Cisco Cisco Packet Data Gateway (PDG)
SecGW Changes in Release 17
▀ SecGW Enhancements for 17.0
▄ Release Change Reference, StarOS Release 17
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SecGW Enhancements for 17.0
This section identifies all of the Security Gateway (SecGW) enhancements included in this release:
Feature Changes – new or modified features or behavior changes. For details, refer to the SecGW Administration
Guide for this release.
Guide for this release.
Command Changes – changes to any of the CLI command syntax. For details, refer to the Command Line Interface
Reference for this release.
Reference for this release.
Performance Indicator Changes – new, modified, and deprecated bulk statistics, disconnect reasons, counters and/or
fields in new or modified bulkstat schema and/or show command output. For details, refer to the Statistics and Counters
Reference for this release.
fields in new or modified bulkstat schema and/or show command output. For details, refer to the Statistics and Counters
Reference for this release.
Important:
This release includes enhancements that are applicable to multiple products. The following lists the
various multi-product enhancements sections, some of which might include content applicable to your SecGW.
AAA Enhancements
CF Enhancements
ECS Enhancements
Firewall Enhancements
GTPP Enhancements
Lawful Intercept Enhancements
MVG Enhancements
NAT Enhancements
SNMP MIB Enhancements
System and Platform Enhancements
Important:
This is the FCS release of SecGW. For complete descriptions of SecGW functionality and features,
see the SecGW Administration Guide.
CSCtt22271 - RFC 4303 ESN
Feature Changes
ESN for ikev2
Every IKE message contains a Message ID (sequence number) as part of its fixed header. This sequence number is a
monotonically increasing integer (incremented by 1 for every packet sent) used to match up requests and responses, and
to identify retransmissions of messages. The sequence is a 32-bit integer which is zero for the first IKE request in each
direction.
monotonically increasing integer (incremented by 1 for every packet sent) used to match up requests and responses, and
to identify retransmissions of messages. The sequence is a 32-bit integer which is zero for the first IKE request in each
direction.