Cisco Systems OL-5805-01 manual Deleting a Signaling Gateway Mated Pair from Your Network, 13-38

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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 13-39for more information.

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.

 

Cisco Signaling Gateway Manager User Guide

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OL-5805-01

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Contents Working with Signaling Gateway Mated Pairs 13-1Viewing Basic Information for Signaling Gateway Mated Pairs 13-2Right-Click Menu for All Signaling Gateway Mated Pairs 13-313-4 Edit NotesClear Event Icon 13-5 13-6 Signaling Gateway Mated Pair Table 13-713-8 13-9 EventsLast Status Change 13-10 13-11 Signaling Gateway Mated Pair Details Right-Click Menu 13-1213-13 13-14 Association ID Naming InformationStatus Information Is PassiveBlocked red Is IgnoredInstance Status Pending redInterface Information 13-17Remote IP Address Information 13-1813-19 Local IP Address InformationInterface Name 13-20 Signaling Gateway Mated Pair Details NotesSignaling Gateway Mated Pair Details Recent Events 13-21 Ack Adjust Row HeightHelp for Event 13-22Category 13-2313-24 Message Probe ConnProbe Link 13-2513-26 13-27 Signaling Gateway Mated Pair Statistics Details Notes 13-28IP Mask Configuration InformationSpeed Bits/Sec Physical AddressStatistics Information 13-30Errors Information 13-3113-32 Transmission Configuration Information 13-3313-34 Statistics Information per sec Rates 13-35Help CancelSave 13-36Viewing Notes for a Signaling Gateway Mated Pair 13-37Deleting a Signaling Gateway Mated Pair from Your Network 13-38Ignoring a Signaling Gateway Mated Pair 13-39Sgmp Dashboard 13-4013-41 Header Sgmp Name Viewing ITP Signaling Gateway Mated Pair StatusHeader Last Update 13-4213-43 13-44 Viewing ITP Signaling Gateway Mated Pair DetailsCongestion 13-45 Header NodeDetails Mated pair, click Sctp Association Details 13-46 Passive Config Local PortConfig Remote Port Remote Port13-48 DescriptionMask 13-49 13-50 Name of the signaling gateway mated pair to which this Sctp 13-5113-52 13-53 13-54