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- Steel-Belted Radius Carrier 8.3.0 Installation
Guide
- Copyright and Trademark Information
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- About This Guide
- Overview of Steel-Belted Radius Carrier and Session State Register
Installation
- Standalone Steel-Belted Radius Carrier Installation Overview
- Migrating from Earlier SBR Releases
- Supporting SIM with Signalware
- Installation Workflow
- Release 8.3.0 Standalone Server Installation Checklist
- Session State Register Cluster Installation Overview
- SSR Cluster Overview
- SSR Cluster Concepts and Terminology
- Supported SBR Carrier SSR Cluster Configurations
- Failover Overview
- Failover Examples
- Distributed Cluster Failure and Recovery
- Failover Overview
- Session State Register Database Tables
- Supporting SIM, SIGTRAN, and Other Protocols with Signalware
- Cluster Installation Workflow
- Session State Register Cluster Installation Checklist
- Standalone Steel-Belted Radius Carrier Installation Overview
- Preparing for a Steel-Belted Radius Carrier Installation
- Planning Your Session State Register Cluster
- Planning the Cluster Topology
- Naming the Cluster and Its Machines
- Cluster Naming Worksheets
- Renaming Node Hosts
- Configuring Multipathing
- Planning the Cluster Topology
- Before You Install Software
- Reviewing the Release Notes
- Determining the Server’s Centralized Configuration Management Role
- Selecting an Appropriate Server
- Meeting System Requirements
- Standalone SBR Carrier Server Hardware
- Session State Register Host Hardware
- Software
- Verifying Root Access
- Verifying Network Requirements
- Creating Required Users and Groups
- Creating Share Directories
- Setting Up External Database Connectivity (Optional)
- Obtaining License Keys
- Creating a Copy of Existing SBR Server Release Files for Migration
- Installing the SIGTRAN Interface (Optional)
- Migrating from Previous SBR Releases
- Migration Overview
- Files from Earlier Releases That Require Manual Editing
- Migrating from SBR Release 6.X
- Migrating from SBR Carrier Release 7.0
- Migrating from SBR Carrier Release 7.4.0
- Migration and New Installations of SBR Carrier with WiMAX
- Historic Files
- Planning Your Session State Register Cluster
- Installing and Configuring a SBR Carrier Standalone Server
- Installation and Basic Configuration of a SBR Carrier Standalone
Server
- Unpacking the Steel-Belted Radius Carrier Software
- Running the Steel-Belted Radius Carrier Configure Script
- Starting and Stopping a Standalone Steel-Belted Radius Carrier Server
- Basic SBR Carrier Configuration
- Configuring the CST for a Standalone Server
- Configuring the sessionTable.ini file
- RadAttr Fields and the sessionTable.ini File
- Multi-Valued Attributes
- Using MVA Facilities
- Configuring the sessionTable.ini file
- Installation and Basic Configuration of a SBR Carrier Standalone
Server
- Installing Session State Register Nodes
- Installing Session State Register Nodes
- Cluster Installation Overview
- Unpacking Session State Register Software
- Setting Up a Starter Kit’s First SBR/Management Node
- Setting Up the Second SBR/Management Node in a Starter Kit
- Setting Up Data Node Hosts Included with the Starter Kit
- Initial Cluster Startup Procedure
- Recommendations before Configuring the Cluster
- Basic SBR Carrier Node Configuration
- Customizing the SSR Database Current Sessions Table
- Current Sessions Table Overview
- Sessions in the CST
- Customizing the CST
- Current Sessions Table Fields
- System Core Fields
- System Feature Fields
- System Optional Fields
- RadAttr Fields
- RadAttr Fields and the sessionTable.ini File
- Multi-Valued Attributes
- Using MVA Facilities
- Admin Private Fields
- System Keys and Indexes
- Admin Keys and Indexes
- SSR Datatypes
- Other Session State Register Configuration Files
- Tuning Other SSR Tables Overview
- Configuring the dbclusterndb.gen File
- Customizing Other Tables and Scripts
- Managing IP Pools
- When and How to Restart Session State Register Nodes, Hosts,
and Clusters
- Overview of Starting and Stopping a Session State Register
Cluster
- sbrd
- Starting the Cluster
- Proper Order for Starting Nodes in a Cluster
- Proper Order for Stopping Individual Nodes
- Stopping a Single Node
- Starting a Single Node
- Proper Order for Stopping the Entire Cluster
- Overview of Starting and Stopping a Session State Register
Cluster
- Installing Session State Register Nodes
- Expanding a Session State Register Cluster
- Expanding an SSR Cluster
- Upgrading from a Restricted Cluster to a Regular Cluster
- Adding Nodes to a Cluster Overview
- Adding a New SBR Carrier Server to an Existing Cluster
- Updating the Existing Cluster Definition Files for the New SBR Node
- Distributing the Updated Cluster Definition Files to the Existing Nodes
- Installing the SBR Carrier Software on the New SBR Node Host Machine
- Configuring the Software on the New SBR Node
- Configuring Each Existing Node in the Cluster with the New Cluster Definition Files
- Starting the New SBR Node
- Adding a Management Node Expansion Kit to an Existing Cluster
- Updating the Existing Cluster Definition Files for the New Management Node
- Distributing the Updated Cluster Definition Files to the Existing Nodes
- Installing the SBR Carrier Software on the New Management Node Host Machine
- Configuring the SBR Carrier Software on the New Management Node
- Configuring Each Existing Node in the Cluster with the New Cluster Definition Files
- Starting the New Management Node
- Running CreateDB.sh on the New Management Node
- Adding a Data Expansion Kit to an Existing Cluster
- Requirements for Selecting a Transition Server in Your Environment
- Using a Transition Server When Adding Data Nodes to an Existing Cluster
- Existing Cluster Configuration for This Example Procedure
- Creating the Transition Server
- Creating the Updated Cluster Definition Files
- Installing the SBR Carrier Software on the Two New Data Node Host Machines
- Distributing the Updated Cluster Definition Files to the Existing Nodes
- Destroying the Session Database on the Original Cluster
- Configuring the Nodes in the Expanded Cluster with the Updated Cluster Definition Files
- Creating the Session Database and IP Pools on the Expanded Cluster
- Removing the Transition Server from Service
- Unconfiguring and Rebuilding the Transition Server
- Non-Transition Server Method—Terminating Connections
- Expanding an SSR Cluster
- SIGTRAN Support for Steel-Belted Radius Carrier
- Migrating Signalware
- Installing Signalware 9 on Oracle Solaris 10
- Installing Signalware 9 on Linux
- Configuring SIGTRAN/IP Network Communication Files
- Starting and Stopping Signalware
- Configuring Communication Files Overview
- Communication Pathways and Corresponding Files
- Configuration Activities
- Signalware MML Commands
- Defining Links, Link Sets, and Route Sets
- Configuring authGateway and GWrelay Applications for HLR Communication
- Configuring the authGateway Routing Location Information
- Configuring the authGateway.conf File
- Configuring the authGateway Startup Information
- Configuring the GWrelay.conf File
- Starting the GWrelay Process
- Configuring the ulcmmg.conf File
- Loading the MML Configuration Settings
- Sample authGateway Command and File
- Uninstalling Steel-Belted Radius Carrier Software
- Removing Steel-Belted Radius Carrier Software
- Upgrading Your SSR Cluster
- Overview of Upgrading Your SSR Cluster
- Using a Transition Server to Mitigate Downtime While Upgrading
Your Cluster
- Cluster Migration Strategy
- Cluster Migration Workflow
- Creating a Transition Server
- Installing the Cluster
- Removing the Transition Server from Service
- Cleaning the Transition Server
- Upgrading Your Cluster Using the Rolling Restart Method
- Overview of the Rolling Restart Upgrade Method
- Preparation
- Upgrading the M Nodes in the Cluster
- Upgrading the SM Nodes in the Cluster
- Upgrading the S Nodes in the Cluster
- Upgrading the Data (D) Nodes with the New Software
- Launching Web GUI
- Upgrading Your Cluster Using the Backup, Destroy, and Re-Create
Method
- Overview of the Backup, Destroy, and Re-Create Upgrade Method
- Capturing Your Current Cluster Configuration
- Backing Up the State of the Sessions in Your SSR Database
- Destroying the Cluster Database
- Stopping All Processes on All Nodes
- Installing the New SBRC Software on the Data Nodes
- Installing the New SBRC Software on the SM Nodes
- Configuring the First SM Node and Creating a New Cluster Definition
- Configuring the SBRC Software on the SM Nodes
- Configuring the SBRC Software on the Data Nodes
- Starting the SSR Processes
- Creating and Restoring the SSR Database
- Starting the RADIUS Process
- Launching Web GUI
- Appendix
- Testing the Installation with DemoSetup.sh
- Creating a Test Database
- DemoSetup.sh Syntax
- Testing the Installation with DemoSetup.sh
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Migrating from SBR Carrier Release 7.4.0
SBR Carrier Release 7.4.0 uses the latest version of the RAIMA RDM Embedded Database. The RAIMA RDM Embedded database is upgraded from RDME version 7.0 to 11.0 when running the configure script.
![]() | Note: The RAIMA RDM Embedded database upgraded to the new version 11.0 cannot be downgraded to the old version. Make sure that the old version of the database is backed up. The following files must be backed up:
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