Engineering Guidelines
172
What is the media bandwidth?
Depending upon how this is measured, this could be simply the payload bandwidth, which is
similar to TDM, or it could be the bandwidth of the packet carried across the network. During
a conversation, this bandwidth is consumed at a constant rate. It may change if the CODEC
includes Voice Activity Detection (VAD) and reduce consumption of bandwidth, but it won’t
exceed a particular level even when network bandwidth is available. This is in contrast to general
TCP data traffic, where bandwidth is consumed to the maximum current capacity of the link.
What is the signalling bandwidth?
The level of signalling is dependent upon call traffic. If there are no phone calls being set up,
then signalling is low (less than 1% of expected media bandwidth). However, setting up a call
uses both voice and signalling bandwidth. In practice, adding 10% to the voice bandwidth for
signalling has been found to be a good rule of thumb that provides sufficient margin.
Table shows typical wire data rates for different protocols and LAN/WAN interfaces.
Note, for example, that a half duplex link uses twice the bandwidth on the connection than a
similar, full duplex connection for the same voice connections. This is because the half duplex
connection is shared with other devices and the repeater on the link retransmits data received
on the received on the receive path for all other devices to hear (it exists on the transmit and
receive cable pairs at the same time).
As the table shows, the physical wire bandwidth required by an IP phone for Ethernet is usually
•
G.711 (about 100 kbps at nominal 20ms packet rate)
•
G.729a (about 40 kbps at nominal 20ms packet rate)
Under most conditions the default packet rate used by the end devices is 20ms. However when
connecting to other third party products packet rate values may vary from 10ms to 40ms in
10ms steps. Typical packet rates and usage include:
•
10ms (for reduced latency at PSTN gateway)
•
20ms (default IP rate, provides good delay and bandwidth usage efficiency)
•
30ms (reduced packet rate, for example wireless base stations)
•
40ms (limited bandwidth connections where reduced header size and larger packet in-
crease efficiency)
Both LAN (Ethernet) and WAN bandwidth usage is shown in the following tables (
Protocols: On-the-wire Bandwidth”
). Often the bandwidth quoted for Ethernet differs between
measurement equipment and in values quoted by different vendors. The values highlighted in
the following tables include all the bits on the wire as would be seen by an oscilloscope. This
includes bits used to delimit the packets and also the inter-packet gap. Although these bits and
time do not carry user information, they do consume bandwidth, which is unusable by any other
connected device.
Note:
Some network analyzers will not monitor the full Ethernet frame, excluding
checksums and synchronization data, and therefore they give a bandwidth somewhere
between wire and IP bandwidth. For the example shown, this would typically be 87.2
kbps, including VLAN.
Summary of Contents for MiVOICE BUSINESS
Page 1: ...Mitel MiVoice Business RELEASE 7 2 ENGINEERING GUIDELINES ...
Page 15: ...Chapter 1 ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT ...
Page 16: ......
Page 22: ...Engineering Guidelines 8 ...
Page 23: ...Chapter 2 SYSTEM OVERVIEW ...
Page 24: ......
Page 28: ...Engineering Guidelines 14 ...
Page 29: ...Chapter 3 TYPICAL CONFIGURATIONS ...
Page 30: ......
Page 73: ...Chapter 4 PHONES AND VOICE APPLICATIONS ...
Page 74: ......
Page 95: ...Phones and Voice Applications 81 Figure 9 ICP Connection Paths and Limitations ...
Page 100: ...Engineering Guidelines 86 ...
Page 101: ...Chapter 5 POWER ...
Page 102: ......
Page 128: ...Engineering Guidelines 114 ...
Page 129: ...Chapter 6 PERFORMANCE ...
Page 130: ......
Page 135: ...Chapter 7 APPLICATIONS ...
Page 136: ......
Page 142: ...Engineering Guidelines 128 ...
Page 143: ...Chapter 8 EMERGENCY SERVICES ...
Page 144: ......
Page 151: ...Chapter 9 IP NETWORKING ...
Page 152: ......
Page 167: ...Chapter 10 LICENSING ...
Page 168: ......
Page 183: ...Chapter 11 BANDWIDTH CODECS AND COMPRESSION ...
Page 184: ......
Page 209: ...Chapter 12 NETWORK CONFIGURATION CONCEPTS ...
Page 210: ......
Page 244: ...Engineering Guidelines 230 ...
Page 245: ...Chapter 13 NETWORK CONFIGURATION SPECIFICS ...
Page 246: ......
Page 309: ...Appendix A CAT 3 WIRING ...
Page 310: ......
Page 315: ...CAT 3 Wiring 301 Figure 55 CX MX MXe AX and LX Minimum Cable Standard ...
Page 316: ...Engineering Guidelines 302 ...
Page 317: ...Appendix B INSTALLATION EXAMPLES ...
Page 318: ......
Page 335: ...Appendix C LLDP AND LLDP MED CONFIGURATION EXAMPLES ...
Page 336: ......
Page 347: ...Appendix D VOIP AND VLANS ...
Page 348: ......
Page 353: ...Appendix E VOIP SECURITY ...
Page 354: ......
Page 381: ... ...