Carrier-class architecture
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- Provides a distributed architecture for flexibility.
- Integrates with provider subscriber databases and supports
customer profiles to define subscriber groups.
- Instantiates each key server multiple times for either
load distribution or failover.
- Facilitates a variety of wholesale and retail models.
- Uses CLI and GUI management and monitoring.
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Seamless
integration with operations support systems (OSS)
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- Uses modular design and
standards-based interfaces such as HTML/XML, RADIUS, LDAP, Common
Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA), and Simple Object Access
Protocol (SOAP).
- Supports open interfaces and mediation mechanisms to facilitate
system integration with diverse OSS applications, including systems
for subscriber management, customer care, order entry, provisioning,
billing, security, and sales support.
- Ensures smooth integration with back office solutions.
(We partner with leading providers of telecommunications, RADIUS/authentication,
authorization, and accounting (AAA), and billing systems to offer
these services.)
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Financial
advantages
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- Avoids the misconception of a one-size-fits-all Internet
access model by offering compelling content options with the appropriate
level of bandwidth, quality of service (QoS), and network functions
(for example, security, traffic prioritization, and filtering).
- Allows providers to hold down on capital expenditures
and operating expenses by offering a wide range of flexible services,
tools, billing models, and revenue streams, and by using the same
network infrastructure.
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Optimal scalability
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- Scales for rapidly growing networks and subscriber bases.
- Works with routers running JUNOSe or JUNOS Software, and
PCMM-compliant CMTS devices to automatically provision and support
thousands to millions of subscribers in a distributed environment.
- Uses zero-touch subscriber provisioning, which removes
the roadblocks that can slow large-scale broadband subscriber acquisition.
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Easy-to-build wholesale-retail model
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- Provides a transparent infrastructure to Internet service
provider (ISP), application service provider (ASP), and content partners,
which lets partners retain ownership and management of their subscriber
bases.
- Frees partners from the responsibility of handling network
operations so that they can focus solely on service delivery.
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Intelligent
accounting
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- Tracks service usage to enable rich and creative tariff
models.
- Supports customer care, rating and billing, security,
and sales support systems.
- Simplifies the task of collecting and managing retailer
and subscriber accounting data.
- Uses a configuration interface to choose the policy rules
to be used for accounting per interface direction (ingress and egress).
- Activates multiple service sessions simultaneously for
a given subscriber; each session can be tracked separately.
- Supports plug-in software that gives service providers
the ability to extend system capabilities.
- Allows for flexible accounting rules.
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Easy subscriber management
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- Uses configuration interfaces for service definition and
subscriber management.
- Uses a directory that acts as a central repository of
customer information and service portal configurations. The directory
stores router information.
- Works with routers running JUNOSe or JUNOS Software, and
PCMM-compliant CMTS to collect subscribers’
credentials and queries the RADIUS server for authentication and authorization.
- Accommodates and manages a very large number of subscribers
(for example, a typical subscriber base may be in the millions).
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Dynamic policy
management
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- Gives subscribers consistent service experience across
the network, regardless of the actual network deployment and the mode
of connection to the network.
- Enables real-time provisioning and collection of subscriber
usage data.
- Offers high availability based on seamless failover.
- Uses configuration interfaces to define policies and store
them in a central repository.
- Provides robust
support for access, QoS, and activation of new services on demand
with configurable policies.
- Performs dynamic policy decisions while services are activated,
leveraging on the directory content to make policy decisions.
- Provides end-to-end service levels across the network.
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Web-based portal
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- Creates dynamic Web pages, giving subscribers personalized
displays to select services on demand.
- Offers branding opportunities for network provider/service
provider partners.
- Identifies subscribers, grants them access to defined
services, and maps their selected service(s) to the network by means
of dynamically provisioned policies.
- Allows portals to be deployed in any application server
with support for CORBA or SOAP.
- Provides a starting point for rapid portal development
through documented sample portals supplied for Java 2 Enterprise Edition
(J2EE) application servers.
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Easy service creation
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- Uses the SRC CLI and the C-Web interface to enable the
definition of various policy objects.
- Uses configuration interfaces to define new services and
to create service templates for future use. Service templates provide
the service-provisioning information that configures the router for
efficient, real-time delivery of that service.
- Provides flexible service creation, a reusable service
library, and automated service implementation.
- Allows providers to define policies once and apply them
network-wide.
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Service activation engine (SAE)
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- Translates services into lists of policies to be enforced
on the router.
- Initiates the service-usage data-collection process.
- Customizes services with differentiated QoS and policies.
- Collects usage data (time and volume) by subscriber
and service to enable differentiated rating and billing.
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Flexible open interface support
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- Allows an external entity or system to control the SRC
software’s behavior.
- Uses application programming
interfaces (APIs) to authenticate managers; to navigate among retailers,
enterprises, and sites; and to create, delete, activate, and deactivate
service sessions.
- Provides a Common Open Policy Service for policy provisioning
(COPS-PR) interface.
- Integrates into a PCMM environment with support for CableLabs
PCMM specification.
- Extends policies to systems that do not have a supported
router driver.
- Integrates with the Ellacoya Networks Deep Packet Inspection
(DPI) platform to provide a traffic management solution that combines
the advanced traffic identification and reporting features of the
Ellacoya DPI with the SRC software’s intelligent service policy
enforcement. With this solution, providers can identify, monitor,
and control traffic on a per-application or per-subscriber basis.
- Integrates into an IP multimedia system (IMS) environment.
The SRC software provides a Diameter protocol-based interface that
allows the SRC software to integrate with services found on the application
layer of IMS.
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