Avaya 4600 Manuale Utente

Pagina di 178
Overview of Voice over IP (VoIP)
Issue 4 August 2006
31
 
NAT
A Network Address Translation (NAT) is an application that can be administered between your 
network and the Internet. The NAT translates network layer IP addresses so your local intranet 
IP addresses can duplicate global, Internet addresses. A detailed discussion of NAT is beyond 
the scope of this document. Note that NAT use can lead to problems that affect the consistency 
of addressing throughout your network. In Release 1.6 and earlier releases of the 4600 Series 
IP Telephones, NAT is not recommended for networks handling IP-based telephony traffic. As 
of Release 1.7, all 4600 Series H.323 IP Telephones support NAT interworking. Therefore, no 
problems exist with NAT and these H.323 IP telephones. Note that support for NAT does not 
imply support for Network Address Port Translation (NAPT). Specifically, the H.323 IP 
telephones do not support communication to the PBX through any NAPT device. SIP IP 
telephones do not support NAT. 
NAT requires specific administration on the media server. The capability to have a direct Avaya 
IP Telephone-to-Avaya IP Telephone call with NAT, also called “NAT shuffling,” requires Avaya 
Communication Manager Release 1.3 software. See the Administration for Network 
Connectivity 
document listed in 
QoS
Quality of Service (QoS) is a term covering several initiatives to maximize the voice quality 
heard at both ends of a call that originates or terminates on an IP-based telephone. These 
initiatives include various prioritization schemes to offer voice packets a larger or prioritized 
share of network resources. These schemes include standards such as:
IEEE’s 802.1D and 802.1Q, 
the Internet Engineering Task Force’s (IETF’s) “Differentiated Services,”
RTP Control Protocol (RTCP), 
Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP), and
port-based priority schemes such as UDP port selection. 
Documentation for your LAN equipment details the extent to which your network can support 
any or all of these initiatives. See 
on page 53, for some implications of 
QoS for the 4600 Series IP Telephones.
As of Release 1.7, the 4620, 4630, and 4630SW IP Telephones provided network audio quality 
information to the end user. This network audio quality information might be useful to the LAN 
Administrator. As of Release 1.8, all 4600 Series IP Telephones provide some level of detail 
about network audio quality. For specific information, see