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Terminology yang sering digunakan dalam dunia Telco

March 5th, 2009

Kadang-kadang orang di dunia telco tahu apa guna dari protocol MM7, SIP, dll tanpa tahu apa singkatan dari setiap protocol itu. Dari sebagian technical documant yang ada di notebook, Saya tulis kembali disini dengan tujuan mempermudah pengaksesan terminology ini. Bagi teman-teman yang kebetulan sudah tahu, mohon ditambahkan jika ada protokol baru.

The following terms and acronyms are used in this document:
- 3GPP—3rd Generation Partnership Project, a collaborative group of telecom standards bodies – Account—A registered application or service provider. An account belongs to an account group, which is tied to a common SLA.
- Account group—Multiple registered service providers or applications that share a common SLA – Administrative user—Someone who has privileges on the Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper management tool. This person has an administrative user name and password.
- Alarm—The result of an unexpected event in the system, often requiring corrective action.
- API—An application programming interface
- Application—A TCP/IP based, telecom-enabled program accessed from either a telephony terminal or a computer
- Application-facing interface—The interface that Application Service Providers use to interact with Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper
- Application Service Provider—An organization offering application services to end users through a telephony network
- AS—An application server
- Application Instance—An Application Service Provider from the perspective of internal Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper administration. An Application Instance has a user name and a password
- CBC—Charging based on the nature of the content delivered, not on time used or simple per-use cost. Content based charging.
- CDR—Charging Data Record
- Communication Service—A facade and an enabler that together form the path through which requests travel in Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper. Each communication service corresponds to a particular service capability.
- CORBA—Common Object Request Broker Architecture
- CPU—Central Processing Unit
- CRM—Customer Relationship Management
- DMZ—Demilitarized Zone, a physical or logical subnetwork that contains and exposes an organization’s external services to a larger, untrusted network
- EAR—Enterprise Archive file
- EJB—Enterprise Java Bean
- Enabler—The Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper layer that performs policy evaluation, routing, and protocol translation. It provides network-facing interfaces.
- End user—The ultimate consumer of the services that an application provides. An end user can be the same as the network subscriber, as in the case of a prepaid service or the end user can be a non-subscriber, as in the case of an automated mail-ordering application where the subscriber is the mail-order company and the end user is a customer to this company
- Enterprise Operator—See Application Service Provider
- Enterprise Service Bus—A middleware component that supports messaging, routing, XML data transformation, and service orchestration
- ETSI—The European Telecommications Standards Institute, a telecom standards body
Event—A traceable, expected occurrence in the system, of interest to the operator
- EDR—Event Data Record
- EWS—Extended Web Services, a set of Web Services interfaces developed by Oracle offering access to network functionality not covered by Parlay X.
- Facade—A set of interfaces exposed to application service developers. A facade functions as a view of an enabler.
- HA—Mechanisms set up to insure high availability
- HTML—Hypertext Markup Language
- HTTP—Hypertext Transfer Protocol
- INAP—Intelligent Network Application Part, a telephony signalling protocol
- Interceptor Stack—A flexible set of chained evaluation steps used in Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper
- IP—Internet Protocol
- JDBC—Java Database Connectivity, the Java API for database access
- JEE—Java Enterprise Edition
- JMS—Java Message Service
- JMX—Java Management Extensions
- LDAP—Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
- Location Uncertainty Shape—A geometric shape surrounding a base point specified in terms of latitude and longitude. It is used in terminal location.
- MAP—Mobile Application Part
- Marshall— Record the state and codebase(s) of an object in such a way that when the marshalled object is “unmarshalled,” a copy of the original object is obtained, possibly by automatically loading the class definitions of the object.
- Mated pair—Two physically distributed installations of Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper nodes sharing a subset of data allowing for high availability between the nodes
- MIB—Management Information Base
- MLP—Mobile Location Protocol
- MM7—A multimedia messaging protocol specified by 3GPP
- MMS—Multimedia Message Service or an instance of this service
- MMSC—Multimedia Message Service Center
- Network plug-in—The Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper module that implements the interface to a network node or OSA/Parlay SCS through a specific protocol
- NS—Network Simulator
- OAM—Operation, Administration, and Maintenance
- OASIS—The Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards, an e-business and web standards consortium
- OCSG—Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper
- Operator—The party that manages Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper. Usually the network operator
- On-boarding—Registering applications and service providers to enable their access to Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper and the underlying network
- ORB—Object request broker
- OSA/Parlay—The Open Service Access interfaces used by a Parlay gateways
- OSS—Operation Support Systems
- Out of the box—The level of functionality available in the default installation of Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper
- PAP—Push Access Protocol – Parlay—The Parlay Group, a telecom standards body
- Parlay Gateway—A telecom gateway implementing Parlay interfaces
- Parlay X—A set of telecom Web Services interfaces specified by the Parlay Group
- Plug-in—See Network Plug-in
- Plug-in Manager—The Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper module charged with routing an application-initiated request to the appropriate network plug-in
- POJO—Plain Old Java Object
- Presence information—A status indicator that conveys the accessibility and the willingness of a potential communication partner
- Presentity—A supplier of presence information.
- PRM—Partner Relationship Management
- Quotas—An access rule based on an aggregated number of invocations. See also Rates
- RAM—Random Access Memory
- RAID—Redundant Array of Independent Disks
- Rates—An access rule based on allowable invocations per time period. See also Quotas
- RESTful—Interfaces that follow Representation State Transfer style
- Rf—The Diameter offline charging mode
- RMI—Remote Method Invocation
- Ro—The Diameter online charging mode
- SAML—Security Assertion Markup Language
- SCF—Service Capability Function or Service Control Function, in the OSA/Parlay sense.
- SCS—Service Capability Server, in the OSA/Parlay sense. Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper can interact with these on its network-facing side
- Service Capability—Support for a specific kind of traffic within Oracle Communications Services Gatekeeper. Defined in terms of communication services
- SIP—Session Initiation Protocol
- SLA—A service level agreement
- SMPP—Short Message Peer-to-Peer Protocol
- SMS—Short Message Service, or an instance of this service
- SMSC—Short Message Service Center
- SNMP—Simple Network Management Protocol
- SOA—Service Oriented Architecture
- SOAP—A protocol for exchanging Web Services messages
- SPI—Service Provider Interface
- SQL—Structured Query Language
- SS7—Signalling System #7, a signaling protocol used in traditional telecom networks
- Subscriber—A person or organization that signs up for access to an application. The subscriber is charged for the application service usage. See End user
- TCP—Transmission Control Protocol
- TUPS—Transaction Units Per Second
- URI—Uniform Resource Identifier
- URL—Uniform Resource Locator
- USSD—Unstructured Supplementary Service Data
- VAS—Value Added Service
- VASP—Value Added Service Provider
- VLAN—Virtual Local Area Network
- VPN—Virtual Private Network
- W3C—The World Wide Web Consortium, a web standards group
- WAP Push—A protocol for sending WAP content (an encoded message including a link to a WAP address) that is pushed to a subscriber’s handset
- Watcher—A consumer of presence information
- WS-Security—An OASIS security standard for Web Services
- WSDL —Web Services Definition Language
- XML—Extensible Markup Language

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