ArticleThe different planes in the IMS interact via specific
reference points to deliver multimedia services to the user. QoS
provisioning for IMS communications has been standardized for
access networks only, with the assumption of an over provisioned
IP core. Effective provisioning of multimedia services requires
performance guarantee along the complete path of the sessions.
End-to-end QoS in IP networks is affected by the route traversed
by the user traffic. Moreover QoS guarantees in one ISP domain
are not effective for transit traffic exiting the domain. QoS
extensions to exterior gateway routing protocols have been
proposed to transfer route QoS information beyond one
autonomous system (domain). This paper explores options for
mapping inter-domain QoS information learnt on the media plane
into control plane session information for IMS QoS control.
Through testbed evaluations we show the effect of routing on delays
experienced in IMS communications.The different planes in the IMS interact via specific
reference points to deliver multimedia services to the user. QoS
provisioning for IMS communications has been standardized for
access networks only, with the assumption of an over provisioned
IP core. Effective provisioning of multimedia services requires
performance guarantee along the complete path of the sessions.
End-to-end QoS in IP networks is affected by the route traversed
by the user traffic. Moreover QoS guarantees in one ISP domain
are not effective for transit traffic exiting the domain. QoS
extensions to exterior gateway routing protocols have been
proposed to transfer route QoS information beyond one
autonomous system (domain). This paper explores options for
mapping inter-domain QoS information learnt on the media plane
into control plane session information for IMS QoS control.
Through testbed evaluations we show the effect of routing on delays
experienced in IMS communications