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CHAPTER 8

                                                      Protocols for VoIP















                                                The Internet is a telephone system that’s gotten uppity.
                                                                            —Clifford Stoll

               The telecommunications industry spans over 100 years, and Asterisk integrates most
               —if not all—of the major technologies that it has made use of over the last century. To
               make the most out of Asterisk, you need not be a professional in all areas, but under-
               standing the differences between the various codecs and protocols will give you a
               greater appreciation and understanding of the system as a whole.
               This chapter explains Voice over IP and what makes VoIP networks different from the
               traditional circuit-switched voice networks that were the topic of the last chapter. We
               will explore the need for VoIP protocols, outlining the history and potential future of
               each. We’ll also look at security considerations and these protocols’ abilities to work
               within topologies such as Network Address Translation (NAT). The following VoIP
               protocols will be discussed (some more briefly than others):

                 • IAX
                 • SIP
                 • H.323
                 • MGCP
                 • Skinny/SCCP
                 • UNISTIM
               Codecs are the means by which analog voice can be converted to a digital signal and
               carried across the Internet. Bandwidth at any location is finite, and the number of
               simultaneous conversations any particular connection can carry is directly related to
               the type of codec implemented. In this chapter, we’ll also explore the differences be-
               tween the following codecs in regards to bandwidth requirements (compression level)
               and quality:





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