Inter-asterisk exchange (IAX) deployment scenarios in SIP-enabled networks / / Mohamed Boucadair
| Inter-asterisk exchange (IAX) deployment scenarios in SIP-enabled networks / / Mohamed Boucadair |
| Autore | Boucadair Mohamed |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Chichester, U.K. : , : Wiley, , 2009 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (275 p.) |
| Disciplina |
004.69/5
004.695 |
| Collana | Wiley series on communications networking & distributed systems |
| Soggetto topico |
Internet telephony
Computer network protocols |
| ISBN |
1-282-01079-4
9786612010798 0-470-74218-6 0-470-74219-4 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Foreword -- Terminology and Definitions -- Acronyms and Abbreviations -- Acknowledgement -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 General Introduction -- 1.2 On Voice over IP and Telephony over IP -- 1.3 Context -- 1.4 Enhancement Strategies to Solve SIP Issues -- 1.5 IAX: Towards Lightweight Telephony Architectures -- 1.6 IAX and Standardisation -- 1.7 Rationale -- 1.8 What This Book is Not -- 1.9 Structure of the Book -- 2 The IAX Protocol at a Glance -- 2.1 What Does IAX Stand For? -- 2.2 Is IAX Specific to the Asterisk Platform? -- 2.3 What is the Difference between IAX2 and IAX? -- 2.4 Why another New VoIP Protocol? -- 2.5 How Does IAX Solve VoIP Pains? -- 2.6 How is Calls Multiplexing Achieved? -- 2.7 And What About Demultiplexing? -- 2.8 What Port Number Does IAX Use? -- 2.9 What Transport Protocol Does IAX Use? -- 2.10 Is IAX a Reliable Protocol? -- 2.11 How Does IAX Ensure Reliability? -- 2.12 Is there an IAX Registration Procedure? -- 2.13 Does IAX Registration Differ from SIP Registration? -- 2.14 How Are Media Streams Transported in IAX? -- 2.15 Is CODEC Negotiation Supported by IAX? -- 2.16 Is On-Fly CODEC Change Possible During a Call? -- 2.17 IAX: a Path-Coupled or Decoupled Protocol? -- 2.18 Can IAX be Aware of the Status of the Network Load? -- 2.19 What About Security? -- 2.20 Could IAX Devices Be Managed? -- 2.21 Is Firmware Version Updating Supported by IAX? -- 2.22 Can IAX Be Extended to Offer New Features? -- 2.23 How is an IAX Resource Identified? -- 2.24 What Does an IAX URI Look Like? -- 2.25 Is it Possible to Set a Call Involving Several IAX Servers? -- 2.26 Is it Possible to Discover the Location of an IAX Resource? -- 2.27 What Is DUNDi? -- 2.28 What Is TRIP? -- 2.29 What Is ENUM? -- References -- Further Reading -- Part One: IAX Protocol Specifications -- 3 IAX Uniform Resource Identifier -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Format of IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers -- 3.3 Examples of IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers -- 3.4 Comparing IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers.
3.5 IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers and ENUM -- References -- Further Reading -- 4 IAX Frames -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Full Frames -- 4.3 Mini Frames -- 4.4 Meta Frames -- 4.5 Encrypted Frames -- 4.6 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 5 IAX Information Elements -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 List of IAX Information Elements -- 5.3 Example of IAX Information Element Traces -- References -- Further Reading -- 6 IAX Messages -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Taxonomy of IAX Messages -- 6.3 IAX Requests/Responses -- 6.4 IAX Functional Categories -- 6.5 IAX Media Frames -- 6.6 IAX Reliable/Unreliable Messages -- References -- Further Reading -- 7 IAX Connectivity Considerations -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 IAX Transport Protocol -- 7.3 IAX Port Number -- 7.4 IAX Call Multiplexing and Demultiplexing -- 7.5 IAX Reliability Mechanism -- 7.6 Authentication and Encryption -- 7.7 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 8 IAX Operations -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Provisioning and Firmware Download -- 8.3 Registration -- 8.4 Call Setup -- 8.5 Call Tear-Down -- 8.6 Call Monitoring -- 8.7 Call Optimisation -- 8.8 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Part Two: Discussion and Analysis -- 9 IAX and Advanced Services -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 CODEC Negotiation -- 9.3 Video Sessions -- 9.4 Negotiation of Several Media Types in the Same IAX Session -- 9.5 Presence Services -- 9.6 Instant Messaging -- 9.7 Topology Hiding -- 9.8 Mobility -- 9.9 Miscellaneous -- 9.10 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 10 Multi-IAX Servers Environment -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Focus -- 10.3 Discovery of IAX Resources -- 10.4 Setting End-to-End Calls -- 10.5 Load Balancing -- 10.6 Path-Coupled and Path-Decoupled Discussion -- 10.7 Forking -- 10.8 Route Symmetry -- 10.9 Conclusion -- References -- 11 IAX and NAT Traversal -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Structure -- 11.3 NAT Types -- 11.4 IAX and NAT Traversal Discussion -- 11.5 Operational Considerations -- 11.6 Conclusion -- References. Further Reading -- 12 IAX and Peer-to-Peer Deployment Scenarios -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Scope -- 12.3 A P2P Solution for Corporate Customers -- 12.4 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 13 IAX and IPv6 -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Context and Assumptions -- 13.3 Service Migration to IPv6 -- 13.4 Structure -- 13.5 The IP Address Exhaustion Problem -- 13.6 IPv6: a Long-Term Solution -- 13.7 Why IPv6 May Be Problematic for Telephony Signalling Protocols: the SIP Example -- 13.8 IAX: an IP Version-Agnostic Protocol? -- 13.9 Deployment of IAX Services in a 'Pure' IPv6 Environment -- 13.10 Heterogeneous Environment -- 13.11 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 14 IAX: Towards a Lightweight SBC? -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 IP Telephony Administrative Domain -- 14.3 Deployment Scenarios -- 14.4 Deployment Contexts -- 14.5 Service Limitations Caused by SBCs -- 14.6 Functional Decomposition -- 14.7 Taxonomy of SBC Functions in an SIP Environment -- 14.8 Validity of these Functions in an IAX Architecture -- 14.9 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Part Three: Deployment Scenarios in SIP-Based Environments -- 15 Scenarios for the Deployment of IAX-Based Conversational Services -- 15.1 SIP Complications -- 15.2 Structure -- 15.3 Beyond the 'SIP-Centric' Era -- 15.4 Methodology -- 15.5 Overall Context -- 15.6 Architectural Requirements -- 15.7 Brief Comparison -- 15.8 Taxonomy -- 15.9 Introducing IAX into Operational Networks -- 15.10 Conclusion. / -- References -- 16 IAX in the Access Segment of SIP-Based Service Architectures -- 16.1 Introduction -- 16.2 A 'High-Level' Description of the Interworking Function -- 16.3 Examples of Call Flows -- 16.4 Bandwidth Optimisation: An Extension to SIP -- 16.5 Conclusion -- References -- 17 Validation Scenario -- 17.1 Overview -- 17.2 Configuring Asterisk Servers -- 17.3 Configuring the SIP Express Router (SER) -- 17.4 User Agent Configuration -- 17.5 Conclusion -- Further Reading -- Index. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910145827203321 |
Boucadair Mohamed
|
||
| Chichester, U.K. : , : Wiley, , 2009 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
Inter-asterisk exchange (IAX) deployment scenarios in SIP-enabled networks / / Mohamed Boucadair
| Inter-asterisk exchange (IAX) deployment scenarios in SIP-enabled networks / / Mohamed Boucadair |
| Autore | Boucadair Mohamed |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Chichester, U.K. : , : Wiley, , 2009 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (275 p.) |
| Disciplina |
004.69/5
004.695 |
| Collana | Wiley series on communications networking & distributed systems |
| Soggetto topico |
Internet telephony
Computer network protocols |
| ISBN |
1-282-01079-4
9786612010798 0-470-74218-6 0-470-74219-4 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Foreword -- Terminology and Definitions -- Acronyms and Abbreviations -- Acknowledgement -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 General Introduction -- 1.2 On Voice over IP and Telephony over IP -- 1.3 Context -- 1.4 Enhancement Strategies to Solve SIP Issues -- 1.5 IAX: Towards Lightweight Telephony Architectures -- 1.6 IAX and Standardisation -- 1.7 Rationale -- 1.8 What This Book is Not -- 1.9 Structure of the Book -- 2 The IAX Protocol at a Glance -- 2.1 What Does IAX Stand For? -- 2.2 Is IAX Specific to the Asterisk Platform? -- 2.3 What is the Difference between IAX2 and IAX? -- 2.4 Why another New VoIP Protocol? -- 2.5 How Does IAX Solve VoIP Pains? -- 2.6 How is Calls Multiplexing Achieved? -- 2.7 And What About Demultiplexing? -- 2.8 What Port Number Does IAX Use? -- 2.9 What Transport Protocol Does IAX Use? -- 2.10 Is IAX a Reliable Protocol? -- 2.11 How Does IAX Ensure Reliability? -- 2.12 Is there an IAX Registration Procedure? -- 2.13 Does IAX Registration Differ from SIP Registration? -- 2.14 How Are Media Streams Transported in IAX? -- 2.15 Is CODEC Negotiation Supported by IAX? -- 2.16 Is On-Fly CODEC Change Possible During a Call? -- 2.17 IAX: a Path-Coupled or Decoupled Protocol? -- 2.18 Can IAX be Aware of the Status of the Network Load? -- 2.19 What About Security? -- 2.20 Could IAX Devices Be Managed? -- 2.21 Is Firmware Version Updating Supported by IAX? -- 2.22 Can IAX Be Extended to Offer New Features? -- 2.23 How is an IAX Resource Identified? -- 2.24 What Does an IAX URI Look Like? -- 2.25 Is it Possible to Set a Call Involving Several IAX Servers? -- 2.26 Is it Possible to Discover the Location of an IAX Resource? -- 2.27 What Is DUNDi? -- 2.28 What Is TRIP? -- 2.29 What Is ENUM? -- References -- Further Reading -- Part One: IAX Protocol Specifications -- 3 IAX Uniform Resource Identifier -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Format of IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers -- 3.3 Examples of IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers -- 3.4 Comparing IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers.
3.5 IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers and ENUM -- References -- Further Reading -- 4 IAX Frames -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Full Frames -- 4.3 Mini Frames -- 4.4 Meta Frames -- 4.5 Encrypted Frames -- 4.6 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 5 IAX Information Elements -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 List of IAX Information Elements -- 5.3 Example of IAX Information Element Traces -- References -- Further Reading -- 6 IAX Messages -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Taxonomy of IAX Messages -- 6.3 IAX Requests/Responses -- 6.4 IAX Functional Categories -- 6.5 IAX Media Frames -- 6.6 IAX Reliable/Unreliable Messages -- References -- Further Reading -- 7 IAX Connectivity Considerations -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 IAX Transport Protocol -- 7.3 IAX Port Number -- 7.4 IAX Call Multiplexing and Demultiplexing -- 7.5 IAX Reliability Mechanism -- 7.6 Authentication and Encryption -- 7.7 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 8 IAX Operations -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Provisioning and Firmware Download -- 8.3 Registration -- 8.4 Call Setup -- 8.5 Call Tear-Down -- 8.6 Call Monitoring -- 8.7 Call Optimisation -- 8.8 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Part Two: Discussion and Analysis -- 9 IAX and Advanced Services -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 CODEC Negotiation -- 9.3 Video Sessions -- 9.4 Negotiation of Several Media Types in the Same IAX Session -- 9.5 Presence Services -- 9.6 Instant Messaging -- 9.7 Topology Hiding -- 9.8 Mobility -- 9.9 Miscellaneous -- 9.10 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 10 Multi-IAX Servers Environment -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Focus -- 10.3 Discovery of IAX Resources -- 10.4 Setting End-to-End Calls -- 10.5 Load Balancing -- 10.6 Path-Coupled and Path-Decoupled Discussion -- 10.7 Forking -- 10.8 Route Symmetry -- 10.9 Conclusion -- References -- 11 IAX and NAT Traversal -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Structure -- 11.3 NAT Types -- 11.4 IAX and NAT Traversal Discussion -- 11.5 Operational Considerations -- 11.6 Conclusion -- References. Further Reading -- 12 IAX and Peer-to-Peer Deployment Scenarios -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Scope -- 12.3 A P2P Solution for Corporate Customers -- 12.4 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 13 IAX and IPv6 -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Context and Assumptions -- 13.3 Service Migration to IPv6 -- 13.4 Structure -- 13.5 The IP Address Exhaustion Problem -- 13.6 IPv6: a Long-Term Solution -- 13.7 Why IPv6 May Be Problematic for Telephony Signalling Protocols: the SIP Example -- 13.8 IAX: an IP Version-Agnostic Protocol? -- 13.9 Deployment of IAX Services in a 'Pure' IPv6 Environment -- 13.10 Heterogeneous Environment -- 13.11 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 14 IAX: Towards a Lightweight SBC? -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 IP Telephony Administrative Domain -- 14.3 Deployment Scenarios -- 14.4 Deployment Contexts -- 14.5 Service Limitations Caused by SBCs -- 14.6 Functional Decomposition -- 14.7 Taxonomy of SBC Functions in an SIP Environment -- 14.8 Validity of these Functions in an IAX Architecture -- 14.9 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Part Three: Deployment Scenarios in SIP-Based Environments -- 15 Scenarios for the Deployment of IAX-Based Conversational Services -- 15.1 SIP Complications -- 15.2 Structure -- 15.3 Beyond the 'SIP-Centric' Era -- 15.4 Methodology -- 15.5 Overall Context -- 15.6 Architectural Requirements -- 15.7 Brief Comparison -- 15.8 Taxonomy -- 15.9 Introducing IAX into Operational Networks -- 15.10 Conclusion. / -- References -- 16 IAX in the Access Segment of SIP-Based Service Architectures -- 16.1 Introduction -- 16.2 A 'High-Level' Description of the Interworking Function -- 16.3 Examples of Call Flows -- 16.4 Bandwidth Optimisation: An Extension to SIP -- 16.5 Conclusion -- References -- 17 Validation Scenario -- 17.1 Overview -- 17.2 Configuring Asterisk Servers -- 17.3 Configuring the SIP Express Router (SER) -- 17.4 User Agent Configuration -- 17.5 Conclusion -- Further Reading -- Index. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910830232403321 |
Boucadair Mohamed
|
||
| Chichester, U.K. : , : Wiley, , 2009 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
Inter-asterisk exchange (IAX) deployment scenarios in SIP-enabled networks / / Mohamed Boucadair
| Inter-asterisk exchange (IAX) deployment scenarios in SIP-enabled networks / / Mohamed Boucadair |
| Autore | Boucadair Mohamed |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Chichester, U.K., : Wiley, 2009 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (275 p.) |
| Disciplina |
004.69/5
004.695 |
| Collana | Wiley series in communications networking & distributed systems |
| Soggetto topico |
Internet telephony
Computer network protocols |
| ISBN |
9786612010798
9781282010796 1282010794 9780470742181 0470742186 9780470742198 0470742194 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Foreword -- Terminology and Definitions -- Acronyms and Abbreviations -- Acknowledgement -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 General Introduction -- 1.2 On Voice over IP and Telephony over IP -- 1.3 Context -- 1.4 Enhancement Strategies to Solve SIP Issues -- 1.5 IAX: Towards Lightweight Telephony Architectures -- 1.6 IAX and Standardisation -- 1.7 Rationale -- 1.8 What This Book is Not -- 1.9 Structure of the Book -- 2 The IAX Protocol at a Glance -- 2.1 What Does IAX Stand For? -- 2.2 Is IAX Specific to the Asterisk Platform? -- 2.3 What is the Difference between IAX2 and IAX? -- 2.4 Why another New VoIP Protocol? -- 2.5 How Does IAX Solve VoIP Pains? -- 2.6 How is Calls Multiplexing Achieved? -- 2.7 And What About Demultiplexing? -- 2.8 What Port Number Does IAX Use? -- 2.9 What Transport Protocol Does IAX Use? -- 2.10 Is IAX a Reliable Protocol? -- 2.11 How Does IAX Ensure Reliability? -- 2.12 Is there an IAX Registration Procedure? -- 2.13 Does IAX Registration Differ from SIP Registration? -- 2.14 How Are Media Streams Transported in IAX? -- 2.15 Is CODEC Negotiation Supported by IAX? -- 2.16 Is On-Fly CODEC Change Possible During a Call? -- 2.17 IAX: a Path-Coupled or Decoupled Protocol? -- 2.18 Can IAX be Aware of the Status of the Network Load? -- 2.19 What About Security? -- 2.20 Could IAX Devices Be Managed? -- 2.21 Is Firmware Version Updating Supported by IAX? -- 2.22 Can IAX Be Extended to Offer New Features? -- 2.23 How is an IAX Resource Identified? -- 2.24 What Does an IAX URI Look Like? -- 2.25 Is it Possible to Set a Call Involving Several IAX Servers? -- 2.26 Is it Possible to Discover the Location of an IAX Resource? -- 2.27 What Is DUNDi? -- 2.28 What Is TRIP? -- 2.29 What Is ENUM? -- References -- Further Reading -- Part One: IAX Protocol Specifications -- 3 IAX Uniform Resource Identifier -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Format of IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers -- 3.3 Examples of IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers -- 3.4 Comparing IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers.
3.5 IAX Uniform Resource Identifiers and ENUM -- References -- Further Reading -- 4 IAX Frames -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Full Frames -- 4.3 Mini Frames -- 4.4 Meta Frames -- 4.5 Encrypted Frames -- 4.6 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 5 IAX Information Elements -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 List of IAX Information Elements -- 5.3 Example of IAX Information Element Traces -- References -- Further Reading -- 6 IAX Messages -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Taxonomy of IAX Messages -- 6.3 IAX Requests/Responses -- 6.4 IAX Functional Categories -- 6.5 IAX Media Frames -- 6.6 IAX Reliable/Unreliable Messages -- References -- Further Reading -- 7 IAX Connectivity Considerations -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 IAX Transport Protocol -- 7.3 IAX Port Number -- 7.4 IAX Call Multiplexing and Demultiplexing -- 7.5 IAX Reliability Mechanism -- 7.6 Authentication and Encryption -- 7.7 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 8 IAX Operations -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Provisioning and Firmware Download -- 8.3 Registration -- 8.4 Call Setup -- 8.5 Call Tear-Down -- 8.6 Call Monitoring -- 8.7 Call Optimisation -- 8.8 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Part Two: Discussion and Analysis -- 9 IAX and Advanced Services -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 CODEC Negotiation -- 9.3 Video Sessions -- 9.4 Negotiation of Several Media Types in the Same IAX Session -- 9.5 Presence Services -- 9.6 Instant Messaging -- 9.7 Topology Hiding -- 9.8 Mobility -- 9.9 Miscellaneous -- 9.10 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 10 Multi-IAX Servers Environment -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Focus -- 10.3 Discovery of IAX Resources -- 10.4 Setting End-to-End Calls -- 10.5 Load Balancing -- 10.6 Path-Coupled and Path-Decoupled Discussion -- 10.7 Forking -- 10.8 Route Symmetry -- 10.9 Conclusion -- References -- 11 IAX and NAT Traversal -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Structure -- 11.3 NAT Types -- 11.4 IAX and NAT Traversal Discussion -- 11.5 Operational Considerations -- 11.6 Conclusion -- References. Further Reading -- 12 IAX and Peer-to-Peer Deployment Scenarios -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Scope -- 12.3 A P2P Solution for Corporate Customers -- 12.4 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 13 IAX and IPv6 -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Context and Assumptions -- 13.3 Service Migration to IPv6 -- 13.4 Structure -- 13.5 The IP Address Exhaustion Problem -- 13.6 IPv6: a Long-Term Solution -- 13.7 Why IPv6 May Be Problematic for Telephony Signalling Protocols: the SIP Example -- 13.8 IAX: an IP Version-Agnostic Protocol? -- 13.9 Deployment of IAX Services in a 'Pure' IPv6 Environment -- 13.10 Heterogeneous Environment -- 13.11 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- 14 IAX: Towards a Lightweight SBC? -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 IP Telephony Administrative Domain -- 14.3 Deployment Scenarios -- 14.4 Deployment Contexts -- 14.5 Service Limitations Caused by SBCs -- 14.6 Functional Decomposition -- 14.7 Taxonomy of SBC Functions in an SIP Environment -- 14.8 Validity of these Functions in an IAX Architecture -- 14.9 Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Part Three: Deployment Scenarios in SIP-Based Environments -- 15 Scenarios for the Deployment of IAX-Based Conversational Services -- 15.1 SIP Complications -- 15.2 Structure -- 15.3 Beyond the 'SIP-Centric' Era -- 15.4 Methodology -- 15.5 Overall Context -- 15.6 Architectural Requirements -- 15.7 Brief Comparison -- 15.8 Taxonomy -- 15.9 Introducing IAX into Operational Networks -- 15.10 Conclusion. / -- References -- 16 IAX in the Access Segment of SIP-Based Service Architectures -- 16.1 Introduction -- 16.2 A 'High-Level' Description of the Interworking Function -- 16.3 Examples of Call Flows -- 16.4 Bandwidth Optimisation: An Extension to SIP -- 16.5 Conclusion -- References -- 17 Validation Scenario -- 17.1 Overview -- 17.2 Configuring Asterisk Servers -- 17.3 Configuring the SIP Express Router (SER) -- 17.4 User Agent Configuration -- 17.5 Conclusion -- Further Reading -- Index. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9911019407803321 |
Boucadair Mohamed
|
||
| Chichester, U.K., : Wiley, 2009 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||