Avaya 555-245-600 Manual Do Utilizador

Página de 378
The Converged Network Analyzer
Issue 6 January 2008
347
 
Sites A and B will move away from the outage in less than a second, preventing unintelligibility 
in the audio bearer, or outages in the voice signaling.
Simultaneous monitoring of all paths
The ability for CNA to measure all paths simultaneously is achieved by configuring Policy Based 
Routing (PBR) functionality on the edge routers. Essentially, measurements through the various 
links are sourced from different Virtual IP addresses (VIPs). The edge routers are then 
configured to route the measurement packets to its different links according to the packets’ 
source address. PBR functionality exists in most routers, sometimes under a different name. In 
Juniper devices, PBR functionality is called Filter-Based Forwarding (FBF). 
Figure 94: Headquarters CNA deployment – Measurement plane
, three loopback addresses V1a, V1b, and V1c will be configured on CNA-1. Three 
Generic Routing Ecapsulation (GRE) tunnels Ga, Gb, and Gc can be configured between the 
CNA system and the edge routers R1a, R1b, and R1c. Measurement traffic pertaining to Paths 
A, B, and C will be sourced from V1a, V1b, and V1c, and routed through Ga, Gb, and Gc, 
respectively. The router will be configured to route traffic emerging from Ga, Gb, and Gc to 
interfaces Ia, Ib, and Ic respectively.
The GRE tunnels allow the measurement traffic to emerge from their own virtual interfaces on 
the routers. This way, PBR rules can be made to apply on those virtual interfaces only. This 
setup presents advantages in some contexts, especially when the edge routers are unable to 
perform line rate PBR. In such contexts, applying PBR rules to the measurement traffic only 
helps prevent performance degradation. An alternative to building GRE tunnels is to configure 
different VLANs for each of the measurement streams.