Is it possible for you to get the Fortigate out of the picture
to test. We have seen issues when running VoIP through those. From:
wireshark-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:wireshark-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Mark Jeffers In saying ARP caching could be
a factor, are you saying ARP caching could be causing the problem or it could
offer some relief? On Thu, Jun 18, 2009 at 5:03 PM, Bob Carlson <bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: This is almost certainly a
network issue. Given the intermittent nature, you might have a circular path in
the LAN. ARP caching could be a factor. If there’s a firewall involved look
there too. Cheers, Bob Eugene, OR - Tucson, AZ From: wireshark-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:wireshark-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Mark Jeffers We've been having a terrible time with a new VoIP system on our network. The phone system is manufactured by Allworx - it is tied to the outside
world with a standard PRI, so the only IP portion of calls takes place
between our LAN phone server and the IP extensions. Several of the extensions are having packet loss problems resulting in
echoes, "static", dropped audio, etc. The problems are
intermittent and jump around to different phones on the network. The switches we are using are Dell 3548P PowerConnects. I've
configure the network to use two VLANs - one for phone, one for everything else
- and used VLAN tagging and CoS to prioritize VoIP traffic.
I've actually combed through the configs with a Dell engineer, and we're
good there. So I'm relatively new to both VoIP and hardcore packet analysis, but I found
an excellent article on troubleshooting VoIP using wireshark and followed
instructions. I mirrored one of the Trunk ports on the switch to my laptop, configured
Wireshark to filter out all but UDP packets and let it run for about an
hour. The results are horrible... I've attached screenshot images so you guys
might be able to help me figure this out. When I ran an RTP Stream analysis, there were blocks of sessions where several
of them had "Max Delta" in the thousands (some in the 9000s),
resulting in 90+% packet loss! See Image1,jpg I drilled down into one of the streams to see a bunch of "Wrong
Sequence nr" messages - See Image2.jpg I went to VoIP Calls under the statistics menu, and pulled up the same call
shown in Image2 - looked fine to me, but I'm a noob - See Image3.jpg I'm at a loss here. Obviously severe network issues, or the
Phone Switch is bad. I've tried everything I can think of to no
avail. Anybody have any ideas of what might be wrong, or what further
information I should gather to help pinpoint the issue? I'm going
nuts here and any help would be greatly, greatly appreciated. :) Cheers, Mark
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