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Network Instruments VoIP Analysis

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Page 1: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Network InstrumentsVoIP Analysis

Page 2: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

VoIP Basics

What is VoIP? Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network Competes with other traffic on the network A new technology that needs real-time, consistent monitoring Sensitive to delay

Understanding VoIP Begins with Understanding Delay Normal (not sensitive to delay)

example: FTP, HTTP, e-mail, etc. Tolerant (sensitive to delay, loss tolerant, buffered

by receiver) example: streaming video, Internet radio, etc.

Real-time (delay and loss sensitive) example: VoIP

Page 3: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Common VoIP Troubleshooting Myths

Myth #1

Running VoIP without Quality of Service is acceptable

Myth #2

No VoIP Site Survey is necessary

Myth #3

Voice conversations are secure

Page 4: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

VoIP Monitoring and Analysis Challenges

Current, competing tools were designed for lab use No method of quickly determining status and health No mechanism for understanding aggregate call quality VoIP dependencies are not implemented properly Separate tools increase learning curve, reduce ROI

Other VoIP tools

Observer

Page 5: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

VoIP Terms

Jitter R-Factor / MOS QoS / TOS / Precedence Burstiness / Gap / Gap Duration Compression Techniques (Codecs)

Page 6: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Jitter

What is it? Jitter is the variation in the time between packets transmitted

and received. For example, if a packet stream leaves a device with 30 ms packet

spacing and arrives with 50 ms packet spacing, the jitter is 20 ms.

Adjusting jitter buffers can help at the expense of increased latency and thus, clipping. Jitter buffer overflow will introduce dropped packets.

Why measure it? Understanding jitter gives you the hard facts to help improve call

quality

Page 7: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Observer’s Jitter Measurement

In aggregate…

and per call…

Page 8: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Call Quality Scoring

What is it? R-factor

Identify call quality using a single source of visibility (actual live calls) Based on E-Model Scale: 1-100, with the theoretical maximum being 93.2 after

typical degradation MOS

Determine user satisfaction level with a call Takes into account a number of different factors

(handset quality, ambient noise, network performance) Scale: 1-5, with 4.0 and higher considered satisfied,

4.5 and higher is extremely satisfied When using a simulated call, traffic can be captured at the destination and

compared to the original sent data to identify degradation. Why measure Call Quality Scoring?

Provides objective and subjective scores to evaluate existing conditions and to compare with historical conditions.

Page 9: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Observer’s Call Quality Scoring

In aggregate…

per call…

and Expert…

Page 10: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Burstiness and Burst Density

What is it? A burst is a period of time characterized by high rates of packet loss. Burst Percentage is the % of time bursts are occurring. Burst Density is the rate of VoIP data packets lost during a burst

period. Why measure it?

Higher rates affect call quality, especially when coupled with long Average Burst Duration times.

Possible reason for packet loss include network congestion, media

failure, and link failure.

Page 11: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Gap Density and Duration

What is it? Bursts are periods characterized by high rates of packet loss. Gaps are the periods between bursts. A gap is a period of time characterized by lower levels of

packet loss than the burst periods that bound it. Gap Density is the percent rate of packet loss during the gaps. Average Gap Duration is measured in time.

Why measure it? Knowing the gap helps define the burst. In most cases, packet loss during gaps is rendered insignificant

by packet loss concealment techniques built into the VoIP

infrastructure.

Page 12: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Observer’s Burst and Gap Density

In aggregate…

and per call…

Page 13: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Settings for QoS / Precedence

Support for multiple definitions of Quality of Service (QoS) Also known as Precedence Also known as Type Of Service (TOS)

What is it?

QoS is a bit setting used by routers and switches to prioritize packet flow. Why measure it?

Incorrectly set QoS can lead to contention of VoIP and other data on a network.

Contention will lead to delays in packet delivery, and thus reduce call quality.

Page 14: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Observer’s QoS/TOS/Precedence

In aggregate…

per call…

and Decode…

Page 15: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Compression Techniques

Codec is a term for Coder/Decoder

Different compression techniques (codecs) G.711: 64kbps (no compression) G.729: 8kbps G.723: 6.3kbps, 5.3kbps

Higher compression reduces R-Factor and MOS but also reduces potential contention

Page 16: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Observer’s Codecs Used Display

In aggregate…

per call…

and Decode…

Page 17: Network Instruments VoIP Analysis. VoIP Basics  What is VoIP?  Packetized voice traffic sent over an IP network  Competes with other traffic on the

Thank you