Autorestoration and fast retry

Last Updated : Oct 30, 2012 |

When an active AC drops prematurely, you must invoke either autorestoration or fast retry for autorestoration to be attempted for an active AC. If you administer an AC for autorestoration and the connection was routed over SDDN trunks, auto restoration is attempted. During restoration, connections are maintained between the server and both endpoints. In addition to maintaining the active session, AC also provides a high level of security by prohibiting other connections from intervening in active sessions. Autorestoration is usually complete before the 60-second endpoint holdover interval. If autorestoration is successful, the call might be maintained, but this is not guaranteed. The restoration is transparent to the user, with the exception of a temporary disruption of service while restoration is in progress. A successful restoration is indicated by the restored value in the Connection State field on the Administered-Connection Status screen. Although a restoration is successful, the data session might not be preserved.

If autorestoration is inactive, or if the AC is not routed over SDDN trunks, the server immediately attempts a fast retry to reestablish the connection. The server also attempts a retry if the originating endpoint caused the drop. With fast retry, connections are not maintained on both ends. Fast retry is not attempted for an AC that was last established with fast retry, unless that AC is active for at least 2 minutes. If autorestoration or fast retry fails to restore or reestablish the connection, the call drops, and the AC goes into retry mode. Retry attempts continue, at the administered retry interval, as long as the AC is scheduled to be active.