MikroTik RouterOS v2.9 Reference Manual page 670

Reference manual
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Description
IP telephony, known as Voice over IP (VoIP), is the transmission of telephone calls over a data
network like one of the many networks that make up the Internet. There are four ways that you
might talk to someone using VoIP:
Computer-to-computer - This is certainly the easiest way to use VoIP, and you don't have to
pay for long-distance calls.
Computer-to-telephone - This method allows you to call anyone (who has a phone) from your
computer. Like computer-to-computer calling, it requires a software client. The software is
typically free, but the calls may have a small per-minute charge.
Telephone-to-computer - Allows a standard telephone user to initiate a call to a computer user.
Telephone-to-telephone - Through the use of gateways, you can connect directly with any
other standard telephone in the world.
Suppoted hardware:
Quicknet Technologies
Internet PhoneJACK (ISA or PCI) for connecting an analog telephone (FXS port)
Internet LineJACK (ISA) for connecting an analog telephone line (FXO port) or a
telephone (FXS port)
ISDN client cards (PCI) for connecting an ISDN line. See
supported PCI ISDN cards
Voicetronix
OpenLine4 card for connecting four (4) analog telephone lines (FXO ports)
Zaptel Wildcard X100P IP telephony card (from
analog telephone line (FXO port)
Supported standards:
MikroTik RouterOS supports IP Telephony in compliance with the International
Telecommunications Union - Telecommunications (ITU-T) specification H.323v4. H.323 is a
specification for transmitting multimedia (voice, video, and data) across an IP network.
H.323v4 includes: H.245, H.225, Q.931, H.450.1, RTP(real-time protocol)
The followong audio codecs are supported: G.711 (the 64 kbps Pulse code modulation (PCM)
voice coding), G.723.1 (the 6.3 kbps compression technique that can be used for compressing
audio signal at very low bit rate), GSM-06.10 (the 13.2 kbps coding), LPC-10 (the 2.5 kbps
coding), G.729 and G.729a (the 8 kbps CS-ACELP software coding), G.728 (16 kbps coding
technique, supported only on Quicknet LineJACK cards)
In PSTN lines there is a known delay of the signal caused by switching and signal compressing
devices of the telephone network (so, it depends on the distance between the peers), which is
generally rather low. The delay is also present in IP networks. The main difference between a PSTN
and an IP network is that in IP networks that delay is more random. The actual packet delay may
vary in order of magnutude in congested networks (if a network becomes congested, some packets
may even be lost). Also packet reordering may take place. To prevent signal loss, caused by random
jitter of IP networks and packet reordering, to corrupt audio signal, a jitter buffer is present in IP
telephony devices. The jitter buffer is delaying the actual playback of a received packet forming
Page 656 of 695
Copyright 1999-2007, MikroTik. All rights reserved. Mikrotik, RouterOS and RouterBOARD are trademarks of Mikrotikls SIA.
Other trademarks and registred trademarks mentioned herein are properties of their respective owners.
cards:
Device Driver List
Linux Support Services
for the list of
) for connecting one

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