A signaling gateway is a network component responsible for transferring
signaling
In signal processing, a signal is a function that conveys information about a phenomenon. Any quantity that can vary over space or time can be used as a signal to share messages between observers. The '' IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing' ...
messages (i.e. information related to call establishment, billing, location, short messages, address conversion, and other services) between
Common Channel Signaling (CCS) nodes that communicate using different protocols and transports. Transport conversion is often from
SS7 to
IP.
A
SIGTRAN Signaling Gateway is a network component that performs packet level translation of signaling from common channel signaling (based upon SS7) to SIGTRAN signaling (based upon IP). The concept of the SIGTRAN signaling gateway was introduced in the
IETF
The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is a standards organization for the Internet and is responsible for the technical standards that make up the Internet protocol suite (TCP/IP). It has no formal membership roster or requirements and ...
document: RFC 2719: Architectural Framework for Signaling Transport.
A signaling gateway can be implemented as an embedded component of some other network element, or can be provided as a stand-alone network element. For example: a signaling gateway is often part of a
softswitch
A softswitch (''software switch'') is a call-switching node in a telecommunications network, based not on the specialized switching hardware of the traditional telephone exchange, but implemented in software running on a general-purpose computing ...
in modern
VoIP
Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), also called IP telephony, is a method and group of technologies for the delivery of voice communications and multimedia sessions over Internet Protocol (IP) networks, such as the Internet. The terms Interne ...
deployments. The signaling gateway function can also be included within the larger operational domain of a
Signal Transfer Point (STP).
Protocol conversion gateways can also convert from one network operational paradigm to another – for example,
SIP to
ISUP for call control, SIP to
TCAP for address translation, or SIP to
MAP for location or presence.
See also
*
Media gateway
Voice over IP
Signaling System 7
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