INTRODUCTION 1-3

The term ISDN refers to the collection of international recommendations that are evolving toward adoption as a CCITT telecommunications standard. These recommendations are based on the following objectives:

1.To provide the user with end-to-end digital connectivity (which in theory will be independent of the network provider)

2.To use the end-to-end digital connections as shared (integrated) facilities, thus permitting the same channel to be used alternately for voice, data, or imagery/video

3.To permit users access to these new services by a limited set of multipurpose customer interfaces (each interface being CCITT approved)

The long-range goal is to provide the full set of ISDN services and features on digital customer- premises switches, digital COs, and to provide these services end-to-end through the public digital network.

The CCITT ISDN recommendations define two (functionally different) types of communication interfaces. They are known as the ISDN primary rate interface (ISDN-PRI)and the ISDN basic rate interface (ISDN-BRI).ISDN-PRI recommendations (like DS1) are associated with trunk access, while ISDN-BRI recommendations are associated with line (or user terminal) access.

Initially, the CCITT recommendations were identified by their standardization committee as the “I” series documents (I.412, I.431, I.441, and I.451). Later, another CCITT development committee used the I-series documents to develop another series of documents called the "Q" series (Q.921 or Q.931). Recommendations are designed to be compatible with the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) 7-layer model. Both ISDN-PRI and ISDN-BRI include recommendations for layers 1, 2, and

3.Recommendations for the PRI are similar in function but not identical to those for the BRI. The BRI and the PRI are compared as follows.

Layer 1

PRI defines functions provided by the physical layer. It requires use of a DS1

 

and is based on recommendations I.211, I.412, and I.431. These layer 1

 

functions include the physical connector, the creation of the bit stream by

 

multiplexing the information B-channels and signaling D-channel, the orderly

 

sharing of the D-channel, timing, synchronization, framing, and line coding.

Layer 2

PRI defines the signaling-channel (data-link) protocol. This layer includes the

 

LAPD protocol (the focus of the Q.921 recommendations). The LAPD protocol

 

permits many logical links to be multiplexed into one D-channel. It also

 

provides flow control and error recovery for each logical link.

Layer 3

PRI defines the network-layer protocol, which consists of the Q.931

 

recommendations. It provides the methods (messages) to establish, maintain,

 

and terminate network connections between communicating ISDN applications.

 

The message set includes over 200 messages, which provide many

 

services/features that are not available without ISDN. Some of these include:

Call establishment messages (alerting, call proceeding, connect, setup)

Call information phase messages (resume, suspend)

Call disestablishment messages (disconnect, release)

Miscellaneous messages

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AT&T DS1/DMi/ISDN-PRI manual Layer, Introduction