Cisco Cisco ASR 5000
GTPP Server Group Configuration Mode Commands
gtpp duplicate-hold-time ▀
Command Line Interface Reference, StarOS Release 18 ▄
6169
gtpp duplicate-hold-time
Configures the number of minutes to hold onto CDRs that are possibly duplicates while waiting for the primary CGF to
come back up.
come back up.
Product
GGSN
P-GW
SAEGW
SGSN
S-GW
Privilege
Security Administrator, Administrator
Mode
Exec > Global Configuration > Context Configuration > GTPP Server Group Configuration
configure > context context_name > gtpp group group_name
Entering the above command sequence results in the following prompt:
[context_name]host_name(config-gtpp-group)#
Syntax
gtpp duplicate-hold-time minutes minutes
default gtpp duplicate-hold-time
default
Resets the configuration to the default value of 60 minutes for the duplicate hold time.
minutes
When the primary CGF is down, the number of minutes to hold onto CDRs that may be duplicates.
minutes
must be an integer from 1 to 10080. Default is 60.
Usage
Use this command to configure how long to hold onto CDRs, that are possibly duplicates, while waiting for
the primary CGF to come back up. If the GGSN determines that the primary CGF is down, CDRs that were
sent to the primary CGF, but not acknowledged, are sent by the GGSN to the secondary CGF as “possibly
duplicates”. When the primary CGF comes back up, the GGSN uses GTPP to determine whether the possibly
duplicate CDRs were received by the primary CGF. Then the secondary CGF is told whether to release or
cancel those CDRs. This command configures how long the system should wait for the primary CGF to come
back up. As soon as the configured time expires, the secondary CGF is told to release all of the possibly
duplicate CDRs.
the primary CGF to come back up. If the GGSN determines that the primary CGF is down, CDRs that were
sent to the primary CGF, but not acknowledged, are sent by the GGSN to the secondary CGF as “possibly
duplicates”. When the primary CGF comes back up, the GGSN uses GTPP to determine whether the possibly
duplicate CDRs were received by the primary CGF. Then the secondary CGF is told whether to release or
cancel those CDRs. This command configures how long the system should wait for the primary CGF to come
back up. As soon as the configured time expires, the secondary CGF is told to release all of the possibly
duplicate CDRs.
Example
Use the following command to set the amount of time to hold onto CDRs to 2 hours (120 minutes):
gtpp duplicate-hold-time minutes 120