Greger:
The question of the day seems to be whether or not the two Cisco gateway do indeed have
the abilty to speak to each other. No firewall exists. No "obvious" ACLs exist.
We are looking at the control plane policing policies but they do not appear to be an
issue. It has long been suspected to be a dialpeer problem but we do not see again
"obvious" issue. An ngrep from the proxy perspective shows a 503 service
unavailable from the gateway handling the first call leg. That seems to be the root
symptom but the cause of this error remains a mystery.
-Steve
________________________________
From: Greger Viken Teigre [greger(a)teigre.com]
Sent: Sunday, March 30, 2008 7:51 AM
To: Steven C. Blair
Cc: serusers(a)iptel.org
Subject: Re: [Serusers] Help with attended (consultative) call transfer problem
Can one Cisco gw do media directly to another gw on the SIP interface? I.e. will you see
any difference if you proxy the call through your rtpproxy?
You don't say anything about how the transfer fails. As you have an existing media
session going, it needs to be replaced and you get hairpinning of the media.
g-)
Steven C. Blair wrote:
Hello:
We have been having persistent problems with consultative (attended) call transfer and I’d
like to ask the list for some input.
We have three Cisco 2821 gateways each with two PRIs connecting to Verizon Centrex
service. The route advance sequence defined by Verizon results in all calls entering our
VoIP environment entering via gateway #1. If no channels exist calls fail over to gateway
#2 and finally #3.
For load balancing purposes our SER 0.9.7-pre3 proxy will send outbound calls to gateway
#3, then #2 and finally #1.
We are using Cisco 79x0 phones running SIP load 7.3. All other types of calls including
blind transfers work.
Call transfers in which both call legs traverse the same gateway work. Only transfers
where each call leg traverses different gateways fail. Given the inbound and outbound
routing described above it is easy to see how most transfers fail.
From a protocol perspective the transfer follows RFCs.
I have ethereal traces if anyone needs them.
Cisco has worked on this problem and is now suspecting that a transfer will only work if
both call legs traverse the same gateway. It is unclear if this is technically correct, a
configuration issue in our gateway or a mistake.
To further complicate the issue calls from the PSTN, through a gateway to an IP phone
which is transfers to another IP phone on the same proxy work. Failures only happen when
the second call leg is to the PSTN and traverse a different gateway.
Has anyone on this list seen this issue or have any input whatsoever?
Thanks,Steve
Senior Network Engineer,
Information Systems and Computing
Networking and Telecommunications , Suite 221A /6228
University of Pennsylvania
Voice:215-573-8396
FAX:215-898-9348
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