Viewing Rtp Session Statistics - Avaya G250 Administration

Media gateways
Hide thumbs Also See for G250:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Configuring monitoring applications
Table 47
describes the fields in the summary report.
Table 47: RTP statistics summary reports output
Field
Total QoS traps
QoS traps Drop
Qos Fault/QoS
Clear
Engine ID
Description
Uptime
Active Sessions
Total Sessions
Mean Duration
Tx TTL

Viewing RTP session statistics

Using the CLI, you can view a summary of active and terminated sessions and you can view
RTP statistics for a given RTP session.
344 Administration for the Avaya G250 and Avaya G350 Media Gateways
Description
The total number of QoS traps sent since the RTP statistics
application was enabled or since the last use of the rtp-stat
clear command.
The number of QoS traps dropped by the rate limiter since the RTP
statistics application was enabled or since the last use of the
rtp-stat clear command.
General QoS state: QoS Fault means that the number of active RTP
sessions with QoS faults is currently higher than the QoS fault
boundary. QoS Clear means that the number of active RTP sessions
with QoS faults is currently less than or equal to the QoS clear
boundary. You can configure the QoS fault and clear boundaries
using the rtp-stat fault command. See
and clear traps
on page 342.
The ID of the VoIP engine. Since the G250/G350 has one VoIP
engine, one line appears in the table.
Description of the VoIP engine.
The uptime of the RTP statistics application. This is the time since the
RTP statistics application was enabled or since the last use of the
rtp-stat clear command.
The number of active sessions / number of active sessions with QoS
problems.
The total number of sessions / number of sessions that had QoS
problems.
The mean RTP session duration (calculated only for terminated calls).
The IP TTL (Time To Live) field for transmitted RTP packets.
Configuring QoS fault

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

G350

Table of Contents