HSL
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− | + | High Speed Link (HSL) refers to a single MTP2 link that uses the entire bandwidth of a [[trunk]] to transport MTP2 data. The difference between a HSL MTP2 link and a Nx64/56kbps MTP2 link is that the Nx64/56kbps link uses many (N) independent [[timeslot|timeslots]], each containing a [[HDLC]] receiver/transmitter, grouped logically into a single MTP2 link. On the other hand, the HSL link is really a single [[HDLC]] receiver/transmitter that is not bound by a timeslot's normal 7/8 bit boundary. Instead, it uses the complete trunk frame's potential bandwidth to transmit data. A Nx64/56kbps link can be switched via digital cross-connect equipment that handles the timeslot level (also referred to as 'channelized') while a HSL-type link cannot. | |
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− | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signaling_System_7 Wikipedia | + | == References == |
+ | *[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signaling_System_7 Wikipedia article] | ||
[[category:Glossary]] | [[category:Glossary]] |
Revision as of 09:00, 2 September 2009
High Speed Link (HSL) refers to a single MTP2 link that uses the entire bandwidth of a trunk to transport MTP2 data. The difference between a HSL MTP2 link and a Nx64/56kbps MTP2 link is that the Nx64/56kbps link uses many (N) independent timeslots, each containing a HDLC receiver/transmitter, grouped logically into a single MTP2 link. On the other hand, the HSL link is really a single HDLC receiver/transmitter that is not bound by a timeslot's normal 7/8 bit boundary. Instead, it uses the complete trunk frame's potential bandwidth to transmit data. A Nx64/56kbps link can be switched via digital cross-connect equipment that handles the timeslot level (also referred to as 'channelized') while a HSL-type link cannot.