05-08-2002 02:45 PM - edited 03-12-2019 06:44 PM
why would someone use mgcp instead of h.323? what are the major advantages? other than maintaing existing calls during srst failover what can mgcp do that h323 cannot?
05-09-2002 12:45 AM
Cofiguration of mgcp gateways is simplified using the web interface very little config on the gateway perhaps vlan for cat blade use dhcp switch type framing vg200.
05-09-2002 06:09 AM
The main reason I would use MGCP over h.323 is for failover. If you are using a h.323 gateway and your primary callmanager goes down the calls will be dropped. With mgcp the gateway calls will be failed over to the secondary callmanager and the calls will stay up. This is the main advantage I can see. Like someone else said it also simplfies the configuration because most if not all can be done on the callmanager versus doing half and on gateway and have in callmanager with h.323.
Hope this helps,
-Mckee
05-18-2002 07:55 AM
Watch out for MGCP problems with a fax machine and VG200... as of last October's code h.323 was required for this setup.
05-18-2002 08:47 AM
What are the issues with fax and MGCP 12.2.2xn code vg200 ?
I was ging to implement this set-up tomorrow at a site witha vg248 should I revert to h.323 ?
05-11-2011 08:27 AM
I'm not sure if this is a correct statement. With H.323 protocol if the primary call manager fails the call will drop.
With MGCP protocol if the primary call manager fails the call will re-route to the subscriber.
Isn’t true when u configure a H.323, the gateway has the following statements
· dial-peer voice 100 voip
session target ipv4: publisher IP address”xxxx
· dial-peer voice 101 voip
session target ipv4: Subscriber IP address”xxxx
H.323 is intelligent enough to switch to the 2nd subscriber based on the statement above
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