Cisco 7931G Administration Guide - Page 227

Using Voice Quality Metrics

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Chapter 9 Troubleshooting and Maintenance Monitoring the Voice Quality of Calls Using Voice Quality Metrics To use the metrics for monitoring voice quality, note the typical scores under normal conditions of zero packet loss, and use the metrics as a baseline for comparison. It is important to distinguish significant changes from random changes in metrics. Significant changes are scores that change about 0.2 MOS or greater and persist in calls that last longer than 30 seconds. Conceal Ratio changes should indicate greater than 3 percent frame loss. MOS LQK scores can vary based on the codec that the Cisco Unified IP Phone uses. The following codecs provide these maximum MOS LQK scores under normal conditions with zero frame loss: • G.711 codec gives 4.5 score • G.729A/ AB gives 3.8 score • G.728/iLBC gives 3.9 score Note • CVTQ does not support wideband (7 kHz) speech codecs, as ITU has not defined the extension of the technique to wideband. Therefore, MOS scores that correspond to G.711 performance are reported for G.722 calls to allow basic quality monitoring, rather than not reporting an MOS score. • Reporting G.711-scale MOS scores for wideband calls through the use of CVTQ allows basic quality classifications to be indicated as good/normal or bad/abnormal. Calls with high scores (approximately 4.5) indicate high quality/low packet loss, and lower scores (approximately 3.5) indicate low quality/high packet loss. • Unlike MOS, the Conceal Ratio and Concealed Seconds metrics remain valid and useful for both wideband and narrowband calls. A Conceal Ratio of zero indicates that the IP network is delivering frames and packets on time with no loss. Cisco Unified IP Phone 7931G Administration Guide for Cisco Unified Communications Manager 6.0 OL-12457-01 9-23

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Cisco Unified IP Phone 7931G Administration Guide for Cisco Unified Communications Manager 6.0
OL-12457-01
Chapter 9
Troubleshooting and Maintenance
Monitoring the Voice Quality of Calls
Using Voice Quality Metrics
To use the metrics for monitoring voice quality, note the typical scores under
normal conditions of zero packet loss, and use the metrics as a baseline for
comparison.
It is important to distinguish significant changes from random changes in metrics.
Significant changes are scores that change about 0.2 MOS or greater and persist
in calls that last longer than 30 seconds. Conceal Ratio changes should indicate
greater than 3 percent frame loss.
MOS LQK scores can vary based on the codec that the Cisco Unified IP Phone
uses. The following codecs provide these maximum MOS LQK scores under
normal conditions with zero frame loss:
G.711 codec gives 4.5 score
G.729A/ AB gives 3.8 score
G.728/iLBC gives 3.9 score
Note
CVTQ does not support wideband (7 kHz) speech codecs, as ITU has not
defined the extension of the technique to wideband. Therefore, MOS scores
that correspond to G.711 performance are reported for G.722 calls to allow
basic quality monitoring, rather than not reporting an MOS score.
Reporting G.711-scale MOS scores for wideband calls through the use of CVTQ
allows basic quality classifications to be indicated as good/normal or
bad/abnormal. Calls with high scores (approximately 4.5) indicate high
quality/low packet loss, and lower scores (approximately 3.5) indicate low
quality/high packet loss.
Unlike MOS, the Conceal Ratio and Concealed Seconds metrics remain valid
and useful for both wideband and narrowband calls.
A Conceal Ratio of zero indicates that the IP network is delivering frames and
packets on time with no loss.