Table Of Contents
Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks
Prerequisites
Restrictions
How to configure Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks
Troubleshooting the Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks Feature
Verifying Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks
Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks
The Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks feature provides precondition-based Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) support for basic audio call and supplementary services on Cisco Unified Border Element (UBE). This feature improves the interoperability between RSVP and non-RSVP networks. RSVP functionality added to Cisco UBE helps you to reserve the required bandwidth before making a call.
This feature extends RSVP support to delayed-offer to delayed-offer and delayed-offer to early-offer calls, along with the early-offer to early-offer calls.
Prerequisites
•RSVP policies allow you to configure separate bandwidth pools with varying limits so that any one application, such as video, can consume all the RSVP bandwidth on a specified interface at the expense of other applications, such as voice, which would be dropped.
•To limit bandwidth per application, you must configure a bandwidth limit before configuring Support for the Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks feature. See the "Configuring RSVP on an Interface" section.
Cisco Unified Border Element
•Cisco IOS Release 15.0(1)XA or a later release must be installed and running on your Cisco Unified Border Element.
Cisco Unified Border Element (Enterprise)
•Cisco IOS XE Release 3.1S or a later release must be installed and running on your Cisco ASR 1000 Series Router.
Restrictions
The Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks feature has the following restrictions:
•Segmented RSVP is not supported.
•Interoperability between Cisco UBE and Cisco Unified Communications Manager is not available.
•RSVP-enabled video calls are not supported.
How to configure Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks
To enable support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks feature perform the steps in this section. This section contains the following subsections:
•Configuring RSVP on an Interface (required)
•Configuring Optional RSVP on the Dial Peer (optional)
•Configuring Mandatory RSVP on the Dial Peer (optional)
•Configuring Midcall RSVP Failure Policies (optional)
•Configuring DSCP Values (optional)
•Configuring an Application ID (optional)
•Configuring Priority (optional)
Configuring RSVP on an Interface
You must allocate some bandwidth for the interface before enabling RSVP. Perform this task to configure RSVP on an interface.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. enable
2. configure terminal
3. interface type slot/port
4. ip rsvp bandwidth [reservable-bw [max-reservable-bw] [sub-pool reservable-bw]]
5. end
DETAILED STEPS
|
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1 |
enable
Example:
Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. •Enter your password if prompted. |
Step 2 |
configure terminal
Example:
Router# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
interface type slot/port
Example:
Router(config)# interface FastEthernet 0/1 |
Configures an interface type and enters interface configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
ip rsvp bandwidth [reservable-bw [max-reservable-bw] [sub-pool reservable-bw]]
Example:
Router(config-if)# ip rsvp bandwidth 10000 100000 |
Enables RSVP for IP on an interface. |
Step 5 |
end
Example:
Router(config-if)# end |
(Optional) Exits interface configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Configuring Optional RSVP on the Dial Peer
Perform this task to configure optional RSVP at the dial peer level. This configuration allows you to have uninterrupted call even if there is a failure in bandwidth reservation.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. enable
2. configure terminal
3. dial-peer voice tag voip
4. no acc-qos {controlled-load | guaranteed-delay} [audio | video]
5. req-qos {controlled-load | guaranteed-delay} [audio | video] [bandwidth [default bandwidth-value] [max bandwidth-value]]
6. end
DETAILED STEPS
|
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1 |
enable
Example:
Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. •Enter your password if prompted. |
Step 2 |
configure terminal
Example:
Router# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
dial-peer voice tag voip
Example:
Router(config)# dial-peer 77 voip |
Enters dial peer voice configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
no acc-qos {controlled-load | guaranteed-delay} [audio | video]
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# no acc-qos controlled-load |
Removes any value configured for the acc-qos command. •Keywords are as follows: –controlled-load—Indicates that RSVP guarantees a single level of preferential service, presumed to correlate to a delay boundary. The controlled load service uses admission (or capacity) control to ensure that preferential service is received even when the bandwidth is overloaded. –guaranteed-delay—Indicates that RSVP reserves bandwidth and guarantees a minimum bit rate and preferential queueing if the bandwidth reserved is not exceeded. |
Step 5 |
req-qos {controlled-load | guaranteed-delay} [audio | video] [bandwidth [default bandwidth-value] [max bandwidth-value]]
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# req-qos controlled-load |
Configures the desired quality of service (QoS) to be used. •Calls continue even if there is a failure in bandwidth reservation. Note Configure the req-qos command using the same keyword that you used to configure the acc-qos command, either controlled-load or guaranteed-delay. That is, if you configured acc-qos controlled-load command in the previous step, then use the req-qos controlled-load command here. |
Step 6 |
end
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# end |
(Optional) Exits dial peer voice configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Configuring Mandatory RSVP on the Dial Peer
Perform this task to configure Mandatory RSVP on the dial peer. This configuration ensures that the call does not connect if sufficient bandwidth is not allocated.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. enable
2. configure terminal
3. dial-peer voice tag voip
4. acc-qos {best-effort | controlled-load | guaranteed-delay} [audio | video]
5. req-qos {best-effort [audio | video] | {controlled-load | guaranteed-delay} [audio | video] [bandwidth [default bandwidth-value] [max bandwidth-value]]}
6. end
DETAILED STEPS
|
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1 |
enable
Example:
Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. •Enter your password if prompted. |
Step 2 |
configure terminal
Example:
Router# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
dial-peer voice tag voip
Example:
Router(config)# dial-peer 77 voip |
Enters dial peer voice configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
acc-qos {best-effort | controlled-load | guaranteed-delay} [audio | video]
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# acc-qos best-effort |
Configures mandatory RSVP on the dial-peer. •Keywords are as follows: –best-effort—Indicates that Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) makes no bandwidth reservation. This is the default. –controlled-load—Indicates that RSVP guarantees a single level of preferential service, presumed to correlate to a delay boundary. The controlled load service uses admission (or capacity) control to ensure that preferential service is received even when the bandwidth is overloaded. –guaranteed-delay—Indicates that RSVP reserves bandwidth and guarantees a minimum bit rate and preferential queueing if the bandwidth reserved is not exceeded. |
Step 5 |
req-qos {best-effort [audio | video] | {controlled-load | guaranteed-delay} [audio | video] [bandwidth [default bandwidth-value] [max bandwidth-value]]}
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# req-qos controlled-load |
Configures mandatory RSVP on the dial-peer. •Calls continue even if there is a drop in the bandwidth reservation. |
Step 6 |
end
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# end |
(Optional) Exits dial peer voice configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Configuring Midcall RSVP Failure Policies
Perform this task to enable call handling policies for a midcall RSVP failure.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. enable
2. configure terminal
3. dial-peer voice tag voip
4. voice-class sip rsvp-fail-policy {video | voice} post-alert {optional keep-alive | mandatory {keep-alive | disconnect retry retry-attempts}} interval seconds
5. end
DETAILED STEPS
|
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1 |
enable
Example:
Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. •Enter your password if prompted. |
Step 2 |
configure terminal
Example:
Router# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
dial-peer voice tag voip
Example:
Router(config)# dial-peer voice 66 voip |
Enters dial peer voice configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
voice-class sip rsvp-fail-policy {video | voice} post-alert {optional keep-alive | mandatory {keep-alive | disconnect retry retry-attempts}} interval seconds
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# voice-class sip rsvp-fail-policy voice post-alert mandatory keep-alive interval 50 |
Enables call handling policies for a midcall RSVP failure. •Keywords are as follows: –optional keep-alive—The keepalive messages are sent when RSVP fails only if RSVP negotiation is optional. –mandatory keep-alive—The keepalive messages are sent when RSVP fails only if RSVP negotiation is mandatory. Note Keepalive messages are sent at 30-second intervals when a postalert call fails to negotiate RSVP regardless of the RSVP negotiation setting (mandatory or optional). |
Step 5 |
end
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# end |
(Optional) Exits dial peer voice configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Configuring DSCP Values
Perform this task to configure different Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) values based on RSVP status.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. enable
2. configure terminal
3. dial-peer voice tag voip
4. ip qos dscp {dscp-value | set-af | set-cs | default | ef} {signaling | media [rsvp-pass | rsvp-fail] | video [rsvp-none | rsvp-pass | rsvp-fail]}
5. end
DETAILED STEPS
|
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1 |
enable
Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. •Enter your password if prompted. |
Step 2 |
configure terminal
Example:
Router# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
dial-peer voice tag voip
Example:
Router(config)# dial-peer voice 66 voip |
Enters dial peer voice configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
ip qos dscp {dscp-value | set-af | set-cs | default | ef} {signaling | media [rsvp-pass | rsvp-fail] | video [rsvp-none | rsvp-pass | rsvp-fail]}
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# ip qos dscp af11 media rsvp-pass |
Configures DSCP values based on RSVP status. •Keywords are as follows: –media rsvp-pass—Specifies that the DSCP value applies to media packets with successful RSVP reservations. –media rsvp-fail—Specifies that the DSCP value applies to packets (media or video) with failed RSVP reservations. –The default DSCP value for all media (voice and fax) packets is ef. Note You must configure the DSCP values for all cases: media rsvp-pass and media rsvp-fail. |
Step 5 |
end
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# end |
(Optional) Exits dial peer voice configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Configuring an Application ID
Perform this task to configure a specific application ID for RSVP establishment.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. enable
2. configure terminal
3. dial-peer voice tag voip
4. ip qos policy-locator {video | voice} [app app-string] [guid guid-string] [sapp subapp-string] [ver version-string]
5. end
DETAILED STEPS
|
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1 |
enable
Example:
Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. •Enter your password if prompted. |
Step 2 |
configure terminal
Example:
Router# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
dial-peer voice tag voip
Example:
Router(config)# dial-peer voice 66 voip |
Enters dial peer voice configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
ip qos policy-locator {video | voice} [app app-string] [guid guid-string] [sapp subapp-string] [ver version-string]
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# ip qos policy-locator voice |
Configures a QoS policylocator (application ID) used to deploy RSVP policies for specifying bandwidth reservations on Cisco IOS Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) devices. |
Step 5 |
end
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# end |
(Optional) Exits dial peer voice configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Configuring Priority
Perform this task to configure priorities for call preemption.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. enable
2. configure terminal
3. dial-peer voice tag voip
4. ip qos defending-priority defending-pri-value
5. ip qos preemption-priority preemption-pri-value
6. end
DETAILED STEPS
|
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1 |
enable
Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. •Enter your password if prompted. |
Step 2 |
configure terminal
Example:
Router# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
dial-peer voice tag voip
Example:
Router(config)# dial-peer voice 66 voip |
Enters dial peer voice configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
ip qos defending-priority defending-pri-value
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# ip qos defending-priority 66 |
Configures the RSVP defending priority value for determining QoS. |
Step 5 |
ip qos preemption-priority preemption-pri-value
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# ip qos preemption-priority 75 |
Configures the RSVP preemption priority value for determining QoS. |
Step 6 |
end
Example:
Router(config-dial-peer)# end |
(Optional) Exits dial peer configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Troubleshooting the Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks Feature
Use the following commands to debug any errors that you may encounter when you configure the Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks feature.
•debug call rsvp-sync events
•debug call rsvp-sync func-trace
•debug ccsip all
•debug ccsip messages
•debug ip rsvp messages
•debug sccp all
Verifying Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks
This task explains how to display information to verify the configuration for the Support for Interworking Between RSVP Capable and RSVP Incapable Networks feature. These commands need not be entered in any specific order.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. enable
2. show sip-ua calls
3. show ip rsvp installed
4. show ip rsvp reservation
5. show ip rsvp interface detail [interface-type number]
6. show sccp connections details
7. show sccp connections rsvp
8. show sccp connections internal
9. show sccp [all | connections | statistics]
DETAILED STEPS
|
Command or Action
|
Purpose
|
Step 1 |
enable
Example:
Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. •Enter your password if prompted. |
Step 2 |
show sip-ua calls
Example:
Router# show sip-ua calls |
(Optional) Displays active user agent client (UAC) and user agent server (UAS) information on SIP calls. |
Step 3 |
show ip rsvp installed
Example:
Router# show ip rsvp installed |
(Optional) Displays RSVP-related installed filters and corresponding bandwidth information. |
Step 4 |
show ip rsvp reservation
Example:
Router# show ip rsvp reservation |
(Optional) Displays RSVP-related receiver information currently in the database. |
Step 5 |
show ip rsvp interface detail [interface-type number]
Example:
Router# show ip rsvp interface detail GigabitEthernet 0/0 |
(Optional) Displays the interface configuration for hello. |
Step 6 |
show sccp connections details
Example:
Router# show sccp connections details |
(Optional) Displays SCCP connection details, such as call-leg details. |
Step 7 |
show sccp connections rsvp
Example:
Router# show sccp connections rsvp |
(Optional) Displays information about active SCCP connections that are using RSVP. |
Step 8 |
show sccp connections internal
Example:
Router# show sccp connections internal |
(Optional) Displays the internal SCCP details, such as time-stamp values. |
Step 9 |
show sccp [all | connections | statistics]
Example:
Router# show sccp statistics |
(Optional) Displays SCCP information, such as administrative and operational status. |