Use Case: QoS for Voice and Video Applications
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End-of-Life (EoL)
Use Case: QoS for Voice and Video Applications
Voice and video traffic is particularly sensitive
to measurements that the QoS feature shapes and controls, especially
latency and jitter. For voice and video transmissions to be audible
and clear, voice and video packets cannot be dropped, delayed, or
delivered inconsistently. A best practice for voice and video applications,
in addition to guaranteeing bandwidth, is to guarantee priority
to voice and video traffic.
In this example, employees at
a company branch office are experiencing difficulties and unreliability
in using video conferencing and Voice over IP (VoIP) technologies
to conduct business communications with other branch offices, with
partners, and with customers. An IT admin intends to implement QoS
in order to address these issues and ensure effective and reliable
business communication for the branch employees. Because the admin
wants to guarantee QoS to both incoming and outgoing network traffic,
he will enable QoS on both the firewall’s internal- and external-facing
interfaces.
- The admin creates a QoS profile, defining Class
2 so that Class 2 traffic receives real-time priority and on an
interface with a maximum bandwidth of 1000 Mbps, is guaranteed a
bandwidth of 250 Mbps at all times, including peak periods of network
usage.Real-time priority is typically recommended for applications affected by latency, and is particularly useful in guaranteeing performance and quality of voice and video applications.On the firewall web interface, the admin selects NetworkNetwork ProfilesQos Profile page, clicks Add, enters the Profile Name ensure voip-video traffic and defines Class 2 traffic.
- The admin creates a QoS policy to identify voice and
video traffic. Because the company does not have one standard voice
and video application, the admin wants to ensure QoS is applied
to a few applications that are widely and regularly used by employees
to communicate with other offices, with partners, and with customers.
On the PoliciesQoSQoS Policy RuleApplications tab,
the admin clicks Add and opens the Application
Filter window. The admin continues by selecting criteria
to filter the applications he wants to apply QoS to, choosing the
Subcategory voip-video, and narrowing that down by specifying only
voip-video applications that are both low-risk and widely-used.The application filter is a dynamic tool that, when used to filter applications in the QoS policy, allows QoS to be applied to all applications that meet the criteria of voip-video, low risk, and widely used at any given time.The admin names the Application Filter voip-video-low-risk and includes it in the QoS policy:The admin names the QoS policy Voice-Video and selects Other Settings to assign all traffic matched to the policy Class 2. He is going to use the Voice-Video QoS policy for both incoming and outgoing QoS traffic, so he sets Source and Destination information to Any:
- Because the admin wants to ensure QoS for both incoming
and outgoing voice and video communications, he enables QoS on the
network’s external-facing interface (to apply QoS to outgoing communications)
and to the internal-facing interface (to apply QoS to incoming communications).The admin begins by enabling the QoS profile he created, ensure voice-video traffic (Class 2 in this profile is associated with policy, Voice-Video) on the external-facing interface, in this case, ethernet 1/2.He then enables the same QoS profile ensure voip-video traffic on a second interface, the internal-facing interface (in this case, ethernet 1/1).
- The admin selects NetworkQoS to confirm that QoS is
enabled for both incoming and outgoing voice and video traffic:The admin has successfully enabled QoS on both the network’s internal- and external-facing interfaces. Real-time priority is now ensured for voice and video application traffic as it flows both into and out of the network, ensuring that these communications, which are particularly sensitive to latency and jitter, can be used reliably and effectively to perform both internal and external business communications.