3-169
Cisco Signaling Gateway Manager User Guide
78-15589-01
Chapter3 Managing ITP Networks Using SGM
Working with Signaling Points
Note If you delete a signaling point, SGM removes it from the Signaling Points In
Current View table of the Network View Editor window. If SGM then rediscovers
the signaling point, SGM places it in the New Signaling Points Found table of the
Network View Editor window. To restore the signaling point to your current view,
you must move it into the Signaling Points In Current View table. For more
information, see the “Working with Views” section on page3-26.
Unmanaging and Managing a Signaling Point
SGM enables you to label a signaling point Unmanaged, and to remove the
Unmanaged status from a signaling point.
In some situations, you might not want to see a given signaling point in SGM
displays, but you might be unable to delete it from the SGM database. For
example:
If you have not physically deleted a known signaling point from your
network, and you delete it from SGM, SGM removes the signaling point from
the poll list, and at the next poll SGM returns the signaling point to the
DEFAULT view, and labels the signaling point as a new signaling point if you
are using a custom view.
If a signaling point has at least one adjacent signaling point in Active or
Warnin g state, you cannot delete the signaling point. If you try to do so,
SGM cancels the deletion.
If these situations, you can label the signaling point Unmanaged. When you label
a signaling point Unmanaged, SGM removes the signaling point from the poll
list.
Note If you label a signaling point Unmanaged, the signaling point is Unmanaged for
all SGM clients and views connected to that SGM server.
To label a signaling point Unmanaged, right-click a signaling point in a window,
then select Unmanage from the right-click menu. SGM labels the selected
signaling point Unmanaged and removes it from the poll list.