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  • 1.  Physical SBCs for the Branch Office

    Posted 12-08-2020 04:29 PM

    Hello all -

    I am hoping this group has some good input on a question that has been posed to us in telecom, and that question is this:

    How do we go about putting SIP Trunking at remote locations that have less then 50 people in the building (Branch Office)? These locations are geographically diverse from our main campus, by hundreds of miles, so maintaining a local survivability is required in any design we build out. That means for us, we have to have a SIP Trunk provided at the location, and can't trunk it back to our Main Campus, in the event the WAN between sites goes down. The LSP/Branch Session Manager and SBC, should still be able to operate to provide inbound/outbound calling. Furthermore, all of these sites do not have a Virtual server infrastructure to build upon, so we are left with having to use physical device of some sort if we go SIP/SBC. Also to throw a wrinkle in this, one of the sites may also require Remote Worker functionality through the SBC (So we are looking for both Trunking and Remote Worker on the same SBC).

    So MY real question for the group here is, how do you go about providing SIP trunking at your remote locations that may fit the description above? I have seen and read about some smaller SBCs (i.e. Oracle, Audio Codes, etc.), I have also seen where folks have stood up a server, and ran a small/local VM instance, and put Avaya SBCE on it, and I bet there are other out of the box ideas as well. What I really would like to know from the group is, what have others done here?  Was it affordable, what worked well, and what issues you all might have run into?



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    James Davis
    Voice and Data Senior Engineer
    University of Nebraska Medical Center
    Omaha NE
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  • 2.  RE: Physical SBCs for the Branch Office

    Posted 12-11-2020 08:41 AM
    Hi James,

    Your best bet would be to virtualize a small Avaya SBC. Especially for remote worker. A VM instance is best if you need to shutdown and reboot, or snapshot the box. In fact you should put the entire remote location SBC, LSP and BSM on Vmware. You did not mention a media gateway. I assume each remote site has one?

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    Tracy M Brooks
    Senior Unified Communications Engineer
    Ropes And Gray LLP
    Boston
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