Number of IP Addresses per Call Leg Size
The table below defines the number of
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call legs supported for a given number of IP Addresses assuming UDP ports 4,000 through 64,444 are configured for media port usage.
For
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media resource allocation scenarios, the
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requires a minimum of 10 IP addresses configured to support 150,000 call legs (one Primary IP address plus 9 alternate IP addresses in non-VLAN configuration).
Number of IP Addresses Needed to Support Call Legs
Number of Call Legs | Number of IP Addresses |
---|
150,000 | 10 |
140,000 | 9 |
130,000 | 8 |
120,000 | 7 |
110,000 | 6 |
96,000 | 5 |
80,000 | 4 |
64,000 | 3 |
45,000 | 2 |
25,000 | 1 |
For example, to use 100,000 call legs you must configure at least six (6) IP addresses because five IP addresses will only allow up to 96,000 call legs through the
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.
The
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supports configuring up to 14 alternate media addresses. For more details, see
Alternate Media IP Addresses Support.
Configuration Limits
The
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supports a large number of configurable objects and is capable of supporting from a few very large customers to thousands of small customers. Important details about the provisioning system include:
- Interactive provisioning of configuration objects (such as commands typed at the CLI or entered in the EMA or EMS) does not affect call handling or capacity.
- Provisioning behavior does not depend on the number of existing entities. The addition of the 10,000th instance is roughly comparable to adding the 1st such instance.
Caution
Bulk or non-interactive provisioning may affect call handling. Operations such as sourcing a CLI script with many configuration commands (or even a few commands affecting particularly large objects) should only be done during a maintenance window or at non-busy-hour intervals.
Provisioning Limits
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provisioning limits are shown in the following table.
Configuration Objects | Provisioning Limits |
---|
| SBC 7000 Series | SBC 5000 Series | SBC SWe5 |
---|
Address Contexts | 4,096 | 2,048 | 128 |
SIP Signaling Ports | 4,096 | 2,048 | 128 |
H.323 Signaling Ports | 2,048 | 2,048 | 128 |
SIP Trunk Groups | 40,0001 | 10,0002 | 128 |
H.323 Trunk Groups | 2,0481 | 2,0482 | 128 |
Gateway Trunks | 1281 | | |
Zones | 4,096 | 2,048 | 128 |
DNS Groups | 2,048 | 512 | 128 |
IP Interfaces | 4,096 | 4,096 | 128 |
IP Interfaces Groups | 4,096 | 2,048 | 128 |
Alternate Media IP Addresses (per LIF) | 254 | 254 | 254 |
IP Addresses | 8,192 | 4,096 | |
IP ACLs | 50,0003 | 16,0004 | |
Dynamic Black List Entries | 4,096 | | |
Footnotes
1 - The aggregate number of IP trunk groups (SIP + GW + H.323) cannot exceed 40,000. As a best practice, do not provision more than 20,000 trunk groups in a single zone.
2 - The aggregate number of IP trunk groups (SIP + GW + H.323) cannot exceed 10,000.
3 - Includes approximately 40,000 IP ACLs for peers, 10,000 IP ACLs for signaling ports (2 x 4,000 SIP, 2,000 H323) and 100 IP ACLs for OAM.
4 - Includes approximately 10,000 IP ACLs for peers, 4,000 IP ACLs for signaling ports and 100 IP ACLs for OAM.
5 - In earlier SBC SWe releases, the provisioning limits in this table were not enforced. As a result, when upgrading to 5.x from a pre-5.x release and the system includes more than 128 trunk groups and/or address contexts, the system will operate normally. Plus, trunk groups/address contexts may be deleted with no ill effect. However, no new trunk groups or address contexts may be added in excess of the 128 limit.
6 - SBC SWe supports a maximum of 64 alternate media IP addresses per vNIC.
The time required to add an object to an existing configuration is immaterial (It takes much longer to actually type the command or complete the EMA/EMS fields). However, bulk loading of a large configuration from the CLI may take a substantial amount of time.
Caution
See cautionary note above about the potential bulk configuration loading on call handling performance.
While the
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supports large limits on multiple types of configuration objects, a few typical usage scenarios exist. The length of time to bulk load a configuration depends on the size of the configuration. Consequently, four
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profile classes are defined to give customers a rough idea for the bulk loading time relevant to their configuration:
- 1K profile – comprised of 1,000 instances each of Address Contexts, Zones, IP Interface Groups, IP Interfaces, Signaling Ports, and Trunk Groups
- 4K profile – comprised of 4,000 instances each of Address Contexts, Zones, IP Interface Groups, IP Interfaces, Signaling Ports, and Trunk Groups
- 4K/10K profile – comprised of 4,093 instances of IP Interfaces, 2,048 instances each of Zones, Address Contexts, IP Interface Groups, SIP Signaling Ports, 10,000 IP Peer, and 10,000 IP Trunks (see Note below).
- 4K/40K profile [SBC 7000 series only] – comprised of 4,000 instances each of Address Contexts, Zones, IP Interface Groups, IP Interfaces, Signaling Ports; and 40,000 Trunk Groups
Note
If both IPv4 and IPv6 are combined on every sipSigPort on an SBC 5200, the system limits the number of sipSigPorts to 1,980.
Maximum CLI Load Times
The following table lists the maximum CLI load times for the above profile classes.
Configuration Profile | Maximum CLI Load Time |
---|
1K | 2.5 hours |
4K | 4 hours |
4K/10K | 3 hours |
4/40K (7000 only) | 10 hours |
For a system previously loaded with configuration, the start-up time also depends on the amount of configuration. The start-up time is considered the time from when the
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application is started (by PM) to the time that the
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is ready to accept calls.
Note that this start-up time is typically only relevant to standalone systems after an upgrade. For a HA system, the standby is activated to handle calls while the SBC is being started or restarted.
Approximate Start-up Times for Standalone SBC
The following table lists the approximate start-up times for a standalone
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based on its configuration profile:
Approximate Start-up Times for Standalone SBC
Configuration Profile | Maximum Time to Service Ready |
---|
No configuration | 5 minutes |
1K | 10 minutes |
4K | 20 minutes |
4K/10K | 22 minutes |
4K/40K (7000 only) | 45 minutes |