Performance studies of VoIP over Ethernet LANs

Date
2008
Authors
Wu, Di
Supervisor
Sarkar, Nurul
Item type
Thesis
Degree name
Master of Computer and Information Sciences
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Auckland University of Technology
Abstract

Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) is a rapidly growing technology that enables transport of voice over data networks such as Ethernet local area networks (LANs). This growth is due to the integration of voice and data traffic (telecommunication convergence) over the existing networking infrastructure, low cost, and improved network management offered by the technology.

This research investigates the performance of VoIP traffic characteristics over Ethernet LANs. In the investigation, the impact of increasing the number of VoIP clients, voice codec schemes, and traffic distribution on system performance is considered. Through various simulation experiments under realistic networking scenarios, such as small offices home offices (SOHO) and campus networks, this study provides an insight into the VoIP performance over Ethernet LANs. The simulation results indicate that all these factors can significantly affect VoIP performance over Ethernet LANs. Under both SOHO and campus network scenarios, increasing the number of VoIP clients, voice packet lengths and different traffic arrival distributions have significant impact on system performance.

Description
Keywords
Network infrastructure , VoIP , Ethernet LANs , Wireless
Source
DOI
Publisher's version
Rights statement