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McGraw Hill-Signaling System Number 7(5th edition) 英文版
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Chapter
1
Signaling System #7
Signaling System 7 (SS7) has become one of the most important assets within any
carrier’s network. Already deemed important for interconnecting calls from one net-
work to the next, SS7 also has become a network rich in user data.
SS7 is really a control protocol, used to provide instructions to the various elements
within a telephony network. These instructions may be how to route a call through the
network, what features a caller has subscribed to, or in the case of number portability,
which carrier will be used to handle the call.
In order to provide this level of instruction, a great deal of information must be sent
from one element to another. Everything from the caller’s telephone number to his or
her calling card number, as well as other pertinent data, is sent through the network
to the various network elements involved in connecting the caller to his or her destina-
tion. If there were a means of trapping all this information and storing it for analysis
(which, of course, there is), carriers would find a rich resource for identifying the users
of their network.
The data can be used for determining new marketing campaigns, the success of new
feature offerings, and much more. In fact, I often refer to these data as the three W’s:
who is using the network, when they are using the network, and why they are using
the network. These data are crucial to the success of any business to ensure that it is
meeting the needs of its customers.
Many carriers are just now realizing the benefits of mining the data traversing the
SS7 network and are using these data to maintain revenue assurance in all aspects of
the business. SS7 has even become an important revenue source for carriers who have
learned to tap its links and interface to back-office billing systems.
What was once an obscure, little-known technology has become one of the industry’s
most prized possessions. However, SS7 will not live forever. Particular aspects of SS7
will continue to thrive throughout the signaling networks, but already the lower layers
of the SS7 protocols are being replaced by protocols based on the Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP).
1
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Source: SIGNALING SYSTEM #7, Fifth Edition

In addition to changes in the transport layer, the industry already has begun to
evolve the network itself to a new architecture designed to support not just voice but
all forms of media, including video and messaging. Much as the Intelligent Network (IN)
was designed to support the delivery of voice services under the control of SS7, the IP
Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) has been developed to support the delivery of all services,
using all types of media, under the control of a new call control protocol known as the
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP).
Still, SS7 is a long way from obsolescence and is extremely important to understand
if one plans on making a career out of telecommunications. To fully understand how
and why SS7 is used, one first must understand the basics of telephony as well as basic
signaling.
Introduction to Telephony Signaling
Why is signaling needed? To understand the answer to this question, you must first
understand the mechanics of a telephone call. When a subscriber picks up a telephone
receiver, an electric signal is sent over a wire to a telephone switch. The telephone
switch detects the electric current on this wire and interprets this “signal” as a request
for a dial tone.
But let’s say the subscriber wants to transmit data over this same line using packet
switching rather than an analog modem. The information sent to the telephone switch
has to define the transmission as digital data and not voice before the switch can de-
termine how to handle the call. This is only one portion of the call.
To transmit the data to another network, the switch must determine first how the
data are to be routed (to what destination) and which circuits to use to reach the desti-
nation. After this has been determined, some form of request must be sent to the tele-
phone switch on the other end of the circuit to establish a connection. This continues
all the way through the network, with the same requirements at each leg of the call.
Telephone switches need the capability to signal one another and share information
regarding the type of transmission, how the transmission is to be routed (call destina-
tion), and what the contents of the transmission are (audio, video, data, and so on).
If there is to be special handling or routing for a call, the telephone switches involved
in routing the call must be able to obtain these instructions. Rather than store routing
instructions for every single telephone number in the world within each and every tele-
phone switch, each network is responsible for its own network database. The telephone
switches then need the capability to connect and communicate with these databases to
obtain the special instructions.
This is a high-level view of what signaling networks really do. They enable tele-
phone switches (and now packet switches) to communicate directly with one another
and share information needed to process any type of call autonomously. SS7 was
designed originally for the analog telephone network, but it has undergone continu-
ous changes and enhancements to accommodate the ever-changing world of telecom-
munications. Today, SS7 is used for data, video, voice, audio, and even Voice-over-IP
(VoIP) networks.
2 Chapter 1
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Signaling System #7

Signaling System #7 3
Ever since the beginning of the telephone, signaling has been an integral part of
telephone communications. The first telephone devices depended on the receiving party
standing next to the receiver. Early telephones did not have ringers like today’s tele-
phones and used crude speakers to project the caller’s voice into the room. If the person
being called was not within close proximity of the speaker, he or she would have no
indication of an incoming call.
After the formation of the Bell Telephone Company, Alexander Graham Bell’s faith-
ful assistant, Thomas Watson, invented the telephone ringer. The ringer served one
purpose: to alert the called party of an incoming call. When the called party lifted the
receiver, a direct-current (dc) battery and ground were used to indicate that the called
party had answered the telephone and completed the circuit. Although not having an
immediate impact, this method became important when the first telephone exchange
was created. Lifting the receiver and allowing a dc current to flow through the phone
and back through the return of the circuit would light a lamp on the operator’s switch-
board. This signaled the operator when someone needed to place a telephone call and
often was accompanied by a buzzer.
Once the operator answered the switchboard, information was exchanged with the
operator. The person calling was identified so that a record of the call could be made
(for billing if it was a long-distance call), and the person being called was identified
so that the operator knew how to connect the call. This is not much different from
telephone signaling today, although signaling has evolved over the decades to include
significantly more information than these early methods could.
Consider the typical long-distance telephone call today. When a caller dials the area
code and prefix of the telephone number, the local exchange must determine how to
route the call. In addition, billing information must be passed to a central database. If
the caller is using a contemporary digital facility [such as T1 or an Integrated Services
Digital Network (ISDN)], information regarding the digitization of the line also must
be provided.
Early signaling methods were analog and had a limited number of states, or values,
that could be represented. They also were limited to audible tones because they used
the same circuit for both signaling and voice. The tones sometimes would interfere with
the call in progress, and sometimes the voice transmission itself would be interpreted
as part of the signaling and release the call.
Another problem with early signaling methods was the fact that the circuit used for
the call would be busy from the time the caller started dialing until the call was com-
pleted. Since the signaling was sent through the same circuit as the voice transmission,
it was necessary to connect the facility end to end even if there was no voice transmis-
sion. For example, if the number being called was busy, the facility still would be con-
nected end to end so that a busy tone could be sent through the circuit to the caller.
This is not an efficient use of facilities, and as the demand grew for telephone service,
it placed a heavy burden on telephone companies with limited facilities.
Many telephone companies in metropolitan areas such as Los Angeles were facing
substantial investments to add new facilities to support the millions of customers who
were creating an enormous amount of traffic. The telephone companies had to find
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Signaling System #7

4 Chapter 1
a way to consolidate their facilities, making more efficient use of what they had. In ad-
dition, they needed a service that would vastly improve their network’s capability and
support the many new services being demanded by subscribers.
Europe had already begun the process of digitizing the network in the early 1960s.
One of the first steps was to remove signaling from the voice network and place the
signaling on a network all its own. In this way, the call setup and teardown procedures
required for every call could be faster than the previous methods, and voice and data
circuits could be reserved for use when a connection was possible rather than maintain-
ing the connection even when the destination was busy. Common Channel Signaling
(CCS) paved the way for services the early pioneers of signaling never dreamed of. CCS
is the concept that ISDN and SS7 are based on.
The concept is simple. Rather than use voice trunks for signaling and voice trans-
mission, they are used only when a connection is established and voice (or data) trans-
mission takes place. For instance, when a call is placed to a distant party using con-
ventional signaling, the signaling for that call begins from the time the caller lifts the
receiver and goes off-hook until the caller goes back on-hook. After the end office has
received the dialed digits, an outgoing trunk to the destination end office is seized,
based on a routing-table entry and the digits dialed.
The voice circuit remains connected and in use by the telephone switch, even if the
distant party never answers the call, until the calling party hangs up. Meanwhile, other
circuits are being tied up in a similar fashion. By removing the signaling from the voice
network and placing it on a network of its own, the voice circuit remains available for a
longer period of time. This means that the availability of voice circuits is higher, and the
need for additional circuits decreases. The facilities used for signaling provide signaling
for many voice circuits, hence the name CCS.
Other efficiencies are provided by SS7 (albeit not always implemented). Take the
case of service tones and intercept recordings. Typically, when a caller dials a number
that is busy, he or she receives a busy tone from the destination (terminating) switch.
This, of course, requires use of the voice circuit (or at least one side of the circuit) for
the audible tone. The same is true for intercept recordings.
With SS7, the caller’s local office could provide these tones and recordings at the
command of the distant office. This implementation would offer even more efficiencies
than the present method used throughout North America (voice circuits are two-way
transmission circuits, with a transmit and receive, so that tones and recordings are
sent in one direction).
SS7 does provide much faster connections and teardowns than conventional signal-
ing methods. Even if voice circuits do get connected, with the speed of the signaling
network, circuits can be disconnected and quickly connected again for a new call. This
is especially true of long-distance calls, where many segments of circuits are bridged
between multiple switches to connect a call end to end. Each segment is connected and
released individually, making it available for other calls.
Signaling today uses existing digital circuits. By using existing digital circuits, sig-
naling for many circuits can be consolidated onto one signaling link using a fraction
of the bandwidth required if conventional signaling were used. One digital data link
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Signaling System #7

Signaling System #7 5
can carry the signaling information for thousands of trunks and maintain thousands
of telephone calls. When TCP/IP is used as the transport for signaling, this number
increases significantly.
With SS7, the amount of information that can be provided is virtually unlimited. This
opens the potential for many more uses of the signaling data. Signaling takes place in two
parts of the telephone network: between the subscriber and the local end office and from
switching office to switching office within the telephone company network. The signaling
requirements are similar, although interoffice signaling can be more demanding.
As the telephone network grew more sophisticated, the signaling methods grew as
well. Signaling between the subscriber and the central office now includes the calling-
party number, which is forwarded to the called party and displayed before the phone is
even answered. Interoffice signaling now includes information obtained from regional
databases pertaining to the type of service a subscriber may have or billing informa-
tion. In fact, the first use of SS7 in the United States was not for call setup and tear-
down but for accessing remote databases. The opposite is true of Europe and other
international communities, where C7 is used for call setup and teardown, but the con-
cept of centralized databases for custom call routing is still new. In the 1980s, the U.S.
telephone companies offered a new service called Wide Area Telephone Service (WATS),
which used a common 800 area code regardless of the destination of the call. This posed
a problem for telephone-switching equipment, which uses the area code to determine
how to route a call through the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN).
To overcome this problem, a second number is assigned to every 800 number. This
second number is used by the switching equipment to actually route the call through
the voice network. But the number must be placed in a centralized database where all
central offices can access it. When an 800 number is dialed, the telephone company
switching equipment uses a data communications link to access this remote database
and look up the actual routing number. The access is in the form of a message packet,
which queries the network for the number. The database then responds with a response
message packet providing the routing telephone number as well as billing information
for the 800 number. The switching equipment then can route the call using conven-
tional signaling methods.
SS7 provides the data communications link between switching equipment and tele-
phone company databases. Shortly after 800 number implementation, the SS7 network
was expanded to provide other services, including call setup and teardown. Still, the
database-access capability has proven to be the biggest advantage behind SS7 and is
used widely today to provide routing and billing information for all telephone services,
including 800 numbers, 900 numbers, 911 services, custom calling features, caller iden-
tification, and many new services still being defined.
800 numbers at one time belonged to one service provider. If subscribers wanted to
change service providers, they had to surrender their 800 number. This was due to the
location of the routing information. All routing information for 800 numbers is located
in a central database within the carrier’s network and is accessed via the SS7 network.
SS7 is now used to allow 800 numbers to become transportable and to provide subscrib-
ers the option of keeping their 800 numbers even when they change service providers.
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Signaling System #7
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