The OPTIONS Ping will come across in the regular SIP stack (TCP:5060/TCP:5061 
or UDP:5060 typically). Prioritization is a Quality of Service technique and 
not an Access Control technique. I don't think a standard ACL would look at the 
application layer header to differentiate SIP messages and offer priority of 
individual SIP messages.

I'd look into making sure you are applying the correct signaling QoS to the 
ingress/egress links.

-RH

On Aug 27, 2017, at 11:31 PM, Ki Wi 
<kiwi.vo...@gmail.com<mailto:kiwi.vo...@gmail.com>> wrote:

Hi Saranyan,
thanks! I would like to know how can I compose an access-list to detect SIP 
option ping and prioritize it.




On Mon, Aug 28, 2017 at 11:20 AM, saranyan k 
<saranyan2...@gmail.com<mailto:saranyan2...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi Ki Wi,

OPTIONS ping is a SIP message. Ideally the transport mode of the message is TCP 
or UDP based on the configuration done under voice service voip -> sip.
Otherwise, we can configure a keepalive profile so that we can specify the mode 
of transport for the OPTIONS keepalive messages.

!

voice class sip-options-keepalive 1

transport tcp

!

Map the profile to any dial-peer:

!

dial-peer voice 1 voip

 session protocol sipv2

 incoming called-number 299

 voice-class sip options-keepalive profile 1

 dtmf-relay rtp-nte sip-notify

 codec g711ulaw

 no vad

!

Say if the router is set to use UDP, its worth to give it a try with TCP.

Please let me know if this helps.


Regards,

Saranyan




On Mon, Aug 28, 2017 at 8:26 AM, Ki Wi 
<kiwi.vo...@gmail.com<mailto:kiwi.vo...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi Group,
I would like to find out if SIP option ping is a "ping" or a "sip message" ?

From the documents, it seems like it is a sip messages.

My customer is facing issue with the dial-peers getting busy out during WAN 
congestion. We would like to prioritize those messages as a WAN provider but 
they are not able to give us the exact commands for the CE router.

 Currently this is the command on all their managed "voice gateway"
 * voice-class sip options-keepalive up-interval 120 down-interval 120 retry 2

This means the "transport" mode is default. This make things more complex, I 
have no idea it is TCP or UDP or ???

With no access to customer network (unable to do wireshark), I would like to 
see if there's anyone having the experience to prioritize those SIP option ping 
packets?


--
Regards,
Ki Wi

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--
Regards,
Ki Wi
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