RSVP Per Flow Limit and RSVP Call Rate
When configuring RSVP, the “ip rsvp bandwidth (bandwidth) [per flow limit]” command there is an optional parameter which limits the per flow bandwidth of individual RSVP reservation. When using Call Admission Control for VoIP, that is the rate of an individual voice call in one direction, but the behavior is not as clear cut as it seems.
This feature was added to prevent other application from reserving all of interface’s reservable bandwidth. If a video application uses RSVP within the network, it can take up majority of the reservation with a single video call. For example if the smallest interface only has 500 kbps RSVP bandwidth and a video conference request all 500 kbps, no voice calls will be allowed through. Per flow limit wouldn’t allow one reservation to request all of the bandwidth. There are other methods to limit other application’s ability to reserve bandwidth with a more granular method using a RSVP local policy.
The actual VoIP rate is depended on many factors such as codec, sampling rate and header overhead.[1] The most common codec is either G.711 or G.729. For the G.711 codec, the IP rate is 80 Continue reading