Introduction
Traditional SS7 networks continue to grow and evolve to meet the demands of burgeoning
wireless and next-generation networks. At the same time, lower cost IP-based networks
are also emerging at the edges of these traditional networks.
Service providers are attempting
to minimize the complexity of and investment in the still growing SS7 network while
also striving to take full advantage of the cost and flexibility benefits the IP-based
networks provide.
Challenges
- Reduce the cost of point to point SS7 links at the edge of an existing SS7 network
- the costs associated with the growth and evolution of SS7 networks is substantial
- from the edge of networks and where dedicated TDM circuits need to be provisioned
in redundant pairs. Often, SS7 traffic originating from end nodes does not fill
a complete circuit, resulting in underutilization of purchased bandwidth. SS7 transport
costs can be significantly reduced by transporting SS7 traffic over shared-use IP
networks instead
- Interconnect an existing SS7 Signaling network with a VoIP network - this interconnection
is essential to providing end-to-end calling capabilities between legacy SCN customers
and VoIP customers. As VoIP networks are deployed around the globe, they quickly
change and evolve. Service providers and OEMs need VoIP media gateways that keep
pace with the network evolution. VoIP gateway solutions have been cumbersome to
deploy and upgrade
- Extend the SS7 network cost effectively while preserving SS7 network reliability
- at the expanding edge of the SS7 network, there are few if any point codes available
to the operator for deploying new services and capabilities. The addition of STPs
and connectivity to STP nodes poses a significant expense. Network operators looking
to transition to a packet-based IP network are often faced with challenges; the
solution must work with existing billing and monitoring equipment to preserve the
investments, and it must provide the same level of reliability as the circuit-switched
SS7 network
- Cost-effectively deploy SS7 capabilities to remote, under developed regions of the
world - providing traditional PSTN or wireless telephony service by installing fiber
optic or twisted pair cables for SS7 connectivity to and in these regions is cost-prohibitive.
Rather, it is simpler and more cost-effective to deploy localized VoIP networks.
Interconnection and interworking of SS7 networks with these VoIP networks is critical
Solution
-
Reduce the cost of point-to-point SS7
links in an existing SS7 network - offloading long haul SS7 traffic onto lower cost,
shared-use networks will achieve this cost reduction. This will also preserve core
SS7 network capacity by routing traffic between SSPs at the edge. In this way, edge
signaling traffic stays local and does not consume core SS7 network bandwidth
- Interconnect an existing SS7 signaling network to a VoIP network - the VoIP Softswitch
disaggregation into Media Gateway (MG), Media Gateway Controller (MGC), and the
Signaling Gateway (SG) provides a flexible architectural solution for the interconnection
and interworking of SS7 networks with VoIP networks. In this architecture the SG
performs all the signaling tasks freeing the MGC to focus on the call and circuit-related
tasks
- Extend the SS7 network in a cost-effective manner preserving SS7 network reliability
- extending the SS7 network to an IP transport medium reduces carrier leasing and
provisioning costs associated with dedicated, long haul SS7 links. The VoIP Softswitch
disaggregation again provides a flexible architectural solution for the interconnection
and interworking of SS7 networks with VoIP networks and it also enables cost-effective
incremental growth
- Cost-effectively deploy SS7 capabilities to remote, under developed, regions of
the world - extending the SS7 network with IP transport over satellites is designed
to reduce the costs associated with installing fiber optic or twisted pair cables
for terrestrial SS7 links or IP networks. The SG provides the flexible architectural
solution for the interconnection and interworking of SS7 networks with VoIP
Ulticom nSignia eSTP
Ulticom's nSignia® eSTP is designed to reduce SS7 transport costs
by offloading long haul SS7 traffic onto lower cost, shared-use IP networks. These
solutions offer superior software reliability, support for all major variants of
SS7 (ANSI, ITU, NTT/TTC, and Chinese), powerful functionality with a very small
footprint, network transparency and remote management capability. In addition, nSignia
eSTP preserves core SS7 network capacity by routing traffic between SSPs connected
to the same nSignia eSTP or between nSignia eSTPs. Edge signaling traffic stays
local and does not consume core SS7 network bandwidth. nSignia eSTP is optimized
to support the demanding requirements of the SG.
Key Business Benefits
- nSignia eSTP delivers a cost-effective solution, extendable to Wireless Metropolitan
Area Networks
- Integrates into customer's existing network addressing plan
- SSPs are implemented using ISUP, SCCP, TCAP
- No network operations disruption
- Single network management solution
- Greater customer return on investment using SS7 application assets
- Inter-working at STP level of performance when backhauling with M2PA