Internet Draft
A. Kankkunen
Internet Draft Integral Access
Document: <draft-kankkunen-vompls-fw-01.txt>
G. Ash
AT&T
A. Chiu
AT&T
J. Hopkins
Cisco
J. Jeffords
Integral Access
F. Le Faucheur
Cisco
B. Rosen
Marconi
D. Stacey
Nortel Networks
A. Yelundur
NEC
L. Berger
LabN Consulting
VoIP over MPLS Framework
draft-kankkunen-vompls-fw-01.txt
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026 [1].
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The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
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Abstract
This document provides a Framework for using MPLS as one
underlying technology alternative for transporting VoIP based
public voice services.
The document defines a reference model for VoIP over MPLS, defines
some specific applications for VoIP over MPLS and identifies
potential further standardization work that is necessary to
support these applications. The annexes of the document discuss
the types of requirements that voice services set on the under
laying transport infrastructure.
Editor's Note:
This document is an early and incomplete version. It is being
published to facilitate discussion prior to the Pittsburgh IETF.
It is expected that the draft will need to be revised and expanded
based on the results of the discussion.
Discussion related to this document will take place on the
vompls@lists.integralaccess.com mailing list. To subscribe send
mail to vompls-request@lists.integralaccess.com with "subscribe"
in the message body. An archive is available at
http://sonic.sparklist.com/scripts/lyris.pl?enter=vompls.
Table of Contents
1. Abbreviations and Acronyms..............................4
2. Introduction............................................5
2.1. Background and motivation...............................7
2.2. Brief Introduction to MPLS..............................7
3. VoMPLS Reference Model..................................8
3.1. Reference Model Components and their roles..............8
3.1.1. Call Agent.............................................11
3.1.1.1. Media Gateway Connection Control.......................11
3.1.1.2. Call processing........................................12
3.1.1.3. Management.............................................12
3.1.2. Media Gateways.........................................12
3.1.3. Media Inter-Working Function...........................13
3.1.4. Signaling Gateway......................................14
3.1.5. Signaling Inter-Working Function.......................14
3.1.6. Trunk Gateway..........................................15
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3.1.7. Access Gateway.........................................15
3.1.8. Line Side Gateway......................................15
3.1.9. Integrated Access Device...............................15
3.1.10. Voice Terminals........................................15
3.1.11. VoMPLS Media Gateway...................................16
3.1.12. VoMPLS Signaling Gateway...............................16
3.2. Data Plane.............................................16
3.3. Control Plane..........................................17
3.3.1. Concept of IP QoS Bearer Control.......................18
3.3.2. Advertisement/Negotiation of Traffic Parameters and IP
QoS Bearer Control requirement in Call Control.........18
3.3.3. Signaling for IP QoS Bearer Control Establishment......19
3.3.3.1. Scaling IP QoS Bearer Control with RSVP................21
3.3.4. Coordination between Call Control and IP QoS Bearer
Control................................................22
3.3.5. Policy Based Control of VoMPLS Network Elements........23
3.3.6. Bearer Control for VoMPLS..............................23
3.3.6.1. Concept of VoMPLS Bearer Control.......................23
3.3.6.2. VoMPLS Bearer Control for Connectivity.................24
3.3.6.3. VoMPLS Bearer Control for QoS and Resource Reservation.24
3.3.6.4. VoMPLS Bearer Control for Compression/Multiplexing.....24
3.3.7. Aggregated MPLS Processing in the Core.................25
4. VoMPLS Applications....................................27
4.1. Trunking Between Gateways..............................27
4.1.1. Encapsulation Requirements for Efficient Multiplexed
Trunk..................................................27
4.2. VoMPLS on Slow Links...................................27
4.3. Voice Traffic Engineering using MPLS...................28
4.3.1. Off-Line Voice traffic engineering Aspects.............28
4.3.2. Connection Admission and/or Connection Routing.........29
4.3.3. Dynamic Traffic Management.............................30
4.4. Providing End-to-end QoS for Voice Using MPLS..........30
5. Requirements for MPLS Signaling........................32
5.1. LDP and CR-LDP.........................................32
5.2. RSVP-TE................................................33
6. Requirements for Other Work............................33
7. Security Considerations................................33
8. Acknowledgements.......................................33
9. References.............................................33
10. Author's Addresses.....................................36
ANNEX A - E-Model analysis of the VoIP over MPLS Reference Model.38
A.1 Introduction.................................................38
A.2 Deployment of VoMPLS within the Core Network.................39
A.2.1 Scenario 1 - Effect of Multiple MPLS Domains...............39
A.2.2 Scenario 2 - Analysis of VoMPLS and Typical DCME Practice..40
A.2.3 Scenario 3 - Analysis of GSM, VoMPLS and Typical DCME
Practice...............................................41
A.2.4 VoMPLS Core Network Summary................................43
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A.3 Extending VoMPLS into the Access Network.....................43
A.3.1 Scenario 4 - VoMPLS Access on USA to Japan.................43
A.3.2 Scenario 5 Deployment of GSM and VoMPLS Access.............45
A.3.3 VoMPLS Access Summary......................................45
A.4 Effects of Voice Codecs in the access network...............46
A.4.1 Scenario 6 - Deployment of Codecs in one Access Leg (USA -
Japan).................................................46
A.4.2 Scenario 7 - Codec Deployment in both Access Legs (USA -
Japan).................................................47
A.4.3 Scenario 8 Codec Deployment and Mobile Access (USA -
Australia).............................................47
A.4.4 Voice Codec Summary........................................48
A.5 Overall Conclusions..........................................48
B.1 Voice Service Requirements...................................50
B.1.1 Voice Encoding.............................................50
B.1.2 Control of Echo............................................51
B.1.2.1 Echo Control by Limiting Delay...........................51
B.1.2.2 Echo Control by Deploying Echo Cancellers................51
B.1.2.3 Network Architecture implications........................52
B.1.3 End-to-end Delay and Delay Variation.......................53
B.1.4 Packet Loss Ratio..........................................54
B.1.5 Timing Accuracy............................................54
B.1.6 Grade-of-service...........................................56
B.1.7 Quality considerations pertaining to Session Management....57
1. Abbreviations and Acronyms
AG Access Gateway
CA Call Agent
DS1 Digital Signal 1
E1 2048kbit/s signal possibly with G.704
framing
FIB Forwarding Information Base
IAD Integrated Access Device
ID Internet Draft
IP Internet Protocol
LSG Line Side Gateway
LSP Label Switched Path
MegacoP Media Gateway Control Protocol (Different
than MGCP)
MG Media Gateway
MGC Media Gateway Controller
MGCP Media Gateway Control Protocol (Different
than MegacoP)
MIWF Media Inter Working Function
MPLS Multi Protocol Label Switching
PABX Private Automatic Branch Exchange
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PDP Policy Decision Point
PSTN Public Switched Telephone Network
SG Signaling Gateway
SIP Session Initiation Protocol
SIWF Signaling Inter Working Function
SLA Service Level Agreement
SS7 Signaling System 7
TBD To Be Defined
TDM Time Division Multiplexing
TG Trunk Gateway
VF Voice Frequency
VoIP Voice over IP
VoMPLS VoIP over MPLS
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL
NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
RFC-2119 [2].
2. Introduction
The purpose of this draft is to provide a common reference point
for the operation of voice over IP where MPLS is used in part or
all of the IP network, and to identify any needed related
standardization work.
The voice encapsulation used in VoMPLS (In this document we refer
to "VoIP over MPLS" as "VoMPLS") is voice/RTP/UDP/IP/MPLS. Header
compression techniques can be used for making the transport of
RTP/UDP/IP headers more efficient. Thus, VoIP over MPLS does not
mean that the RTP/UPD/IP headers MUST be physically transmitted.
The headers can be compressed, but must be "reconstructible" at
the egress of the MPLS cloud. Such header compression has been
adopted as a work item in the MPLS WG. (MPLS WG charter: "11.
Specify standard protocols and procedures to enable header
compression across a single link as well as across an LSP.")
Possible header compression mechanisms are defined in [20, 8].
The purpose of the header compression is to define a way to create
LSPs that carry voice efficiently. The basic format of packets in
the LSP should be a compressed header form of IP/UDP/RTP, with
trivial conversion to and from real IP/UDP/RTP. Voice LSPs should
optionally support multiplexing within the LSP (multiple channels
per LSP), which should be a minor extension to this compressed
header.
LSPs should be able to be created with a constrained delay
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characteristic. Two different alternatives for providing this kind
of QoS are presented.
- One solution is to rely on IP QoS end-to-end. Where IP is
transported over MPLS, the IP QoS is mapped to the MPLS QoS and
MPLS features such as Traffic Engineering can be used over the
MPLS cloud.
- A second scenario is one where MPLS is used in both the access
and collector portion of the network as well as the core. Under
this scenario a QoS control mechanism that is MPLS aware is
advantageous, utilizing MPLS TE to establish an optimal route
across multiple (alternate) MPLS LSPs.
One purpose of this effort is to enable Session Switched Services
from IP terminals which achieve the same QoS characteristics for
real-time media as is currently available on ISDN and B-ISDN
networks.
This draft consists of three main sections: VoMPLS Reference
Model (In this document we refer to "VoIP over MPLS" as "VoMPLS"),
VoMPLS Applications and Definition of the required VoMPLS
standardization work.
Section 3 defines a reference model for VoMPLS.
Section 4 defines applications where MPLS can be the enabling
technology for supporting voice in an IP-infrastructure.
Sections 5 and 6 define the new VoMPLS related standardization
that needs to take place in order to support the applications
defined in Section 4 within the reference model of Section 3.
This document identifies new application specific requirements
that are not addressed by existing work. These requirements
include the following:
- Service types for carrying voice services over Packet Networks
should be defined. (This is not an MPLS specific issue.)
- Explicit quantitative guidelines each service type sets on the
parameters described in Annex B should be defined.
- Identify how the quantitative guidelines are mapped to MPLS LSPs
in both diff-serv and non-diff-serv environments.
- Mechanisms for using MPLS for providing GoS required by the
various service types need to be defined.
- The reduction of header overhead and the support of efficient
multiplexing of multiple voice calls over a single LSP.
- The reduction of header overhead and the support of multiplexing
using link level techniques.
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2.1. Background and motivation
MPLS is being introduced into IP networks to support Internet
Traffic Engineering and other applications. The motivation for
VoIP over MPLS is to take advantage of these new network
capabilities, in the parts of the network where they are
available, to improve voice-over-IP service by:
- using label-switched-paths as a bearer capability for VoIP
thereby providing more predictable, and even constrained QoS,
- providing a more efficient transport mechanism for VoIP
possibly using header compression or suppression,
- leveraging other advantages of MPLS, e.g. Layer 2
independence, integration with IP routing and addressing,
etc.
2.2. Brief Introduction to MPLS
MPLS (Multi Protocol Label Switching) is an emerging standard,
that provides a link layer independent transport framework for IP.
MPLS runs over ATM, Frame Relay, Ethernet and point-to-point
packet mode links.
MPLS based networks use existing IP-mechanisms for addressing of
elements and for routing of traffic. MPLS adds connection oriented
capabilities to the connectionless IP-architecture.
For more information please see [6], [7], [16], [17] and [18].
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3. VoMPLS Reference Model
The traditional VoIP reference model is presented in Figure 1.
+--+ +------------+ +--+ +---------------------+
|CA|-| |<--|TG|-->| |
+--+ | | +--+ | |
| | | |
| IP | +--+ | Circuit-Switched |
+--+ | Network |<--|SG|-->| Network (e.g. PSTN)|
|CA|-| | +--+ | |
+--+ | | | |
+------------+ +---------------------+
^ ^ +---+ |
| | |AG/| +---+
| +--->|IAD|<---+ |LSG|
| +---+ | +---+
| | | MG=AG/IAD, LSG
| | +-------+ or TG
| | |IP |
| | |Network|
| | +-------+
| | |
| | +---+
| | |AG/|
| | |IAD|
| | +---+
| | |
IP Terminals Conventional Terminals
(e.g. Workstation-phone, (e.g. PABX, Analog Phone, Key
IP_PBX) System, ISDN TE, VF modem, FAX)
Figure 1 Voice over IP Reference Model
3.1. Reference Model Components and their roles
The model used for VoIP is the "decomposed gateway", which
separates call control functions into an entity known as a Call
Agent (CA), and a Media Gateway (MG), which has the bearer, or
voice/packet stream handling. Call Agents and a media gateway can
be physically realized in a single device, or they may be separate
devices that communicate to each other using suitable protocols
(Megaco/H.248 or MGCP for example). The Media Gateway is a
function that converts a voice (or other media stream such as
video) into a packet stream.
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There are many types of media gateways (Trunk Gateway, Access
Gateway, etc.), differentiated by the number and type of
interfaces they have. There are no "rules" for categorizing a
particular media gateway into one type or another, but the
following sections define the Call Agent and several different
kinds of gateways for expository purposes.
The VoMPLS reference model (Figure 2) refines the definition of a
MG and a SG to include a PSTN to IP inter-working function and an
IP to MPLS inter-working function.
The PSTN to IP inter-working function is implemented by a Media
Gateway (MG) for bearer connections and a Signaling Gateway
(SG) for signaling connections as it is in the VoIP Reference
Model.
The IP to MPLS inter-working function is implemented with a
separate functional element. The IP to MPLS inter-working Function
for Media Gateways is called the Media Inter-Working Function
(MIWF). The IP to MPLS inter-working function for Signaling
Gateways is called the Signaling Inter-Working Function (SIWF).
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+--+ +------------+ +------+(*)+--+ +---------------------+
|CA|-| |<->| MIWF |<->|TG|<->| |
+--+ | | +------+ +--+ | |
| IP/MPLS | +------+(#)+--+ | Circuit-Switched |
+--+ | Network |<->| SIWF |<->|SG|<->| Network (e.g. PSTN)|
|CA|-| | +------+ +--+ | |
+--+ | | | |
+------------+ +---------------------+
^ ^ +---+ |
| | +------+(*)|AG/| +---+
| +>| MIWF |<->|IAD|<-+ |LSG|
| +------+ +---+ | +---+
| | | (*)
| | +----+
| | |MIWF|
| | +----+
| | |
| | +-------+
| | |IP/MPLS|
| | |Network|
| | +-------+
| | |
| | +----+
| | |MIWF|
| | +----+
| | | (*)
| | +---+
| | |AG/|
| | |IAD|
| | +---+
| | |
IP Terminals Conventional Terminals
(e.g. Workstation-phone, (e.g. PABX, Analog Phone, Key
IP_PBX) System, ISDN TE, VF modem, FAX)
Figure 2 VoIP over MPLS Reference Model
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(*) The MG (TG, AG/IAD, LSG) and MIWF may be:
- implemented in the same physical device in the case of a VoMPLS
GW (Figure 3).
+-----------------+
| VoMPLS GW |
| +------+ +--+ |
| | MIWF |<->|MG| |
| +------+ +--+ |
+-----------------+
Figure 3: VoMPLS Gateway
- implemented as separate devices in the case of a VoIP GW. The MG
and MIWF are then connected via an IP internetwork (Figure 4).
+------+ +------+ +-------------+
| MIWF |<->|IP Net|<->|MG (VoIP GW) |
+------+ +------+ +-------------+
Figure 4: VoIP Gateway
(#) In the same way the SG and SIWF may be:
- implemented in the same physical device in the case of a VoMPLS
SG.
- implemented as separate devices in the case of a VoIP SG. The SG
and SIWF are then connected via an IP internetwork.
The VoMPLS reference model covers, in particular, the following
situations:
- all Media GWs are connected to an MPLS cloud
- Some Media GWs are connected to an MPLS Cloud while other Media
GWs are connected to a non-MPLS IP cloud
- Media GWs are connected to an IP cloud which uses MPLS somewhere
in the core.
3.1.1. Call Agent
Call Agents (CA), sometimes called "Media Gateway Controllers",
provide among other things basic call and connection control
capabilities for Voice over IP/MPLS networks. These capabilities
include media gateway (Trunk Gateway, Access Gateway, etc.)
connection control, call processing and related management
functions.
3.1.1.1. Media Gateway Connection Control
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Media Gateway Connection control allows a Call Agent to modify the
state of a media gateway's resources, e.g. to connect two end-
points via a bearer connection, connect an access line to a tone
generator, detect events such as user on-hook/off-hook detection,
etc. There is a master-slave relationship between Call Agent and
Media Gateway. Megaco/H.248 [9] and MGCP [10] are examples of
protocols that enable a Call Agent to control a media gateway.
3.1.1.2. Call processing
Call processing in a Call Agent provides call control functions.
Call control determines how telephony calls are established,
modified and released. There is a peer-to-peer relationship
between Call processing entities, such as other Call Agents, PSTN
switches or IP-telephony appliances. Q.1901 [13], H.323 [11] and
SIP [12] are examples of peer call control signaling protocols.
Depending on the call control protocol and call model, basic call
control may be supplemented by user or service features such as
routing based on pre-subscribed carrier identification code, or
upon information provided by a service agent, mobility agent or
routing & translation server. Work is in progress also to
integrate intelligent network (IN)based service logic and call
control protocols (see, for example, [14,15]).
3.1.1.3. Management
Management functions enable a Call Agent to alter the state of a
call in response to network abnormalities such as congestion or
failure of a network element (e.g. another Call Agent, Media
Gateway or Signaling Gateway) or label switched path payload or
signaling transport. It also allows the graceful startup or
shutdown of VoIP over MPLS network components.
3.1.2. Media Gateways
A Media Gateway (MG) forms the interface between the IP/MPLS
packet network ("packet side"), and circuit-switched PSTN/ISDN/GSM
networks or elements ("circuit side"), and adapts between the
coding formats for voice, fax and voice-band data in the circuit
side and packet side. Depending upon the traffic type, the Media
Gateway may also perform signal quality enhancements (e.g. echo
cancellation) and silence suppression. A Call Agent has exclusive
control over one or more Media Gateways.
The Media Gateway includes the following functions:
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- Logical Connection Control: The MG receives instructions from
the Call Agent to initiate the establishment or release of
bearer connections to other media gateways. Optional QoS-
parameters may be included in this instruction. The instruction
to the MG indicates the mapping between circuit side ports and
IP address of the peer-GW (or IP-endpoint) to be used for the
call.
- Call Agent Interface: The MG has an IP-based interface to the
Call Agent that is used for the exchange of media gateway
control information. This interface may also support the back-
haul transport of in-band signaling information received from
the circuit side, as appropriate.
- Packetization/Depacketization: The MG packetizes audio signals
from the circuit side for transmission on the packet network
and performs the inverse depacketization function for traffic
sent to the circuit side. Packetization/Depacketization
involves encapsulating/decapsulating packetized audio samples
using the IP address indicated for the call by the Call Agent.
Depending upon implementation, the MG may also support other
functions, e.g. data detection of fax and modem signals, echo
cancellation, transcoding/audio-mixing, silence detection/comfort-
noise generation, and buffering/traffic shaping for received audio
packets. However these functions are beyond the scope of this
draft.
3.1.3. Media Inter-Working Function
The Media Inter-Working Function (MIWF) may be implemented in the
same functional element as the Media Gateway, or it may be
implemented as a separate functional element interconnected to the
Media Gateway via an IP internetwork.
The MIWF implements the functionality of an MPLS Edge Node [6]. It
also performs inter-working between VoIP QoS bearer control and
MPLS based QoS services.
Where Diff-Serv mechanisms are used for the IP Bearer QoS,
interworking with MPLS is specified in [21].
Where QoS reservations are used through RSVP signaling,
interworking with MPLS could be achieved in two modes:
- without aggregation: one RSVP reservation maps to an MPLS LSP.
- with aggregation: multiple RSVP reservations maps into a shared
MPLS LSP. Such interworking is discussed further below in
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section 3.3.7 and combines operations of RSVP Aggregation [23]
with the RSVP extensions for LSP set-up [17].
Alternatively QoS reservations may be implemented via policy based
control of MPLS as outlined in [24]. Such reservations may be
either per session or aggregated.
3.1.4. Signaling Gateway
With decomposed gateways, the physical interface for channel
controlled signaling (such as SS7 messages and Q.931 messages) may
not be in the same device as the logical terminating point for
such signaling. For ISDN, the interface may be in the media
gateway. For SS7, the interface may be in a separate box. The
Signaling Gateway provides a termination point for lower level
protocols carrying such signaling channels, and may provide a
packet interface to transport the higher layer signaling to the
call agent, using, for example, SCTP. For ISDN, the SG might
terminate Q.921. For SS7 networks, the SG might terminate MTP2,
or MTP3. The call agent would terminate Q.931 or Q.761.
The Signaling Gateway (SG) forms the interface for call/connection
control information between the VoIP network and attached
PSTN/ISDN/GSM networks. For example, an SS7 SG receives messages
from an SS7-linkset and encapsulates the SS7 application parts
(e.g. ISUP, TCAP, MAP, etc.) for delivery to the Call Agent. The
SG must terminate and processes MTP2 and MTP3 if an SS7 interface
is supported, e.g. to either an STP Pair or SS7 end system
(SSP/SCP). There is a master-slave relationship between a Call
Agent and a (set of) Signaling Gateways. A SG is responsible for
all signaling information relating to a (set of) Media Gateway(s).
Signaling protocols use IP transport (which may transit MPLS LSPs)
such as UDP, TCP or SCTP[19].
3.1.5. Signaling Inter-Working Function
The SIWF may be implemented in the same functional element as the
Signaling Gateway, or it may be implemented as a separate
functional element interconnected to the Signaling Gateway via an
IP internetwork.
The Signaling Inter-Working Function implements the functionality
of an MPLS Edge Node [6].
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3.1.6. Trunk Gateway
A Trunk Gateway (TG) is a type of Media Gateway, and is generally
a large capacity gateway used to connect a PSTN network to a VoIP
network. The physical interface in a trunk gateway is a large
number of E1/T1s or perhaps concatenated DS3/T3/E3 or OC-n ports
intended to be connected to the trunk side of a Central Office.
Signaling for TGs is generally via SS7 through an SG, but in some
cases could use ISDN with the SG collocated in the TG.
3.1.7. Access Gateway
An Access Gateway (AG) is a type of Media Gateway intended to
exist on the edge of a public VoIP/MPLS network, and connect
multiple subscriber circuits (such as PBXs) to a VoIP/MPLS
network. The physical interface in an Access Gateway would
typically be a number of T1/E1s (possibly PRIs), large number of
analog POTS interfaces or ISDN BRI interfaces.
3.1.8. Line Side Gateway
A Line-Side Gateway (LSG) is a type of media gateway designed to
provide "emulated local loop" capability where a VoIP/MPLS network
provides voice circuit transport to the line side of a Central
Office switch, the CO providing all call control. In this
application, the Call Agent may not exist (the LSPs or IP
connections would be provisioned), or be very simple (providing
transport of hook switch and ring for example). The physical
interface for a LSG would be a number of T1/E1s, or possibly an
OC-3, using GR-303 or V5.2 signaling, with the SG collocated in
the LSG.
3.1.9. Integrated Access Device
An Integrated Access Device (IAD) is a device that includes the
functions of a Media Gateway as well as additional data network
capability, with the purpose of coalescing voice/video and data
connectivity to a site through a single uplink (communications
facility). For example, an IAD may have an Ethernet interface to
the site LAN and a T1/E1 interface to the site PBX, together with
an IP interface as an uplink to a public VoIP/MPLS network that
carries the voice and data.
3.1.10. Voice Terminals
Voice terminals form the interface between the human user and the
telecommunications infrastructure.
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Traditional voice terminals for the PSTN/ISDN networks include
analog phone, PBX, Key System, VF modem, Fax machines and ISDN
terminals.
In addition to being connected directly to an IAD or AG the voice
terminals may be connected to a VoMPLS network via:
- An conventional PBX through a interworking device such as an
H.323 gateway
- An IP PBX
- A "Phone Hub", which would be a device with multiple analog or
digital phone interfaces on one side and an Ethernet on the
other side
- A single port adapter, which has a single phone port and an
Ethernet port
- A telephone adapter to another device on the network such as a
PC
- An "IPPhone" (or "SIPPhone" or H.323 terminal), which is an end
device with a native network interface.
Phone Hubs, Single Port Adapters, IP-Phones and other devices may
use external call agents. H.323 gateway, IP PBXs and similar
devices are combined Call Agent/Media Gateways.
3.1.11. VoMPLS Media Gateway
A VoMPLS Media Gateway is an implementation of a Media Gateway and
a Media Inter-Working Function in a single functional element. An
implementation of a VoMPLS Media Gateway is not required to
implement the protocols defined between the Media Gateway and the
Media Inter-Working Function. A VoMPLS Media Gateway is required
to implement the functionality of the Media Gateway and the Media
Inter- Working Function.
3.1.12. VoMPLS Signaling Gateway
A VoMPLS Signaling Gateway is an implementation of a Signaling
Gateway and a Signaling Inter-Working Function in a single
functional element. An implementation of a VoMPLS Signaling
Gateway is not required to implement the protocols defined between
the Signaling Gateway and the Signaling Inter-Working Function. A
VoMPLS Signaling Gateway is required to implement the
functionality of the Signaling Gateway and the Signaling Inter-
Working Function.
3.2. Data Plane
The requirements for the Data Plane are:
-
Provide a transparent path for VoIP bearers (RTP flows).
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-
Provide efficient transport of voice (header compression)
-
Provide an efficient method to implement a multiplexed LSP
-
Provide an optional method to specify delay characteristics
across the network on a specific LSP, specifically, a way to
specify the maximum delay and a bound on delay variation for an
LSP.
The data plane may be functionally broken down into -
- Voice Encoding [audio signals into digital format - G.711,
G.726, G.723.1, G.729, etc]
- Packetization/De-packetization [converting the encoded voice
into RTP/UDP/IP/MPLS packets & vice versa]
- Compression [Compressing the RTP/UDP/IP/MPLS headers to reduce
overhead or other alternative approaches such as suppression]
- Multiplexing [Multiplexing many different voice circuits into
one MPLS packet for Voice trunking application]
- Echo Control [Reduce / cancel the echo generated by legacy PSTN
systems]
- Queues / Schedulers [Give priority to voice traffic wrt BE
traffic multiplexed on the same output link]
- Traffic Shapers [To reduce jitter & control burstiness nature of
traffic]
- Tone Generators & Receivers [Generation & detection of DTMF
tones, continuity test tones & detection of modem tones]
3.3. Control Plane
The Control Plane involved in VoIP and VoMPLS can be divided into
two components:
- the Call Control
- the Bearer Control
The Call Control is responsible for establishing, modifying and
releasing telephony calls. Entities involved in Call Control may
be communicating with protocols such as Q.1901, SIP, or H.323. In
the `decomposed gateway model', Call Agents involved in the Call
Control control the Gateways (GWs) via media gateway protocols
such as MGCP or Megaco/H.248.
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Call control must arrange for the (bearer) originating media
gateway to obtain the address of the (bearer) terminating gateway.
It must also determine, through negotiation if necessary, the
processing functions the media gateway must apply to the media
stream, such as codec choice, echo cancellation application, etc
and inform its media gateway function of such treatment.
The Bearer Control is responsible for establishing, modifying and
releasing the logical connection between Gateways.
3.3.1. Concept of IP QoS Bearer Control
When telephony services are transported over TDM or natively over
layer 2 technologies such as ATM, the `bearer' is indeed a circuit
or a logical connection. Thus with such transport technologies, no
connectivity is available until the bearer is established. Also,
all the connectivity attributes such as quality of service and
resource reservations are established simultaneously with the
bearer itself. Thus, in such environments Bearer Control is
typically an atomic action establishing at the same time
connectivity as well as all the connectivity attributes (eg QoS).
When telephony services are transported over IP, the concept of
bearer is perhaps less intuitive since default connectivity
between Gateways is permanently available without requiring any
explicit bearer establishment.
Because default connectivity is permanently available, it has
sometimes been incorrectly assumed that the concept of Bearer
Control did not apply to VoIP.
Where the default connectivity between Gateways is appropriate for
transport of the telephony services, the Bearer Control role
indeed reduces to nothing.
However, the default connectivity can not always be assumed to be
sufficient. We focus on environments where the service provider
wants to guarantee adequate quality to (all or some) voice calls
and thus wants to be able to reserve resources and obtain Quality
of Service above those always available through default
connectivity. This resource reservation and QoS properties (above
and beyond the default connectivity) need to be explicitly
established by the Bearer Control entity. This resource
reservation and QoS establishment is called the `IP QoS Bearer
Control'.
3.3.2. Advertisement/Negotiation of Traffic Parameters and IP QoS
Bearer Control requirement in Call Control
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It is necessary for the call control protocol to include
provisions for specifying the codec type, packetization period,
and other parameters required to determine all the traffic
parameters (eg token bucket profile) required for the IP QoS
Bearer Control to establish the required reservation and QoS for
the call. Existing call control protocols already include such
provisions.
It is useful for the Call Control protocols to be able to
advertise the requirements associated with a given call in terms
of `IP QoS Bearer Control' (eg. whether, for each direction, QoS
reservation is mandatory, optional or not requested at all) for
example in order to support different levels of quality for
different calls. It may also be useful for the Call Control
protocols to allow negotiation of the `IP QoS Bearer Control'
requirements (for example, if one of the party does not want to
incur the charges associated with reservations).
Ongoing work in the IETF is addressing Call Control protocol
capability to advertise/negotiate the `IP QoS Bearer Control'
requirements. One example of this is the SDP extensions defined in
[25] in order to advertise pre-conditions for call establishment
in terms of QoS reservation.
Because megaco also makes use of SDP, we expect these SDP
extensions defined for SIP to be also applicable to megaco.
3.3.3. Signaling for IP QoS Bearer Control Establishment
Once a requirement for `IP QoS Bearer Control' (eg QoS
reservation) has been determined through the mechanisms described
in section 3.3.2, the Bearer Control protocol must enter in
action.
The QoS architecture for the Internet separates QoS signaling from
application level signaling [26]. In agreement with [25], the
authors of this paper feel that such QoS architecture is
particularly applicable to support of public telephony services
over a packetized infrastructure. This means that the `IP QoS
Bearer Control' must remain separate from the Call Control:
- `IP QoS Bearer Control' is performed by the Bearer Control
entities which are logically separate from the Call Control
entities.
- `IP QoS Bearer Control' is to be performed through a network
level protocol designed for network resource reservation and QoS
signaling and which is separate from the Call Control protocol.
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However although logically separate the interaction between the
two layers is important. Specifically it is necessary to ensure
that bandwidth reservation occurs prior to called party alerting
to avoid call defects in the case where the reservation
mechanism fails due to insufficient resources.
Benefits of this QoS architecture include:
- alignment to natural layering: management of QoS reservations
are fundamentally a network layer issue while Call Control
entities are fundamentally application level devices (with no or
limited natural network awareness)
- avoids issues related to difference between bearer path and
control path: Call Control entities are often located out of the
bearer path which would make it difficult for them to perform
QoS reservation on the bearer path.
- common `IP QoS Bearer Control' solution for all Call Control:
Because the Bearer Control protocol operates separately from the
Call Control protocol, the same Bearer Control solution can be
used by all the Call Control protocols (eg. SIP, H.323, Q.1901)
as well as all the Media Gateway Control protocols
(Megaco/H.248, MGCP,).
- common `IP QoS Bearer Control' solution for all applications:
Because the Bearer Control performs generic QoS reservation
which are not specific to the voice application, the same Bearer
Control solution can be used by other applications than
telephony (eg video, multimedia).
The IETF has defined a network level IP signaling protocol [26] as
well as QoS services (such as Guaranteed Services [27] and
Controlled Load [28]) which can be used as the `IP QoS Bearer
Control' to achieve predictable/constrained QoS required for
public telephony services over IP.
The IETF has also defined a framework [29] and associated
protocols (such as [30]) for policy based admission control
applicable to environments where the resource-based admission
control is performed through the RSVP protocol. Thus, where RSVP
is used as the IP QoS Bearer Control protocol existing
specifications define a way to enforce various policies for
controlling resource access. As an example, such policies may be
useful at network boundaries.
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[31] specifies how RSVP can take into account the compression
gains achieved through header compression performed locally on
some hops. This allows accurate resource reservations even if
different hops perform different compression schemes or no
compression at all.
3.3.3.1. Scaling IP QoS Bearer Control with RSVP
Much existing work in the IETF has provided various options to
achieve carrier class scalability when RSVP is used as the IP QoS
Bearer Control protocol at per-call level between VoIP GWs. The
simplest option is to carry the per-call RSVP messages through an
IP core network transparently, i.e., each core router does not
process the RSVP messages, but simply forwards them to the next
hop just as if they were regular IP packets. This approach relies
on the core network having enough resources pre-provisioned to
carry all calls.
Another option is to use Int-Serv over Diff-Serv [32]. The
attractiveness of this option is using Diff-Serv
classification/scheduling complemented by RSVP signaling in the
control plane to perform end-to-end admission control. This
achieves considerable scalability improvement via aggregation of
classification and scheduling states.
In addition to using Diff-Serv classification/scheduling in the
user plane for scalability improvement, one can scale further in
the control plane via additional aggregation of reservation states
by using RSVP reservation aggregation [23]. [23] specifies how to
create aggregate reservations dynamically based on end-to-end per-
flow reservations (per-call reservations in the VoIP case), and
how to classify traffic for which the aggregate reservation
applies. The approach also allows service providers to dynamically
adjust the size of the aggregate reservations based on certain
local policies and algorithms. Such policies and algorithms may
include:
1) increase or decrease the size of the aggregate reservation by
a fixed quantity based on the usage level of current
reservation e.g., by comparing with some pre-configured upper
and lower thresholds;
2) resize the aggregate reservation based on some trend line over
certain period of time characterizing the speed of increase or
decrease in call volume;
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3) determine the size of aggregate reservation based on a priori
requirements that may be associated with a particular day in a
week and time of day.
Also, [23] allows recursive aggregation so that multiple levels of
aggregation may be used if required.
Given all the options described above, it shows that RSVP can be
used as a scalable Bearer Control protocol for VoIP with
predictable/constrained QoS over the connectionless
infrastructure.
3.3.4. Coordination between Call Control and IP QoS Bearer Control
One of the functions involved in the `IP QoS Bearer Control' is
admission control of the requested reservation. If the network
resources required to establish the requested QoS reservation are
not available and cannot be reserved at least at one point in the
network, the reservation will be rejected. This admission control
can be seen as a `network level admission control'.
Where consistent high quality voice service is required, as
assumed in this document focusing on IP based public Voice
services, it is essential that a voice call can be rejected
(before the called party's phone even rings) if its quality (or
the quality of already established calls) cannot be guaranteed. In
other words, it is essential to be able to trade service
degradation for service rejection.
Consequently, the `network level admission control' must be
translated into `voice admission control'. This is to be achieved
by proper coordination between the `IP QoS Bearer Control'
signaling and the Call Control signaling.
Again, there is ongoing work on standardizing such coordination.
Design goals for defining this coordination include telephony user
expectations of behavior after phone is ringing, minimization of
post dial delay, charging aspects, denial of services,...
[33] provides a more detailed discussion on such coordination in
the context of the Distributed Call Signaling (DCS) architecture.
[25] provides an example of how SIP signaling can be coordinated
with `IP QoS Bearer Control signaling'.
As another example, [34] has been submitted into ITU SG16 defining
how H.323 signaling with `Slow Start' can be coordinated with
RSVP.
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3.3.5. Policy Based Control of VoMPLS Network Elements
One potential approach for controlling VoMPLS network elements to
enable QoS and GoS guarantees to be made is via the emerging MPLS
Policy model [24]. In this model abstract policy rules may be used
to define and control the Quality of Service assigned to a
particular session or groups of sessions.
Available network resources are brokered by a management layer
consisting of one or more Policy Decision Points (PDP) that
effectively act as bandwidth brokers. The PDPs pass policy rules
to the MPLS network elements that trigger the generation (or
deletion) of LSPs. Such LSPs can be used as pre-provisioned
aggregate traffic trunks thereby providing a mechanism for
achieving GoS within a VoMPLS network.
The control of individual sessions is achieved by adding or
deleting associated filters to the aggregated LSPs. The PDPs
perform a bandwidth broker function to determine whether the
session may be accepted and if so its optimal route. To achieve
scaling it may be advantageous to have this functionality
distributed and therefore to have an inter-bandwidth broker
signaling mechanism that is capable of passing LSP control
information.
3.3.6. Bearer Control for VoMPLS
3.3.6.1. Concept of VoMPLS Bearer Control
Let's consider a VoMPLS GW i.e. a GW which incorporates both the
VoIP function and the IP/MPLS IWF, and thus is capable of
transmitting packetised voice over MPLS.
Before packetised voice can be transmitted over an MPLS Label
Switched Path (LSP), the LSP must be established via a label
binding protocol. Since we focus on environments where quality is
to be guaranteed to voice calls, the LSP must be established with
resource reservation and QoS attributes. The LSP may also be
established along a path determined by Constraint Based Routing to
meet these QoS attributes. Also, where Header Compression and
multiplexing are performed over the LSP, the compression and
multiplexing contexts must be established over the LSP.
Thus, the VoMPLS Bearer Control function can be seen as
responsible for establishment of:
- connectivity (possibly with Constraint Based Routing)
- QoS and resource reservation
- compression/multiplexing context
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3.3.6.2. VoMPLS Bearer Control for Connectivity
RSVP [17] and CR-LDP [18] can be used as the Bearer Control
protocol to perform LSP set-up and corresponding label binding.
Where Constraint Based Routing is to be performed at the
granularity of GW-to-GW-pair, Constraint Based Routing can be
performed at LSP set-up so that RSVP or CR-LDP establish the LSP
along the computed path.
Where Fast Reroute is to be performed at the granularity of GW-to-
GW-pair, Fast Reroute can be requested at LSP set-up by RSVP or
CR-LDP.
3.3.6.3. VoMPLS Bearer Control for QoS and Resource Reservation
Resource reservation and QoS establishment can also be performed
by RSVP and CR-LDP. Clearly, they can be performed simultaneously
with the LSP establishment (VoMPLS Bearer Control for
Connectivity) and can use the same signaling messages simply
augmented with the appropriate QoS-related Information Elements.
The QoS Bearer Control function for VoMPLS is identical to the IP
QoS Bearer Control discussed earlier for VoIP GWs. Consequently,
all the ongoing work in the IETF pertaining to `IP QoS Bearer
Control' for VoIP is applicable to VoMPLS as one possible
approach. This includes:
- solutions for advertisement and negotiation of Traffic
Parameters and QoS Bearer Control requirement in Call Control
protocols as discussed above in section 3.3.2.
- solutions for QoS Bearer Control signaling as discussed above in
section 3.3.3.
- solutions for coordination between call control and QoS bearer
Control as discussed above in section 3.3.4.
3.3.6.4. VoMPLS Bearer Control for Compression/Multiplexing
Establishment of Compression and Multiplexing context is one
aspect of VoMPLS Bearer Control. RSVP and CR-LDP may also be used
to signal the corresponding information.
As an example, details of how RSVP can be used to signal the
compression and multiplexing context for the Simple Header
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Compression are provided in [20]. We note then that all aspects of
Bearer Control (connectivity, Constraint Based Routing, QoS and
reservation, Compression and Multiplexing) can be performed
simultaneously and with the same signaling messages simply
carrying Information Elements for all aspects.
As mentioned earlier, [31] specifies how RSVP can take into
account the compression gains achieved through header compression
performed locally on some hops. This allows accurate resource
reservations even if different hops perform different compressions
or no compression at all. The approach specified is easily
extensible for new compression schemes through the definition of
compression identifiers. We recommend that the corresponding
compression identifiers be defined for the compression scheme(s)
that may be defined for VoMPLS. This will ensure, where RSVP is
used as the Bearer Control protocol, that accurate reservations
are performed end-to-end even where these VoMPLS compression
schemes are used on some hops only (eg. where the LSP does not
span the entire GW-to-GW path)and where different compression
schemes are used on different logical hops.
3.3.7. Aggregated MPLS Processing in the Core
As discussed above in section 3.3.6.2, the VoMPLS Bearer Control
entity can establish an MPLS Label Switched Path which can be used
to transport one call or, assuming multiplexing is used, to
transport all or any subset of the calls between a given pair of
GWs. Advanced MPLS features may also be applied onto this LSP such
as Constraint Based Routing and protection of the LSP via Fast-
Restoration.
From the MPLS Control Plane perspective, this results in :
- RSVP or CR-LDP signaling processing and label binding at every
MPLS hop for each GW-to-GW pair.
- resource reservation and admission control at every MPLS hop for
each GW-to-GW pair and every time the resource reservation is
modified (eg. to adjust to varying number of calls on a GW-to-GW
pair)
- in case of failure, Fast Reroute at the relevant MPLS hops of
all the affected GW-to-GW LSPs
From the MPLS user plane perspective, this result in a different
MPLS label cross-connect entry in the Label Forwarding Information
Base established at every MPLS hop for every GW-to-GW pair.
In brief, this involves full MPLS processing at every hop in the
MPLS network at the granularity of GW-to-GW pair.
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As the number of Gateways grow, this may represent a significant
scaling burden which would not yield the most cost economical
solution in all environments. Consequently, we propose one
approach allowing MPLS processing purely on an aggregate basis in
the MPLS core.
This approach relies on RSVP reservation aggregation as defined in
[23] and already mentioned above in section 3.3.3.1. Where RSVP is
used by GWs as the Bearer Control protocol, the end-to-end GW-to-
GW RSVP reservations can be aggregated when entering the
aggregation region (ie the core) into a smaller number of fat
aggregated reservations within the aggregation region. At the
egress of the aggregation region, the aggregated reservations are
broken out back into end-to-end GW-to-GW reservations. [23]
specifies that an aggregated reservation may be instantiated as a
tunnel of some sort and in particular as an MPLS Tunnel. In this
context, we elect to instantiate every aggregate reservation as an
MPLS Tunnel. Each MPLS tunnel is then used to transport all the
calls associated with the multiple GW-to-GW reservations which are
aggregated together through the aggregation region. As defined in
[23], the classification and scheduling required in the core are
purely Diff-Serv (as opposed to per-label
classification/scheduling), retaining extremely high scalability
properties for the user plane in the core.
Exactly as in the non-MPLS context discussed in 3.3.3.1, very
flexible and powerful policies and algorithms can be used by the
service provider for establishing and controlling the sizing of
the aggregated reservations.
The MPLS Tunnels corresponding to aggregate reservations can be
established via RSVP (or possibly CR-LDP after appropriate mapping
is defined). Constraint Based Routing and Fast Restoration can
also be applied to these MPLS Tunnels.
Both from the MPLS Control Plane perspective as well as from the
MPLS User Plane perspective, MPLS processing in the core is now
performed at the granularity of the aggregate reservation instead
of a the level of GW-to-GW. Yet, the benefits of MPLS such as
Constraint Based Routing and Fast Reroute are offered to the
transported telephony services; only they are achieved in the core
on an aggregate basis.
This approach is applicable for aggregation over an MPLS core
regardless of whether GWs are connected to the core via MPLS or
non-MPLS. For instance, this aggregation can be achieved with VoIP
GWs having non-MPLS connectivity to the MPLS core. In that case, a
natural (but not mandatory) location to perform the aggregation is
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at the level of the MIWF ie. the MIWFs also act as Aggregators and
Deaggregators as defined in [23]. Also, this aggregation can be
achieved with VoMPLS GWs having full end-to-end MPLS connectivity.
In that case, the Aggregators and Deaggregators are MPLS Label
Switch Routers located closer into the core than the GWs.
4. VoMPLS Applications
4.1. Trunking Between Gateways
MPLS LSPs can be used for providing the trunks between the various
gateways defined in Section 3.
4.1.1. Encapsulation Requirements for Efficient Multiplexed Trunk
Where a label edge router, or a gateway with built-in label edge
router functionality can determine that multiple streams must pass
on the same LSP to the same far end LER, then the streams can be
optimized by using a multiplexing technique. The VoMPLS
multiplexing function shall provide an efficient means for
supporting multiple streams on a single LSP which is trivially
convertible into multiple individual IP/UDP/RTP streams by the far
end LER.
The multiplexing methods needs to provide an efficient voice
encapsulation and a call identification mechanism.
4.2. VoMPLS on Slow Links
Slow links are being used in the MPLS based access networks. These
links are typically based on transmission over copper cables.
The vast majority of access lines in the world are currently
copper-based and this will not change in the near future.
Therefore it is important to address the requirements of slow
links in the VoMPLS specifications.
Slow links introduce additional requirements concerning bandwidth
efficiency and the control of voice latency.
In most cases bandwidth in slow links is expensive and needs to be
used in the most efficient way possible. Especially it is often
desirable to avoid the overhead of carrying full IP, UDP and RTP
headers with every voice packet.
A simple method for compressing IP/UDP/RTP headers shall be
specified. The header compression mechanism and the multiplexing
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mechanism of section 4.1.1 should be considered the same mechanism
(i.e. the IP header compression could yield a short LSP specific
channel identifier which permits multiple channels per LSP).
Alternatively header compression can be applied at link level
using the methods proposed in [8]. Also PPP-muxing can be used for
reducing the overhead [3].
The control of latency on slow links requires link level
fragmentation of large data packets. The fragmentation is
specified in RFC 2686 [4].
4.3. Voice Traffic Engineering using MPLS
The goal of voice traffic engineering is to ensure that network
resources can be efficiently deployed and utilised so that the
network is able to support a planned group of users with a
controlled/guaranteed (voice) performance. In essence voice
traffic engineering may be summed up as providing QoS and GoS to a
group of users at a reasonable (network) cost.
Voice traffic engineering for VoMPLS will encompass forecasting,
planning, dimensioning, network control and performance
monitoring. It therefore spans both off-line analysis and on-line
control, management and measurement. Broadly, voice traffic
engineering may be broken down into three distinct layers
(characterised by the temporal resolution at which they operate):
1) Off-line voice traffic engineering.
2) Connection admission and/or connection routing.
3) Dynamic Traffic Management.
The general requirements at each layer will be discussed in more
detail below. Clearly in an optimal solution there is interaction
between the stages - a fundamental requirement of performance
measurement is to provide this necessary feedback.
4.3.1. Off-Line Voice traffic engineering Aspects
The goal of off-line voice traffic engineering is to ensure that
sufficient network resources are engineered together with a given
set of policies and procedures such that the network is capable of
delivering the GoS and QoS guarantees to the planned group of
users.
In traditional voice network planning the first stage in this
process is to perform traffic analysis to determine the capacity
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requirements for the voice traffic at busy hour. This then enables
the network to be dimensioned and configured to support this load
with a given blocking probability. Finally a set of policies and
procedures should be defined to determine how the allocated
network resources should be utilised. The policies should address
key requirements including the mechanism whereby the voice GoS is
maintained within a multi-service environment, definitions of
routing mechanisms that should be applied to ensure efficient
network utilisation, behaviour rules for overload and congestion
management.
Some operators may choose to use off line voice traffic
engineering tools and techniques in a VoMPLS system, that are
radically different from those in the PSTN. As an example, busy
hour measurements may have little affect on pre-allocated LSPs in
a VoMPLS network, as average rates may determine pre-allocated
resources, with dynamically created LSPs absorbing traffic during
busy periods. Policy metrics and control points in packet networks
are typically very different from those in the PSTN, and thus new
mechanisms, specific policies, and enforcement mechanisms will be
required. VoMPLS work may motivate some mechanisms but
implementing such mechanisms is out of scope of the VoMPLS work.
4.3.2. Connection Admission and/or Connection Routing
Network performance will be fundamentally affected by the policies
and procedures applied when establishing new sessions. At a
minimum the following issues need to be addressed within a VoMPLS
network:
(i) New sessions should be routed such that the network
resources are used in an efficient manner. This implies that
the system needs to be capable of supporting traffic between
the same two end points using multiple path alternatives.
(ii) The QoS guarantees for existing voice connections should
be unaffected when new sessions are established - at the
limit this implies a requirement that new session requests
should be rejected if insufficient network resources are
available.
(iii) The network should be resilient to mass calling events.
This implies that call rejection should be performed at the
edge of the network to avoid placing undue load onto the core
network routers.
The above requirements imply that VoMPLS systems should be
constructed where the MIWF is aware of LSP usage, and tracks
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bandwidth consumption, either using admission control to restrict
new calls, or creating new LSPs when bandwidth in an existing LSP
is committed.
4.3.3. Dynamic Traffic Management
Dynamic traffic management refers to the set of procedures and
policies that are applied to existing voice sessions to ensure
that network congestion is minimised and controlled. The following
functions will typically be performed at this layer:
- traffic buffering and queue management within MPLS routers to
control delay (based on signaled QoS requirements, i.e., is
not voice specific)
- traffic policing at key network ingress points to ensure
session compliance to traffic contracts/SLAs
- traffic shaping at ingress points to minimise the resource
requirements of traffic sources
- loss/late packet interpolation and jitter buffering at egress
points to reconstitute the original real-time session stream
- traffic measurement for performance monitoring and congestion
detection
VoMPLS does not differ from other forms of Voice over data
networks in its dynamic traffic management capabilities other than
the fundamental properties MPLS provides.
4.4. Providing End-to-end QoS for Voice Using MPLS
A key goal of the development of the VoMPLS specification will be
to ensure that the reference architecture is capable of supporting
end-to-end QoS and GoS.
Defining new MPLS related signaling protocols is out of the scope
of the VoMPLS work. VoMPLS work may motivate some extensions to
the existing protocols as required.
The initial goal is to define an end-to-end QoS architecture for
single MPLS domain. This implies that it should be possible to set
up LSPs with a bandwidth reservation and a bounded delay.
A long term goal is to achieve end-to-end QoS across multiple MPLS
domains. However, this will require considerable progress in the
area of the generic MPLS specifications. A connectivity model and
end-to-end VoIP over MPLS reference connection is shown in Figure
5 below. The model provides a framework for the control and
signaling required to establish QoS capable sessions. The
reference model illustrated is scalable to global proportion
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consisting of access domains and core network domains. In Figure 5
two core domains are shown, which might for example represent the
two national operators involved in establishing an international
session. The connectivity model may be devolved further to support
multiple core MPLS domains. The access domains may be provided
either by the ISDN (requiring a TDM to packet interworking
function at the gateway to the core MPLS domain) or by an MPLS
access network enabling full end-to-end VoIP over MPLS operation.
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Gateway Gateway
+------+ +------+
| | | |
+--+ +------+ | +--+ | | +--+ |
|TE|---| ISDN |---|CC|------------------|CC|-----//--A
+--+ | or | | +--+ | | +--+ |
| MPLS | | | | |
|Access| | +--+ | +--+ +--+ | +--+ |
+------+ | |BC|---|BC|---|BC|----|BC|-----//--B
| +--+ | +--+ +--+ | +--+ |
| | | |
+------+ +------+
\------------ --------------/
\/
MPLS Core Domain 1
Gateway Gateway
+------+ +------+
| | | |
| +--+ | | +--+ | +------+ +--+
A---------|CC|------------------|CC|----| ISDN |---|TE|
| +--+ | | +--+ | | or | +--+
| | | | | MPLS |
| +--+ | +--+ +--+ | +--+ | |Access|
B---------|BC|---|BC|---|BC|----|BC|----| |
| +--+ | +--+ +--+ | +--+ | +------+
| | | |
+------+ +------+
\--------- ---------/
\/
MPLS Core Domain 2
BC = Bearer Control
CC = Call Control
Figure 5 - End-to-End Reference Connection
5. Requirements for MPLS Signaling
5.1. LDP and CR-LDP
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TBD
5.2. RSVP-TE
TBD
6. Requirements for Other Work
This section should list the "standardization items" that are
recommended for IETF and their associated requirements.
a) identification of the work item
b) the Section in the draft describing the item details,
c) the WG where the work could be carried out
Some possible items follow:
i) solutions for advertisement and negotiation of Traffic
Parameters and QoS Bearer Control requirement in Call Control
protocols. (TEWG item?)
ii) solutions for QoS Bearer Control signaling. (MPLS WG item?)
iii) solutions for coordination between call control and QoS
bearer Control. (SIP, MEGACO, MPLS, TEWG item?)
iv) identify requirements, protocol, guidelines for QoS/GoScall-
control/bearer-control coordination mechanisms for VoMPLS
(TEWG item)
v) support of voice Traffic Engineering/Constraint Based
Routing? (TEWG item)
7. Security Considerations
8. Acknowledgements
9. References
1 Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 3",
BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.
2 Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997
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3 "PPP Multiplexed Frame Option", R. Pazhyannur et al., work in
progress, <draft-ietf-pppext-pppmux-00.txt>, January 2000
4 "The Multi-Class Extension to Multi-Link PPP", RFC 2686, C.
Bormann. September 1999.
5 null
6 "Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture", Eric C. Rosen et
al., work in progress, draft-ietf-mpls-arch-06.txt, August 1999
7 "MPLS Label Stack Encoding", Eric C. Rosen et al., work in
progress, draft-ietf-mpls-label-encaps-07.txt, September 1999
8 "MPLS/IP Header Compression", L. Berger et al., work in
progress, draft-ietf-mpls-hdr-comp-00.txt, July 2000.
9 "Megaco Protocol", F. Cuervo et al., work in progress, draft-
ietf-megaco-protocol-07.txt, February 2000
10 "Media Gateway Control Protocol (MGCP), Version 1.0", RFC 2705,
M. Arango et al., October 1999
11 "Packet-based multimedia communications systems", ITU-T
Recommendation H.323, February 1998
12 "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 2543, M. Handley et
al., March 1999.
13 "Bearer Independent Call Control", Draft ITU-T Recommendation
Q.1901, (to be published)
14 F. Haerens, "Intelligent Network Application Support of the
SIP/SDP Architecture", Internet Draft , November 1999, work in progress.
15 V. Gurbani, "Accessing IN Services from SIP Networks," Internet
Draft , Internet
Engineering Task Force, December 1999, work in progress.
16 "LDP Specification", L. Andersson et al., work in progress,
draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-06.txt, October 1999.
17 "Extensions to RSVP for LSP Tunnels", D. Awduche et al., work
in progress, draft-ietf-mpls-rsvp-lsp-tunnel-06.txt, July 2000
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18 "Constraint-Based LSP Setup using LDP", B. Jamoussi et al.,
work in progress, draft-ietf-mpls-cr-ldp-03.txt, September
1999.
19 "Simple Control Transmission Protocol", R. Stewart et al., work
in progress, draft-ietf-sigtran-sctp-06.txt, February 2000
20 draft-swallow-mpls-simple-hdr-compress-00.txt, Simple Header
Compression, Swallow et al., March 2000
21 Le Faucheur et al., draft-ietf-mpls-diff-ext-04.txt, March
2000.
22 null
23 draft-ietf-issll-rsvp-aggr-02.txt, `Aggregation of RSVP for
IPv4 and IPv6 Reservations', Baker et al., March 2000.
24 "Requirements for Policy Enabled MPLS", S Wright et al, draft-
wright-policy-mpls-00.txt, March 2000.
25 draft-manyfolks-sip-resource-00.txt, `Integration of Resource
Management and SIP for IP Telephony', March 2000.
26 RFC2205, `Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) --
Version 1 Functional Specification', Braden et al.,
September 1997.
27 RFC2212, `Specification of Guaranteed Quality of Service',
Shenker et al, September 1997.
28 RFC2211, `Specification of the Controlled-Load Network Element
Service', Wroclawski, September 1997.
29 RFC2753, `A Framework for Policy-based Admission Control',
Yavatkar et al. , January 2000.
30 RFC2748, `The COPS (Common Open Policy Service) Protocol',
Durham et al., January 2000.
31 draft-ietf-intserv-compress-02.txt, `Integrated Services in the
Presence of Compressible Flows', Davie et al. , February 2000.
32 draft-ietf-issll-diffserv-rsvp-04.txt, `A Framework For
Integrated Services Operation Over Diffserv Networks', Bernet
et al., March 2000.
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33 draft-dscgroup-sip-arch-01.txt, `Architectural Considerations
for Providing Carrier Class Telephony Services Utilizing SIP-
based Distributed Call Control Mechanisms', March 2000
34 ITU-T, SG16/Q13, Geneva, Feb 2000, Delayed Contribution,
`Enhancement for Synchronising RSVP with Slow Start'.
10. Author's Addresses
Gerald R. (Jerry) Ash
AT&T Labs
Room MT E3-3C37
200 Laurel Avenue
Middletown, NJ 07748
USA
Angela Chiu
AT&T Labs
100 Schulz Dr., Rm 4-204,
Red Bank, NJ 07701, USA
Phone: +1 (732) 345-3441
Email: alchiu@att.com
John Hopkins
Cisco Systems
3 The Square,
Stockley Park,
Uxbridge, Middlesex. UB11 1BN
United Kingdom
tel: +44 208 734 3265
email: johopkin@cisco.com
Jason Jeffords
Integral Access
6 Omni Way
Chelmsford MA, 01824
USA
Email: jjeffords@integralaccess.com
Antti Kankkunen
Integral Access
6 Omni Way
Chelmsford MA, 01824
USA
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Email: anttik@integralaccess.com
Francois le Faucheur
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Les Lucioles - 291, rue Albert Caquot
06560 Valbonne
France
E-mail: flefauch@cisco.com
Brian Rosen
Marconi
1000 FORE Drive
Warrendale, PA 15086
USA
Email: brosen@fore.com
Dave Stacey
Nortel Networks
London Rd, Harlow, Essex, CM17 9NA, UK.
Phone: +44 1279 402697
Email: dajs@nortelnetworks.com
Anil Yelundur
NEC
Lou Berger
LabN Consulting, LLC
Voice: +1 301 468 9228
Email: lberger@labn.net
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ANNEX A - E-Model analysis of the VoIP over MPLS Reference Model
A.1 Introduction
The ITU-T standards for voice network QoS are defined in relation
to a global reference connection, which is intended to represent
the worst case international situation. Within this annex we take
a PSTN call from Japan to east coast USA and a GSM call from
Australia to east-coast USA as being representative of global
reference connections having clear commercial significance.
In this annex several scenarios will be presented to illustrate
the requirements on VoMPLS deployments. The scenario analysis is
split into three distinct parts. In the first part we analyse
scenarios where the VoMPLS deployment is constrained to the core
of the network; in the second part of the analysis we extend MPLS
into the access network; and in the third part we analyse the
impact of deploying differing voice encoding schemes.
The scenarios are analysed using the ITU-T E-Model transport
modelling method [G.107]. The E-Model allows multiple sources of
impairment to be quantified and the overall impact assessed. The
result is expressed as an R-Value which is a rating of the
assessment that real users would express if subjected to the voice
impairments. Equations to convert E-model ratings into other
metrics e.g. MOS, %GoB, %PoW can be found in Annex B of G.107.
Using the R-value the ITU G.109 defines 5 classes of speech
transmission quality as illustrated in Table A.1 below. As a rule
of thumb, wire-line connections on todays PSTN tend to fall in the
'satisfied' or 'very 'satisfied categories' - and R-values below
50 are 'not recommended' for any connections.
+------------------------------------------------------------+
| R-value range | Rating | Users' Satisfaction |
|------------------|---------|-------------------------------|
| 90 <= R < 100 | Best | Very satisfied |
| 80 <= R < 90 | High | Satisfied |
| 70 <= R < 80 | Medium | Some users dissatisfied |
| 60 <= R < 70 | Low | Many users dissatisfied |
| 50 <= R < 60 | Poor | Nearly all users dissatisfied |
+------------------------------------------------------------+
Table A.1 Definition of Categories of Speech Transmission Quality
In this analysis we use the term 'intrinsic delay' to define the
additional delay introduced by a VoMPLS domain over and above the
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transmission delay - i.e. typically the intrinsic delay is the sum
of any packetisation and buffering delays introduced by a packet
network.
Transmission delay is included within the analysis as a fixed
delay based on transmission distance (evaluated based on SONET/SDH
transmission rules).
A.2 Deployment of VoMPLS within the Core Network
A.2.1 Scenario 1 - Effect of Multiple MPLS Domains
Figure A.1 illustrates the first reference connections considered.
In the PSTN to PSTN connection two core VoMPLS network islands are
traversed in both Japan and the USA. In the GSM to PSTN scenario
one VoMPLS network island is traversed in Australia and two within
the USA. Calls traversing the VoMPLS core networks interwork
through the current PSTN.
The analysis covers a range of intrinsic delays (from 10 ms to 100
ms) and Packet Loss Ratios (PLR)(0% to 1%) for each VoMPLS domain.
Each VoMPLS domain is assumed to have the same performance. It is
assumed that the transmission delay corresponds to 1.5 times the
greater circle distance between the two users.
Japan USA
--------/\-------- --------/\--------
/ \ / \
POTS--|MPLS|--|MPLS|----|MPLS|--|MPLS|--POTS
/
/
/
Mobile--|GSM|--|MPLS|--
\ /
--------\/-------
Australia
Figure A-1: Scenario 1 - Effect of multiple VoMPLS Core Domains
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A number of further assumptions are made on the basis of best
possible practice in order to separate the contribution of
multiple networks from other sources of impairment, in particular:
- DCME on the Japan to USA link is at full rate e.g. 32 kb/s
G.726 and VoiceActivity Detection is not included.
- The Australia to USA link is G.711 i.e. there is no DCME.
- VoMPLS domains use G.711 with packet loss concealment
algorithm employed.
- GSM domain uses full rate codec and no Voice Activity
Detection.
- Wired PSTN phones are analogue with echo-cancellers
employed.
+--------------------------------------|
| | | Intrinsic Delay(ms) |
|Connection| PLR | 09 | 20 | 50 | 100 |
+--------------------------------------|
|PSTN-PSTN | 0% | 79 | 74 | 61 | 48 |
|PSTN-PSTN | 0.5%| 67 | 62 | 49 | 36 |
|PSTN-PSTN | 1.0%| 59 | 54 | 41 | 29 |
|GSM-PSTN | 0% | 60 | 56 | 47 | 37 |
|GSM-PSTN | 0.5%| 48 | 44 | 35 | 25 |
|GSM-PSTN | 1.0%| 40 | 36 | 27 | 17 |
+--------------------------------------+
Table A.2 R-Value Results for Scenario 1
The results are presented in Table A.2. It can be seen that with
an intrinsic delay of around 10 msec and 0% packet loss (per
VoMPLS domain) then the PSTN case achieves a rating of near 80
which is the normal target for PSTN. The equivalent delay and PLR
for the GSM case achieves only 60 which is rated as poor quality
in the E-Model. It can be seen that any significant relaxation of
the intrinsic delay or PLR leads to operations with a rating of
less than 50 which is outside recommended planning limits.
A.2.2 Scenario 2 - Analysis of VoMPLS and Typical DCME Practice
In the second scenario considered the network is simplified to a
single VoMPLS core network in both Japan and the USA but the DCME
scenario is changed to show the impact of voice activity detection
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and downspeeding. The deployment scenario is illustrated in figure
A-2.
Japan USA
-----/\------ ---/\----
/ \ / \
POTS----|MPLS|---|DCME|----|MPLS|---POTS
Figure A-2: Scenario 2 - Analysis of Core VoMPLS with DCME
The following voice processing assumptions were used:
- DCME on the Japan to USA link uses voice activity detection
and includes the downspeeding of the G.728 coding to 12.8
kb/s.
- VoMPLS domains use G.711 with packet loss concealment.
- Wired phones are analogue with echo-cancellers deployed.
+---------------------------------------------------|
| | | Intrinsic Delay(ms) |
|Connection | PLR | 09 | 20 | 50 | 100 |
+---------------------------------------------------|
|DCME G.728 @ 16 kb/s | 0% | 82 | 81 | 76 | 64 |
|DCME G.728 @ 16 kb/s | 0.5%| 76 | 75 | 70 | 58 |
|DCME G.728 @ 16 kb/s | 1% | 72 | 71 | 66 | 54 |
|DCME G.728 @ 12.8 kb/s | 0% | 69 | 68 | 63 | 51 |
|DCME G.728 @ 12.8 kb/s | 0.5 | 63 | 62 | 57 | 45 |
|DCME G.728 @ 12.8 kb/s | 1% | 59 | 58 | 53 | 41 |
+---------------------------------------------------+
Table A.3 R-Value Results for Scenario 2
The results are presented in table A.3. It can be seen that with
DCME downspeeding (12.8 kb/s) an intrinsic delay of 9 ms and 0%
packet loss is in the low quality range. Any significant
relaxation would lead to poor quality or operation outside of
planning limits.
A.2.3 Scenario 3 - Analysis of GSM, VoMPLS and Typical DCME Practice
In this scenario the network is simplified to a single VoMPLS
domain in Australia and another in the USA and the analysis covers
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the impact of typical DCME practice. In this case only 0% packet
loss is considered. Three DCME cases are considered, G.711 (i.e.
no DCME) G.728 at 16 kb/s and G.728 with downspeeding to 12.8
kb/s. The DCME equipment also includes voice activity detection.
The deployment configuration for this scenario is shown in figure
A.3 and the resultant E-model results shown in Table A.4
Australia USA
--------/\-------- -----/\----
/ \ / \
Mobile--|GSM|--|MPLS|-----|DCME|-----|MPLS|--POTS
Figure A-3: Scenario 3 - Deployment of VoMPLS Core Networks
The voice processing assumptions are as follows:
- VoMPLS domains use G.711 with packet loss concealment.
- Wired phones are analogue with echo-cancellers deployed.
+-------------------------------------------------------------|
| | | Intrinsic Delay(ms) |
|Connection | PLR | 09 | 20 | 50 | 100 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------|
|G.711 no DCME,GSM User | 0% | 65 | 62 | 55 | 45 |
|G.711 no DCME,PSTN User | 0% | 63 | 59 | 51 | 40 |
|G.728 @ 16kb/s DCME, GSM User | 0% | 54 | 51 | 45 | 36 |
|G.728 @ 16kb/s DCME, PSTN User | 0% | 51 | 48 | 40 | 30 |
|G.728 @ 12.8kb/s DCME, GSM User | 0% | 44 | 38 | 32 | 23 |
|G.728 @ 12.8kb/s DCME, PSTN User | 0% | 38 | 35 | 27 | 17 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Table A.4 R-Value Results for Scenario 3
The results of the analysis are presented in Table A.4. The GSM
listener receives better QoS than the PSTN listener as a result of
the asymmetrical operation of echo handling. Echo generated at the
2-4 wire conversion in the PSTN side is removed by an echo
canceller whereas the GSM side, being 4-wire throughout, relies on
the terminal coupling loss achieved by the handset itself to
control any acoustic echo. For this calculation a weighted
terminal coupling loss of 46 dB is assumed for the terminal. It
can be seen by inspection that it is difficult to provide
acceptable QoS for GSM calls on Global Reference Connections. DCME
is typical practice in this case.
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A.2.4 VoMPLS Core Network Summary
The deployment of multiple VoMPLS islands interworking via the
conventional PSTN will be a natural consequence of switch
deployment practice. A carrier wishing to deploy VoMPLS as a PSTN
solution would wish to continue normal investment to cope with
growth and retiring obsolete equipment. This will lead to multiple
VoMPLS islands within a single carriers' network as well as
islands which arise due to calls which are routed through multiple
operators. It is possible to deploy equipment intelligently and to
plan routing to avoid excessive numbers of islands, but if
deployment is driven by growth and obsolescence then the
transition to a full VoMPLS solution will take 15 to 20 years,
during which time multiple islands will be the normal situation.
Solutions, which lead to retrofit requirements in order to solve
QoS problems, are very unlikely to be cost effective. Therefore to
enable operation with such network configurations it will be
necessary for each VoMPLS core network domain to be able to
achieve an intrinsic delay in the order of 10 ms and negligible
packet loss.
A.3 Extending VoMPLS into the Access Network
The following scenarios analyse the impact of extending VoMPLS
into the access network.
A.3.1 Scenario 4 - VoMPLS Access on USA to Japan
In this scenario the core network comprises 2 MPLS networks in USA
plus 2 MPLS networks in Japan linked by sub cable which may have
DCME employed. The intrinsic delay within each core MPLS network
is set to 10 ms delay and zero packet loss is assumed. The
encoding scheme used is G.711 throughout. Figure A.4 illustrates
the deployments analysed. Four cases are considered:
(A) MPLS access network each end, full echo control, no DCME
(B) MPLS access network each end, no echo control, no DCME
(C) MPLS access network one end; analogue PSTN other end, full
echo control, DCME @32kb/s
(D) MPLS access network one end; Analogue PSTN other end, full
echo control, no DCME
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Case A & B:
TE --|MPLS|---|MPLS|--|MPLS|---------|MPLS|--|MPLS|--|MPLS|--TE
Dig. Access Core Core SUB-cable Core Core Access Dig
Case C & D:
TE --|CO|---|MPLS|--|MPLS|-----------|MPLS|--|MPLS|--|MPLS|--TE
An PSTN Core Core SUB-cable Core Core Access Dig
Figure A.4 Scenario 4 - Impact of VoMPLS Access Systems
The results for the analysis are shown in Table A.5 which provides
results for various access delays (per access domain). For cases A
and B the performance is symmetrical (digital terminals have
identical performance) whereas for cases C and D the performance
is slightly different at each end due to the different nominal
loudness ratings of the analogue and digital terminals. The
figures in the table refer to the listener at the analogue PSTN
terminal - the performance at the digital terminal is slightly
worse by about 5 points.
Table A.5 R-Values for Scenario 4
Delay - ms | 10 20 50 100 150
------------|--------------------------------------------
Case (A) | 92.8 91.9 83.9 73.4 65.9
Case (B) | 80.8 77.9 67.9 54.0 44.3
Case (C) | 84.1 83.0 79.4 73.4 68.3
Case (D) | 93.6 93.0 90.2 84.2 75.8
The results show that if the MPLS access delay is restricted to 50
ms or below generally satisfactory results can be achieved for
most scenarios.
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A.3.2 Scenario 5 Deployment of GSM and VoMPLS Access
In this scenario the core network comprises 2 MPLS networks in USA
plus 1 MPLS network and a mobile network in Australia linked by
sub cable which does not have DCME employed. Each core MPLS
network has 10 ms intrinsic delay and zero packet loss. Encoding
G.711 throughout MPLS domains. Figure A.5 illustrates the
deployments analysed. Five cases are considered:
E - Mobile = GSM FR codec, full echo control, no DCME
F - Mobile = GSM FR codec, no echo control, no DCME
G - Mobile = GSM EFR codec, full echo control, no DCME
H - Mobile = GSM EFR codec, no echo control, no DCME
TE --|MPLS|---|MPLS|--|MPLS|-----------|MPLS|--|MPLS|--|GSM|--TE
Dig Access Core Core SUB-cable Core Core Access Dig
Figure A.5 Scenario 5 - VoMPLS Access with GSM
The results from the E-model analysis are given in Table A.6.
Table A.6 R-Values for Scenario 5
Delay - ms | 10 20 50 100 150
-------------|-------------------------------------------
Case (E) | 73.3 72.7 69.8 63.7 58.1
Case (F) | 61.7 60.5 55.9 47.6 40.1
Case (G) | 88.3 87.7 84.8 78.7 73.1
Case (H) | 76.7 75.5 70.9 62.6 55.1
Again the results show that MPLS access delays should be
restricted to the order of 50 ms or below. The results also
highlight the advantage of using the GSM EFR codec over the GSM FR
codec and that even when working fully digital full echo control
provides a measurable benefit.
A.3.3 VoMPLS Access Summary
The scenarios show that for VoMPLS access systems the intrinsic
delay should be kept to the order of 50 ms per access domain or
below to achieve acceptable voice quality for the majority of
connections.
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A.4 Effects of Voice Codecs in the access network
In the final scenarios the impact of deploying voice codecs within
the access network is considered.
A.4.1 Scenario 6 - Deployment of Codecs in one Access Leg (USA -
Japan)
Again the core network comprises 2 MPLS networks in USA plus 2
MPLS networks in Japan linked by sub cable which has no DCME
employed. Each core MPLS network has 10 ms intrinsic delay and
zero packet loss. Encoding is G.711 throughout the core network.
A fixed delay of 50ms and zero packet loss is assumed in the
access MPLS network. The configuration is illustrated in figure
A.6.
TE --|CO|---|MPLS|--|MPLS|-----------|MPLS|--|MPLS|--|MPLS|--TE
An PSTN Core Core SUB-cable Core Core Access Dig
(2ms) (10ms) (10ms) (10ms) (10ms) (50ms) (var)
Figure A.6 Scenario 6 - Effects of Codecs in one Access Leg
The results for various voice codec deployments are presented in
Table A.7 which provides the R-values as experienced by the user
of the PSTN and the MPLS access system.
Table A.7 - R-values for Scenario 6
Connection |PSTN |MPLS |
------------------------------------------------------
G.711 to G.711 | 88.9 | 84.6 |
G.711 to G.729A + VAD (8kb/s) | 73.7 | 69.9 |
G.711 to G.723A + VAD (6.3kb/s) | 62.4 | 58.0 |
G.711 to G.723A + VAD (5.3kb/s) | 58.4 | 54.0 |
G.711 to GSM-FR | 61.7 | 57.3 |
G.711 to GSM-EFR | 76.7 | 72.3 |
The results show asymmetrical performance due to the different
nominal loudness ratings of the analogue and digital terminals.
Generally acceptable performance is attained although the
performance for the low bit rate G.723 coding scheme is marginal.
In these examples since VoMPLS access is used for one leg of the
connection only transcoding is performed once.
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A.4.2 Scenario 7 - Codec Deployment in both Access Legs (USA - Japan)
The deployment configuration for this scenario is as scenario 6
with the exception that MPLS access systems are used at both ends.
The configuration is illustrated in figure A.7. and the resultant
R-values provided in Table A.8
TE --|MPLS|---|MPLS|--|MPLS|---------|MPLS|--|MPLS|--|MPLS|--TE
Dig Access Core Core SUB-cable Core Core Access Dig
(var) (50ms) (10ms) (10ms) (10ms) (10ms) (50ms) (var)
Figure A.7 Scenario 7 - Codec Deployment in Both Access Legs
Table A.8 R-value Results for Scenario 7
Connection |R-value
------------------------------------------------------
G.711 to G.711 | 83.9 |
G.729A+VAD to G.711 to G.729A+VAD (8.0kb/s) | 54.2 |
G.729A+VAD (8.0kb/s) tandem free operation | 68.9 |
G.723A+VAD to G.711 to G.723A+VAD (6.3kb/s) | 36.2 |
G.723A+VAD (6.3kb/s) tandem free operation | 58.6 |
GSM-FR to G.711 to GSM-FR | 31.7 |
GSM-FR tandem free operation | 57.2 |
GSM-EFR to G.711 to GSM-EFR | 61.7 |
GSM-EFR tandem free operation | 72.2 |
The benefits of eliminating transcoding - tandem free operation
(TFO) - can be clearly seen from these results. Further it can be
seen that the performance attained by low bit rate G.723 is
extremely poor when transcoding is performed at both access
gateways.
A.4.3 Scenario 8 Codec Deployment and Mobile Access (USA - Australia)
The core network comprises 2 MPLS networks in the USA plus 1 MPLS
network and a mobile network in Australia linked by sub cable
which does not have DCME employed. Each core MPLS core network
has 10 ms intrinsic delay and zero packet loss. The access network
has 50ms delay and zero packet loss. Full echo control is
employed. For the UMTS mobile network, a delay of 60ms and an
codec impairment factor (Ie) of 5 is assumed based on the
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predicted performance of the GSM AMR codec. The results are
provided in table A.9
TE --|MPLS|--|MPLS|--|MPLS|---------|MPLS|--|MPLS|--|UMTS|--TE
Dig Access Core Core SUB-cable Core Core Mobile Dig
(var) (50ms) (10ms) (10ms) (10ms) (10ms) (60ms) (var)
Figure A.8 Scenario 8 - Codec Deployment and Mobile Access
Table A.9 - Results for Scenario 8
Connection | R-value
---------------------------------------
UMTS to G.711 | 78.7
UMTS to G.729A via G.711 | 63.9
UMTS to G.723A via G.711 | 53.6
UMTS to GSM-EFR | 69.3
UMTS to UMTS -
- TFO | 76.6
Again these results highlight the significant benefit arising from
the use of tandem free operation.
A.4.4 Voice Codec Summary
The scenarios in this section highlight the critical impact that
the voice coding scheme deployed in the access network will have
on the overall voice quality. For international reference
connections acceptable voice quality may not be attained with some
of the very low bit rate codecs. The benefits of avoiding
transcoding wherever possible can also clearly be seen.
A.5 Overall Conclusions
The following key conclusions may be drawn from the study:
For VoMPLS core networks, per domain the intrinsic delay
should not exceed 10 ms and the packet loss should be
negligible.
When MPLS is extended to the access domain (in conjunction
with the use of digital terminals) an additional 50 ms per
access domain may be tolerated.
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Wherever possible codec compatibility between the end-
terminals should be negotiated to avoid the requirement for
transcoding.
Where terminal compatibility cannot be achieved transcoding
should be limited to one function per connection.
Low bit rate G.723 coding should be avoided unless
transcoderless operation can be attained.
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ANNEX B - Service Requirements on VoMPLS
B.1 Voice Service Requirements
This section covers generic voice service requirements. These same
considerations would apply in any voice network and this section
has nothing specific to VoMPLS.
Annex A provides one example of a quantitative approach to voice
call quality assessment. This Annex is provided for information
purposes only.
The call quality as perceived by the end user of the VoMPLS
service is influenced by a number of key factors including delay,
packet loss (and its impact on bit error), voice encoding scheme
(and associated compression rates), echo (and its control) and
terminal quality. It is the complex interaction of these
individual parameters that defines the overall speech quality
experienced by the user.
VoMPLS work should define one or more voice service types, the
most obvious ones being a voice service which is comparable to the
service provided by the existing PSTN or a voice service which is
lower quality than the existing PSTN but could be provided at a
lower cost. For each service type quantitative performance
objectives for the parameters defined in this section need to be
determined.
B.1.1 Voice Encoding
The VoMPLS network should be capable of supporting a variety of
voice encoding schemes (and associated voice compression rates)
ranging from 64kb/s G.711 down to low-bit rate codecs such as
G.723. The applicability of an individual voice encoding algorithm
and associated voice compression rate is dependent on the
particular network deployment.
The impact of transcoding between voice encoding schemes must also
be considered. Not only does transcoding potentially introduce
delay but typically distortion as well - a key voice impairment
factor. Whilst transcoding is sometimes an inevitable consequence
of complicated networks, wherever possible it should be avoided.
Specific codec choices are network, service, use, and terminal
dependent. In many cases, no compression will be used (G.711), in
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other cases (wireless), low bit rate compression may be used.
VoMPLS networks shall be capable of transporting traffic with a
variety of codecs.
B.1.2 Control of Echo
Echo is one of the most significant impairment factors experienced
by the user. In traditional networks echo arises from acoustic
coupling in the terminal and impedance mismatches within the
hybrid devices that perform the 2 to 4 wire conversion (typically)
at the local exchange. The effect that echo has on voice-quality
increases non-linearly as the transmission delay increases. The
transmission delay consists of the processing delay in network
elements and the speed of light delay.
B.1.2.1 Echo Control by Limiting Delay
Where the one way delay between talker and listener is below 25ms
then the effects of echo can be controlled to within acceptable
limits if the Talker Echo Loudness Rating (TELR) complies with ITU
G.131 Figure 1. At the limiting delay of 25ms this corresponds to
a TELR of 33dB, which is not attainable by normal telephone
terminals especially on short lines. The telephony network
overcomes this limitation by assuming average length subscriber
lines and by including 6dB of loss in the four wire path (usually
in the receive leg) at the local exchange. In the case of ISDN
subscribers using 4 wire terminals it is achieved by specifying
terminals with an echo return loss of greater than 40dB. If delay
in a VoMPLS network can be controlled, and the delay through the
system can be limited to 25 ms, then echo cancellation may not be
required in all equipment. It is desirable, therefore, that MPLS
systems be capable of creating an LSP with controlled delay.
B.1.2.2 Echo Control by Deploying Echo Cancellers
Where either the one way delay between talker and listener exceeds
25ms, or, for one way delays below 25ms, the TELR does not meet
the requirements of ITU G.131 figure 1, then echo cancellers
complying with ITU G.165/G.168 are required.
The end-to-end delay consists of the processing delays in network
elements and the speed of light delay.
Typically legacy TDM networks are designed so, that when it is
known that the origination and termination ends are close enough
to each other (less than 25ms delay), no echo cancellation is
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deployed. This is the case for domestic calls in many small
countries and for local calls in larger countries.
Echo cancellers are deployed as half cancellers so that each unit
only cancels echo in one direction. Each unit should be fitted as
close to the point of echo as possible in order to reduce the tail
length over which it must operate. The tail length is the round
trip delay from the echo canceller to the point of echo plus an
allowance for dispersion of the echo; such allowance would
typically be 10ms.
Echo Cancellers will typically be located in Media Gateway devices
under the control of a Call Agent. Call processing in the Call
Agent may analyze service type and accumulated delay to determine
if activation of echo cancellation is appropriate for the call in
question.
B.1.2.3 Network Architecture implications
There are two main mechanisms which introduce echo in the PSTN,
namely the 2-wire to 4-wire hybrid at the local exchange, and,
with a lesser impact, the users telephone terminal. Where the PSTN
extends 4-wire to the users terminal, i.e. ISDN, then echo due to
the hybrid is eliminated, and that due to the terminal itself is
controlled by specifying such digital terminals to have a TELR
better than 40 dB. Where a 4-wire circuit taken to the customers
premises is converted to 2-wire so that standard terminals may be
used, then the hybrid has been moved from the local exchange to
the line terminating equipment on the users premises and the
situation as regards echo is essentially the same as for the
normal PSTN.
PSTN networks typically have rules which determine when the
network deploys echo cancellation equipment. Voice over packet
networks typically have greater delay (due to packetization and
other buffering mechanisms) than the equivalent PSTN equipment.
Echo cancellation in packet networks which interface to the PSTN
may have to employ additional echo cancellation equipment to
compensate.
The impact of a packetised form of transport to the user would
depend upon whether this terminated on a 4-wire ’audio' unit or
was converted to 2-wire and a standard terminal used.
If a standard terminal is used, then the hybrid in the terminating
equipment should be designed to produce a TELR of at least the 33
dB encountered in the PSTN, remembering that the 2-wire line will
be of very short length and that the 6dB loss which the PSTN
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introduces to increase the TELR must be accommodated (i.e. it must
either be present or the hybrid performance must be further
increased by this amount).
Termination by a 4-wire ’audio' unit would depend upon the echo
performance of this unit. If it is a 4-wire terminal designed for
ISDN, then there should be no significant echo. (This arrangement
is analogous to GSM mobile networks which do not use any form of
echo cancellation device to protect users on the fixed network
from echo even though the mobile network has added 100-150ms
additional delay. They do however include half echo cancellers at
the point of interconnect to the PSTN to protect the mobile user
from echo produced by the PSTN).
If however the audio unit was a speaker and microphone connected
to a personal computer, then the TELR is uncontrollable because
there is no control of the special positioning of the speakers and
microphone, or the acoustics of the room, and it would become
mandatory that provision be made locally for the control of echo
(as it is with loudspeaker telephones).
It should be noted that echo cancellation must be performed at a
TDM point, i.e. it cannot be performed within the packetised
domain and that there must be no suppression of silent periods in
the path to and from the echo canceller to the source of the echo
because such an arrangement produces a discontinuous echo function
and the echo canceller would be unable to converge.
B.1.3 End-to-end Delay and Delay Variation
A key component of the overall voice quality experienced by the
user is the end-to-end delay. As a guideline the ITU [G.114]
specifies that wherever possible, the one-way transmission delay
for an international reference connection should be limited to 150
ms. It is important to stress that the international delay budget
is under pressure and that the 150 ms target is already broken if,
for example, satellite links or cellular access systems are
deployed.
In a packet based network the end-to-end delay is made up of fixed
and variable delays; the fixed delays include packetisation delay
and the transmission delay whilst the variable delay is imposed by
statistical multiplexing (and hence queuing) at each (MPLS)
router. For voice and other real-time media the variable delay
must be filtered at the receiving terminal by an appropriate
jitter buffer to reconstitute the original constant rate stream.
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Effectively this process imposes an additional connection delay
equal to the maximum packet delay variation (i.e. this fixed delay
is set by the 'worst' statistical delay irrespective of its rate
of occurrence).
Thus packet delay variation should be minimised within the VoMPLS
network to minimise the overall one way delay as well as reducing
costs in the end-equipment by reducing the memory requirements for
the jitter buffer. It is desirable that the MPLS network be able
to create an LSP with a controlled delay variation.
B.1.4 Packet Loss Ratio
Packet loss is a key voice impairment factor.
For voice-band connections ITU-T G.821 specifies overall
requirements for error performance in terms of errored seconds and
severely errored seconds. Under this definition, for the majority
of voice encoding schemes the loss of a single VoMPLS packet will
cause at least a single severely errored second. ITU-T G.821
specifies an end to end SES requirement of 1 in 10^-3 - this
requirement is predominately driven by the demands of voice-band
data (fax, modem). Speech impairment in packetized voice networks,
on the other hand, can be unnoticeable with fairly high packet
loss (as high as 5% in some cases). The relationship between SES
and packet loss is not well known.
In networks where it is important to pass voice, modem and/or fax
data without degradation, techniques such as controlling packet
loss may be employed. Alternatively demodulation, data pass
through and remodulation of fax/modem calls may be employed to
achieve such a goal.
B.1.5 Timing Accuracy
When determining the timing accuracy for VoMPLS domains the
following types of traffic must be considered: speech, voice band
data, and circuit mode data.
All speech traffic is obtained by the equivalent of sampling the
analogue speech signal at a nominal 8 kHz and generating linear
PCM. This can be companded to 64 kbit/s in accordance with ITU-T
G.711, or it can be compressed to a lower bit rate either on a
sample-by-sample basis (e.g. ADPCM G.726/7) or on a multiple
sample basis to produce packets (e.g. various forms of CELP).
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Voice band data traffic is obtained by sampling the analogue modem
signal, i.e. low rate data modulated onto defined frequency
carrier signals, in the same way as for speech and companding to
64 kbit/s using G.711. Except for very low data rates compression
is not possible.
In all cases, provided the traffic could be carried by the VoMPLS
packet network directly from encoder to decoder, AND the decoder
could work on the sample rate determined from the received
traffic, then the encoder would only need to have a frequency
tolerance sufficient to achieve the required analogue frequency
response and to constrain the traffic data bandwidth; thus the
VoMPLS packet network would have no particular frequency tolerance
requirements. (Packet jitter including delay variation would still
have to be constrained within buffer sizes, and measures such as
sequence numbers would still be needed to maintain accurate
determination of the transmitter sample rate under circumstances
of packet loss.)
All legacy voice equipment, however, will have been designed
assuming a synchronous TDM network; so decoders may typically be
designed to use a sample rate derived from the locally available
network clock. Furthermore, the packet network will have to
interwork for the foreseeable future with the existing synchronous
TDM network. The principle characteristic of this existing network
is that all basic rate 64 kbit/s signals are timed by the network
clock, and thus multiplexing into primary rate signals E1, DS1, or
J2 has been defined in ITU-T G.704 to be SYNCHRONOUS. The
interface to the interworking equipment will in general be the in-
station form of these primary rate signals or possibly the primary
rate signals multiplexed into PDH or SDH higher order multiplex
signals.
Primary rate signals must be within the tolerances defined in ITU-
T G.703, e.g. +/-50ppm for E1, to permit them to be carried in the
PDH or SDH transport networks. These tolerances allow transport
networks to carry primary rate signals from different networks
timed by different network clocks, e.g. private networks as well
as public networks between which there my be little or no service
interworking. The result of interworking between networks at the
extremes of these tolerances is frequent slips in which octets of
each basic rate 64 kbit/s channel are dropped or alternatively
repeated to compensate for the rate difference.
For example the consequences of 50ppm offset = 1 slip every 2.5
seconds are:
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-0- G.711 speech - loss/gain of 1 sample, a barely audible
click,
-0- G.726/727 ADPCM - as for G.711 speech,
-0- for packet based speech codecs G.723, 728, 729 - packet
error, i.e. multiple sample loss, more annoying click;
-0- voice band data - a slip produces a 125 us phase shift
for modems up to 2.4 kbit/s - probably tolerated without
error for modems above 2.4 kbit/s - error burst each slip
probably leading to loss of synchronization and resultant
retraining: result is intermittent transmission, down
speeding if possible, or complete failure;
-0- circuit mode data - packet loss ratio dependent of client
layer packet size, e.g. 1 in 20 for packet size of 1000
bytes.
To permit satisfactory interworking without the above impairments,
the slip rate should be constrained within the limits set out in
ITU-T G.822. This could be possible by timing the packet network
interworking equipment in the same way as existing synchronous TDM
network equipment, that is in a synchronization network where
timing is traceable to a primary reference clock (PRC) of which
the accuracy is in accordance with ITU-T G.811.
Within the same synchronization domain, where all equipment
derives its timing from the same PRC, except under fault
conditions the slip rate will be zero. When traversing boundaries
between domains of different PRCs the operation will be
plesiochronous: the accuracy of 10exp-11 of each PRC will ensure
the slip rate is within the normal limit in G.822 of 1 slip per
5.8 days over a 27000 km hypothetical reference link consisting of
13 nodes.
Some MPLS networks may not be designed to achieve synchronous
timing, and thus slip buffers are required in such networks, and
compression choices may be influenced by the lack of
synchronization in the network.
B.1.6 Grade-of-service
In traditional circuit switched networks a clear distinction can
be drawn between Grade of Service and Quality of Service. Grade of
Service defines blocking probabilities for new connections (and
behaviour rules under network overload conditions) so that a
network can be dimensioned to achieve an expected behaviour.
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Quality of Service defines the voice intelligibility requirements
for established connections; namely delay (and jitter), error
rates, and voice call defects. It is important that both GoS and
QoS are addressed equally when determining the architectural
framework for VoMPLS networks.
Much of the work so far undertaken on traffic engineering within
IP networks has focussed on the development of QoS mechanisms.
Whilst such mechanisms will ensure the intelligibility of
established voice connections without an equivalent GoS framework
no guarantees can be made to the blocking rate experienced during
busy network periods. At the limit this may severely impact users'
future willingness to use the network.
Equally if one merely dimensions the network according to GoS
requirements without providing explicit QoS mechanisms then any
QoS 'guarantees' are only probabilistic and there remains the
possibility of significant packet loss rate at localised
congestion points within the network. In a statistically
multiplexed network when such congestion occurs it will typically
impact other connections traversing the congested routers and is
not simply confined to those additional connections that caused
the overload condition.
Generally GoS is defined on a per service basis either through
international specification or via peer agreements between network
operators.
Packet networks differ from the PSTN however in that they are
designed to support multiple services. It is a requirement that
per-service GoS can be provided despite the diverse traffic
characteristics of (potentially competing) multiple alternate
services. This implies that the network operator may need to be
able to isolate (or control the allocation of) key resources
within the network on a per-service basis. For example an operator
could use multiple LSPs between two points in order to enable
trunk provisioning and per-service dimensioning.
B.1.7 Quality considerations pertaining to Session Management
There are a number of additional quality factors that users take
for granted in today's circuit switched network. It is reasonable
to anticipate that similar requirements should be placed onto some
VoMPLS networks so that from a service perspective equivalent
performance is maintained, where that is deemed necessary. These
factors include:
Session Setup Delay (sometimes referred to as "post dial delay")
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Session Availability - This refers to the ability (or in-
ability) of the network to establish sessions due to outage
events (nodal, sub-network or network).
Session Defects - This refers to defects that occur to
individual (or groups) of sessions. The defects may be caused by
transient errors occurring within the network or may be due to
architectural defects. Examples of session defects include:
- misrouted sessions
- dropped sessions
- failure to maintain adequate billing records
- alerting the end-user prior to establishing a connection
and then not being able to establish a connection
- clipping the initial conversation (defined by the post
pickup delay)
- enabling theft of service by other users
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