Additional Management Tools and Interfaces
Revised: August 08, 2013, OL-24178-09
Introduction
This chapter contains the following information:
•The Cisco SCA BB Service Configuration Utility
•The Cisco SCA BB Real-Time Monitoring Configuration Utility
•The Cisco SCA BB Signature Configuration Utility
•Overview of SNMP, MIB, and Traps
•Installing PQI Files from the Command Line
•Managing Subscribers via Other System Components
The Cisco SCA BB Service Configuration Utility
The Cisco SCA BB Service Configuration Utility (servconf) is a command-line utility (CLU) for applying and retrieving service configurations. Use it in a scripting environment to automate service configuration tasks on multiple Service Control Engine (SCE) platforms.
The Service Configuration Utility can run in Windows, Solaris, and Linux environments.
servconf Syntax
The command-line syntax of servconf is:
servconf <operation> [<option>] [<option>]...
Table 14-1 lists the servconf operations.
Table 14-2, Table 14-3, Table 14-4, Table 14-5, and Table 14-6 list the servconf options.
Table 14-1 servconf Operations
|
|
|
--apply |
-a |
Copies the specified service configuration file to the specified SCE platforms and activates it |
--retrieve |
-r |
Retrieves the current service configuration |
--update-dc |
-u |
Updates a Cisco Service Control Management Suite (SCMS) Collection Manager (CM) with service configuration values |
--status |
— |
Shows the service configuration status on the SCE platform |
--update-signature |
— |
Updates the SCE platform with a new protocol pack |
--update-signature-pqi |
— |
Updates the SCE platform with a new SPQI protocol pack |
--signature-info |
-i |
Shows information about the Dynamic Signature Script (DSS) file |
--help |
— |
Displays help, then exits |
--version |
— |
Displays the program version number, then exits |
Table 14-2 servconf File Options
|
|
|
--file=filename |
-f |
Specifies a service configuration file or DSS file |
--backup-directory=directory |
-b |
Specifies the directory to which to save the retrieved PQB file before applying a new protocol pack |
Table 14-3 servconf Connection Options
|
|
|
--se=address |
-S |
Specifies the IP address of the destination SCE platform. To specify multiple SCE platforms, list the IP addresses separated by semicolons (see Example 1 in the following section). When using a semicolon in a Unix command line, the command-line argument must be enclosed in quotation marks. |
--dc=address |
-D |
Specifies the IP address of the destination SCMS Collection Manager platform (required only for the --update-dc operation). |
--password=password |
-P |
Specifies the password for connecting to the SCE platform. |
--username=username |
-U |
Specifies the username for connecting to the SCE platform. If this option is not specified, the following default values are used: •SCE—admin •CM—pcube •SM—pcube |
Table 14-4 servconf Reference SCE Option
|
|
--refer-se=address |
Specifies the IP address of the SCE platform to which the service configuration values refer (required only for --update-dc operation) |
Table 14-5 servconf Apply Options
|
|
--no-dc |
(Optional) Specifies that the --apply operation should not automatically update the SCMS Collection Manager with service configuration values. |
--no-default-signature |
Applies the service configuration without adding the default DSS to it. |
--force-default-signature |
Forces the replacement of the DSS in the retrieved PQB with the default DSS, even if the signatures of the existing DSS are mapped to services. Without this flag, trying to update a PQB containing a DSS fails. |
Table 14-6 servconf Update Signature Option
|
|
--force-signature |
Forces replacement of the DSS in the retrieved PQB, even if the signatures of the existing DSS are mapped to services. Without this flag, trying to update a PQB containing a DSS fails. |
servconf Examples
Example 1
To copy the service configuration file config.pqb from the local machine to two SCE platforms (at 63.111.106.7 and 63.111.106.12), and activate this configuration:
servconf "--se=63.111.106.7;63.111.106.12" --username Alice --password ***** --apply
--file config.pqb
Example 2
To retrieve the current service configuration from the SCE platform at 63.111.106.7, and save it in file my_files\config.pqb on the local machine:
servconf -S 63.111.106.7 -U Bob -P ***** --retrieve --file my_files\config.pqb
Example 3
To update the SCMS Collection Manager at 63.121.116.17 with service configuration values from file config.pqb, as if they were applied to the SCE platform at 63.111.106.7 (but without actually applying them to the SCE platform):
servconf -D 63.121.116.17 -U Alice -P ***** --update-dc
--refer-se 63.111.106.7 --file config.pqb
Example 4
To distribute the protocol pack file new_signature.spqi to the SCE platforms at 10.56.216.33 and 10.56.216.36:
servconf --update-signature-pqi -f new_signature.spqi
-S "10.56.216.33;10.56.216.36" -U user123 -P *****
The Cisco SCA BB Real-Time Monitoring Configuration Utility
SNMP-based monitoring tools, such as MRTG, allow network administrators to monitor the activity and health of network devices in real time. Cisco SCA BB includes an SNMP-based real-time monitoring solution, which is implemented using MRTG and a graphics utility (RRD Tool).
The Cisco SCA BB Real-Time Monitoring Configuration Utility (rtmcmd) is a command-line utility (CLU) for automating the production of the files required by the MRTG tool.
For installation instructions, see How to Install the Cisco SCA BB Configuration Utilities. For more information about installing and using the Cisco SCA BB SNMP-based real-time monitoring solution, see the Cisco SCA BB SNMP Real Time Monitoring User Guide.
•rtmcmd Syntax
•rtmcmd Examples
•The rtmcmd User Configuration File
•An rtmcmd User Configuration File Example
rtmcmd Syntax
The command-line syntax of the Cisco SCA BB Real-Time Monitoring Configuration Utility is:
rtmcmd --sce <SCE (SNMP) addresses> {--file <PQB filename> | (--pqb-sce
<SCE (PQB) addresses> --username <username> --password <password>)} --source-dir <dir>
--dest-dir <dir> --config-file <file>
Table 14-7 lists the rtmcmd options.
Table 14-7 rtmcmd Options
|
|
|
--sce address |
-S |
Specifies the IP address or hostname of the SCE platform from which SNMP data is collected. To specify multiple SCE platforms, list the IP addresses separated by semicolons. When using a semicolon in a Unix command line, the command-line argument must be enclosed in quotation marks. |
--file filename |
-f |
(Required if --pqb-sce is not included) Specifies the service configuration file to use when generating the configuration and report files. If this option is specified, the --username/-U and --password/-P options are prohibited. |
--pqb-sce address |
-q |
(Required if --file is not included) Specifies the hostname or IP address of the SCE platform from which the service configuration should be retrieved. This option requires the --username/-U and --password/-P options. |
--username <username> |
-U |
(Required if --pqb-sce is included) Specifies the username for connecting to the SCE platform. |
--password <password> |
-P |
(Required if --username is included) Specifies the password for connecting to the SCE platform. |
--source-dir <dir> |
-s |
Specifies the location of the report template files. |
--dest-dir <dir> |
-d |
Specifies the directory where the processed report templates should be stored. |
--config-file <file> |
-c |
Specifies the configuration file. (See The rtmcmd User Configuration File). |
You can invoke additional operations (see Table 14-8) to display information about the rtmcmd using the following syntax:
Table 14-8 rtmcmd Operations
|
|
--version |
Displays the program version number, then exits |
--help |
Displays help, then exits |
rtmcmd Examples
Example 1
To use the service configuration file servicecfg.pqb to create configuration and report files for the collecting and reporting of SNMP information from two SCE platforms (at 63.111.106.7 and 63.111.106.12):
rtmcmd --sce="63.111.106.7;63.111.106.12" --file=servicecfg.pqb
--source-dir=/rtm-templates --dest-dir=/rtm-output -c./rtmcmd.cfg
Example 2
To use the service configuration loaded on the SCE platform at 63.111.106.7 to create configuration and report files for the collecting and reporting of SNMP information from two SCE platforms (at 63.111.106.7 and 63.111.106.12):
rtmcmd -S "63.111.106.7;63.111.106.12" -U user123 -P **** --pqb-sce=63.111.106.7
--source-dir=/rtm-templates --dest-dir=/rtm-output -c./rtmcmd.cfg
The rtmcmd User Configuration File
The user configuration file contains user-specific information required by the rtmcmd utility. The Cisco SCA BB utilities distribution package contains a sample configuration file, named rtmcmd.cfg. You should edit this file according to the details of your setup.
Table 14-9 lists the configuration parameters that should be present in the user configuration file:
Table 14-9 rtmcmd User Configuration File Parameters
|
|
|
|
rrdtool_bin_dir |
The absolute path to the directory where RRDTool and RRDCGI binary files are installed. |
— |
Required |
rtm_dir |
The absolute path to the directory where RRD archives and CGI files are stored. This is under the web server web directory. |
— |
Required |
mrtg_bin_dir |
The absolute path to the directory where MRTG binary files are installed. This location is used to create MRTG invocation commands in the crontab sample file. |
— |
Required |
snmpCommunityString |
The SNMP community string to use when accessing the SCE platforms. |
Public |
Required |
The configuration text file is a listing of key-value pairs, where the key is one of the parameters listed above, in the following format:
•Each key-value pair is on a separate line.
•A key-value pair may be extended across several adjacent lines by putting a back slash character, "\", at the end of each line.
•To use an actual back slash in the value (as in directory names on Windows), the back slash should be escaped with a second back slash, like this: "\\" (or use a slash "/").
•To comment a line, add "#" or "!" at the beginning of the line.
For example:
# This is a comment line.
# Directory names should use escape backslashes:
rtm_dir=D:\\PROGRA~1\\APACHE~1\\Apache2.2\\htdocs
An rtmcmd User Configuration File Example
#The absolute path to the RRD tool's execution files folder
#Use '\\' or '/' as path separator
rrdtool_bin_dir=C:/rrdtool-1.2.15/rrdtool/Release
#The absolute path where RTM files will be placed.
#This path will be used by MRTG to create and update the RRD files
#Note: path must not contain white spaces!
rtm_dir=C:/PROGRA~1/APACHE~1/Apache2.2/htdocs
#The absolute path to the MRTG bin folder.
#This path will be used to create file crontab.txt
mrtg_bin_dir=C:/mrtg-2.14.5/bin
#The SCE's community string
snmpCommunityString=public
The Cisco SCA BB Signature Configuration Utility
The Cisco SCA BB Signature Configuration Utility (sigconf) is a command-line utility for installing and managing the default DSS.
The Signature Configuration Utility can run in Windows, Solaris, and Linux environments.
For installation instructions, see How to Install the Cisco SCA BB Configuration Utilities.
sigconf Syntax
The command-line syntax of the Cisco SCA BB Signature Configuration Utility is:
sigconf <operation> [--file <filename>]
Table 14-10 lists the sigconf operations.
Table 14-11 lists the sigconf option.
Table 14-10 sigconf Operations
|
|
|
--set-default-dynamic-signature |
-d |
Installs the default DSS on this workstation |
--remove-default-dynamic-signature |
— |
Uninstalls the default DSS from this workstation |
--get-default-dynamic-signature |
— |
Fetches the default DSS installed on this workstation |
--help |
— |
Displays help, then exits |
Table 14-11 sigconf File Option
|
|
|
--file filename |
-f |
Specifies a DSS file |
sigconf Examples
Example 1
To install the file new_signature.dss as the default DSS:
sigconf --set-default-dynamic-signature --file new_signature.dss
Example 2
To retrieve the installed default DSS file, and save it as default_backup.dss:
sigconf --get-default-dynamic-signature --file default_backup.dss
Overview of SNMP, MIB, and Traps
Cisco provides complete network FCAPS (Fault, Configuration, Accounting, Performance, Security) management.
Two interfaces are provided for network management:
•Command-line interface (CLI)—Accessible through the console port on the front panel of the SCE platform or through a Telnet connection to the SCE platform, the CLI is used for configuration and security functions.
•SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol)—Provides fault management (via SNMP traps) and performance monitoring functionality.
SNMP
SNMP is a set of protocols for managing complex networks. SNMP works by sending messages, called protocol data units (PDUs), to different parts of a network. SNMP-compliant devices, called agents, store data about themselves in Management Information Bases (MIBs) and return this data to the SNMP requesters.
The SCE platform operating system includes an SNMP agent. Configuring the SNMP agent parameters and enabling the SNMP interface is described in either the "Configuring the Management Interface and Security" chapter of Cisco SCE8000 10GBE Software Configuration Guide or the "Configuring the Management Interface and Security" chapter of Cisco SCE8000 GBE Software Configuration Guide.
MIB
Management Information Bases (MIBs) are databases of objects that can be monitored by a network management system. SNMP uses standardized MIB formats that allow standard SNMP tools to monitor any device defined by a MIB.
The SCE platform supports the following MIBs:
•MIB-II—Defined in RFC 1213, (Management Information Base for Network Management of TCP/IP-based Internets)
•Cisco Service Control Enterprise MIB—Described by a number of MIB files
The Cisco proprietary MIB allows external management systems to retrieve general information about the SCE platform operating status and resource utilization, extract real-time measurements of bandwidth utilization and network statistics, and receive notifications of critical events and alarms.
The part of the Cisco proprietary MIB that provides configuration and runtime status for Cisco SCA BB is documented in the "SCA BB Proprietary MIB Reference" chapter of Cisco Service Control Application for Broadband Reference Guide. Other parts of the Cisco proprietary MIB are documented in either the "Proprietary MIB Reference" appendix of the Cisco SCE8000 10GBE Software Configuration Guide or the "Proprietary MIB Reference" appendix of the Cisco SCE8000 GBE Software Configuration Guide. These books also explain the order in which the MIB must be loaded.
Traps
Traps are unsolicited messages generated by the SNMP agent that resides inside the SCE platform. Traps are generated when an event occurs. When the Network Management System receives the trap message, it can take suitable actions, such as logging the occurrence or ignoring the signal.
The SCE platform supports two general categories of traps:
•Standard SNMP traps—As defined in RFC 1157 and using the conventions defined in RFC 1215
•Proprietary Cisco Service Control Enterprise traps—As defined in the Cisco proprietary MIB
For a description of the SNMP traps and an explanation of how to configure the SNMP trap managers, see either the "Configuring and Managing the SNMP Interface" section in the "Configuring the Management Interface and Security" chapter of Cisco SCE8000 10GBE Software Configuration Guide or the "Configuring and Managing the SNMP Interface" section in the "Configuring the Management Interface and Security" chapter of Cisco SCE8000 10GBE Software Configuration Guide.
Installing PQI Files from the Command Line
•How to Install a Cisco SCA BB PQI File on an SCE Platform
•How to Enter Line Interface Configuration Mode
How to Install a Cisco SCA BB PQI File on an SCE Platform
You can install a Cisco SCA BB PQI file on an SCE platform using the SCE platform Command-Line Interface (CLI).
Step 1 Make sure that the PQI file is available.
Do one of the following:
•Locate the PQI file on the SCE platform.
•Upload the appropriate PQI file to the SCE via FTP.
Step 2 Enter line interface configuration mode. (See How to Enter Line Interface Configuration Mode.)
Step 3 Type pqi install file engXXXXX.pqi.
Step 4 Monitor the installation progress until it is completed.
What to Do Next
After you install the Console, you can use the Network Navigator tool to install PQI files. See How to Install PQI Files on SCE Devices.
How to Enter Line Interface Configuration Mode
Step 1 At the SCE platform CLI prompt (SCE#),
type configure.
Step 2 Press Enter.
The SCE(config)#
prompt appears.
Step 3 Type interface LineCard 0.
Step 4 Press Enter.
The SCE(config if)#
prompt appears.
Managing Subscribers via Other System Components
Other components of the Cisco Service Control solution offer alternatives for subscriber management (as opposed to using the Subscriber Manager GUI tool in the Console):
•The Cisco Service Control Management Suite (SCMS) Subscriber Manager (SM) has options that are not available from the Console.
•The SCE platform has a wide range of subscriber-related functions.
This section gives an overview of these alternatives, with emphasis on the Cisco SCA BB-specific subscriber management options. For in-depth explanations, see the appropriate Service Control documentation.
•Anonymous Subscriber Mode
•Subscriber-Aware Mode
•Selecting Subscribers for Real-Time Usage Monitoring
•Managing Subscriber CSV Files
Anonymous Subscriber Mode
An anonymous subscriber is one with a name generated automatically by the SCE platform according to an anonymous subscriber group specification. An anonymous subscriber is always mapped to a single IP address. The actual identity of the customer is unknown to the system.
An anonymous group is a specified IP range, possibly assigned a subscriber template. If an anonymous group is configured, the SCE platform generates anonymous subscribers for that group when it detects traffic with an IP address in the specified IP range. If a subscriber template is assigned to the group, the anonymous subscribers generated have properties defined by that template. If no subscriber template is assigned, the default template is used, which cannot be changed by template import operations. Initially, 200 templates are preconfigured, one for each package ID.
Anonymous subscriber groups and subscriber templates are managed using the SCE platform Command-Line Interface (CLI). You can enter CLI commands via a Telnet session. For more information, see Cisco SCE 8000 CLI Command Reference Guide or Cisco SCE 2000 and SCE 1000 CLI Command Reference Guide.
Use the following commands to import anonymous subscriber groups and subscriber templates from CSV files and to export subscriber data to these files:
•subscriber anonymous-group import csv-file
•subscriber anonymous-group export csv-file
•subscriber template import csv-file
•subscriber template export csv-file
Note The preceding CLI commands are line interface configuration commands. You must enter line interface configuration mode (see How to Enter Line Interface Configuration Mode) and see the SCE(config if)#
prompt displayed before entering a command.
Use the following commands to delete anonymous groups or subscriber templates from the system.
•no subscriber anonymous-group [all] [name <groupname>]
•clear subscriber anonymous
•default subscriber template all
Note The preceding CLI commands are line interface configuration commands. You must enter line interface configuration mode (see How to Enter Line Interface Configuration Mode) and see the SCE(config if)#
prompt displayed before entering a command.
Use the following commands to display anonymous subscriber information:
•show interface LineCard 0 subscriber templates [index]
•show interface LineCard 0 subscriber anonymous-group [all] [name <groupname>]
•show interface LineCard 0 subscriber amount anonymous [name <groupname>]
•show interface LineCard 0 subscriber anonymous [name <groupname>]
Subscriber-Aware Mode
In subscriber-aware mode, each subscriber is a specific customer with an externally generated name. This externally generated name allows the subscriber to be mapped to more than one IP address and still be identified. Each traffic session (single IP flow, or a group of related IP flows) processed by the SCE platform is assigned to a recognized subscriber on the basis of the configured subscriber mappings.
There are three options for introducing and managing these subscribers:
•The SM GUI tool (see Using the SM GUI Tool)
•The SCE platform subscriber CLI
•The SM subscriber management CLU
The SCE Platform Subscriber CLI
Use the following commands to import subscriber data from CSV files and to export subscriber data to these files:
subscriber import csv-file
subscriber export csv-file
Note The preceding CLI commands are line interface configuration commands. You must enter line interface configuration mode (see How to Enter Line Interface Configuration Mode) and see the SCE(config if)#
prompt displayed before entering a command.
Use the following command to remove subscribers from the system.
no subscriber [all] [name <subscriber-name>]
Note The preceding CLI command is a line interface configuration command. You must enter line interface configuration mode (see How to Enter Line Interface Configuration Mode) and see the SCE(config if)#
prompt displayed before entering the command.
Use the following commands to display subscribers meeting various criteria:
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber [amount]
[prefix <prefix>] [property <propertyname> equals | greater-than | less-than
<property-val>]
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber [amount] prefix <prefix>
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber [amount] suffix <suffix>
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber mapping IP <iprange>
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber [amount] mapping intersecting IP <iprange>
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber mapping VLANid <vlanid>
Use the following commands to display information about a specific subscriber:
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber properties
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber name <name>
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber name <name> mappings
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber name <name> counters
show interface LineCard 0 subscriber name <name> properties
The SM Subscriber Management CLU
The SM Subscriber Management Utility (p3subs) is a CLU for managing subscribers. You can use it to add or remove subscribers. You can also manage subscriber properties and mappings with this utility.
For more information about p3subs, see Cisco Service Control Management Suite Subscriber Manager User Guide.
p3subs Syntax
You run p3subs from the Solaris shell prompt. The command-line syntax of the utility is:
p3subs <operation> --subscriber=<Subscriber-Name> [--ip=<IP-address>]
[--property=<property-name=value>] [--domain=<domain-name>] [--overwrite]
The following table lists the p3subs operations relevant to managing subscribers.
Table 14-12 p3subs Subscriber Operations
|
|
--add |
Adds a subscriber or replaces the existing subscriber configuration |
--set |
Updates mappings and properties for the specified subscriber |
--remove |
Removes the specified subscriber |
--show |
Displays information for specified subscriber |
Selecting Subscribers for Real-Time Usage Monitoring
Real-Time Subscriber Usage RDRs report the network activity of a single subscriber per service per metric, in real-time. You must enable the generation of these subscriber usage RDRs separately for each subscriber that you wish to monitor.
Caution
Generating and collecting Real-Time Subscriber Usage RDRs for many subscribers can compromise performance. Enable Real-Time Subscriber Usage RDR generation only for subscribers that must be monitored.
The monitor
subscriber property controls the generation of Real-Time Subscriber Usage RDRs. By default, generation of these RDRs is disabled (monitor = 0
. To enable generation of the RDRs, change the value of the property to 1.
You can modify this property for selected subscribers using either the SM Command-Line Utility (CLU) or the SCE platform CLI.
•Managing Subscriber Monitoring via the SM
•Managing Subscriber Monitoring via the SCE Platform
Managing Subscriber Monitoring via the SM
You can enable or disable the generation of the Real-Time Subscriber Usage RDRs using the SM p3subs utility. You can also create a file that processes a batch of subscribers. For more information, see Cisco Service Control Management Suite Subscriber Manager User Guide.
•How to Enable Subscriber Monitoring for a Subscriber
•How to Disable Subscriber Monitoring for a Subscriber
•How to Enable Subscriber Monitoring for Multiple Subscribers
•How to Verify that Subscriber Monitoring is Enabled for a Subscriber
How to Enable Subscriber Monitoring for a Subscriber
You can enable subscriber monitoring for a specified subscriber.
Step 1 From the command line, run sm/server/bin/p3subs --set --subscriber Smith --property monitor=1.
How to Disable Subscriber Monitoring for a Subscriber
You can disable subscriber monitoring for a specified subscriber.
Step 1 From the command line, run sm/server/bin/p3subs --set --subscriber Smith --property monitor=0.
How to Enable Subscriber Monitoring for Multiple Subscribers
You can enable subscriber monitoring for multiple subscribers.
Step 1 Create a text file (named monitor.txt in this example) containing the sequence of CLU invocations.
The file would look something like this:
p3subs --set --subscriber Jerry --property monitor=1
p3subs --set --subscriber George --property monitor=1
p3subs --set --subscriber Elaine --property monitor=1
p3subs --set --subscriber Kramer --property monitor=1
p3subs --set --subscriber Newman --property monitor=1
Step 2 From the command line, run sm/server/bin/p3batch -f monitor.txt.
How to Verify that Subscriber Monitoring is Enabled for a Subscriber
You can check to see whether subscriber monitoring is enabled for a specific subscriber.
Step 1 From the command line, run sm/server/bin/p3subs --show-property --subscriber Smith --property monitor.
Managing Subscriber Monitoring via the SCE Platform
You can also enable or disable the generation of the Real-Time Subscriber Usage RDRs using the SCE platform. For more information, see Cisco SCE8000 CLI Command Reference Guide.
•How to Enable Subscriber Monitoring for a Subscriber
•How to Disable Subscriber Monitoring for a Subscriber
•How to Enable Subscriber Monitoring for Multiple Subscribers
•How to Verify that Subscriber Monitoring is Enabled for a Subscriber
How to Enable Subscriber Monitoring for a Subscriber
You can enable subscriber monitoring for a specified subscriber.
Step 1 Enter line interface configuration mode. (See How to Enter Line Interface Configuration Mode.)
Step 2 At the SCE(config if)#
prompt, run subscriber name Smith property name monitor value 1.
How to Disable Subscriber Monitoring for a Subscriber
You can disable subscriber monitoring for a specified subscriber.
Step 1 Enter line interface configuration mode. (See How to Enter Line Interface Configuration Mode.)
Step 2 At the SCE(config if)#
prompt, run subscriber name Smith property name monitor value 0.
How to Enable Subscriber Monitoring for Multiple Subscribers
You can enable subscriber monitoring for multiple subscribers.
Step 1 Create a text file (named monitor.txt in this example) containing the sequence of CLI invocations, including the commands to access the appropriate CLI mode.
The file would look something like this:
configure
interface LineCard 0
subscriber name Jerry property name monitor value 1
subscriber name George property name monitor value 1
subscriber name Elaine property name monitor value 1
subscriber name Kramer property name monitor value 1
subscriber name Newman property name monitor value 1
Step 2 From the SCE platform CLI prompt (SCE#),
run script run monitor.txt.
How to Verify that Subscriber Monitoring is Enabled for a Subscriber
You can check to see whether subscriber monitoring is enabled for a specific subscriber.
Step 1 From the SCE platform CLI prompt (SCE#),
run show interface LineCard 0 subscriber name Smith properties.
The properties are displayed; monitor
is the relevant parameter.
Subscriber smith properties:
subscriberPackage=0
monitor=1
Subscriber 'smith' read-only properties
Managing Subscriber CSV Files
Use the p3subsdb SM utility to import and export subscriber CSV files. You can import subscriber information for a group of subscribers from a CSV file into the SM database. You can also export subscriber information from the SM database to a CSV file.
For more information, see the Cisco Service Control Management Suite Subscriber Manager User Guide.
CSV file structure is described in the "CSV File Formats" chapter of Cisco Service Control Application for Broadband Reference Guide.
•How to Import Subscriber CSV Files
•How to Export Subscriber CSV Files
How to Import Subscriber CSV Files
Step 1 At the Solaris shell prompt, run p3subsdb --import <filename>.
How to Export Subscriber CSV Files
Step 1 At the Solaris shell prompt, run p3subsdb --export <filename>.
Example: Filtering and Exporting Subscribers
The following example exports every subscriber whose name begins with `a' to the file silverSubscriberFile.csv
p3subsdb --export --prefix=a --output=silverSubscriberFile.csv