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Overview of SRC-ACP

SRC-ACP is an external plug-in for the SAE. SRC-ACP authorizes and tracks subscribers' use of network resources associated with services that the SRC software manages. Service providers can implement SRC-ACP configurations for both residential and enterprise subscribers. Consequently, both JUNOSe routers and JUNOS routing platforms are compatible with SRC-ACP. References to virtual routers (VRs) in this documentation refer to an actual VR on a JUNOSe router or the single VR called default that the SRC software associates with each JUNOS routing platform (see Part 2, Using Juniper Networks Routers in the SRC Network ).

SRC-ACP operates in two separate regions of the SRC network: the edge network and the backbone network. The edge network is the layer 2 access network through which subscribers connect to the router. The backbone network is the region between the router and the service provider's network.

Congestion often occurs in the network at points where connections are aggregated. SRC-ACP monitors congestion points at interfaces between devices in the edge network. In the backbone network, SRC-ACP monitors one congestion point, a point-to-point label-switched path (LSP) between the router and the service provider's network.

Figure 45 shows a typical network topology.


Figure 45: Position of SRC-ACP in Network

In the edge network, SRC-ACP performs the following procedures to determine whether there are sufficient resources to activate a service:

In the backbone network, SRC-ACP performs the following procedures to determine whether there are sufficient resources to activate a service:

Typically, network administrators use their own network management applications and external applications to provide data for SRC-ACP. SRC-ACP first obtains updates from external applications through its remote CORBA interface, and then obtains updates from the directory by means of LDAP. For information about developing external applications that send data to SRC-ACP, see API for ACP. SRC-ACP does not interact directly with the network to assess the capacity of a congestion point or actual use of network resources.

In the backbone network, SRC-ACP can also execute applications defined in the action congestion point. For information about defining applications in congestion points, see Configuring Action Congestion Points. Some applications require real-time congestion point status. If SRC-ACP must provide real-time congestion point status to the application, state synchronization must be enabled to handle interface tracking events so that the congestion points are updated properly.


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