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Frame relay development could mean improved voice over IP

Frame relay development could mean improved voice over IP

By:  Greg Enright  On: 23 Aug 2001 For: Channelworld India 

A new development that promises to transport frame relay packets more efficiently could result in big improvements in the use of voice over IP across corporate networks.

A new development that promises to transport frame relay packets more efficiently could result in big improvements in the use of voice over IP across corporate networks.

Announced last month by the Frame Relay Forum, FRF.20 is an implementation agreement that reduces the size of voice packets, thereby allowing more VoIP calls to run across a network at the same time. The reduction is achieved by eliminating bytes within a packet's header that are similar to each other. With this redundancy out of the way, headers can shrink from a typical size of 40 bytes to counts as low as two bytes.

These micro alterations could ultimately have the macro result of allowing an ordinary 64K link to handle five uncompressed concurrent calls instead of two.

"When it comes down to it, that header…does not change very much from packet to packet," said Frame Relay Forum President Mike Walsh. "In fact, probably about 80 to 90 per cent of that header stays the same. So we're using the [agreement] in order to identify how to compress that header so that the stuff that's going to be the same from call to call will simply have a reference to (it),…and it will only pass the information that changes."

Steven Taylor, a consultant and Frame Relay Forum member who has written articles about the protocol for Network World (U.S.), said the development is a significant one, especially for the improvement of VoIP. Highly-compressed voice, which demands short packets, has traditionally not been a good fit with IP, which Taylor pointed out is an extremely overhead-intensive protocol.

"You end up with it being a rather inefficient way to do voice because a typical voice packet of voice over IP could rather easily be half-overhead. So anything you can do to minimize the impact of that overhead would be rather important."

With VoIP attracting more attention from IT departments every week, Taylor added that the development comes at an important time. He added, however, that if those IT departments are looking at moving voice throughout a point-to-point internal virtual trunk line, they would be wiser to do voice directly over frame relay rather than VoIP over frame relay, as it would offer better reliability. Due to the current "trendiness" of VoIP, however, Taylor doesn't see too many shops going this route.

"Even though IP is not an ideal transport mechanism for voice, there is so much momentum behind the all-IP network that VoIP is just quite frankly gaining a lot of popularity," he said. "What this (implementation agreement) does is minimize some of the negative impacts of doing VoIP over frame to give it some of the efficiencies of doing voice over frame."


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Greg Enright Greg Enright is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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