Configuring Sip Local Survival - HP MSR SERIES Configuration Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for MSR SERIES:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Configuring SIP local survival

IP phones have been deployed throughout the headquarters and branches of many enterprises and
organizations. Typically, a voice server is deployed at the headquarters to control calls originated by IP
phones at branches.
The local survival feature enables the voice router at a branch to automatically detect the reachability to
the headquarter voice server, and process calls originated by attached IP phones when the headquarters
voice server is unreachable. The headquarters voice server will take over call services from the branch
voice router when the failure is removed.
Figure 749
shows a typical network diagram for the local survival feature.
Figure 749 Network diagram for the local survival feature
Server
The following describes the local survival feature in detail:
1.
When the WAN link from a branch to the headquarters is normal, all IP phones at the branch are
registered with the headquarters voice server and the headquarters voice server processes calls
originated by branch IP phones.
2.
When the WAN link to the headquarters or the primary server fails:
The branch voice router can accept registrations from its attached IP phones.
The branch voice router ensures the normal call services between its IP phones, between its IP
phones and FXS interfaces, and between its FXS interfaces.
IP phone users at the branch can place or receive PSTN calls through FXS interfaces on the
voice router.
3.
When the WAN link or the primary server recovers, the branch voice router rejects registrations
from IP phones and the headquarters voice server takes over call processing.
Headquarters
Branch A
WAN
Branch B
PSTN
Branch C
728

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents