L. Dong et al., TRANSMISSION OF COMPRESSED VOICE OVER INTEGRATED SERVICES FRAME RELAYNETWORKS - PRIORITY SERVICE AND ADAPTIVE BUILDOUT DELAY, IEE proceedings. Communications, 141(4), 1994, pp. 265-274
Voice packets must be delivered within a time constraint to be played
out at the receiver, and the simplicity of frame relay (FR) protocols
makes this difficult to achieve with a low loss rate for integrated tr
affic. Highly compressed voice is more sensitive to losses than uncomp
ressed voice and also changes the nature of the traffic in a FR networ
k because of the short length of the voice frames. Priority for voice
is shown to be highly desirable to achieve high voice performance wher
e low-speed access links may be used for integrated service traffic. P
acketised voice transmission also requires that the receiver compensat
e for the random queuing delays experienced by each voice packet. The
packetised voice protocol (PVP) achieves this by using delay stamps cr
eated in packet switching nodes at the packet level, but this is not p
ossible in FR networks because they have no packet level. The authors
propose an adaptive buildout delay mechanism which requires no action
by the switching nodes, meets the requirements of random delay compens
ation with acceptable loss rates, and achieves shorter end-to-end voic
e delay than the PVP.