No. 4 Electronic Switching System
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The No. 4 Electronic Switching System (4ESS) is a class 4 telephone electronic switching system that was the first digital electronic toll switch introduced by
Western Electric The Western Electric Company was an American electrical engineering and manufacturing company officially founded in 1869. A wholly owned subsidiary of American Telephone & Telegraph for most of its lifespan, it served as the primary equipment ma ...
for long-distance switching. It was introduced in Chicago in January 1976, to replace the 4A
crossbar switch In electronics and telecommunications, a crossbar switch (cross-point switch, matrix switch) is a collection of switches arranged in a matrix configuration. A crossbar switch has multiple input and output lines that form a crossed pattern of int ...
. The last of the 145 systems in the AT&T network was installed in 1999 in Atlanta. Approximately half of the switches were manufactured in Lisle, Illinois, and the other half in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. At the time of the Bell System divestiture, most of the 4ESS switches became assets of AT&T as part of the long-distance network, while others remained in the RBOC networks. Over 140 4ESS switches remained in service in the United States in 2007.


System architecture

The 4ESS Switch is often considered as a switching network and its controlling processor. The major functional equipment areas include: * 1B processor, the 4ESS primary controlling processor * 3B computer and associated attached processor system, which provides disk storage and additional functions * CNI ring, a group of peripheral processors serially interconnected with each other in a dual ring configuration, and a 3B20D processor that functions in a distributed input/output processing architecture. * Terminal equipment provides the interface between metallic trunk facilities in the toll network and the 4ESS Switch. Two-wire and 4-wire voice-frequency trunks terminating at metallic terminal facilities and equipment which provides an interface between digital carrier equipment and the 4ESS switching network. * The switching network contains the equipment which actually switches pulse code modulated data from one trunk or service circuit to another. The switching network also contains timing equipment that generates the precise timing signals required to switch traffic. The switching network is also used to connect test equipment, announcements, and various tones to trunks when required.


Processor

The processor acts as the
CPU A central processing unit (CPU), also called a central processor, main processor or just processor, is the electronic circuitry that executes instructions comprising a computer program. The CPU performs basic arithmetic, logic, controlling, and ...
for the switch. The processor includes a central control, call stores, and program stores. In addition it had access to additional units through the auxiliary unit bus (AUB) and peripheral unit bus (PUB). A master control console (MCC) provides office technicians access to the switch through the processor peripheral interface (PPI). Early versions used the same 1A processor as the contemporaneous improved
1AESS switch The Number One Electronic Switching System (1ESS) was the first large-scale stored program control (SPC) telephone exchange or electronic switching system in the Bell System. It was manufactured by Western Electric and first placed into servic ...
. All existing switches have been subsequently upgraded to use the 1B processor.


File store and CNI ring

The file store provides long term storage (
disk storage Disk storage (also sometimes called drive storage) is a general category of storage mechanisms where data is recorded by various electronic, magnetic, optical, or mechanical changes to a surface layer of one or more rotating disks. A disk drive is ...
) of the processor programs (program store) and office data (call store). It was first implemented using disk technology but was replaced by the 4E attached processor system (4EAPS). The 4EAPS is a 3B computer running 4EAPS application software on the
DMERT Multi-Environment Real-Time (MERT), later renamed UNIX Real-Time (UNIX-RT), is a hybrid time-sharing and real-time operating system developed in the 1970s at Bell Labs for use in embedded minicomputers (especially PDP-11s). A version named Duple ...
operating system. The 4EAPS interfaces to the 4ESS processor via the attached processor interface (API) units. The "1A file store" became partitions on the 3B computer disks. At first the 4EAPS just provided "file store" but soon it also provided access to the common-network interface ring (CNI ring) to provide common-channel signaling (CCS). The 4EAPS originally used the
3B20D The 3B series computers are a line of minicomputers produced from the late 1970s by AT&T Computer Systems' Western Electric subsidiary for use with the company's UNIX operating system. The line primarily consists of the models 3B20, 3B5, 3B15, 3 ...
computer. These were all converted to the
3B21D The 3B series computers are a line of minicomputers produced from the late 1970s by AT&T Computer Systems' Western Electric subsidiary for use with the company's UNIX operating system. The line primarily consists of the models 3B20, 3B5, 3B15, 3 ...
around 1995.


Peripheral units

The peripheral units include units that interface to the central control over the peripheral unit bus. This includes the common channel interface signaling (CCIS) terminal, signal processors, time-slot interchanges (TSI) and time multiplexed switches (TMS). It also includes equipment not directly on the PUB including terminating equipment used to connect the switch to the transport network and the TSIs and TMSs, which actually perform the "time-space-time" switching function. Timing is provided by a high speed, high accuracy network clock.


History

4ESS development began circa 1970, mainly in Naperville, Illinois under the direction of Henry Earle Vaughan.
AT&T Long Distance SBC Long Distance LLC is a long-distance telephone company owned by AT&T that does business as AT&T Long Distance. SBC Long Distance competes with other long-distance providers who provide service within some of the Bell Operating Company service b ...
was the primary customer for the switch. Driving development from the customer's perspective was AT&T VP Billy Oliver. Previous tandem switching systems, primarily the No. 4 Crossbar switch, used analog voice signaling. The decision to switch in a digital voice format was controversial at the time, both from a technical and economic viewpoint. Nevertheless, visionaries such as Vaughn and Oliver recognized that the network would eventually become digital, requiring digital switching technologies. The last 4ESS was installed in suburban Atlanta, GA in 1999 as a toll tandem for AT&T. At the peak of the product's life time in 1999, AT&T employed 145 4ESS switches in its long-haul network, and several were owned by various Regional Bell Operating Companies (RBOCs). AT&T replaced or supplemented the 4ESS toll tandem switches with 5ESS switches, which featured an advanced design, and are used as edge switches in the network. Most RBOCs who used 4ESS tandems have replaced them with Class 5 systems of other manufacturers, e.g., Nortel. As of 2014, AT&T operates and maintains approximately one hundred 4ESS switches in the public switched telephone network.


Next-generation 4ESS

The Nokia N4E-N1B (New 4ESS) is the ATCA-based next-generation toll switch for AT&T. The N4E-N1B includes the 4E APS and 4ESS software, but replaces the 1B processor and the peripheral units which run in emulated environments on an ATCA blade or
commercial off-the-shelf Commercial off-the-shelf or commercially available off-the-shelf (COTS) products are packaged or canned (ready-made) hardware or software, which are adapted aftermarket to the needs of the purchasing organization, rather than the commissioning of ...
servers.4E Replacement
Alcatel-Lucent customer support The N4E-N1B is based on the Alcatel-Lucent (now Nokia) gateway platform (7520 Media Gateway (MGW)), 1310 Operations and Management Console – Plus (OMC-P) and the 5400 Linux Control Platform (LCP) and includes other elements such as MRV console terminal servers. Starting in the late 2010s and continuing in the early 2020s, AT&T is replacing older 4ESS switches with N4E-N1B switches, and is also adding new N4E-N1B switches in places where there was no 4ESS previously. It is assumed that these new N4E-N1B switches are taking over Class-4 functions that were previously handled by 5ESS switches acting as "edge tandems."


See also

*
1ESS switch The Number One Electronic Switching System (1ESS) was the first large-scale stored program control (SPC) telephone exchange or electronic switching system in the Bell System. It was manufactured by Western Electric and first placed into servi ...
* 5ESS switch *
Telephone exchange A telephone exchange, telephone switch, or central office is a telecommunications system used in the public switched telephone network (PSTN) or in large enterprises. It interconnects telephone subscriber lines or virtual circuits of digital syst ...
*
Bell System Practices The Bell System Practices (BSPs) is a compilation of technical publications which describes the best methods of engineering, constructing, installing, and maintaining the telephone plant of the Bell System under direction of AT&T and Bell Telephone ...


References

* *


External links


Bell System commercial about the 4ESS switch
on YouTube * https://telephoneworld.org/telephone-switching-systems/western-electric-lucent-modern-telephone-switching-systems/ * https://telephoneworld.org/landline-telephone-history/the-crash-of-the-att-network-in-1990/ AT&T 4ESS Tandem crash of 1990 {{Telephone Switches Telephone exchange equipment