Integration of call signaling and resource management for IP telephony
01 May 1999
IP telephony presents a tremendous opportunity to service providers to offer both traditional services as well as a range of creative new services. However, there are substantial challenges to be faced in supporting a resource management framework that is adequate For telephony, and in providing a signaling architecture that enables these services while preserving user privacy and preventing theft of service. This article describes the Distributed Open Signaling Architecture, a framework for call signaling and resource management that meets these needs. A kev contribution of our work is a recognition of the need for coordination between call signaling, which controls access to telephony-specific services, and resource management, which controls access to network-layer resources. We evaluate one approach to resource management in the backbone, consistent with our architecture, using signaling for aggregates of flows. Using traces from calls on the AT&T long distance network, we show that the multiplexing gains achieved by such aggregation can achieve most of the benefits of per-flow signaling, while avoiding its overheads. We also evaluate scheduling algorithms in order to understand their effect on the end-to-end delay experienced by voice packets.