This invention relates generally to transferring voice and data over Internet systems and more particularly to an asymmetric Digital Simultaneous Voice/Data system that facilitates transmission of voice and data to different endpoints.
Many home users have only one phone line, and hence use Digital Simultaneous Voice/Data (DSVD) modems to simultaneously transfer voice and data at the same time over a common communication channel. DSVD modems conforming to a V.34 standard are beginning to become available at low cost and are expected to be ubiquitous in new consumer-oriented personal computers. PC hardware and software companies expect to significantly reduce support costs by providing concurrent voice and data access for help desks and support organizations.
Conventional DSVD operates as an “end-to-end” system. In an end-to-end system, a communication channel, such as through a Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS) telephone call, directly connects two endpoints at the physical channel level. End-to-end systems differ from “access” systems where the communication channel connects to a packet switched network such as the Internet.
Referring to
The implementation of the DSVD modems 18 and 24 are symmetric meaning the voice data is encoded, compressed, and multiplexed with the computer character data for transmission at one end. The voice and character data is then de-multiplexed, decompressed, and decoded at the other end in a reverse manner. Such a scheme leads to a number of serious limitations on how DSVD may be employed.
In order to support both voice and data, symmetric DSVD requires a DSVD modem at both ends of the transmission channel. If one user has a DSVD modem and the other user only has a conventional modem used in conjunction with PC-based packet voice software, the two users cannot transmit voice data. Another substantial limitation is that DSVD systems are only capable of one physical channel switched connection at a time. Thus, in DSVD systems, the voice and data must always terminate at the same endpoint.
Consumers of the voice and data may not be at the same endpoint. For example, voice may be sent to a service representative for catalog company “A” while the data may be sent to a World Wide Web (WWW) site for company “B” to search for alternative pricing information. Other operations may also be performed on the transmitted voice stream, such as recording conversations, performing voice recognition, etc. However, the analog voice signal output from the DSVD modem cannot be directly processed in a digital signal processing environment. The analog voice signal would require reencoding back into a digital data format. Reencoding voice signals require additional time and signal processing circuitry. The quality of the voice signal also degrades each time the voice signal is encoded and decoded between an analog signal and digital data.
Accordingly, a need remains for a system that is more effective in transmitting and receiving voice and data to and from different network endpoints over the same communication channel.
Voice and data is transmitted over a public telephone line in a standard DSVD data format and then formatted into data packets. Because the voice is not decoded back into an analog voice signal, the voice and data stream output from a modified DSVD modem is interfaced directly to a network access server. The network access server is coupled to a network access system, such as Internet, for routing the voice and data packets to different endpoints. The endpoints comprise different computer and telephone systems. The telephone system receives voice packets from the access server through a separate telephony gateway.
The modified DSVD modem includes a packet framer that removes a conventional DSVD framing format data stream and stuffs bytes into the voice and data forming IP packets. The network access server then routes the voice and data packets to the different endpoints identified in a packet header. Since the voice and data are output from the DSVD modem as data packets, the voice and data can be routed more effectively using the data network to different endpoints.
When transmitting data to a conventional DSVD modem, byte stuff framing is removed from the voice and data packets. The packets are then segmented and interleaved together. DSVD framing is added to the interleaved segments forming a data stream that is transmitted via a V.34 modem over a telephone line to another DSVD modem. Because the data stream is always transmitted and received in a standard modem framing format, the system operates either with conventional DSVD modems or with the modified DSVD system described above.
The voice signal is no longer decoded or transcoded by the modified DSVD modem or the access server. Thus, the system overcomes limitations with conventional DSVD modems that require voice and data to terminate at the same endpoint. Voice quality is also improved since the voice signals do not require reencoding before retransmission. The improved DSVD system requires less circuitry than current DSVD modems and is, therefore, less expensive to manufacture. Cost savings multiply as the number of lines processed by an access server increases.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become more readily apparent from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention which proceeds with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
The network system 46 represents any standard packet switched network system. For example, the access system 46 represents a Local Area Network (LAN) or a Wide Area Network (WAN) 44 such as Ethernet, FDDI, T1/E1, T3/E3, ISDN PRI, or ATM. The access server 44 in one embodiment is a standard packet based router system such router Model No. AS50100 manufactured by Cisco Systems, 170 West Tasman Dr., San Jose, Calif. 95134-1706.
Telephony gateway 48, in one embodiment is a PC based telephony server which is commercially available from MICOM Communications Corp., 4100 Los Angeles Ave. Simi Valley, Calif. 93063. The telephony gateway includes a G.729 codec that decodes voice packets into analog voice data and dial-up circuitry for calling the telephone 26. Alternatively, the telephony gateway 48 uses a conventional DSVD modem 18 which includes a V.34 codec for converting the voice packets into analog voice signals. The host computer 28 represents any computer system that receives and transmits network data packets.
At the dial-up side of the DSVD transmission, electrical voice signals are generated by telephone 14 and digital data characters are generated by PC 16. The voice signals are converted into digital frames by the codec 32 (
The multiplexed voice and data stream transmitted by DSVD modem 18 is formatted into separate voice and data packets by modified DSVD modem 42. Of significant interest is the way in which the voice signal is maintained as digital data. Because the voice data is not converted back to an analog voice signal, both the digital character data from the PC 16 and the voice data from telephone 14 can be interfaced directly to access server 44 and then routed to different endpoints.
The voice packets in one embodiment are transferred to a telephony gateway 48 using an Internet protocol (IP). The IP address of telephony gateway 48 is contained in a destination address in a packet header constructed by the access server 44. The telephony gateway converts the voice packets into analog voice signals that are sent to telephone 26. Data packets are sent using the Internet protocol. The IP data packets include an associated IP destination address in a packet header. Access server 44 routes the data packets to the host computer 28 according to the IP destination address.
The destination addresses for the telephony gateway 48 and the host computer 28 are originally designated according to the phone number dialed up by telephone 14 and the IP addresses input via PC 16. For example, a user at PC 16 enters a web page address that corresponds with host computer 28.
The web page address is sent along with other character and voice data to modem 42. The web page address is formatted into a data packet header. The access server 44 uses the address to route the packet to host computer 28. The user dials the phone number of telephone 26 with telephone 14. The phone number is used to establish an end-to-end connection between DSVD modem 18 and modified DSVD modem 42. Access server 44 then converts the telephone number into an IP address associated with telephony gateway 48. Alternatively, the PC 16 is used to select the phone number for DSVD modem 42 and destination addresses for the different voice and data endpoints.
While shown as two separate boxes in
Referring to
The UART 50, V.34 Modem 54, and DAA 56 are the same components used in conventional DSVD modems. The DAA 56 provides isolation between circuitry coupled to the public phone network and is well known to those skilled in the art. The telephony interface 30 and G.729a CODEC 32 previously shown in
Referring to
The framer/interleaver 52 in block 66 accumulates the bytes for each voice and data packet and removes the byte-stuff framing of the network packet formatting. A segmenting block 68 breaks up each received data packet if longer than a given threshold size. The threshold data size is configurable through an interface on the DSVD modem 42 (not shown). If a packet does not require segmentation, it is sent directly to an interleaver 70. If the packet requires segmentation, the first segment is sent to the interleaver 70 and the rest of the packet is reframed and sent to a segment buffer 72.
The interleaver 70 accepts the next frame from the segment block 68 and if no segments exist in the segment buffer 72, sends the frame to a V.76 framer 74. If there are segmented frames in the segment buffer 72, after sending the next frame to the framer 74, the interleaver 70 sends one segment from the buffer 72 to the V.76 framer before accepting another voice frame from the segmenter 68. This interleaves voice frames between the segments of data frames in a manner compatible with the segmentation scheme of the V.76 modem standard. The V.76 framer 70 performs the framing operations required to produce a V.76 compliant data stream compatible with the V.34 modem 54.
Voice and data received over the PSTN 20 from a standard DSVD modem are processed by the framer and interleaver 52 in the following manner. Frames are transmitted in a multiplexed data stream 77 and received through the V.34 modem 18 in a V.76 framing format (FIG. 1). The V.76 multiplexed framing is removed from the data stream in block 78. The voice and data is converted in block 76 by byte-stuffing the data into HDLC packets for transmission over network system 46. The DLCI field in a frame header 63 is set to zero for data packets 62 and set to one for voice packets 64. The packets are then output to the UART 50 byte-by-byte.
The invention is particularly attractive for servers employing internal banks of V.34 modems since little or no additional hardware is required to process the voice along with the other data. The invention also interfaces well with Voiceover-IP (VOIP) products which provide capabilities such as the telephony gateway 48 that carry the voice end-to-end over a packet switched network interfacing to standard telephone extensions, PBXs and the PSTN 20.
Performance of access servers is enhanced by offloading voice coding and compression to the DSVD modem attached to the user's computer. The feature set of the access servers is expanded by providing an attractive way of accessing the network through DSVD modems. The cost of sending voice through access servers is considerably decreased since the expense of DSPs to process the voice is eliminated for those channels handling DSVD. Voice quality is also improved because the voice signal does not have to be reencoded after the voice decoding preformed by conventional DSVD modems.
Having described and illustrated the principles of the invention in a preferred embodiment thereof, it should be apparent that the invention can be modified in arrangement and detail without departing from such principles. I claim all modifications and variation coming within the spirit and scope of the following claims.
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