About this Guide


This preface describes who should read the Cisco Service Control Application for Broadband User Guide, how it is organized, its document conventions, and how to obtain documentation and technical assistance.

This guide assumes a basic familiarity with the concept of the Service Control solution, the Service Control Engine (SCE) platforms, and related components.

Document Revision History

The Document Revision History below records changes to this document.

Revision
Cisco Service Control Release and Date
Change Summary

OL-7205-10

3.1.7
December, 2008

Changes to the default configuration. See Managing Advanced Service Configuration Options, page 10-39.

OL-7205-09

3.1.6
July, 2008

Minor correction regarding filter rules.

OL-7205-08

3.1.6
May, 2008

Minor changes throughout the guide.

OL-7205-07

3.1.5
November, 2007

Added the following new features:

Configuration Wizards, page 4-18

See:

How to Use the Usage Analysis Wizard, page 4-19

How to Use the P2P Traffic Optimization Wizards, page 4-30

How to Use the Reporter DB Configuration Wizard, page 4-46

How to Configure SCE and CM Devices Using a Wizard, page 5-8

DSCP ToS Classification (ToS is added as a flavor type, see Managing Flavors, page 7-44)

DSCP ToS Marking (see How to Manage DSCP ToS Marker Values, page 9-28)

OL-7205-05

3.1.0
May, 2007

Added the following new features:

Virtual Links (see Managing Virtual Links, page 9-43)

Asymmetric Routing Classification Mode, page 10-34

NetFlow (see NetFlow records, page 8-2)

Quota Replenish Scatter, page 9-49

Updated the following sections of the document

Managing Bandwidth, page 9-29

Information About the System Modes, page 10-34

Managing Advanced Service Configuration Options, page 10-39

OL-7208-04

3.0.5
November, 2006

Added the following new feature:

The SCA BB Real-Time Monitoring Configuration Utility, page 13-5

Updated the following sections of the document

Quick Forwarding (see Filter Rule Actions, page 10-19 and Automatic Quick Forwarding of Media Flows, page 10-19)

OL-7205-03

3.0.3
May, 2006

Added the following new features:

Hitless Upgrade of the SLI, page 4-12

Content Filtering (see Managing Content Filtering, page 7-53)

The Service Security Dashboard, page 10-1

Removed the following deprecated feature:

Attack Filtering and Subscription Notification

OL-7205-02

3.0.0
December, 2005

Document name changed to Cisco Service Control Application for Broadband User Guide.

Both the look-and-feel and the functionality of the Cisco Service Control Application for Broadband (SCA BB) Console were redesigned for release 3.0. Consequently, this document underwent a major rewrite. The major changes in this document are listed below.

Appendixes B, C, D of the 2.5.5 release user guide were moved to a new document: the Cisco Service Control Application for Broadband Reference Guide.

Chapter 8 and Appendix A of the 2.5.5 release user guide were moved to a new document: the Cisco Service Control Application Suite Reporter User Guide.

The Cisco Service Control Application Suite for Broadband Installation Guide was deprecated; it forms the basis for part of the Getting Started chapter.

Chapter 5 of the 2.5.5 release user guide (Constructing Service Configurations) was completely rewritten and split into three chapters.

New chapters were added for the new tools included in the Console: the Network Navigator tool and the Signature Editor tool.

OL-7205-01

2.5.5
February, 2005

First version of this document (then named Cisco Service Control Application Suite for Broadband User Guide).


Organization

This guide contains the following sections:

Section
Title
Description

1

Cisco Service Control Overview

Provides a general overview of the Cisco Service Control solution.

2

System Overview

Provides a functional overview of the Cisco Service Control solution.

3

Traffic Processing Overview

Provides a technical overview of the Cisco Service Control solution.

4

Getting Started

Guides you through the process of installing or upgrading SCA BB and describes the concept of the Console as a collection of tools.

5

Using the Network Navigator

Explains how to use the Network Navigator to create a model of all devices that are part of the Cisco Service Control solution and how to manage the devices remotely.

6

Using the Service Configuration Editor

Explains how to use the Service Configuration Editor to manage service configurations.

7

Using the Service Configuration Editor: Traffic Classification

Explains how to configure service configurations to perform traffic classification.

8

Using the Service Configuration Editor: Traffic Accounting and Reporting

Explains how to configure service configurations to perform traffic reporting.

9

Using the Service Configuration Editor: Traffic Control

Explains how to configure service configurations to perform traffic control.

10

Using the Service Configuration Editor: Additional Options

Documents additional, advanced options available in the Service Configuration Editor.

11

Using the Subscriber Manager GUI Tool

Explains how to use the SM GUI tool to configure subscribers on the SCMS-SM database.

12

Using the Signature Editor

Documents the Signature Editor tool, which can create files for updating protocols in SCA BB.

13

Additional Management Tools and Interfaces

Documents and explains other tools that are available for use with SCA BB.


Related Publications

Use this Cisco Service Control Application for Broadband User Guide in conjunction with the following Cisco documentation:

Cisco Service Control Application for Broadband Reference Guide

Cisco Service Control Application for Broadband Service Configuration API Programmer Guide

Cisco Service Control Management Suite Collection Manager User Guide

Cisco Service Control Management Suite Subscriber Manager User Guide

Cisco Service Control Application Reporter User Guide

The SCE platform installation and configuration guides:

Cisco SCE 1000 2xGBE Installation and Configuration Guide

Cisco SCE 2000 4xGBE Installation and Configuration Guide

Cisco Service Control Engine (SCE) CLI Command Reference

Cisco Service Control Engine (SCE) Software Configuration Guide

Conventions

This document uses the following conventions:

Convention
Indication

bold font

Commands and keywords and user-entered text appear in bold font.

italic font

Document titles, new or emphasized terms, and arguments for which you supply values are in italic font.

[ ]

Elements in square brackets are optional.

{x | y | z }

Required alternative keywords are grouped in braces and separated by vertical bars.

[ x | y | z ]

Optional alternative keywords are grouped in brackets and separated by vertical bars.

string

A nonquoted set of characters. Do not use quotation marks around the string or the string will include the quotation marks.

courier font

Terminal sessions and information the system displays appear in courier font.

< >

Nonprinting characters such as passwords are in angle brackets.

[ ]

Default responses to system prompts are in square brackets.

!, #

An exclamation point (!) or a pound sign (#) at the beginning of a line of code indicates a comment line.



Note Means reader take note.



Tip Means the following information will help you solve a problem.



Caution Means reader be careful. In this situation, you might perform an action that could result in equipment damage or loss of data.


Timesaver Means the described action saves time. You can save time by performing the action described in the paragraph.



Warning Means reader be warned. In this situation, you might perform an action that could result in bodily injury.


Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request

For information on obtaining documentation, submitting a service request, and gathering additional information, see the monthly What's New in Cisco Product Documentation, which also lists all new and revised Cisco technical documentation, at:

http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/general/whatsnew/whatsnew.html

Subscribe to the What's New in Cisco Product Documentation as a Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feed and set content to be delivered directly to your desktop using a reader application. The RSS feeds are a free service and Cisco currently supports RSS version 2.0.