- IP Phone
An IP phone uses
Voice over IP technologies allowing telephone calls to be made over an IP network such as the internet instead of the ordinaryPSTN system. Calls can traverse the Internet, or a private IP Network such as a that of a company. The phones use protocols such asSession Initiation Protocol ,Skinny Client Control Protocol or one of various proprietary protocols such as that used bySkype . IP phones can be simple software-basedSoftphone s or purpose-built hardware devices that appear much like an ordinarytelephone or acordless phone .There also exist the possibility to reuse ordinaryPSTN phones as IP phones, withanalog telephony adapter s (ATA). One of the primary motivations for implementing such a system is the lower calling cost. When calling other IP phones over the internet one only pays for the usually fixed cost internet bandwidth.It may have many features an analog phone doesn't support, such as e-mail-like IDs for contacts that may be easier to remember than names or phone numbers.
Elements of an IP phone
#Hardware
#DNS client
#STUN client
#DHCP client (not commonly used)
#Signalling stack (SIP, H323, Skinny, Skype, or others)
#RTP Stack
#User interfaceHardware of a stand alone IP phone
The overall hardware may look like a telephone or mobile phone. An IP phone has the following hardware components.
*Speaker/ear phone andmicrophone
*Key pad / touch pad to enter phone number and text (not used for ATAs).
*Display hardware to feedback user input and show caller-id/messages (not used for ATAs).
*General purpose processor (GPP) to process application messages.
*Avoice engine or aDigital signal processor to process RTP messages. Some IC manufacturers provides GPP and DSP in single chip.
*ADC and DAC converters: To convert voice to digital data and vice versa.
*Ethernet or wireless network hardware to send and receive messages on data network.
*Power source might be a battery or DC source. Some IP phones receive electricity fromPower over ethernet .Other devices
There are several
WiFi enabledmobile phone s and PDAs that come pre-loaded with SIP clients or are at least capable of running IP telephony clients. Some IP phones may also support PSTN phone lines directly.Analog telephony adapter sThese are usually rectangular boxes that are connected to the internet or
Local area network using anEthernet port and have sockets to connect one or morePSTN phones. Such devices are sent out to customers who sign up with various commercial VoIP providers allowing them to continue using their existing PSTN based telephones.Another type of gateway device acts as a simple
GSM base station and regularmobile phone s can connect to this and make VoIP calls. While a license is required to run one of these in most countries these can be useful onship s or remote areas where a low-powered gateway transmitting on unused frequencies is likely to go unnoticed.Stun Client
A STUN client is used on some SIP-based IP phones as firewalls on Network interface sometimes block SIP/RTP packets. Some special mechanism is required in this case to enable routing of SIP packets from one network to other. STUN is used in some of the sip phones to enable the SIP/RTP packets to cross boundaries of two different IP networks. A packet becomes unroutable between two sip elements if one of the networks uses private IP address range and other is in public IP address range. Stun is a mechanism to enable this border traversal. There are alternate mechanisms for traversal of NAT, STUN is just one of them. STUN or any other NAT traversal mechanism is not required when the two sip phones connecting are routable from each other and no firewall exists in between.
DHCP Client
DHCP client may be used to configure the TCP/IP parameters and server details if network segment uses dynamic IP address configuration. DHCP client then provides central and automatic management of IP phones configuration.
Common features of IP phones
*
Caller ID
* Dialing using name/ID: This is different from dialing from your mobile call register as the user does not need to save a number to a sip phone.
* Locally stored and network-based directories
* Conference and multiparty call
* Call park
* Call transfer and call hold
* Preserving user name/ number when choosing a different service provider (not widely supported).
* Applications like weather report, Attendance in school and offices, Live news etc.Disadvantages of IP phones
* Requires internet access to make calls outside the
Local area network unless a compatible local PBX is available to handle calls to and from outside lines.
* IP Phones and the routers they connect through usually depend onmains electricity , unlikePSTN phones which are supplied with power from thetelephone exchange .
* IP networks, particularly residential internet connections are easily congested. This can cause poorer voice quality or the call to be dropped completely.
* IP Phones, like other network devices can be subjected toDenial of service attack s as well as other attacks especially if the device is given a publicIP address [ [http://www.continuitycentral.com/feature074.htm VoiP - Vulnerability over Internet Protocol] ]
* Due to the latency induced byprotocol overhead they do not work as well onsatellite internet and other high-latency internet connections.References
ee also
*
List of SIP software
*IP Multimedia Subsystem
*VoIP
*Mobile VoIP
*Private branch exchange (PBX)
*ZRTP
*Session initiation protocol
*Soft phone
*STUN
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