Solution Glossary
- 2/4-Wire Analog - 2-wire circuit:
A telephone line or trunk that has just one current loop (one pair- most
commonly FXS, FXO or E&M). 4-wire circuit: A circuit having two pairs,
TX and RX. Provides higher quality signal than two-wire circuit, most commonly
E&M. RAD voice interfaces can usually be ordered in any of these formats.
- AAL (ATM Adaptation Layer) - A
collection of standardized protocols that adapt user traffic to the cell
format. The AAL is subdivided into the Convergence Sublayer (CS) and the
Segmentation and Reassembly (SAR) sublayer. There are several types of
AALs to support the various AAL service classes: AAL1, AAL2, AAL3/4 and
AAL5.
- ABCD Bit Manipulation - The signaling
bits are used by telephone switches and PBXs for call answer and disconnect
supervision. Flexibility in manipulating these bits simplifies installation
and configuration when matching the voice system with the existing switches.
- ABR (Available Bit Rate) - One
of five ATM Forum-defined service categories. In this service type, the
network makes the best effort to pass the maximum number of cells but does
not guarantee cell delivery. Supports variable bit rate data traffic with
flow control, a minimum guaranteed data transmission rate and specified
performance parameters. In exchange for regulating user traffic flow, the
network offers minimal cell loss of accepted traffic. Traffic parameters
are PCR and MCR. QoS parameters are CLR and CER.
- AC/DC - Support for AC (usually
90-240 VAC) and DC (usually -48 VDC).
- Address - A coded representation
of the origin or destination of data.
- Agent - In SNMP, this refers to
the managed system.
- AIM (ATM Inverse Multiplexing) - See
IMA.
- Alternate Routing - In switching,
alternate routing is the choice of the next-best path when the best path
is blocked.
- AMI (Alternate Mark Inversion) - A
bipolar coding scheme in which successive 1s (marks) must alternate in
polarity.
- Analog - A continuous wave or signal
(such as human voice).
- Analog Loopback - A testing technique
that isolates faults in transmission equipment by performing a loopback
on the data at the analog (line) side of the modem.
- Analog Transmission - The transmission
of a continuously variable signal, as opposed to a discrete (digital) one.
- ANSI - American National Standards
Institute.
- AR (Access Rate) - The data rate
of the user access channel in a Frame Relay network. The speed of the access
channel determines how fast (maximum rate) the end user can inject data
into a Frame Relay network.
- ARQ (Automatic Request for Repeat or Retransmission) - A communications feature where the receiver asks the transmitter
to resend a block or frame because errors were detected by the receiver.
- ASCII (American Standard Code for Information
Interchange) - A seven-level code (128 possible characters)
used for data transfer.
- Async - See
Asynchronous Transmission.
- Asynchronous Transmission - A transmission
method that sends units of data one character at a time. Characters are
preceded by start bits and followed by stop bits, which provide synchronization
at the receive terminal. Also called start-stop transmission.
- ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode) - A
standard (ITU) implementation of cell relay, which is a packet switching
technique using packets (cells) of a fixed length. It is asynchronous in
the sense that the recurrence of cells containing information from an individual
user is not periodic.
- ATM Forum - A worldwide organization
that promotes and sets standards for ATM networks and equipment.
- Attenuation - Signal power loss
through equipment, lines or other transmission devices. Measured in decibels.
- Automatic Rate Fallback - Ensures
that the logical channel remains open even if individual links fail, by
automatically dropping to the next lower rate. When failed links are recovered,
the original rate is restored.
- AWG - The American Wire Gauge system,
which specifies wire width.
Solution Glossary
- Balanced Line - A circuit in which
neither side of the line is grounded. This minimizes crosstalk or noise
pickup between pairs in the same cable.
- Bandwidth - The range of frequencies
passing through a given circuit. The greater the bandwidth, the more information
can be sent through the circuit in a given amount of time.
- Baseband - Refers to transmission
of a digital or analog signal at its original frequency, as an unmodulated
signal.
- Baud - Unit of signaling speed
equivalent to the number of discrete conditions or events per second. If
each signal event represents only one bit condition, baud rate equals bps
(bits per second).
- Bc (Committed Burst Size) - The
maximum amount of data (in bits) that the network agrees to transfer during
a time interval Tc.
- Be (Excess Burst Size) - The maximum
amount of uncommitted data (in bits) in excess of Bc that a Frame Relay
network can try to deliver during time interval Tc. The network treats
Be data as discard-eligible.
- BECN (Backward Explicit Congestion Notification) - A bit set by a Frame Relay network to notify an interface device
(DTE) that congestion avoidance procedures should be initiated by the sending
device.
- BERT (Bit Error Rate Test/Tester) - A
device used to test the bit error rate of a communications circuit (i.e.,
the ratio of received erroneous bits to received bits, usually referenced
to a power of 10).
- Bipolar - A signaling method (in
T1/E1) represents a binary "1" by alternating positive and negative
pulses, and a binary "0" by absence of pulses.
- BISDN (Broadband Integrated Services Digital
Network) - The next generation of ISDN, which is intended to
carry digital data, voice and video. ATM provides the switching fabric
and SONET or SDH the physical transport.
- Bit - The smallest unit of information
in a binary system. Represents either a one or zero ("1" or "0").
- Bit Interleaving/Multiplexing - A
process used in time division multiplexing where individual bits from different
lower speed channel sources are combined (one bit from one channel at a
time) into one continuous higher speed bit stream.
- BOD (Bandwidth on Demand) - A concept
in digital communications that enables users to request additional network
bandwidth as the application warrants, allowing them to pay for only the
bandwidth they use.
- Bps (Bits Per Second) - A measure
of data transmission rates in serial transmission.
- Bridge - A device interconnecting
local area networks at the OSI Data Link Layer, filtering and forwarding
frames according to media access control (MAC) addresses.
- Bridging - Interconnecting local
area networks at the OSI Data Link Layer, filtering and forwarding frames
according to media access control (MAC) addresses.
- Broadband - Wideband technology
capable of supporting voice, video and data, possibly using multiple channels.
- Buffering - Used to compensate
for differences in data rates or event timing when transmitting from one
device to another. Also used to remove jitter.
- Bus - A transmission path or channel.
A bus is typically an electrical connection with one or more conductors,
where all attached devices receive all transmissions at the same time.
- Byte - A group of bits (normally
8 bits in length).
Solution Glossary
- CAS (Channel Associated Signaling) - Voice signaling based on bits taken from voice time slots, used by many PBXs.
- CBR (Constant Bit Rate) - One of
the five ATM classes of service. CBR supports the transmission of a continuous
bit stream of information, such as voice and video traffic, which requires
a constant amount of bandwidth allocated to a connection for the duration
of the transmission.
- CC (Continuity check) - A cell
used periodically to check whether a connection is idle or has failed.
Continuity checking is one of the OAM function types for fault management.
- CCR (Current Cell Rate) - The currently
acceptable transmission rate for an end-system as defined by RM cells within
ABR. The field in the RM cell indicates the current complying cell rate
(i.e., ACR) a user can transmit over a virtual connection (VC).
- CCS 7 (Common Channel Signaling Version 7)
- Also known as Signaling System 7 (SS7), a network standard that
transmits call-handling information for telecom calls over a separate channel
than that taken by the calls.
- CCS Compression (Common Channel Signaling
Co) - Signaling information is transported out-of-band. CCS
compression takes advantage of the idle flags between HDLC formatted messages
to reduce signaling bandwidth required.
- CCS Transparency - Passes the out-of-band signaling channel transparently with no compression or store-and-forward delay characteristics.
- CD (Carrier Detect) - A modem interface
signal indicating to an attached terminal that the local modem is receiving
a signal from the remote modem.
- CDP (Conditional Di-Phase) - A
digital encoding technique which is a variant of Manchester encoding and
is not sensitive to polarity of wires (wires in a pair can be crossed).
- CDR (Call Detail Recording) - A
device and method used to record statistics about telephone calls such
as the number dialed, cost of the call extension from which the call was
made, duration of the call, and trunk or trunk group used to place the
call.
- CDV (Cell Delay Variation) - A
QoS parameter that measures the difference between the transfer delay of
a single cell (CTD) and the expected transfer delay. This parameter is
important for time-sensitive virtual circuits such as CBR and VBR-RT.
- CDVT (Cell Delay Variation Tolerance) -
Used in CBR traffic, it specifies the acceptable tolerance of the
CDV (jitter).
- Cell - In asynchronous transfer
mode (ATM), a 53-byte fixed-length data packet.
- Central Office Line - The link
connecting a station to a central office.
- Central Office Trunk - The link
connecting a central office to a PBX or another switch.
- Centrex - A type of direct inward
dialing (DID) offered by local telcos. See DID (direct inward dialing).
- CES (Circuit Emulation Service) - ATM
Forum-defined service that provides a virtual circuit connection, which
emulates the characteristics of a real, constant-bit-rate, dedicated-bandwidth
circuit. Traffic over ATM networks that complies with the other ATM Forum
interoperability agreements. Specifically, this specification supports
emulation of existing TDM circuits over ATM networks.
- Channel - A path for electrical
transmission between two or more points. Also called a link, line, circuit
or facility.
- Channel Bank - Equipment that connects
multiple voice channels to high speed links by performing voice digitization
and time division multiplexing. Voice is converted to a 64 kbps signal
(24 channels into 1.544 Mbps in countries offering T1 services, such as
the U.S.A.; 30 channels into 2.048 Mbps in countries offering E1 or CEPT
services, such as in Europe).
- Channelized T1/E1 - T1 or E1 service
that is divided into individual 64 kbps channels (or channels that are
multiples of 64 kbps such as a 256 kbps channel made from four 64 kbps
channels), as opposed to unchannelized service, which uses the entire bandwidth
of the T1 (1.544 Mbps) or E1 (2.048 Mbps). Channelized T1 or E1 lines can
consist of switched lines with in-band signaling or leased lines.
- Characteristic Impedance - The
termination impedance of an electrically uniform transmission line.
- CIR (Committed Information Rate) - A
term used in Frame Relay which defines the information rate the network
is committed to provide the user.
- Circuit Emulation - In ATM, a connection
over a virtual circuit-based network providing service to the end users
that is indistinguishable from a real point-to-point, fixed-bandwidth circuit.
- Clock - A term for the source(s)
of timing signals used in synchronous transmission.
- CLR (Cell Loss Ratio) - A QoS parameter
that measures the number of transmitted cells that are erroneous over a
specific period of time (i.e., those that contain errors when they arrive
at the destination).
- CO (Central Office) - Telephone
company switching office. This is where you would find the local telco
switch that connects to your telephone.
- CODEC (Coder/Decoder) - An audio
codec converts analog audio signals to digital signals for transmission
over digital circuits, and then converts the digital signals back to analog
signals for reproduction.
- Committed Rate Measurement Interval -
See Tc.
- Composite Link - The line or circuit
carrying multiplexed data which connects a pair of multiplexers or concentrators. Also called aggregate or main link.
- Compression - Any of several techniques
which reduce the number of bits required to represent information in data
transmission or storage, thereby conserving bandwidth and/or memory.
- Configuration Planner - RADview
configuration planner makes it possible to configure products in advance,
without having to connect to a physical product.
- Congestion - A state in which the
network is overloaded and starts to discard user data (frames, cells or
packets).
- Congestion Control - In ATM networks,
congestion control schemes may be based on fields within the ATM cell header
(CLP, EFCI within the PTI) or may be based on a more sophisticated mechanism
between the ATM end-system and ATM switches. The ATM Forum has developed
a mechanism based on rate control for ABR-type traffic. In Frame Relay
networks, congestion is handled by the FECN, BECN and DE bits.
- Constant Bit Rate - See CBR.
- Contention - A condition arising
when two or more data stations attempt to transmit at the same time using
the same link or channel.
- Control Characters - In communications,
any extra transmitted characters used to control or facilitate data transmission
(for example, characters associated with polling, framing, synchronization,
error checking or message delimiting).
- Control Signals - Signals passing
between one part of a communications system and another (such as RTS, DTR
or DCD), as part of a mechanism for controlling the system.
- CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check) - A
data transmission error-detection scheme. A polynomial algorithm is performed
on the data, and the resultant checksum is appended at the end of the frame.
The receiving equipment performs a similar algorithm.
- Crosstalk - An undesirable condition
that happens when a communication from one line can be heard on another
independent line. This is usually caused by inductive or capacitive coupling,
or by an electrical short circuit between lines.
- CSMA/CD (Carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision
Detection) - In this protocol, stations listen to the bus and
only transmit when the bus is free. If a collision occurs, the packet is
retransmitted after a random time-out. CSMA/CD is used in Ethernet.
- CSU/DSU (Channel Service Units/Data Service
Units) - CSUs and DSUs are usually grouped together. They convert
carrier line signals to digital signals.
- CTD (Cell Transfer Delay) - A QoS
parameter that measures the average time for a cell to be transferred from
its source to its destination over a virtual connection (VC). It is the
sum of any coding, decoding, segmentation, reassembly, propagation, processing
and queuing delays.
- CTS (Clear To Send - ) A modem
interface control signal from the data communications equipment (DCE) indicating
to the data terminal equipment (DTE) that it may begin data transmission.
- Current Loop - Method of data transmission.
A mark (binary "1") is represented by current on the line, and
a space (binary "0") is represented by the absence of current.
Solution Glossary
- D4-frame - A T1 line uses the D4
format, also known as the superframe (SF) format, to frame data at the
physical layer. The D4 format consists of 12 consecutive frames, each separated
by framing bits.
- DACS (Digital Access and Cross Connect System)
- A digital switching device for routing and switching DS0s
within T1 and E1 lines.
- Data - Information represented
in digital form, including voice, text, facsimile and video.
- Data Interface Variety - More than
one serial or LAN interface option is available for this product. Please
refer to data sheet for product selection. Interfaces available from RAD
include: V.35, RS-530, V.36/RS-449, X.21, V.24/RS-232, G.703, HSSI, Ethernet,
Fast Ethernet, Token Ring, and FDDI.
- Data Link Layer - Layer 2 of the
OSI model. The entity which establishes, maintains, and releases data-link
connections between elements in a network. Layer 2 is concerned with the
transmission of units of information, or frames, and associated error-checking.
- Data Relay - Transferring low speed
data in the forms of V.22 and V.22 bis through compressed voice systems.
With the emergence of the Internet, modem traffic acrosinternational voice
circuits is becoming increasingly rare.
- dB (Decibel) - A unit used to measure
relative increase or decrease in power, voltage or current, using a logarithmic
scale.
- DB Agenda/Flip - User programmable
configuration can be set to switch between configuration databases in case
of any network event. This feature enables alternate routing in case of
failure, as well as for adjustment to different time schedules, work hours,
weekends, holidays, etc.
- dBm - A logarithmic scale for measurement of power. On the dBm scale, one milliwatt is 0 dBm.
- DCD - Data and Carrier Detect -
see CD.
- DCE (Data Communications Equipment) -
or data circuit-terminating equipment. Devices and connections of
a network that make up the network end of the interface between the network
and the user. A modem is an example of a DCE.
- DDS (Digital Data Service) - A
trademark of AT&T, identifying a private line service for digital data
communications in the data rate range between 2,400 and 56,000 bps. Commonly
used in countries other than the U.S.A. at 64 or 128 kbps or higher.
- DE (Discard Eligibility) - A bit
indicating that a frame may be discarded in case of congestion on a Frame
Relay network, in order to help maintain the committed information rate
(CIR).
- Decibel (dB) - A unit used to measure
relative increase or decrease in power, voltage or current, using a logarithmic
scale.
- Diagnostics - The detection and
isolation of a malfunction or mistake in a communications device, network
or system.
- DID (Direct Inward Dialing) - A
technique that allows an outside party to call an extension in a PBX directly,
by dialing an ordinary telco telephone number.
- Differential Delay - Products like
the RAD IMX-2T1/E1 compensate for any differential delay (up to 64 ms)
between the T1 lines, to properly reconstruct the original stream. The
differential delay is caused by the T1 lines traversing shorter and longer
paths.
- Digital - The binary ("1/0")
output of a computer or terminal. In data communications, an alternating,
non-continuous (pulsating) signal.
- Digital Loopback - A technique
for testing the digital processing of a communications device. The loopback
is toward the line side of a modem, but tests most of the circuitry in
the modem under test.
- Distortion - The unwanted change
in a signal's waveform occurring between two points in a transmission system.
- DLC (Digital Loop Carrier) - DLC
is equipment that concentrates analog local loop lines, digitizing and
multiplexing calls for transmission to the central office.
- DLCI (Data Link Connection Indicator) -
In a Frame Relay network, DLCIs uniquely identify each virtual circuit
number corresponding to a particular destination. The DLCI is part of the
Frame Relay header and is usually ten bits long. In most circumstances,
DLCIs have strictly local significance at each Frame Relay interface.
- DLCI Multiplexing - Encapsulates
several voice and data channels over a single DLCI, in order to minimize
the monthly service charges over public Frame Relay networks.
- Drop-and-Insert - A process of
adding data (insert) to a T1 data stream, or terminating data (drop) from
a T1 data stream to other devices connected to the drop-and-insert equipment.
- Dry Contact Alarms - Contact pins
on a connector are closed or opened to indicate alarms. External alarm
monitoring equipment uses the change in current flow across these pins
to set off an alarm.
- DS0 (Digital Subscriber Level Zero) -
A 64 kbps unit of transmission bandwidth. A worldwide standard speed
for digitizing one voice conversation, and more recently, for data transmission.
Twenty-four DS0s (24x64 kbps) equal one DS1.
- DS-1 (Digital Signal Level 1) - Framing
specification used in transmitting digital signals at 1.544 Mbps on a T1
facility or 2.048 Mbps on an E1 facility.
- DS2 Channel - For a T1 line, a 6.312
Mbps channel that consists of four DS1 channels; for an E1 line, an 8.45
Mbps channel that consists of four DS1 channels.
- DS3 Channel - A 44.736 Mbps line
consisting of seven DS2 channels. A DS3 line is also called a T3 line.
- DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) - A
modem technology for transmitting information at high speeds on existing
copper phone lines to homes and businesses. DSL operates over existing
copper telephone lines and requires runs of usually less than 20,000 feet
to a central telephone office. Types of DSL include asymmetric DSL (ADSL),
symmetric DSL (SDSL), and high bit rate DSL (HDSL).
- DTE (Data Terminal Equipment) - As
defined in the RS-232 specification, equipment to which DCE (Data Communications
Equipment) is connected, such as personal computers or data terminals.
DTE refers to application equipment, such as a videoconference terminal
or LAN bridge or router, while DCE refers to equipment such as network
access equipment.
- DTMF (Dual-Tone Multifrequency) - DTMF
is a technology enabling a touch-tone telephone to create 16 tones using
frequencies.
- DTR (Data Terminal Ready) - A modem
interface control signal sent from the DTE to the modem, usually telling
the modem that the DTE is ready to transmit data.
- DXI (Data Exchange Interface) - Protocols
used between routers and DSUs for SMDS and ATM.
Solution Glossary
- E1 Line - A 2.048 Mbps line that
supports thirty-two 64 kbps channels, each of which can transmit and receive
data or digitized voice. The line uses framing and signaling to achieve
synchronous and reliable transmission. The most common configurations for
E1 lines are E1 PRI, and unchannelized E1.
- E1 PRI Line - An ISDN line that
consists of thirty-two 64 kbps channels. This type of line uses 30 B channels
for user data, one x 64 kbps D channel for ISDN D-channel signaling, and
one framing channel. The B channels can be all switched, nailed up, or
a combination of switched and nailed up. This type of PRI line is a standard
in Europe and Asia called CEPT G.703.
- E3 - The European standard for
high speed digital transmission, operating at 34 Mbps.
- E&M - A form of DC signaling
in which the battery voltage is used to indicate the status of the line.
- Echo Cancellation - Echo cancellation
improves the quality of voice transmissions. It eliminates the echo that
results from the reflection of the telephony signal back to the caller,
which can occur in a 4-wire to 2-wire hybrid connection between the VFRAD
and the telephones or PBX. The longer it takes the signals to return to
the caller, the more perceptible the echo.
- Echo Signal - Distortion occurring
when a transmitted signal is echoed back (reflected) to the originating
station.
- EIA (Electronic Industries Association
- ) A standards organization in the U.S. specializing in the electrical
and functional characteristics of interface equipment.
- EMI (Electromagnetic Interference) - Radiation
leakage outside a transmission medium resulting mainly from the use of
high frequency wave energy and signal modulation. EMI can be reduced by
appropriate shielding.
- Encapsulation - Encapsulating data
is a technique used by layered protocols in which a low level protocol
accepts a message from a higher level protocol, then places it in the data
portion of the lower-level frame. The logistics of encapsulation require
that packets traveling over a physical network contain a sequence of headers.
- Enterprise Network - An information
infrastructure, often combining private and public facilities, to cover
all of the locations operated by a single company or corporate enterprise
with a single communications fabric.
- Equalizer - A device that compensates
for distortion due to signal attenuation and propagation time with respect
to frequency. It reduces the effects of amplitude, frequency and/or phase
distortion.
- ESF (Extended Super Frame) - ESF
is a framing format that consists of 24 consecutive frames separated by
framing bits. The ISDN specification advises that you use ESF with ISDN
D-channel signaling.
- Ethernet - A local area network that
connects devices like computers, printers and terminals. Ethernet operates
over twisted-pair or coaxial cable at speeds of 10 or 100 Mbps.
- Excess Burst Size - See Be.
Solution Glossary
- Fanout - The ability of a digital
access cross connect (DAC) to split and switch channels between incoming
and outgoing circuits.
- Fault Tolerance - A way to provide
redundancy in hardware systems to protect against doif one of the redundant
systems or components fails. For RAD products, fault tolerance is provided
by means of redundant I/O modules, common logic and/or power supplies.
See also Redundancy/CL/ML/PS.
- Fax Relay - Fax Group III support
with automatic fallback. The fax signal is demodulated back to the original
0s and 1s and transmitted as a data stream using less bandwidth across
the voice compression system. The data content is returned to fax format
at the far end.
- FCC (Federal Communications Commission)
- The regulatory agency established in the United States for all
interstate radio and electronic communications.
- FDDI (Fiber Distributed Data Interface) -
An ANSI standard for fiber optic links with data rates up to 100
Mbps.
- FECN (Forward Explicit Congestion Notification)
- A bit set by a Frame Relay network to notify an interface (DTE)
that congestion avoidance procedures should be initiated by the receiving
device.
- FEP (Front End Processor) - A communications
device in the IBM/SNA environment responsible for communication between
the mainframe and cluster controllers.
- Fiber - Hair-thin glass structures,
usually cylindrical in shape, for transmitting optical signals.
- Fiber Optics - A transmission medium
consisting of thin glass filaments. Light beams travel through the fiber
optic line, carrying large amounts of data over long distances.
- FR+ with Funnel - FR+ with enhanced
funnel. Proprietary RAD protocol for reducing packet delay times across
public Frame Relay networks by fragmenting, prioritizing and traffic shaping
to prevent congestion at remote bottlenecks. Similar to "leaky bucket"
in ATM.
- Fractional T1 - Service offering
data rates between 64 kbps (DS0 rate) and 1.536 Mbps (DS1 rate), in specified
intervals of 64 kbps.
- Fractional T1 Line - A T1 line that
contains both switched and nailed-up channels. T1 PRI and ISDN BRI lines
can also be Fractional T1 lines.
- FRAD (Frame Relay Access Device) - A
device responsible for framing data with header and trailer information
(control information) before presenting the frame to the Frame Relay switch.
- Fragmentation - RAD's MP-2100H
and MAXcess products incorporate fragmentation schemes to improve performance.
Data packets are divided into small fragments, allowing higher priority
voice packets to receive the right-of-way without waiting for the end of
long data transmissions. The remaining data packets in the data stream
are momentarily halted until the voice transmission gets through. The down-side
of fragmentation is that it increases the number of data frames, thereby
increasing the number of flags and headers. This increases overhead and
reduces bandwidth efficiency. RAD's FR+ application provides an enhanced
fragmentation mechanism, which fragments data frames only in cases where
voice packets arrive at the switch during a data transmission. Otherwise,
the long data frames are sent intact.
- Frame - A logical grouping of information
sent as a link layer unit over a transmission medium. The terms packet,
datagram, segment and message are also used to describe logical information
groupings.
- Frame Relay - An efficient packet
switching technology providing high speed frame or packet transmission
with minimum delay and efficient bandwidth utilization over virtual circuits.
The link layer handles much of the network layer functionality. It has
less protocol overhead than X.25.
- Frame Relay Forum - A worldwide
organization that promotes and sets standards for Frame Relay networks
and equipment.
- Frame Relay Frame - A variable-length
unit of data in Frame Relay format that is transmitted as pure data through
a Frame Relay network.
- Framing - At the physical and data
link layers of the OSI model, bits are fit into units called frames. Frames
contain source and destination information, flags to designate the start
and end of the frame, plus information about the integrity of the frame.
All other information, such as network protocols and the actual payload
of data, is encapsulated in a packet, which is encapsulated in the frame.
- Full Duplex - Circuit in telecommunications
with channels for both sending and receiving.
- FUNI (Frame User Network Interface) -
Frame-based interface to ATM supporting signaling and QoS. To interoperate
with a Frame Relay end system, the ATM switch should support FRF.8, which
is the Frame Relay/ATM service internetworking specification. Replaces
the ATM DXI.
- FXO (Foreign Exchange Office) - A
voice interface, emulating a PBX extension, as it appears to the C.O. (Central
Office) for connecting a PBX extension to a multiplexer.
- FXS (Foreign Exchange Subscriber) - A
voice interface, emulating the extension interface of a PBX (or
subscriber interface of a CO) for connecting a regular telephone set to
a multiplexer.
Solution Glossary
- G.703 - An ITU standard for the
physical and electrical characteristics of various digital interfaces,
including those at 64 kbps and 2.048 Mbps.
- G.723.1 - An ITU standard for voice
compression.
- G.802 - ITU standard for carrying
T1 traffic over E1 networks.
- Gatekeeper - A device that manages
an IP network, supporting all gateways, user profiles, and authentication.
A gatekeeper is defined by the H.323 standard.
- Gateway - Gateways are points of
entrance and exit from a communications network. Viewed as a physical entity,
a gateway is that node that translates between two otherwise incompatible
networks or network segments. Gateways perform code and protocol conversion
to facilitate traffic between data highways of differing architecture.
- Glare - A signal the switch sends
when you attempt to place an outgoing call and answer an incoming call
simultaneously.
- Grooming - In telecommunications,
the process of separating and segregating channels by combing, such that
the broadest channel possible can be assembled and sent across the longest
practical link. The aim is to minimize de-multiplexing traffic and reshuffling
it electrically.
- Ground Start - A signaling method
in which the customer premises equipment (CPE) transmits an off-hook condition
by creating a zero-voltage condition.
- GUI (Graphical User Interface) - Pronounced
"gooey," this software interface is based on pictorial representations
and menus of operations and files. Opposite of command line interface.
Solution Glossary
- H.323 - A set of International
Telecommunication Union (ITU) standards that define a framework for the
transmission of real-time voice communications by means of IP-based packet-switched
networks. Created in response to customers who needed to use their existing
IP networks to support voice communications, the H.323 standards define
a gateway and a gatekeeper.
- Half Duplex - A circuit or device
capable of transmitting in two directions, but not at the same time.
- HDLC (High-Level Data Link Control) -
A synchronous, bit-oriented link layer protocol for data transmission.
Frame Relay is an example of an HDLC-based packet protocol.
- HDSL (High Bit-Rate Digital Subscriber Line) - A high performance twisted pair transmission technology, best
known as an enhanced transport mechanism for T1 or E1 service. It is designed
for the Local Loop between a customer's premises and an area exchange central
office.
- HSSI (High-Speed Serial Interface) - A
serial interface that operates at speeds up to 52 Mbps at distances up
to 50 feet. It is similar to, but faster than, RS-232 and V.35 serial interfaces.
- Hunt Group - A group of channels
that share the same phone number. When a call comes in using the phone
number assigned to the hunt group, the switch hunts for an available channel
in the group.
- Hybrid Circuit - A transformer arrangement
that permits the transmitted and received signals to be separated and then
put back together. Used to connect a 2-wire line to a 4-wire line.
Solution Glossary
- Idle Disconnects - The breaking
or release of a circuit connecting two telephones or data devices that
occurs when no data is transmitted on a link in a specified amount of time.
- IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Engineers) - An international professional society issuing its
own standards. The IEEE is a member of ANSI and ISO.
- IEEE 802.3 - The IEEE's specification
for CSMA/CD LANs.
- IEEE 802.5 - The IEEE's specification
for Token Ring LANs.
- IMA (Inverse Multiplexing over ATM) -
A method to pasATM traffic over multiple E1/T1 links while maintaining
the ATM quality of service and optimizing bandwidth usage.
- Impedance - The combined effect of
resistance, inductance and capacitance on a transmitted signal. Impedance
varies at different frequencies.
- In-band Signaling - The transmission
of signaling information over the same path as data and/or voice information.
Another term for in-band signaling is robbed-bit signaling. Robbed-bit
refers to the 8 kbps of each channel used for signaling. T1 access lines
containing one or more switched channels, and switched-56 lines use in-band
signaling.
- Interactive Voice Response - A specialized
computer that accepts input from either a telephone keypad or the caller's
voice, and on the basis of that input, uses synthesized voice or pre-recorded
messages to offer callers choices on how to complete their call.
- Interface - A shared boundary,
defined by common physical interconnection characteristics, signal characteristics,
and meanings of exchanged signals.
- Internet Address - Also known as
an IP address. This is a 32-bit hardware-independent address assigned to hosts using the TCP/IP protocol suite.
- Inverse Multiplexing - A method
in which the inverse multiplexer slices the data stream into equal portions
and transmits each portion over an available circuit. The receiving end
adjusts for network-induced delay and reassembles the data packets into
their proper order. Therefore, an inverse multiplexer allows lower speed
channels across a network to be combined into a single, higher speed data
stream.
- IP (Internet Protocol) - A networking
protocol for providing a connectionless service to the higher transport
protocol. It is responsible for discovering and maintaining topology information
and for routing packets across homogeneous networks. Combined with TCP,
it is commonly known as the TCP/IP platform.
- IP Address - An address that uniquely
identifies each host on a network or Internet.
- I-PNNI (Integrated Private Network-Network
Interface) - Protocol used to exchange reachability information
between routers that augment or replace protocols such as OSPF and IPX
and is compatible with PNNI. This enables the integration of existing router-based
connectionless networks with ATM networks.
- IP Telephony - The transmission
of voice over an Internet Protocol (IP) network. Also called Voice over
IP (VoIP), IP telephony allows users to make phone calls over the Internet,
intranets, or private LANs and WANs that use the TCP/IP protocol.
- IPX (Internetwork Packet Exchange) - Netware
network layer (layer 3) protocol for transferring data from servers to
workstations.
- ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network)
- A carrier-provided service that allows a variety of switched
digital data and voice transmissions to be accommodated simultaneously.
ISDN is available as BRI, PRI and B-ISDN.
- ISDN Backup - Alternate routing
of traffic over ISDN, PRI, and BRI for backup purposes when the main link
fails.
- ISDN BRI Line - An ISDN basic rate
interface (BRI) line that uses two B channels for user data, and one 16
kbps D channel for ISDN D-channel signaling. Both B channels can be switched
or nailed up, or one channel can be switched and the other nailed up. A
line of this type can connect to standard voice service, switched 56 kbps
data service or switched 64 kbps data service.
- ISDN D-Channel Signaling - A type
of signaling in which a D channel handles WAN synchronization and signaling
and the B channels carry the user data. Another term for ISDN D-channel
signaling is out-of-band signaling. T1 PRI, E1 PRI, and ISDN BRI lines
use ISDN D-channel signaling.
- ISDN Multirate - A network-based
ISDN service which allows users network access equipment to dial network
channels of bandwidth in increments of 64 kbps, up to 1536 kbps. Access
to ISDN multirate service is obtained over ISDN PRI lines.
- ISO (International Standards Organization)
- An international organization involved in writing communications
standards.
- ITU (International Telecommunication Union)
- A European-based, international advisory committee recommending
worldwide standards for transmission.
Solution Glossary
- Jitter Buffer - Variation in the
arrival times between packets, also called jitter, causes unnatural-sounding
voice instead of a smooth voice stream. If a packet does not arrive in
time to fit into the voice stream, the previous packet is replayed. This
can seriously detract from voice quality. To avoid the effect of jitter,
VoFR and VoIP devices such as RAD's MP-2100H detain each packet in a jitter
buffer, giving subsequent packets time to arrive and still fit into a natural
voice flow. Since the jitter buffer adds to the overall delay of voice
transmissions, the optimal jitter buffer should fit the network's differential
delay. Better access devices, like those from RAD, employ adaptive jitter
buffering which continuously monitors the network delay and adjusts the
queuing period accordingly.
Solution Glossary
- KTS (Key Telephone System) - Customer
premises equipment (CPE) used to route calls both within an organization
and to the outside telephone network. A key system is a scaled-down version
of a PBX, usually with less functionality, and is geared toward smaller
organizations. A key system can be either analog or digital. Some digital
key systems can terminate digital as well as analog connections. Moreover,
key systems work in conjunction with channel banks to distribute channels
from the T1/E1 circuit for voice, video, fax and data.
Solution Glossary
- LAN (Local Area Network) - A network
that interconnects devices over a geographically small area, typically
in one building or part of a building. The most popular LAN type is Ethernet,
a 10 Mbps standard that works with 10BaseT, 10Base2, or 10Base5 cables.
- Laser - A device that transmits
an extremely narrow and coherent beam of electromagnetic energy in the
visible light spectrum. Used as a light source for optical-fiber transmission
(generally more expensive, shorter lived, single mode only, for greater
distances than LED).
- Latency - The time between initiating
a request for data and the beginning of the actual data transfer. Network
latency is the delay introduced when a packet is momentarily stored, analyzed
and then forwarded.
- Leaky Bucket - A flow control algorithm, where
cells are monitored to check whether they comply with the established connection
parameters. Non-conforming cells are either tagged or dropped from the
network. The analogy is taken from a bucket with a hole in its bottom that
allows the fluid to flow out at a certain rate.
- Leased Line - A permanent telephone
connection between two points that is rented for exclusive use from a telecommunications
common carrier. In contrast to a normal dial-up connection, a leased line
is always active. Typically, the highest speed data connections require
a leased line connection. For example, a T1 channel is a type of leased
line that provides a maximum transmission speed of 1.544 Mbps.
- LED (Light Emitting Diode) - A
semiconductor light source that emits light in the optical frequency band
or the infrared frequency band. LEDs are a major light source for optical
fiber transmission used with multimode optical fiber in applications that
require a low cost light source.
- Line Driver - A signal converter
which conditions a digital signal to ensure reliable transmission over
an extended distance.
- Load Balancing - A technique that
distributes network traffic along parallel paths in order to maximize the
available network bandwidth while providing redundancy.
- Loading - The
addition of inductance to a line in order to minimize amplitude distortion.
Used commonly on public telephone lines to improve voice quality, it can
make the lines impassable to high speed data and baseband modems.
- Local Loop - The physical wires
that run from the subscriber's telephone set, PBX, or key telephone system
to the telephone company's central office. Increasingly, the Local Loop
now goes from the main distribution frame at the customer premises to the
telephone company. The subscriber is responsible for connecting his wires
from the box at the customer's premises to his phone, PBX, or key system.
- Loopback - A type of diagnostic
test in which the transmitted signal is rto the sending device after passing
through all or part of a communications link or network.
- Loop Start -
The most commonly used method of signaling an off-hook condition between
an analog phone set and a switch, where picking up the receiver closes
a wire loop, allowing DC current to flow, which is detected by a PBX or
local exchange and interpreted as a request for service.
- LMI (Local Management Interface) - An
ITU-T defined interface to provide an ATM or Frame Relay end system user
with network management information.
Solution Glossary
- MAC (Media Access Control) - A
protocol that defines the way workstations gain access to transmission
media, most widely used in reference to LANs. For IEEE LANs, the MAC layer
is the lower sublayer of the data link layer protocol
- MAN (Metropolitan Area Network) - A
network that provides regional connectivity within a metropolitan area
(such as a city). MANs are wider than LANs, but more local than LANs
- Manager - An application that receives
Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) information from an agent. An
agent and manager share a database of information, called the Management
Information Base (MIB). An agent can use a message called a traps-PDU to
send unsolicited information to the manager. A manager that uses the RADview
MIB can query the RAD device, set parameters, sound alarms when certain
conditions appear and perform other administrative tasks.
- Mark - In
telecommunications, this means the presence of a signal. A mark is equivalent
to a binary 1. A mark is the opposite of a space (0)
- Master Clock - The source of timing
signals (or the signals themselves) that all network stations use for synchronization
- MBS (Maximum Burst Size) - A traffic
parameter that specifies the maximum number of ATM cells in a burst that
can be transmitted at the peak rate (PCR)
- MCR (Minimum Cell Rate) - An ABR
traffic parameter (in cells per second) that gives the slowest rate at
which the network controls the flow of the source on an ABR virtual connection
(VC)
- Metering - This feature is intended
for support of payphones, and therefore includes dedicated circuits for
the detection of polarity and of 16 kHz or 12 kHz metering pulses
- MF Signaling (Multifrequency Signaling)
- A signaling method using frequencies to carry address or system
status information. MF is used internally by telcos and other common carriers.
Similar to DTMF
- MIB (Management Information Base) - A
directory listing the logical names of all information resources residing
in a network and pertinent to the network's management. A key element of
SNMP management systems.
- Modem (Modulator-Demodulator)- A device used
to convert serial digital data from a transmitting DTE to a signal suitable
for transmission over extended distances. It also reconverts the transmitted
signal to serial digital data for acceptance by a receiving DTE
- Modem Eliminator - A device used
to connect a local terminal and a computer port. The modem eliminator replaces
the pair of modems ordinarily required
- Modular - Modular interfaces enable
field changeable conversion
- Modulation - The alteration of
a carrier wave in relation to the value or samples of the data being transferred
- MPMLQ (Multipulse Maximum Likelihood Quantization)
- A speech compression technology which is the ITU compression
standard G.723.1. It is very effective at low bit rates, maintaining a
minimal level of distortion
- MPOA (Multi-Protocol Over ATM) - IETF-defined
specifications and procedures that enable network layer protocols to operate
directly on top of ATM and provide end-to-end internetworking between hosts
in an ATM and non-ATM environment
- Multidrop - A communications configuration
in which multiple devices share a common transmission facility (or multipoint
line), although generally only one may transmit at a time. Usually used
with some kind of polling mechanism to address each connected terminal
with a unique address code
- Multimode Fiber - A fiber with
a large core diameter. 50-200 microns compared with the wavelength of light.
It therefore propagates more than one mode. With multimode fiber, light
traverses multiple paths, some longer than others. This leads to dispersion
which reduces optical range at high bit rates
- Multiplexer - At one end of a communications
link, a device that combines several lower speed transmission channels
into a single high speed channel. A multiplexer at the other end reverses
the process. Sometimes called a mux. See Bit
Interleaving/Multiplexer
- Multipoint Line - See
Multidrop.
Solution Glossary
- Narrowband
- In communications technology, digital communication at
the rate of 64,000 bits per second or lower.
- NDIS (Network Driver Interface
Specification) - A standard interface specification for PC network adapter
cards developed by Microsoft to separate the communications protocol from
the PC networking hardware. The driver is able to run multiple protocol
stacks concurrently
- Network - (1) An interconnected
group of nodes. (2) A series of points, nodes, or stations connected by
communications channels; the collection of equipment through which connections
are made between data stations
- Network Layer - A layer in the
OSI reference model. The network layer provides address resolution and
routing protocols. Address resolution enables the network layer to determine
a unique network address for a node. Routing protocols allow data to flow
between networks and reach their proper destination. Examples of network
layer protocols are Address Resolution Protocol (ARP), Datagram Delivery
Protocol (DDP), Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP), Interior Gateway
Protocol (IGP), Internet Protocol (IP), Internetwork Packet Exchange (IPX)
and Packet Layer Protocol (PLP).
- NFAS (Non-Facility Associated Signaling) - A
special case of ISDN signaling in which two or more T1 PRI lines use the
same D channel. A backup D channel can be added. When all 24 channels of
the T1 PRI line carry user data or voice, the D channel must be on another
line.
- NMS (Network Management System) - The system that controls network
configuration, fault and performance management, and diagnostic analysis
- NNI (Network Node Interface or Network-to-Network
Interface) - ITU-T standard interface between nodes within the
same network. The ATM Forum distinguishes between two standards, one for
private networks called PNNI and one for public networks known as public
NNI
- Node - A point of interconnection
to a network
- NRZ (Non-Return to Zero) - A binary
encoding scheme representing 1s and 0s by opposite and alternating high
and low voltages, in which there is no return to a zero (reference) voltage
between encoded bits
- NRZI (Non-Return to Zero Inverted) - A
binary encoding scheme which inverts the signal 1 and leaves the signal
unchanged or a 0. Also called transition coding.
- NT1 (Network Terminator
Type 1) - An ISDN BRI line terminating device at the subscriber's location
that provides line maintenance access, timing and echo cancellation. NT1s
may be built into other pieces of equipment or stand alone
Solution Glossary
- OAM (Operation Administration and Maintenance)
- Management framework defined by the ITU. In telecommunications,
OA&M denotes functions such as technical interfaces, diagnostics, service
measurements and status reports
- OAM Cells - Special-purpose ATM
cells exchanged between two ATM entities for network fault and performance
management, analysis and fault isolation
- OC (Optical Carrier) - A hierarchy
of optical signals used to classify speeds or capacities of fiber lines,
especially as related to the SONET standard. The basic speed is OC-1 (52
Mbps). An OC-3 fiber line has a capacity of 155 Mbps
- ODI (Open Data Link Interface) - A
standard interface specification developed by Novell to enable PC adapter
cards to run multiple protocol stacks
- Off-Hook - A state that results
when you lift a telephone receiver, producing a busy signal
- On-Hook - No loop current flows
and the switch recognizes that the telephone is available for incoming
calls
- OSI (Open Systems Interconnection Model) -
A seven-layer model of network communications developed by the International
Standard Organization (ISO).
- Out-of-Band Connection - A remote link,
or a link outside connected networks, established over a modem. It is useful
when network communications are not available.
- Out-of-Band Signaling
- The transmission of signaling information over a different path from data and/or voice information. CCS7 uses out-of-band signaling.
- Outpulse - Sequence of addressing information, automatically generated and dialed.
The RAD VoIP and VoFR gateways (MP-2100H and MAXcess) use voice switching
to reach the terminating gateway and then DTMF outpulsing to complete the
final leg of a voice call
Solution Glossary
- Packet - An ordered group of data
and control signals trthrough a network, as a subset of a larger message
- Packet Switching - A data transmission
technique which divides user information into discrete data envelopes called
packets, and sends the information packet by packet.
- Parity Bit - An
additional non-information bit added to a group of bits to ensure that
the total number of 1 bits in the character is even or odd
- Payload - The 48-byte segment of
the ATM cell containing user data. Any adaptation of user data via the
AAL will take place within the payload
- PBX (Private Branch Exchange) - A
private switching system, usually serving an organization, such as a business
or a government agency, and is usually located on the customer's premises
- PCM (Pulse Code Modulation) - Technique
for digitizing speech that samples sound waves 8,000 times a second and
converts each sample into an 8-bit binary number resulting in a 64,000
bit-per-second signal, the size of a traditional voice channel
- PCR (Peak Cell Rate) - An ATM traffic
parameter (in cells per second) that characterizes the source and gives
the maximum rate at which cells can be transmitted. It is calculated as
the reciprocal of the minimum intercell interval (the time between two
cells) over a given virtual connection (VC)
- PHY (Physical Layer ATM) - The
bottom layer of the ATM protocol reference model, it is subdivided into
two sublayers: Transmission Convergence (TC) and Physical Medium (PM).
It provides ATM cell transmission over the physical interfaces that interconnect
the ATM devices
- Physical Layer - Layer 1 of the
OSI model. The layer concerned with electrical, mechanical and handshaking
procedures over the interface connecting a device to the transmission medium
- PNNI (Private Network-Network Interface)
- The interswitch interface within a private ATM domain. The PNNI
trunking protocol providing for hierarchical ATM-layer routing and QoS
support
- Policing - See
Traffic Policing.
- Polling - See
Multidrop
- Port - The physical interface to
a computer or multiplexer, for connection of terminals and modems
- POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service) - The
analog dial tone-type telephone networks and services in place worldwide
with transmission rates up to 52 kbps. In contrast, telephone services
based on digital communications lines, such as ISDN, have higher speeds
and bandwidths. POTS networks are also called public switched telephone
networks (PSTNs).
- PPP (Point-to-Point Protocol) - Provides a standard
means of encapsulating data packets sent over a single-channel WAN link.
It is the standard WAN encapsulation protocol for the interoperability
of bridges and routers over synchronous or asynchronous circuits
- PRI (Primary Rate Interface) - An
ISDN subscriber line, consisting of twenty-three 64 kbps B channels in
North America (thirty 64 kbps channels elsewhere) and one 64 kbps D channel,
used for signaling purposes.
- Prioritization - Prioritization schemes
"tag" different applications according to their sensitivity to
delay, assigning higher priority to voice and other time-sensitive data
such as SNA. RAD's MP-2100H and MAXcess product lines support seven user-defined
priority levels. The prioritization and fragmentation mechanisms ensure
high quality voice, low delay and minimal bandwidth overhead
- Protocol - A formal set of conventions
governing the formatting and relative timing of message exchange between
two communicating systems
- PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network)
- The telecommunications network commonly accessed by ordinary telephones,
key systems, PBX trunks and data equipment.
- PVC (Permanent Virtual Circuit) - A
virtual connection established by the network management between an origin
and a destination that can be left up permanently
- PVP (Permanent Virtual Path) - A
set of permanent virtual channels (PVCs) that exists between two cross
points
Solution Glossary
-
QoS - Quality Of Service - A group of service classes defined by the
ATM forum in terms of different QoS parameters:
- Class 0 refers to the best effort service (UBR).
- Class 1 specifies the parameters for circuit emulation, and the transport
of CBR uncompressed video and for VPNs. AAL1 supports this kind of delay
sensitive connection oriented service.
- Class 2 specifies the parameters for the transport of VBR (low speed
or compressed packetized) audio and video. AAL2 supports this delay sensitive,
connection oriented class.
- Class 3 specifies the parameters for connection oriented data transfer.
AAL3/4 and mostly AAL5 supports this delay tolerant class which is intended
to provide interoperability with SMDS and IP.
- Class 4 specifies the parameters for connectionless data transfer.
AAL3/4 or AAL5 can be used to support this delay tolerant class which is
also intended to provide interoperability with SMDS and IP.
- Class X refers to the connection oriented transport service where the
traffic type (CBR or VBR) and timing requirements (delay sensitive or non-sensitive)
are defined by the user. It is known as an unrestricted service class and
which is supported by AAL5.
Solution Glossary
- RADview - The RADview Graphical
User Interface (GUI) is an SNMP-based management system enabling complete monitoring and control of
LAN and WAN networks from a central management station. The system provides
direct on-line supervision, configuration and diagnostics
- Redundancy/CL/ML/PS - Provides
duplicate common logic (CL), main link (ML) and/or power supply (PS) to
immediately take over the function of the equipment in case of failure
- Register - A storage device capable
of receiving and holding a number of digits
- Repeater - A device which automatically
amplifies, restores or reshapes signals to compensate for distortion and/or
attenuation prior to retransmission
- Reverse Polarity - Signaling call
answer and disconnect status is often a problem on analog voice circuits
(FXO). When circuits supporting reverse polarity are available, the signaling
problem can be solved by sensing reverse polarity and toggling the status
of the signaling bits appropriately
- RFC 1483 - Specifies the encapsulation
of multiprotocol data for transmission over an ATM network. RFC 1483 make
use of AAL5 in the support of PVCs and SVCs. The two methods defined in
this RFC are VC multiplexing and LLC/SNAP encapsulation
- RFC 1490 - Specifies the encapsulation
of multiprotocol data for transmission over Frame Relay
- RIP2 - Routing Information Protocol
used to discover agents and the routes that IP packets must traverse. This
is done automatically using periodic broadcasts. RIP2 also supports IP
subnets
- RJ-45 Connector (Registered Jack-45) -
A telephone connector that accomodates up to eight wires. RJ-45
plugs and sockets are used in Ethernet and Token Ring devices.
- RJ-48C
- An eight-position keyed plug most commonly used for connecting T1 circuits.
The RJ-48C is an eight-position plug with four wires (two for transmit,
two for receive). When the phone company delivers T1 to your offices, it
usually terminates its T1 circuit on a RJ-48C.
- RMON - The Remote
Monitoring MIB, which allows a network monitoring device to be configured
and read from remote locations
- Router - An interconnection device
that connects individual LANs. Unlike bridges, which logically connect
at OSI layer 2, routers provide logical paths at OSI layer 3. Like bridges,
remote sites can be connected using routers over dedicated or switched
lines to create WANs.
- Routing - The process of selecting the most
efficient circuit path for a message
- RSVP (Resource reSerVation Protocol) -
A protocol developed for supporting different QoS classes for IP
applications
- RTS (Request To Send) - A modem
control signal sent from the DTE to the modem which tells the modem that
the DTE has data to send
- RTT (Round Trip Time) - The round
trip time it takes for a packet to travel between a source and a network
device. In ATM, RTT is usually measured in numbers of cells.
Solution Glossary
- SAR (Segmentation
and Reassembly) - Segments thinformation frames into cells at the source
and reassembles them back into information frames at the destination. These
activities occur at the lower part of the AAL. Each AAL type has its own
SAR format
- Satellite Link - A microwave link
that uses a satellite to receive and retransmit signals. Uses a geosynchronous
orbit to keep a satellite above a fixed position on the equator.
- Scalable - Able to be changed in
size or configuration to suit changing conditions. For example, a scalable
network can be expanded from a few nodes to thousands of nodes.
- SCR
(Sustainable Cell Rate) - A traffic parameter that characterizes a
bursty source and specifies the maximum average rate at which cells can
be sent over a given virtual connection (VC). It can be defined as the
ratio of the MBS to the minimum burst interarrival time.
- SDH (Synchronous Data Hierarchy) - The
European standard for using optical media as the physical transport for
high speed long haul networks.
- SDLC (Synchronous Data Link Control) -
An IBM protocol for use in SNA environment. SDLC is a bit-oriented
protocol, similar to HDLC.
- Serial Transmission - A common
mode of transmission, where the character bits are sent sequentially one
at a time instead of in parallel.
- SF - Also known as D4, T1 lines
use this format to frame data at the physical layer. The SF format consists
of 12 consecutive frames, each separated by framing bits.
- Sharing Device - A device that
enables sharing of a single resource (modem, mux or computer port) among
several devices (terminals, controllers or modems).
- Shielded Twisted Pair Cable (STP) - Consists
of two wires twisted two or more times per inch in order to help cancel
out noise. The entire cable has a protective covering which should be connected
to a single ground.
- Shielding - The protective enclosure
surrounding a transmission medium, designed to minimize electromagnetic
interference (EMI/RFI).
- Short Haul Modem - A modem designed
for use in transmitting over relatively short distances across unloaded
metallic circuits. Also called a line driver or limited distance modem
(LDM).
- Silence Suppression - In a telephone
conversation, only about 50% of the full duplex connection is used at any
given time. This is generally because only one person talks while the other
person listens. In addition, voice packets are not sent during interword
pauses and natural pauses in the conversation, reducing the required bandwidth
by another 10%. Silence suppression frees this 60% of bandwidth on the
full duplex link for other voice or data transmissions.
- Single Mode
- Describing an optical waveguide or fiber that is designed to propogate
light of only a single wavelength (typically 5-10 microns in diameter).
- SLIP (Serial Link Internet Protocol) -
An Internet protocol for host dial- up connection. SLIP frames are encapsulated IP datagrams in which SLIP
adds just a few bytes of control data.
- SMDS (Switched Multimegabit Data Service)
- A specification for a connectionless packet-switched data service.
- SNA (Systems Network Architecture) - IBM's
layered communications protocol architecture.
- SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol)
- The Internet standard protocol for managing nodes on an IP network.
- SONET (Synchronous Optical Network) -
A standard for using optical media as the physical transport for
high speed long haul networks. SONET basic speeds start at 51.84 Mbps and
go up to 2.5 Gbps.
- Space - In telecommunications,
the absence of a signal. Equivalent to a binary 0.
- SS7 (Signaling System 7 - ) A signaling
method separate from the voice or data channel that lets intelligent network
elements exchange information among themselves.
- Statistical Multiplexer
- A device connecting multiple channels to a single link by dynamically
allocating timeslots to the channels based on their transmission activity.
- STP (Shielded Twisted Pairs) - General
term for cabling systems that are designed specifically for data transmission
where the cables are shielded.
- Sub-rate Multiplexing - In the
U.S. this refers generally to time division multiplexing at data rates
lower than 64 kbps.
- Super Tandem - A - feature
that eliminates the need for compression/decompression on each cascaded
link (for example, an embedded pattern can switch the system to super tandem
mode to remove the cumulative distortion of consecutive compression/decompression
cycles).
- SVC (Switched Virtual Circuit) - A
logical connection between two points that is established dynamically and
exists during transmission only. In ATM networks, the SVC connection is
established via signaling. End systems transmit their UNI 3.1 or 4.0 signaling
request via the Q.2931 signaling protocol.
- Sync - See
Synchronous Transmission.
- Synchronous Transmission - Transmission
in which data bits are sent at a fixed rate, with the transmitter and receiver
synchronized.
Solution Glossary
- T1 - A digital transmission link
with a capacity of 1.544 Mbps used in North America. Typically channelized
into 24 DS0s, each capable of carrying a single voice conversation or data
stream. Uses two pairs of twisted pair wires.
- T3 - A digital transmission link
with a capacity of 45 Mbps, or 28 T1 lines.
- Tandem Encoding - Maintains a minimal
level of distortion when the voice signal undergoes two or more consecutive
compression/decompression cycles (e.g., in applications where voice calls
carried over digital links are switched via a central switch or PBX.
- Tandem Switching - Routing a call
through a switch to another switch.
- Tc (Committed Rate Measurement Interval)
- The time interval during which the user can send only Bc-committed
amount of data and Be excess amount of data. Tc is used to measure only
incoming traffic. The duration of the Tc is usually proportional to the
burstiness of the traffic and is usually computed as Tc = Bc/CIR.
- TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet
Protocol) - A protocol platform, known also as the Internet
protocol suite, that combines both TCP and IP. Widely used applications,
such as Telnet, FTP and SMTP, interface to TCP/IP.
- TDM (Time Division Multiplexer) - A
device that divides the time available on its composite link among its channels, usually interleaving
bits (Bit TDM) or characters (Character TDM) of data from each terminal.
- TDMoATM - Transparently carrying
TDM bit streams over packet technology as found in the ACE product line
for TDM over ATM (circuit emulation).
- TDMoFR - Transparently carrying
TDM bit streams over packet technology as found in the MAXcess product
line for TDM over Frame Relay. Analogous to circuit emulation over Frame
Relay.
- TDMoIP - Transparently carrying
TDM bit streams over packet technology as found in the IPmux for TDM over
IP. Analogous to circuit emulation over IP.
- Telnet - The virtual terminal protocol
in the Internet suite of protocols. It lets users on one host access another
host and work as terminal users of that remote host. Instead of dialing
into the computer, you connect to it over the Internet using Telnet. When
you issue a Telnet session, you connect to the Telnet host and log in.
The connection enables you to work with the remote machine as though you
were a terminal connected to it.
- Terminal Adapter - A device that
allows analog voice and data devices to work through an ISDN connection.
The terminal adapter is a protocol converter that adapts equipment not
designed for ISDN, such as phones, faxes, and modems.
- TFTP (Trivial File Transfer Protocol)
- A simplified version of the File Transfer Protocol that transfers
files but does not provide password protection or user directory capability.
- TFTP/CFG - TFTP of configuration: TFTP download and upload of configuration
files (using an application such as Pumpkin or Netmanage). This feature
is useful in creating an exact image of a product's configuration. Even
though the configuration file cannot be read or understood using standard
tools such as RADview or text editors, it can be copied to diskette for
backup purposes. Restore is performed in a similar manner. This feature
is particularly useful when diagnosing serious problems. The customer downloads
the exact image of the configuration and emails it to RAD Tech Support
or Engineering where it is used to simulate the customer's exact configuration
and diagnose the problem.
- TFTP/SW (Trivial File Transfer Protocol)
- is a simple file transfer protocol based on UDP transport. TFTP
is small and simple enough to be embedded in boot ROMs. TFTP applications
such asPumpkin (shareware) can be used to download new software versions
to provide enhanced features and fix bugs. The upgrades can be done across
IP networks in-band or out-of-band without the need to send technicians
on-site and without replacing equipment.
- Throughput - The amount of information
transferred through the network between two users in a given period, usually
measured in the number of packets per second (pps).
- Tie Trunk (Tie Line) - A dedicated
trunk used to connect two locations that routinely need to contact one
another. Stations connected to a switch at one end of the tie trunk may
dial stations connected to a switch at the other end directly, without
using the public network.
- Timeslot - A portion of a serial
multiplex of timeslot information dedicated to a single channel. In T1
and E1, one timeslot typically represents one 64 kbps channel.
- Token Ring - A local area network
standardized as IEEE 802.5. A supervisory frame, or token, is passed from
station to adjacent station sequentially. Stations wishing to gain access
to the network must wait for the token to arrive before transmitting data.
- Traffic Contract - An asynchronous
transfer mode (ATM) configuration that guarantees the delivery of a specified
amount of data. While data above the traffic contract can still be delivered
when network resources are available, data that exceeds the traffic contract
can be delayed or lost when conditions are congested.
- Traffic Management
- Set of actions and operations performed by the network to guarantee
the operability of the network exercised in the form of traffic control
and flow control. ATM traffic management includes the following: CAC, FRM,
NRM, Priority Control (PC), Traffic Shaping (TS) and UPC, the goal of which
is to maintain the required QoS.
- Traffic Policing - Mechanism whereby
any traffic that violates the traffic contract agreed to at connection
setup is detected and discarded. A method to verify that the incoming VP/VC
complies with the user's service contract.
- Traffic Shaping - A method for
smoothing the bursty traffic rate that might arrive on an access virtual
circuit so as to present a more uniform traffic rate on the network and
comply with the traffic contract.
- Trunk - A single circuit between
two points, both of which are switching centers or individual distribution
points. A trunk usually handles many channels simultaneously.
Solution Glossary
- UBR (Undefined
Bit Rate) - An economical best-effort class of service.
- UDP (User Datagram Protocol) - A
connectionless transport protocol without any guarantee of packet sequence
or delivery. It functions directly on top of IP.
- Unbalanced Line - A transmission
line in which a single conductor is used to transmit a signal, in reference
to ground (for example, in a coaxial cable).
- UNI (User Network Interface) - The
interface, defined as a set of protocols and traffic characteristics, between
the CPE and the Frame Relay or ATM network.
- UNI 4.0 - This UNI specification
refers to signaling issues in ABR, VP and QoS negotiations.
- UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair Cable) -
UTP cable consists of two wires twisted two or more times per inch
in order to help cancel out noise. The entire cable has no covering. UTP
cable is typically used in telephone lines for voice service, 10BaseT Ethernet
networks and particular sections of Token Ring networks.
Solution Glossary
- V.22bis - An extension of the V.22
standard, providing a data rate of up to 2400 bps at 600 baud.
- VBR-nrt
(Variable Bit Rate Non Real Time) - One of the two VBR service types
for transmitting traffic where timing information is not critical. Since
this service type is delay-tolerant, it is well-suited for bursty traffic
such as data communications.
- VBR-rt (Variable Bit Rate Real Time) -
One of the two VBR service types for transmitting traffic that depends
on timing and control information. It is suitable for carrying delay-sensitive
traffic such as packetized video and audio.
- VC (Virtual Connection) - A connection
established between end users, where packets are forwarded along the same
path and bandwidth is not permanently allocated until it is used.
- VCC (Virtual Channel Connection) - An
end-to-end connection consisting of a concatenation of two or more virtual
channels between two end points. VCCs may be bundled into a VPC (ATM).
- Voice Compression - Newer voice
compression algorithms try to model PCM (G.711) more efficiently using
fewer bits to reduce the bandwidth required while preserving the quality
or audibility of the voice transmission. Vendors such as RAD support low
bit rate voice compression algorithms such as ITU G.723.1 and G.729A to
permit the greatest number of simultaneous multiple calls while maintaining
high quality voice. In this way, compressed voice systems (CVSTM) can offer
greater bandwidth savings, reduced network congestion and high quality
voice transmissions.
- Voice Digitization (Voice Encoding) - The conversion
of an analog voice signal into digital symbols for storage or for transmission
(examples: ADPCM, CVSD or PCM).
- VoFR (Voice over Frame Relay) - A
term applied to a set of facilities for managing the delivery of voice
information using frame relay. A major advantage of VoFR is that it avoids
the tolls charged by ordinary telephone service.
- Voice Interface Variety
- More than one voice interface option is available for many RAD products.
Please refer to data sheets for product selection. Sample interfaces available
from RAD include: FXS, FXO, E&M, T1, E1, ISDN "S", and ISDN
"U".
- Voice Switching - Routing tables
are used to manipulate the DTMF dialed digits, thus creating a flexible
and user-transparent dialing plan of three to 22 digits. Switching the
voice calls within the Frame Relay network eliminates switching via an
external PBX, thus saving costs of additional PBX modules. Voice quality
is also improved since there is no need for multiple compression/ decompression
cycles.
- VoIP (Voice over IP) - Set of facilities
for managing the delivery of voice information using the Internet Protocol
(IP). Voice information is sent in digital form in discrete packets over
the Internet instead of in analog form over the public switched telephone
network (PSTN). A major advantage of VoIP is that it avoids the tolls charged
by ordinary telephone service.
- VP (Virtual Path) - Set of virtual
channels (VCs) between cross points, grouped together.
- VPC (Virtual Path Connection) - An
end-to-end connection consisting of two or more virtual path (VP) links.
- VPN (Virtual Private Network) - A
restricted network that uses public wires to connect nodes. A VPN provides
a way to encapsulate, or "tunnel," private data cheaply, reliably,
and securely through a public network, usually the Internet.
Solution Glossary
- WAN (Wide
Area Network) - A network that typically spans nationwide distances
and usually utilizes public telephone networks.
- WDM (Wave Division Multiplexing) - Optical
transmission technique in which two or more wavelengths (each carrying
its own information) are combined for transmission over a single optical
fiber. At the receiving end, the wavelengths are separated and directed
to separate receivers. Increases the capacity of data transmission over
fiber optics. Also used to connect two fiber optic devices over a single
strand of fiber.
- Wink - On a telephone line, a signal
that is comprised of an on-hook/off-hook/on-hook transition.
- Wink Start - A method of trunk signaling
that identifies a busy/ready status to receive digits. The "wink"
is sent by the answering switch to indicate that it is ready to receive
the dialed digits from the calling switch.
- Wireless Modem - A modem that uses
radio transmission technology to transmit data between remote locations.
A wireless modem is often used by mobile clients in locations where access
to a terrestrial connection is not feasible.
Solution Glossary
- X-ON/X-OFF (Transmitter
On/Transmitter Off) - Control characters used for flow control, instructing
a terminal to start transmission (X-ON) or end transmission (X-OFF).
Solution Glossary
No Topics
Solution Glossary
No Topics