Uri dialing for incoming calls, Types of dns records required, Process – TANDBERG D14049.01 User Manual

Page 85: Srv record format, Configuring h.323 srv records, Location srv records, Call srv records, Configuring sip srv records, Location srv records call srv records, Configuring uri dialing for

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D 14049.01
07.2007

85

TANDBERG

VIDEO COMMUNICATION SERVER

ADMINISTRATOR GUIDE

Text goes here

Introduction

Getting

Started

System

Overview

System

Configuration

H.323 & SIP

Configuration

Registration

Control

Zones and

Neighbors

Call

Processing

Firewall

Traversal

Bandwidth

Control

Maintenance

Appendices

TANDBERG

ADMINISTRATOR GUIDE

TANDBERG

VIDEO COMMUNICATION SERVER

ADMINISTRATOR GUIDE

Call

Processing

Types of DNS Records Required

The ability of the VCS to receive incoming calls made via URI
dialing relies on the presence of DNS records for each domain
the VCS is hosting.
These records can be of various types including:

A records, which provide the IPv4 address of the VCS
AAAA records, which provide the IPv6 address of the VCS
Service (SRV) records, which specify the FQDN of the VCS
and the port on it to be queried for a particular protocol and
transport type.

As a preference, SRV records should be used, and you should
provide an SRV record for each combination of domain hosted
and protocol and transport type enabled on the VCS.



URI Dialing for Incoming Calls

URI Dialing

Configuring H.33 SRV Records

Annex O of H.323 [

15

] defines the procedures for using DNS to locate

gatekeepers and endpoints and for resolving H.323 URL aliases. It also defines
parameters for use with the H.323 URL.
The VCS supports two types of SRV record as defined by this Annex. These are
Location and Call, with

_ Service

set to

_ h323ls

and

_ h323cs

respectively.

If you wish the VCS to be contactable via H.323 URI dialing, you should provide
at least a Location SRV record, as it provides the most flexibility and the
simplest configuration.

Location SRV Records

For each domain hosted by the VCS, you should configure a Location SRV record
as follows:

_ Service

is

_ h323ls

_ Proto

is

_ udp

Port

is the port number that has been configured via

VCS Configuration >

Protocols > H.323

as the

Registration UDP port

.

Call SRV Records

Call SRV records (and A/AAAA records) are intended primarily for use by
endpoints which cannot participate in a location transaction, exchanging LRQ
and LCF. The configuration of a Call SRV record should be as follows:

_ Service

is

_ h323cs

_ Proto

is

_ tcp

Port

is the port number that has been configured via

VCS Configuration >

Protocols > H.323

as the

Call signaling TCP port

.





SRV Record Format

The format of SRV records is defined by RFC 2782 [

3

] as:

_ Service. _ Proto.Name TTL Class SRV Priority Weight Port Target

For the VCS, these will be as follows:

_ Service

and

_ Proto

will be different for H.323 and SIP, and will depend on the protocol and transport type being used.

Name

is the domain in the URI that the VCS is hosting (e.g. example.com)

Port

is the port on the VCS that has been configured to listen for that particular service and protocol combination

Target

is the FQDN of the VCS.




Configuring SIP SRV Records

RFC 3263 [

16

] describes the DNS procedures

used to resolve a SIP URI into the IP address,
port, and transport protocol of the next hop to
contact.
If you wish the VCS to be contactable via
SIP URI dialing, you should configure an SRV
record for each SIP transport protocol enabled
on the VCS (i.e. UDP, TCP or TLS) as follows:

_ Service

is

_ sip

_ Proto

is one of

_ udp

,

_ tcp

, or

_ tls

Port

is the port number that has been

configured via

VCS Configuration > Protocols

> SIP

as the

port

for that particular

transport protocol.



Process

When an incoming call has been placed using URI dialing, the
VCS will have been located by the calling system via one of the
DNS record lookups described above. It will receive the request
containing the dialled URI in the form

[email protected]

. The

VCS will then check its local registrations and FindMe names
and if any are an exact match, the call will be routed to the
appropriate device(s).

In order for locally registered endpoints to be reached
using URI dialing, they must register using a full URI.
This applies to both SIP and H.323 endpoints. If

endpoints do not register using a full URI, they will be
discoverable only by the VCS to which they are registered, and
any neighbor VCSs.

Several mechanisms could have been used to locate the
VCS. You may wish to enable calls placed to

user@VCS_IP_address

to be routed to an existing

registration for

[email protected]

. In this case you would

configure a

Local Zone Transform

that would strip the

IP address of the VCS from the incoming URI and replace it with
the domain name of

example.com

.

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