12-26-2023 07:31 AM
For those SLA probes that support one-way delay statistics, e.g. UDP Jitter, does the one-way delay measurement always require a Cisco endpoint using ip sla responder feature?
Thanks!
12-26-2023 08:05 AM
Hmm, unsure jitter is truly a one way measurement, although it's easy to think it is.
As far as requiring a SLA responder to measure jitter, unsure that's true too. The biggest feature of a SLA responder is it tells the sender how long it took to respond, so that time is NOT attributed to the network.
Anyway, for measuring jitter in just one direction, I can see it being done with packets carrying additional information, which possibly many applications don't provide. If they don't, a sender could figure jitter for the round trip, independent of packet contents, but it wouldn't be able to truly tell either direction's jitter or receiver's impact to measurements.
12-26-2023 08:10 AM
-For udp jitter you need responders
-For icmp jitter the responder is optional' but it recommends to config it.
MHM
12-26-2023 08:14 AM
That didn't actually answer my question
I know that UDP Jitter requires responders, my question does the one-way delay measurement require a Cisco responder (UDP Jitter itself does not itself require a Cisco responder).
12-26-2023 08:16 AM
Yes friend I answer you
Udp jitter (one way or other) need responders.
MHM
12-26-2023 08:18 AM - edited 12-26-2023 08:19 AM
Can you please specify if you mean a Cisco responder, or a standard IP/application device that is listening on UDP Port 7
UDP Jitter for VOIP requires a Cisco responder
UDP Jitter requires any responder (Cisco or not) ---> this is the one I am talking about
12-26-2023 08:19 AM
Wait I think I found something help you' let me check it in lab'
Udp use control to make responder know the udp port it use.
There is a note that this control if disable ypu dont need responder.
But let me check it
MHM
12-26-2023 08:46 AM
control is disable and the responder is not config
12-26-2023 08:49 AM
the control is disable and the responder is only config with ipaddress and port (no ip sla responder)
it work
so you need either
1-enable control and config ip sla responder
or
2-disable control (in sender) and config
#ip sla responder udp-echo ipaddress 100.0.0.2 port 1000
MHM
12-26-2023 09:18 AM
Thanks MHM, but just to bring it back to the original question
For the UDP Jitter SLA, can a non-Cisco responder (which are supported for this SLA) be used to provide one-way delay statistics?
12-26-2023 09:20 AM
For the UDP Jitter SLA, can a non-Cisco responder (which are supported for this SLA)? It support what can you elaborate.
Thanks
MHM
12-26-2023 09:27 AM
One-way delay statistics.
Thanks
12-26-2023 09:36 AM - edited 12-26-2023 10:05 AM
if it non-cisco how is support IP SLA UDP jitter, non-cisco not support to be sender or responder.
and if you use cisco then you need as I mention above.
MHM
12-28-2023 06:26 AM
So what that says is, "you cannot configure an IP SLA responder on a non-Cisco device".
It does not say, you can't use a non-Cisco device as a responder for this probe.
This document says UDP Jitter for VOIP requires Cisco Endpoints, but UDP Jitter does not.
https://www.cisco.com/en/US/technologies/tk648/tk362/tk920/technologies_qas0900aecd8017bd5a.html
Where did that screenshot come from, a book perhaps? It doesn't even mention UDP Jitter for VOIP only UDP Jitter, so I wonder if it is quite old.
12-28-2023 07:21 AM
Friend
I dont have much to say after all above.
Udp jitter need udp port which work with control enable or disable' and both need cisco device to config.
Thanks
Have a nice day
MHM
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