OK, hot off the press from ATIS, the U.S. SHAKEN General Authority….

 

Nothing has changed in the STIR/SHAKEN application process. Each service 
provider (SP) will need to apply through the PA to be able to participate in 
the SHAKEN ecosystem. The FCC is recently concerned because several providers 
using wholesale number pools to operate today are now applying for numbers out 
of the national pool. 

 

Actually acquiring numbers out of the national pool is not necessary. The only 
current numbering pool requirement is that you are a national or state 
registered SP that HAS ACCESS TO NATIONAL NUMBER POOLS (you don’t actually need 
to possess any of your own numbers…..continue to use wholesale resources to 
operate).

 

So in closing, you do not need your own phone numbers to operate. You just need 
federal or state permission to access the national number pool as one of the 
credentials and qualifiers to become a registered SP with the PA.

 

Dave  

 

From: VoiceOps <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Zilk, David
Sent: Tuesday, September 8, 2020 4:20 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [VoiceOps] More Question about routing

 

Having come into telephony from the data networking end, rather than from a 
PSTN telephony background, where would one find a good  basic to detailed 
tutorial of how routing of VoIP calls into the PSTN and vice versa works?  

 

I have so far only been involved with routing from our SIP platform to and from 
wholesale service providers, and have not yet had to manage our own numbers and 
peering. With STIR/SHAKEN we may need to get into that, and I need to get up to 
speed.

 

Thanks,

David

 

From: VoiceOps [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Richard 
Jobson
Sent: Tuesday, September 8, 2020 12:44 PM
To: Glen Gerhard <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >; 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] Question about SS7 routing

 

Hi Ross

 

So in your original email you were wondering about the role of MTP, the layer 3 
protocol. This keeps tabs on the point codes. If you are troubleshooting down 
to the SS7 messages (MSU’s), SLTM’s & SLTA’s tell you what point codes those 
links are reaching.

 

The Global Title Translation uses the SCCP/SS7 protocol when connecting to IXC.

 

Local Number Portability uses AIN/TCAP to dip the database to determine the 
LRN. But many SS7 operations just troubleshoot this by looking at the ISUP 
protocol where the original calling Party number (CGN) appears in the Generic 
Address Part GAP and the LRN in the called party number (CDN) field.

 

Cheers

Richard

 

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                            

From: VoiceOps <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > on behalf of Glen Gerhard 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Date: Tuesday, September 8, 2020 at 11:47 AM
To: <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] Question about SS7 routing

 

Hi Ross,

Unless you have an SS7 trunk to an ILEC you don't need to worry much about the 
Point Code. For SIP traffic you just dip the call and route on the LRN.

The Point Code itself is a special format that is assigned to you when you set 
up your SS7 capable switch. Unless you have one of them you never need to worry 
about it.

========

ANSI Point Codes
ANSI point codes are made up of three groups of digits called the network 
indicator (NI), network cluster (NC), and network cluster member (NCM). The 
values for ANSI point codes depends on the value of the pctype parameter of the 
chg-sid command, either ansi or other. If the pctype parameter is set to ansi, 
the ANSI rules for the ANSI point code are used to define the point code. The 
range of values for an ANSI point code with the pctype=ansi parameter are:

NI – 001-255
NC – 001-255 (if ni = 001-005) or 000-255, * (if ni = 006-255)
NCM – 000-255, *
The pctype=other parameter specifies that the ANSI point codes do not meet ANSI 
standards. The range of values for ANSI point codes with the pctype=other 
parameter are:

NI – 000-255
NC – 000-255, *
NCM – 000-255, *
The asterisk (*) point code value indicates a single cluster address for a 
cluster point code (for example, 20-2-*) or a network routing destination 
(21-*-*). for more information on cluster point codes, see the Cluster Routing 
and Management Diversity (CRMD) section. For more information on network 
routing point codes, see the Network Routing section.

A double asterisk (**) and triple asterisk (***) can also be used for the NC 
and NCM fields of the ANSI point code, but for only the rtrv-dstn, 
rept-stat-dstn, rtrv-rte, and rept-stat-rte commands.

A double asterisk in the NCM field of a point code (for example, 20-2-**) 
produces a summary report that shows all point code destinations or routes 
residing in the given cluster (20-2). This does not include the cluster point 
code, if the cluster point code (for example, 20-2-*) is provisioned. The 
following examples (rtrv-dstn and rtrv-rte) are reports generated using two 
asterisks in the NCM field of a point code.
=======

~Glen

On 9/3/2020 10:55 AM, Mary Lou Carey wrote:

I'll try to make this as short and sweet as possible even though it's pretty 
complicated. Point Codes are the 10 digit addresses for a particular switch and 
LRNs are the 10 digit addresses for a particular connection point that switch 
is associated with. In the PSTN world, all connections are dedicated and 
implemented by LATA / Tandem area for Local / IntraLATA traffic. When you get 
your first NPA-NXX for a LATA / tandem area, you enter it in the LERG (National 
Routing Database) and populate the tandems (Local, IntraLATA and FGD) that you 
are connecting to. Then you assign a 10 digit phone number from your NXX block 
to be your LRN. You add that to both the LERG and NPAC (National Porting 
Database). 

Once you've published all your switch information in the LERG and NPAC, then 
you establish your ISUP trunks with each ILEC you're interconnecting with. You 
can set up additional trunks with other carriers if you want a cheaper option 
for routing traffic, but the minimum required is the ILEC. Each carrier's 
switch will have a distinct point code associated with it so you'll order ISUP 
trunks to each switch (point code route) you need to be connected to. You'll 
also associate the distinct LRN for that LATA / carrier tandem area with that 
trunk group. Usually there's multiple trunk groups per LATA / tandem area so 
you'll program your routing tables with the NPA-NXXs each trunk group serves. 
That way when a customer originates a call, your switch can do the LNP dip to 
find the LRN and send it over the route that the NPA-NXX of the LRN is 
associated with.  Routing tables can get complicated depending on how many 
carriers you're connected to. Companies that operate in more than one ILEC area 
or LATA usually purchase Least Cost Routing software so they can send their 
originating traffic out over the cheapest route. 

IXC traffic is routed a little differently because it is routed by CIC (4 digit 
code that identifies the IXC) rather than by NPA-NXX. They connect to all the 
ILEC carriers just like the CLECs do, but they populate their routing 
information in the SMS database instead of the NPAC database. Once the call is 
dipped, the traffic is delivered in pretty much the same way.....by dedicated 
trunk group / tandem area. 



MARY LOU CAREY 
BackUP Telecom Consulting 
Office: 615-791-9969 
Cell: 615-796-1111 

On 2020-09-02 04:46 PM, Ross Tajvar wrote: 

Hi all, 

I'm trying to understand how routing works in SS7-land. I am familiar 
with portability, and I know (at least in the US) the first step in 
routing a call is doing an LNP dip to get the LRN. 

However, it looks like addresses in MTP3 are "point codes" (PCs) which 
are assigned to switches. Calls are set up with ISDN-UP, which is 
transported via MTP3. So in order for a call to be set up, the 
destination switch's PC must be known. How is the destination PC 
determined from the destination LRN? 

Thanks, 
Ross 
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-- 
Glen Gerhard
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
858.324.4536
 
Cognexus, LLC
7891 Avenida Kirjah
San Diego, CA 92037

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