4. Installation

4.1. Hardware Specifications
4.1.1. Dimensions and Weight
4.1.2. Front View
4.1.3. Back View
4.2. Installation Prerequisites
4.3. Rack-Mount Installation
4.4. Power Supply Cabling
4.5. Network Cabling

This chapter will provide the step by step instructions on how to put the sip:provider PRO into operations.

4.1. Hardware Specifications

4.1.1. Dimensions and Weight

The sip:provider PRO ships fully pre-installed on two servers. The hardware dimensions and weight is defined in the following figure:

Hardware Dimensions

Xa

Xb (Width)

Y (Height)

Za w/ bezel

Za w/o bezel

Zb (Depth)

Zc

482.4mm

434mm

42.4mm

35mm

21mm

612.6mm

641.9mm

Weight: 15kg

4.1.2. Front View

Front View Front View LCD Panel

4.1.3. Back View

Back View View Back View PSU

The redundant PSUs include LEDs which indicate the status of the PSU:

  • Not lit: AC power is not connected.
  • Green: In standby mode, a green light indicates that a valid AC source is connected to the power supply and that the power supply is operational. When the system is on, a green light also indicates that the power supply is providing DC power to the system.
  • Amber: Indicates a problem with the power supply.
  • Alternating green and amber: When hot-adding a power supply, this indicates that the power supply is mismatched with the other power supply (a high output power supply and an Energy Smart power supply are installed in the same system). The power supply that has the flashing indicator needs to be replaced with the same model as the other power supply.

4.2. Installation Prerequisites

In order to put the sip:provider PRO into operations, you need to rack-mount it into 19" racks.

What you will find in the box is the following equipment:

  • 2 servers
  • 2 pairs of rails to rack-mount the servers
  • 4 power cables with C13 jacks

What you will additionally need and what is not part of the shipment is the following parts:

  • 2 CAT5 cables to connect the servers to the access switches for external communication
  • 1 CAT5 cable to directly connect the two servers for internal communication

4.3. Rack-Mount Installation

Install the two servers into the rack (either into a single one or into two geographically distributed ones). The rails shipped with the servers should fit into standard 4-Post 19" racks. If it does not fit, please consult your rack vendor to get proper rails.

The following figure shows the mounted rails. Please note that the cable management arm on the top right is NOT included.

Rack-mounted Rails

4.4. Power Supply Cabling

Each server has two redundant Power Supply Units (PSU). Connect one PSU to your normal power circuit and the other one to an Uninterruptible Power Supply Unit (UPS) to gain the maximum protection against power failures.

The cabling should look like in the following picture to prevent accidental power cuts:

Proper PSU Cabling

4.5. Network Cabling

For each of the two servers, connect a straight CAT5 cable to the first network interface and hook it up to the corresponding access switch port.

Then patch a cross-link with another straight CAT5 cable between the two servers by connecting the cable to the second network interface. The direct cross cable is used for maximum availability, because this connection is used by the servers to communicate with each other internally. Only use a switch in between if there is no other way to connect the two ports (e.g. if it’s geographically distributed).

In case you are using a switch for cross-link make sure to enable portfast mode on Cisco switches. The thing is that STP puts the port into learning mode for 90 seconds after it comes up for the first time. During this learning phase, the link is technically up, but no traffic passes through, so heartbeat will detect other node as dead during boot. Portfast tells the switch to skip the learning phase and go to forwarding state right away: spanning-tree portfast [trunk].