1 / 27

Configuring Campus Switches to Support Voice

Configuring Campus Switches to Support Voice. BCMSN Module 7 Lesson 1. Objectives. Explain why an organization would want to run VoIP on the network Describe the main components of a VoIP network, including IP-enabled PBX, user end-devices, gateways and gatekeepers, and the IP network

gur
Télécharger la présentation

Configuring Campus Switches to Support Voice

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Configuring Campus Switches to Support Voice BCMSN Module 7 Lesson 1

  2. Objectives • Explain why an organization would want to run VoIP on the network • Describe the main components of a VoIP network, including IP-enabled PBX, user end-devices, gateways and gatekeepers, and the IP network • Compare the uniform bandwidth consumption of voice traffic to the intermittent bandwidth consumption of data traffic • Describe a VoIP call flow through a network and where contention for bandwidth between data traffic and voice traffic will occur • Explain an auxiliary VLAN • Identify a solution for latency, jitter, bandwidth, packet loss, reliability, and security • Explain the importance of high availability in the campus network to support a VoIP implementation • Explain the use of AutoQoS in Cisco Catalyst switches • Describe the commands that enable AutoQoS on Cisco Catalyst switches

  3. Purpose of this Lesson • Coverage of topics new to the “Configuring Campus Switches to Support Voice and Video Applications” module of BCMSN. • What’s new in this module? • More information about Converged Networks. • Updated content for VoIP components and functionality. • Description of traffic types and call flow for VoIP. • New auto qos commands for voice. • Overall content is updated and reorganized. • This lesson does not cover QoS. The QoS module of BCMSN is largely unchanged.

  4. The Basics • VoIP is a technology that digitizes sound, divides that sound into packets, and transmits those packets over an IP network. • VoIP evolved into IP telephony, delivering packetization to the desktop through IP phones. IP telephony uses telephone-like handsets, and users dial regular telephone numbers. • IP Communications, also called unified communications or converged communications, is the next stage in the evolution. Tying together telephone, voice mail, e-mail, and information services, via familiar-looking telephone equipment.

  5. Benefits of a Converged Network • More efficient use of bandwidth and equipment • Lower transmission costs • Consolidated network expenses • Increased revenue from new services • Service innovation • Access to new communications devices • Flexible new pricing structures

  6. VoIP Network Components

  7. VoIP Call Flow

  8. Codecs • A codec (Coder/Decoder) converts analog signals to a digital bitstream, and another identical codec at the far end of the communication converts the digital bitstream back into an analog signal. • Codecs generally provide a compression capability to save network bandwidth.

  9. Auxiliary VLANs

  10. Self Check • What is a codec used for in VoIP? • Which VoIP component provides translation between VoIP and non-VoIP networks? • What is call control signaling? • What protocol is used to carry actual voice samples? • What is the auxiliary VLAN feature supported by some Catalyst switches?

  11. QoS

  12. Converged Networks Require QoS • Traditional telephony networks reserve resources and guarantee voice quality. • Traditional data networks are best effort, with no guarantee of delivery, delay or timing. Depend on TCP upper-layer protocols for reliability. • Converged networks must use QoS to ensure that voice and data can be supported on the same network.

  13. Characteristics of Voice and Data

  14. One-Way Requirements Voice QoS RequirementsProvisioning for Voice Voice • Latency ≤ 150 ms • Jitter ≤ 30 ms • Loss ≤ 1% • 17–106 kbps guaranteed priority bandwidth per call • 150 bps (+ layer 2 overhead) guaranteed bandwidth forvoice-control traffic per call • CAC (call admission control) must be enabled • Smooth • Benign • Drop sensitive • Delay sensitive • UDP priority

  15. QoS Basics

  16. AutoQoS One command per interface to enable and configure QoS.

  17. AutoQoS Benefits • Application Classification • Policy Generation • Configuration • Monitoring and Reporting • Consistency

  18. Configuring AutoQoS • Single command at the interface level configures interface and global QoS. • Supported on static, dynamic-access, voice VLAN access, and trunk ports. • CDP must be enabled for AutoQoS to function properly.

  19. ! mls qos map cos-dscp 0 8 16 26 32 46 48 56 mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 1 threshold 3 5 mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 2 threshold 3 3 6 7 mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 3 threshold 3 2 4 mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 4 threshold 2 1 mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 4 threshold 3 0 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 1 threshold 3 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 2 threshold 3 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 2 threshold 3 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 2 threshold 3 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 3 threshold 3 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 3 threshold 3 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 4 threshold 1 8 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 4 threshold 2 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 4 threshold 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold 1 138 138 92 138 mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold 2 138 138 92 400 mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold 3 36 77 100 318 mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold 4 20 50 67 400 mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold 1 149 149 100 149 mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold 2 118 118 100 235 mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold 3 41 68 100 272 mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold 4 42 72 100 242 mls qos queue-set output 1 buffers 10 10 26 54 mls qos queue-set output 2 buffers 16 6 17 61 mls qos ! ! interface GigabitEthernet0/1 srr-queue bandwidth share 10 10 60 20 srr-queue bandwidth shape 10 0 0 0 queue-set 2 mls qos trust device cisco-phone mls qos trust cos auto qos voip cisco-phone ! AutoQoS VoIP for Catalyst Switches CAT2970(config-if)#auto qos voip cisco-phone

  20. ! class-map match-any AutoQoS-VoIP-RTP-Trust match ip dscp ef class-map match-any AutoQoS-VoIP-Control-Trust match ip dscp cs3 match ip dscp af31 ! ! policy-map AutoQoS-Policy-Trust class AutoQoS-VoIP-RTP-Trust priority percent 70 class AutoQoS-VoIP-Control-Trust bandwidth percent 5 class class-default fair-queue ! ! interface Multilink2001100117 bandwidth 768 ip address 10.1.102.2 255.255.255.0 service-policy output AutoQoS-Policy-Trust ip tcp header-compression iphc-format no cdp enable ppp multilink ppp multilink fragment delay 10 ppp multilink interleave ppp multilink group 2001100117 ip rtp header-compression iphc-format ! … ! interface Serial2/0 bandwidth 768 no ip address encapsulation ppp auto qos voip trust no fair-queue ppp multilink ppp multilink group 2001100117 ! AutoQoS VoIP: WAN interface Serial2/0 bandwidth 768 ip address 10.1.102.2 255.255.255.0 encapsulation ppp auto qos voip trust

  21. Configuring AutoQoS: Native OS Switch(config-if)# auto qos voip trust • The uplink interface is connected to a trusted switch or router, and the VoIP classification in the ingress packet is trusted. Switch(config-if)# auto qos voip cisco-phone • Automatically enables the trusted boundary feature, which uses the CDP to detect the presence or absence of a Cisco IP Phone. • If the interface is connected to a Cisco IP Phone, the QoS labels of incoming packets are trusted only when the Cisco IP Phone is detected.

  22. Monitoring AutoQoS Switch# show auto qos [interface interface-id] • Displays the AutoQoS configuration that was initially applied • Does not display any user changes to the configuration that might be in effect Switch#show auto qos Initial configuration applied by AutoQoS: wrr-queue bandwidth 20 1 80 0 no wrr-queue cos-map wrr-queue cos 1 0 1 2 4 wrr-queue cos 3 3 6 7 wrr-queue cos 4 5 mls qos map cos-dscp 0 8 16 26 32 46 48 56 ! interface FastEthernet0/3 mls qos trust device cisco-phone mls qos trust cos

  23. Self Check • Describe the characteristics of a traditional data network. • Describe the QoS requirements of voice traffic. • What 3 QoS quality factors directory affect voice quality? • What is the Cisco Auto QoS feature? • What Cisco protocol must be enabled for AutoQoS to function properly?

  24. Summary • Converged networks reduce costs and increase productivity. • VoIP equipment consists of a VoIP phone and a network infrastructure capable of supporting VoIP. • Auxiliary VLANs provide the ability to apply QoS to voice traffic without affecting the flow of data from the client PC. • To ensure high quality VoIP, implementation of QoS is required. • AutoQoS is a simple way to implement a trust boundary for VoIP.

  25. Q and A

  26. Resources • FCC VoIP Frequently Asked Questions • http://www.fcc.gov/voip/ • VoIP Provider Information • http://voipreview.org/faq.aspx • Cisco Press Book: • “Internet Phone Services Simplified”, by Jim Doherty, Neil Anderson, 2006.

More Related