Cisco Systems Linksys PAP2 Manual De Usuario

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If the service provider is offering origination and/or termination on endpoint equipment then it is very 
likely that the softswitch chosen for network operations will support multiple PSTN and VoIP signaling 
protocols. 
The table below lists the most commonly accepted, de-facto standards used when implementing a 
VoIP signaling scheme based on the type of gateway or endpoint equipment being deployed: 
VoIP Equipment Type 
Typical Port Density 
De-Facto Signaling Standards 
Trunking Gateways 
Greater Than 500 Ports 
H.248-Megaco / MGCP / IPDC 
Access Gateways 
Between five and 500 Ports 
SIP / H.323 
PBX/KTS Platforms 
Between ten and 500 Ports 
SIP / H.323 / SCCP 
PBX/KTS Telephone Sets 
One Port 
SIP / MGCP / SCCP 
Phone Adapters and IP Centrex 
Phones 
Up to four Ports 
SIP / MGCP 
The PHONE ADAPTER supports SIP today.  It has the capability to communicate with a variety of 
endpoints and signaling entities via SIP messages. 
1.2. 
Network Address Translation (NAT) Traversal 
1.2.1. 
What is a NAT or NAPT (Network Address Port Translator)? 
A NAT allows multiple devices to share the same external IP address to access the resources on the 
external network. The NAT device is usually available as one of the functions performed by a router 
that routes packets between an external network and an internal (or private) one. A typical application 
of a NAT is to allow all the devices in a subscriber’s home network to access the Internet through a 
router with a single public IP address assigned by the ISP. The IP header of the packets sent from 
the private network to the public network can be substituted by the NAT with the public IP address 
and a port selected by the router according to some algorithm. In other words, recipient of the packets 
on the public network will perceive the packets as coming from the external address instead of the 
private address of the device where the packets are originated. 
In most Internet protocols, the source address of a packet is also used by the recipient as the 
destination to send back a response. If the source address of the packets sent from the private 
network to the public network is not modified by the router, the recipient may not be able to send back 
a response to the originator of the message since its private source IP address/port is not usable. 
When a packet is sent from a device on the private network to some address on the external network, 
the NAT selects a port at the external interface from which to send the packet to the destination 
address/port. The private address/port of the device, the external address/port selected by the NAT to 
send the packet, and the external destination address/port of the packet form a NAT Mapping.  
The mapping is created when the device first sends a packet from the particular source address/port 
to the particular destination address/port and is remembered by the NAT for a short period of time. 
This period varies widely from vendor to vendor; it could be a few seconds, or a few minutes, or more, 
or less. While the mapping is in effect, packets sent from the same private source address/port to the 
same public destination address/port is reused by the NAT. The expiration time of a mapping is 
extended whenever a packet is sent from the corresponding source to the corresponding destination.  
More importantly, packets sent from that public address/port to the external address/port of the NAT 
will be routed back to the private address/port of the mapping session that is in effect. Some NAT 
devices actually reuse the same mapping for the same private source address/port to any external IP 
address/port and/or will route packets sent to its external address/port of a mapping from any external 
 
© 2004 Linksys Proprietary (See Copyright Notice on Page 2) 
 
 
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