Weed Eater 2600 manual FXO Supervisory Disconnect Tone Commands, Delay in Voice Networks

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FXO Supervisory Disconnect Tone Commands

Cisco High-Density Analog Voice and Fax Network Module

Feature Overview

Supervisory tone disconnect occurs when the connected switch provides a special tone to indicate a change in call state. Some PBXs and PSTN CO switches provide a 600-millisecond interruption of line power as a supervisory disconnect, and others provide supervisory tone disconnect (STD). This is the signal that the router is looking for when the no supervisory disconnect command is configured on the voice port.

Note In some circumstances, you can use the FXO Disconnect Supervision feature to enable analog FXO ports to monitor call progress tones for disconnect supervision that are returned from a PBX or from the PSTN. For more information, see the “Configuring FXO Supervisory Disconnect Tone Commands” section on page 16.

FXO Supervisory Disconnect Tone Commands

If the FXO supervisory disconnect tone is configured and a detectable tone from the PSTN or PBX is detected by the Digital Signal Processor (DSP), the analog FXO port goes on-hook. This feature prevents an analog FXO port from remaining in an off-hook state after an incoming call is ended. FXO supervisory disconnect tone enables interoperability with PSTN and PBX systems whether or not they transmit supervisory tones.

Note This feature applies only to analog FXO ports with loop-start signaling on the Cisco 2600 series, the Cisco 3640, and the Cisco 3660 routers.

To configure a voice port to detect incoming tones, you must know the parameters of the tones expected from the PBX or PSTN. Then create a voice class that defines the tone- detection parameters, and, finally, apply the voice class to the applicable analog FXO voice ports. This procedure configures the voice port to go on-hook when it detects the specified tones. The parameters of the tones need to be precisely specified to prevent unwanted disconnects due to detection of nonsupervisory tones or noise.

A supervisory disconnect tone is normally a dual tone consisting of two frequencies; however, tones of only one frequency can also be detected. Use caution if you configure voice ports to detect nondual tones, because unwanted disconnects can result from detection of random tone frequencies. You can configure a voice port to detect a tone with one on/off time cycle, or you can configure it to detect tones in a cadence pattern with up to four on/off time cycles.

Delay in Voice Networks

Delay is the time it takes for voice packets to travel between two endpoints. Excessive delay can cause quality problems with real-time traffic such as voice. However, because of the speed of network links and the processing power of intermediate devices, some delay is expected.

When listening to speech, the human ear normally accepts up to about 150 ms of delay without noticing delays. The ITU G.114 standard recommends no more than 150 ms of one-way delay for a normal voice conversation. Once the delay exceeds 150 ms, a conversation is more like a “walkie-talkie” conversation in which one person must wait for the other to stop speaking before beginning to talk.

You can measure delay fairly easily by using ping tests at various times of the day with different network traffic loads. If network delay is excessive, it must be reduced for adequate voice quality.

Cisco IOS Release 12.2(2)XT and 12.2(8)T

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Weed Eater 2600 manual FXO Supervisory Disconnect Tone Commands, Delay in Voice Networks