The invention relates to a method for transmitting signalling information via a network limiting element, which connects a packet-switched communications network and a circuit-switched communications network.
In conventional telecommunications networks speech information has previously predominantly been transferred according to a switching principle in which a continuous channel is switched for the entire duration of the connection. All data transmitted during the connection takes the same path and always arrives at the receiver in the sequence in which it was brought onto the path.
In packet-oriented data networks, such as the internet, the data is sent through the network broken down into portions, rather than physical channels being permanently through-switched for the duration of a connection.
Communication connections via the internet, in which real-time data, such as speech or video information, is transmitted, largely function according to the same pattern. The real-time information is digitised, compressed and forwarded to its destination in the form of data packets via active network connection nodes—the routers—according to specific rules. To establish a connection the selected call number must be converted in advance into an IP address. The IP address appears as destination information in the message header of the data packet. The connection-oriented character of the message transfer is only discernible in higher network layers, for example of the TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) or SCTP (Stream Control Transmission Protocol) because viewed at the lowermost IP level there is no connection between the connection points. The individual data packets are directed by the sender into the network without them being made aware of whether, when and how these data packets have reached the receiver. In the terminal equipment the speech information is removed from the data packets and made audible again by codec (compression/decompression).
With a Voice over IP connection (VoIP), network limiting elements, for example gateways, form a transmission interface for the connection between IP world and public operator network (PSTN). The central function of these network limiting elements is the conversion of the different data formats used in an inter-network connection during transport, sequential control and audio/video processing. In the inter-network connection the gateways provide for the establishment and dismantling of connections and take on packing into data packets as well as the compression process. The signalling information, which is necessary to establish and dismantle connections, is transmitted via these network limiting elements in addition to the payload. As a result of signalling information a conference call for example may be established or a third call may be displayed during a call (call waiting) or further features may be provided for use by the communication users.
As in conventional telecommunications networks “Voice or Communication over IP” connections are guided by network elements in which central functional units are duplicated for safety reasons. In the event of a fault a changeover can therefore be made to the functional unit that is held in readiness.
With Voice over DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) what are known as access gateways (AGW) are used as remote gateways to connect from 1,000 to 50,000 analogue and ISDN telephones. An access gateway comprises interfaces that are situated toward the data network and have redundant connection units. An access gateway is controlled via control channels, which are connected to the connecting units of the interfaces, by a Packet Control Unit (PCU) of the packet-switching network. On the circuit-switched side of the communications network an access gateway completes the ISDN protocol.
With a changeover to a redundant connection unit, whether this changeover is triggered in the event of a fault of by manual reconfiguration, the problem of protocol-internal signalling data, such as the “Transmission Control Block” not being known occurs and the connection has to be re-established. The consequence of this is that all signalling messages are automatically lost until the corresponding connection is re-established. The signalling protocols currently used at the interface to the packet-switched network have the drawback that they take a long time to recognise the non-existence of this connection, however. The situation may occur therefore that signalling is interrupted for up to a minute and as a consequence it is only then that a connected ISDN user for example can set up or disconnect a call.
An object underlying the present invention is to disclose a method for transmitting signalling information via a network limiting element in such a way that the loss of signalling information on a changeover to a redundant connection is as low as possible.
This object is achieved by the features of the independent claim. The dependent claims make reference to advantageous embodiments of the invention.
According to the invention it is provided that in the connection to the data network a state transmission is carried out between a message-oriented channel and a connection-oriented control channel, so the connection-oriented control channel is controlled by the message-oriented channel. Consequently the time for re-establishing a connection following a changeover is considerably reduced. The interruption to service between connected ISDN communication users can consequently usually be reduced to less than 1 s and is scarcely noticed by the communication users.
By contrast a changeover from an operating access gateway interface (AGW-IF) to a redundant access gateway interface in systems according to the prior art lasts up to two minutes. The service interruption that accompanies this changeover (IP failover) is regarded by connected ISDN communication users as being very disruptive. Furthermore financial disadvantages accrue for the network operator: if for example the failure of the SCTP/IUA connection in the case of an IP failover of an AGW-IF with up to 10,000 users lasts 1 min according to conventional technology, the operator may lose
2 calls/sec (per 1,000 users)*10*60 sec=1,200 calls
as a result which it cannot switch and therefore cannot charge for (1,000 users/connection group). Should every fifth AGW-IF of a large AGW with up to 50,000 users accordingly carry out an IP failover, the number of lost calls may increase fivefold:
2 calls/sec (per 1,000 users)*50*60 sec=6,000 calls.
With the invention however failure of the SCTP/IUA connection is limited to 1 sec and this ensures that no calls are lost since all signalling timers are greater than one second.
The state transmission according to the invention is advantageously triggered at the same time as initiation of the changeover in the access gateway (AGW).
In a preferred embodiment of the invention it is provided that the changeover in the access gateway triggers generation of what is referred to as the “Service Change: Failover” message which is transmitted from the access gateway to the Packet Control Unit (abbreviated: PCU). The interruption to the SCTP/IUA connections may be reduced to less than a second by the termination being signalled immediately and the previously conventional recognition time ceasing to apply.
It is advantageous if the MGCP protocol is used in the message-oriented control channel and the SCTP protocol in the connection-oriented control channel to transmit signalling information.
A particularly preferred embodiment of the method is characterised in that the packet control unit has a maintenance functional unit (Mnt) and an adaptation functional unit (IUA). The signalling message is transmitted to the maintenance functional unit by message-oriented signalling. After receiving the signalling message receipt is announced in the maintenance functional unit to the adaptation functional unit, so the adaptation functional unit can establish a signalling connection to the redundant connection unit via connection-oriented signalling.
The invention will be described by way of example hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Bidirectional signalling information is transmitted between the access gateway 3 and the control unit 7 for this purpose. Protocol MGCP is used on the message-oriented control channel 12 and SCTP on the connection-oriented control channel 12 as the signalling protocols.
If, as illustrated in the introduction, there is accordingly a changeover in the access gateway interface 8 to the redundant connection unit 11, according to the prior art it would take up to a minute, depending on the message traffic on the SCTP connection, for the connection-oriented protocol SCTP on the PCU 7 to determine failure of the previous SCTP/IUA connection (association) by means of an “align” message repeated several times. Only then could the protocol SCTP re-establish an association which would then be terminated at the active central voice processing unit (CVU0 in
As illustrated in the introduction, in the case of Voice over DSL (VoSDL) an access gateway (AGW) supplies up to 50,000 analogue/digital user connections. All access gateways, which are controlled by a packet control unit (PCU) are set up by way of their IP addresses as VoDSL partners. All service change messages of these IP addresses are therefore passed to VoDSL maintenance (a function in the network which checks the availability of users and in the event of non-availability optionally transmits messages to a higher-order monitoring element). The service change message: “failover” from an AGW accordingly indicates the IP failover thereof. VoDSL maintenance forwards this “service change: failover” message to the layer management of IUA by means of a process-internal communication. This then brings about immediate re-establishment of the relevant SCTP/IUA connection (association), although this is now terminated at the redundant CVU.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102004033648.2 | Jul 2004 | DE | national |
This application is the US National Stage of International Application No. PCT/EP/2005/052594, filed Jun. 7, 2005 and claims the benefit thereof. The International Application claims the benefits of German application No. 102004033648.2 DE filed Jul. 12, 2004, both of the applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/52594 | 6/7/2005 | WO | 1/10/2007 |