7.telepresence system and network design for enterprise

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  • 8/13/2019 7.TelePresence System and Network Design for Enterprise

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    TelePresence System and NetworkDesign for Enterprise

    BRKEVT-2003

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    Who am I?

    M A R I A N O O K O NDISTINGUISHED SYSTEMS ENGINEER

    Voice CCIE # 13210

    Business Video Technical Lead

    Emerging Markets

    [email protected]

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    Before this session starts..

    Please turn offyour phone

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    Business Video Systems

    Video calling,WebEx, and

    interoperability

    Unifiedcommunications

    Videobroadcast todesktop PCs

    Desktop videostreaming Networked

    video signage

    Digitalsignage

    IP-based videosurveillance

    Videosurveillance

    Life-like,in-person video

    collaboration

    CiscoTelePresence

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    The Importance of Visual Interaction

    Sources: Human Productivity Lab 2006

    Pearn Kandola: The Psycho logy o f Effec t ive Bus iness Comm unica t ions in Geograph ica lly Dispe r sed Teams 2006

    People remember..

    20%of What They Hear

    Importance of Visual Traffic30% of brains cortex devoted to vision, 8% for touch and 3% for hearingMore than 60% of communication is non-verbal

    70%of What TheySee an d Hear

    30%of What They See

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    Cisco TelePresence

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    Cisco TelePresence

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    Cisco TelePresenceWhat It Is Today The Cisco TelePresence Meeting

    A true replacement for face-to-face meetings As good as actually being thereFeel as if youre actually in the same room together Travel the world without ever leaving your office

    As easy to use as an in-person meeting

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    Quality Its All About the Experience Ultra High Definition Video 1080p (twice the video quality of 720p)

    Every participant has a seat at the table , Life Size images

    Eye contact, facial gestures and emotion help create engagement

    Audio is spatial, sound comes from participants using normal voice levels

    Imperceptible latency

    Simplicity As Easy as Placing a Phone Call Technology invisible to the user

    One button to push (groupware integration)

    Reliability Uses the Network as the Platform Cisco TelePresence leverages the Network as the Platform along with

    Cisco Unified Communications Services to deliver reliability, resiliency,and security

    A true replacement for face-to-face meetings As good as actually being thereFeel as if youre actually in the same room together Travel the world without ever leaving your office

    As easy to use as an in-person meeting

    Quality Its All About the Experience High Definition Video 1080p (twice the video quality of 720p)

    Every participant has a seat at the table , Life Size images

    Eye contact, facial gestures and emotion help create engagement

    Audio is spatial, sound comes from participants using normal voice levels

    Imperceptible latency

    Simplicity As Easy as Placing a Phone Call Phone interface

    One button to push (groupware integration) Technology invisible to the user

    Reliability Uses the Network as the Platform Cisco TelePresence leverages the Network as the Platform along with

    Cisco Unified Communications Services to deliver reliability, resiliency,and security

    Cisco TelePresenceWhat It Is Today The Cisco TelePresence Meeting

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    Cisco TelePresenceIcon Overview

    Cisco TelePresenceSystem Codec

    (CTS)

    Cisco UnifiedCommunications

    Manager (CUCM)

    Cisco TelePresenceManager

    (CTS-Man.)

    Cisco TelePresenceMultipoint Switch

    (CTMS)

    Cisco TelePresenceSystem 1x00(CTS-1x00)

    Cisco TelePresenceSystem 3010/3210

    (CTS-3010CTS-3210)

    Cisco TelePresenceSystem 500(CTS-500)

    Cisco TelePresen ceSystem 1300

    (CTS-1300-65)

    Cisco TelePresenceRecording Server

    (CTRS)

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    Cisco TelePresenceSystem Components

    Management and Calendaring Components

    MicrosoftExchange

    Cisco TelePresenceManager

    Microsoft ActiveDirectory

    MicrosoftOutlook Client

    Network Infrastructure

    CTS-500/1x00/3x00Endpoints

    Cisco UnifiedCommunicationsManager Cluster

    Call Control

    CTS-500/1x00/3x00Endpoints

    MultipointRecording

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    Cisco TelePresence Release 1.6Continued Solution-Level Release

    Endpoints

    Release 1.0Release 1.1Release 1.2Release 1.3Release 1.4Release 1.5

    Release 1.0Release 1.1Release 1.2Release 1.3Release 1.4Release 1.5

    Release 1.0Release 1.1.0Release 1.1.1Release 1.5

    Phase I

    Phase II

    Release 1.6

    SolutionLevelFocus Release 1.6 Release 1.6 Release 1.6

    Multipoint CTS-Manager Inter-Company

    C i s c o

    T e

    l e P r e s e n c e

    S o l u t i o n

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    Cisco TelePresenceCTS-3000

    12 participants atthe virtual table

    Includes everything shownhere, minus chairs and plants

    Native 1080p cameras and65 plasma displays

    Wideband microphonesand speakers

    Cisco Unified IPPhone 7970G

    High-definition data projector

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    Cisco TelePresenceCTS-1000

    4 participants atthe virtual table

    Table, chairs and plantsnot included

    Native 1080p camera and65 plasma display

    Wideband microphoneand speaker

    Cisco Unified IPPhone 7970G

    (Optional) high-definitiondata display

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    Cisco TelePresenceendpoint designed for largeconference rooms, trainingrooms or classrooms

    Seating capacity for up to 18participants per room

    Same superior video, audioand experience quality acrossall Cisco TelePresence

    endpoints

    Cisco TelePresenceCTS-3200

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    Brings the in-person CiscoTelePresence experience directly intothe private office

    Provides equal stature for individuals,subject matter experts and executives to

    join TelePresence calls - appearing life-size on CTS 3000s and other endpoints

    Cisco TelePresenceCTS-500

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    Cisco TelePresenceCTS-1100

    TelePresence-class video for2 users

    Multiple uses: CTS, digitalsignage, in room display,audio conferencing(Optional) high-definitiondata display

    Uses existing table

    65 screen sizeUpgrade path to CTS-1300

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    Cisco TelePresenceCTS-1300

    Opens up all multi-purposerooms for CiscoTelePresence

    Multi-camera design for greatexperience

    Life-size meeting instantswitching

    TelePresence-class video for6 users

    65 screen size

    Seamlessly go from audioconferences to CTS meetings

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    Cisco TelePresenceIntroducing the CTS 3010 and CTS 3210

    Updates to the award-winningCTS 3000 and CTS 3200endpoints

    New 40 LCD for data sharing

    New light shroud and diffuser

    40% Faster Install time

    25% more energy efficient

    More serviceable

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    CTS 5001 2 Seats

    CTS 10002 Seats

    CTS 11002 Seats

    CTS 13006 Seats

    CTS 30106 Seats

    CTS 321018 Seats

    Scheduling and OperationMultipoint-48 segments

    One-button scheduling server

    Intercompany services

    Planning and DesignNetwork readiness

    Room readiness (3000/3010/3200/3210)

    Groupware integration

    Services and SolutionsSD and HD interoperability

    Recording studio

    End-to-end encryption

    Implementation and SupportInstallation

    Monitoring, support, helpdesk

    Financing

    Personal

    Cisco TelePresence Product PortfolioMultipurpose Dedicated

    New!

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    Cisco TelePresenceCisco TelePresence Manager

    Calendaring integration and management

    Middleware glue between Cisco TelePresence Systems, Cisco Unified

    Communications and corporate calendaring systemsProvides One Button to Push (OBTP) accessto scheduled meetings

    Resource and location management for multipoint services

    Helpdesk and concierge services

    CTS-Manager

    LDAP/ExchangeCont ro l

    EndpointsAppl ica t ion Multipoint

    CUCM

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    Cisco TelePresenceCisco TelePresence Multipoint System (CTMS)

    1080p -720p video Scheduled meetings with OBTP Wideband audio Auto Collaboration

    Centralized Video and audio switching Up to 48 segments Site and Segment switching Low latency platform switching

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    Cisco TelePresenceCisco TelePresence Recording Studio (CTRS)

    Simple: One-button-to-push

    High-quality: Recording at 1080p

    User-driven creation and distribution

    Any to Any: Streaming to Web

    Appliance Based Up to 24 simultaneous streams per server Up to 300 hours of 1080p content on server Recording is supported in 1080p and 720p

    resolutions including 720P lite

    Recording is also available for viewing via aweb browser

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    Cisco TelePresence System

    (CTS)

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    Cisco TelePresence System OverviewCodec

    Embedded Linux on Compact FlashLeverages CUCM architecture

    Built on open standards

    CDP and 802.1Q for VLAN assignment

    802.1p and DSCP for QoSHTTP Configuration/Firmware Downloads

    Secured Administration with SSH/HTTPs

    SIP signaling

    RTP and sRTP for MediaUDP, TCP and TLS for Signaling

    Video: H.264 @ 1080p & 720p or CIF

    Audio: AAC-LD, G.711 & G.722

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    Based on Cisco Unified CommunicationsX.509v3 Digital Certificates (MIC / LSC)

    Certificate Trust List (CTL)

    Signed Firmware Loads

    Signed / Encrypted Configuration FilesSIP over TLS

    Secure Real-Time Transport Protocol (sRTP)

    S-Description Key Exchange in Session Description Protocol (SDP)

    Additional Support Only by Cisco TelePresence+ DTLS Key Exchange (TLS over UDP)+ HTTPS Admin Web Interface

    + HTTPS CTS-Man Meeting Updates

    Cisco TelePresence Security Summary

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    Cisco TelePresence SystemResolution and Motion Handling

    Supports 1080p and 720p Resolutions3 Motion Handling Modes for 1080p

    4 Motion Handling Modes for 720p

    Flexibility for Sites with Bandwidth Constraints

    Dynamically Reduced Motion HandlingDue to excessive Frame Jitter or Packet LossNo Resolution Change(e.g. 1080p-Best 1080p-Good)

    Part of CUCM Administration

    for each CTS

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    Cisco TelePresence SystemUser Interface

    Communicate in XML

    Cisco Unified IP Phone 7975GProvided as Part of CTSProvides Touch Screen UserInterface to the CTS

    Features:Manual Calling by Number System Speed DialsFuture Scheduled Meetings PreviewOne Button to Push dialing for Scheduled Meetings

    Add Audio Participants to a TelePresence meeting

    Simplified Operation and Faster Response Time with MIDlets (with CUCM 7+)

    XML or MIDletInterface

    XML Interface No LongerMaintained since 1.5

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    Cisco TelePresence System Audio Add-in

    During A TelePresence Meeting Adding An Audio Only Participant from

    An Audio Only Phone with G.711, or

    An Audio Bridge with G.711

    Initiated from the 7975G Touch ScreenDedicated AUX Audio Channel

    Remix G.711 Audio into AAC-LD

    Redistribute into TelePresence Meeting as AUX Audio

    Audio Only (G.711)

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    Cisco TelePresence System Auto Collaborate

    Simultaneous Content Sharing to All CTS

    Plug and Play

    Controlled by Last Activated SourceDedicated Aux Video/Audio Channel

    H.264 Video Encoding

    - Input Resolution 1024x768 @ 60Hz

    - Sampled @ 5 frames per second

    AAC-LD Audio EncodingOptional Presentation Codec @ 30fps

    Display Options:Projector provided for CTS-3000/3200

    LCD provided for CTS-3010/3210

    Presentation in Picture for CTS- 500/1000/1100/1300 or Optional Additional Displays

    Input Device Option Availability

    VGA Laptop All CTS

    HDMI Documentation Camera All Except CTS-1300

    PiP

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    CTS-500, CTS-1000, CTS-1100 & CTS-1300 Only

    Presentation in Picture (PiP)Displays Auto Collaborate VideoOn The System LCD Placed over The Remote Room

    No Additional Display RequiredPiP Placement Selection via Phone UI

    Disabled, or Choice of Center, Left & Right

    Cisco TelePresence SystemPiP (Auto Collaborate)

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    Indication Quality Metrics

    All received streams is 1080p with no loss above the 1% warning threshold, andThe received presentation has no loss above 2% if active

    The Lowest resolution of all received HD streams is 720p with loss 1%, andThe received presentation has no loss above 2% if active

    The Lowest resolution of all received HD streams is CIF with loss 1, andThe received presentation has loss 2% if active

    The highest percentage packet loss of all received HD streams > 1% but 10%, or The received presentation has loss above 10% if active

    Cisco TelePresence SystemNetwork Quality Bars (Release 1.6)

    Network Bars replace on screen warning messages

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    Cisco TelePresence SystemRelease 1.6 New On Screen Icons

    10 min left 2 min left

    Presentation not Shared

    Presentation Shared

    5 bars Hold

    Muted SecureCall

    Non-SecureCall

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    LAN/WAN

    Video Streams

    Audio Streams

    Cisco TelePresence System Audio and Video Multiplexing

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    Cisco TelePresence SystemNetwork Connectivity

    Phone and Primary Codec both reside on the Voice VLANPrimary Codec passes CDP and 802.1Q/p between the phone and network.Switch sees two CDP Neighbors.Switch QoS trust is extended through the codec to the phone

    Example:Console(config)#interface Gigabit 0/16Console(config-if)#switchport mode accessConsole(config-if)#switchport access vlan 261Console(config-if)#switchport voice vlan 262Console(config-if)#spanning-tree portfastConsole(config-if)#mls qos trust {dscp | cos}

    Phone and cameras receivePower over Ethernet(802.3af) from codec

    A/C

    7975 Codec Switch

    CDP802.1Q/p

    CDP802.1Q/p

    POE

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    Cisco 7975IP Phone Access-EdgeSwitch Cisco UnifiedCommunications Manager

    Cisco

    TelePresenceManager

    CDP CDPCDP

    TFTPHTTP on port 6970

    SIP

    SIP

    XML

    No 802.1Q VLAN tagTagged with 802.1Q ID of Voice VLAN

    Shared Line

    802.3af

    LAN /WAN

    DHCPDHCP

    XML, SNMP

    TelePresencePrimary

    Codec

    Cisco TelePresence SystemCTS Network Protocol Interaction

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    XML:User pressed ANSWER

    XML:User pressed DIAL

    SIP INVITE

    Signaling

    Media

    SIP 200 OK

    SIP INVITE

    SIP 200 OK

    RTP Media(audio + video)

    Note: Signaling has been simplified for the purpose of this slide.There are many other XML and SIP messages which are not shown.

    Cisco TelePresenceCTS Call Setup Illustration

    XML:Show Incoming call

    7975Cisco UnifiedCallManager 7975

    PrimaryCodec

    PrimaryCodec

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    Cisco TelePresence Manager

    (CTS-MAN)

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    Cisco TelePresenceOverview

    Calendaring integration and managementMiddleware glue between Cisco TelePresence Systems, CiscoUnified Communications and corporate calendaring systemsProvides One Button to Push (OBTP) accessto scheduled meetingsResource and location management for multipoint servicesSupports up to 500 TelePresence rooms

    CTS-Manager

    LDAP/ExchangeCont ro l

    EndpointsAppl ica t ion Multipoint

    CUCM

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    Cisco TelePresence Manager CTS-Manager CUCM Integration

    CTS-Manager

    Cont ro l

    AXL\SOAP over HTTPs for TP room discovery

    AXL\SOAP over HTTPs to CUCMs RIS DB toObtain TP IP address, DN, and SMTP address

    CTI\QBE API used to monitor registration statusOf discovered TP rooms

    NOTE: No support for Cisco Unified Communications Manager redundancy until Release 1.6

    Before Release 1.6 Cisco TelePresence Manager could only communicate with a single Cisco Unified

    Communications Manager node, so that node must run both the AXL Web Service and CTI Manager service.

    CTS-Manager CUCM

    CUCM

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    Cisco TelePresence ManagerCTS-Manager LDAP/Exchange Integration

    CTS-Manager

    CUCMLDAP

    CTS-Man. Authenticates using LDAP or LDAP over SSL

    CTS-Man subscribes to room mailboxes using SMTP address received fromCUCM

    ExchangeServer

    Event notification is sent from Exchange when a TP meeting is scheduled

    CTS-Manager retrieves the TP room calendar information via WebDav

    CTS-Manager

    Cont ro lCUCM LDAP/Exchange

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    Cisco TelePresence ManagerCTS-Manager LDAP/Domino Integration

    CTS-Manager

    CUCM

    CTS-Man. Authenticates using LDAP or LDAP over SSL

    DominoServer/

    Direcotry

    CTS-Manager

    Cont ro lCUCM LDAP/Domino

    CTS-Man verifies TP room mailbox using email mail address received fromCUCM

    CTS-Manager polls Domino server for scheduled events using Cobra\IIOP

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    Cisco TelePresence Manager CTS-Manager and CTS Integration

    CTS-Manager CUCM LDAP Exchange\

    NotesCTS Endpoint

    CTS-Man. pushes schedule information to CTS using XML\Soap

    Schedule infor mationpushed for phone viaXML\XSI

    7975

    Appl ica t ion

    CTS-Manager

    Cont ro lCUCM LDAP/Exchange

    Endpoints

    One Buttonto Push

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    7975

    Cisco TelePresence Manager CTS-Manager and CTMS Integration

    Multipoint

    CTS-Manager CUCM LDAP Exchange\

    NotesCTS Endpoint

    CTMS

    CTMS registers with CTS-Manager via XML\SOAP supplying available segments and location

    CTS-Manager schedules multipoint meetings based on capacity and location then providesschedued meeting information to CTMS via XML\SOAP

    Appl ica t ion Endpoints

    CTS-Manager

    Cont ro lCUCM LDAP/Exchange

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    Cisco TelePresence ManagerCTMS Geographical Selection

    CTS-Manager

    Multipoint meeting requested:New York, Barcelona and Dubai

    NY: GMT -5BA: GMT +1

    DU: GMT +4 Av. GMT +0

    System selection

    1

    2

    3 Check for availableresources

    CTMS closest tomean GMT is selected

    4 Meeting scheduledsuccessfully

    Note: If no resources are available in Barcelona the next closest CTMS isselected (Dubai GMT +4)

    New YorkGMT - 5

    BarcelonaGMT + 1

    DubaiGMT +4

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    Cisco TelePresence Manager 1.6Hardware Update

    HardwareMCS-7845-I2 IBM x3650, 4GB RAM, Four 146GB SAS Drives New Install & Upgrade

    MCS-7845-H2 will continue to be supported but not be orderable

    MCS-7835-H2 & MCS-7835-I2 Upgrade support limited toexisting CTS Manager customers using a prior version of CTSManager in a production environment.

    Note: MCS-7835-H2/I2 is not supported for new installs (it is notorderable).

    Software

    CTS Manager 1.6 Image will be available on a DVD.

    Installation procedure will be available in Install Guide.

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    Cisco TelePresence Manager 1.6System Performance

    Hardware PlatformRooms supported with

    Microsoft Exchangeintegration

    Rooms supported withIBM Dominointegration

    MCS 7835 H2 150 25

    MCS 7835 I2 150 25

    MCS 7845 H2 750 100

    MCS 7845 I2 750 100

    Suppo r ted roo m s based on 80% of emai lcon f i rmat ions re tu rned w i th in 15 minu tes

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    Component Compatible ReleasesOutlook Client 2003, 2007

    Lotus Notes Client 6.5.x, 7.x, 8.x

    MS Exchange Server 2003, running on a Windows 2003 or 2008 server.2007, running on a Windows 2003 or 2008 server.

    Active Directory 2003, running on a Windows 2003 or 2008 server.2007, running on a Windows 2003 or 2008 server.

    IBM Domino 7.x, 8.x Running on Linux Platform

    IBM Domino Directory 7.x, 8.x Running on Linux Platform

    CUCM Version 6.1.3 or Later

    CTS x000 1.5.x, 1.6.x

    CTMS 1.5.x, 1.6.xCTRS 1.6

    Client Browser Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.x

    CUVC 35XX 5.5.0.0.54

    CUVC 56XX 7.0

    Cisco TelePresence Manager 1.6Supported Versions

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    Cisco TelePresence Multipoint Switch

    (CTMS)

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    Cisco TelePresence Multipoint SwitchOverview

    Supports TelePresence Meetings for more than 2endpoints

    Supports up to 48 segments

    No restrictions on number of conferences (up to 48segments)Software based low latency switching

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    Cisco TelePresence Multipoint SwitchMultipoint Components

    CTMSVideo and Audio Switching

    Non-Scheduled Meetings

    CUVCNon-TelePresence Interoperability

    CTS-Manager

    Meeting SchedulingOne Button to Push Dialing

    Resource and Location Management

    CTMS

    CTS-Manager

    CUVC

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    Cisco TelePresnce Multipoint SwitchSite and Segment Switching

    Site SwitchingEntire site switches

    Segment SwitchingEach segment switches

    independently

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    Cisco TelePresence Multipoint SwitchMultipoint Bandwidth Considerations

    Multipoint meetings aremultiple point-to-pointmeetings

    Provision 5.5Mbps per tablesegment supported for 1080p

    Bandwidth must beprovisioned for the max.number of segmentssupported on the multipointdevice

    Distribute multipoint devices inlarger deployments to helpdistribute network bandwidth

    Optional Additional Bandwidth

    Auto Collab.30fps

    ~4Mbps

    Interoperability ~1Mbps

    MultipointDevice

    60Mbps

    45Mbps

    l l h

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    Meeting begins - all CTS SystemsTransmit video and audio

    London

    Dallas

    Paris

    Stop sending videoLeft, right & center

    Video and Audio

    Video and Audio

    Active Site

    Active Site

    With Flow Control:5.5Mbps per table segment (avg.)6 Table segments (video & audio)3 Audio channels

    33.2 Mbps total bandwidth

    Active segmentsidentifiedAudio Only

    No Flow Control:5.5Mbps per table segment (avg.)9 Table segments

    49.5 Mbps total bandwidth

    Cisco TelePresence Multipoint SwitchFlow Control

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    Ci T l P CUCM I i

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    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationCisco Unified Communications Manager

    CUCM Release 6.0 or later requiredCUCM view a CTS just like aCisco Unified SIP IP Phone

    Automated configuration and firmwaredistribution

    Management, Call Detail Recording (CDR)

    CTS-Manager integrates with CUCMvia AXL/SOAP and CTI/QBE providing

    Device and call status

    Cisco TelePresence Multipoint integrateswith CUCM via SIP trunk

    Cisco Unified SIP IP Phone 7975 providing:Simple user interface Its as easy as making a phonecall

    Ci T l P CUCM I i

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    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationCUCM CTS Communication

    CUCM sees primary codec as a SIP endpoint

    Secondary codecs are invisible to the networkand to CUCM

    Cisco Unified IP Phone 7975 runs SIP (not SCCP)

    Primary codec and IP Phone share a line appearance

    Gig Ethernet

    SIP

    Ethernet + POE

    CiscoUnifiedCallManager

    Cisco UnifiedIP Phone 7975

    Cisco TelePresenceSystem

    Ci T l P CUCM I i

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    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationDial Plan Considerations

    Plan your dial plan wisely and select the appropriateDirectory Numbers, Partitions and Calling SearchSpaces used

    Audio Add-In feature: access to the rest of your IP Phones,

    MeetingPlace, or the PSTN is required. Either deploy a voicegateway or trunk to your existing CUCM cluster

    Future B2B connectivity will require CTS dial plan to beexternally reachable

    Consider 911 accessRecommend installing a second Cisco IP Phone on the wallinside the room for emergency calls

    Ci T l P CUCM I i

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    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationDSCP Marking Considerations

    Communications Manager provides DSCP values toTelePresence codecs as part of its configuration file

    DSCP value needs to be set to CS4 for TelePresence,default is AF41 which is used for Video Telephony andVideoconferencing devices

    Communications Manager currently only supports one DSCPvalue for video

    Ci T l P CUCM I t ti

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    Option 1: If TelePresence is the only video supported in theCUCM cluster the DSCP value should be changed from AF41 toCS4

    Option 2: Use a dedicated CUCM cluster for TelePresence so thatyou change the DSCP for Video Calls service parameter to CS4(no other types of video endpoints should be deployed on thiscluster)

    Option 3: Use existing CUCM cluster and re-mark DSCP at theaccess edge switch using Access Control Lists (ACLs)

    Disadvantage: administratively intensive

    Recommendations

    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationDSCP Marking Considerations

    Ci T l P CUCM I t ti

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    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationCall Admission Control (CAC) Considerations

    Communications Manager locations is used forTelePresence CACCommunications Manager only supports a single videobandwidth pool per location

    RSVP is not currently supported for Telepresence

    RecommendationsOption 1: Use a dedicated CallManager cluster forTelePresence so that you manage the bandwidth independently(no other video types should be deployed on this cluster)

    Option 2: Use existing CallManager cluster and configureunique Regions and Locations for TelePresence

    Disadvantage: administratively intensive

    Ci T l P CUCM I t g ti

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    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationCUCM Release Requirements and Recommendations

    TelePresence SystemCisco Unified

    Communications Manager

    Release 1.0(x) November 2006 Release 5.0(4) or greater

    Release 1.1(x) April 2007 Release 5.1(2b) or greater

    Release 1.2(x) November 2007 Release 6.0(1) or greater Release 6.1(2) or higher recommended

    Release 1.3(x) April 2008 Release 6.0(1) or greater Release 6.1(2) or higher recommended

    Release 1.4(x) August 2008 Release 6.0(1) or greater Release 6.1(3) or higher recommended

    Release 1.5(x) December 2008 Release 7.0(1) or greater

    Release 1.6(x) November 2009 Release 7.0(2a)SU2 or greater 7.1 device pack coming in 7.1(4)

    Ci T l P CUCM I t g ti

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    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationCisco TelePresence Manager

    CTS-Manager communicates with CUCM via AXL/SOAP and JTAPI

    CUCM Configuration:

    Create an Application User withthe following privileges

    AXL API Access

    CTI Monitoring

    Serviceability Access

    Standard CCM Admin Access

    Associate CTS devices

    CTS-Manager Configuration:

    Configure the IP address of theCUCM node that runs the AXL Weband CTI Manager services

    Must be the same node

    Cisco TelePresence CUCM Integration

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    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationCUCM Integration Multipoint Configuration

    Cisco TelePresence Multipoint Switch communicateswith CUCM via a SIP Trunk

    CUCM Configuration:

    Configure a UDP-only SIP Trunk

    Security Profile CTMS 1.0 onlysupports UDP

    Configure a SIP Trunk

    Configure a Route Pattern

    CTMS Configuration:

    Configure Access Number

    range to match CUCM RoutePattern

    Configure IP addresses of allCUCM servers

    CTMS

    Cisco TelePresence CUCM Integration

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    Supported Scenarios

    All CUCM clusters secured

    Mix of secured and non-securedLondon

    New York

    Bangalore

    San Jose

    Tokyo

    Up to 5 CUCM clusterconfiguration supported

    CTS-MAN has CUCM info inthe dashboard view

    CTS-MAN

    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationMulti CUCM Cluster Support Release 1.6

    Cisco TelePresence CUCM Integration

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    CTI Manager failover now supported

    Inter-Clusters Trunks between CUCM clusters must be SIP. H.323ICT trunks do not support TelePresence callsDuplicate MAC Address/Email address across clusters are identified

    Rooms will be marked as DuplicatesCTS-MAN Dash board

    Devices show consolidated CUCM clustersService shows Discovery service status

    CTI 2CTI 1

    CTS-MAN

    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationMultiple CUCM Clusters Release 1.6

    Cisco TelePresence CUCM Integration

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    E.911 support during codec outage

    Phone connects directly to Switch to have direct access to the network

    IP phone PC port connects to Primary Codec phone port

    Disable BPDU-guard, enable BPDU-filter in Ethernet Switch

    Primary codec discovers IP phone via phone port, but communicates withphone over the network

    Aux PC SW

    Switch Interface Configuration# spanning-tree bpdufilter enable# spanning-tree bpduguard disable

    Cisco TelePresence CUCM IntegrationSingle Phone for E.911 Support

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    Cisco TelePresence Network Requirements

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    Cisco TelePresence Network Requirements A New Class of Application

    Higher bandwidth 34x that of standard Videoconferencing

    Far less tolerant to loss than Voice

    Real-time, highly interactive extremely low latency

    Higher business criticality CXO level visibility

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    Cisco TelePresence Traffic CharacteristicsResolution

    2,073,600 pixels per frame

    x 3 colors per pixelx 1 Byte (8 bits) per color

    x 30 frames per second

    = 1.5 Gbps per screenuncompressed !

    1920 lines of Vertical Resolution (Widescreen Aspect Ratio is 16:9)

    1 0 8 0 l i n e s o

    f H o r i z o n

    t a l R e s o

    l u t i o n

    Compressed to 4 Mbps perscreen

    > 99% compression ratio!

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    Cisco TelePresence Traffic CharacteristicsMax Bandwidth Consumption Per Second

    Not Applicable to 720p Lite

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics Average Call vs. Max Consumption

    M

    e g a

    b i t s

    second

    15Mbps

    11Mbps

    Average Call Bandwidth Consumption Per SecondResolution 1080p 1080p 1080p 720p 720p 720p 720p

    Motion Handling Best Better Good Best Better Good Lite

    CTS-500/1000 average bandwidth(Mbps) includes Layer 2- 4 overhead 4 Mbps 3.5 Mbps 3 Mbps 3 Mbps 2.5 Mbps 1.5 Mbps 1 Mbps

    CTS-3000/3200 average bandwidth(Mbps) includes Layer 2- 4 overhead 11 Mbps 10 Mbps 8 Mbps 8 Mbps 6 Mbps 3 Mbps -

    5 10

    CTS-3000BW Consumptio vs Time Graph

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    Cisco TelePresence Traffic CharacteristicsRelation of Video Frames to Packets

    Frame #365KB

    33ms 33ms 33ms33ms

    Frame# 5 Frame # 2

    6KBFrame #425KB

    Frame # 516KB

    Application Layer

    Network Layer

    Frame # 1

    16KB

    RX Buffer

    Resolution 1080p 720p

    Motion Handling Best Better Good Best Better Good Lite

    Average video frame sizeincl udes Layer 3-4 overh ead

    16KB 14KB 13KB 9.4KB 6.3KB 4.3KB 4KB

    Average bytes per video packetincl udes Layer 3-4 overh ead

    1,100 Bytes

    CTS-1000 average video packetsper second (2 video channels) 873 pps 792 pps 682 pps 553 pps 373 pps 272 pps 262 pps

    CTS-3000 average video packets

    per second (4 video channels)1745 pps 1584 pps 1364 pps 1106 pps 747 pps 545 pps

    N

    e t w o r k

    L a y e r

    A p p l i c a

    t i o n

    L a y e r

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    Cisco TelePresence Traffic CharacteristicsRelation of Video Frames to Bytes Per Millisecond

    15Mbps

    Resolution 1080p 720p

    Motion Handling Best Better Good Best Better Good Lite

    CTS-1000 m ax bandwidth over onesecond (Mbps)

    5,553 TX5,707 RX

    4,953 TX5,107 RX

    4,353 TX4,507 RX

    4,353 TX4,507 RX

    3,153 TX3,307 RX

    1,953 TX2,107 RX

    1,397 TX1,550 RX

    CTS-3000 m ax bandwidth over onesecond (Mbps) 15,307 13,507 11,707 11,707 8,107 4,507

    CTS-1000 mean rate per millisecondthe router expects (Bytes)

    688 TX713 RX

    613 TX638 RX

    538 TX563 RX

    538 TX563 RX

    388 TX413 RX

    250 TX263 RX

    250 TX263 RX

    CTS-3000 mean rate per millisecondthe router expects (Bytes) 1,913 1,688 1,463 1,463 1,013 563

    33ms frame intervals

    1 second

    * Audio Traffic Not Included for Simplicity

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    Cisco TelePresence Traffic CharacteristicsUnderstanding and Provisioning for Bursts 1 of 2

    65KB

    1.913KB

    65KB

    1.913KB

    Release 1.1.1(365) August 2007

    Release 1.2.0(991)November 2007

    P e r

    S c r e e n

    P e r

    S c r e e n

    65KB

    1.913KB

    Release 1.0.1(616)November 2006

    P e r

    S c r e e n

    One 33ms video frame interval

    One 33ms video frame interval One 33ms video frame interval

    For a 15 Mbps call, the routers policer algorithmexpects to receive a mean rate of 1.913 KB permillisecond. Everything above the yellow line isconsidered burst and could be policed.

    In 1.0 we would send our entire 65 KB payload in asingle millisecond (34x the mean rate)

    In 1.1 we began shaping our traffic across the 33msframe interval, lowing our max burst to 20 KB in asingle milllisecond (still 10x the mean rate)

    Since 1.2 we shaped our traffic even more, reducingour max burst to 13 KB (still 7x the mean rate)

    20KB

    13KB

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    Provisioning Option Benefit Challenge

    Larger Policer Tc on SP PEThe larger the Tc, thecloser the burst converges

    to CIR.

    Frequently not an optionon certain types of carrier

    circuits

    Buy 20% more bandwidth Burst is invisible to the SP Higher Operation Expense

    Apply Hierarchical Shaping

    (HQoS) on CE WANInterface

    Conforms to SP policer

    policy at no additionalcost.

    Induces higher jitter &latency due to queuing

    Dealing with Burst

    Option became available in release 1.5 asa result of jitter buffer enhancement

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic CharacteristicsUnderstanding and Provisioning for Bursts 2 of 2

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    Serialization,Queuing, Shaping

    CE-PE

    Branch

    ServiceProvider

    De-Jitter Buffer,Decoding

    Codec

    Queuing, Shaping

    Campus

    Encoding,Packetization

    Codec

    Campus

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic CharacteristicsOne-Way Latency, Jitter and Loss Targets & Thresholds

    Policing, Queuing,Propagation

    PE-PE PE-CE

    Serialization,Queuing,Shaping

    Metric TargetThresholds Triggered Action on Threshold

    1 st 2nd 3 rd 4 th 1 st 2nd

    Latency 150 ms 250 ms 400 ms None None

    Jitter 50 ms 85 ms 125 ms 165 ms 245 ms None None

    Loss 0.05% 1% 10% Network Bar Change 1. Reduce Quality

    2. Drop Call

    SLAs Only Relate to Network Flight TimeCodec Codec

    CE PE PE CE

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    Cisco TelePresence Traffic CharacteristicsUnderstanding Video Frame Jitter vs. Packet Jitter

    Encoder Produces a Video Frame (a Picture) each 33ms.

    Decoder Must Deliver one picture to the Plasma every 33ms.Video Jitter is the Difference of Actual vs. Expected Picture Arrival Time

    Jitter is Mostly Influenced by Line Rate (Serialization Time) & Shaping/Queuing

    Zero Packet Jitter could still Lead to Large Application Layer Jitter

    53ms

    Frame #365KB

    33ms 33ms 33ms33ms

    Frame# 5 Frame # 2

    6KBFrame #425KB

    Frame # 516KB

    Application Layer

    Network Layer

    Frame # 1

    16KB

    RX Buffer

    Variation in serialization delaybetween packets (0ms because our

    packets are all the same size)

    Variation inserialization delay ofentire frame vs. the33ms interval (21ms

    in this example)

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic Characteristics

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    The primary contributor to video frame jitter is the clock rate of every

    interface along the path (i.e. how long it takes to serialize a video frameonto the wire as compared to the expected frame arrival time each 33ms)

    Per Screen T1 E1 4 x T1 4 x E1 10MbpsEthernet E3 T3 OC3 OC12

    Circuit Bit Rate(kbps) 1 1,544 2,048 6,176 8,192 10,000 34,368 44,736 155,520 622,080

    Max Frame Size 65 KB 65 KB 65 KB 65 KB 65 KB 65 KB 65 KB 65 KB 65 KB

    Average FrameSize 16 KB 16 KB 16 KB 16 KB 16 KB 16 KB 16 KB 16 KB 16 KB

    Min Frame Size 1 KB 1 KB 1 KB 1 KB 1 KB 1 KB 1 KB 1 KB 1 KB

    Max Frame

    Serialization Rate2 337 ms 254 ms 84 ms 64 ms 52 ms 15 ms 12ms 4 ms < 1 ms

    Average FrameSerialization Rate 2 83 ms 63 ms 21 ms 16 ms 13 ms 4 ms 3 ms < 1 ms < 1 ms

    Min FrameSerialization Rate 2 5 ms 4 ms 1 ms < 1 ms < 1 ms < 1 ms < 1 ms < 1 ms < 1 ms

    Max Jitter(MFSR vs. 33ms) 304 ms 221 ms 51 ms 31 ms 19 ms 0 ms 0 ms 0 ms 0 ms

    Cisco TelePresence Traffic CharacteristicsUnderstanding Video Frame Jitter vs. Packet Jitter

    Cisco TelePresence 1.6 Enhancement

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    Cisco TelePresence 1.6 EnhancementMax Video Frame Size Reduction

    Smaller Max Frame Reduces the Size VariationReduces the Difference in Serialization Delay (Jitter)

    Accommodating Slower Links Due toPhysical Layer Constrain

    Traffic Shaping

    Resolution 1080p 720p

    Motion Handling Best Better Good Best Better Good Lite *

    CTS 1.5.3- 67KB

    CTS 1.5.10+ 67KB 66KB 59KB 54KB 40KB 40KB 40KB

    * 720p Lite Not Available Prior to 1.6

    84 ms for 4xT1 to Serialize26 ms for 4xT1 to Serialize

    Cisco TelePresence

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    Cisco TelePresenceIntroducing Extended Reach

    Optimized

    Enables branch offices tocommunicate effectivelywith headquarters and

    each other

    Maintains ease of useand quality experience

    Immersive

    Provides first classexperience for keybusiness decision

    meetings

    Life-size, life-like, and

    face to face

    Extended Reach

    Supports users inlocations without multi-megabit bandwidth

    Enables applicationswhere experiencetrade-off is acceptable

    Quality of Experience

    Created newmarket category

    withhigh utilization

    Reach remote siteswhere bandwidth is

    costly or notavailable

    Optimized resolution,latency and frame

    rate

    Cisco TelePresence Extended Reach

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    Cisco TelePresence Extended ReachCTS Network Support

    Version 1.5Version 1.0 1.4 Version 1.6

    EnterpriseWAN

    Internet

    Enterprise WAN withDS-3 or Higher Enterprise WAN withNxT1 or Higher andshaping support *

    Enterprise WAN T-1or Higher and Broadbandover CVO

    1.0 Substantial burst1.1 70% burst reduction

    1.2 10% further burst reduction

    Version 1.5 SLA changesExpanding Jitter Buffer :

    Threshold 1 - 85 msThreshold 2 - 125 msThreshold 3 - 165 msThreshold 4 - 245 ms

    Version 1.6 Low Bandwidth

    720p Lite Mode for T1\E1Long Term Reference Picture (LTRP)

    Gradual Decode Refresh (GDR)

    *Supported as pilot only in Version 1.5

    Cisco TelePresence Extended Reach

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    Cisco TelePresence Extended ReachOptions for Branch Offices, Companies of all Sizes

    Extended Reach Optimized Immersive

    MeetingType

    Working sessions Extending immersive/

    optimized meetings toremote participants

    Internal meetings Operations reviews One on one meetings Supplier engagements

    Business decisions Board meetings Critical intercompany

    meetings (customers,partners, job interviews)

    Location Home office Small Office Branch office Corporate campus Regional office

    Endpoint Single screen Multi screen Single screen Multi screen Single screen

    NetworkTypes

    T1/E1 with QoS MPLS, DS3, and high-

    capacity networks withQoS

    Bonded T1/E1

    MPLS, DS3, and high-capacity networks with QoS

    Premium Broadband(FIOS, Cable) withseparate supportmodel best effort only

    Quality 720pLite

    720p Good 720p Good, Better, Best 1080p Good, Better, Best

    Cisco TelePresence Experience and Resolution

    Cisco TelePresence over T1/E1

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    New Video Quality on EndpointsHigher Main Video Compression

    Auto Collaborate @ 1fps

    (2 seconds to converge)

    Supports Single T1No More than one Active Call

    Cant Initiate Audio Add -in

    Sends Audio only for SD InteropSupports CUVC 52XX HD Interop

    GDR & LTRP will be disabled

    Only Interoperates with Release 1.6+ Devices

    C sco e e ese ce ove /720p Lite Summary

    Cisco TelePresence Extended Reach

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    Features & Caveats

    Extended Reach Optimized Immersive

    Bandwidth720p Lite 1.5 Mb/sec 720p Good 2.1 Mb/sec

    720p Better 2.7 Mb/sec720p Best 3.6 Mb/sec

    1080p Good 4.5 Mb/sec1080p Better 5.1 Mb/sec1080p Best 5.7 Mb/sec

    Premium Broadband Minimum 2.0 Mb/sec

    DataCollaboration

    T1/E1 -1 fps for all endpoints in the callBroadband 5 fps

    Capable of 5 fps(30 fps requires

    additional bw)

    Capable of 5 fps(30 fps requires

    additional bw)

    Audio Add-in

    T1/E1 -Cannot initiate audio add-in, butcan be in call

    Broadband can initiate audio add-inCan initiate audio add-in Can initiate audio add-in

    Multipoint All endpoints on call display same resolution setting as lowest in call.

    VideoConferencing

    Interoperability

    TelePresence endpoints: Send & receive audio and video from all endpoints.T1/E1- No Video to or from 720p

    Lite systems to SD Interopmeetings (CUVC 35XX)

    Legacy endpoints: Send &Receive audio/video from

    Optimized TeleP

    Legacy endpoints: Send &Receive audio/video from

    Immersive TeleP

    SoftwareUpgradeRequired

    All TelePresence endpoints on a call must be running Version 1.6 in order to include a T1/E1endpoint on that call

    Cisco TelePresence 1.6 Enhancements

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    Video Frame

    Target Environment Low Bandwidth Unreliable Network

    Challenge Large Serialization Delay for IDR Packet Loss

    Symptoms Very High Video Jitter BurstsPossibly Late Packets ArtifactsFrequent Full Screen Refreshes

    Solution Replace IDR withGradual Full Screen Repair Faster Repair by Recovering fromPrevious Known Healthy Frame

    Feature Gradual Decoder Refresh(GDR)Long Term Reference Picture(LTRP)

    GDR & LTRP Use Cases

    Packet# 1Packet# 2Packet# 3 PublicInternet

    Cant recover the picture from packet lossSend me a new full screen refresh

    Broadband Internet Users Causes Frequent Screen Refresh

    Video Frame not Useable and Requires Refresh due to severe Packet LossUnusable Late Packets due to Jitter from Serialization Delay on Low BW

    Problem Amplified on CTMS Calls

    Before You Begin

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    gConverged vs. Overlay Deployment Models

    ConvergedNetwork

    Maximum Return on Investment,

    lowest Total Cost of Ownershipin the long run

    Must follow network designguidelines

    Switch platforms, line cardsRouter platforms

    WAN bandwidth/queuingpoliciesShaping, queuing policies

    Quicker, tactical option

    Easier, cheaper in the short runLess concern of impact on currentnetwork

    Relaxed network designguidelines

    Overlay now, converge whenyoure ready

    OverlayNetwork

    Cisco TelePresence Network Design

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    Hardware Low-Latency Queuing with > 400KB of buffer for ports carrying only a singleTelePresence call

    Hardware Low-Latency Queuing with > 1MB of buffer for ports carrying multipleTelePresence calls

    Cisco IOS Software Low-Latency Queuing and HQoS to ensure adequate performance forboth throughput and packet per second requirements

    gChoosing the Correct Router & Switch Platform

    CTS-3000

    CoreDistribution Access WAN Handoff

    WAN

    CTMS

    CTRS

    Resolution 1080p 720p

    Motion Handling Best Better Good Best Better Good Lite

    CTS-1000 average video packetsper second (2 video channels) 873 pps 792 pps 682 pps 553 pps 373 pps 272 pps 262 pps

    CTS-3000 average video packets

    per second (4 video channels)1745 pps 1584 pps 1364 pps 1106 pps 747 pps 545 pps

    Cisco TelePresence Campus Design

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    p gCampus Policies Overview

    CTS-3000

    Trust DSCP or Trust CoS + Map CoS 4 DSCP CS4 and CoS 5 DSCP EF

    + Optional Ingress Policing+ Queuing (DSCP CS4 & EF PQ)+ Queuing (DSCP CS3 Non-PQ)

    Trust DSCP+ Queuing (DSCP CS4 & EF PQ)+ Queuing (DSCP CS3 Non-PQ)

    CoreDistribution Access

    Cisco TelePresence MPLS VPN Design

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    MPLS VPN

    Branch 1

    Branch 2

    Outbound Policies: Inbound Policies:HQoS Shaper (if required)+ LLQ for VoIP (EF) Trust DSCP

    + LLQ or CBWFQ for TelePresence (CS4)+ Remark TP (if necessary) + Restore TelePresence to CS4 (if necessary)+ CBWFQ for Call-Signaling (CS3) + Remark Call-Signaling (if necessary)

    + Restore Call-Signaling to CS3 (if necessary)

    33%

    of BW

    Enterprise Subscriber (Unmanaged CE Routers)

    Service Provider:Outbound Policies: Inbound Policies:+ LLQ for Real-Time Trust DSCP+ CBWFQ for Critical Data Police on a per-Class Basis

    CE Routers CE RoutersPE Routers

    Campus VPNBlock

    E

    E

    E

    E

    F

    F

    F

    F

    F

    E

    MPLS VPN Policies Overview

    Cisco TelePresence Sub-Line-Rate Access Design

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    MetroEthernetNetwork

    Network-FacingProvider Edges

    (N-PE)Sub-Line Rate

    Ethernet Access Circuit

    Trust DSCP+ Hierarchical QoS (HQoS) Shaping to Sub-Line Access Rate+ PQ for CoS 5 (VoIP) within Shaped Rate+ PQ for CoS 4 (TelePresence) within Shaped Rate+ Non-PQ for CoS 3 (Call-Signaling)

    Trust DSCP+ Queuing (CoS 4 & 5 PQ)

    33% of Shaped

    Rate

    gSub-Line-Rate Access Policy Overview

    HQoS Capable Switchor Router

    Cisco TelePresence WAN Edge Shaping Design

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    TXRing

    policy-map ACCESS-EDGEclass VOIP

    priority 1000class TELEPRESENCEpriority 15300

    class CALL-SIGNALINGbandwidth x

    class TRANSACTIONALbandwidth y

    class BULK-DATAbandwidth z

    class class-defaultfair-queue

    Packetsin

    Packetsout

    g p g gHQoS Shaping & Queuing Policy and Operation

    policy-map HQoS-50MBPSclass class-default

    shape average 50000000 1000000service-policy ACCESS-EDGE

    CBWFQScheduler

    FQ

    Call-Signaling CBWFQTransactional CBWFQ

    Bulk Data CBWFQDefault Queue

    1 MbpsVOIP

    Policer

    15 MbpsTP

    Policer

    16 Mbps PQ (FIFO Between VOIP and VIDEO)

    Class-BasedShaper

    GE Interfacewith a sub-line-rate

    access service(e.g. 50 Mbps)

    Queuing policies will not engage unless the interface is congested

    A shaper will guarantee that traffic will not exceed the contracted rate A nested queuing policy will force queuing to engage at the contracted sub-line-rate to prioritize packets prior to shaping

    Apply HQoS to Ensure Conformance toStrict SP Policer

    Sub-line Rate

    Cisco TelePresence Extended Reach Design

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    BroadbandPublic

    Internet

    (VPN Tunnel)

    VirtualOffice

    Corporate HQCisco Virtual Office Design Cisco TelePresence WAN Design

    gBroadband Internet, Single T1 & NxT1 Options

    Cisco TelePresence over CVOFollow Cisco TelePresence & CVO SRND

    Overlay Network Dedicated for TelePresenceAn Extension of TelePresence WAN Design

    Min 2Mbps for Broadband 720p Lite 720p Lite for Single Full T1 /E1720p Good or Higher for N x T1/E1

    Apply Shaper with 95% of measured BW

    Apply HQoS to Avoid LossFollow Sub-Line-Rate Access Design

    Apply HQoS for WAN Design Consistency

    Specifically for NxT1/E1 where BW isShared by Other Applications

    Minimum Platform is Cisco 881 Affected by Crypto Engine Performance

    Cisco 2811 or Higher Recommended Affected by MLPPP CPU Utilization

    Expect Quality to Vary Through the DayInfluenced by neighbors, school hours, etc

    Consistent Quality

    BranchOfficeN x T1

    MPLSOC12

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    Cisco TelePresence Interoperability

    Cisco TelePresence Interoperability

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    Tandberg

    Polycom

    Cisco CUVC and CUPC

    Microsoft NetMeeting

    Microsoft Officeand Lotus Sametime

    Mac XMeeting

    Lifesize

    And many more Cisco 7985

    Works With a Wide Range of EndpointsSupported Protocols

    H.323SIPSCCP

    CIF4CIF720p

    G.711G.722

    Cisco TelePresence Interoperability

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    Software Roadmap

    Standard-Definition interop via the CUVC 3500 Series was introduced in CTS release 1.3

    CTS-Manager support for CUVC 3500 Series was introduced in CTS release 1.4No change in release 1.5

    High-Definition interop via the CUVC 5200 Series was introduced in CTS release 1.6

    CiscoTelePresence

    System(CTS)

    CiscoTelePresence

    Multipoint Switch(CTMS)

    CiscoTelePresence

    Manager(CTS-MAN)

    Cisco UnifiedVideo

    Conferencing(CUVC)

    Cisco UnifiedCommunications

    Manager (CUCM)

    ResolutionSupported

    1.3(x) Q1CY08 1.1.0 Q1CY08 N/A 5.5 or 5.6 on3500 series

    6.0(1) or later StandardDefinition

    1.4(x) Q2CY08 1.1.1 Q2CY08 1.4(x) Q2CY08 5.5 or 5.6 on3500 series

    6.0(1) or later StandardDefinition

    1.5(x) Q4CY08 1.5(x) Q4CY08 1.5(x) Q4CY08 5.5 or 5.6 on3500 series

    7.0(2) or later StandardDefinition

    1.6(x) Q4CY09 1.6(x) Q4CY09 1.6(x) Q4CY09 7.0(x) on 5200series Q4CY09

    7.0(2) or later HighDefinition

    Cisco TelePresence Interoperability

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    Standard-Definition via the CUVC 3500 Series

    New York

    London H.323 or H.320Videoconferencing

    Tokyo Cisco TelePresenceMultipoint Switch

    (CTMS)

    Cisco UnifiedVideoconferencing

    (CUVC)

    SCCP Video Telephony

    SIPVideo Telephony

    H.264 1080p or 720p

    AAC-LDG.711

    Any video format CUVC supports

    Any audio format CUVC supports

    H.264 CIF

    Cisco TelePresence Interoperability

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    CUVC

    Standard-Definition via the CUVC 3500 Series

    New York

    London H.323 or H.320Videoconferencing

    H.264 1080p or 720p

    AAC-LD

    Tokyo CTMS

    G.711

    Any video format CUVC supports

    Any audio format CUVC supports

    1. All CTS endpoints send a copy of their audio in G.711 format2. CTMS determines which CTS segment is emitting the most dominant audio

    and requests it to send a copy of that segments video in CIF resolution3. CTMS mixes the G.711 channels from all CTS endpoints into a single G.711

    channel and switches CIF and G.711 to CUVC

    4. As the dominant audio segment changes throughout the meeting,CTMS switches the CIF video stream accordingly

    H.264 CIF

    Active SegmentCascade

    SCCP Video Telephony

    SIPVideo Telephony

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    Cisco TelePresence InteroperabilityS d d fi i i bili i

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    1920

    1080

    CIF video received from CUVC is scaled to4CIF resolution by the CTS codec and then

    displayed on TelePresence 65 1080p displaysurrounded by black borders

    704

    576

    Standard Definition Interoperability User ExperienceTandberg C60 CIF quality

    Cisco TelePresence InteroperabilityS d d D fi i i I bili U E i

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    1920

    1080

    CIF video received from CUVC is scaled to4CIF resolution by the CTS codec and then

    displayed on TelePresence 65 1080p displaysurrounded by black borders

    Standard Definition Interoperability User ExperienceCisco 7985 CIF quality

    Cisco TelePresence InteroperabilityS d d D fi i i I bili U E i

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    1920

    1080

    CIF video received from CUVC is scaled to4CIF resolution by the CTS codec and then

    displayed on TelePresence 65 1080p displaysurrounded by black borders

    Standard Definition Interoperability User ExperienceTandberg C60 and Polycom HDX 8006 CIF quality

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    Cisco TelePresence InteroperabilityHi h D fi i i i h CUVC 5200 S i

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    High Definition via the CUVC 5200 Series

    New York

    London H.323 or H.320Videoconferencing

    Tokyo Cisco TelePresenceMultipoint Switch

    (CTMS)

    Cisco UnifiedVideoconferencing

    (CUVC)

    SCCP Video Telephony

    SIPVideo Telephony

    H.264 720p

    AAC-LDG.722

    Any video format CUVC supports

    Any audio format CUVC supports

    Cisco TelePresence InteroperabilityHi h D fi iti i th CUVC 5200 S i

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    CUVC

    High Definition via the CUVC 5200 Series

    New York

    London H.323 or H.320Videoconferencing

    AAC-LD

    Tokyo CTMS

    G.722

    Any video format CUVC supports

    Any audio format CUVC supports

    1. All CTS endpoints negotiate down to 720p when joining the meeting, andsend a copy of their audio in G.722 format

    2. CTMS determines which CTS segment is emitting the most dominant audio3. CTMS mixes the G.722 channels from all CTS endpoints into a single G.722

    channel and switches 720p and G.722 over to the CUVC4. As the dominant audio segment changes throughout the meeting,

    CTMS switches the 720p video stream accordingly

    Active SegmentCascade

    SCCP Video Telephony

    SIPVideo Telephony

    H.264 720p

    Cisco TelePresence InteroperabilityHi h D fi iti i th CUVC 5200 S i

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    CUVC

    High Definition via the CUVC 5200 Series

    New York

    London H.323 or H.320Videoconferencing

    H.264 1080p

    AAC-LD

    Tokyo CTMS

    G.722 Any video format CUVC supports

    Any audio format CUVC supports

    5. In the opposite direction, 720p video and G.722 audio coming fromCUVC to CTMS is switched to all CTS endpoints when the audio comingfrom CUVC is deemed to be the most dominant segment

    6. 720p image from CUVC is presented on the left screen of each CTS, fullscreen

    Active SegmentCascade

    SCCP Video Telephony

    SIPVideo Telephony

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    Cisco TelePresence InteroperabilityHigh Definition Interoperability User Experience

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    1920

    1080

    Any resolution video up scaled to 720pand occupies the whole segment

    High Definition Interoperability User ExperienceCisco 7985 Upscaled from CIF to 720p quality

    Cisco TelePresence InteroperabilityHigh Definition Interoperability User Experience

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    1920

    1080

    Any resolution video up scaled to 720p andcontinuous presence is still an option up to

    16 segments simultaneously displayed

    High Definition Interoperability User ExperienceTandberg C60 and Polycom HDX 8006 720p quality

    Cisco TelePresence InteroperabilityHigh Definition via the CUVC 5200 Series

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    Maxi m um Bandwidth Utilization Per Second, Per CTS EndpointResolution 1080p 1080p 1080p 720p 720p 720p

    Motion Handling Best Better Good Best Better Good

    Video per Screen (kbps) N/A N/A N/A 2250 1500 1000

    Audio per Microphone (kbps) N/A N/A N/A 64 64 64

    Auto Collaborate Video channel @ 5fps N/A N/A N/A 500 500 500

    Auto Collaborate Audio channel (kbps) N/A N/A N/A 64 64 64

    CTS-1000 / CTS-500 Tx N/A N/A N/A 2,878 2,128 1,628

    Total Audio and Video (kbps) Rx N/A N/A N/A 3,006 2,256 1,756

    CTS-3000 / CTS-3200 N/A N/A N/A7,506 5,256 3,756

    Total Audio and Video (kbps) N/A N/A N/A

    + 20% for Layer 2-4 overhead

    CTS-1000 / CTS-500 m ax bandwidth (kbps) Tx N/A N/A N/A 3,454 2,554 1,954

    Rx N/A N/A N/A 3,607 2,707 2,107

    CTS-3000 / CTS-3200 m ax bandwidth (kbps) N/A N/A N/A 9,007 6,307 4,507

    Optional Feature Additional MediaBandwidth+ 20% for Layer

    2-4 overhead

    Additional Bandwidth(including layer 2-4 overhead)

    High-DefinitionInterop Audio channel = 64kbps 80kbps

    High Definition via the CUVC 5200 Series

    Cisco TelePresenceQuality Simplicity Reliability

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    QualityUltra-high definition(1080p) spatialaudio

    Virtually an in-person experience

    SimplicityOne button to push

    Easy to use forexecutives andeveryone

    ReliabilityReliable, resilient,and secure

    Cisco is the bestchoice, globally

    Unified CommunicationsNetwork as the Platform

    Quality Simplicity Reliability

    Questions ?

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    Questions ?

    Complete Your Session Evaluation

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    Complete Your Session Evaluation

    Please give us your feedback!!

    Complete the evaluation form you weregiven when you entered the room

    This is session BRKEVT-2308

    Dont forget to complete the overallevent evaluation form included inyour registration kit

    YOUR FEEDBACK IS VERYIMPORTANT FOR US!!! THANKS

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    T H A N K Y O U !

    [email protected]

    Recommended ReadingCisco TelePresence Fundamentals

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    Cisco TelePresence Fundamentals

    Continue your Networkers atCisco Live learning experience withfurther reading from Cisco Press

    Check the Recommended Readingflyer for suggested books

    Available Onsite at the CiscoCompany Store

    Recommended Reading

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    Recommended Reading

    Continue your Networkers atCisco Live learning experience withfurther reading from Cisco Press

    Check the Recommended Readingflyer for suggested books

    Available Onsite at the CiscoCompany Store

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    Appendix

    Room Examples

    Executive Design

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    Executive DesignVan Ness

    Employee Grade: ExecutiveRoom Size: 24-10 x 21 -7Wall Finish: FabricCherry wood baseboard and upper

    panelingAcoustics: Acoustic paneling in room

    along TelePresence microphone levelLighting: Soffit with indirect fluorescent

    lighting (primary source of illumination)Hanging pendant lights (aesthetic finish,

    not a primary source)Wall wash, spot lights along perimeter to

    help create perception of depthConcept: higher-end environmentCeiling plan customized to reflect more

    sophisticated style Aesthetics, acoustics and lighting allupgraded in parallel Address larger room depth by addingseating and decor

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    Professional Design

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    o ess o a es g

    Employee Grade: Manager,Director, ExecutiveRoom Size: 15-6 x 25 -0Wall Finish: Wallpaper Acoustics: Wall art in credenzaalcove to diffuse sound reflectionsLighting: Traditional commercialfixtures with added diffusers for amore even diffusion of light.Concept: wall texture helpscreate depth on cameraWall art carries continuity acrossthree screens

    Haight

    Classic Design

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    g

    Employee Grade: Staff

    Member Room Size: 16-5 x 25 -0Wall Finish: PaintAcoustics: NoneLighting: Linear Pendantfixture, 100% indirectillumination for evenilluminationConcept: standard roomdeployment with the additionof decor Wall art carries continuityacross three screensBalance decor for in-room

    experience as well as on-camera experience

    Ashbury

    Executive Design

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    gMarina

    Employee Grade: ExecutiveRoom Size: 12-5 x 16 -4Wall Finish: Wallpaper Acoustics: noneLighting: Linear Pendant fixture for

    primary illumination

    Wall sconce for added fill light Wallwash fixtures to promote depth and addinterest to the backgroundConcept: multi-purpose meeting roomMetallic tones of lighting and wallpaper

    give the room a more polished feelMiniatures of buildings in background

    help build depth on camera

    Classic Design

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    g

    Employee Grade: Staff Member Room Size: 13-4 x 10 -10

    Wall Treatment: Paint

    Acoustics: none

    Lighting: 100% indirect, recessedfixture with wide distribution of light

    Concept: standard smallconference room

    Multi-purpose for meetings otherthan TelePresence

    Decorative touches help lessensterile feel of flat paint

    Sloat

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    Cisco TelePresence Network RequirementsReal-Time Interactive Class for TelePresence

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    ApplicationL3 Classification

    DSCPPHB RFC

    Low-Latency Data 18AF21 RFC 2597

    Broadcast Video 24CS3 RFC 2474

    Real-Time Interactive 32CS4 RFC 2474

    Call Signaling 40CS5 RFC 2474

    VoIP Telephony 46EF RFC 3246

    OAM 16CS2 RFC 2474

    IETF

    High-Throughput Data 10AF11 RFC 2597

    Low-Priority Data 8CS1 RFC 3662

    Network Control 48CS6 RFC 2474

    Multimedia Streaming 26AF31 RFC 2597

    Best Effort 0DF RFC 2474

    Multimedia Conferencing 34AF41 RFC 2597

    Cisco TelePresence Network Requirements1P3Q8T Queuing Model Example

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    1P3Q8T

    Queue 3

    Queue 1

    Queue 2CoS 0

    CoS 1

    Q2T1

    Q1T1

    Q4Priority Queue

    CoS 5

    Q3T1

    Q3T2

    Q3T3

    Q3T4

    CoS 3CoS 6

    CoS 7

    CoS 2

    Network Management

    Call Signaling

    TelePresence

    Voice

    Application

    CS3

    CS4

    EF

    CS2

    Scavenger CS1Best Effort 0

    Internetwork Control CS6

    PHB

    Network Control

    CoS 3

    CoS 4

    CoS 5

    CoS 2

    CoS 10

    CoS 6

    CoS

    CoS 7

    CoS 4

    Q Q g p

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