Next Generation SONET/SDH

Chapter 3.3.7 - FAX over IP

3.3.7   FAX over IP

As a page is scanned, surface intonations are encoded in a digital form; thus, the
original form of faxed data is digital. However, traditional fax machines convert the
digital information in analog to transmit it over the public switched transport network
(PSTN) using “switched services.” This analog signal is again encoded to 64
kbit/s channel, thus committing a relatively disproportionate bandwidth in both directions
(even if one direction only is fully used). In fact, the peak rate for a fax
transmission is 14.4 kbps in one direction. Therefore, packet networks (ATM, FR,
IP) would be more efficient sending scanned data in pure digital form end-to-end
over a unidirectional path.

There have been two methods used to send faxes: real-time and store-and-forward.
The difference between these two methods lies in the actual time of delivery
and the method of confirmation. In real-time faxing, a fax is transmitted to the destination
as soon as the send button is pressed. In store-and-forward faxing, the contents
of a document may be entered in memory, a timer set, and the fax sent later
when the network transmission rates are lower. Clearly, these two methods correspond
to two different urgency and priority levels. In fact, timing is an important issue
in FoIP networks; excessive delay in FoIP may cause the timing to be skewed
and result in loss of call, which impact QoS (ITU recommends that the FoIP protocol
compensate for the loss of a fixed timing of messages so that the T.30 protocol
operates without error).

As faxes can be transmitted using switched services, they can also be sent over
other packet networks. In this respect, the Frame Relay Forum has defined a real-time
protocol for the transmission of fax-over-frame relay (FoFR). ITU has defined
the T.37 recommendation for store-and-forward fax-over-IP (FoIP), and the T.38
for real-time FoIP. Furthermore, T.38 is selected for H.323.

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