Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Signalling (telecommunications)

Encyclopedia : S : SI : SIG : Signalling (telecommunications)


Signalling In Telecommunications

In telecommunication, signalling (or signaling) has the following meanings:

Classification

Signalling systems can be classified according to their principal properties, some of which are described below:

In-Band Signalling versus Out-Of-Band Signalling

In the public switched telephone network, (PSTN), in-band signalling is the exchange of signalling (call control) information within the same channel that the telephone call itself is using. An example is DTMF signalling.

Out-of-band signalling is telecommunication signalling (exchange of information in order to control a telephone call) that is done on a channel that is dedicated for the purpose and separate from the channels used for the telephone call. Out-of-band signalling is used in Signalling System #7 (SS7), the latest standard for the signalling that controls the world's phone calls.

Line Signalling versus Register Signalling

Line signalling is concerned with conveying information on the state of the line or channel, such as on-hook, off-hook, ringing current (alerting), and recall.

Register signalling is concerned with conveying addressing information, such as the calling and/or called telephone number.

Channel-Associated Signalling versus Common-Channel Signalling

Channel-Associated signalling employs a signalling channel which is dedicated to a particular bearer channel.

Common-Channel signalling is so-called, because it employs a signalling channel which conveys signalling information relating to multiple bearer channels. These bearer channels therefore have their signalling channel in common.

Compelled Signalling

The term Compelled Signalling refers to the case where receipt of each signal needs to be explicitly acknowledged before the next signal is able to be sent.

Most forms of R2 register signalling are compelled (see R2 signalling).

The term is only relevant in the case of signalling systems that use discrete signals (e.g. a combination of tones to denote one digit), as opposed to signalling systems which are message-oriented (such as SS7 and ISDN Q.931) where each message is able to convey multiple items of information (e.g. multiple digits of the called telephone number).

Classification, revisited

Note that every signalling system can be characterized along each of the above axes of classification. A few examples:

Whereas common-channel signaling systems are out-of-band by definition, and in-band signaling systems are also necessarily channel-associated, the above metering pulse example demonstrates that there exist channel-associated signaling systems which are out-of-band.

Sources

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: