Preparing Your Network for an IP PBX
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This presentation covers the basics of network preparation for an IP PBX, including topics such as real-time protocol, quality of service, network assessment, and installation. It also discusses the importance of ongoing monitoring and maintenance to ensure the reliability of VoIP.
Preparing Your Network for an IP PBX
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Presentation Transcript
Preparing Your Network for an IP PBX TMCU-201-1 Warren Sonnen Director of Product Management Epygi Technologies Ltd. warren.sonnen@epygi.com
Agenda • The Basics • Discovery & Assessment • Is The Network Ready? • Installation • What Next?
The Basics • Real-Time Protocol (RTP) • Latency • Jitter • Packet Loss • Echo • Quality of Service (QOS) • Mean Opinion Score (MOS) • 1.0 – 5.0 • Quality of Experience (QOE) Layer 2 Switch PC PC PC PC
The Basics cont. Local Area Network (LAN) • Wide Area Network (WAN) • Virtual LAN (VLAN / IEEE 802.1Q) • Differentiated Services Code Points (DiffServ) • Type of Service (TOS) • IEEE 802.1p Router VLAN A VLAN B Layer 2 Switch PC PC PC PC
Discovery & Assessment • Network Topology • Current hardware elements • IP addressing scheme • Large-scale data applications • Service level agreement (SLA) • Assessment • Voice traffic simulation • Metric translation • Duplex mismatch • Stress the network
Discovery & Assessment cont. • WAN • Internet Service Provider (ISP) type • Current usage • Backbone congestion • Bursting • Link type • LAN • Voice traffic simulation • Type of current traffic • Traffic flows • Link speeds • Current network stress • Delay should be under 150 milliseconds • Jitter buffers can resolve mild jitter - 20 to 40 ms buffer • Packet Loss should not be less than 1% • Mean Opinion Score (MOS) between 3.5 and 4.1 is desired
Is The Network Ready? • Review the baseline assessment • Have all “The Basics” been addressed? • HUBS vs. Managed Switches • Application level gateway (ALG) firewall • Make appropriate changes • Codec decision
Is The Network Ready? cont. • Test it again! • Was there an improvement? • Did the anomaly resurface? • Did the final simulation mimic estimated traffic activity? • Security
Installation Good Luck! Successful Deployment vs. Unsuccessful Deployment • Informed installer • Installation plan • Pre-staging • Qualified/Trained • Unknown environment • End-user driven install • On-site setup • First time install
What Next? How important should VoIP be to the customer? • The number ONE critical application How can I ensure my VoIP stays #1? • Periodic health checks • Client PC health – Virus, Worms, SPAM, and Spyware • Plan new application deployments
What Next? cont. Is this all free? • Outsourcing this activity • Managed service revenue • Maintenance revenue • Network assessment and diagnostic fees
Mission CriticalorMission Impossible? Warren Sonnen Director of Product Management Epygi Technologies Ltd. warren.sonnen@epygi.com