Voice Qos In A Wireless Network - Cisco 8961 Administration Manual

Administration guide for cisco unified communications manager 8.6 (sip)
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Chapter 6
Understanding the VoIP Wireless Network
The Cisco Unified IP Phone associates with the AP with the highest RSSI and lowest channel usage
values (QBSS) that posses matching SSID and encryption types. To ensure that voice traffic is handled
properly, you must configure the correct QoS in the AP.
Related Topics

Voice QoS in a Wireless Network

Voice traffic on the Wireless LAN, like data traffic, is susceptible to delay, jitter, and packet loss. These
issues do not impact the data end user, but can seriously impact a voice call. To ensure that voice traffic
receives timely and reliable treatment with low delay and low jitter, you must use Quality of Service
(QoS), and use separate virtual LANs (VLANs) for voice and data. By isolating the voice traffic onto a
separate VLAN, you can use QoS to provide priority treatment for voice packets when traveling across
the network. Also, use a separate VLAN for data traffic, not the default native VLAN which is typically
used for all network devices.
You need the following VLANs on the network switches and the APs that support voice connections on
the WLAN:
Assign separate SSIDs to the voice and to the data VLANs. If you configure a separate management
VLAN in the WLAN, do not associate an SSID with the management VLAN.
By separating the phones into a voice VLAN and marking voice packets with higher QoS, you can ensure
that voice traffic gets priority treatment over data traffic resulting in lower packet delay and fewer lost
packets.
Unlike wired networks with dedicated bandwidths, wireless LANs consider traffic direction when
implementing QoS. Traffic is classified as upstream or downstream from the point of view of the AP as
shown in
Figure 6-2
Cisco Unified IP Phone 8961, 9951, and 9971 Administration Guide for Cisco Unified Communications Manager 8.6 (SIP)
Traffic Specification (TSpec)—Calculation of call limits and WLAN load balancing. The TSpec
value of each voice stream allows the system to allocate bandwidth to voice devices on a first-come,
first-served basis. For more information, see
page
6-9.
Security for Voice Communications in WLANs, page 6-11
VoIP WLAN Configuration, page 6-15
Voice VLAN—Voice traffic to and from the wireless IP Phone
Native VLAN—Data traffic to and from other wireless devices
Figure
6-2.
Voice Traffic in a Wireless Network
Downstream
IP
Upstream
Downstream QoS only
Components of the VoIP Wireless Network
"Voice QoS in a Wireless Network" section on
Downstream
Upstream
Bi-Directional QoS
Network
6-9

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