Dynamic call admission control (CAC) enables the Media Gateway Controller (MGC) to automatically assign the bandwidth available for voice traffic on WAN interfaces and block new calls when the existing call bandwidth is completely engaged. You configure dynamic CAC on a high-bandwidth primary interface and on one or more backup interfaces with less bandwidth.
Without dynamic CAC, the MGC cannot detect the switchover to the backup link or the resulting changes in network topology and available bandwidth. As a result, the MGC continues to admit calls at the bandwidth of the primary link, causing network congestion and possible jitter, delay, and loss of calls.
Dynamic CAC must be configured on each Services Router interface responsible for providing call bandwidth. You can configure dynamic CAC on the following types of interfaces on Services Routers:
The dynamic CAC bearer bandwidth limit (BBL) configured on an interface specifies the maximum bandwidth available for voice traffic on the interface. The TGM550 reports the BBL to the MGC. When the call bandwidth exceeds the BBL, the MGC blocks new calls and alerts the user with a busy tone.
You configure the dynamic CAC activation priority value on interfaces to specify the order in which the interfaces are used for providing call bandwidth.
To assess the WAN interfaces that have an activation priority value and determine a single BBL to report to the MGC, the TGM550 uses the following rules. The reported BBL (RBBL) allows the MGC to automatically control the call bandwidth when interfaces responsible for providing call bandwidth become available or unavailable.
2 x 1500 Kbps).
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Dynamic CAC works in conjunction with the Avaya Communication Manager (CM) Call Admission Control: Bandwidth Limitation (CAC-BL) feature. If you configure dynamic CAC on WAN interfaces, you must also configure CAC-BL on Avaya CM. For more information about configuring CAC-BL, see the Administrator Guide for Avaya Communication Manager. |