Chapter 13 Working with Signaling Gateway Mated Pairs
Deleting a Signaling Gateway Mated Pair
Deleting a Signaling Gateway Mated Pair from Your Network
If you physically delete a known signaling gateway mated pair from your network (for example, by powering down an ITP), it remains in the SGM database, SGM labels it Unknown, and it is the system administrator’s responsibility to delete it from the SGM database, if you choose to do so.
Deleting a Signaling Gateway Mated Pair from the SGM Database
Typically, you delete a signaling gateway mated pair from the SGM database for one of the following reasons:
•You have physically deleted the signaling gateway mated pair from your network. This is the most common reason for deleting a signaling gateway mated pair from the SGM database.
•The signaling gateway mated pair is Down, Inactive, or Unknown, you are aware of the reason, and you no longer want to see it in SGM displays. For example, the signaling gateway mated pair might be a test lab device.
If you have physically deleted a known signaling gateway mated pair from your network, and you then delete it from SGM, it is no longer in the SGM database, it does not appear in SGM windows, and it is not discovered when you run Discovery.
If you have not physically deleted a known signaling gateway mated pair from your network, and you delete it from SGM, at the next poll SGM finds the signaling gateway mated pair and adds it back to the SGM database, setting the status appropriately. If this happens, do not delete the signaling gateway mated pair again. Instead, set it to Ignored. See the “Ignoring a Signaling Gateway Mated Pair” section on page
Note If you delete a signaling gateway mated pair from the SGM database, the signaling gateway mated pair is deleted for all SGM clients and views connected to that SGM server.
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