RE: RSVP

From: Phong Tran Tien (PhongTT2@FPT.COM.VN)
Date: Fri Mar 21 2003 - 07:08:51 GMT-3


I think it's alright. But pay attention to the bandwidth allocation.
 
Total BW for LLQ < Line BW - reserved BW for RSVP
 
#11285

        -----Original Message-----
        From: Hunt Lee [mailto:huntl@webcentral.com.au]
        Sent: Fri 3/21/2003 1:02 PM
        To: Phong Tran Tien
        Cc: 'ccielab@groupstudy.com'
        Subject: RE: RSVP
        
        

        Can I use LLQ instead of WFQ when using RSVP?
        
        Thanks.
        
        Hunt
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: Phong Tran Tien [mailto:PhongTT2@FPT.COM.VN]
        Sent: Friday, 21 March 2003 1:42 PM
        To: Songbin Wei; Hunt Lee; ccielab@groupstudy.com
        Subject: RE: RSVP
        
        
        Also remembet to enable WFQ if you are using RSVP
        
        #11285
        
                -----Original Message-----
                From: Songbin Wei [mailto:sbwei_2000@yahoo.com]
                Sent: Fri 3/21/2003 6:28 AM
                To: Hunt Lee; ccielab@groupstudy.com
                Cc:
                Subject: Re: RSVP
               
               
        
                ip rsvp bandwidth bw1 bw2
                bw1 is the total bandwidth reservable on the
                interface. bw2 is the bandwith reservable for one rsvp
                session.
               
                'req-qos controlled-load' dial-peer configuration
                instructs the voip to set up a rsvp session when makes
                call. If you want voip with rsvp, you need this
                command. Remember that 'ip rsvp bandwidth' just makes
                the router ready to set up rsvp, in order to rsvp,
                some application must initiate the reservation.
                'req-qos controlled-load' is one of the commands to
                initiate the reservation.
               
                For voip with default codec (g728), it will reserve
                24kbps, so the config for one call is:
                ip rsvp bandwidth 24 24
                if you want to support 2 calls, configure:
                ip rsvp bandwidth 48 24
               
                For g711 codec, it will reserve 80kbps.
               
                Try to test this using two phones. And 'show ip rsvp
                installed' to check the rsvp sessions.
               
                --- Hunt Lee <ciscoforme3@yahoo.com.au> wrote:
> Hi group,
>
> For RSVP, I found that if I just type "ip rsvp
> bandwidth" under an interface along
> the path that I wanted RSVP activated, it will
> automatically put in values for me...
> If I wanted to configure the values myself, how
> should I based this on? I have read
> a number of e.g. from books and CCO, and they mostly
> use
>
> interface s0
> ip rsvp bandwidth 48 48
>
> What does the 2 values mean?
>
> Also, I also saw this on a VoIP config:-
>
> dial-peer voice 2 voip
> destination-parttern 110
> session target ipv4:172.168.10.65
> req-qos controlled-load <---- Is this a
> mandatory command
> when using
> RSVP with voice? What does the
> command do?
>
>
>
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