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SoftSwitch
                       by

    A S M Jayeed Bin Amin 062-424-056




         Project report submitted to the
Department of Computer Science and Engineering of
              North South University

                       For

           ETE 605 IP Telephony
               Spring 2008




                   Approved


    _______________________________
            Dr. Mashiur Rahman


                15th April, 2008
               Dhaka, Bangladesh
Acknowledgements

I acknowledge our Faculty Advisor Dr. Mashiur Rahman for providing me with the
opportunity to work on this project and learn all the tools, technologies used in it.




                                                                                        ii
Contents

Acknowledgements                                                              ii


1.1 Softswitch in general                                                     1
1.2 Softswitch Advantages and Benefits                                        2
1.3 Three Factors Dominate New Softswitch Network Designs                     2
2.1 Major Elements of a Softswitch                                            3
3. Features and Benefits of Softswitch Architecture in Wireless Networks      4
        3.1 Distributed Switching                                             4
        3.2 Deploy services of Softswitch                                     5
        3.3 Deploy Services using IP-based Service Platforms via Softswitch   7


Reference                                                                     8




                                                                                   iii
1.1 Softswitch in General:

A softswitch is a central device in a telephone network which connects calls from one phone line
to another, entirely by means of software running on a computer system. This work was formerly
carried out by hardware, with physical switchboards to route the calls.


A softswitch is typically used to control connections at the junction point between circuit and
packet networks. A single device containing both the switching logic and the switching fabric can
be used for this purpose; however, modern technology has led to a preference for decomposing
this device into a Call Agent and a Media Gateway.


The Call Agent takes care of functions like billing, call routing, signalling, call services and so on
and is the 'brains' of the outfit. A Call Agent may control several different Media Gateways in
geographically dispersed areas over a TCP/IP link.


The Media Gateway connects different types of digital media stream together to create an end-to-
end path for the media (voice and data) in the call. It may have interfaces to connect to traditional
PSTN networks like DS1 or DS3 ports (E1 or STM1 in the case of non-US networks), it may
have interfaces to connect to ATM and IP networks and in the modern system will have Ethernet
interfaces to connect VoIP calls. The call agent will instruct the media gateway to connect media
streams between these interfaces to connect the call - all transparently to the end-users.


The softswitch generally resides in a building owned by the telephone company called a central
office. The central office will have telephone trunks to carry calls to other offices owned by the
telephone company and to other telephone companies (aka the Public Switched Telephone
Network or PSTN).


Looking towards the end users from the switch, the Media Gateway may be connected to several
access devices. These access devices can range from small Analog Telephone Adaptors (ATA)
which provide just one RJ11 telephone jack to an Integrated Access Device (IAD) or PBX which
may provide several hundred telephone connections.

Typically the larger access devices will be located in a building owned by the telephone company
near to the customers they serve. Each end user can be connected to the IAD by a simple pair of
copper wires.




                                                                                                    1
The medium sized devices and PBXs will typically be used in a business premises and the single
line devices would probably be found in residential premises.


In more recent times (i.e., the IP Multimedia Subsystem or IMS), the Softswitch element is
represented by the Media Gateway Controller (MGC) element, and the term "Softswitch" is rarely
used in the IMS context. [1]


1.2 Softswitch Advantages and Benefits

Reduce Costs
    •   Boost capacity of existing lines by offloading data to IP networks
    •   Lower cost commercial hardware and software
    •   Lower cost processing and connectivity expansion
    •   Smaller, higher-density packaging


Improve Services
    •   Roll out new services more quickly
    •   Differentiate services with value-added offerings
    •   Leverage familiar Internet and Web tools/programs
    •   Provide end users ability to maintain their own service preferences


Facilitate Migration to Data-Centric IP Networks
    •   Scale easily with new subscriber demand
    •   Quickly incorporate new protocols and connectivity
    •   Evolve networks and services through a distributed architecture


1.3 Three Factors Dominate New Softswitch Network Designs
While lower cost has become the primary driver behind new softswitch network designs,
engineers must still pay attention to other major driving factors that dominate today’s design of
new systems -the “high-order-bits” in digital design parlance. For the new networks being built
for both wireless, wireline, and IP networks, three other factors dominate what must be
accommodated in the new designs, (1) massive scalability, (2) high-availability, and (3) enabling
rapid delivery of new services to customers, whether they be equipment builders or service
providers. Lower costs are assumed to be a major element in all three of these factors.


                                                                                               2
Scalability - Tremendous growth in numbers of subscribers, who demand to be always on-line
and with higher speed links, is forcing bandwidth demands to double every nine months. Optical
fiber network technology is keeping pace, but Moore's law only predicts processor speeds to
double every eighteen months. This demands new architectural approaches to telecom networks,
by distributing intelligence out to the edges of the network, and designing new core network
switching and routing technologies. Building scalability into these new networks becomes one
major driving factor in new designs.


High Availability - As the content delivered over today's connection-based networks changes to
be predominantly data rather than voice, telecommunication operators and equipment suppliers
are transitioning their core networks to IP packet-switched technologies, optimized for delivery of
data, but also capable of handling Voice-over-IP (VoIP). A key challenge, however, for the
Network Equipment Providers (NEPs), is to deliver the same level of high availability with the
new packetswitched technologies as they currently deliver with existing, voice-optimized,
connection switched technologies. Continuous uptime, or high-availability, has become a second
major driving factor and a differentiator in offering services to customers.


Rapid delivery of new services - While dealing with these first two design factors, all three major
providers of service, wireless, wireline, and IP network vendors are being forced to deliver new
and improved services to customers, to keep existing customers, and to attract new ones as prices
for services are driven down by competition. To enable this, NEPs and their Telecom services
provider customers, ISPs and ASPs, are demanding more open, integrated, hardware and software
stacks in their platforms in order to deliver these new services to their customers more quickly.
Fortunately, addressing these four driving forces, lower cost, scalability, high availability, and
rapid delivery of new services, has become much easier with the definition of new industry
protocols and the availability of off-the-shelf standard hardware with modern processors and
software building blocks. Telecom equipment suppliers can now build carrier-grade high
performance, scalable, and highly available packet-switched core networks, including
softswitches with Voice-over-IP (VoIP) services using industry standard CompactPCI hardware
and software modules that leverage technologies developed for enterprise IP-based systems. [2]


2.1 Major Elements of a Softswitch
Today the IETF and other standards bodies define the four basic building blocks of softswitch
architectures as shown in figure 2, (1) Media Gateway Controller (MGC), (2) Media Gateway


                                                                                                 3
(MG), (3) Signalling Controller, and (4) The IP/Internet Services Layer, such as media servers
handling voice recognition, SIP presence services, SIP proxy servers, etc. More and more these
are being defined as off-the-shelf, open standard, but highly available Internet servers. [2]




             Figure 2.1: Typical Softswitch Architecture including Services Layer [2]




3. Features and Benefits of Softswitch Architecture in Wireless
Networks
3.1 Distributed Switching
Legacy circuit-switched networks utilize centrally located MSCs to provide the needed switching
of voice calls between the Radio Access Network (RAN) and the PSTN. Due to the significant
cost of operation and staffing of operational personnel to operate a MSC, Service Providers have
deployed large centrally located MSCs at the expense of backhauling the voice circuits from
RAN located in each city and likewise backhauling of the voice circuits to local PSTN
connections within each city. It should be noted that most local calls stay local, that is when a
mobile subscriber makes a call, they usually call someone within their own city or local area.
Since most calls stay local, this calls for double the circuits from the local RAN to the MSC and
from the MSC to the local PSTN. This is shown on the left side of the following diagram.




                                                                                                4
As show on the right side of the above diagram, using the softswitch-based architecture of
centralized MSC Server/Softswitch with Media Gateways, call control and voice processing /
switching are separated allowing for Media Gateways to be placed where they can provide the
most value and the complex call control can still be centrally located. By deploying distributed
switching, Service Providers can significantly reduce the backhaul charges that they would have
to pay because the bearer voice stays local for local calls and does not require to be shipped back
to the central location only to be shipped back again to the local area for completion to the local
PSTN.
Another key benefit of using the softswitch-based distributed architecture is to share the core
network between voice traffic and GPRS data. The Service Provider now has one network to
maintain instead of 2 networks as they do in 2.5G networks. [3]


3.2 Deploy services of Softswitch
Wireless operators are deploying standards-based services using mobile Intelligent Network (IN).
The GSM standard for the mobile IN is Customized Application for Mobile Enhanced Logic
(CAMEL). Similarly, the U.S. CDMA & TDMA markets are standardizing on Wireless
Intelligent Network (WIN). Though many services, such as prepaid, today are deployed using
proprietary extensions to the IN protocol, extending these services to roaming partners requires
the implementation of standards-based CAMEL & WIN services.


Both CAMEL and WIN architectures utilize a centralized intelligent network node known as the
Service Control Point (SCP). A MSC that has been upgraded to provide support for CAMEL and
WIN, at certain points in a call, passes control of the call to the SCP. The SCPs then execute the




                                                                                                 5
service logic. As new services are deployed, operators must upgrade all their MSCs and arm them
with these triggers. The disadvantages of this approach are:
• Provisioning Cost – Upgrading each MSCs and provisioning the service can be expensive and
time consuming.
• MSC real-time processing cost – These triggers may take up 5 to 20% of the MSC processing
capacity. This means that the operator will be able to pack 5 – 20% fewer wireless subscribers per
MSC compared with MSCs, which do not have to process these triggers. This is a huge cost to the
operator.
• Software cost - There is a capital expense associated with software upgrades on the MSCs
• Market Timing of Service Delivery – Software development on traditional circuit switched
MSCs is longer.


A better and more economical solution is to offload these triggers onto a Softswitch. As Mobile
originated/terminated calls are routed through the softswitch, the softswitch launches the queries
to SCPs based on the provisioned triggers. This allows centralizing the provisioning of service
triggers at the softswitch and unburdens the MSC from processing these triggers.


A good example is Wireless Number Portability (WNP). WNP, mandated by the FCC in the U.S.,
allows subscribers to change the operator they use for service but still retain the same PSTN
directory number. As the PSTN directory number no longer indicates the physical home network
switch, every call must be intercepted at the MSC, and a WNP query is launched to the SCP to
obtain a Location Routing Number (LRN) and ultimately the call is routed to the destination
indicated by the Location Routing Number. As queries are launched on every call, the processing
burden on the MSC could be significant.


The following figure compares the architecture of doing the LNP triggers on an MSC versus
doing it on a softswitch.




                                                                                                6
Other examples of IN Services, which can be launched from a Softswitch, are Number Pooling,
Prepaid Roaming, Toll Free service, Location based Services etc. Number Pooling, which allows
multiple operators to share a block of NPA-NXX also, requires processing very similar to LNP.
Number Pooling is mandated by several state regulators. Most of the prepaid platforms deployed
today use proprietary IN solution. CAMEL & WIN based solutions allow seamless roaming
prepaid across partner networks. CAMEL Phase 2 and Phase 3 define the prepaid & prepaid
roaming capabilities where as WIN Package 2 defines the prepaid solution for the roaming
networks. [3]


3.3 Deploy Services using IP-based Service Platforms via Softswitch
The International Softswitch Consortium’s Applications Working Group has developed an
Applications Framework, in which Softswitches can use SIP or LDAP to access services from IP-
based Application Servers. These IP-enabled Service Platforms operate in a similar fashion as
SCP’s, but they are available at a much lower cost and offer more flexibility. Once the databases
are moved to a more modern platform, they can be queried by the Softswitch using SIP or LDAP.
More information on this Application Framework is available from the Application Working
Group. [3]




                                                                                               7
References:
[1] www.wikipedia.org
[2] Peter Palm, New Softswitch Architectures help to manage the Network Industry turmoil,
    Sun Microsystems
[3] Softswitch Applications in Wireless Core Networks, Version: 1.1 - April 18, 2002,
    International Softswitch Consortium, Wireless Working Group




                                                                                            8

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Jayeed 062424056 Ete605 Sec 2

  • 1. SoftSwitch by A S M Jayeed Bin Amin 062-424-056 Project report submitted to the Department of Computer Science and Engineering of North South University For ETE 605 IP Telephony Spring 2008 Approved _______________________________ Dr. Mashiur Rahman 15th April, 2008 Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • 2. Acknowledgements I acknowledge our Faculty Advisor Dr. Mashiur Rahman for providing me with the opportunity to work on this project and learn all the tools, technologies used in it. ii
  • 3. Contents Acknowledgements ii 1.1 Softswitch in general 1 1.2 Softswitch Advantages and Benefits 2 1.3 Three Factors Dominate New Softswitch Network Designs 2 2.1 Major Elements of a Softswitch 3 3. Features and Benefits of Softswitch Architecture in Wireless Networks 4 3.1 Distributed Switching 4 3.2 Deploy services of Softswitch 5 3.3 Deploy Services using IP-based Service Platforms via Softswitch 7 Reference 8 iii
  • 4. 1.1 Softswitch in General: A softswitch is a central device in a telephone network which connects calls from one phone line to another, entirely by means of software running on a computer system. This work was formerly carried out by hardware, with physical switchboards to route the calls. A softswitch is typically used to control connections at the junction point between circuit and packet networks. A single device containing both the switching logic and the switching fabric can be used for this purpose; however, modern technology has led to a preference for decomposing this device into a Call Agent and a Media Gateway. The Call Agent takes care of functions like billing, call routing, signalling, call services and so on and is the 'brains' of the outfit. A Call Agent may control several different Media Gateways in geographically dispersed areas over a TCP/IP link. The Media Gateway connects different types of digital media stream together to create an end-to- end path for the media (voice and data) in the call. It may have interfaces to connect to traditional PSTN networks like DS1 or DS3 ports (E1 or STM1 in the case of non-US networks), it may have interfaces to connect to ATM and IP networks and in the modern system will have Ethernet interfaces to connect VoIP calls. The call agent will instruct the media gateway to connect media streams between these interfaces to connect the call - all transparently to the end-users. The softswitch generally resides in a building owned by the telephone company called a central office. The central office will have telephone trunks to carry calls to other offices owned by the telephone company and to other telephone companies (aka the Public Switched Telephone Network or PSTN). Looking towards the end users from the switch, the Media Gateway may be connected to several access devices. These access devices can range from small Analog Telephone Adaptors (ATA) which provide just one RJ11 telephone jack to an Integrated Access Device (IAD) or PBX which may provide several hundred telephone connections. Typically the larger access devices will be located in a building owned by the telephone company near to the customers they serve. Each end user can be connected to the IAD by a simple pair of copper wires. 1
  • 5. The medium sized devices and PBXs will typically be used in a business premises and the single line devices would probably be found in residential premises. In more recent times (i.e., the IP Multimedia Subsystem or IMS), the Softswitch element is represented by the Media Gateway Controller (MGC) element, and the term "Softswitch" is rarely used in the IMS context. [1] 1.2 Softswitch Advantages and Benefits Reduce Costs • Boost capacity of existing lines by offloading data to IP networks • Lower cost commercial hardware and software • Lower cost processing and connectivity expansion • Smaller, higher-density packaging Improve Services • Roll out new services more quickly • Differentiate services with value-added offerings • Leverage familiar Internet and Web tools/programs • Provide end users ability to maintain their own service preferences Facilitate Migration to Data-Centric IP Networks • Scale easily with new subscriber demand • Quickly incorporate new protocols and connectivity • Evolve networks and services through a distributed architecture 1.3 Three Factors Dominate New Softswitch Network Designs While lower cost has become the primary driver behind new softswitch network designs, engineers must still pay attention to other major driving factors that dominate today’s design of new systems -the “high-order-bits” in digital design parlance. For the new networks being built for both wireless, wireline, and IP networks, three other factors dominate what must be accommodated in the new designs, (1) massive scalability, (2) high-availability, and (3) enabling rapid delivery of new services to customers, whether they be equipment builders or service providers. Lower costs are assumed to be a major element in all three of these factors. 2
  • 6. Scalability - Tremendous growth in numbers of subscribers, who demand to be always on-line and with higher speed links, is forcing bandwidth demands to double every nine months. Optical fiber network technology is keeping pace, but Moore's law only predicts processor speeds to double every eighteen months. This demands new architectural approaches to telecom networks, by distributing intelligence out to the edges of the network, and designing new core network switching and routing technologies. Building scalability into these new networks becomes one major driving factor in new designs. High Availability - As the content delivered over today's connection-based networks changes to be predominantly data rather than voice, telecommunication operators and equipment suppliers are transitioning their core networks to IP packet-switched technologies, optimized for delivery of data, but also capable of handling Voice-over-IP (VoIP). A key challenge, however, for the Network Equipment Providers (NEPs), is to deliver the same level of high availability with the new packetswitched technologies as they currently deliver with existing, voice-optimized, connection switched technologies. Continuous uptime, or high-availability, has become a second major driving factor and a differentiator in offering services to customers. Rapid delivery of new services - While dealing with these first two design factors, all three major providers of service, wireless, wireline, and IP network vendors are being forced to deliver new and improved services to customers, to keep existing customers, and to attract new ones as prices for services are driven down by competition. To enable this, NEPs and their Telecom services provider customers, ISPs and ASPs, are demanding more open, integrated, hardware and software stacks in their platforms in order to deliver these new services to their customers more quickly. Fortunately, addressing these four driving forces, lower cost, scalability, high availability, and rapid delivery of new services, has become much easier with the definition of new industry protocols and the availability of off-the-shelf standard hardware with modern processors and software building blocks. Telecom equipment suppliers can now build carrier-grade high performance, scalable, and highly available packet-switched core networks, including softswitches with Voice-over-IP (VoIP) services using industry standard CompactPCI hardware and software modules that leverage technologies developed for enterprise IP-based systems. [2] 2.1 Major Elements of a Softswitch Today the IETF and other standards bodies define the four basic building blocks of softswitch architectures as shown in figure 2, (1) Media Gateway Controller (MGC), (2) Media Gateway 3
  • 7. (MG), (3) Signalling Controller, and (4) The IP/Internet Services Layer, such as media servers handling voice recognition, SIP presence services, SIP proxy servers, etc. More and more these are being defined as off-the-shelf, open standard, but highly available Internet servers. [2] Figure 2.1: Typical Softswitch Architecture including Services Layer [2] 3. Features and Benefits of Softswitch Architecture in Wireless Networks 3.1 Distributed Switching Legacy circuit-switched networks utilize centrally located MSCs to provide the needed switching of voice calls between the Radio Access Network (RAN) and the PSTN. Due to the significant cost of operation and staffing of operational personnel to operate a MSC, Service Providers have deployed large centrally located MSCs at the expense of backhauling the voice circuits from RAN located in each city and likewise backhauling of the voice circuits to local PSTN connections within each city. It should be noted that most local calls stay local, that is when a mobile subscriber makes a call, they usually call someone within their own city or local area. Since most calls stay local, this calls for double the circuits from the local RAN to the MSC and from the MSC to the local PSTN. This is shown on the left side of the following diagram. 4
  • 8. As show on the right side of the above diagram, using the softswitch-based architecture of centralized MSC Server/Softswitch with Media Gateways, call control and voice processing / switching are separated allowing for Media Gateways to be placed where they can provide the most value and the complex call control can still be centrally located. By deploying distributed switching, Service Providers can significantly reduce the backhaul charges that they would have to pay because the bearer voice stays local for local calls and does not require to be shipped back to the central location only to be shipped back again to the local area for completion to the local PSTN. Another key benefit of using the softswitch-based distributed architecture is to share the core network between voice traffic and GPRS data. The Service Provider now has one network to maintain instead of 2 networks as they do in 2.5G networks. [3] 3.2 Deploy services of Softswitch Wireless operators are deploying standards-based services using mobile Intelligent Network (IN). The GSM standard for the mobile IN is Customized Application for Mobile Enhanced Logic (CAMEL). Similarly, the U.S. CDMA & TDMA markets are standardizing on Wireless Intelligent Network (WIN). Though many services, such as prepaid, today are deployed using proprietary extensions to the IN protocol, extending these services to roaming partners requires the implementation of standards-based CAMEL & WIN services. Both CAMEL and WIN architectures utilize a centralized intelligent network node known as the Service Control Point (SCP). A MSC that has been upgraded to provide support for CAMEL and WIN, at certain points in a call, passes control of the call to the SCP. The SCPs then execute the 5
  • 9. service logic. As new services are deployed, operators must upgrade all their MSCs and arm them with these triggers. The disadvantages of this approach are: • Provisioning Cost – Upgrading each MSCs and provisioning the service can be expensive and time consuming. • MSC real-time processing cost – These triggers may take up 5 to 20% of the MSC processing capacity. This means that the operator will be able to pack 5 – 20% fewer wireless subscribers per MSC compared with MSCs, which do not have to process these triggers. This is a huge cost to the operator. • Software cost - There is a capital expense associated with software upgrades on the MSCs • Market Timing of Service Delivery – Software development on traditional circuit switched MSCs is longer. A better and more economical solution is to offload these triggers onto a Softswitch. As Mobile originated/terminated calls are routed through the softswitch, the softswitch launches the queries to SCPs based on the provisioned triggers. This allows centralizing the provisioning of service triggers at the softswitch and unburdens the MSC from processing these triggers. A good example is Wireless Number Portability (WNP). WNP, mandated by the FCC in the U.S., allows subscribers to change the operator they use for service but still retain the same PSTN directory number. As the PSTN directory number no longer indicates the physical home network switch, every call must be intercepted at the MSC, and a WNP query is launched to the SCP to obtain a Location Routing Number (LRN) and ultimately the call is routed to the destination indicated by the Location Routing Number. As queries are launched on every call, the processing burden on the MSC could be significant. The following figure compares the architecture of doing the LNP triggers on an MSC versus doing it on a softswitch. 6
  • 10. Other examples of IN Services, which can be launched from a Softswitch, are Number Pooling, Prepaid Roaming, Toll Free service, Location based Services etc. Number Pooling, which allows multiple operators to share a block of NPA-NXX also, requires processing very similar to LNP. Number Pooling is mandated by several state regulators. Most of the prepaid platforms deployed today use proprietary IN solution. CAMEL & WIN based solutions allow seamless roaming prepaid across partner networks. CAMEL Phase 2 and Phase 3 define the prepaid & prepaid roaming capabilities where as WIN Package 2 defines the prepaid solution for the roaming networks. [3] 3.3 Deploy Services using IP-based Service Platforms via Softswitch The International Softswitch Consortium’s Applications Working Group has developed an Applications Framework, in which Softswitches can use SIP or LDAP to access services from IP- based Application Servers. These IP-enabled Service Platforms operate in a similar fashion as SCP’s, but they are available at a much lower cost and offer more flexibility. Once the databases are moved to a more modern platform, they can be queried by the Softswitch using SIP or LDAP. More information on this Application Framework is available from the Application Working Group. [3] 7
  • 11. References: [1] www.wikipedia.org [2] Peter Palm, New Softswitch Architectures help to manage the Network Industry turmoil, Sun Microsystems [3] Softswitch Applications in Wireless Core Networks, Version: 1.1 - April 18, 2002, International Softswitch Consortium, Wireless Working Group 8