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IMS Layers
The IMS specifications define functions to
handle the signaling and subscriber traffic for multimedia applications.
The functions are separated into logical layers, and many of the specified
functions often reside in a single platform. Vendors have the flexibility
to implement IMS functions in consolidated ways, and it is natural
that platforms such as softswitches will combine many logically separate
IMS call-processing functions, and that routers will take on some
of the session-enforcement and gateway functionality in IMS.
The three layers are the service layer, the control
layer, and the transport layer. Figure 17 shows
a high-level view of the IMS architecture.
Figure 17: High-Level View of the IMS Architecture

- Service layer—Hosts application and content services,
including application servers and Web servers. It also includes generic
service enablers that manage service elements such as user groups
and presence. These service elements connect to subscribers through
the control plane. The application layer supports most of the multimedia
applications or application enablers, such as presence and location
of the subscriber.
- Control layer—Makes the policy decisions that are
enforced in the transport layer. This layer provides session control
and management, and is responsible for setting up and taking down
packet sessions. It also contains information about subscriber authentication,
service authorization, and location.
- Connectivity layer—Supports the core network architecture
of the General Packet Radio Service (GPRS), which consists of support
nodes for data services. This layer is where routers, switches, firewalls,
and optical transport reside, along with gateways that translate protocols
between packet- and circuit-based traffic.
Signaling Protocol
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is the main signaling
protocol in IMS. SIP is the proposed standard for multimedia communication
between subscribers interacting with voice, video, and instant messaging.
In IMS, the use of SIP facilitates interconnectivity between fixed
and mobile networks.
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