About Server-to-Server Routing

Server-to-server routing routes faxes between two or more Upland AccuRoute servers thus reducing the cost of sending faxes long distance over phone lines.

The servers with SSR connectors use routing rules to determine when a fax should be routed via server-to-server routing. When a fax message in server A matches a routing rule specifying the SSR connector as the routing action and destination, server A routes the message using the SSR connector over a network (LAN, WAN, or internet) to the SSR connector of another server B. Server B picks up the fax message from its SSR connector, processes the message and routes it according to its routing rules.

Example

A company has office locations in Boston, London, and Dallas. Each location has an AccuRoute Server. The Server Administrators in Boston and Dallas create routing rules that route messages whose destination fax numbers start with +01144 to the London server, because it costs less for the London server to send these messages than either of the other servers. Similarly, the Dallas and London administrators create rules that route messages destined for the +1617, +1978, +1508, and +1781 area codes to the Boston server, and the Boston and London administrators create rules that route messages destined for the +1469 and +1972 area codes to the Dallas server.

Note: : You must install a connector on each server that will route messages.

See also

About SSR Connector

Setting Up Server-to-Server Routing

Configuring SSR Connector Settings