Administrator’s Guide for SIP-T3xG IP Phones
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consider when configuring a modern QoS implementation, these include: bandwidth,
delay, jitter and loss.
QoS provides better network service by providing the following features:
Supporting dedicated bandwidth
Improving loss characteristics
Avoiding and managing network congestion
Shaping network traffic
Setting traffic priorities across the network
The Best-Effort service is the default QoS model in the IP networks. It provides no
guarantees for data delivering, which means delay, jitter, packet loss and bandwidth
allocation are unpredictable. Differentiated Services (DiffServ or DS) is the most widely
supported QoS model. It provides a simple and scalable mechanism for classifying and
managing network traffic and providing QoS on modern IP networks. Differentiated
Services Code Point (DSCP) is used to define DiffServ classes and stored in the first six
bits of the ToS (Type of Service) field. Each router on the network can provide QoS
simply based on the DiffServ class. The DSCP value ranges from 0 to 63. Each DSCP
specifies a particular per-hop behavior (PHB) that is applied to a packet. A PHB refers to
the packet scheduling, queuing, policing, or shaping behavior of a node on any given
packet.
There are four standard PHBs available to construct a DiffServ-enabled network and
achieve QoS:
Class Selector PHB – is backwards compatible with IP precedence. Class Selector
code points are of the form ―xxx000‖. The first three bits are the IP precedence bits.
These PHBs retain almost the same forwarding behavior as nodes that implement
IP-precedence based classification and forwarding.
Expedited Forwarding PHB – is the key ingredient in DiffServ model for providing a
low-loss, low-latency, low-jitter and assured bandwidth service.
Assured Forwarding PHB – defines a method by which BAs can be given different
forwarding assurances.
Default PHB – specifies that a packet marked with a DSCP value of ―000000‖ gets
the traditional best effort service from a DS-compliant node.
VoIP is extremely bandwidth and delay sensitive. QoS is a major issue in VoIP
implementations. The issue is how to guarantee that packet traffic will not be delayed or
dropped due to interference from other lower priority traffic. VoIP can guarantee
high-quality QoS only if the voice and the SIP packets are given priority over other kinds
of network traffic. The IP phones support the DiffServ model of QoS.
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