Configuring Ip Groups - AudioCodes E-SBC User Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for E-SBC:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

CHAPTER 18    Core Entities

Configuring IP Groups

The IP Groups table lets you configure up to 80 IP Groups. An IP Group represents a SIP entity in
the network with which the device communicates. This can be a server (e.g., IP PBX or ITSP) or a
group of users (e.g., LAN IP phones). For servers, the address of the IP Group is typically defined
by associating it with a Proxy Set (see
You can use IP Groups for the following:
( SBC Application ) Classification of incoming SIP dialog-initiating requests (e.g., INVITE
messages) to IP Groups based on Proxy Set. If the source address of the incoming SIP dialog
is defined for a Proxy Set, the assigns ("bonds") the SIP dialog to the IP Group associated with
the Proxy Set. The feature is configured using the IP Groups table's 'Classify by Proxy Set'
parameter. For more information and recommended security guidelines, see the parameter's
description, later in this section.
( SBC Application ) Classification of incoming SIP dialog-initiating requests (e.g., INVITE
messages) to IP Groups based on source tags of incoming dialog. Tag-based classification
occurs only if Classification based on user registration and on Proxy Sets fail. For more
information, see
(SBC Application) Representing the source and destination of the call in IP-to-IP Routing rules
(see
Configuring SBC IP-to-IP Routing
SIP dialog registration and authentication (digest user/password) of specific IP Groups (Served
IP Group, e.g., corporate IP-PBX) with other IP Groups (Serving IP Group, e.g., ITSP). This is
configured in the Accounts table (see
(Gateway Application) Call routing rules:
Tel-to-IP calls: The IP Group is used as the destination of the outgoing IP call and is used
in Tel-to-IP call routing rules (see
IP-to-Tel calls: The IP Group identifies the source of the IP call and is used in IP-to-Tel call
routing rules (see
Number manipulation: The IP Group can be associated with a number manipulation rule
(see
Included in routing decisions by a third-party routing server. If deemed necessary for routing,
the routing server can even create an IP Group. For more information, see
Party Routing
You can also apply the device's Quality of Experience feature to IP Groups:
Quality of Experience Profile: Call quality monitoring based on thresholds for voice metrics
(e.g., MOS) can be applied per IP Group. For example, if MOS is considered poor, calls
belonging to this IP Group can be rejected. To configure Quality of Experience Profiles, see
Configuring Quality of Experience
Bandwidth Profile: Bandwidth utilization thresholds can be applied per IP Group. For
example, if bandwidth thresholds are crossed, the device can reject any new calls on this IP
Group. To configure Bandwidth Profiles, see
The following procedure describes how to configure IP Groups through the Web interface. You can
also configure it through ini file [IPGroup] or CLI (configure voip > ip-group).
Configuring Classification Based on Tags
Configuring IP-to-Tel Routing
Configuring Number Manipulation
Server.
For the Gateway application, IP Group #0 cannot be associated with Proxy Set #0.
If you delete an IP Group or modify the 'Type' or 'SRD' parameters, the device
immediately terminates currently active calls that are associated with the IP Group.
In addition, all users belonging to the IP Group are removed from the device's users
database.
Mediant 1000 Gateway & E-SBC | User's Manual
Configuring Proxy
Sets).
Rules).
Configuring Registration
Configuring Tel-to-IP Routing
Rules).
Tables).
Profiles.
Configuring Bandwidth
- 344 -
on page 770.
Accounts).
Rules).
Centralized Third-
Profiles.

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Mediant 1000b

Table of Contents