
advanced security
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Data Center Architecture
The Data Center is a cohesive, adaptive network
architecture supporting:
requirements for consolidation
business continuance
security
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Branch Architecture
The Branch allows enterprises to extend head-office
applications and services including:
security
IP communications
advanced application performance supporting
thousands of remote locations/users
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Teleworker Architecture
Teleworker architecture allows enterprises to securely
deliver voice and data services to remote, small or
home offices.
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WAN Architecture
WAN architecture offers the convergence of voice,
video and data services over a single IP
communications network.
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Example: Enterprise Network
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Network Traffic Mix and Requirements
Converged network traffic mix:
Voice and video traffic
Voice applications traffic
Mission-critical applications traffic
Transactional traffic
Routing update traffic
Network management traffic
Bulk transfer (best-effort) and scavenger (less-than-best-effort)
traffic
Key requirements:
Performance (bandwidth, delay, and jitter)
Security (access and transmission)
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Example: Integrated Services in a Converged
Network
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Intelligent Information Network (IIN)
IIN integrates networked resources and information
assets.
IIN extends intelligence across multiple products and
infrastructure layers.
IIN actively participates in the delivery of services and
applications.
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Phases of IIN
Three phases in building an IIN are:
Integrate transport
Integrate services
Integrate applications
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Cisco SONA Framework
Cisco SONA is an architectural framework.
Cisco SONA brings several advantages to enterprises:
Outlines how enterprises can evolve toward the IIN
Illustrates how to build integrated systems across a fully
converged intelligent network
Improves flexibility and increases efficiency
Cisco provides an extensive product line, services,
proven architectures, and experience to help the
enterprises achieve their business goals.
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Cisco SONA Layers
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SONA—Networked Infrastructure Layer
The goal is “anywhere/anytime connectivity.”
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SONA—Interactive Services Layer
Interactive services includes:
voice and collaboration
services
mobility services
security and identity services
storage services
computer services
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application networking services
network infrastructure
virtualization
services management
adaptive management services
SONA—Application Layer
Application Layer includes:
business applications
collaboration applications
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Summary
The traditional three-layer hierarchical model no longer
completely meets the needs of large converged
networks carrying voice, video, and data. IIN aligns IT
resources with business priorities.
Cisco Enterprise Architecture and SONA provide a
framework for deploying converged networks.
Dealing with complex traffic mixes is a key feature of
Cisco Enterprise Architecture. The Service layer of
SONA addresses the performance and security
requirements of converged networks.
IIN aligns IT resources with business priorities.
Cisco SONA provides an evolutionary path to IIN.
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.