Internet protocol (IP) serverless page party (SPP) station and systems and methods for deploying multiple SPP stations

A serverless Page Party (SPP) station is provided for page announcing and party line conferencing that is configured to implement mutual provisioning to allow all SPP stations within a system to mutually maintain their configurations in runtime, and multiple master station negotiation and master failover. Plural SPP stations are connected with Ethernet cable or WIFi to a network and therefore without need for expensive and cumbersome cabling and daisy-chain configuration among stations. SPP stations route packets between each other via multicast technology and without need for a IP-PBX or other server (e.g., a SIP server) for controlling inter-station connections. In Mutual Provisioning Mode, SPP stations operate using a system configuration obtained from other SPP stations already on the network using a command channel. System configuration is maintained by a SPP station designated as a master station. Plural SPP stations can negotiate among themselves to designate a new master station.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to an IP-based, serverless Page Party (SPP) station and methods and apparatuses for deploying multiple SPP stations using multicast technology.

Description of Related Art

An existing “Analog” Page-Party station is a product which is widely used in deployments where both Page Announcing and Party Line Conferences are a necessity. Multiple stations work together to allow multiple users to converse on up to 5 channels as well as allowing Page Announcements to be made to local speakers simultaneously.

Such systems are modular, thereby realizing the advantage of being a decentralized system having no single point of failure. Cabling in Page/Party systems such as the system depicted inFIG. 1, however, can be costly and cumbersome.

For example, the more Page or Party Lines required for an installation and the greater the distance between devices, the greater the cost of cabling becomes. Where traditional telephones can contact multiple endpoints (with the aid of an exchange) over a single physical line, Page Party requires a single line per channel. The result is a large bundle of wires connected to each station is used. Also, the station enclosures must be sufficiently large to accommodate extra cabling for future service loops.

Another approach uses a network backbone as the communications infrastructure and Voice over IP (VoIP) devices. With networks, multiple “channels” can be utilized over a single cable. It can be possible to deploy multiple IP devices across an existing network backbone, reducing the cost of added infrastructure significantly still. Such traditional VoIP solutions, however, require the use of a VoIP exchange in much the same manner that an analog telephony system would require an exchange. This approach fails to realize the strength of decentralization by introducing a single point of failure that would otherwise not be present in an analog Page Party system.

A need therefore exists for an improved Page Party station that does not require costly and cumbersome cabling, and an improved system for deploying multiple Page Party stations that does not require interconnection control using a server or other centralized or single point of failure.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The above and other problems are overcome, and additional advantages are realized, by illustrative embodiments of the present invention.

In accordance with aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention, a page party station provides page announcing and party line conferencing with respect to other page party stations. The page party station is connected to other page party stations in a network that supports multicast and point-to-point communication. The page party station comprises: a network interface to connect the page party station to the network; a plurality of configurable multicast addresses to transmit and receive audio in party line conferencing with other page party stations; a plurality of configurable multicast addresses to transmit page announcements to other page party stations; a party line selector to select one of the multicast addresses for party line conferencing; a page line selector to select one of the multicast addresses for page announcing; and a processing device that operates in a mutual provisioning mode to configure the station to provide page announcing and party line conferencing operations using voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) on the network. The mutual provisioning mode allocates multicast addresses to designate page sockets and party line sockets used by the page party station and the other page party stations in the network in accordance with a system configuration. The page party station, once configured, operates to listen to its configured page sockets for received audio, to transmit audio on its configured page sockets, and to participate in party line conferencing on its configured partly line sockets in accordance with the system configuration.

In accordance with aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention, the processing device is configured to operate the page party station as a master station with respect to the other page party stations and maintains the system configuration.

In accordance with aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention, the system configuration comprises designation of a selected multicast address for a command channel used by the page party station and the other page party stations, and the page party station operating as a master station can listen on the command channel for an announcement provided on the command channel by another page party station and send responses to that page party station via the command channel.

In accordance with aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention, the system configuration comprises a list of master stations, and the processing device is programmed to negotiate with other page party stations on the master list to designate one of them as the new master station.

In accordance with aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention, the network interface is at least one of an Ethernet cable interface and a \VIM interface.

In accordance with aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention, the page party station further comprises a local power source.

In accordance with aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention, the page party station is configured for at least one of IPv4-enabled communications and IPv6-enabled communications with the other page party stations.

In accordance with aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention, audio transmitted and received via the page party station comprises a real-time transport protocol (RTP) layer of packets structured in accordance with internet standard RFC 3550.

In accordance with aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention, the system configuration comprises at least two virtual zones defined using designated station identifiers and zone identifiers.

Additional and/or other aspects and advantages of the present invention will be set forth in the description that follows, or will be apparent from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention. The present invention may comprise a page party station or page party system and methods for configuring and/or operating same having one or more of the above aspects, and/or one or more of the features and combinations thereof. The present invention may comprise one or more of the features and/or combinations of the above aspects as recited, for example, in the attached claims.

Throughout the drawing figures, like reference numbers will be understood to refer to like elements, features and structures.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS

Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the present invention, which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The embodiments described herein exemplify, but do not limit, the present invention by referring to the drawings.

In accordance with advantageous aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention and with reference toFIGS. 3A, 3B, 3C and 3D, an improved Page Party station20is provided (e.g., hereinafter referred to as a serverless Page Party (SPP) station) that employs multicast, that is, technology to enable multiple IP devices configured to listen on a given broadcast address to receive data over a network from a single source. The SPP station is configured to have one or more of the following features:IPv4/IPv6 enabled.Handset with Pressbar to control Page/Party mode.Five Configurable Multicast Channels for conference speech with Party Line Selector.Eight Configurable Multicast Channels for Page announcements with Page Line Selector.Six Configurable Outputs.On-board amplifier with non-audible self-check feature and Ambient Level sensing.Auxiliary analog audio input.Operation with between 2 and 4095 stations per system.Mutual provisioning Mode for easy solution deployment.

As mentioned above, the conventional stations15in the system depicted inFIG. 1are connected to a cumbersome cable17(e.g., a 16 core cable) comprising Page, Party lines and power lines in a daisy chain wiring scheme extending from a main cabinet to a zone comprising a group of stations15within a designated area. The SPP station obviates the necessity of a bulky cable such as cable17and the cumbersome sequential station15configuration because it is configured with local power and a much less cumbersome Ethernet cable connection to existing network infrastructure having a standard Ethernet installation and information technology (IT) configuration and other SPP stations. Further, the SPP stations can be configured to be in virtual zones and are not constrained to be in designated physical area zones due to proximity needed for the daisy chain wiring scheme of conventional stations15.

For existing Page/Party systems employing VoIP, each station15or VoIP phone must be commissioned though a central SIP server or IP-PBX which represents an undesirable single point of failure. The SPP station20is advantageous over existing stations15because it is configured to be serverless in terms of connections with other SPP stations20, and may use only an optional server for configuration and updates, for example. As described below, each SPP station20is also configured to be self-aware, allowing for simple replacement of stations20without re-commissioning via a SIP server or IP-PBX.

In addition, the SPP station20is essentially real-time operational in that multicast is instantaneously available on the Party line without need for a conference bridge and additional time needed to set up a conference in older systems (i.e., the delay associated with a SIP/server or conference bridge selecting a line for a user, the user dialing into the conference and then pressing a page button, the paging port of an IP-PBX to an amplifier being dialed, the page button being released and then the call going through to the conference bridge).

In accordance with advantageous aspects of the present invention, a customers' personnel or other administrator can easily allocate or program multicast addresses/ports or sockets to respective party and page lines employed by SPP stations20. SPP stations can then listen for RTP on sockets to which they are configured to listen as part of a designated group and convert the RTP to audio for playback. Each SPP station in a group can be listening to a party line, and multiple people can broadcast on the same party line, without the need for an IP-PBX or similar device.

As described herein, the SPP stations20and other advantageous aspects of illustrative embodiments of the present invention allow for elimination of a DHCP server. One or more SPP stations20can be designated as master stations to manage configuration and updating of any SPP station in its system.

Overview of SPP Station20Operations

Page/Party operations are emulated using VoIP.

Party Line Operation:

1. The party-line selector switch has a multicast address/port or socket assigned for each of the five party lines to both transmit and listen to when selected.

2. The station20will listen to the page sockets as described in Page Operation below.

3. When a party line is selected and the handset is off-hook, if configured, the amplifier audio will be muted, and the audio from the selected multicast socket will be routed to the earpiece and the audio from the handset microphone will be transmitted on the multicast socket.

Page Operation:

The station20can broadcast received page audio while the unit is off-hook in a party-line conversation.

1. A multicast socket is used to transmit and listen to the page line. Page audio is typically not monitored in the earpiece, but the station20can be configured such that one station hears the page audio of another in the earpiece when the press bar is depressed.

2. The SPP station20performs idle listening to all configured page sockets routing received page audio appropriately to the amplifier. Audio is not routed to the page line until the handset is off-hook and the Pressbar is depressed. When the Pressbar is depressed, the audio from the designated page line socket is routed to the earpiece and the audio from the microphone is routed to the page line socket.

3. Zoning can be accomplished similarly to the current multicast groups on the VoIP telephone described in commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/471,642 using the same priority scheme. The station20preferably only receives pages on the configured page receive sockets. One multicast socket can be designated as the local zone socket. This local zone socket can be used for paging from the station. All stations in the same local zone will idle using the local page zone socket. The station also listens to the other X page sockets.

4. Mutual mute is accomplished using the contributing source identifier (CSRC) in the header of the RTP audio packet. The station20can allow up to a designated number of CSRC's to be configured in addition to its own. Upon receipt of RTP from any of the configured CSRC's, the station discards the packet. If the audio is received from a CSRC that is not configured, it is routed to the page amplifier assuming it has priority. The audio is preferably only routed to the earpiece if it is from the same local zone socket of the station and the handset is off-hook and the Pressbar depressed.

5. A pre-announce tone is configurable and transmitted to both the earpiece and page line prior to routing voice audio from the handset microphone.

6. If a higher priority page is being broadcast into the local zone, the station20does not allow a page to begin, and a busy tone can be heard in the earpiece while the handset is off-hook and the Pressbar depressed. The Busy tone can be configurable with the Defer function described in function item 9 below.

7. The station20can support a 600-Ohm audio output for routing received page audio to an external amplifier or other device with a debounced contact closure indicating the presence of audio on the output.

8. The station20can have a 600-Ohm audio input for transmitting external audio into the designated page zone. In addition, there can be a contact closure input to indicate when external audio should be broadcast. External audio preferably has the same priority scheme as voice audio where it is prohibited if a higher priority page is being broadcast in the local page zone.

9. In addition to the 5 Party Line sockets, the station20can listen on up to, for example, 8 other configurable page sockets for inbound page audio. Each page socket has a priority associated with it from 1 to 8. When Idle or in a Party Line Conference, the station20will route the highest priority Page Audio stream being received at the station to the amplifier. The station20may be configured to make page announcements on up to four of the 8 existing page sockets. When making a page announcement, the socket used will be the one selected by the Page Zone Selector switch. If this zone is the same as the one being received, then the user will join in with the announcement. In this case, the audio currently routed to the amplifier will be instead routed to the earpiece. Each page socket may be configured to defer. If the selected Page Line is configured to defer, then the station20will not allow the user to join the current announcement. Instead, a busy tone will be played at the earpiece. If the received audio is on a different priority socket than the selected page zone when the Pressbar is depressed, then the user may make a page announcement as normal without affecting the Page audio at the amplifier.

SNMP can be used as a method of monitoring the station. Health checks can include:a. Device is on-line and functionalb. Handset is in use/off-hookc. Device in currently pagingd. Handset integritye. Handset amplifier integrityf. Speaker amplifier integrityg. Speaker integrity

Power can be provided either via power over Ethernet (PoE) to provide a maximum output power under POE, or via AUX universal AC or AUX 24 VDC.

Illustrative Usage Scenarios

FIG. 4shows an example installation scenario for multiple SPP stations20referenced as stations A through H. All stations20are connected to a network40, each via a single cable36(e.g., in this case, an Ethernet cable such as a Cat 5 cable). The network40could be a single simple network switch or a complex network. The behavior of the network itself is beyond the scope of this invention and is omitted herein for conciseness. The network is generally existing infrastructure available at the location of deployment and need only be set up such that it allows all SPP stations20to route network packets to one another, which includes a necessity for all nodes within the network40to handle multicast-based traffic as well as point-to-point traffic.

The ability to (1) connect SPP stations20with merely Ethernet cable to a network, and (2) for stations to route packets between each other via multicast technology and therefore without need for a IP-PBX or other server (e.g., a SIP server) for controlling inter-station20connections, realizes significant advantages over existing analog Page/Party systems, and existing Smart Page/Party systems employing IP-PBXs or other switch or exchange. As mentioned above, the stations15in the system depicted inFIG. 1are connected to a cumbersome cable17(e.g., a 16 core cable), for example, in a daisy chain wiring scheme. Accordingly, the more stations15that are used, the more cabling is needed, which can be costly. Further, each station15is provided with an extra length of cable17for future service loop connections. In many instances, a station15enclosure has 2 feet of bulky cable stored therein, which requires a commensurately large enclosure for the station15. The enclosure23for the SPP station20can be almost ½ the width of the station15as illustrated when comparing inFIGS. 3A and 3BwithFIGS. 2A and 2Brespectively. The SPP stations20are less costly to manufacture and are easier to install in more customer locations than conventional stations15because of the overall smaller profiles of stations20.

In contrast to a Smart Page/Party system that uses an IP-PBX or SIP server for IP paging or conference connections, the SPP stations20are configured to be serverless, as described below, thereby obviating a potential and undesirable single point of failure associated with systems that use centralized paging control among stations.

FIG. 5shows Users at Station A, Station C and Station E in a Party Line Conference on Party Line 1. All 3 users are using their SPP station handsets with the Pressbar released and the Party Line Selector Switch set to 1. All 3 Users may freely converse with one another.

FIG. 6shows Users at Station B and Station D in a Party Line Conference on Party Line 2. Both users are using their SPP station handsets with the Pressbar released and the Party Line Selector Switch set to 2. These 2 Users may freely converse with one another. The Users from the scenario inFIG. 5are using the system simultaneously with the Users at Stations B and D. Each group of Users is participating in their own separate conversation over the system.

FIG. 7shows a User at Station G using his/her handset with the Pressbar held down and the Page Destination Zone Selector Switch set to 1 to make a Page Announcement to other stations listening on Page Zone 1. In this case, Station C, Station D and Station H are internally configured to listen on Page Zone 1 and so these stations will play the speech out of the speakers/amplifiers connected to them and not the handset. This audio is single-direction, so no audio is heard at Station G. The Users from the scenarios inFIG. 5andFIG. 6are using the system simultaneously with the User at Station G. Page audio can play out of the speaker/amplifier at Station C while the User at Station C may converse in a separate conversation over Party Line 1.

FIG. 8shows Users at Station F and Station H using their handsets with Pressbar held down and the Page Destination Zone Selector Switch set to 2 to make a Page Announcement to other stations listening on Page Zone 2. In this case, Station E and Station D are configured to listen on Page Zone 2 and so these stations will play the speech out of the speakers/amplifiers connected to them. Station D is configured to listen on both Page Zone 1 and Page Zone 2. Since Page Zone 2 is set as a higher priority than Page Zone 1, Station D now ignores the audio from Page Zone 1 and instead plays out the audio from Page Zone 2.

With continued reference toFIGS. 3A through 3Dand with reference toFIGS. 9 and 10, an SPP station20has an enclosure23with a front panel21. A handset22and supporting cradle30are provided. A user has access to a Page Line selector switch24and a Party Line selector switch26from the front panel21. The underside of the handset22can be provided with a Pressbar28in a conventional manner. It is to be understood that the Page Line selector switch24, Party Line selector switch26and Pressbar28can have different form factors and can be provided on the SPP station20at different locations than those depicted inFIG. 3A. A main printed circuit board (PCB)32is connected to the underside of the front plate21as shown inFIG. 3C, but can be mounted within the enclosure23in a different orientation or location. The enclosure comprises a DC power supply34as shown inFIG. 3D, although other means for providing local DC or AC power can be employed. The station is connected to an Ethernet cable in a conventional manner (not shown). The station can also be configured for WiFi communication in a manner as described in commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/471,642, filed Aug. 28, 2014.

Some of the components on the main PCB32are shown inFIG. 9. The main PCB32comprises a processor50, a flash memory52, an SRAM54, an Ethernet connection56(e.g., a Cat5 or other Ethernet interface) and related physical interface (PHY) circuit58, and a power over Ethernet (PoE)) interface60. Non-volatile memory can be used to store, for example, Application data for keeping a static firmware image, and Configuration data for storing modifiable data such as configuration settings, internal events, and so on. A number of TDM codecs indicated generally at62are provided for processing signals received and transmitted via the Ethernet connection. A primary codec64and optional secondary codec66are provided for processing audio signals from the speaker68and microphone70and other audio interface (e.g., a headset)72at the SPP station20. The main PCB32also provides a I/O decoding circuit74for connecting different inputs to the processor and conditioning different output signals from the processor. An amplifier circuit80(FIG. 10) can be provided on the main PCB32or be provided on a separate board within the enclosure. An optional Watchdog (WDOG) circuit76and UART78connection can also be provided.

With reference toFIG. 10, is a block diagram representing different SPP station20hardware elements and their respective inputs and/or outputs with respect to the processor50. The Party Line Selector Switch26is used to choose which of several party lines (e.g., lines 1 through 5, although a different number of Party lines can be used) is currently in use by the SPP station. The Hook Switch detects whether the Handset is on hook or not. The Page Line Selector Switch24is used to select the current Page Zone in use by the SPP station. A designated number of Page Lines (e.g., 1 through 4) can be used. The Pressbar (e.g., on the underside of the handset22) is used to select page audio. The earpiece (e.g., on the handset22) is used to playback audio received by the SPP station. The microphone (e.g., on the handset22) is used to sample real sound from the user's voice. The Amplifier80shown as the Amplifier Output inFIG. 10is used to playback Page audio over an Amplifier and speaker68on or connected to the SPP station20. An Amplifier Input the Amplifier load) is provided, along with an Amplifier Load Sensor used to read a voltage returned from an Amplifier Health Check. The Amplifier State Control is use to control the Amplifier Mode. Outputs are used to drive external peripherals such as Relays or LEDs. For example, a Heartbeat LED is used for visual indication. The Ethernet MAC (EMAC) is used for network communication with other devices, including the transmission and reception of audio data as well as secondary network services. An Auxiliary Audio Input is used to sample audio from an external analog source. For example, an Auxiliary Audio Contact can be used to signal to the SPP station that it should sample audio from the Auxiliary Audio Input instead of the microphone for a Page Announcement. A UART can be used to output string data from the SPP station20.

With reference toFIGS. 11-18, operations of SPP station20components and software for controlling the same shall now be described.

FIG. 11is a block diagram representing software elements or modules in the processor50of the SPP station20. Physical devices88are described above with reference toFIGS. 9 and 10. The device drivers90are a collection of processes which form a control and data interface to the actual hardware devices. They implement hardware control on behalf of application processes and can be hardware-dependent. For example, an Ethernet MAC driver initializes the Ethernet MAC and implements the functions required for data to be written to and read from the device. A codec driver implements local audio data flow inbound and outbound to the station20. The codec driver initializes any hardware concerning the Microphone, Earpiece, Auxiliary Audio Input and Amplifier, provides the PCM data from the Microphone and Auxiliary Audio Input for the application layer to read, and receives PCM data from the application later to write to the Earpiece and Amplifier. A Timer driver can be provided to implement time signals required for the rest of the system. For example, the Timer driver can handle the timer interrupts generated by a hardware timer.

With continued reference toFIG. 11, a bootstrap process100provides an initial process that is run when power is applied to the SPP station20. This process, for example, comprises the following operations:Performs a CRC Check on the contents of non-volatile memory.Initializes the Device Drivers90Initializes the Scheduler102Initializes the Internal Command System92Initializes the Station Clock118Initializes the Configuration Manager104Initializes the Audio Manager106Initializes the General I/O Manager108Initializes the Telnet Client112Initializes the SNMP Client114Initializes the TFTP Client116Initializes the Health Monitor110
When all of these processes have been complete, the bootstrap process100hands over control to the Scheduler102. The Scheduler102manages the resource use of the other software processes in the system such as, for example, ensuring that time-critical processes (e.g., audio-related tasks) that need certain resources can get those resources when required (e.g., by deferring any processes that are not time-critical until the resources are available to deal with them). The primary requirement for the Scheduler102in this system is to ensure that the e requirements of audio transmission and reception can be met.

Configuration Manager

With continued reference toFIG. 11, the SPP station20supports a Configuration Manager104. The Configuration Manager is responsible for maintaining the current running configuration of the station. The Configuration Manager handles all requests for read and write configuration data to both non-volatile memory and the current running configuration. The Configuration Manager104is responsible for validating each of the fields it maintains. For example, the configurable fields can be as indicated in the Appendix below.FIG. 17is an illustrative state diagram for a Configuration Manager as it handles requests for configuration changes, stores/retrieves configuration data, maintains running configuration state, and makes configuration state available to other system services.

Command Channel. The Configuration Manager104can use a dedicated Multicast Address/Port for communication with other SPP stations, called the “Command Channel”. All SPP stations having visibility and access to this channel may send and receive text data on this channel. Illustrative commands are provided in the below table:

Mutual Provisioning Mode Protocol Commands

CommandDescriptionRD <SD>Request Data command used to send out request for<CV> <CS>configuration data. Includes current SystemDesignation <SD>, Configuration Version <CV>and Configuration Checksum <CS>.PD <SD> <CV>Provision Data command used to send out<CS> <GN>configuration data <DATA> with Configuration<SN> <DATA>Checksum <CS> and Configuration Version <CV>for device with Group Number <GN> StationNumber <SN>.IP <SD> <GN>IP command used to send out an IP address<SN> <DATA><DATA> as part of System Designation <SD>for SPP Station with Group Number <GN>Station Number <SN>.AN <SD> <GN>Announce command used to announce presence to<SN>other SPP Stations, including System Designation<SD>, Group Number <GN> and Station Number<SN>.NM <SD> <GN>New Master command used to determine new<SN>Master Station in the event that the existing Mastergoes AWOL. Includes System Designation <SD>,Group Number <GN> and Station Number <SN>.KA <SD> <SV>Keep Alive command used by the current Master<GN> <SN>Station to indicate its presence on the network to<CS>other SPP Stations. Includes System Designation<SD>, System Version <SV>, Group Number<GN>, Station Number <SN> and ConfigurationChecksum <CS>.DS <SD> <GN>Duplicate Station command used to indicate that<SN>the last Announce message contained a GroupNumber <GN> and Station Number <SN> inSystem Designation <SD> which are alreadyin use.

Configuration Storage. Each SPP station20individually maintains a copy of the running System Configuration at runtime and also in a non-volatile store so that it persists between power downs.

System Configuration. The SPP stations20use a formal configuration structure called a “System Configuration”. This structure contains the configuration of all SPP stations within the system. The System Configuration is preferably always used irrespective of the various Configuration options available. A System Configuration consists of the following logical elements:

System Designation. The System Designation is a string value (e.g. “GTUK Burton”) which indicates which system the SPP station belongs to. It is primarily used to prevent conflicts and data corruption when stations are moved between systems. The Administrator should set this value to a unique string to discriminate their System from any others that may be on their network or used within their organization.

There is a reserved designation value “FACTORY”. This designation indicates that the SPP station has the default System Configuration applied. This value cannot be set in the SPP manually—it is applied at manufacture time or when restoring from factory defaults.

System Version. The System Version s an integer which defines the version of the System Configuration on a given station. This version number should be incremented by the Administrator when changes are made to the System Configuration so that the new System Configuration is proliferated to all other stations within that System.

Group Number. A Group shall describe the common or general settings that apply to a large number of SPP stations. A System Configuration may define up to 16 Group Numbers. Each Group Number is a unique number within the System Configuration between 0 and 15. This number is unique and has up to 255 Station Numbers associated with it. The Group Number corresponds directly to and is selected by the value set by the Group Selector Switch (FIG. 10).

Each Group has a single Group Configuration associated with it. This is a list of configurable fields within the SPP station which are used for all stations within that Group. For details on which fields are set by Group, see the below Appendix. Each Group also specifies the Network Mode for that Group and any fields required for that mode of operation.

Each Group also specifies a default Profile to use for all stations within that Group.

Station Number. A Station Number is used to identify one specific station within a Group. Each Station Number within a Group must be unique. The Station Number corresponds directly to the value configured by the Station Number Selector Switch.

Station Name. A Station Name is an identifier consisting of two parts; The Group number and the Station Number. For example, the Station Name “2.54” would represent “Station Number 54 in Group 2”. Each Station Name has a single Profile associated with it.

Master List. The Master List is a list of comma-delimited Station Names. It describes which stations in this system shall act as the “Master” stations. It also describes the Order of Preference. The Order of Preference is used to determine which of the Masters shall occupy the role of Master Station in the event that the highest in the Order of Preference is missing from the network. E.g. “0.1, 1.3, 0.2” would indicate that the Master Station is 0.1, which fails over to 1.3, which fails over to 0.2.

Profile. A Profile is a list of configuration settings which apply to local and/or station-specific settings. Up to 64 profiles may be defined within a System Configuration. A single Profile may be applied to as many stations as required. Note that some configuration data may be defined in both a Profile and a Group. Where there are one or more fields defined in both Group and Profile, the data for those fields in the Profile is always used and the data for those fields in the Group ignored.

Network Mode. Below are the network modes supported by the SPP station. A single mode is defined within each Group as part of the System Configuration.

Static IP Mode. If Static IP Mode is defined for a Group, that Group shall define the following common data for the SPP stations within that Group:Subnet MaskGateway

In addition, in Static IP Mode, the following station-specific data is defined for each station belonging to that Group:Fixed IP Address.

DHCP Mode. If DHCP Mode is defined, the SPP stations within that Group operate using an IP Address obtained from a DHCP server as a DHCP client according to RFC 2131. DHCP Mode does the following:Provisions the SPP station with an IP Address from a DHCP server.Provisions the SPP station with a Subnet Mask from a DHCPProvisions the SPP station with a Gateway Address from a DHCP server.Provisions the SPP station with a TFTP Server Address from a DHCP server.

In addition, the following station-specific data can be defined for each station in that Group:Fixed IP Address.
If a Fixed IP Address is configured, that station does not use DHCP mode.

In DHCP Mode, the SPP station depends upon the presence of a functioning DHCP server to operate, in the event that a DHCP server cannot be found, the station will raise a “DHCP Lost” alarm. During DHCP server loss, the SPP station may be configured to not make Page or Party announcements across the network.

Master Allocation Mode. If Master Allocation Mode is defined, the Group shall define the following common data for the SPP stations within that Group:IP Address PoolSubnet MaskGateway

In addition, the following station-specific data can be defined for each station in that Group:Fixed IP Address.

In Master Allocation Mode, the IP Address Pool is an IP Address range, e.g. “192.168.1.12 to 192.168.1.46”. While operating in this mode, the SPP station will depend upon the Master Station for IP address allocation via the Command Channel. If the SPP station is the Master Station, it only uses a fixed IP address set within the Group configuration. It is the responsibility of the current Master Station to maintain the current address pool for Master Allocation Mode.

If a Fixed IP Address is configured, and would conflict with the IP Address Pool, the address is reserved and cannot be allocated from the Pool. If a change to configuration would create an IP conflict, the Master should resolve the problem by re-allocated addresses as required.

Master Allocation Mode can preferably only be used, for example, with SPP stations running in Mutual Provisioning Mode where there is a currently designated Master Station to perform IP allocation.

Configuration Modes. The SPP station supports two configuration modes. The mode is controlled using the Profile Selector Switch (e.g., the Station and Group number selector switches shown inFIG. 10which can be, for example, implemented as hexadecimal (0-F) rotary switches on the main board32). When the Profile Selector Switch is set to 0, the SPP station shall use Manual Configuration Mode, for example. When the Profile Selector Switch is set to 1-255, the SPP station shall use Mutual Provisioning Mode, for example.

Manual Configuration Mode. This mode is intended to allow a SPP station to operate as a standalone device, possibly within a pre-existing and/or 3rd-party Multicast based audio system. It is also intended for use during initial setup for Mutual Provisioning Mode (see below).

In Manual Configuration Mode, the SPP station only uses Group 0 and Profile 0 from its current System Configuration. The SPP station does not share or accept System Configuration data on the Command Channel from other SPP stations in this mode. Manual Configuration Mode does not use Mutual IP Allocation and does not use or need “Master” stations.

Mutual Provisioning Mode. This mode is intended to allow all SPP stations within a system solution to mutually maintain their configurations in runtime, without the support of a fixed central paint such as a server, and without the need for human administration.

Mutual Provisioning Mode is intended to streamline the initial set-up process by separating the system design/planning and system installation stages of a customer solution, and also intended to minimise the cost and effort required to maintain/replace faulty SPP stations in an existing system.

In Mutual Provisioning Mode, SPP stations operate sing the System Configuration obtained from other SPP stations already on the network using the Command Channel.

Feature Summary for Mutual Provisioning Mode:All stations share a System Configuration.Two Selector Switches to control Group and Station Number.Fixed Multicast address/port “Command Channel” used for configuration control and proliferation between stations. Factory Configurable.16 Groups, each with configurable fields.64 Profiles, each with configurable fields.Static, DHCP or Mutually Allocated IP settings.Mutual Provisioning only used for configuration, does not affect/is not required for actual station operation.System wide control via single “Master” station. Master Station (and backups) determined by System Configuration.System wide interface via the Master Station. IP Address determined according to configured Network Mode, can be configured as Static within DHCP or Master Allocation Mode if required.Individual SPP stations may be isolated from Mutual Provisioning Mode by setting the Station Number and Group Number switches to “0”.

An illustrative basic flow of events for setting up a system when using Mutual Provisioning Mode is as follows:

Generate System Configuration. SPP stations running Mutual Provisioning Mode obtain their configuration information from the System Configuration. The System Configuration captures the configuration of all SPP stations within the system. This is the point of solution design and should take place prior to the actual installation of the SPP stations. Typically an Administrator would generate the System Configuration as a file using a text editor, to be subsequently applied to the first SPP station.

Connect & Configure the First SPP station. The Administrator takes the first SPP station and sets the Group Selector Switch to 0 and the Station Number Selector Switch to 0. This puts the station into Manual Configuration Mode. This station is then connected to a laptop/PC using a network cable and powered.

An Administrator should interface to this station and either update the existing System Configuration or load a previously generated System Configuration File. As part of this, the Administrator should set a new System Designation, e.g. “GTUK Burton” and System Version, e.g. “1”. Whenever the System Configuration is altered in any way, the SPP station shall validate the entire configuration to ensure that the settings are compatible. If the file is valid, the SPP station shall generate a new MD5 Checksum against that file which can be used as an identifier.

Once the new System Configuration has been applied to the SPP station, the Group/Number Selector switches should be set to their appropriate values. This shall trigger a reconfiguration on the station which will apply the settings according to the System Configuration for that Station Name, e.g. “0.1”.

Once the reconfiguration process has completed, the SPP station (henceforth known as Station 0.1, since it now has a Station Name) announces itself on the Command Channel using the AN command, which contains the System Designation, Group Number and Station Number.

Duplicate Station Detection. The AN Command is used to announce the presence of an SPP station which has either just powered up or has just had its Group and/or Station Number setting changed. When other stations on the system received the AN command, they respond with a DS command if they share the same Group Number, Station Number and System Designation. The DS command indicates to the initial SPP station that there is a duplicate station on the system. In this event, the first SPP station shall raise a “No Configuration” alarm.

The station then listens on the Command Channel for the KA command from the Master Station. If the KA command is not received within 3 times the set Keep Alive period, and if this station is included in the Master List, this station issues a NM command to the command channel (see later) to advertise its Group and Station Number on the System to other Master Stations present. As this is the first station, there will be no response and so it shall designate itself as the “Master” station for the overall System. If that station is using Master Allocation Mode, the station shall also allocate to itself an IP Address from an address range set by the Administrator as part of its Group.

Master Station. The Master Station is an SPP station which has been designated the role of maintaining the System configuration on behalf of all SPP stations within the system. The Master Station also serves as the interface point for the Administrator.

Keep Alive. During runtime the Master Station uses a “Keep Alive” mechanism to inform other SPP stations that it is still present and functional within the system. The “KA” command is used for this purpose (see Command Channel Table above). This command is repeatedly issued over the command channel at an interval equal to the Keep Alive period (factory configured value) by the Master Station. With reference toFIG. 19, The KA command contains the Group Number, Station Number, System Designation, System Version and Configuration Checksum of the Master Station that issued it. SPP stations will ignore the KA command if it contains a System Designation that does not match their own (except for SPP stations with the “FACTORY” designation).

Introduce New SPP Stations. The installer takes a second SPP station (disconnected and unpowered) and sets the Group Number Selector Switch to 0 and the Station Number Selector Switch to 2. The installer then connects this second SPP station (henceforth known as Station 0.2) to the network with the Master Station already set up and connected.

With reference toFIG. 20, the second SPP station announces itself on the Command Channel using an AN command. It then awaits a KA command from the Master Station.

When the KA command is received, Station 0.2 compares its own configuration checksum with the checksum it received from the KA command. If the checksums match, Station 0.2 shall configure itself according to the data for station name “0.2” in its own System Configuration. If the checksums are different, Station 0.2 will compare its System Version to the System Version received in the KA command. If Station 0.2 has a lower System Version number than Station 0.1, Station 0.2 requests the System Configuration data from the Master Station using an RD command. The Master Station responds to this command with a PD command to provide the configuration data.

Station 0.2 then stores the received System Configuration in non-volatile memory, recalculates the checksum on the received System Configuration and compares with the checksum it received originally from the Master and the checksum it received with the configuration itself. If all checksums match, Station 0.2 applies the received System Configuration. It then reconfigures itself according to the data for station name “0.2” in its System Configuration, and deletes the old configuration.

If the checksums do not match, the second station will raise a request the data again and repeat this process until the checksums match. If this process fails 3 times the station shall raise a “No Configuration” alarm.

Finally, if Station 0.2 is included in the Master List of its new System Configuration, has the same System Designation as the current Master Station, and is higher in the Order of Preference than the current Master Station, it shall inform the current master using an NM command (see later) and then take over the role of Master. Any relevant volatile data, such as assigned IP addresses, held by the current Master shall be transferred to the new Master in this case.

Configuration Maintenance and Updates. The KA command advertises the current configuration checksum calculated from its System Configuration to other SPP stations on the system. Any SPP station that does not have a matching configuration checksum, even if it used to match previously, shall request a configuration update by way of an RD command which the Master will respond to with a PD command. In this way, any configuration changes can be proliferated throughout the overall system while the Administrator only has to apply changes to the Master Station.

If Station 0.2 is operating in Master Allocation Mode, the Master Station shall allocate it an IP address from its corresponding Group Pool as part of this process. The SPP station then adopts the settings according to the System Configuration.

The same process should be followed to connect subsequent SPP stations to the network. In each case, the appropriate values should be set with the Station and Group Number switches for each station connected.

Loss of Master. In the event that the Master does not send the KA command within 3 times the set Keep Alive period, the remaining SPP stations included in the Master List for that System shall issue an NM command to the command channel to advertise their Group and Station Number. After all remaining SPP stations contained in the Master List have issued their command, or after a set timeout, the new Master SPP station shall be determined using the Order of Preference. The new Master shall then begin to issue KA commands to the Command Channel as normal.

With reference toFIG. 21, if the newly negotiated Master then loses connection for whatever reason, the same behavior will repeat if the KA command is not received within the set Keep Alive period. In this way, the overall system should always have a station present in order to facilitate configuration updates and to provide an interface to the Administrator.

System Power Loss/Simultaneous Power Up. SPP stations maintain awareness of the currently configured Master in non-volatile memory. If a System Power Loss event occurs, the stations shall power up and announce themselves on the Command Channel using an AN command. They shall then wait for a KA command from the Master. If the Master has been permanently disconnected during the System Power Loss event, and the KA command is not received within 3 times the set Keep Alive period, the remaining SPP stations in the Master List shall negotiate amongst themselves to decide which SPP station should be designated the new Master Station using the same method as Loss of Master (see above).

Multiple Master Negotiation/Master Fail-over. When multiple Master Stations with the same System Designation are operating in Mutual Provisioning Mode and locate one another over the Command Channel, the SPP stations in the Master List negotiate among themselves to decide which SPP station should be designated the new Master Station using the same method as Loss of Master (see above).

If two separate systems (i.e. two groups of SPP stations with different System Designations) are merged/connected in this way, the stations on each respective system will not attempt to overwrite one another's configuration. In effect each station shall always remain part of its own System according to its System Designation until such time as it is reset to the FACTORY designation.

If using Master Allocation mode, the Master Station shall re-allocate IP addresses in order to resolve any IP or configuration conflicts it has detected (i.e. if two separate SPP station networks with separate Master-allocated IP pools had just been connected).

Missing Configuration. If the chosen Station Group or Station Number is not configured within the current System Configuration immediately after that configuration has been applied, the SPP station shall raise a “No Configuration” alarm.

Introduction of Master from a second System. If a SPP station is connected and powered with a System Configuration from a Second system and is included in the Master List of its own System Configuration, the existing Master Station will not attempt to override it's configuration because the System Designation will differ. Similarly, other SPP stations on the first system will not make configuration requests to the Master Station from the second system, unless all Master Stations in the first system lose network connectivity.

This is a design choice to prevent SPP stations moved from other systems from corrupting the existing System Configuration. It ensures that the worst case scenario for a conflict will be that a single station will be incorrectly configured. The exception to this rule is SPP stations with the System Designation “FACTORY”. These SPP stations will allow any Master to provide them with a new System Configuration until a new System Configuration alters their System Designation to another value.

Further Maintenance. When changes to an established System Configuration need to be made, the Administrator should interface with the current Master Station to make the necessary changes. This is to be done by way of a Telnet connection. The IP Address of the SPP station used for this purpose will depend upon the chosen network mode but in all cases can be configured manually as part of the System Configuration so that it is known.

When the System Configuration is updated, the KA command from the Master Station shall include the new Configuration Checksum and System Version. Other SPP stations with the same System Designation as the Master Station, a different Configuration Checksum, and a System Version lower than the Master Station shall request a configuration update from the Master Station using an RD command.

Initial Configuration. The Configuration Manager loads the System Configuration during initialization to memory. The SPP station defaults to valid, hard-coded configuration values on initialization if a System Configuration is not present. The SPP station raises a “No Configuration” alarm (e.g., using the Health Monitor) if there is no on-hoard configuration present.

Reset to Factory Defaults. The SPP station20supports Reset to Factory Defaults as an update function. The SPP station stores a Factory Default System Configuration in a non-volatile store so that it persists between power downs. When invoked, the Reset to Factory Defaults function replaces the current running System Configuration with the Factory Default System Configuration and apply the new System Configuration settings.

Configuration Update Request. The Configuration Manager supports Configuration Update Requests. The Configuration Manager accepts requests for single Configuration Field updates to the existing System Configuration or for a Reset to Factory Defaults.

User Accounts & Access Levels. The System Configuration maintains a list of 5 User accounts which are used to authorize access to and modification of the configuration on the SPP station, as well as authorizing commands issued to the SPP station. Each user account shall consist of:Username. Unique Identifier. Values: 32-character string.Password. Values: 32-character ASCII string.Access Level. Values: 1-5.

Access Levels. The System Configuration 3 maintains a list of 5 Access Levels which are referenced by the User Accounts. An Access Level defines a permissive list of which configurable parameters/commands can be changed or invoked by a User with that Access Level. Any parameter/command not included on that Access Level cannot be accessed by that access level. Additionally, each Access Level consists of:Access Level. Unique Identifier. Values: 1-5.

Each SPP station20also has a special User Account with Access Level 0. This account is a reserved account intended for use by manufacturing. This access level does not have any access restrictions placed upon it. The account preferably always exists on the system, and should be automatically generated by the SPP station in the event that is absent from the configuration.

Audio Manager

With continued reference toFIG. 11, the SPP station20supports an Audio Manager process106. The Audio Manager is responsible for routing audio to and from the hardware peripherals. The Audio Manager106implements, for example, Audio Manager State Diagrams (and associated sub-states) described herein with reference toFIGS. 12 through 15

With reference toFIG. 12, the Audio Manager manages the audio routing to/from peripherals and channel priority negotiation for the Page Line.

FIG. 13illustrates a state diagram for a Paging Playback substate inFIG. 12. For example, initially the Pressbar is released, and the Handset is on Hook. The SPP station receives Page Line audio on a higher priority than the one currently being played back at the amplifier. The SPP station stops routing lower priority inbound Page Line audio to the Amplifier. The SPP station mixes the highest priority inbound Page Line audio streams and routes the mixed audio to the Amplifier.

FIG. 14illustrates a state diagram for a Party Line Conference substate inFIG. 12. For example, initially the Pressbar is released, and the Handset is on Hook. The User lifts the Handset. The SPP station begins to sample the audio at the Microphone. The SPP station routes sampled audio to the selected Party Line. The SPP station routes audio received on the selected Party Line to the Earpiece.

FIG. 15illustrates a state diagram for a Page Line Announcement substate. For example, initially the Pressbar is released, and the Handset is on Hook. The User depresses the Pressbar. The SPP station20stops routing audio received on the selected Page Line to the Amplifier. The SPP station routes audio received on the selected Page Line to the Earpiece. The SPP station mixes remaining highest priority inbound Page Line audio streams and routes the mixed audio to the Amplifier. As an exception, the SPP station can be configured to defer on the currently selected Page Line while audio is being received on that Page Line. SPP station plays busy tone at the earpiece until the handset22goes on hook or the Pressbar is released. The SPP station20otherwise routes pre-announce tone to earpiece for a fixed time. The SPP station routes pre-announce tone to selected Page Line for a fixed time. The SPP station begins to sample the audio at the Microphone. The SPP station routes sampled audio to the selected Page Line. As another exception, the User can alter the selected Page Line. SPP station is configured to defer on the newly selected Page Line while audio is being received on that Page Line. SPP station plays busy tone at the earpiece instead of audio/pre-announce until the handset goes on hook or the Pressbar is released.

Transmission and Reception of Audio between stations. With continued reference to the Audio Manager generally inFIG. 11, the SPP station transmits and receives audio over an IP Network. The following describes illustrative means by which audio is sampled and transmitted and received between SPP stations.

Audio Sampling. Audio can be sampled at the Microphone and/or the Auxiliary Audio input as monaural PCM. The rate of audio sampling can be fixed at a rate of at least 8000 Hz. A higher standard sampling rate may be used to achieve greater audio sampling quality subject to hardware and performance constraints. A sampling rate of below 8000 Hz is generally unacceptable. The PCM data from each device can be stored in a separate circular buffer (i.e. one buffer per device). The PCM from the Auxiliary Audio input shall only be used when the Auxiliary Audio Contact is Active.

Audio Down-sampling. When PCM audio is read from the circular buffer, it may need to be down-sampled to a lower frequency before it is compressed. This mechanism is required in order to match the chosen compression scheme for transmission and also for future development in the form of additional compression schemes. A given PCM audio stream may or may not need to be down-sampled; this is dependent upon the chosen fixed sampling rate and also the requirement of the compression scheme being used. The PCM is preferably not altered to a resolution lower than 8000 Hz prior to compression.

Audio Compression. Sampled audio can be read from the circular buffer as whole ‘frames’. Any partial frames (for example, at the end of a conversation) can be padded h silence. The frame size depends upon the compression scheme used. Each frame of audio can be encoded using one of the following standard compression schemes as:G.711 u-law.G.711 a-law,G.729.

It is understood that other compression schemes can be used. For example, wider-bandwidth codecs can be used along with a compatible compression scheme. The compression scheme to use for compression is configurable by input source (i.e., Microphone/Auxiliary input.)

Audio Transmission. Compressed frames are transmitted from an SPP station across the Network using RTP over IP at a rate of either 10 or 100 MBit/s auto-negotiated. Multicast addressing is used so that each packet may be received by multiple SPP stations. Each packet of data is structured as shown inFIG. 22, for example. Each layer of the packet structure conforms to the relevant RFC. Note that for a single packet, the IP layer can only conform to RFC 791 (IPv4) or RFC 2460 (IPv6). The IP layer cannot conform to both at the same time. SRTP (Secure RTP) could be used if data encryption were a desired feature.

Audio Destination. The network destination of audio from the Microphone is determined by the software state of the SPP station, controlled by the Page Switch, Party Switch and Pressbar. Auxiliary Audio is transmitted to the socket selected by the Page Socket.

RTP Layer. This layer is the core mechanism behind the transmission and reception of audio with a SPP station. For the most part, the RTP layer of transmitted packets is structured according to RFC 3550. An example structure is provided below to illustrate that:some fields in the RTP layer are optional; the scope of an example implementation is captured here;the CSRC field is intended for use in a non-standard way; andthe size of the Payload field may vary between implementations.The RTP layer of each packet can be constructed as follows:

Each device has a configurable CSRC field which can contain a single value. Any other station with this value configured in their Mutual Mute List shall ignore audio from this SPP station.

Audio Reception (Network). Audio is received from the network40by extracting the encoded payload data within RIP packet streams on sockets that the SPP station is configured to listen for. The SPP station20is able to listen on up to 1 Party Socket and up to 8 Page Sockets simultaneously. The payload data from the selected Party Socket (according to the Party-Line Selector Switch position) is buffered and ready for decompression. Simultaneously, the payload data is buffered from the highest priority Page Socket as determined by the software state (e.g., the state diagrams inFIGS. 12-16) and the configured priority assignments. Each Page Socket has a numeric priority value associated with it that may hold a value between 1-8. Each Page Socket must be configured with a unique priority value and this shall be enforced by validation. SPP stations may need to receive Page Announcements from areas outside of their immediate communication group (i.e. the Page/Party channels that they may transmit upon), such as emergency multicast announcements from other SPP stations or audio streams from external multicast systems. Therefore, up to 8 Page Sockets can be supported instead of just 4 Page Sockets.

Filtering. The payload data is not buffered, but rather immediately discarded, if the value of the CSRC field matches a value contained in the Mutual Mute list on the SPP station, or, one of the header fields in either the UDP or RTP layer does not conform to one of the specified values (indicates incompatible stream configuration).

Audio Decompression. The payload in each RTP packet is decoded according to the compression scheme indicated by the Payload Type field within the RTP layer. This produces a monaural PCM frame of at least 8000 Hz. A higher playback rate may be achieved (up to the sampling rate of the received data) subject to hardware evaluation and performance constraints.

Identification. The SSRC field within the RTP layer is used to associate each PCM frame with an active ‘channel’ for mixing purposes. Where a matching channel cannot be found, a new channel is created to store the new audio data. There is a maximum of 8 channels.

Buffering. Received PCM frames are stored in a circular buffer associated with the allocated channel. The buffer has a user configurable size of between 20 ms-2000 ms in real time.

Mixing. When there is at least one frame available on each active receiving channel, the oldest frame from each channel is mixed into a single PCM frame of 80 samples. This frame is stored in a circular buffer associated with the receiving socket ready for playback.

Playback. Audio is routed to the appropriate peripheral once that socket receives priority (in the case of Page Audio) or becomes the selected Line (in the case of Party Audio). The details of where and when audio is routed to the earpiece/amplifier is described above in connection withFIGS. 12-15.

The SPP station supports a General I/O Manager108that reads the Page Line Selector Switch, the Party Line Selector Switch, the Hook Switch and the Auxiliary Audio Contact and maintains the input and output states. More generally, the General I/O Manager108is a process which is responsible for reading the electronic state of the various hardware peripherals as inputs and setting the state of the various peripherals as outputs. The General I/O Manager can implement, for example, the General I/O Manager State Diagram as shown inFIG. 16.

Outputs. The General I/O Manager108supports requests to set the state of 6 configurable Outputs. The SPP station drives each of these 6 peripherals based on its internal logical state and the configured activation conditions for that peripheral.

Each logical state may be combined for a different peripheral. Where more than one state is used, a logical OR between the two states shall be performed to determine the final output state of the peripheral.

The exception to this are the ON and OFF states. These states override all other states. ON and OFF cannot be configured to the same peripheral at the same time.

The activation conditions of each output on SPP station20for this purpose are as follows:IDLE. When the SPP station20is in the Idle State (Handset On Hook, Pressbar Depressed, no Page announcements in progress).RXPAGEANY. When the SPP station is receiving Page audio on one or more of the Page channels.RXPAGEn. When the SPP station is receiving Page audio on the Page channel specified by ‘n’ (1-8).TXPAGEANY. When the SPP station is transmitting Page audio on one of the Page channels.TXPAGEn. When the SPP station is transmitting Page audio on the channel specified by ‘n’ (1-8).PARTY. When the SPP station is in a Party-line conference.PARTYn. When the SPP station is in a Party-line conference on the line specified by ‘n’ (1-5).OFFHOOK. When the SPP station Hook-Switch is in the Off-Hook state.ONHOOK. When the SPP station Hook-Switch is in the On-Hook state.FAULTY. When there are one or more Events logged which indicate a fault state,HEALTHY. When there are no Events logged which indicate a fault stateON. Set the output to the Active state.OFF. Set the output to the Inactive state.

Inputs. The General I/O Manager108supports requests to read the functional state of the system inputs. The support inputs are:Party SwitchPage SwitchHook SwitchPressbar

Whenever the General I/O Manager receives a request for the functional state of one of the above inputs, the General I/O Manager108shall read that device and return the correct value.

Amplifier State. The Amplifier has two states which are controlled using a relay. The relay is driven from a GPIO pin. The General I/O Manager supports two Amplifier states:SPKRAMP

Whenever the General I/O Manager108receives a request to set the state of the Amplifier relay to one of the above, it drives the corresponding pin accordingly. Typically, the Amplifier State is driven by the Health Monitor.

Telnet Client

With continued reference toFIG. 11, the SPP station supports a Telnet service as a human usable interface. The Telnet service allows a Telnet client112to form a TCP connection to the SPP station and interface with the internal Command System. The Telnet Client challenges each new connection to present a valid login. A login is valid if the Requester enters the strings matching those stored in the SPP station configuration fields for User Login and User Password.

With continued reference toFIG. 11, the SPP station hosts an SNMP gent for reporting health status changes to and for handling health status requests from an SNMP Management System. This Agent maintains a Management Information Base in order to expose the relevant health status information.

The SNMP Client114supports SNMP Traps to report health status changes as asynchronous events to the SNMP Management System. The SPP Client does not support configuration provisioning via SNMP. The SPP Client retrieves the system status using the Internal Command System. The SNMP Client challenges each new connection to present a valid login. A login shall be valid if the Requester enters the strings matching those stored in the SPP station configuration fields for User Login and User Password. The SNMP Client maintains the Management Information Base (MIB) for the SPP station.

TFTP (Trivial File Transfer Protocol) Client

With continued reference toFIG. 11, the SPP station supports a TFTP Client116for transmitting/receiving firmware and configuration between a TFTP server and the SPP station. The TFTP Client reads and writes data to the SPP station via the Internal Command System.

Configuration Updates. The TFTP Client116allows an Administrator to transmit configuration and/or MPG data as a plain text file to the SPP station20. Configuration files can consist of part or all fields. The TFTP Client will only attempt to update Configuration fields that are specified within the configuration file used. The TFTP Client performs validation on the file before applying configuration updates. If any fields fail validation, the TFTP Client rejects the entire update.

Configuration Retrieval. The TFTP Client116allows an Administrator to retrieve MPG data from the SPP station. The TFTP Client also allows an Administrator to retrieve the configuration settings from the SPP station as a plain text file.

Firmware Updates. The TFTP Client116provide a mechanism for the SPP station to retrieve a firmware update from a TFTP server in order to self-update. Upon a successful firmware download, the SPP station performs a reboot in order to apply the new firmware version.

Authentication. The TFTP Client116challenges each new connection to present a valid login. A login shall be valid if the Requester enters the strings matching those stored in the SPP station configuration fields for User Login and User Password.

File Macros. The TFTP Client supports update file macros. The supported macros are:

TFTP Boot Configuration Update. The SPP station supports an option to perform TFTP configuration updates on boot. When this option is enabled, the TFTP Client attempts to perform a configuration update after the SPP station has initialized.

TFTP Timed Configuration Update. The SPP station supports TFTP timed updates. When this option is enabled, the TFTP Client attempts to perform a configuration update at a set time. The SPP station also supports a TFTP update interval. When configured, the TFTP Client attempts to update the configuration at an interval after the time set for the Timed Configuration Update. The interval is configurable in hours and minutes.

Health Monitor

With continued, reference toFIG. 11, the SPP station20supports a Health Monitor110as a software service. The Health Monitor110is responsible for monitoring a set of internal conditions on the SPP station. The Health Monitor is also be responsible for logging Events. The Health Monitor also monitors the internal system process to ensure that they are still working. This is done by a simple request-response mechanism to each process.

Heartbeat LED. The Health Monitor110drives a heartbeat LED. The LED shall cadence at a steady rate of 500 ms on, 500 ms off. This function serves as an indication that the software has not stalled. If any of designated internal services have failed, then the heartbeat function shall cadence at a steady rate of 250 ms on, 250 ms off. If the Heartbeat LED ceases to function, this indicates that the Health Monitor has stalled.

Events. The SPP station supports Event logging. An Event is defined as something that has occurred that the SPP station has detected and recorded. Each Event is recorded along with a time and date stamp. For example, an Event can be logged whenever one of the following occurs:

EventDescriptionStation OnlineThe Station has initialized successfully.Station PageThe Station is in the Paging Playback State.PlaybackStation PageThe Station is in the Page Announcement State.AnnouncementStation IdleThe Station is in the Idle State.Station PartyThe Station is in the Party Line Conference State.ConferenceUnexpected RebootThe Station booted unexpectedly.Handset Off-HookThe Handset was removed from its stowage.Handset On-HookThe Handset was put back on its stowage.

FIG. 18provides an illustrative state diagram for the Health Monitor110as it continuously monitors the current health state of the overall system, maintains the current system health state, handles requests for health status information, and triggers health status reports.

Glossary

DHCP. Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol: a client/server protocol that automatically provides an Internet Protocol (IP) host with its IP address and other related configuration information.

Event. An incident which the SPP Station has detected and recorded in an internal log.

IP-PBX. Internet Protocol Private Branch Exchange.

IT. Information Technology

LED. Light Emitting Diode

Lift Handset. To take the handset off its stowage (e.g., cradle).

MAC. Media Access Control; MAC data communication protocol is a sub-layer of the OSI data link layer (layer 2).

Master. The currently active Master Station for Mutual Provisioning

Off Hook. The handset has been removed from its stowage (e.g., cradle).

On Hook. The handset has been placed on its stowage.

Page Line. One of 4 broadcast channels.

Page Announcement. A one-way audio broadcast to one or more SPP Stations using a Page channel.

Page Line Audio. Audio received on a Page channel (network or auxiliary).

Party Line. One of 5 conference channels.

Party Line Conference. A conversation between: two or more SPP Station users using a Party channel.

Replace Handset. To place the handset on its stowage cradle).

RFC 3550. Internet standards track protocol. See https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3550.txt or http://www.rfc-base.org/txt/rfc-3550.txt.

SNMP. Simple Network Management Protocol.

Socket. An IP address and port combination used to send/receive RTP.

SRAM. Static Random Access Memory.

TFTP. Trivial File Transfer Protocol: a simple, lock-step, file transfer protocol which allows a client to get from or put a file onto a remote host.

VoIP. Voice over Internet Protocol (IP)

Zone. A pre-configured Page Line Socket.

Additional Embodiments and Implementations

Illustrative embodiments of the present invention have been described with reference to operations at a programmable device such as a Page/Party station or VoIP phone or server for station configuration or health monitoring in an intercom system. It is to be understood, however, that the present invention can also be embodied as computer-readable codes on a computer-readable recording medium. The computer-readable recording medium is any data storage device that can store data which can thereafter be read by a computer system. Examples of the computer-readable recording medium include, but are not limited to, read-only memory (ROM), random-access memory (RAM), CD-ROMs, DVDs, magnetic tapes, floppy disks, optical data storage devices. It is envisioned that aspects of the present invention can be embodied as carrier waves (such as data transmission through the Internet via wired or wireless transmission paths). The computer-readable recording medium can also be distributed over network-coupled computer systems so that the computer-readable code is stored and executed in a distributed fashion.

The components of the illustrative devices, systems and methods employed in accordance with the illustrated embodiments of the present invention can be implemented, at least in part, in digital electronic circuitry, analog electronic circuitry, or in computer hardware, firmware, software, or in combinations of them. These components can be implemented, for example, as a computer program product such as a computer program, program code or computer instructions tangibly embodied in an information carrier, or in a machine-readable storage device, for execution by, or to control the operation of, data processing apparatus such as a programmable processor, a computer, or multiple computers. A computer program can be written in any form of programming language, including compiled or interpreted languages, and it can be deployed in any form, including as a standalone program or as a module, component, subroutine, or other unit suitable for use in a computing environment. A computer program can be deployed to be executed on one computer or on multiple computers at one site or distributed across multiple sites and interconnected by a communication network. Also, functional programs, codes, and code segments for accomplishing the present invention can be easily construed as within the scope of the invention by programmers skilled in the art to which the present invention pertains. Method steps associated with the illustrative embodiments of the present invention can be performed by one or more programmable processors executing a computer program, code or instructions to perform functions (e.g., by operating on input data and/or generating an output). Method steps can also be performed by, and apparatus of the invention can be implemented as, special purpose logic circuitry, e.g., an FPGA (field programmable gate array) or an ASIC (application-specific integrated circuit).

The above-presented description and figures are intended by way of example only and are not intended to limit the present invention in any way except as set forth in the following claims. It is particularly noted that persons skilled in the art can readily combine the various technical aspects of the various elements of the various illustrative embodiments that have been described above in numerous other ways, all of considered to be within the scope of the invention.

APPENDIX

The following illustrative configurable fields shall be internally configurable on the SPP station within a System Configuration. Some fields are only configurable by certain users. Some fields are limited to either Profiles or Groups (e.g., where P=Profile, G=Group).

The configuration file format can be, for example, a plain text file comprising Profiles and Groups. Each Profile and Group defined within the file can contain a subset of configuration fields.

Other fields can be set for Audio settings, SNMP Agent settings, Output settings, Hookswitch and Pressbar State Control settings, among others.