Cisco Cisco Expressway Maintenance Manual
Field
Description
Usage tips
Downspeed
per call mode
per call mode
Determines what happens if the per-call bandwidth
restrictions on a subzone or pipe mean that there is insufficient
bandwidth available to place a call at the requested rate.
restrictions on a subzone or pipe mean that there is insufficient
bandwidth available to place a call at the requested rate.
On: the call will be downspeeded.
Off: the call will not be placed.
Downspeed
total mode
total mode
Determines what happens if the total bandwidth restrictions on
a subzone or pipe mean that there is insufficient bandwidth
available to place a call at the requested rate.
a subzone or pipe mean that there is insufficient bandwidth
available to place a call at the requested rate.
On: the call will be downspeeded.
Off: the call will not be placed.
About Downspeeding
If bandwidth control is in use, there may be situations when there is insufficient bandwidth available to place a call at
the requested rate. By default (and assuming that there is some bandwidth still available) the Expressway will still
attempt to connect the call, but at a reduced bandwidth – this is known as downspeeding.
the requested rate. By default (and assuming that there is some bandwidth still available) the Expressway will still
attempt to connect the call, but at a reduced bandwidth – this is known as downspeeding.
Downspeeding can be configured so that it is applied in either or both of the following scenarios:
■
when the requested bandwidth for the call exceeds the lowest per-call limit for the subzone or pipes
■
when placing the call at the requested bandwidth would mean that the total bandwidth limits for that subzone
or pipes would be exceeded
or pipes would be exceeded
You can turn off downspeeding, in which case if there is insufficient bandwidth to place the call at the originally
requested rate, the call will not be placed at all. This could be used if, when your network is nearing capacity, you
would rather a call failed to connect at all than be connected at a lower than requested speed. In this situation
endpoint users will get one of the following messages, depending on the system that initiated the search:
requested rate, the call will not be placed at all. This could be used if, when your network is nearing capacity, you
would rather a call failed to connect at all than be connected at a lower than requested speed. In this situation
endpoint users will get one of the following messages, depending on the system that initiated the search:
■
"Exceeds Call Capacity"
■
"Gatekeeper Resources Unavailable"
About Subzones
The Local Zone is made up of subzones. Subzones are used to control the bandwidth used by various parts of your
network.
network.
Three special subzones — the Default Subzone, the Traversal Subzone and the Cluster Subzone (only applies if the
Expressway is in a cluster) — are automatically created and cannot be deleted.
Expressway is in a cluster) — are automatically created and cannot be deleted.
Note that the Traversal Subzone is the only configurable subzone.
Default links between subzones
The Expressway is shipped with the Default Subzone and Traversal Subzone (and Default Zone) already created, and
with links between them. If the Expressway is added to a cluster then default links to the Cluster Subzone are also
established automatically. You can delete or amend these
with links between them. If the Expressway is added to a cluster then default links to the Cluster Subzone are also
established automatically. You can delete or amend these
network.
About the Traversal Subzone
.
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Cisco Expressway Administrator Guide
Bandwidth Control