Network Checks - 3Com 3C10402B Administrator's Manual

Networked telephony systems
Hide thumbs Also See for 3C10402B:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

488
A
D: C
PPENDIX
ONNE

Network Checks

X
H.323 G
TIONS
ATEWAY
However, at the router and beyond, network administrators can influence
H.323 call quality through the priority that they give to H.323 packets at
both the internet router and at the firewall.If H.323 connections
consistently experience significant delays, review the local router and
firewall configurations at each side of the H.323 connection.
A network check uses:
Network Ping
NetMeeting Connections
Network Ping
A network ping is a packet transfer that checks the logical continuity
between a personal computer and a specified IP (router) address. For
example, you can ping your own address, or the default gateway. The
next ping checks the connection to the IP router at the remote end of the
intended H.323 connection.
The easiest way to initiate a ping is with a DOS ping command. This
command sends four pings to the specified IP address. The router at that
address immediately returns the ping, and the command notes the round
trip delay for each ping packet. Some firewalls do not return pings for
security reasons. If the ping test fails, you can use a "trace router"
command ("tracert") to find out where the logical connection failed.
To check a connection:
1 Access the DOS command prompt from the DOS shell in Windows.
2 Enter
on the command line:
ping
ping <192.168.1.190>
3 Interpret ping results:
a
Request timed out
Ping reached the network but couldn't connect to the host
(No such address; or the device is down.)
Initial request timed-out
(It is normal for a first ping to fail and subsequent pings to
succeed.)
Subsequent requests timed-out
(sample IP address)
(all four times)

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

V3000 analogV3000 briV3001rV5000Nbx 100

Table of Contents