Appendix A: Linksys Ata Routing Field Reference; Appendix B: Linksys Ata Voice Field Reference; Sip Proxy Redundancy; Other Linksys Ata Software Features - Linksys RTP300 - Broadband Router With 2 Phone Ports Administration Manual

User guide
Hide thumbs Also See for RTP300 - Broadband Router With 2 Phone Ports:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Introducing Linksys Analog Telephone Adapters

SIP Proxy Redundancy

In typical commercial IP Telephony deployments, all calls are established through a SIP proxy
server. An average SIP proxy server may handle thousands of subscribers. It is important that a
backup server be available so that an active server can be temporarily switched out for
maintenance. The Linksys ATA device supports the use of backup SIP proxy servers (via DNS
SRV) so that service disruption should be nearly eliminated.
A relatively simple way to support proxy redundancy is to configure your DNS server with a list
of SIP proxy addresses. The Linksys ATA device can be instructed to contact a SIP proxy server in
a domain named in the SIP message. The Linksys ATA device consults the DNS server to get a
list of hosts in the given domain that provides SIP services. If an entry exists, the DNS server
returns an SRV record that contains a list of SIP proxy servers for the domain, with their host
names, priority, listening ports, and so on. The Linksys ATA device tries to contact the list of
hosts in the order of their stated priority.
If the Linksys ATA device is currently using a lower priority proxy server, it periodically probes
the higher priority proxy to see whether it is back on line, and switches back to the higher
priority proxy when possible. SIP Proxy Redundancy is configured in the Line and PSTN Line
tabs in the Administration Web Server. See

Other Linksys ATA Software Features

The following table summarizes other features provided by Linksys ATA devices.
Feature
Description
Streaming Audio Server See
T.38 Fax Relay
See
Silence Suppression
See
Modem and Fax Pass-
Through
Adaptive Jitter Buffer
The Linksys ATA device can buffer incoming voice packets to minimize out-
of-order packet arrival. This process is known as jitter buffering. The jitter
buffer size proactively adjusts or adapts in size, depending on changing
network conditions.
The Linksys ATA device has a Network Jitter Level control setting for each line
of service. The jitter level determines how aggressively the Linksys ATA
device tries to shrink the jitter buffer over time to achieve a lower overall
delay. If the jitter level is higher, it shrinks more gradually. If jitter level is
lower, it shrinks more quickly.
Adaptive Jitter Buffer is configured in the Line and PSTN Line tabs. See
"Linksys ATA Voice Field Reference, " on page 94
Linksys ATA Administration Guide
"Linksys ATA Routing Field Reference, " on page 86
"Configuring a Streaming Audio Server, " on page
"Using a FAX Machine (SPA2102, SPA3102 or SPA8000), " on page
"Silence Suppression and Comfort Noise Generation, " on page
Modem pass-through mode can be triggered only by predialing the
number set in the Modem Line Toggle Code. (Set in the Regional tab.)
FAX pass-through mode is triggered by a CED/CNG tone or an NSE event.
Echo canceller is automatically disabled for Modem pass-through mode.
Echo canceller is disabled for FAX pass-through if the parameter FAX
Disable ECAN (Line 1 or 2 tab) is set to "yes" for that line (in that case FAX
pass-through is the same as Modem pass-through).
Call waiting and silence suppression is automatically disabled for both
FAX and Modem pass-through. In addition, out-of-band DTMF Tx is
disabled during modem or fax pass-through.
ATA Software Features
.
71.
45.
48.
.
23

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents