[AusNOG] SIP trunking DR diversion
Ed Hallett
ed at teltech.net.au
Wed Dec 12 09:44:09 EST 2012
Hi guys,
This is just a quick, enormous “thank-you” for all the responses – there is some incredible talent out there, and I can’t show my appreciation enough for the advice and offers of assistance from this community. Well, I can – bar tabs are a legitimate form of currency, yes?
It’s going to take a while to get through all the responses, so if I take a little time to get back to you, be patient J
--Ed - Teltech
From: ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of Ed Hallett
Sent: Tuesday, 11 December 2012 2:58 PM
To: ausnog
Subject: [AusNOG] SIP trunking DR diversion
Afternoon Noggers,
More of a “is this possible” scenario:
Can a SIP trunk be diverted in a Disaster Recovery situation, including indials?
More info (as much as I have at this stage):
A client with multiple remote offices is sponsoring a company wide event at a remote location which has a large pipe, and is afraid of what will happen if the staff are trapped at the remote location for a few extra days. They have asked for a method to divert all SIP trunks to their sites to the single remote location, where staff can likely use softphones on their laptop.
The tricky bit as I can see it is the indial 1300 numbers which goes to a group, as well as QOS for up to 20 concurrent inbound/outbound phonecalls.
Does anyone have DR / High Availability experience with SIP trunking and could spare some wisdom? 6 days into the new job and I get this one .
Replies off-list are fine, but feel free to reply online – this may of interest to others.
Kind regards,
Ed – TelTech – 1300 81 55 66 | 0413 233 303
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.ausnog.net/pipermail/ausnog/attachments/20121212/86f5ca9f/attachment.html>
More information about the AusNOG
mailing list