Configuring Sbc Routing Policy Rules - AudioCodes Mediant 500L User Manual

Enterprise session border controller (e-sbc) & media gateway
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35.4

Configuring SBC Routing Policy Rules

The Routing Policies table lets you configure up to 41 Routing Policy rules. A Routing
Policy determines the routing and manipulation (inbound and outbound) rules per SRD in a
multiple SRD configuration topology. The Routing Policy also configures the following:
Enables Least Cost Routing (LCR), and configures default call cost (highest or lowest)
and average call duration for routing rules that are not assigned LCR Cost Groups.
The default call cost determines whether matched routing rules that are not assigned
Cost Groups are considered as a higher or lower cost route compared to other
matching routing rules that are assigned Cost Groups. If you disable LCR, the device
ignores the Cost Groups assigned to the routing rules in the IP-to-IP Routing table.
Assigns LDAP servers (LDAP Server Group) for LDAP-based routing. IP-to-IP routing
rules configured for LDAP or CSR (Call Setup Rules) queries use the LDAP server(s)
that is assigned to the routing rule's associated Routing Policy. You can configure a
Routing Policy per SRD or alternatively, configure a single Routing Policy that is
shared between all SRDs.
The implementation of Routing Policies is intended for the following deployments only:
Deployments requiring LCR and/or LDAP-based routing.
Multi-tenant deployments that require multiple, logical routing tables where each
tenant has its own dedicated ("separated") routing (and manipulation) table. In such
scenarios, each SRD (tenant) is configured as an Isolated SRD and assigned its own
unique Routing Policy, implementing an almost isolated, non-bleeding routing
configuration topology.
For all other deployment scenarios, the Routing Policy is irrelevant and the handling of the
configuration entity is not required as a default Routing Policy ("Default_SBCRoutingPolicy"
at Index 0) is provided. When only one Routing Policy is required, the device automatically
associates the default Routing Policy with newly added configuration entities that can be
associated with the Routing Policy (as mentioned later in this section, except for
Classification rules). This facilitates configuration, eliminating the need to handle the
Routing Policy configuration entity (except if you need to enable LCR and/or assign an
LDAP server to the Routing Policy). In such a setup, where only one Routing Policy is
used, single routing and manipulation tables are employed for all SRDs.
Note:
(tenants), unless deployment requires otherwise (i.e., a dedicated Routing Policy per
SRD).
Once configured, you need to associate the Routing Policy with an SRD(s) in the SRDs
table. To determine the routing and manipulation rules for the SRD, you need to assign the
Version 7.2
Address Incomplete; [485] Ambiguous; [486] Busy; [487] Request
Terminated; [488] Not Acceptable Here; [491] Request Pending; [493]
Undecipherable; [500] Internal Error; [501] Not Implemented; [502] Bad
Gateway; [503] Service Unavailable; [504] Server Timeout; [505]
Version Not Supported; [513] Message Too Large; [600] Busy
Everywhere; [603] Decline; [604] Does Not Exist Anywhere; [606] Not
Acceptable; [805] Admission Failure; [806] Media Limits Exceeded;
[818] Signalling Limits Exceeded.
If possible, it is recommended to use only one Routing Policy for all SRDs
Description
705
Mediant 500L Gateway & E-SBC
35. Routing SBC

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