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Prerequisites for Voice VLANs
The following are the prerequisites for voice VLANs:
Voice VLAN configuration is only supported on switch access ports; voice VLAN configuration is not supported on trunk ports.
Note
Trunk ports can carry any number of voice VLANs, similar to regular VLANs. The configuration of voice VLANs is not supported on trunk ports.
Before you enable voice VLAN, enable QoS on the switch by entering the trust device cisco-phone interface configuration command. If you use the auto QoS feature, these settings are automatically configured.
You must enable CDP on the switch port connected to the Cisco IP Phone to send the configuration to the phone. (CDP is globally enabled by default on all switch interfaces.)
Restrictions for Voice VLANs
You cannot configure static secure MAC addresses in the voice VLAN.
Information About Voice VLAN
Voice VLANs
The voice VLAN feature enables access ports to carry IP voice traffic from an IP phone. When the switch is connected to a Cisco 7960 IP Phone, the phone sends voice traffic with Layer 3 IP precedence and Layer 2 class of service (CoS) values, which are both set to 5 by default. Because the sound quality of an IP phone call can deteriorate if the data is unevenly sent, the switch supports quality of service (QoS) based on IEEE 802.1p CoS. QoS uses classification and scheduling to send network traffic from the switch in a predictable manner.
The Cisco 7960 IP Phone is a configurable device, and you can configure it to forward traffic with an IEEE 802.1p priority. You can configure the switch to trust or override the traffic priority assigned by a Cisco IP Phone.
Figure 1. Cisco 7960 IP Phone Connected to aSwitch.
This network configuration is one way to connect a Cisco 7960 IP Phone.
The Cisco IP Phone contains an integrated three-port 10/100 switch. The ports provide dedicated connections to these devices:
Port 1 connects to the switch or other voice-over-IP (VoIP) device.
Port 2 is an internal 10/100 interface that carries the IP phone traffic.
Port 3 (access port) connects to a PC or other device.
Cisco IP Phone Voice Traffic
You can configure an access port with an attached Cisco IP Phone to use one VLAN for voice traffic and another VLAN for data traffic from a device attached to the phone. You can configure access ports on the switch to send Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) packets that instruct an attached phone to send voice traffic to the switch in any of these ways:
In the voice VLAN tagged with a Layer 2 CoS priority value
In the access VLAN tagged with a Layer 2 CoS priority value
In the access VLAN, untagged (no Layer 2 CoS priority value)
Note
In all configurations, the voice traffic carries a Layer 3 IP precedence value (the default is 5 for voice traffic and 3 for voice control traffic).
The switch can also process tagged data traffic (traffic in IEEE 802.1Q or IEEE 802.1p frame types) from the device attached to the access port on the Cisco IP Phone. You can configure Layer 2 access ports on the switch to send CDP packets that instruct the attached phone to configure the phone access port in one of these modes:
In trusted mode, all traffic received through the access port on the Cisco IP Phone passes through the phone unchanged.
In untrusted mode, all traffic in IEEE 802.1Q or IEEE 802.1p frames received through the access port on the Cisco IP Phone receive a configured Layer 2 CoS value. The default Layer 2 CoS value is 0. Untrusted mode is the default.
Note
Untagged traffic from the device attached to the Cisco IP Phone passes through the phone unchanged, regardless of the trust state of the access port on the phone.
Because a Cisco 7960 IP Phone also supports a connection to a PC or other device, a port connecting the switch to a Cisco IP Phone can carry mixed traffic. You can configure a port to decide how the Cisco IP Phone carries voice traffic and data traffic.
The voice VLAN should be present and active on the switch for the IP phone to correctly communicate on the voice VLAN. Use the show vlan privileged EXEC command to see if the VLAN is present (listed in the display). If the VLAN is not listed, create the voice VLAN.
The Power over Ethernet (PoE) switches are capable of automatically providing power to Cisco pre-standard and IEEE 802.3af-compliant powered devices if they are not being powered by an AC power source.
The Port Fast feature is automatically enabled when voice VLAN is configured. When you disable voice VLAN, the Port Fast feature is not automatically disabled.
If the Cisco IP Phone and a device attached to the phone are in the same VLAN, they must be in the same IP subnet. These conditions indicate that they are in the same VLAN:
They both use IEEE 802.1p or untagged frames.
The Cisco IP Phone uses IEEE 802.1p frames, and the device uses untagged frames.
The Cisco IP Phone uses untagged frames, and the device uses IEEE 802.1p frames.
The Cisco IP Phone uses IEEE 802.1Q frames, and the voice VLAN is the same as the access VLAN.
The Cisco IP Phone and a device attached to the phone cannot communicate if they are in the same VLAN and subnet but use different frame types because traffic in the same subnet is not routed (routing would eliminate the frame type difference).
Voice VLAN ports can also be these port types:
Dynamic access port.
IEEE 802.1x authenticated port.
Note
If you enable IEEE 802.1x on an access port on which a voice VLAN is configured and to which a Cisco IP Phone is connected, the phone loses connectivity to the switch for up to 30 seconds.
Protected port.
A source or destination port for a SPAN or RSPAN session.
Secure port.
Note
When you enable port security on an interface that is also configured with a voice VLAN, you must set the maximum allowed secure addresses on the port to two plus the maximum number of secure addresses allowed on the access VLAN. When the port is connected to a Cisco IP Phone, the phone requires up to two MAC addresses. The phone address is learned on the voice VLAN and might also be learned on the access VLAN. Connecting a PC to the phone requires additional MAC addresses.
How to Configure Voice VLAN
Configuring Cisco IP Phone Voice Traffic
(CLI)
You
can configure a port connected to the Cisco IP Phone to send CDP packets to the
phone to configure the way in which the phone sends voice traffic. The phone
can carry voice traffic in IEEE 802.1Q frames for a specified voice VLAN with a
Layer 2 CoS value. It can use IEEE 802.1p priority tagging to give voice
traffic a higher priority and forward all voice traffic through the native
(access) VLAN. The Cisco IP Phone can also send untagged voice traffic or use
its own configuration to send voice traffic in the access VLAN. In all
configurations, the voice traffic carries a Layer 3 IP precedence value (the
default is 5).
vlan-id—Configures the phone to forward all voice
traffic through the specified VLAN. By default, the Cisco IP Phone forwards the
voice traffic with an IEEE 802.1Q priority of 5. Valid VLAN IDs are 1 to 4094.
dot1p—Configures the
switch to accept voice and data IEEE 802.1p
priority frames tagged with VLAN ID 0 (the native VLAN). By default, the
switch drops all voice and data traffic
tagged with VLAN 0. If configured for 802.1p the Cisco IP Phone forwards the
traffic with an IEEE 802.1p priority of 5.
none—Allows the phone to use its own configuration
to send untagged voice traffic.
untagged—Configures the phone to send untagged
voice traffic.
Step 5
end
Example:
Switch(config-if)# end
Returns to
privileged EXEC mode.
Step 6
Use one of the
following:
show interfacesinterface-idswitchport
show running-config
interfaceinterface-id
Example:
Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/1 switchport
or
Switch# show running-config interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
Verifies your
voice VLAN entries or your QoS and voice VLAN entries.
Step 7
copy
running-config startup-config
Example:
Switch# copy running-config startup-config
(Optional) Saves
your entries in the configuration file.
Configuring the Priority of Incoming Data Frames
(CLI)
You
can connect a PC or other data device to a Cisco IP Phone port. To process
tagged data traffic (in IEEE 802.1Q or IEEE 802.1p frames), you can configure
the
switch to send CDP packets to instruct the
phone how to send data packets from the device attached to the access port on
the Cisco IP Phone. The PC can generate packets with an assigned CoS value. You
can configure the phone to not change (trust) or to override (not trust) the
priority of frames arriving on the phone port from connected devices.
Follow these steps to set the
priority of data traffic received from the non-voice port on the Cisco IP
Phone:
SUMMARY STEPS
1.configureterminal
2.interfaceinterface-id
3.switchport priority
extend {cosvalue |
trust}
4.end
5.show
interfacesinterface-idswitchport
6.copy
running-config startup-config
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action
Purpose
Step 1
configureterminal
Example:
Switch# configure terminal
Enters the global configuration mode.
Step 2
interfaceinterface-id
Example:
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
Specifies the
interface connected to the Cisco IP Phone, and enters interface configuration
mode.
Sets the priority
of data traffic received from the Cisco IP Phone access port:
cosvalue—Configures the phone to override the
priority received from the PC or the attached device with the specified CoS
value. The value is a number from 0 to 7, with 7 as the highest priority. The
default priority is
cos 0.
trust—Configures the phone access port to trust
the priority received from the PC or the attached device.
Step 4
end
Example:
Switch(config-if)# end
Returns to
privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5
show
interfacesinterface-idswitchport
Example:
Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/1 switchport
Verifies your
entries.
Step 6
copy
running-config startup-config
Example:
Switch# copy running-config startup-config
(Optional) Saves
your entries in the configuration file.
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