Pagina Inicial Forums HAast (High Availability for Asterisk) General How do internal phones locate the PBX after failover

Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • Avatar photoCustomer Inquiry
    Participant
    Post count: 203

    We have setup a HAAst cluster and have phones located on our local subnet(s). How do the phones locate the active PBX for registration?

    Avatar photoTelium Support Group
    Participant
    Post count: 265

    The answer depends on the location of your two PBX’s. If the two PBX’s are located on the same subnet, then

    1. Move IP: Use the VoIPNIC option of HAAst to move a single IP between peers. This will allow for rapid reconnection of downstream (user agents) and upstream (trunks)

    If the two PBX’s are located on different subnets (from each other):
    [list=2]
    [*]SRV records: Assuming your user agents (phone sets) support SRV records (which most do), then you should create SRV records for your two PBX’s. Most user agents will perform a DNS lookup for SRV records to find available PBX’s, and try them in order of priority until they successfully register with a PBX. For example, if you have PBX’s located in data centers dc1 and dc2, create two DNS entries (in your internal DNS server) as follows:

    type=srv
    name=_sip._udp.mydomain.com
    priority= 10
    weight=0
    port=5060
    hostname=pbx1.local


    and

    type=srv
    name=_sip._udp.mydomain.com
    priority= 20
    weight=0
    port=5060
    hostname=pbx2.local


    [*]Route Change: Use the pre/post Asterisk start/stop event handlers of HAAst to update routes in your router(s). Set the updated routes to point to the new PBX address.
    [*]DNS update: Use the pre/post asterisk start/stop event handlers to update a public DNS entry. Be sure to set the TTL value low enough that phones will lookup the new IP in a reasonable timeframe.[/list]

    Note: Using SRV records or DNS entries makes it easy for users with softphones to move on and off LAN and resume a PBX connection without manual intervention.

Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.