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Encyclopedia > Signalling System 7
SS7 protocol suite
Layer Protocols
Application INAP, MAP, IS-41...

TCAP, ISUP, ... Signalling System #7 is a set of protocols defined by ITU-T, specifically in the Q.7* set of documents, used to set up telephone calls. ... Bold text TBold texthe application layer is the seventh level of the seven-layer OSI model. ... The Intelligent Network Application Part (INAP) is a signaling protocol used in the intelligent network architecture. ... Mobile Application Part ... Transaction Capabilities Application Part, from ITU-T recommendations Q.771-Q.775 or ANSI T1. ... The ISDN User Part or ISUP is part of the Signaling System #7 which is used to set up telephone calls in Public Switched Telecom Networks. ...

Transport SCCP
Network MTP Level 3
Data link MTP Level 2 ...
Physical MTP Level 1 ...

Signalling System #7 (SS7) is a set of telephony signalling protocols which are used to set up the vast majority of the world's PSTN telephone calls. Signaling Connection and Control Part, from ITU-T recommendation Q.713, is the routing protocol for Signalling System 7 networks. ... The network layer is level three of the seven level OSI model. ... The Message Transfer Part is part of the Signalling System 7 (SS7) which is used for communication in Public Switched Telephone Network. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... The Message Transfer Part is part of the Signalling System 7 (SS7) which is used for communication in Public Switched Telephone Network. ... The physical layer is level one in the seven level OSI model of computer networking. ... The Message Transfer Part is part of the Signalling System 7 (SS7) which is used for communication in Public Switched Telephone Network. ... In telecommunication, Telephony encompasses the general use of equipment to provide voice communication over distances. ... The public switched telephone network (PSTN) is the concatenation of the worlds public circuit-switched telephone networks, in much the same way that the Internet is the concatenation of the worlds public IP-based packet-switched networks. ...


It is usually abbreviated to SS7 while in North America it is often referred to as CCS7, acronym for "Common Channel Signaling System 7". In some European countries, specifically the United Kingdom, it is sometimes called C7 (CCITT number 7) and is also known as number 7 and CCIS7. (ITU-T was formerly known as CCITT.) The ITU Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T) coordinates standards for telecommunications on behalf of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and is based in Geneva, Switzerland. ...

Contents


History

The SS7 protocols were developed by AT&T since 1975 and defined as standard by ITU-T during 1981 in ITU-T's Q.7XX-series recommendations. SS7 was designed to replace Signalling System #5 (SS5) and Signalling System #6 (SS6) and R2, all of which are ITU standards defined by ITU-T prior to SS7 and were once in widespread international use. SS7 has substantially replaced SS6, SS5, and R2, with the exception that R2 variants are still used in numerous nations. SS5 and earlier used in-band signalling, where the call-setup information was sent by playing special tones into the telephone lines (known as bearer channels in the parlance of the telecom industry). This led to a number of security problems when users discovered on certain telephone switching equipment that they could play these tones into the telephone handset and control the network even without the "special keys" on an operators handset. So-called phreaks experimented with fooling the telephone exchanges by sending their own user-generated signalling tones from small electronic boxes known as blue boxes. Modern designs of telephone equipment that implement in-band signalling protocols explicitly keep the end-user's audio path—the so-called speech path—separate from the signalling phase to eliminate the possibility that the MF tones used for signalling are introduced by the end-user, which defeats the blue-box phreaking technique. AT&T Inc. ... The ITU Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T) coordinates standards for telecommunications on behalf of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and is based in Geneva, Switzerland. ... R2 is a 1960s- and 1970s-era Channel Associated Signalling signalling protocol used outside of North America to convey at least the following information along a telephone trunk: seizure of an idle DS0 channel, the called partys digits 1 through 10, the calling partys digits 1 through 10... The ITU Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T) coordinates standards for telecommunications on behalf of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and is based in Geneva, Switzerland. ... In-band signalling is the act of transmitting metadata and network control information together with the regular data sent. ... Phreaking is a slang term for the action of making a telephone system do something that it normally should not allow—in the words of one former practitioner, making the phone company bend over and grab its ankles. Sometimes, phreaking will be considered illegal, like in the act of toll... A Verizon Central Office in Lakeland, Florida at night. ... The blue box previously owned by Steve Wozniak, on display at the Computer History Museum. ... The blue box previously owned by Steve Wozniak, on display at the Computer History Museum. ...


SS7 moved to a system in which the signalling information was out-of-band, carried in a separate signalling channel. This avoided the security problems earlier systems had, as the end user had no connection to these channels. SS6 and SS7 are referred to as so-called Common Channel Interoffice Signalling Systems (CCIS) or Common Channel Signaling (CCS) due to their hard separation of signalling and bearer channels. However it also required a separate channel dedicated solely to signalling, but due to the rapid rise in the number of available channels at the same time this was a moot point. In telecommunications, the term out-of-band signaling has the following meanings: 1. ... Common Channel Signaling (CCS) is the transmission of signaling information out of the information band. ...


Uses of SS7

SS7 provides a universal structure for telephony network signalling, messaging, interfacing, and network maintenance. It deals with establishment of a call, exchanging user information, call routing, different billing structures, and supports Intelligent network (IN) services. The Intelligent Network or I.N., as it is more commonly referred to, is a network architecture for both fixed and mobile telecommunication networks. ...


In order to move some non-time critical functionality out of the main signalling path, and for future flexibility, the concept of a separate "service plane" was introduced by the IN technology. The initial, and still the most important use of IN technology has been for number translation services, e.g. when translating toll free numbers to regular PSTN numbers. But much more complex services have since been built on IN, such as CLASS and prepaid telephone calls. A toll-free telephone number (or Freephone number in the UK) is a special telephone number, in which the calling party is not charged for the call by the telephone operator. ... Custom Local Area Signaling Services (CLASS) are PSTN telephony intelligent network services beyond simple voice transfer, such as caller ID (automatic number identification (ANI)), caller number blocking, automated call return, call blocking or screening, TCAP services, etc. ... Prepaid telephone calls are a popular way of making telephone calls which allow the caller to control spend and not be tied into ongoing commitments with the telephone operator. ...


SS7 is also important in linking VoIP traffic to the PSTN network. IP Telephony, also called Internet telephony, is the technology that makes it possible to have a telephone conversation over the Internet or a dedicated Internet Protocol (IP) network instead of dedicated voice transmission lines. ...


SS7 is also used in the mobile cellular telephony networks like GSM and UMTS for voice (Circuit Switched) and data (Packet Switched) applications.


Here are some of the GSM/UMTS CS interfaces in the MSC transported over SS7:


B -> VLR (uses MAP/B). Most MSCs are associated with a VLR, making the B interface "internal".


D -> HLR (uses MAP/D) for attaching to the CS network and location update


E -> MSC (uses MAP/E) for inter-MSC handover


F -> EIR (uses MAP/F) for equipment identity check


H -> SMS-G (uses MAP/H) for SMS over CS



There are also several GSM/UMTS PS interfaces in the SGSN transported over SS7:


Gr -> HLR for attaching to the PS network and location update


Gd -> SMS-C for SMS over PS


Gs -> MSC for combined CS+PS signalling over PS


Ge -> Charging for CAMEL prepaid charging


Gf -> EIR for equipment identity check


Physical network

SS7 clearly splits the signalling planes and voice circuits. An SS7 network has to be made up of SS7 capable equipment from end to end in order to provide its full functionality. The network is made up of several link types (A, B, C, E, and F) and three signalling nodes - Service switching point (SSPs), signal transfer point (STPs), and Service Control Point (SCPs). Each node is identifed on the network by a number, a point code. Extended services are provided by a database interface at the SCP level using X.25. Service Switching Point (SSP) usually forms the end point of a SS7 network. ... SCP or Service Control Point is a standard component of IN (Intelligent Networks) that is used to control the IN Service. ... X.25 is an ITU-T standard protocol suite for WAN networks using the phone or ISDN system as the networking hardware. ...


The links between nodes are full-duplex 56 kbit/s and/or 64 kbit/s. In Europe they are usually timeslots (DS0s) within an E1 or T1 trunk. In contrast to the US, trunks with signalling links usually also carry bearer channels, called associated signalling. In the US, SS7 links are usually carried over a network that is separated from the bearer channels, called nonassociated signaling. Quasi-associated signalling is similar to nonassociated signaling with a logical separation, but uses a smaller number of dedicated STPs to handle the signalling path. Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) is a technology for shared medium (usually radio) networks. ... In T-carrier systems Digital signal 0 (DS0) is a basic digital signaling rate of 64 kb/s, corresponding to the capacity of one voice-frequency-equivalent channel. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Two Network Interface Units, one with a single card, the other with two In telecommunications, T-carrier is the generic designator for any of several digitally multiplexed telecommunications carrier systems originally developed by Bell Labs and used in North America and Japan. ...


SS7 protocol

The SS7 protocol stack borrows partially from the OSI Model of a packetized digital protocol stack. The SS7 protocol has only four levels, matching the OSI layers 1 (physical), 2 (data link), and 3 (network), with level 4 corresponding to OSI layer 7. The levels are identified as Message Transfer Part (MTP) 1, MTP 2, and MTP 3 with Level 4 consisting of a number of different user parts, of which TUP, ISUP, TCAP with INAP and MAP , and SCCP are examples. The Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model (OSI Model or OSI Reference Model for short) is a layered abstract description for communications and computer network protocol design, developed as part of the Open Systems Interconnection initiative. ... The Message Transfer Part is part of the Signalling System 7 (SS7) which is used for communication in Public Switched Telephone Network. ... The ISDN User Part or ISUP is part of the Signaling System #7 which is used to set up telephone calls in Public Switched Telecom Networks. ... Transaction Capabilities Application Part, from ITU-T recommendations Q.771-Q.775 or ANSI T1. ... The Intelligent Network Application Part (INAP) is a signaling protocol used in the intelligent network architecture. ... Mobile Application Part ... Signaling Connection and Control Part, from ITU-T recommendation Q.713, is the routing protocol for Signalling System 7 networks. ...


The MTP covers the transport protocols including network interface, information transfer, message handling and routing to the higher levels. SCCP is a sub-part of other L4 protocols, together with MTP 3 it can be called the Network Service Part (NSP), it provides end-to-end addressing and routing, connectionless messages (UDTs), and management services for the other L4 user parts. TUP is a link-by-link signaling system used to connect calls. ISUP is the key user part, providing a circuit-based protocol to establish, maintain, and end the connections for calls. TCAP is used to create database queries and invoke advanced network functionality, or links to intelligent networks (INAP), mobile services (MAP), etc.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Signalling System #7 (SS7) | TelecomSpace (955 words)
SS7 or Signaling System Number 7 is simply another set of protocols that describe a means of communication between telephone switches in public telephone networks.
SS#7 is the defined interoffice signalling protocol for ISDN.
Signaling links utilize DS–0 channels and carry raw signaling data at a rate of 56 kbps or 64 kbps (56 kbps is the more common implementation).
:..Teralight Ltd..: (265 words)
Signalling System Number 7 (SS#7) is the protocol used by the telephone companies for interoffice signalling.
This method of signalling is inefficient and is rapidly being replaced by out-of-band or common-channel signalling techniques.
SS#7 is the defined interoffice signalling protocol for ISDN.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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