Time to gut the network - thoughts?
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@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
Speaking about a flat switched network - OK so my phone vendor is adamant I need QoS to ensure I don't have phone quality issues. What respectable publications can I point to that say this isn't a typical concern anymore?
Looking at you mostly @scottalanmiller
I would say every source would insist you have QoS enabled.
Not the other way around...
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@DustinB3403 said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
Speaking about a flat switched network - OK so my phone vendor is adamant I need QoS to ensure I don't have phone quality issues. What respectable publications can I point to that say this isn't a typical concern anymore?
Looking at you mostly @scottalanmiller
I would say every source would insist you have QoS enabled.
Not the other way around...
OK that's fine to - guides/recommendations for that setup? Focusing specifically on the switches.
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@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
Speaking about a flat switched network - OK so my phone vendor is adamant I need QoS to ensure I don't have phone quality issues. What respectable publications can I point to that say this isn't a typical concern anymore?
Looking at you mostly @scottalanmiller
You vendor is 100% correct in that statement as you just typed it. You are required to use QoS on all switches and routers in your control to ensure quality.
The point you glossed here is that you need said QoS on the traffic not an entire VLAN. Every reputable SIP device uses DSCP tagging. So what you would do is set QoS on DSCP 46 (RTP the voice) and 26 (SIP the signaling) traffic.
Those examples are what my Yealink phones use by default to communicate to the FreePBX server and is the traffic going out my WAN.
You generally will never see QoS applied on your switch unless a port is saturated.
You will see the QoS applied all the time on your routers assuming you are decently normal. It gets hit in spikes most of the time, not consistently.
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I guess I didn't quote it well enough, let me try to recreate the conversation.
ME: I want to make my whole network flat and put the phones on the same network as everything else.
Vendor: we don't advise this, you should put the phones on a VLAN so you can have QoS for calls, otherwise we have no assurances of voice quality. -
@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
I guess I didn't quote it well enough, let me try to recreate the conversation.
ME: I want to make my whole network flat and put the phones on the same network as everything else.
Vendor: we don't advise this, you should put the phones on a VLAN so you can have QoS for calls, otherwise we have no assurances of voice quality.That's nothing at all like you said in the last statement. QoS is good, VLANs don't do what they are claiming and, as you showed, the vendor implemented incorrectly and left you without any actual QoS.
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@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
Speaking about a flat switched network - OK so my phone vendor is adamant I need QoS to ensure I don't have phone quality issues. What respectable publications can I point to that say this isn't a typical concern anymore?
Looking at you mostly @scottalanmiller
So the questions are...
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Why do you need to ensure it? THis is a scare tactic. Start here. Say "ensure it"? Why do I need to ensure something that we've never needed to ensure before? What's the ACTUAL risk that you are trying to protect me against... because it's never come up and we have no reason to believe it could be a problem so why are we worried about "ensuring" anything?
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If we need QoS, why haven't we had it all this time but had screwed up VLANs instead without QoS working? ANd if it is so important, how has it worked so long perfectly without it?
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@JaredBusch said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
Every reputable SIP device uses DSCP tagging. So what you would do is set QoS on DSCP 46 (RTP the voice) and 26 (SIP the signaling) traffic.
Most shady ones too.
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@scottalanmiller said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
Speaking about a flat switched network - OK so my phone vendor is adamant I need QoS to ensure I don't have phone quality issues. What respectable publications can I point to that say this isn't a typical concern anymore?
Looking at you mostly @scottalanmiller
So the questions are...
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Why do you need to ensure it? THis is a scare tactic. Start here. Say "ensure it"? Why do I need to ensure something that we've never needed to ensure before? What's the ACTUAL risk that you are trying to protect me against... because it's never come up and we have no reason to believe it could be a problem so why are we worried about "ensuring" anything?
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If we need QoS, why haven't we had it all this time but had screwed up VLANs instead without QoS working? ANd if it is so important, how has it worked so long perfectly without it?
Well, as you said, this statement is/was wrong.
So I'm starting over by asking my vendor to reply to the following:I’m looking to redesign my network to get rid of the VLANs and make everything flat. In our previous discussions you cautioned against not putting the phones in their own VLAN – do I recall that correctly? Assuming I recall this correctly, what’s the reasoning behind that?
I'll let you know their response.
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@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
I’m looking to redesign my network to get rid of the VLANs and make everything flat. In our previous discussions you cautioned against not putting the phones in their own VLAN – do I recall that correctly? Assuming I recall this correctly, what’s the reasoning behind that?
I'll let you know their response.
You might want to LEAD with.... since we discovered that QoS was not set up properly and has never been a problem we can assume that QoS and ensuring call quality cannot be the reason.
Let them come up with a reason if you head that off at the pass.
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@scottalanmiller said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
I’m looking to redesign my network to get rid of the VLANs and make everything flat. In our previous discussions you cautioned against not putting the phones in their own VLAN – do I recall that correctly? Assuming I recall this correctly, what’s the reasoning behind that?
I'll let you know their response.
You might want to LEAD with.... since we discovered that QoS was not set up properly and has never been a problem we can assume that QoS and ensuring call quality cannot be the reason.
Let them come up with a reason if you head that off at the pass.
Time out for a second...
JB says he doesn't do anything internal to the switches to setup/ensure, whatever you wanna call it, QoS. But that the handsets themselves set these tags themselves (and @scottalanmiller agreed with that).So my question is - do my switches honor those tags by default? Do VLANs make any difference in this? i.e. if a QoS tagged packet is on VLAN 2, and traffic on VLAN 1 is peaking the ports out, does the switch allow the QoS Tag on VLAN 2 to win out?
or is the switch ignoring these packets unless the switch is specifically setup to honor them?
Please keep in mind - I have ZERO SIP/DSCP traffic going out my WAN ports. All traffic is local on my network only.
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@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
Time out for a second...
JB says he doesn't do anything internal to the switches to setup/ensure, whatever you wanna call it, QoS. But that the handsets themselves set these tags themselves (and @scottalanmiller agreed with that).All agreed. Doing internal QoS is 99% of the time just ridiculous. If a consultant is telling you that you need that without a very specific "your network is screwed royally and we aren't going to fix it" reason, it's a scam.
And yes, the handsets are prepared for proper QoS out of the gate.
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@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
So my question is - do my switches honor those tags by default? Do VLANs make any difference in this? i.e. if a QoS tagged packet is on VLAN 2, and traffic on VLAN 1 is peaking the ports out, does the switch allow the QoS Tag on VLAN 2 to win out?
So a bunch of thoughts...
- It depends on the switch. Not likely, you need to tell the switches how you want the tagged traffic treated.
- VLANs break this, obvious, you'd prioritized something else explicitly.
- It doesn't matter on the LAN, that's a sales tactic.
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@scottalanmiller said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
the vendor implemented incorrectly and left you without any actual QoS.
We do not know that. QoS at the VLAN level exists and is what most people assume is working. If implemented, he has perfectly working QoS. It is prioritizing more than just the RTP, that is true. But as long as only phones are on that VLAN, and proper IEEE 802.1Q is setup, there is QoS.
So please do not over simplify.
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@scottalanmiller said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
So my question is - do my switches honor those tags by default? Do VLANs make any difference in this? i.e. if a QoS tagged packet is on VLAN 2, and traffic on VLAN 1 is peaking the ports out, does the switch allow the QoS Tag on VLAN 2 to win out?
So a bunch of thoughts...
- It depends on the switch. Not likely, you need to tell the switches how you want the tagged traffic treated.
- VLANs break this, obvious, you'd prioritized something else explicitly.
- It doesn't matter on the LAN, that's a sales tactic.
- True it is not likely
- VLAN alone does nothing to break QoS. See previous post.
- It most certainly can matter in the LAN. An office can have bursts traffic that can cause degradation of voice quality. It is not common though.
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@JaredBusch said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
We do not know that. QoS at the VLAN level exists and is what most people assume is working.
I thought that the issue was that he did not have QoS hitting the WAN. But he has no VoIP to the WAN, I had missed that part.
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@JaredBusch said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
- It most certainly can matter in the LAN. An office can have bursts traffic that can cause degradation of voice quality. It is not common though.
Not on A LAN, on the meaning "this" LAN. He and I had discussed offline that he has no traffic that ever would trigger the QoS system.
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@scottalanmiller said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
@JaredBusch said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
- It most certainly can matter in the LAN. An office can have bursts traffic that can cause degradation of voice quality. It is not common though.
Not on A LAN, on the meaning "this" LAN. He and I had discussed offline that he has no traffic that ever would trigger the QoS system.
In that case I agree that it is not needed in any fashion.
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@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
@scottalanmiller said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
I’m looking to redesign my network to get rid of the VLANs and make everything flat. In our previous discussions you cautioned against not putting the phones in their own VLAN – do I recall that correctly? Assuming I recall this correctly, what’s the reasoning behind that?
I'll let you know their response.
You might want to LEAD with.... since we discovered that QoS was not set up properly and has never been a problem we can assume that QoS and ensuring call quality cannot be the reason.
Let them come up with a reason if you head that off at the pass.
Time out for a second...
JB says he doesn't do anything internal to the switches to setup/ensure, whatever you wanna call it, QoS. But that the handsets themselves set these tags themselves (and @scottalanmiller agreed with that).So my question is - do my switches honor those tags by default? Do VLANs make any difference in this? i.e. if a QoS tagged packet is on VLAN 2, and traffic on VLAN 1 is peaking the ports out, does the switch allow the QoS Tag on VLAN 2 to win out?
or is the switch ignoring these packets unless the switch is specifically setup to honor them?
Please keep in mind - I have ZERO SIP/DSCP traffic going out my WAN ports. All traffic is local on my network only.
A point of note here is that DSCP is at the IP level and 802.1Q is at the VLAN level.
These are totally different processes.
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@scottalanmiller said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
You might want to LEAD with.... since we discovered that QoS was not set up properly and has never been a problem we can assume that QoS and ensuring call quality cannot be the reason.
I want to make sure I fully understand why we can say without a doubt that QoS wasn't setup properly, or at least not optimally.
Here's the current config
hostname "Main Backbone HP 2824" snmp-server contact "Dash" snmp-server location "Building 1" ip default-gateway 192.168.1.1 ip routing ip zero-broadcast vlan 1 name "DEFAULT_VLAN" untagged 2-17,19-23 ip address 192.168.1.2 255.255.255.0 no untagged 1,18,24 exit vlan 2 name "VOICE" untagged 1 ip address 192.168.150.2 255.255.255.0 qos priority 7 tagged 3-20,24 exit vlan 105 name "WIRELESS" ip address 192.168.105.2 255.255.255.0 tagged 2-21 exit vlan 17 name "IMAGING" untagged 18 ip address 10.10.10.1 255.255.255.240 tagged 24 exit fault-finder bad-driver sensitivity high fault-finder bad-transceiver sensitivity high fault-finder bad-cable sensitivity high fault-finder too-long-cable sensitivity high fault-finder over-bandwidth sensitivity high fault-finder broadcast-storm sensitivity high fault-finder loss-of-link sensitivity high fault-finder duplex-mismatch-HDx sensitivity high fault-finder duplex-mismatch-FDx sensitivity high
I read the QoS under VLAN 2 to mean that all VLAN 2 traffic will have higher priority than any other VLAN. Considering only phones and the PBX are on VLAN 2, wouldn't this accomplish the goal of my vendor? If I'm correct in my understanding, it's not optimal, but it works.
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@Dashrender said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
@scottalanmiller said in Time to gut the network - thoughts?:
You might want to LEAD with.... since we discovered that QoS was not set up properly and has never been a problem we can assume that QoS and ensuring call quality cannot be the reason.
I want to make sure I fully understand why we can say without a doubt that QoS wasn't setup properly, or at least not optimally.
Here's the current config
hostname "Main Backbone HP 2824" snmp-server contact "Dash" snmp-server location "Building 1" ip default-gateway 192.168.1.1 ip routing ip zero-broadcast vlan 1 name "DEFAULT_VLAN" untagged 2-17,19-23 ip address 192.168.1.2 255.255.255.0 no untagged 1,18,24 exit vlan 2 name "VOICE" untagged 1 ip address 192.168.150.2 255.255.255.0 qos priority 7 tagged 3-20,24 exit vlan 105 name "WIRELESS" ip address 192.168.105.2 255.255.255.0 tagged 2-21 exit vlan 17 name "IMAGING" untagged 18 ip address 10.10.10.1 255.255.255.240 tagged 24 exit fault-finder bad-driver sensitivity high fault-finder bad-transceiver sensitivity high fault-finder bad-cable sensitivity high fault-finder too-long-cable sensitivity high fault-finder over-bandwidth sensitivity high fault-finder broadcast-storm sensitivity high fault-finder loss-of-link sensitivity high fault-finder duplex-mismatch-HDx sensitivity high fault-finder duplex-mismatch-FDx sensitivity high
I read the QoS under VLAN 2 to mean that all VLAN 2 traffic will have higher priority than any other VLAN. Considering only phones and the PBX are on VLAN 2, wouldn't this accomplish the goal of my vendor? If I'm correct in my understanding, it's not optimal, but it works.
Correct you do have QoS. It is on the VLAN, that contains the voice devices.