GS1900-48HP Voice VLAN stopped working after firmware upgrade. . .
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Thank you.
We have set the DNS directly on the devices (PC, phone system controller) and we can access the internet successfully now. Thank you.0 -
Hmmm. "Set DNS directly". . . on the PC's?I was under the impression that the PC's were on VLAN1,and were already working correctly.0
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Yes, the PCs are in VLAN1. We were just testing if PC can access the internet in VLAN2.
We have now successfully put the phone controller and phones in VLAN2 but our voice quality issues still exist.
I am wondering if you have any advises?
We were told that we can try to separate VLAN1 and VLAN2 in two different physical switches. Will it help?
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Some preliminary questions -1.) Is the voice quality bad all of the time,or does it get worse with network activity?2.) The NEC phone system - where are yourincoming phone lines coming from?Do you have "real" phone lines, orsomething brought in digitally?3.) What if you call another extension in your office;is the quality bad on inter-office calls, or is it just oncalls to/from the outside world that are bad?(If calls between extensions in your office are fine,then it's probably not an in-house network issue.)I can't imagine that your in-house network trafficis enough to produce poor quality calls, especially nowthat the phones and the controller are on their own VLAN,and aren't being handled by your router.In theory, now that your phone controller, and your phonesare on VLAN1, you could move them to a separate switch.You'd still need something to act as a gateway for your phones.Any old router, set for 192.168.2.1 could be used for temporary testing.I feel that there is something else going on here though.What are the model numbers of your phone controller,and your phones? I'd like to take a peek at documentation on them.0
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Hi~
1. The voice quality is not bad all the time. It could be ok at the beginning of a call but get worse during the call. Normally a call may only last a few minutes, and I cannot see any network activities that could affect the voice quality.
2. Our calls are mostly from outside. The incoming phone lines are 'real' telephone lines. We also have traditional phones with telephone lines under the same phone controller and its voice quality is good. So we think it is a in-house network issue.
3.We are using a NEC SL2100 phone system. https://www.nec.com/en/global/solutions/univerge/smb/SL2100/sl2100dp.html
The mode number of the IP phone is IP7WW-8IPLD-C1.
4.We have tried to use an old 8 port unmanaged PoE switch under the same Fortigate firewall. We put the whole phone system in this PoE switch but failed. The IP phone cannot connect to the controller. Maybe it is due to that we don't have any setting of VLAN in the old unmanaged PoE switch? (For testing, we connect a PC in VLAN1/192.168.0.x to this old switch and internet access is ok. But if we let the PC in VLAN2/192.168.2.x in the same old switch then the internet is not ok.)
5. We have also tried to adjust the jitter buffer settings in the phone controller but in vain.
6. We didn't use the independent QoS setting (Configuration-->QoS) in GS1900 before. And we just set the QoS Value of our IP phones' port to 6 and we will see if there were any improvement on voice quality.
I feel maybe the problem is from our Fortigate Firewall but not sure what can we do now.
Here are our current network topology:
What we want to test is:
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On our switch at work, we have the Voice/VLAN/QOS settings as follows -And. . .
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I meant to ask you about something you mentioned early on. . .Where did you read that it was better to have static IP addresses on the phones,versus using DHCP to assign the IP addresses to the phones?Also. . . which codec are you using? 729a ?0
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Our settings are the same as your screen shots.
As for the static IP addresses, we have static IP addresses on the phones just simply because it is simple.
(We don't have to deal with the DHCP settings on the firewall.)
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I found something strange.
I use wireshark to monitor the packets.
And I found one of our server (192.168.0.22) keeps doing ARP broadcast. (10~20 times per second)
Is it normal?
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Do you have actual equipment at the addresses listed above?If it were just a few addresses, I'd suspect some sort ofleft-overs from networked printers or file shares.These seem to be incremental ARP broadcasts though.My first thought would some sort of port-scanning malware,so you could probably start there with a malware scan.Second thought - some software that you have that isattempting to enumerate the machines on your network,like some sort of backup software, antivirus, or perhapsa network monitoring tool.I would keep WireShark running on a machineso that you can watch it, while you log on to the serverand start terminating tasks and/or services,until the ARP broadcasts stop.------------------------------------------------------Jumping back to the phones. . .On the phone controller, visit the VLAN section,and make sure it is set for VLAN2, Priority 6.Then, visit IP7WW-8IPLD-C1 phones, and see ifthere is a similar Priority setting inside the phones,and set them to Priority 6 as well.If there is not a manual priority setting insidethe IP7WW-8IPLD-C1 phones, then you may beforced to use DHCP for them.
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