Title :
A control mechanism to prevent correlated message arrivals from degrading Signaling No. 7 network performance
Author :
Kosal, Haluk ; Skoog, Ronald A.
Author_Institution :
AT&T Bell Labs., Holmdel, NJ, USA
fDate :
4/1/1994 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Signaling System No. 7 (SS7) is designed to provide a connectionless transfer of signaling messages of reasonable length. Customers having access to user signaling bearer capabilities as specified in the ANSI T1.623 and CCITT Q.931 standards can send bursts of correlated messages (e.g., by doing a file transfer that results in the segmentation of a block of data into a number of consecutive signaling messages) through SS7 networks. These message bursts with short interarrival times could have an adverse impact on the delay performance of the SS7 networks. A control mechanism, credit manager, is investigated in this paper to regulate incoming traffic to the SS7 network by imposing appropriate time separation between messages when the incoming stream is too bursty. The credit manager has a credit bank where credits accrue at a fixed rate up to a prespecified credit bank capacity. This paper presents simulation results showing delay performance of the SS7 ISUP and TCAP message traffic with a range of correlated message traffic, and control parameters of the credit manager (i.e., credit generation rate and bank capacity) are determined that ensure the traffic entering the SS7 network is acceptable. The results show that control parameters can be set so that for any incoming traffic stream there is no detrimental impact on the SS7 ISUP and TCAP message delay, and the credit manager accepts a wide range of traffic patterns without causing significant delay
Keywords :
delays; queueing theory; telecommunication signalling; telecommunication standards; telecommunication traffic; telecommunications control; ANSI T1.623 standards; CCITT Q.931 standards; ISUP; SS7 networks; Signaling System No. 7; TCAP; connectionless transfer; control mechanism; control parameters; correlated message arrivals; credit bank capacity; credit generation rate; credit manager; delay performance; file transfer; message bursts; short interarrival times; signaling messages; simulation results; telecommunication traffic; user signaling bearer capabilities; ANSI standards; Communication system traffic control; Control systems; Degradation; Delay; ISDN; Signal design; Switching systems; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control;
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on