Design for High Availability
Issue 3.4.1 June 2005
271
Case Study IV (99.999% availability in Atlanta,
99.99% full system availability)
With Avaya Communication Manager 2.0, the Avaya G650 Media Gateway can provide the
optimum 99.999% availability using redundant IPSI connections. The G650 configuration
supports two IPSI circuit packs in active/standby mode.
The call control link to the media gateways is fully redundant. Upon any link or device failure,
there will be a failover to the standby path.
When engineered with duplicated IPSI-2 and N+1 C-LAN and MedPro circuit packs, the G650
Media Gateway reliability assessment projects 99.9995% availability. The following
recommendations based upon our example case environment ensure the objective availability
value is attainable.
●
G650 with redundant IPSIs in Atlanta and Boston Offices.
●
LSP as the alternate gatekeeper and call controller in Cleveland.
●
A fully redundant data network. In order to fully take advantage of the duplicated link
connection between the media servers and media gateways, the WAN path (when
calculated using redundant circuits) should be 99.995% to 99.999% available. It is
expected that every link has sufficient bandwidth to handle the full load of converged
traffic.
Note:
Note:
For these calculations, the LAN between the servers and the IPSIs is assumed to
have been engineered to meet 99.999% availability.
% of traffic between Boston and Cleveland
×
Annual downtime minutes due to failure in
Boston, WAN and in Cleveland
(0.9% + 0.9%)
×
563 = 13
Aggregated Downtime
112.25 minutes
(15 + 9.5 + 27 + 0.75 + 47 +
13)
System Availability = 99.98%
Table 62: Inter-Site Traffic Availability improved with Redundant WAN
Connections (continued)
Full Solution Availability Projected
Weighted Downtime
minutes.
2 of 2
Summary of Contents for Application Solutions
Page 1: ...Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide 555 245 600 Issue 3 4 1 June 2005 ...
Page 20: ...About This Book 20 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 21: ...Issue 3 4 1 June 2005 21 Section 1 Avaya Application Solutions product guide ...
Page 22: ...22 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 106: ...Call processing 106 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 124: ...Avaya LAN switching products 124 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 139: ...Issue 3 4 1 June 2005 139 Section 2 Deploying IP Telephony ...
Page 140: ...140 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 186: ...Traffic engineering 186 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 204: ...Security 204 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 228: ...Avaya Integrated Management 228 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 274: ...Reliability and Recovery 274 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 275: ...Issue 3 4 1 June 2005 275 Section 3 Getting the IP network ready for telephony ...
Page 276: ...276 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 356: ...Network recovery 356 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 366: ...Network assessment offer 366 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 367: ...Issue 3 4 1 June 2005 367 Appendixes ...
Page 368: ...Appendixes 368 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 394: ...Access list 394 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...
Page 414: ...DHCP TFTP 414 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide ...