M00002547
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TIA-1057 2006 Edition, April 6, 2006 Telecommunications IP Telephony Infrastructure Link Layer Discovery Protocol for Media Endpoint Devices
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Availability date: 09/09/2021
Description / Abstract:
This Standard defines a set of organizationally-specific IEEE
802.1AB TLV extensions and a related MIB module, for the purpose of
improved deployment properties and multi-vendor interoperability
between VoIP endpoint devices and IEEE 802 networking
infrastructure elements. Where required for correct multi-vendor
interoperation, specific constraints on IEEE 802.1AB protocol
behavior, application-level interaction with the protocol elements,
as well as constraints on existing IEEE 802.1AB TLVs and related
MIB module, are also defined.
This Standard is applicable to all VoIP network edge devices
such as (but not limited to) IP Phones, Voice / Media Gateways,
Media Servers, IP Communications Controllers or other VoIP devices
or servers, as well as to network access elements such as (but not
limited to) IEEE 802 LAN Bridges or Wireless Access Points, and L2
or L3 switches or routers which are connected within IEEE 802
LANs.
This Standard specifically addresses usage of LLDP and the
extensions defined herein within IEEE 802 LAN environments. This
Standard may also be applicable to IEEE 802 MAN environments (IEEE
802.1AB is not specific to this, however there are no defined
limits).
This Standard is specifically defined for use between VoIP
endpoints and LAN network access elements, and as such is not
intended for use on links between LAN infrastructure elements.
This Standard is international in scope.
This Standard conforms to and harmonizes with other existing,
referenced TIA, ANSI, ISO, IEEE, IETF, ETSI, ITU-T and other
standards. Specifically, this Standard conforms to IEEE 802.1AB [1]
and use of the extension mechanisms defined as part of that
Standard, as well as to applicable IEEEdefined pre-existing
extensions to IEEE 802.1AB as published in Annexes F (802.1
extensions) and Annex G (802.3 extensions) of that Standard.
This Standard does not address interactions between IEEE 802.1AB
and other link level protocols such as IEEE 802.1X or IEEE
802.3af.
This Standard is not specific to any particular VoIP control
architecture, signaling or other higher-level protocol (e.g. SIP,
Megaco / H.248, H.323, etc).
This Standard is not specific to any particular system
management architecture, and does not mandate use of SNMP or other
particular management protocol.
This Standard does not place any application-level requirements
on interaction between system components such as control signaling,
setting of policies, gathering of management information, or usage
of the information provided.
Scope of Current Standard Release
In this release of this Standard, the following capabilities are
fully specified. More detailed functional descriptions of these
capabilities, as well as specific references to implementation
sections, are given in section 7, Media Endpoint Discovery
Functional Description.
• LAN speed and duplex in use, 2-way advertisement (see section
7.2, LAN Speed and Duplex Discovery).
• Network policy discovery, including VLAN id, 802.1p priority
and Diffserv code point (DSCP), 2-way advertisement (see section
7.3, Network Policy Discovery).
• Device location and topology discovery based on LAN-level
MAC/port information, 2-way advertisement (see section 7.4, LAN
Level Endpoint Location Discovery).
• IP Phone location identification, including emergency call
service location, based on IETF and NENA-defined location objects,
1-way advertisement from LAN infrastructure element to endpoint
(see section 7.5,
• Endpoint Location Identification Discovery). Endpoint move
detection notification from network connectivity device to their
associated VoIP management application(s), using SNMP or similar
(see section 7.6, Endpoint Move Detection Notification).
• Extended Power over Ethernet (PoE) discovery for fine-grained
power management, 2-way advertisement (see section 7.7, Extended
Power Via MDI Discovery).
• Extended device identification for inventory management, 1-way
advertisement from endpoint to LAN infrastructure element (see
section 7.8, Inventory Management Discovery).
• Identification of endpoint-embedded network connectivity
capabilities (e.g. multi-port IP Phone with embedded L2 switch or
bridge capability), 1-way advertisement from endpoint to LAN
infrastructure element (see section 7.9, Embedded Network
Connectivity Discovery).
• Application level interactions with the LLDP protocol elements
to provide timely startup of LLDP to support rapid availability of
Emergency Call Service (see section 7.10, LLDP-MED Fast Start
Protocol Behavior).
• Applicability of LLDP-MED to Wireless LAN environments
(Informative, see ANNEX B: LLDPMED Support for Voice over Wireless
LAN).
Note that some of these capabilities are based on newly defined
TLVs and the related MIB module defined herein, while others of
these capabilities are based on previously defined TLVs and related
MIB modules from the IEEE 802.1AB base specification [1].
It is considered that future iterations of this Standard can
potentially add expanded support in the above or related areas, and
also for other types of media endpoints, such as video devices.
Refer to section 2.2 Future Considerations for a listing of future
items considered, but not specified in this release of this
Standard.
Future Considerations
The following were considered for inclusion in this release of
this Standard, but are now considered candidates for future
releases, and every effort is made to provide for extensibility to
these and other capabilities:
• IP Phone advertisement of its dialable phone number, URI or
other callable address.
• Extended device class definitions such as basic IP phone,
video phone, web phone, etc.
• Media type(s) supported (voice, video, text conversation,
etc).
• Media bandwidth requirement(s) advertise by endpoint.
• Device operational status.
• Device mobility.
• IP Phone advertisement of ECS calls in progress.
• Specific extensions for usage of LLDP-MED in Wireless LAN
environments.
Purpose
This Standard fills a recognized need in the Voice Over IP
(VoIP) industry, brought about by the use of equipment supplied by
many different manufacturers, along with the need for
cost-effective, readily deployable, and easily managed solutions.
In particular, the needs for deployment of VoIP equipment into IEEE
802 - based LAN environments are addressed. It will be useful to
anyone engaged in the manufacture of VoIP equipment and related
products, as well as to those purchasing, operating or using such
products. It is internationally applicable.
To fulfill these needs, this Standard provides extensions to
IEEE 802.1AB that are specific to the requirements of Media
Endpoint Devices in an IEEE 802 LAN environment. Specific usage of
the IEEE 802.1AB LLDP base specification is also defined.
Interaction behavior between the Media Endpoint Devices and the LAN
infrastructure elements are also described where they are relevant
to correct operation or multi-vendor interoperability.
LLDP extensions and behavior requirements are described
specifically in the areas of network configuration and policy,
device location (including for Emergency Call Service / E911),
Power over Ethernet management, and inventory management.
Extensibility mechanisms to allow for future work in this area are
also provided where possible.