Thanks for your comments Cliff. You are right regarding the RAS traffic from GK to CCM. To address this ponit, I included the statement '... While this takes care of the H323 RAS traffic between BR2 router (H323 gateway) and HQ router (H323 gatekeeper), to take care of the H323 RAS traffic from the gatekeeper to CallManager, we need to create a policy-map for marking and apply it on the server vlan interface in the outbound direction. ...'
I meant something like : policy-map Mark-CS3 class Signal ! We already have this class-map set ip dscp cs3 interface fa0/1.14 service-policy output Mark-CS3 I also look forward to Mark and Vik's thoughts. Ameha From: [email protected] To: [email protected]; [email protected] Subject: Re: [OSL | CCIE_Voice] QoS - H323 RAS signal marking Date: Mon, 13 Apr 2009 22:43:36 -0400 Interesting point. But to add another wrinkle, the Gatekeeper is in the HQ site. If you're supposed to mark all traffic, then the H323 RAS traffic between GK flowing to CCM wouldn't be marked. I'd never really thought about this. I'd be interested to know if Mark and Vik had any thoughts about this. Cliff ----- Original Message ----- From: Ameha Negash Haile To: [email protected] Sent: Monday, April 13, 2009 9:45 PM Subject: [OSL | CCIE_Voice] QoS - H323 RAS signal marking Hello, First of all, thanks for the lots of great stuff on this list. I have been reading the various postings for very long. Now I have got some thought and I like to get your opinions on it. The question reads as “Mark SCCP, MGCP, H323 and SIP signaling traffic to CS3. Configure only on routers and CallManager.” The configuration on CallManager is straight forward. Regarding the configuration on routers, the solutions I have seen use access lists to capture interesting traffic (including h323 ras traffic at UDP port 1719), create policy-map to mark the traffic to CS3, and apply service policy in the inbound direction of voice VLAN interfaces on the various routers. As the above doesn't take into account traffic generated from the routers themselves, commands like 'ip qos dscp cs3 signaling' under VoIP dial-peers and 'mgcp ip qos dscp cs3 signaling' on MGCP gateways are also used. I haven't seen any similar command for H323 RAS traffic generated from BR2 router and destined to the Gatekeeper on the HQ router as well as H323 RAS traffic generated from the gatekeeper (destined to the BR2 router or the CallManager gatekeeper controlled intercluster trunk). To provide a comprehensive solution that includes H323 RAS signaling traffic, what I think needs to be done is, combine the marking and queuing in the policy-map that is applied on the serial WAN interface in the outbound direction. While this takes care of the H323 RAS traffic between BR2 router (H323 gateway) and HQ router (H323 gatekeeper), to take care of the H323 RAS traffic from the gatekeeper to CallManager, we need to create a policy-map for marking and apply it on the server vlan interface in the outbound direction. A sample configuration for the portion from HQ to BR2 will be like: ! Class-map match-any Voice match ip dscp ef class-map match-any Signal match protocol h323 match protocol skinny match protocol mgcp match protocol sip ! ! Here we have accounted for all signaling traffic specified ! in the question. If we want, we may add 'match ip dscp ! cs3' and 'match ip dscp af31' before the ‘match protocol’ commands. ! The 'match protocol' commands will be used to capture leftovers. ! policy-map LLQ-Mark-HQ-BR2 class Voice priority 96 compress header ip rtp class Signal bandwidth 40 set ip dscp cs3 ! We do the marking here. class class-default fair-queue ! policy-map MQC-768 class class-default shape average 729600 7296 0 service-policy LLQ-Mark-HQ-BR2 ! map-class frame-relay FRTS-768 service-policy output MQC-768 frame-relay fragment 960 ! interface Serial0/1.10 point-to-point bandwidth 768 ip address 10.10.10.3 255.255.255.0 frame-relay interface-dlci 310 class FRTS-768 ! By doing this, I believe we make sure all signaling traffic from HQ to BR2 will be marked to CS3 before leaving the HQ router. We do the same on the BR2 router also for traffic going to HQ. In my opinion, if we don't do the above, in addition to not properly marking H323 RAS traffic to CS3, we also miss H323 RAS traffic from the class-map Signal and the LLQ bandwidth guarantee won’t apply to it. I say this because what I have seen was that H323 RAS traffic is by default marked as 'DSCP 0', not even AF31. If this is the case, during congestion, RAS packets can be dropped big time!! I will appreciate your ideas on this. Thanks, Ameha Haile P.S. By the way, I find using 'match protocol' commands in class-map easier than using access groups and access lists. I don't have to worry about source ports and destination ports although knowing them is good. Could there be any other reasons, which I might be missing, to use one method over another for matching traffic? Create a cool, new character for your Windows Live™ Messenger. Check it out _________________________________________________________________ Create a cool, new character for your Windows Live™ Messenger. http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9656621
