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Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 5)
Q-SYS Quantum Level 1 Training (Online) : Q-SYS Networking II
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CERTIFICATION STEPS COMPLETED
Certification Steps Completed
1 ) Best Practices in Gain Structure
21m 15s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 1)
5m 10s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 2)
5m 7s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 3)
5m 10s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 4)
5m 48s
Assessment
2 ) AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System
28m 8s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 1)
6m 13s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 2)
6m 25s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 3)
5m 26s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 4)
10m 4s
Assessment
3 ) Advanced Digital Video
27m 23s
Advanced Digital Video (Part 1)
5m 17s
Advanced Digital Video (Part 2)
9m 56s
Advanced Digital Video Part 3)
5m 6s
Advanced Digital Video (Part 4)
7m 4s
Assessment
4 ) VOIP Telephony
24m 23s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 1)
7m 19s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 2)
7m 2s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 3)
6m 43s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 4)
3m 19s
Assessment
5 ) Analog Telephony (POTS)
21m 32s
Analog Telephony (Part 1)
8m 16s
Analog Telephony (Part 2)
7m 3s
Analog Telephony (Part 3)
6m 13s
Assessment
6 ) Q-SYS Networking I
40m 20s
Quantum Networking (Part 1)
9m 13s
Quantum Networking (Part 2)
7m 2s
Quantum Networking (Part 3)
10m 23s
Quantum Networking (Part 4)
6m 10s
Quantum Networking (Part 5)
7m 32s
Assessment
7 ) Introduction to Q-SYS Control
34m 56s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 1)
6m 23s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 2)
4m 25s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 3)
10m 45s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 4)
6m 40s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 5)
6m 43s
Assessment
8 ) Q-SYS Networking II
46m 6s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 1)
7m 48s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 2)
4m 6s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 3)
8m 20s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 4)
9m 51s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 5)
8m 49s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 6)
7m 12s
Assessment
9 ) SIP Telephony
46m 22s
Basic SIP Telephony
19m 56s
Advanced SIP Features
9m 14s
SIP Registration with Avaya
7m 7s
Advanced SIP Registration for CUCM
5m 31s
SIP Trunking with CUCM
4m 34s
Assessment
10 ) Control Troubleshooting
9m 52s
Troubleshooting Control Programming
9m 52s
Assessment
Video Transcript
Downloads and Links
Video Transcript
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 5)
8m 49s
00:08
To begin that conversation of network troubleshooting,
00:11
this quote from Albert Einstein lays out a very important idea.
00:15
Network-related problems can seem very difficult and
00:19
sometimes it’s tempting to just start trying things and hope for the best.
00:22
It’s not usually a very fruitful, as if you don’t understand the root cause
00:26
you probably won’t be completely successful.
00:28
Before you act, you’ll want to look at the information you can gather
00:32
from various points of the system to truly define the problem.
00:36
Once you know that, you can devise the lowest-impact solution.
00:39
When troubleshooting these kinds of problems, we’re typically dealing with one of three common problems.
00:45
The first layer is that of basic connectivity…making sure we have the devices all connected the correct way,
00:51
they’re all configured correctly and they’re all running properly.
00:54
After all those challenges are overcome, the next layer tend to be related to how the devices are discovered,
01:01
how they interact with each other and how we interact with them.
01:04
Once all those issues are sorted out, the final layer involves
01:08
the finer detail of troubleshooting media streaming issues.
01:11
At this layer, we’re looking at network performance issues and proper prioritization of packets.
01:17
In troubleshooting basic connectivity problems, Q-SYS configurator is our first stop.
01:22
Does the device in question show up? If it doesn’t show up at all, then check the switch connections?
01:27
Does the device respond to touch of the front panel buttons?
01:31
If not, it may indicate a hardware problem.
01:33
If you know the device is running and you know its IP address,
01:37
you might try a simple PING to make sure you have point to point connectivity to that device.
01:42
If that is a success, try adding a hardlink to the device in Q-SYS designer.
01:46
If it suddenly appears, that could indicate that multicast traffic is being blocked on the network.
01:53
If it does show up, does it do so in green or red?
01:56
Red typically indicates a device is configured for another IP subnet,
02:01
either the computer or the Q-SYS device is configured incorrectly.
02:05
Remember that the connection from the computer running Q-SYS Configurator is one pathway,
02:10
while the connection from a Core running the system to a peripheral is different.
02:15
In some cases you’ll see the device as ‘green’ in configurator,
02:18
but see a report of device ‘missing’ when connected to the running system in Q-SYS Designer Software.
02:24
Another indicator of this is that the ‘design’ is shown as ‘idle’ on that peripheral in the configurator view.
02:29
That tells you that the Core can’t find that peripheral to get it configured.
02:33
There are a few different potential problems:
02:36
One - maybe the peripheral could have the wrong IP configuration and be on a different subnet than the Core.
02:42
Two - The peripheral could have a name that doesn’t match the Q-SYS inventory item in the design file.
02:47
Or three - Multicast discovery packets may not be getting from the Core
02:52
to the network segment the peripheral is on.
02:54
The point here is to remember that there are multicast and unicast elements at play,
02:59
so try to separate those two elements when troubleshooting.
03:02
It’ll help you find solutions much faster.
03:05
Sometimes you might be looking to Q-SYS eventlogs to lead you to understand a problem
03:10
but there seems to be too much information to grasp.
03:13
In older event viewers, you can use Control – F to ‘find’ the items you’re interested in very quickly.
03:19
In Core Manager there’s the ‘search messages’ field with the same functionality.
03:24
This can help you quickly when the other filters aren’t showing you the entries you’d like to see.
03:29
Remember the built in PING, ARP and TRACE route commands
03:34
can give you a quick assessment of network connectivity.
03:36
A PING helps you make sure something is at the IP address you expect the device to respond to.
03:41
If you have a response but something still doesn’t seem right,
03:44
you might try the ARP command to make sure the correct MAC address is associated with that IP.
03:50
If not, you know right away you have a conflict on the network.
03:54
The trace route command can help find problems with routed paths like those to hosted SIP providers.
04:00
One of the most powerful troubleshooting tools in Q-SYS in regard to the network
04:05
is the ability to run a PCAP capture directly on the Core or peripheral itself.
04:11
This isn’t going to help you troubleshoot Q-LAN or other streaming protocols,
04:15
but it's very useful for troubleshooting problems with a Q-SYS softphone,
04:19
external control issues and a number of other things.
04:22
Remember that Q-SYS peripherals don’t have a lot of memory to store large PCAP files, so plan accordingly.
04:28
When it comes time to download and analyze these files,
04:31
remember you’ll need the Wireshark program to see and understand them.
04:35
Once our devices are properly configured and behaving on the network,
04:39
we often uncover other unicast and multicast issues related more to switch configuration.
04:45
As mentioned in other lectures, sometimes it’s to our advantage
04:49
to create multiple virtual networks on the same set of switches.
04:53
For example, we might want Q-SYS and Q-LAN to have a dedicated VLAN
04:57
on a corporate network to separate it from the other common data network.
05:01
When this configuration is applied, it can add a layer of complication to troubleshooting.
05:06
One network port may be a part of one VLAN while the very next is on a different one.
05:12
Plugging the Q-SYS device into the wrong one could be placing it on the wrong network.
05:16
When there are connection problems,
05:18
you might have to check the port configuration to make sure that it’s assigned to the correct VLAN.
05:24
Network switches organize VLANs using 802.1q tags,
05:29
which are numbers embedded into network packets so they know what packet should ride on which VLAN.
05:35
Sometimes packets leave the switch with those tags still in place,
05:39
in which case it seems like Q-SYS didn’t get the message at all.
05:42
Q-SYS does not process VLAN tagged packets.
05:46
We want to make sure that packets are configured as ‘untagged’ on egress in the switch configuration for Q-SYS.
05:52
We also want to make sure the switch is applying the tag from a Q-SYS port into the infrastructure,
05:57
as Q-SYS doesn’t do that either.
05:59
When multiple VLANs must cross a link between switches, the group of VLANs is called a trunk.
06:05
Another common issue when all the devices are missing on another switch
06:09
is that the appropriate VLAN wasn’t trunked from switch to switch.
06:13
This is another aspect that can only be found by looking at the configuration of the switches themselves.
06:19
One other important thing to remember is that a 1Gb link
06:23
between switches can carry only a maximum of 1Gb combined for ALL VLANs.
06:29
Very often one designer is working on the equipment for one VLAN…maybe video, while another is
06:34
working on the audio VLAN thinking they have the entire uplink speed to work with.
06:39
That is not true.
06:40
This can especially become a choke point for networks
06:43
that must carry 4K video streams over uplinks between switches.
06:48
If we see Q-SYS devices disappearing on the network or complete loss of network connectivity
06:53
to everything on the network, it may be related to IGMP problems on the switch.
06:58
This is especially true for networks carrying a lot of multicast video data.
07:03
Have you ever connected two high-bandwidth multicast video encoders onto a network without IGMP filtering?
07:09
The result is often a complete flood of the network.
07:13
Connectivity is lost to everything until you unplug an encoder.
07:17
Remember that a few things must be true to make IGMP snooping and filtering functionality work properly.
07:24
There must be one and ONLY one IGMP querier on each network or VLAN requiring IGMP functionality.
07:31
If there isn’t one, devices will drop off after a time when the IGMP tables are periodically cleared in the switch.
07:38
If there are multiples, the tables in each switch might become incorrect,
07:43
which can cause the network to act unpredictably.
07:45
Remember also that IGMP filtering must often be enabled in a separate step of switch configuration.
07:52
If that step isn’t taken, ports can still be saturated by multicast traffic.
07:58
When you’re not sure if you’re dealing with an IGMP related issue it’s often good to take these steps.
08:03
Temporarily unplug high-bandwidth devices and see if the network recovers.
08:08
If so, check the IGMP configuration immediately.
08:12
If that step doesn’t help, try disabling IGMP to see if the remaining devices start to react more predictably.
08:19
This is often proof that either there isn’t a querier on the network in question.
08:24
If you know where to look in the switch configuration, you can often see
08:27
the table of multicast groups and the ports assigned to them.
08:30
If all are ports our assigned to every group, then multicast filtering isn’t working.
08:35
You’ll need to check that part of the configuration.
08:38
Finally, if nothing else works, you can take a PCAP capture at a Q-SYS device
08:43
and look for more advanced problems with IGMP configuration.
Downloads and Links
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 5)
8m 49s
Click here to download the Networking II (Part 5) video
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