02-07-2018 06:49 AM - edited 03-19-2019 01:07 PM
Hi Everyone
I received a call this morning at 3:30am stating that no one in the call center could make outgoing or receive incoming calls. Sure enough I drove into the office and the cube router was down, the rack it was in experienced a power surge and all the devices got turned off. I plugged the router up directly into the wall and we were back in business, I have another cube router in our data center and they have no redundancy between the one onsite here and the one across town in the data center. Can redundancy be setup between these two boxes so if that would happen again the calls would fail over to our other location?
Thanks
Eric
Solved! Go to Solution.
02-08-2018 08:21 AM
02-09-2018 05:06 AM - edited 02-09-2018 05:06 AM
Yup. Your manager might have been informed about Geo Redundancy though he might not be aware of this. This is basically two CUBEs at different locations in a ACTIVE/ACTIVE format doing load-balancing. The name says redundancy but it is not actuall redundancy. If a box fails, it will drops all calls. However, all future calls will be sent/routed through the other ACTIVE cube. See if this suits the needs, a little.
You would need CUBEE-RED license(s) for this setup.
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/ios-xml/ios/voice/cube/configuration/cube-book/voi-cube-licensing.html#concept_0D14CC5E24B343AB95831899E9C86672
02-07-2018 08:23 AM
02-08-2018 08:13 AM
Nipun
My manager told me that the previous person in my position had failover setup so that if the interface went down the traffic would route to our other location. I've looked at the 2 configs side by side and I don't see anything that would point to that. I've uploaded them and when you have a second can you look at them and tell me do you see anything that would show the cubes are setup for redundancy.
02-08-2018 08:21 AM
02-08-2018 08:25 AM
Thanks Nipun
02-08-2018 08:25 AM
02-08-2018 08:30 AM
Thanks for the info that's good to know, now I'll let my manager know that it's not configured as he was told.
02-09-2018 05:06 AM - edited 02-09-2018 05:06 AM
Yup. Your manager might have been informed about Geo Redundancy though he might not be aware of this. This is basically two CUBEs at different locations in a ACTIVE/ACTIVE format doing load-balancing. The name says redundancy but it is not actuall redundancy. If a box fails, it will drops all calls. However, all future calls will be sent/routed through the other ACTIVE cube. See if this suits the needs, a little.
You would need CUBEE-RED license(s) for this setup.
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/ios-xml/ios/voice/cube/configuration/cube-book/voi-cube-licensing.html#concept_0D14CC5E24B343AB95831899E9C86672
02-09-2018 07:35 AM
Thanks again for the info I really appreciate it
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