| ==Phrack Inc.== |
|
|
| Volume Three, Issue 25, File 3 of 11 |
|
|
| Bell Network Switching Systems |
|
|
| An Informational Definitive File |
|
|
| By Taran King |
|
|
| March 14, 1989 |
|
|
|
|
| Throughout my many conversations with what many consider the "elite" |
| of the community, I have come to realize that even the highest up on the |
| hierarchical map do not know all of the little differences and specificities of |
| the switching systems that the BOCs use throughout the nation. This file was |
| written so that people could understand the differences between their switch |
| and those switches in areas where they have friends or that they pass through. |
|
|
| There are two broad categories that switches can be separated into: |
| local and tandem. Local offices connect customer lines to each other for |
| local calls and connect lines to trunks for interoffice calls. Tandem |
| switching is subdivided into two categories: local tandem offices and toll |
| offices. Local toll offices connect trunks to trunks within a metropolitan |
| area whereas toll offices connect trunks to trunks from the toll network |
| portion (class 1 to 4) of the hierarchical Public Switched Telephone Network |
| (PSTN). |
|
|
| Because of the convenience of having direct interface with customer |
| lines, local switching has built in functions needed to provide exchange |
| services such as local calling, custom calling features, Touch-Tone service, |
| E911 service, and exchange business services (like Centrex, ESSX-1, and |
| ESS-ACD. Centrex is a service for customers with many stations that is |
| provided out of the Central Office. ESSX-1 service limits the number of |
| simultaneous incoming and outgoing calls and the number of simultaneous |
| intragroup calls to software sizes specified by the customer. ESS-ACD is the |
| exchange service equivalent to Automatic Call Distribution except the call |
| distribution takes place in a Centrex-functioning portion of the electronic |
| switch.) |
|
|
| Geographic centralization of the tandem office allows efficiency in |
| providing centralized billing and network services. |
|
|
| Automatic switching was formally installed by the Bell System in 1919 |
| and although there are many replacements that update old and less preferable |
| services, many older offices still exist in various parts of the country. |
|
|
|
|
| ELECTROMECHANICAL SWITCHING SYSTEMS |
|
|
| The Step By Step (SXS) switching system, also known as the Strowger |
| system, was the earliest switching system. Invented by A. B. Strowger in |
| 1889, it is currently used in rural and suburban areas around the country as |
| well as some metropolitan areas which were small when the switch was |
| installed. The term "Step By Step" describes both the manner in which the |
| switching network path is established and the way in which each of the |
| switches in the path operates. They combine vertical stepping and a |
| horizontal rotary stepping motion to find the number dialed through pulse. |
| The drawbacks of the SXS system include not being able to have Touch Tone |
| calling or alternative routing without adding expensive equipment to the |
| office and also that the customer's telephone number is determined by the |
| physical termination/location of the line or connector on the system. The |
| line cannot be moved without changing the telephone number. The other |
| drawback is the high maintenance cost. These reasons, among others, have led |
| to a drop in the amount of SXS systems seen around the country. |
|
|
| The No. 1 Crossbar (XBAR) was developed for use in metropolitan |
| areas. The XBAR system uses horizontal and vertical bars to select the |
| contacts. There are five selecting bars mounted horizontally across the front |
| of each XBAR switch. Each selecting bar can choose either of two horizontal |
| rows of contacts. The five horizontal selecting bars can therefore select ten |
| horizontal rows of contacts. There are ten or twenty vertical units mounted |
| on the switch and each vertical unit forms one vertical path. Each switch has |
| either 100 or 200 sets of crosspoints/contacts depending on the number of |
| vertical units. |
|
|
| The No. 5 Crossbar was developed to fill the need for a switching |
| system that would be more productive in suburban residential areas or smaller |
| cities. The No. 5 XBAR also included automatic recording of call details for |
| billing purposes to allow for DDD (Direct Distance Dialing). The No. 5 XBAR |
| is separated into 2 parts: the switching network where all the talking paths |
| are established and the common-control equipment which sets up the talking |
| paths. Various improvements have been made on the No. 5 XBAR over the years |
| such as centralized automatic message accounting, line link pulsing to |
| facilitate DID (Direct Inward Dialing) to stations served by a dial PBX |
| (Private Branch Exchange), international DDD, Centrex service, and ACD |
| capability. The No. 5 Electronic Translator System (ETS) was also a |
| development which used software instead of wire cross-connections to provide |
| line, trunk, and routing translations as well as storing billing information |
| for transmissions via data link to a centralized billing collection system. |
|
|
| The No. 4 Crossbar is a common-control system designed for toll |
| service with crossbar switches making up its switching network. The No. 4A |
| XBAR system was designed for metropolitan areas and added the ability to have |
| CAMA (Centralized Automatic Message Accounting) as well as foreign-area |
| translation, automatic alternate routing, and address digit manipulation |
| capabilities (which is converting the incoming address to a different address |
| for route control in subsequent offices, deleting digits, and prefixing new |
| digits if needed). The No. 4A ETS replaced the card translator (which was |
| used for translation via phototransistors) and allowed billing and route |
| translation functions to be changed by teletypewriter input as it was a |
| stored-program control processor. CCIS (Common Channel Interoffice |
| Signaling) was added to the No. 4A XBAR in 1976 for more efficient signaling |
| between toll offices among other things. |
|
|
|
|
| ELECTRONIC SWITCHING SYSTEMS |
|
|
| The Electronic Switching Systems were made possible by the invention |
| of the transistor. They apply the basic concepts of an electronic data |
| processor, operating under the direction of a stored-program control, and |
| high-speed switching networks. The stored-program control allows system |
| designs the necessary flexibility to design new features and install them |
| easily. The SPC controls the sequencing of operations required to establish a |
| call. It can control a line or trunk circuit according to its application. |
|
|
| The first electronic switching trial took place in Morris, IL in |
| 1960. The first application of electronic local switching in the Bell System |
| took place in May of 1965 with the cutover of the first 1ESS switch in |
| Succasunna, NJ. |
|
|
| The 1ESS switching system was designed for areas where large numbers |
| of lines and lines with heavy traffic are served. It generally serves between |
| 10,000 and 65,000 lines. The memory of the 1ESS is generally read only memory |
| (ROM) so that neither software or hardware malfunctions can alter the |
| information content. |
|
|
| The 1A Processor was introduced in 1976 in the first 1AESS switch. |
| It was designed for local switching applications to be implemented into a |
| working 1ESS switch. It allowed the switching capacity to be doubled from |
| the old 1ESS switches also. The 1A Processor uses both ROM and RAM (Random |
| Access Memory). Magnetic tape units in the 1A Processor allow for system |
| reinitialization as well as detailed call billing functions. |
|
|
| Both the 1ESS and the 1AESS switches use the same peripheral |
| equipment which allows for easy transition. Programs in both switches control |
| routine tests, diagnose troubles, detect and report faults and troubles, and |
| control emergency actions to ensure satisfactory operation. Both switches |
| offer the standard custom calling features as well as business features like |
| Centrex, ESS-ACD, Enhanced Private Switched Communications Service or ETS |
| (Electronic Tandem Switching). |
|
|
| The 2ESS was designed to extend electronic switching into suburban |
| regions but doing so economically, meeting the need for 2,000 to 10,000 line |
| offices. It has a call capacity of 19,000 with a maximum of 24,000 terminals |
| per system. One of the differences between the 1ESS and the 2ESS is that in |
| the 2ESS, lines and trunks terminate on the same side of the network, which is |
| called a folded network. There is no need for separate line and trunk link |
| networks as in the 1ESS. Also, the network architecture was designed to |
| interface with customer lines carrying lighter traffic, the features were |
| oriented toward residential rather than business lines, and the processor was |
| smaller and less expensive. |
|
|
| In 1976, the first 2BESS switch was introduced in Acworth, GA. The |
| 2BESS switch is similar to the 1AESS in that it has something added into the |
| switch. In this case, though, it is the 3ACC (3A Central Control), which is |
| in the place of the processor. The 3ACC doubles the call capacity originally |
| available in the 2ESS switch by combining integrated circuit design with |
| semiconductor memory stores. It also requires one-fifth of the floor space |
| and one-sixth of the power and air conditioning that the 2ESS central |
| processor requires. The 3ACC is a self-checking, microprogram-controlled |
| processor capable of high-speed serial communication. Resident programs in |
| the 3ACC are hardware write-protected, but non-resident programs like |
| maintenance, recent change (RC), and back-up for translations or residential |
| programs are stored on a tape cartridge. |
|
|
| Also in 1976, the need for switching in rural areas serving fewer |
| than 4500 lines resulted in the introduction of the 3ESS switch. The 3ESS |
| switching equipment is the smallest Western Electric space-division, |
| centralized electronic switching system which serves 2,000 to 4,500 lines. |
| The 3ACC is used as the processor in the 3ESS, which was designed to meet the |
| needs of a typical Community Dial Office (CDO). It, too, is a folded network |
| like the 2ESS and 2BESS. The switch was designed for unattended operation, |
| implementing extensive maintenance programs as well as remote SCCS (Switching |
| Control Center System) maintenance capabilities. |
|
|
| The 4ESS switching equipment is a large-capacity tandem system for |
| trunk-to-trunk interconnection. It forms the heart of the Stored-Program |
| Control (SPC) network that uses CCIS (Common-Channel Interoffice Signaling) |
| yet still supports Multi-Frequency (MF) and Dial-Pulse (DP) signaling. The |
| SPC network allows for features such as the Mass Announcement System (MAS) |
| (which is where we find all of our entertaining 900 Dial-It numbers) and |
| WATS (Wide-Area Telecommunications Services) screening/routing. The 4ESS also |
| provides international gateway functions. It uses a 1A Processor as its main |
| processor, which, along with its use of core memories and higher speed logic, |
| is about five times as fast as the 1ESS processor. The 4ESS software |
| structure is based on a centralized development process using three languages: |
| a low-level assembly language, the intermediate language called EPL (ESS |
| Programming Language), and a high level language called EPLX. The assembly |
| language takes care of real-time functions like call processing while |
| measurements and administrative functions frequently are programmed in EPL. |
| Some maintenance programs and audits which are not as frequently run are in |
| EPLX. Up to six 4ESS switches can be remotely administered and maintained |
| from centralized work centers which means that very few functions need to be |
| performed at the site of the switch itself. |
|
|
| In March of 1982, the 5ESS switch first went into operation. It is a |
| digital time-division electronic switching system designed for modular growth |
| to accommodate local offices ranging from 1,000 to 100,000 lines. It was |
| designed to replace remaining electromechanical switching systems in rural, |
| suburban, and urban areas economically. Features of new generic versions of |
| the program allowed multimodule configuration and local/toll features for |
| combined class 4 and class 5 operation. The 5ESS administrative module |
| processor consists of two 3B20s. The communications module consists of a |
| message switch and a TMS (Time-Multiplexed Switch), which is used to connect |
| voice channels in one interface module to voice channels in another interface |
| module as well as for data messages between the administrative modules and |
| interface modules and also is used for data messages between interface |
| modules. The interface module can host analog line/trunk units, digital |
| line/trunk units, digital carrier line units, digital service circuit units, |
| or metallic service units in addition to miscellaneous test and access units. |
| There are 2 software divisions in the 5ESS. The portion in the administrative |
| module processor is responsible for officewide functions such as the human |
| interfaces, routing, charging, feature translations, switch maintenance, and |
| data storage and backup. The portion in the interface module is responsible |
| for the standard call-processing functions associated with the lines and |
| trunks terminating on that interface module. Most software is written in C |
| and has a modular structure to afford easy expansion and maintenance. |
|
|
| The last thing to mention here are Remote Switching Systems (RSS) and |
| Remote Switching Modules (RSM). The No. 10A RSS is designed to act as an |
| extension of a 1ESS, 1AESS, or 2BESS switching equipment host and is |
| controlled remotely by the host over a pair of dedicated data links. It |
| shares the processor capabilities of these nearby ESS switches and uses a |
| microprocessor for certain control functions under the direction of the host |
| central processor. The RSS is capable of stand-alone functioning if the links |
| between it and the host are severed somehow. If this occurs, though, custom |
| calling, billing, traffic measurements, etc. are unavailable -- only basic |
| service on intra-RSS calls is allowed. The No. 5A RSM can be located up to |
| 100 miles from the 5ESS host and can terminate a maximum of 4000 lines with a |
| single interface module. Several RSMs can be interconnected to serve remote |
| offices as large as 16,000 lines. It is a standard 5ESS system interface |
| module with the capability for stand-alone switching capability if the |
| host-remote link fails. One difference from the RSS of the RSM is the ability |
| to use direct trunking, whereas the RSS requires that all interoffice calls |
| pass through the host switch. |
|
|
| Of course, there are many other switches out there, but these are the |
| basic Western Electric switches provided for the Bell System. The following |
| is a time-table to summarize the occurrences of SPC switching systems that have |
| been used by BOCs and AT&T: |
|
|
| 1965 The 1ESS used for local metropolitan allows 65,000 lines and 16,000 |
| trunks. |
| 1968 The 1ESS expands for local metropolitan and local tandem. |
| 1970 The 2ESS used for local suburban has 30,000 lines and trunks together. |
| 1974 The 1ESS allows 2-wire toll switching. |
| 1976 The 4ESS uses large 4-wire toll for use of 100,000 trunks. |
| 1976 The 1AESS for large metropolitan local use has 90,000 lines and 32,000 |
| trunks |
| 1976 The 2BESS for local suburban use has 30,000 lines and trunks together. |
| 1976 The 3ESS for local rural use has 5,800 lines and trunks together. |
| 1977 The 1AESS using 4-wire toll. |
| 1979 The 1AESS has local, tandem, and toll capability. |
| 1979 The 10A RSS is for local small rural areas with 2,000 lines. |
| 1982 The 5ESS for local rural to large metropolitan areas with tandem and |
| toll capabilities has from 150,000 lines and 50,000 trunks to 0 lines |
| and 60,000 trunks. |
| ______________________________________________________________________________ |
|
|