ZyXEL Communications ISG50 User Manual

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 Chapter 27 Global PBX Settings
ISG50 User’s Guide
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27.9  Network Technical Reference
This section contains background material relevant to the Server screens.
ISDN Overview
ISDN (Integrated Service Digital Network) is a circuit-switched telephone network system. In ISDN, 
there are two types of channels: B-channels and D-channels. ISDN allows digital transmission of 
voice, video and data over ordinary telephone copper wires using B-channels with 64 kbps 
bandwidth. D-channels are mainly used for signaling and control with 16 kbps or 64 kbps 
bandwidth depending on service levels. 
The ISG50 supports the BRI ISDN service level. BRI (Basic Rate Interface) contains two 64 kbps B 
channel and one 16 kbps D channel (2B+1D). A BRI user can have up to 128 kbps service.
DiffServ 
DiffServ (Differentiated Services) is a class of service (CoS) model that marks packets (based on 
the application types and traffic flow) so that they receive specific per-hop treatment at DiffServ-
compliant network devices along their route. Packets are marked with DiffServ Code Points (DSCPs) 
indicating the level of service desired. This allows the intermediary DiffServ-compliant network 
devices to handle the packets differently depending on the code points without the need to 
negotiate paths or remember state information for every flow. In addition, applications do not have 
to request a particular service or give advanced notice of where the traffic is going.
DSCP and Per-Hop Behavior 
The DSCP value determines the forwarding behavior, the PHB (Per-Hop Behavior), that each packet 
gets across the DiffServ network. Based on the marking rule, different kinds of traffic can be 
marked for different forwarding treatment. Resources can then be allocated according to the DSCP 
values and the configured policies.
The ISG50 allows you to mark outgoing frames with following PHB classifications:
Assured Forwarding (AF) - This is a PHB group allowing you to choose from one of four classes 
of forwarding assurance. Each class has three choices of drop precedence to choose from. When 
congestion occurs, the DS nodes on your network treat all IP packets marked with the same class 
and drop precedence identically. DS nodes can be configured to protect packets with lower drop 
precedence value by discarding packets with a higher drop precedence value.
Expedited Forwarding (EF) The EF PHB defines a single DSCP designed for simulating a private 
end-to-end pipeline across a DiffServ network. IP packets are marked for high priority low-loss, 
low-latency, low-jitter, assured-bandwidth end to end service through DS domains. This is 
recommended for use with VoIP traffic as it addresses the factors that cause degradation in sound 
quality.
Class Selector (CS) - IP packets are marked with values partially backwards-compatible with 
known current uses of IP precedence field. The packets marked with higher values are given higher 
priority than those with lower values.