NBX on Data Network
from 3KB:
Solution ID:
2.0.102112367.3754933
NBX - Recommended Network Design and VoIP Pre-Qualification
Problem: Recommended Network Design for 3Com NBX
Problem: Various functional consistency or audio quality issues
Fact: latency
Fact: VoIP
Fact: QoS
Fact: ToS
Fact: 802.1p/q
Fact: 3Com Ethernet Power Sources
Fact: jitter
Fact: switches
Fact: hubs
Fact: cables
Fact: firewall
Fact: VPN
Fact: TAPI
Fact: NBX TAPI
Fact: NBX 100
Fact: SuperStack 3 NBX
Fix: Recommended Design for VoIP and NBX Networked Telephony Products:
*******
Latency: Round trip delay should be <100 ms and not fluctuate to ensure toll voice quality.
*******
Hubs: Not recommended at all. NBX 25 with 8 phones or less, and NO PC's connected is the only exception.
*******
Switches:
--> For a large amount of phones and PC's running multiple applications, switches MUST support and be properly configured for 802.1p and 802.1q
--> If switches cannot be configured for 802.1p/q, it is recommended that NBX network and PC network be either totally separate and not connected, or, switches for NBX and PC equipment be separate, and only connected via a single switch port link between the networks. This will aid in troubleshooting, and allow the switch settings to be optimized for the NBX
--> LAN applications which use large amounts of bandwidth such as GHOST (hard drive replication) and Video Conferencing must be given special consideration to ensure they do not receive a higher priority than the NBX audio packets at any time.
--> Switches than can be configured to look for certain LAN traffic prioritization of audio packets is highly recommended
--> Gigabit Ethernet backbones are highly recommended. Depending on Network Traffic Fast Ethernet backbones can also be used depending on total applications running on the network
--> Multicast addresses used on the NBX should not be used by any other application on the network.
--> Layer 3 Switches must support and be configured for IGMP Query mode, and a multicast routing protocol such as OSPF, or DVMRP
*******
Cabling:
--> Category 5, Category 5E, or higher is required for 10/100 phones operating at 100 mb/S, and is recommended for 10 mb/s telephone operation
--> Category 3 may be used but is not recommended for 10 mb/s telephone operation
--> ATA/ATC devices MUST use Voice Grade connections (66-block or screw terminal jacks). This means the cable from the ATC port on the NBX chassis to the analog telephone jack must NOT pass through cat-5 terminations such as a cat-5 standard "patch panel" in any PC wiring closet. The reason is that ATA/ATC signaling is HIGH VOLTAGE, LOW FREQUENCY (100 volts DC at 20 hertz) which is NOT supported by the TIA standard. Cat-5 patch panels are the opposite, LOW VOLTAGE, HIGH FREQUENCY. Cat-5 patch panel connections are not designed to handle the 48vDC battery and 110 volts AC ringer voltages
*******
Firewalls:
--> NAT, PAT, and Proxy Servers are NOT SUPPORTED for NBX telephones and WILL NOT OPERATE
--> Private Networks are supported, meaning Point-to-Point T1's with all private addressing and multiple site NBX's will work fine, but connection via NAT/PAT/PROXY to a telephone/device is not.
--> If you assign a NAT Public IP for your Internal NCP address, the only functions supported are: NetSet Administration, IMAP connection to get voice mail messages
--> H.323 ConneXtions support NAT/PAT/Proxy, but communicate only with other H.323 Gateways or H.323-compliant clients such as NetMeeting sessions.
--> The NBX uses ports tcp 1040, and udp ports 2093, 2094, 2095, and 2096, which must be open in all directions through firewalls
*******
VPN's:
--> VPN's are fully supported
--> To connect an NBX business phone and PC/laptop at the same time, a hardware VPN device is required, in order to create the VPN subnet IP on the physical ports for the phone and PC to connect to. One static IP address for the hardware VPN device is required.
--> Alternatively, PcXset can possibly be installed on a PC using software (Dial Up Networking) VPN to connect to the NBX subnet. In order for this to work, the O/S on the PC must allow the default network to change to the VPN IP address when the VPN connection is active. Windows NT for one, and other OS's may not allow this. After establishing VPN connection, you must be able to "PING" the ncp directly from the DOS prompt at its ACTUAL (inside, private) address for the pcXset to work. PcXset soft telephones have pretty much the full functionality and multiple button mappings possible as with a standard Business Set
--> If the NCP has a public IP address and is connected directly to the Internet, VPN's are not required. The NCP will require a static public IP, and all phones will need to be on the Public Internet subnet. An IP license is required for the NCP, and you must have enough PUBLIC IP addresses to support all of your phones.
*******
Routers:
--> Any routed IP WAN protocol is supported - Frame Relay, Point-to-Point, ATM, DSL, Cable Modem, ISDN, etc.
--> Connections such as DSL/Cable modems for remote IP telephones generally provide inadequate voice quality, due to lack of QoS, and other factors, and are the most unreliable. Point-to-point T1 lines privately owned are preferred, as the entire network path can be customized by the customer-owned on-premise equipment, and is not subject to sharing bandwidth, or fluctuating bandwidth.
--> Frame Relay connections work excellent, provided they are configured correctly, with zero, or near-zero DE (discard eligibility) by design, as VoIP is a UDP stream. Frame circuits that allow "bursting" above the CIR may have high DE rates on the downswing from burst to CIR. Discuss this with the ISP.
--> Latency should not exceed 100ms round trip between any two devices that are talking (phone-phone, phone-NCP, phone-CO line card port, etc)
--> Check the IP Multicast Address in the NBX and avoid using it on other applications. It can be changed on the NBX and is not hard coded if need be to avoid conflict
--> IP ToS and Diff/Serve support is the Layer 3 equivalent to QoS on the switches at Layer2, and is critical for optimum performance of remote IP phones or devices.
--> All routers between NBX-communicating devices must support a Multicast Routing protocol such as DVMRP, OSPF, (Cisco is PIM Dense mode) in order to support the following features on remote phones: Paging, Conferencing, Correct Date and Time LCD display, and illumination of buttons for Mapped Lines, or DSS/BLF for extensions.
--> Bandwidth Requirements:
Phones and remote devices such as Line Cards in a remote chassis, per port:
- 87 kilobits/sec sustained throughput per conversation, normal mode
- 55 kilobits/sec minimum requirement for low bandwidth and silence suppression options enabled
H.323
- 19.2 kilobytes/sec - 87 kilobits/sec, depending on compression codec used
*******
UPS / Battery Backup:
--> Go to the APC web site (
click on "Selectors", then "Go to UPS Selector", then "Advanced UPS Selectors", then "Telecom", then on the pull-down menu select "3COM" and enter the model you are providing UPS for (NBX 100, NBX 25, Ethernet Power Source, V5000 chassis, or telephone models). Follow instructions for sizing up your UPS for the desired length of time, etc.
--> For NBX Business telephones, the Ethernet Power Source product with splitter pack can be used to provide power through the Ethernet connection to NBX phones, and the black power brick on each phone can be eliminated. A UPS can then be attached to just the Ethernet Power Source device to protect and provide backup power for all telephones.