Chapter 11
| VoIP Traffic Configuration
Configuring VoIP Traffic Ports
– 221 –
Parameters
These parameters are displayed:
◆
Mode
– Specifies if the port will be added to the Voice VLAN when VoIP traffic is
detected. (Default: None)
■
None
– The Voice VLAN feature is disabled on the port. The port will not
detect VoIP traffic or be added to the Voice VLAN.
■
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
vendors 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 321
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.
The Remaining Age starts to count down when the OUI’s MAC address expires
from the MAC address table. Therefore, the MAC address aging time should be
added to the overall aging time. For example, if you configure the MAC address
table aging time to 30 seconds, and the voice VLAN aging time to 5 minutes,
then after 5.5 minutes, a port will be removed from voice VLAN when VoIP
traffic is no longer received on the port. Alternatively, if you clear the MAC
address table manually, then the switch will also start counting down the
Remaining Age.
Summary of Contents for GEL-1061
Page 14: ...Contents 14...
Page 28: ...Section I Getting Started 28...
Page 38: ...Chapter 1 Introduction System Defaults 38...
Page 40: ...Section II Web Configuration 40...
Page 60: ...Chapter 2 Using the Web Interface Navigating the Web Browser Interface 60...
Page 164: ...Chapter 6 Address Table Settings Issuing MAC Address Traps 164...
Page 192: ...Chapter 8 Congestion Control Storm Control 192...
Page 204: ...Chapter 9 Class of Service Layer 3 4 Priority Settings 204...
Page 216: ...Chapter 10 Quality of Service Attaching a Policy Map to a Port 216...
Page 430: ...Chapter 14 Multicast Filtering MLD Snooping Snooping and Query for IPv4 430...
Page 436: ...Chapter 15 IP Tools Address Resolution Protocol 436...
Page 474: ...Section III Appendices 474...
Page 492: ...Glossary 492...
Page 500: ...E052016 ST R02 150200001416A...