Table Of Contents
Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 Release Notes
High Availability: RDU Redundancy
Secure Mode of Connection Using SSL
Dynamic Configuration File Generation TLV Updates
Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 Bugs
Accessibility Features in Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0
Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request
Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 Release Notes
Revised: March 15, 2013 , O L-26277-01These release notes provide an overview of the new features of Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 and lists the open bugs for this release.
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Note
You can access the most current Prime Cable Provisioning documentation, including these release notes, online at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps11754/tsd_products_support_series_home.html.
Contents
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New Features and Enhancements
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Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 Bugs
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Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request
Introduction
Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning, referred to as Prime Cable Provisioning throughout this document, automates the tasks of provisioning and managing customer premises equipment (CPE) in a broadband service-provider network. The application provides a simple and easy way to deploy high-speed data, voice technology, and home networking devices.
Prime Cable Provisioning can be scaled to suit networks of virtually any size, even those deploying millions of devices. It also offers high availability, made possible by its distributed architecture with centralized management.
Prime Cable Provisioning incorporates support for many technologies to provide provisioning services for your network. These technologies include:
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DOCSIS high-speed data
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DPoE devices
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PacketCable voice service, both Secure and Basic workflows
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Non-secure CableHome
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OpenCable Set-top box
For detailed information about Prime Cable Provisioning features, see the Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 User Guide.
Functionality Changes in Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0
Here are the main functionality changes between Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 and its earlier versions (referred to as Cisco BAC):
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To access Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0, you must procure a new 5.0 license. You cannot use any old licenses of any earlier releases.
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In Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0, the licensing scheme only counts the DOCSIS IP devices irrespective of whether the device is a stand-alone CM or an embedded eCM, each DOCSIS IP device consumes one license. Apart from the DOCSIS IP device, all other device types consume no license.
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Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 can be installed only on 64-bit servers.
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User management is completely changed in Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0. With the introduction of RBAC, various fine-grained privileges are grouped into roles. These roles are assigned to users either directly or through user groups.
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The API client library is now packaged in the bpr.jar, bacbase.jar, and bac-common.jar files, located at BPR_HOME/lib, where BPR_HOME refers to the home directory on which you install Prime Cable Provisioning.
New Features and Enhancements
Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 consists of many new features and this section describes the most important changes made in this version.
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High Availability: RDU Redundancy
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Secure Mode of Connection Using SSL
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Dynamic Configuration File Generation TLV Updates
New Prime Admin UI
The Prime Cable Provisioning has a new Prime Admin UI with a new look and feel. It also includes new RDU features like RBAC. The Prime Admin UI has similar look and feel as other Cisco Prime products.
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Note
The Admin UI of Prime Cable Provisioning, has a session timeout of ten minutes.
Role Based Access Control
For better user management and security, Prime Cable Provisioning introduces Role Based Access Control (RBAC) that constitutes of privileges, roles, and user groups. RBAC provides an admin role as well as a set of fine grain roles with focused responsibilities. Roles are composed of fine grain privileges. A privilege is a base unit of enforcement. A role groups a set of privileges into a logical job function to enable the customization of authorization policies. User groups are used to associate a number of users with the same set of responsibilities.
Prime Cable Provisioning provides four levels of checks for better security management:
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URL access check - Enforcement done by web facing components such as the Admin UI or web services.
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Operation/Method level check - Enforcement done by the components protecting access to operations. This type of access check is primarily performed in the RDU and DPE CLI. It is meant to ensure that the user has the correct privileges to invoke operations.
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Instance level check - Enforcement to ensure that the user has access to a specific object. This enforcement is performed in the RDU and leverage database capabilities.
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Property level check - Enforcement to ensure that the user has write access to a specific property. This enforcement is performed in the RDU.
High Availability: RDU Redundancy
RDU redundancy facilitates setting up RDU in high availability (HA) environment with a two node failover pair. The RDU redundancy is supported on RHEL 6.3 servers only, and not on Solaris servers. If the primary RDU node fails or becomes unresponsive, the secondary RDU node controls the provisioning service. This helps you to achieve an error-free and continued provisioning service. The HA environment involves setting up the critical components in a failover pair. This ensures that the service continuity is maintained even if a critical component fails to respond, and also helps in disaster recovery. For a medium or large scale setup, it is required to have a redundant service to adhere to the Service Level Agreements (SLAs) and Service Level Objectives (SLOs).
Provisioning Web Services
The Provisioning Web Services (PWS) component exposes a SOAP 1.2 based web service interface as an external integration interface. The web service is a layer above the RDU and can be deployed in the same server as the RDU or as a remote server. The service maps SOAP requests and internally constructs RDU API requests. The service will be capable of interacting with one or more RDUs. The provisioning service is described using a Web Service Description Language (WSDL) v1.1. The WSDL is a contract describing the operations and all request and reply objects and their data types. You can use the PWS WSDL to generate client language bindings for any specific language.
For detailed information about PWS, see the Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 User Guide and Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 Integration Developers Guide.
64-bit Support
In earlier versions of Prime Cable Provisioning, the RDU and DPE servers were shipped with 32-bit processing capabilities with reliability and scalability limitations. A 32-bit application could address only a 4-GB address process space. To mitigate this performance issue, Prime Cable Provisioning is now enhanced to 64-bit processing capabilities, which also includes 64-bit JVM migration. With RDU and DPE servers supporting 64-bit mode, JRE can have expanded heap sizes that allows better leverage of existing resources. Prime Cable Provisioning supports migration of 32-bit RDU and DPE to 64-bit. Also, 64-bit RDU is backward compatible with 32-bit DPE and other components. The CPNR-EP continues to be in 32-bit.
Secure Mode of Connection Using SSL
Prime Cable Provisioning secures all TCP based interactions through the use of Secure Socket Layer (SSL) protocol. SSL is a standard based protocol that enables secure communication. Prime Cable Provisioning supports both SSL 3.0 and TLS 1.0 with TLS 1.0 being the default.
SSL protects the following interactions:
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Clients using the Prime Cable Provisioning API to interact with the RDU.
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Client interaction with the new web services interface.
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RDU and DPE interactions.
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CPNR-EP and RDU interactions.
CableLab Enhancements
Prime Cable Provisioning supports new CableLab standards such as DPoE 1.0 and PacketCable 2.0.
DPoE 1.0
The DOCSIS Provisioning of Ethernet Passive Optical Network (DPoE) 1.0 is a standard for provisioning of EPON access technology using existing DOCSIS provisioning flow. DPoE network offers IP high speed data services equivalent to DOCSIS networks, where the DPoE system acts like a DOCSIS CMTS. The DPoE system and DPoE Optical Network Unit appear to act like a DOCSIS CM also known as virtual CM (vCM). Prime Cable Provisioning uses the existing DOCSIS device type for DPoE vCM devices. DPoE configuration files contain a mixture of DOCSIS and DPoE-specific TLVs.
PacketCable 2.0
PacketCable 2.0 supports the convergence of voice, video, data, and mobility technologies. It is based on Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and IP multimedia system (IMS) and supports configuration and management of Non-Embedded User Equipment (UE) as well as Embedded User Equipment (E-UE). Prime Cable Provisioning supports only the UEs that are embedded with a DOCSIS Cable Modem and are called as E-UE or Embedded Digital Voice Adapter (E-DVA) in IPv4 mode only. E-DVA supports Residential SIP Telephony (RST).
MIB Updates
Some of the existing MIBs have been modified in Prime Cable Provisioning. Here are the details about the changed MIB.
New MIBs added in this release
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PKTC-IETF-SIG-MIB
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PKTC-IETF-MTA-MIB
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CL-PKTC-EUE-PRS-MIB
Updates to latest MIB revision
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CL-PKTC-EUE-TC-MIB
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CL-PKTC-EUE-USER-MIB
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DOCS-IF3-MIB
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DOCS-IFEXT2-MIB
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DOCS-QOS3-MIB
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DSG-IF-MIB
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DSG-IF-STD-MIB
MIBs changed for product rebranding
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CISCO-BACC-DPE-MIB.my
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CISCO-BACC-RDU-MIB.my
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CISCO-BACC-SERVER-MIB.my
Cosmetic formatting enhancements
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CL-PKTC-EUE-DEV-MIB
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CL-PKTC-EUE-EDVA-MIB
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CL-PKTC-EUE-EVENT-MIB
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CL-PKTC-EUE-PROV-MGMT-MIB
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CL-PKTC-EUE-RST-MIB
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CL-PKTC-EUE-PRS-MIB
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CLAB-TOPO-MIB
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DOCS-DRF-MIB
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DOCS-IF-M-CMTS-MIB
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DOCS-L2VPN-MIB
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DOCS-LOADBAL3-MIB
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DOCS-MCAST-AUTH-MIB
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DOCS-MCAST-MIB
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DOCS-SEC-MIB
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DOCS-SUBMGT3-MIB
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DTI-MIB
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ESAFE-MIB
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OC-HOME-NETWORK-MIB
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OC-STB-HOST-MIB
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PKTC-EN-SIG-MIB
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PKTC-ES-IPTAP-MIB
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PKTC-ES-TAP-MIB
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PKTC-EVENT-MIB
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SLED-MIB
Dynamic Configuration File Generation TLV Updates
Table 1 lists the new Dynamic Configuration File Generation (DCFG) TLVs introduced in Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0.
Table 2 lists the DCFG TLVs updated in the Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0.
Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 Bugs
This section lists issues that are either resolved in this release or are still open in Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0.
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Note
To obtain more information about known problems, access the Cisco Software Bug Toolkit at http://www.cisco.com/pcgi-bin/Support/Bugtool/home.pl. (You will be prompted to log into cisco.com).
Resolved Issues
Table 3 lists the resolved bugs in the Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 release.
Known Issues
Table 4 lists the known bugs in the Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 release.
Using the Bug Toolkit
This section explains how to use the Bug Toolkit to search for a specific bug or to search for all bugs in a release.
Step 1
Go to http://tools.cisco.com/Support/BugToolKit.
Step 2
At the Log In screen, enter your registered Cisco.com username and password; then, click Log In. The Bug Toolkit page opens.
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Note
If you do not have a Cisco.com username and password, you can register for them at http://tools.cisco.com/RPF/register/register.do.
Step 3
To search for a specific bug, click the Search Bugs tab, enter the bug ID in the Search for Bug ID field, and click Go.
Step 4
To search for bugs in the current release, click the Search Bugs tab and specify the following criteria:
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Select Product Category—Cloud and Systems Management
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Select Products—Prime Cable Provisioning.
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Note
Do not enter Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning. Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning is the new product name for the former Cisco Broadband Access Center. At this time, the Bug Toolkit does not accept Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning as the product name.
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Software Version—[Product Version].
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Search for Keyword(s)—Separate search phrases with boolean expressions (AND, NOT, OR) to search within the bug title and details.
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Advanced Options—You can either perform a search using the default search criteria or define custom criteria for an advanced search. To customize the advanced search, click Use custom settings for severity, status, and others and specify the following information:
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Severity—Choose the severity level.
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Status—Choose Terminated, Open, or Fixed.
Choose Terminated to view terminated bugs. To filter terminated bugs, uncheck the Terminated check box and select the appropriate suboption (Closed, Junked, or Unreproducible) that appears below the Terminated check box. Select multiple options as required.
Choose Open to view all open bugs. To filter the open bugs, uncheck the Open check box and select the appropriate suboptions that appear below the Open check box. For example, if you want to view only new bugs in Prime Optical 9.5, choose only New.
Choose Fixed to view fixed bugs. To filter fixed bugs, uncheck the Fixed check box and select the appropriate suboption (Resolved or Verified) that appears below the Fixed check box.
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Advanced—Check the Show only bugs containing bug details check box to view only those bugs that contain detailed information, such as symptoms and workarounds.
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Modified Date—Choose this option to filter bugs based on the date when the bugs were last modified.
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Results Displayed Per Page—Specify the number of bugs to display per page.
Step 5
Click Search. The Bug Toolkit displays the list of bugs based on the specified search criteria.
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Note
In the search results, the headlines and Release-note enclosures might contain both Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning and Cisco Broadband Access Center product names. For example, if a bug applies to both Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 and Cisco Broadband Access Center 4.2, the headline and Release-note enclosure contain the earlier BAC product terminology.
Step 6
To export the results to a spreadsheet:
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In the Search Bugs tab, click Export All to Spreadsheet.
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Specify the filename and location at which to save the spreadsheet.
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Click Save. All bugs retrieved by the search are exported.
If you cannot export the spreadsheet, log into the Technical Support website at http://www.cisco.com/cisco/web/support/index.html or contact the Cisco Technical Assistance Center (TAC).
Product Documentation
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Note
We sometimes update the documentation after original publication. Therefore, you should also look at the documentation on Cisco.com for any updates.
See the Cisco Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0 Documentation Overview for the list of Prime Cable Provisioning guides.
Related Documentation
See the Cisco Prime Network Registrar 8.x Documentation Overview for the list of Cisco Prime Network Registrar guides.
Accessibility Features in Prime Cable Provisioning 5.0
For a list of accessibility features in Prime Cable Provisioning, see the Voluntary Product Accessibility Template (VPAT) on the Cisco website, or contact accessibility@cisco.com.
All product documents are accessible except for images, graphics, and some charts. If you would like to receive the product documentation in audio format, braille, or large print, contact accessibility@cisco.com.
Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request
For information on obtaining documentation, submitting a service request, and gathering additional information, see What's New in Cisco Product Documentation at: http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/general/whatsnew/whatsnew.html.
Subscribe to What's New in Cisco Product Documentation, which lists all new and revised Cisco technical documentation, as an RSS feed and deliver content directly to your desktop using a reader application. The RSS feeds are a free service.
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