Displaying Bandwidth Information; Object Tracking - Avaya G250 Administration

Media gateways
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Configuring WAN interfaces
activation priority (optional) — If dynamic CAC is activated on more than one
active interface, the G250/G350 reports the bearer bandwidth limit of the interface with the
highest activation priority. You can set the activation priority to any number between 1 and
255. The default activation priority is 50.
The following example sets dynamic CAC on Fast Ethernet interface 10/2, with a bearer
bandwidth limit of 128 and an activation priority of 100:
G350-001# interface FastEthernet 10/2
G350-001(super-if:FastEthernet 10/2)# dynamic-cac 128 100

Displaying bandwidth information

Use the show dynamic-cac command to display bandwidth information about the interface.
The show dynamic-cac command displays the following information:
Current RBBL — The current actual bandwidth available on the interface.
Last event — The amount of time since the most recent update by the CAC process.
Last event BBL — The interface's bandwidth at the time of the most recent update by the
CAC process.
Note:
Dynamic CAC also requires configuration of the Avaya Communication Manager.
Note:
For details, see Administrator Guide for Avaya Communication Manager,
03-300509.

Object tracking

With the Object tracking feature, you can track the state (up/down) of various objects in the
system using keepalive probes, and notify registered applications when the state changes. In
particular, object tracking is used to monitor Interface states and routes states, where routes
can be static routes, the DHCP client default route, or PBR next hops.
The purpose of object tracking is to track the state (up/down) of various objects in the system
using keepalive probes, and notify registered applications when the state changes. Configuring
object tracking is a two-stage operation:
The first stage is to define RTRs (Respond Time Reports), the basic building blocks of
object tracking. RTRs actively monitor the reachability state of remote devices by
generating probes at regular intervals. Each RTR, identified by a unique number, monitors
one remote device, and learns the state of the device - up or down. The state of the RTR
reflects the state of the device it is monitoring - either up or down.
256 Administration for the Avaya G250 and Avaya G350 Media Gateways

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