Configuring Your System

 

 

 

 

jitter buffer is adaptive and configurable for different network environments.

 

When packets are lost, a concealment algorithm minimizes the resulting

 

negative audio consequences.

 

Configuration changes can performed centrally at the boot server or locally:

 

 

 

Central

Configuration file:

Set the jitter buffer tuning parameters including minimum and

(boot server)

sip.cfg

maximum size and shrink aggression.

 

 

For more information, refer to Codec Profiles <audioProfile/> on

 

 

page A-36.

 

 

 

Local

Web Server

Set the jitter buffer tuning parameters including minimum and

 

(if enabled)

maximum size and shrink aggression.

 

Navigate to http://<phoneIPAddress>/coreConf.htm#au

 

 

 

 

Changes are saved to local flash and backed up to <Ethernet

 

 

address>-phone.cfgon the boot server. Changes will permanently

 

 

override global settings unless deleted through the Reset Local

 

 

Config menu selection and the <Ethernet address>-phone.cfgis

 

 

removed from the boot server.

 

 

 

Voice Activity Detection

The purpose of voice activity detection (VAD) is to conserve network bandwidth by detecting periods of relative “silence” in the transmit data path and replacing that silence efficiently with special packets that indicate silence is occurring. For those compression algorithms without an inherent VAD function, such as G.711, the phone is compatible with the comprehensive codec-independent comfort noise transmission algorithm specified in RFC 3389. This algorithm is derived from G.711 Appendix II, which defines a comfort noise (CN) payload format (or bit-stream) for G.711 use in packet-based, multimedia communication systems. The phone generates CN packets (also known as Silence Insertion Descriptor (SID) frames) and also decodes CN packets, efficiently regenerating a facsimile of the background noise at the remote end.

Configuration changes can performed centrally at the boot server:

Central (boot server)

Configuration file: sip.cfg

Enable or disable VAD and set the detection threshold.

For more information, refer to Voice Activity Detection <vad/> on page A-47.

DTMF Tone Generation

The phone generates dual tone multi-frequency (DTMF) tones in response to user dialing on the dial pad. These tones are transmitted in the real-time transport protocol (RTP) streams of connected calls. The phone can encode the

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Polycom SIP 2.2.0 manual Voice Activity Detection, Dtmf Tone Generation, Negative audio consequences