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{{Short description|Technology for telephone exchanges}}
'''Stored program control''' ('''SPC''')
Second generation exchanges such as [[Strowger switch|Strowger]], [[Panel switch|panel]], rotary, and [[Crossbar switch|crossbar]] switches were constructed purely from electromechanical switching components with analog control electronics, and had no computer software control. Stored program control was invented by [[Bell Labs]] scientist [[Erna Schneider Hoover]] in 1954 who reasoned that computer software could control the connection of telephone calls.<ref name=tws2Q312>{{cite news▼
|author= Alpha Doggs
|title= Phone switching pioneers to be inducted in National Inventors Hall of Fame
|work= Network World
|date=
|url= http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/25111
|
}}</ref><ref name=tws2Q315>{{cite news
|title= Erna Schneider Hoover
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|date= 2012-06-17
|url= http://www.maximumpc.com/article/features/15_most_important_women_tech_history
|
}}</ref><ref name=tws2Q311>{{cite news
|title= Erna Schneider Hoover
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|date= 2012
|url= http://www.ieeeghn.org/wiki/index.php/Erna_Schneider_Hoover
|
}}</ref>
== History ==
Proposed and developed in the 1950s, SPC was introduced in production [[electronic switching system]]s in the 1960s. The 101ESS [[
SPC enables sophisticated [[calling feature]]s. As such exchanges evolved, reliability and versatility increased.
▲Second
However, later crossbar systems used computer control of their switching matrices and would be considered full SPC systems. Examples include the Ericsson ARE 11 (local) and ARE 13 (transit) and the ITT Metaconta 11, once found throughout Western Europe and in many countries around the world.▼
▲
The addition of [[time-division multiplexing]] (TDM) decreased subsystem sizes and dramatically increased the capacity of the telephone network. By the 1980s, SPC technology dominated the telecommunications industry.
Viable, fully digital switches emerged in the 1970s, with early systems, such
Some digital switches,
▲Viable, fully digital switches emerged in the 1970s, with early systems like the French [[Alcatel]] E10 and Candian Nortel DMS going live during that decade. Other widely adopted systems hit the market in the early 1980s. These included Ericsson AXE 10, which would become the world's most popular switching platform, the [[Western Electric]] [[5ESS]] used through the US and in many other countries, the German designed Siemens ESWD, the ITT System 12 (later rebranded [[Alcatel]] S12) and [[NEC]] NEAX all of which were widely used around the world. The British developed [[System X telephone exchange]] and many other successful smaller systems also emerged in the early 1980s
▲Some digital switches (notably the 5ESS and very early versions of Ericsson AXE 10) continued to use analog concentrator stages, using SPC like technologies, rather then direct connections to the digital line cards containing the [[CODEC]].
The
▲As at 2017, we move onto a 5th generation of telephony switching as [[Time Division Multiplexing|TDM]] and specialist hardware based digital circuit switching is being replaced by soft switches and voice over IP [[VoIP]] technologies.
▲The principle feature of stored program control is one or multiple digital processing units ([[stored-program computer]]s) that execute a set of computer instructions (''program'') stored in the [[computer memory|memory]] of the system by which telephone connections are established, maintained, and terminated in associated electronic circuitry.
An immediate consequence of stored program control is automation of exchange functions and introduction of a variety of new telephony features to subscribers.
A telephone exchange must run continuously without interruption at all times
|title=An Experimental Electronic Switching System |last=Joel |first=A. E. |journal=Bell |volume=36 |issue=10 |page=359 |date=October 1958 }}</ref> The world’s first electronic switching system for The attempts to replace the electromechanical switching matrices by semiconductor cross
==Types==
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===Centralized control===
In centralized control, all control equipment is replaced by a central processing unit. It must be able to process 10 to 100 [[calls per second]], depending on the load to the system.{{citation needed|date=July 2015}} Multiprocessor configurations are commonplace and may operate in various modes, such as in load-sharing configuration, in synchronous duplex-mode, or one processor may be in stand-by mode.
====Standby mode====
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It is possible that a comparator fault occurs only due to transient failure which is not shown even when check out program is run. In such case three possibilities exists:
*Continue with both processors: This is based on the assumption that the fault is transient and may not appear again.
*Take out the active processor and continue with the other.
*Continue with active processor but remove other processor from service.
====Load-sharing mode====
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=== Distributed control ===
Distributed SPC is both more available and more reliable than centralized SPC. The control function are shared by many processors within the exchange. It uses low cost [[microprocessor]]
* In horizontal Decomposition each processor performs only one or only some exchange functions.▼
▲
== See also ==
* [[List of telephone switches]]
* [[Stored-program computer]]
== References ==
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