This invention relates to computer telephone integration (CTI) and, more specifically, to an improved method and apparatus for utilizing CTI techniques to process telephone calls using various applications in a packet switched telephone network.
Telephony over packet networks, particularly over wide area networks such as the Internet, has received considerable attention in recent months. Specifically, scientists have begun exploring the possibility of sending voice and video information streams over packet switched data networks. The transmission of such information streams over packet switched networks can be more cost efficient than traditional telephony, which requires a dedicated circuit between the calling and called party.
Computer telephone integration has been widely applied to traditional telephony methods and apparatus, but has not as yet been successfully applied to the methods and apparatus used for packet network telephony. This invention specifies novel apparatus and methods, supplementary to known packet network telephony apparatus and methods, which enable CTI capabilities in such an environment, and use them to process telephone calls.
One possible set of methods and apparatus for completing calls over a packet switched network, which calls can handle voice and other information streams, is defined by ITU recommendation H.323. The H.323 standard is available from the International Telecommunication Union, of Geneva, Switzerland, and is hereby incorporated herein by this reference. The H.323 standard defines various protocols dealing with call control, call setup, call termination, and other similar techniques known to those in the packet network telephony art.
The H.323 standard defines a functional entity called a gatekeeper. The gatekeeper handles network functions such as bandwidth control, zone management, address translation, and admissions control for a designated set of network terminals. While all these functions are further defined in the previously incorporated standard, we set forth two examples below.
Bandwidth control provides a protocol by which the gatekeeper allocates a particular amount of network bandwidth to a particular connection. The gatekeeper can be contacted by either the calling or called party in order to change the amount of bandwidth allocated to a particular call.
As another example, the gatekeeper performs zone management. This function, as further defined in the H.323 standard, provides a mechanism for allocating sets of different terminals and other nodes in the network to a particular gateway. The H.323 standard provides a mechanism for dynamically altering the allocation of different network nodes to different gatekeepers.
The gatekeeper function provides services analogous to the call processing function within a private branch exchange (PBX) in conventional telephony. In traditional telephony, CTI features are provided by creating an interface between external application software and the call processing function within the PBX. By contrast, in the known packet network telephony art, interfaces to the gatekeeper are only defined from other gatekeepers, end points, and other network entities.
The above and other problems of the prior art are overcome and a technical advance is achieved in accordance with the present invention which relates to a packet network telephony call controller (e.g.; an H.323 gatekeeper) which is arranged to interface with a plurality of external call processing applications programs which may be located on one or more remote computers. In accordance with the teachings of the present invention, a call processing application computer is connected to a call controller computer, via a data network or otherwise, and these two entities exchange messages in the manner specified by the invention. The call controller computer may be located with one of the terminals or may be located on a separate computer.
As well, the processing application computer may be located with the call controller computer, or remote from it.
The call controller computer and applications computer(s) communicate with one another in order to perform various call control and other call processing application functions over the data network and to provide call information and control to a user of the applications computer. As packet switched telephone connections are set up between various terminals or other nodes, the call controller communicates with one or more application computers in order to provide the call information and call control functions required by the computer telephony applications residing on the application computers. Examples of these functions include establishing and tearing down calls, transferring calls, call conferencing, associating the applications computer with one or more specific end points in the call controller zone for monitoring and control, determining the state of calls at a given endpoint, determining the length of calls in progress at a given endpoint, determining the words exchanged in calls in progress at a given endpoint, determining the originating IP address of calls in progress at a given endpoint, routing unanswered new calls terminating at a given endpoint to another to another endpoint, and various other functions.
For illustrative purposes, the invention will be described using systems based upon the H.323 standard as an example. It is understood that the invention is intended to cover any and all other protocols, now known or to be known in the art, which address packet telephony, such as, for example, ITU H.248, also known as MEGACO, Session Initiation Protocol (“SIP”), and Media Gateway Control Protocl (“MGCP”). These protocols describe equivalent modules which are responsible for call setup, and are thus functionally equivalent, within the context of the invention, to the gatekeeper of H.323. The names of these modules, of course, vary with the given protocol. For example, in SIP the gatekeeper functionality is accomplished by what is termed a “proxy”, in MEGACO by a “Media Gateway Controller”, and in MGCP by a “softswitch.” Like the Shakespearean rose, a gatekeeper by any other name is just as sweet.
The arrangement of
The arrangement of
In operation, a command is issued from an applications computer 103 requesting certain telephony services which will be described below. The message requesting such a service is transmitted through path 105 to gatekeeper computer 102 for processing. The message sent to gatekeeper 102 causes gatekeeper 102 to exchange appropriate signaling messages with other packet network telephony environment nodes in a manner as described, for example, in the incorporated H.323 standard. As a result of this sequence of events, the combined system is able to implement the call processing functionality requested by applications computer 103 on behalf of applications 104.
During operation, various call control functions requested by applications computer 103 are performed by the gatekeeper 102. Additionally, by making appropriate requests of gatekeeper 102, applications computer 103 may monitor the outcome of various call control functions and transmit such outcome to any of applications 104.
In operation, the call initially proceeds according to the methods of the packet network telephony environment. A bandwidth request message 205 is sent to gatekeeper 203 and bandwidth is granted by the gatekeeper at message 206. A call setup request, message 207, is issued by the initiating end point 204, and gatekeeper 203 causes call setup request message 208 to be transmitted to receiving end point 202. A call proceeding message 209 is transmitted by the receiving end point back to gatekeeper 203 and relayed to initiating end point 210 as shown.
At approximately the same time gatekeeper 203 relays the call proceeding indication to the initiating end point using message 210, gatekeeper 203 also transmits to external application 201 a notification that an inbound call is being received by the receiving end point 202. Gatekeeper 203 sends this message because external application 201 has previously indicated that it requires notification of telephony events occurring at receiving end point 202.
In order to connect the inbound call, receiving end point 202 requires network bandwidth, and such bandwidth is requested from and allocated by the gatekeeper 203 using messages 212 and 213. Next, the terminal at monitored end point 202 rings to alert the user to the arriving call, and an indication of such ringing is transmitted through messages 214 and 215 to initiating end point 204 through the gatekeeper 203. When the call is connected at the receiving end point 202 because of user action, end point 202 informs gatekeeper 203 via message 216.
At this point, gatekeeper 203 sends an answer notification to the external application 201 via message 217.
At approximately the same time, gatekeeper 203 indicates to the initiating end point 204 that the requested call has been connected via message 218.
In accordance with the protocol described hereinbefore, the detection of the call by an external application is accomplished via a protocol of messages transmitted between the gatekeeper and the end points to be connected, as well as between the gatekeeper 203 and the external application 201, thus enabling gatekeeper 203 to inform external application 201 regarding the progress of relevant calls in the packet telephony network.
In
The sequence of messages begins with a new message 301, specified by the current invention, through which the external application 392 makes a request that the first segment of the call be established from gatekeeper 388 to initiating end point 386.
Next, according to known packet network telephony art, messages 302 and 303 are exchanged between gatekeeper and initiating end point 386 in order to set up that first leg of the call.
Next, the gatekeeper 388 sends a new message 304 to external application 392 to alert it that the call request has been received and is being processed. Much of the remaining signaling, relating to the establishment of that segment of the call between initiating end point 386 and gatekeeper 388 in
However, during the process depicted in
The processing application computers (AC) 430 are connected to the gatekeeper computer (GK) 410 in a variety of ways, some of which are shown as examples in
One or more ACs 430 can be connected to the GK 410 via a LAN 473, a generic data network 472, or via interprocess software communication 471, where both the GK and AC are software modules on the same physical computing device, shown via the dotted line box 490 drawn around these components connected via the interprocess software communication 471.
Alternatively, the AC 4301 and GK 410 can be themselves connected via the Internet 450, or other computer communications network. Or, the GK 410 could write to a file, stored, and then itself transmitted to an AC 430, via a variety of data transmission channels, as described above, or as is otherwise known in the art.
The ACs 430, communicating with the GK in an analogous fashion as described above, can implement, via a variety of applications programs, applications and services such as voice recognition of the words exchanged in the call, rerouting the call if unanswered after a determined number of rings, measurement of the length of the call, and storing the word content of calls as determined by the above described voice recognizer and writing such content to a file for analysis by another program, to list a few. As described above these applications are usually implemented in software, but could be implemented, wholly or partially, in dedicated hardware as well, especially in complex applications requiring a lot of processing.
The method of the invention relates to software functional modules, and holds constant no matter what the physical arrangement of those modules might be. For example, two modules as described above (for example, the Application Computer and the Gatekeeper) might reside on separate computing systems or may reside on a common system; they nonetheless remain separate modules and communicate with each other in a similar fashion. Thus, the invention is intended to include any such rearrangement of software modules on a convenient set of computing systems.
The communication methods described above are as well intended to includea wide variety of possible implementations. Thus, for example, two modules residing in a common computing system will exchange messages, but may not do so over a physical “data network” in the sense of signals travelling over external wires.
There are various methods by which an application (running on the application system) actually requests the services available over the CSTA-like link (CSTA being the standard abbreviation for Computer Supported Telecommunication Applications). One common method is to provide a standard software library on the application machine that offers a telephony Application Programming Interface (“API”) to the application program. Within the context of the invention, this API can be any API that includes call-control functions. Two such APIs known to the industry are, for example, Microsoft's TAPI (“Telephony API”) and Sun's JTAPI (“Java Telephony API”). The APIs are used to provide convenient access by the application program to the services delivered by the invention.
There are many possible applications that could make use of the capabilities of the invention. These applications are well known and for the sake of brevity will not be exhaustively described herein. Some of the more likely applications are the following:
Call Routing. When a request to handle an incoming call is presented to the call controller (or “gatekeeper” in H.323 parlance), the gatekeeper sends a message to the application requesting routing instructions. The application uses any convenient business logic to decide how the call should be routed, and responds to the gatekeeper with appropriate instructions. The gatekeeper then routes the call to a destination based on those instructions. Several examples of such business logic would include, as examples, follow me services, load balancing, skill based routing, screen pop, universal queueing and unified messaging, each of which is summarily described in what follows.
Follow-me services. A telephone subscriber leaves forwarding instructions with the application specifying the telephone endpoint or series of endpoints to which calls should be forwarded, and optionally some rules that govern that forwarding. For example, “calls arriving between certain times of day should be forwarded to this number”; or “I am in my car now; send all calls to my cell phone”, or “Forward all calls to my voicemail except calls from my boss and my children”.
Load balancing. When a call is made to an enterprise and it is determined that any of several individuals, offices or work groups could handle such a call (for example, a call to a customer service number), the application can choose which individual, work group or office should receive to call based on its assessment of the current workload at each potential destination.
Skill-based routing. When a call is made to an enterprise and it is determined that any of several individuals, offices or work groups could handle such a call (for example, a call to a customer service number), the application can choose which individual, work group or office should receive the call based on its assessment of the capabilities required by the caller (for example, knowledge of a particular product or account type, or ability to speak a certain language).
Screen pop. When a call is directed to a particular endpoint, the gatekeeper simultaneously alerts the application so that the application can retrieve business information corresponding to the call (for example, customer or account information) and display it for the user at that endpoint.
Universal Queueing. When an application manages multiple forms of communications for a user (for example, traditional or packet telephone calls, electronic mail messages, facsimile documents, communication requests from parties viewing web pages, text chat sessions) by sequencing those communications so that they are served in an equitable and/or efficient fashion, that application can use the invention to acquire the necessary information about packet telephony calls and to direct the holding and release of such calls as may be required to implement the desired sequencing.
Unified Messaging. When an application manages multiple forms of store-and-forward communications for a user (for example, electronic mail messages, voice mail messages, facsimile documents) by storing these communications, presenting an inventory of those communications to the user, and presenting specific selected messages to the user as directed by that user, that application can use the invention to create packet telephony connections between the message repository and the user for the purposes of presenting said inventory to the user, allowing the user to give said direction, and presenting the selected messages.
The above describes the preferred embodiments of the invention. It will be appreciated however that various other modifications or additions will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art.
This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/955,834, filed on Oct. 21, 1997.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11476425 | Jun 2006 | US |
Child | 13449609 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 08955834 | Oct 1997 | US |
Child | 11476425 | US |