Cisco Hoot and Holler over IP

Configuration Examples

Quality of Service

Voice traffic is much more sensitive to timing variations than data traffic. For good voice performance, configure your data network so that voice packets are not lost or delayed. The following example shows one way to improve QoS for voice multicasting over a Frame Relay connection:

!Configure physical interface for transmitting multicast packets. !Listen to packets of Session Announcement Protocol (SAP).

!This example uses a subinterface

!

interface serial0/0 encapsulation frame-relay frame-relay traffic-shaping no frame-relay broadcast-queue

!

interface serial0/0.1 point-to-point ip address 5.5.5.5 255.255.255.0 ip pim sparse-dense-mode frame-relay class hootie frame-relay interface-dlci 100 frame-relay ip rtp header-compression

!

 

!Frame relay

class commands.

!

 

map-class frame-relay hootie

frame-relay

cir 64000

frame-relay

bc 2000

frame-relay

mincir 64000

no frame-relay adaptive-shaping

frame-relay

fair-queue

frame-relay

fragment 80

frame-relay

ip rtp priority 16384 16383 64

Note In the frame-relay ip rtp priority command, the first number is the audio port. The second number is the number of consecutive audio ports to which the IP RTP priority queuing applies. The third number is the bandwidth, which should equal the bandwidth needed for each call multiplied by the number of calls.

Cisco IOS Voice, Video, and Fax Configuration Guide

VC-848

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Cisco Systems VC-825 appendix Quality of Service, VC-848