– 257 –
C
HAPTER
13
| VoIP Traffic Configuration
Configuring VoIP Traffic Ports
■
Auto
– The port will be added as a tagged member to the Voice
VLAN when VoIP traffic is detected on the port. You must select a
method for detecting VoIP traffic, either OUI or 802.1ab (LLDP).
When OUI is selected, be sure to configure the MAC address ranges
in the Telephony OUI list.
■
Manual
– The Voice VLAN feature is enabled on the port, but the
port must be manually added to the Voice VLAN.
◆
Security
– Enables security filtering that discards any non-VoIP
packets received on the port that are tagged with the voice VLAN ID.
VoIP traffic is identified by source MAC addresses configured in the
Telephony OUI list, or through LLDP that discovers VoIP devices
attached to the switch. Packets received from non-VoIP sources are
dropped. (Default: Disabled)
◆
Discovery Protocol
– Selects a method to use for detecting VoIP
traffic on the port. (Default: OUI)
■
OUI
– Traffic from VoIP devices is detected by the Organizationally
Unique Identifier (OUI) of the source MAC address. OUI numbers
are assigned to manufacturers and form the first three octets of a
device MAC address. MAC address OUI numbers must be configured
in the Telephony OUI list so that the switch recognizes the traffic as
being from a VoIP device.
■
LLDP
– Uses LLDP (IEEE 802.1ab) to discover VoIP devices
attached to the port. LLDP checks that the “telephone bit” in the
system capability TLV is turned on. See
"Link Layer Discovery
Protocol" on page 356
for more information on LLDP.
◆
Priority
– Defines a CoS priority for port traffic on the Voice VLAN. The
priority of any received VoIP packet is overwritten with the new priority
when the Voice VLAN feature is active for the port. (Range: 0-6;
Default: 6)
◆
Remaining Age
– Number of minutes before this entry is aged out.
W
EB
I
NTERFACE
To configure VoIP traffic settings for a port:
1.
Click Traffic, VoIP.
2.
Select Configure Interface from the Step list.
3.
Configure any required changes to the VoIP settings each port.
4.
Click Apply.
Summary of Contents for LGB6026A
Page 6: ...ABOUT THIS GUIDE 4...
Page 40: ...38 CONTENTS...
Page 60: ...58 SECTION I Getting Started...
Page 86: ...84 SECTION II Web Configuration Unicast Routing on page 517 Multicast Routing on page 575...
Page 162: ...160 CHAPTER 5 Interface Configuration VLAN Trunking...
Page 196: ...194 CHAPTER 6 VLAN Configuration Configuring MAC based VLANs...
Page 204: ...CHAPTER 7 Address Table Settings Clearing the Dynamic Address Table 202...
Page 238: ...CHAPTER 11 Class of Service Layer 2 Queue Settings 236...
Page 254: ...252 CHAPTER 12 Quality of Service Attaching a Policy Map to a Port...
Page 448: ...446 CHAPTER 16 Multicast Filtering Multicast VLAN Registration...
Page 470: ...468 CHAPTER 17 IP Configuration Setting the Switch s IP Address IP Version 6...
Page 576: ...574 CHAPTER 21 Unicast Routing Configuring the Open Shortest Path First Protocol Version 2...
Page 606: ...604 CHAPTER 22 Multicast Routing Configuring PIMv6 for IPv6...
Page 620: ...618 CHAPTER 23 Using the Command Line Interface CLI Command Groups...
Page 672: ...670 CHAPTER 25 System Management Commands Time Range...
Page 692: ...690 CHAPTER 26 SNMP Commands...
Page 700: ...698 CHAPTER 27 Remote Monitoring Commands...
Page 854: ...CHAPTER 34 Port Mirroring Commands Local Port Mirroring Commands 852...
Page 862: ...860 CHAPTER 36 Address Table Commands...
Page 958: ...956 CHAPTER 40 Quality of Service Commands...
Page 1034: ...1032 CHAPTER 42 LLDP Commands...
Page 1044: ...1042 CHAPTER 43 Domain Name Service Commands...
Page 1062: ...1060 CHAPTER 44 DHCP Commands DHCP Server...
Page 1206: ...CHAPTER 47 IP Routing Commands Open Shortest Path First OSPFv3 1204...
Page 1250: ...1248 SECTION IV Appendices...
Page 1256: ...1254 APPENDIX A Software Specifications Management Information Bases...
Page 1278: ...1276 COMMAND LIST...