– 269 –
13
V
O
IP T
RAFFIC
C
ONFIGURATION
This chapter covers the following topics:
u
– Enables VOIP globally, sets the Voice VLAN, and the
aging time for attached ports.
u
– Configures the list of phones to be treated as VOIP
devices based on the specified Organization Unit Identifier (OUI).
u
– Configures the way in which a port is added to the Voice
VLAN, the filtering of non-VoIP packets, the method of detecting VoIP
traffic, and the priority assigned to voice traffic.
O
VERVIEW
When IP telephony is deployed in an enterprise network, it is
recommended to isolate the Voice over IP (VoIP) network traffic from other
data traffic. Traffic isolation can provide higher voice quality by preventing
excessive packet delays, packet loss, and jitter. This is best achieved by
assigning all VoIP traffic to a single Voice VLAN.
The use of a Voice VLAN has several advantages. It provides security by
isolating the VoIP traffic from other data traffic. End-to-end QoS policies
and high priority can be applied to VoIP VLAN traffic across the network,
guaranteeing the bandwidth it needs. VLAN isolation also protects against
disruptive broadcast and multicast traffic that can seriously affect voice
quality.
The switch allows you to specify a Voice VLAN for the network and set a
CoS priority for the VoIP traffic. The VoIP traffic can be detected on switch
ports by using the source MAC address of packets, or by using LLDP (IEEE
802.1AB) to discover connected VoIP devices. When VoIP traffic is detected
on a configured port, the switch automatically assigns the port as a tagged
member the Voice VLAN. Alternatively, switch ports can be manually
configured.
C
ONFIGURING
V
O
IP T
RAFFIC
Use the Traffic > VoIP (Configure Global) page to configure the switch for
VoIP traffic. First enable automatic detection of VoIP devices attached to
the switch ports, then set the Voice VLAN ID for the network. The Voice
VLAN aging time can also be set to remove a port from the Voice VLAN
when VoIP traffic is no longer received on the port.
Summary of Contents for DG-GS4826S
Page 2: ...DG GS4826S DG GS4850S E012011 R01 F1 2 2 0 ...
Page 4: ......
Page 6: ...ABOUT THIS GUIDE 6 ...
Page 60: ...SECTION I Getting Started 60 ...
Page 72: ...CHAPTER 1 Introduction System Defaults 72 ...
Page 90: ...CHAPTER 2 Initial Switch Configuration Managing System Files 90 ...
Page 92: ...SECTION II Web Configuration 92 u Unicast Routing on page 539 u Multicast Routing on page 595 ...
Page 138: ...CHAPTER 4 Basic Management Tasks Resetting the System 138 ...
Page 204: ...CHAPTER 6 VLAN Configuration Configuring MAC based VLANs 204 ...
Page 212: ...CHAPTER 7 Address Table Settings Clearing the Dynamic Address Table 212 ...
Page 238: ...CHAPTER 9 Rate Limit Configuration 238 Figure 106 Configuring Rate Limits ...
Page 268: ...CHAPTER 12 Quality of Service Attaching a Policy Map to a Port 268 ...
Page 368: ...CHAPTER 14 Security Measures DHCP Snooping 368 ...
Page 422: ...CHAPTER 15 Basic Administration Protocols Remote Monitoring 422 ...
Page 488: ...CHAPTER 17 IP Configuration Setting the Switch s IP Address IP Version 6 488 ...
Page 538: ...CHAPTER 20 IP Services Forwarding UDP Service Requests 538 ...
Page 594: ...CHAPTER 21 Unicast Routing Configuring the Open Shortest Path First Protocol Version 2 594 ...
Page 624: ...CHAPTER 22 Multicast Routing Configuring PIMv6 for IPv6 624 ...
Page 638: ...CHAPTER 23 Using the Command Line Interface CLI Command Groups 638 ...
Page 712: ...CHAPTER 26 SNMP Commands 712 ...
Page 720: ...CHAPTER 27 Remote Monitoring Commands 720 ...
Page 776: ...CHAPTER 29 Authentication Commands Management IP Filter 776 ...
Page 876: ...CHAPTER 34 Port Mirroring Commands Local Port Mirroring Commands 876 ...
Page 898: ...CHAPTER 37 Address Table Commands 898 ...
Page 998: ...CHAPTER 41 Quality of Service Commands 998 ...
Page 1060: ...CHAPTER 42 Multicast Filtering Commands MLD Proxy Routing 1060 ...
Page 1078: ...CHAPTER 43 LLDP Commands 1078 ...
Page 1088: ...CHAPTER 44 Domain Name Service Commands 1088 ...
Page 1164: ...CHAPTER 47 IP Interface Commands IPv6 to IPv4 Tunnels 1164 ...
Page 1260: ...CHAPTER 48 IP Routing Commands Open Shortest Path First OSPFv3 1260 ...
Page 1304: ...SECTION IV Appendices 1304 ...
Page 1310: ...APPENDIX A Software Specifications Management Information Bases 1310 ...
Page 1343: ...DG GS4826S DG GS4850S E012011 R02 F1 2 2 0 ...
Page 1344: ......