As I mentioned in the earlier
post, Addressing and Information Routing in SS7 Global Title Translation is used when the message has to deliver to a
different network and the point code details of the destination node is not
available. The Global Title Translation method reduces the burden of keeping
the point code and sub system number of the actual destination. In a larger
network, there will be many intermediate GTT to route the information to the
next possible node and the final GTT will provide the point code and subs
system number of the final destination.
Showing posts with label GTT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GTT. Show all posts
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Addressing and Information Routing in SS7
In SS7, the SCCP layer routes the
messages between different network elements using Destination Point Code (DPC)
plus the Sub System Number (SSN) or Global Title (GT) plus SSN (Optional)
combination. Normally, the application layer expects the SCCP to route the
message and also specifies to the lower layer whether to route the message on
the DPC or the GT.
SCCP uses the first combination
when the application layer is aware of the destination point code and the SSN located
at that point code. The second combination is used when the destination entity
can be identified by the combination of elements within the GT. Normally the
second combination is used when the message has to deliver to a different
network and the point code of the end node is not available. In such scenarios,
the network determines the destination point code and the SSN by performing a
GT Translation.
As per ITU-T SCCP recommendation
Q.713, SCCP should support the following elements when GT is used for
addressing:
·
Address Indicator
·
GT Indicator
·
Translation Type
·
Numbering Plan
·
Encoding Scheme
·
GT Address Information
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)