Cisco Systems Linksys PAP2 Manual De Usuario

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1. Introduction 
This guide describes basic administration and use of the Linksys Technology PHONE ADAPTER 
phone adapter – an intelligent low-density Voice over IP (VoIP) gateway.  The PHONE ADAPTER 
enables carrier class residential and business IP Telephony services delivered over broadband or 
high-speed Internet connections. By intelligent, we mean the PHONE ADAPTER maintains the states 
of all the calls it terminates.  It is capable of making proper decisions in reaction to user input events 
(such as on/off hook or hook flash) with little or no involvement by a ‘middle-man’ server or media 
gateway controller.  
Examples of proper reactions are: playing dial tone, collecting DTMF digits, comparing them against a 
dial plan and terminating a call. With intelligent endpoints at the edges of a network, performing the 
bulk of the call processing duties, the deployment of a large network with thousands of subscribers 
can scale quickly without the introduction of complicated, expensive servers.  As described later in 
this section, the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is a good choice of call signaling protocol for the 
implementation of such a device in this type of network. 
The phenomenal growth of broadband Internet access (DSL, Cable, FTTH, etc.), has brought the 
realization of reliable packet switched IP Telephony Services with circuit switched toll-quality and 
subscriber feature transparency with that of the PSTN’s CLASS feature-set. In addition to basic 
offerings comparable to traditional PSTN services, many service providers have integrated their IP 
Telephony offering with a large number of web-based productivity applications like unified messaging 
and call management features such as, remote call forward configuration via the web. Such advances 
over traditional phone services, with equal or better voice quality and lower per-minute prices, have 
made IP Telephony service a viable business. In fact, IP Telephony service providers in the US and 
abroad have seen their subscriber base growing at a rapid pace. 
The technical challenges in deploying and operating a residential IP Telephony service, however, are 
not small. One of the main challenges is to make the service transparent to subscribers: The 
subscribers shall expect to use their existing phones to make or receive calls in the same way as with 
the existing PSTN service. To enable this level of transparency, the IP Telephony solution has to be 
tightly integrated. A key element in this end-to-end IP Telephony solution is the provision of an 
endpoint device that sits at a subscriber’s premises that serves as an IP Telephony gateway or 
telephone adapter. This phone adapter offers one or more standard telephone RJ-11 phone ports – 
identical to the phone wall jacks at home – where the subscriber can plug in their existing telephone 
equipment to access phone services. The IP Telephony gateway may connect to the IP network, like 
the Internet, through an uplink Ethernet connection. 
Important!!  Please note:  The information contained herein is not a warranty from Linksys  
Customers planning to use the PHONE ADAPTER in a VoIP service deployment are warned to test 
all functionality they plan to support in conjunction with the PHONE ADAPTER before putting the 
PHONE ADAPTER in service.  Some information in Section 1 of this guide is written for educational 
purposes and describes functionality not yet implemented in the PHONE ADAPTER. 
 
1.1. 
The Session Initiation Protocol 
There are many excellent articles and books that discuss the advantages of SIP.
i
  Here are some of 
the more popular details: 
• SIP message constructs are very similar to those of HTTP which is well-known to be IP 
Network (Internet) friendly. 
• SIP is transport agnostic – meaning it can be used over TCP/IP or UDP/IP, with or without 
security. 
•  SIP has a better chance of traversing NATs than other control protocols. 
 
© 2004 Linksys Proprietary (See Copyright Notice on Page 2) 
 
 
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