Actions

High Availability Exchange

From Zenitel Wiki

Revision as of 14:49, 14 January 2011 by Asle (talk) (Supervision of Ethernet port 1)

Standby AMC-IP

The AlphaCom E20 and AlphaCom E26 exchanges can be equipped with a second AMC-IP card. Both AMC-IP cards are under control of the APC-card and report failure information to the APC, which for this purpose is equipped with a microcontroller. Based on that information the APC decides if and when to switchover between the 2 AMC-IP cards. This means that in the case of an AMC-IP card failure the down time of an E26 exchange is reduced to the time it takes for the standby AMC-IP card to take over rather than the time to get a new card from stock, program it and install it, which even if the card is an on-site spare, will easily take 30 minutes.

Operation

The supervisor of the system is a microprocessor plugged in on the APC card. The APC processor monitors the two AMC-IP cards by a dedicated I2C bus controlling some dedicated hardware I/O on the AMC-IP card. The two AMC-IP cards must be placed in board position 24 and 25.

Both AMC-IP cards can be configured with the exact same backup.bin database (also same IP adresses).

The active AMC-IP card is switched only when the standby AMC-IP card status is reported OK and the master is setting the "Standby request" flag. <br\>

The standby request flag is set when:

  • Hardware reset of the master card (Watch dog)
  • Software reset of the master card
  • Hot swap cable use on the master card
  • If all connections to IP stations are lost after reaching the IP station registration trigger level.
  • If the Stentofon Multidrop protocol fails. (This protocol can be active on both active and standby card)

On the AMC-IP in standby mode the Ethernet port 1 is deactivated. This means that Eth1 from both AMC-IP cards can be connected to the same network switch, but only one of them will be operational at a time.

Note: Only Eth1 can be used as 'common' port. Eth0 and the two serial ports are not deactivated on the standby board.

Due to boot of Linux the switch between the AMC-IP cards takes approx 1 min and 30 seconds.

Supervision of Ethernet port 1

The supervision of ethernet port 1 is done by monitoring the number of IP stations registered. When no more IP stations are registered, the system will switch to the standby AMC-IP. However, to prevent unstability in the system, you need to set the minimum number of IP stations that has to be registered before the monitoring of the ethernet port 1 will start. This number must be set in the NVRAM from the TST console:

ex_profile.glob_const.sbm_ip_st_down_trig = xx

Normally you set the number a little bit lower than the total number of IP stations in the system.

Say you have a system with 40 IP stations, you could set this value to 30. This means that as long as 25 stations are registered, the ethernet supervision is not active. As soon as the number of registered stations reaches 30 or more, the ethernet supervision becomes active. If now all IP stations drop out (e.g. faulty ethernet port, cable or switch), the standby AMC-IP will automatically take over.

For testing you can set the value to a low number.

License handling

For systems requiring licenses the following rules applies (Available from AMC 10.51):<br\>

  • Any license required in the exchange must be installed in the AMC-IP in position 25
  • The AMC-IP in position 24 runs on Free License

AMC-IP in pos 24 will have a free license as long as there is a AMC IP board present in pos 25. If no AMC IP is present in board pos 25 the free license timer will start ticking.

Software requirements

  • AMC software 10.52 or higher
  • Flash image version 16

Note: From factory the AMC-IP board comes with Flash image version 12, so it is required to do a AlphaCom Flash Image Upgrade.

Redundant power supplies

The AlphaCom E26 always has had support for redundant power supplies. This redundancy was supported by the old 1009701000 PSU, and is now supported by the 1009703000. Note that the power supplies operate in load sharing mode which increases the reliability even further, as each PSU is only loaded far below its capability, giving a much lower stress on the compents than for which they are designed.

Note that the redundant AMC-IP solution can also be use in an AlphaCom E20 exchange; this exchange however does not support redundant power supplies.

Ordering information

The components required for the AlphaCom High Availability exchange are available under the following numbers:

  • 1009626010: High Availability exchange, dual AMC-IP with automatic switch over and 2 PSU's; additional AMC-IP filter card is included
  • 1009626011: E26 High Availability extension package, AMC-IP card (including filtercard) and APC upgrade kit