Introduction to fax methods, T.38 fax, Pass-through fax – H3C Technologies H3C MSR 50 User Manual

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Signals that a G3 fax machine receives and sends are modulated analog signals. Therefore the router

processes fax signals in a different way it processes telephone signals. The router needs to perform A/D
or D/A conversion for fax signals (that is, the router demodulates analog signals from PSTN into digital

signals, or modulates digital signals from the IP network into analog signals), but does not need to

compress fax signals.
A real-time fax process consists of five phases:

1.

Fax call setup phase. This phase is similar to the process of a telephone call setup. The difference
is that the fax tones identifying the sending/receiving terminals are included.

2.

Prior-messaging phase. During this phase, fax faculty negotiation and training are performed.

3.

Messaging phase. During this phase, fax packets are transmitted in accordance with the T.4
procedure, and packet transmission is controlled (including packets synchronization, error

detection and correction, and line monitoring).

4.

Post-messaging phase. During this phase, control operations such as packet authentication,
messaging completion, and multi-page continuous transmission are performed.

5.

Fax call release phase. During this phase, the fax call is released.

Introduction to fax methods

T.38 fax

The device supports two fax protocols: T.38 protocol and standard T.38 protocol. The standard T.38

protocol should be selected for interworking with leading fax terminals in the industry. Because most

leading fax terminals in the industry do not support the local training mode, the end-to-end training

mode must be selected for interworking with them.

Pass-through fax

The fax pass-through technology was developed primarily for the purpose of compressing and

transmitting T.30 fax packets that cannot be demodulated through packet switched networks. With this

technology, the devices on two sides can directly communicate over a transparent IP link, and the voice
gateways do not distinguish fax calls from voice calls. After detecting a fax tone in an established VoIP

call, the voice gateway checks whether the voice codec protocol is G.711. If not, the voice gateway

switches the codec to G.711. Then fax data is transmitted as voice data in the pass-through mode.
In the pass-through mode, fax information is in the format of uncompressed G.711 codes and is

encapsulated in RTP packets between gateways, and a fixed bandwidth of 64 Kbps is occupied.
Although the packet redundancy mechanism can reduce the packet loss ratio, the pass-through mode is

subject to factors such as packet loss ratio, jitter, and delay. Therefore, it is necessary to ensure

synchronization of the clocks on both sides. Fax pass-through is called voice band data (VBD) by ITU-T.

That is, fax or modem signals are transmitted over a voice channel using a proper coding method. So far,
the codecs supported are only G.711 A-law and G.711 μ-law. In addition, when the fax pass-through

function is enabled, the voice activity detection (VAD) function must be disabled to avoid fax failures.
You can implement the fax pass-through function on the voice gateway in two ways:

Configure the fax to operate in pass-through mode on both sides.

Negotiate the codec as G.711 and disable fax forwarding. Then, disable the VAD function to avoid
fax failures. This method is used for the voice gateway to interwork with other devices in the

pass-through mode.

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