In this section:

The request system command applies to both system-level and configure modes except where noted.

Admin

Command Syntax

% request system admin <SYSTEM NAME>
    adManualSync	
    discardCandidateConfiguration
    license loadLicenseFile
		bundleName <license bundle name>
		fileName <license filename>
	loadConfig
		allowOldVersion <no | yes>
		filename 
	reenableOSaccount userName <username>
	reGenerateSshRsaKeys
	reKeyConfdEncryptionKeys
	removeSavedConfig fileName <filename>
	restart
    restoreRevision revision <revision number>
    saveAndActivate
	saveConfig fileNameSuffix <suffix>
    searchAdData adAttributeIdentifier <AD Attribute> searchString <search data>
	setHaConfig
		bondMonitoring <currentValue | direct-connect | network-connect> 
		leaderElection <currentValue | enhanced | standard>
	softReset
	switchover
	verifyDatabaseIntegrity <activeAndStandbyPolicy | activeConfigAndActivePolicy | all>
    viewConfigurationChanges
       revision <revision number>
	zeroizePersistenKeys

Command Parameters

NOTEGeographical Redundancy High Availability (GRHA) is supported on SBC hardware platforms and SWe 1:1 HA deployments. It is not supported in N:1 HA or cloud-based deployments.

 

System Admin Parameters (request)

Parameter

Description

adManualSync 
This is a request to sync with AD Server to fetch subscriber data. This is an optional parameter.

discardCandidateConfiguration

Use to discard candidate configuration changes that have been committed on the OAM node, but not yet activated on the managed SBC nodes with the saveAndActivate command. This command also restarts the OAM nodes, although it does not impact the managed SBC nodes. Applies only to SBC SWe cluster deployments operating in OAM configuration mode.

license loadLicenseFile

Load the specified node-locked license file stored in the SBC directory /opt/sonus/external.

  • bundleName <license bundle name> – The bundle name to use for the license installation.
  • fileName <license filename> – The name of the license file to install.

References:

loadConfig

Load saved configuration and restart the system without rebooting the servers.

  • allowOldVersion – This option is only intended for use to override checks for older releases which do not identify their version. In this case, the follow error results. Follow the instructions given:

    "There is no version identifier on the saved file. Use the allowOldVersion parameter only if you are sure the version of the saved configuration file is compatible with the running software version."
    • no
    • yes
  • filename – Enter the configuration file to load.

NOTE: In a redundant system, using loadConfig restarts both CEs

NOTE: If "reason Configuration file version not compatible with current software version. matrixFileNotAvailable" error is returned, the lswuMatrixSBX5000.bin/lswuMatrixSBX5000.txt file is missing from the/opt/sonus directory. You must must restore these files from the release package of the currently running software with the name pattern of "sbc-V0X.YY.ZZRQQQ.x86_64.tar.gz". Unzip and untar the current release's tar.gz file in that directory, return to the CLI and perform the command again.

reenableOSaccount

Use this command to re-enable an OS account for a specific user.

  • userName <user name> - User name of account to re-enable.
reGenerateSshRsaKeysUse this control to regenerate all SSH keys.
reKeyConfdEncryptionKeys

Use this control to regenerate system configuration database encryption keys.

NOTE: Ribbon recommends backing up current encrypted parameters in plaintext, if possible. Ribbon further recommends performing a full configuration backup immediately after this activity has successfully completed.

removeSavedConfig

Remove the saved configuration from the system.

  • fileName – Specify filename of configuration to remove from the system.

restart

Restart system (all CEs).

restoreRevision

Use this command along with a specific, prior configuration revision number to revert to that configuration. The OAM nodes and the SBC nodes automatically restart when you restore a prior configuration.  

  • revision <revision number>

saveAndActivateSave and activate cluster configuration. Applies only to SBC SWe clusters operating in OAM or Direct Single configuration mode. Saves the configuration to EMS. Activates the configuration on the managed VMs, if a cluster is using OAM configuration mode. Refer to Modifying SBC Cluster Configuration.

saveConfig

Save the current configuration.

  • fileNameSuffix – Use this parameter to specify the filename suffix to use when saving the configuration.
setHaConfig

Use this action command to configure SBC for Geographical Redundancy High Availability (GRHA) mode when active and standby servers are located in two different data centers to protect SBCs against data center and network failures. To configure/change just one setting, use currentValue option for the other setting.

  • bondMonitoring – Select the bond monitoring type for GRHA mode.
    • currentValue 
    • direct-connect
    • network-connect
  • leaderElection Select the leader election algorithm type to use for GRHA mode.
    • currentValue 
    • enhanced
    • standard


References:

NOTE: Bond monitoring is not applicable to the SBC SWe.

softReset

Restart the applications on the system without rebooting the server(s).

switchover

Perform a switchover of the management applications and restart all applications on currently active server.

verifyDatabaseIntegrity

Use this command to verify that the SBC policy and configuration databases on the active server are in sync and that the policy databases on the active and standby servers are in sync. Because these commands take a few seconds to execute, it is not advisable to constantly run these commands on systems.

  • activeAndStandbyPolicy – Check if policy databases on the active and standby servers are in sync.
  • activeConfigAndActivePolicy – Check if the policy and configuration databases on the active server are in sync.
  • all – Perform both of the above checks.

To view the results of the above checks, use the 'show table system databaseIntegrity' command. Refer to Show Table System for details.

viewConfigurationChanges

The behavior of this request command depends on whether you provide an optional revision number. Applies only to SBC SWe cluster deployments operating in OAM configuration mode.

Issue this request command without specifying a revision number to list the candidate configuration changes that have been committed on the OAM node, but not yet activated on the managed SBC nodes with the saveAndActivate command.

Specify a revision number to list the configuration changes associated with the specified revision.

  • revision <revision number>

If the revision number refers to a configuration that was part of restore operation, no changes are shown.

Note that viewing of configuration related to lawful intercept (LI) is restricted to authorized users and therefore output is filtered accordingly. LI-related changes are not present in the output shown to users that lack LI privileges. Similarly, users with only LI privileges can see only LI-related configuration changes.

zeroizePersistenKeys

Use this control to securely erase all persistent CSPs from the system. The SBC server reboots after confirmation.

searchAdDataSearches the local AD database
adAttributeIdentifierAD Attribute Identifier
searchStringA request to Search String

Command Example

The following is an example of how to request manual sync:

request system admin TICKS adManualSync


The following is an example of how to search AD Data: 

request system admin TITAS searchAdData adAttributeIdentifier adAttribute2 searchString 8067100197

Ethernet Port

Command Syntax

% request system ethernetPort packetAdmin <host name> <pkt0 | pkt1> switchover

Command Parameter

Ethernet Port 'request' Parameter

Parameter

Description

switchover

Use this parameter to initiate a port switchover within a redundancy pair.

Note: The switchover command only applies to pkt0 and pkt1 on the SBC 7000 and SBC SWe Cloud active server.



IP Policing

Command Syntax

> request system ipPolicing resetOffendersList <OffendersList name> 
  aclOffendersList 
  aggregateOffendersList 
  arpOffendersList 
  badEtherIpHdrOffendersList 
  discardRuleOffendersList 
  ipSecDecryptOffendersList 
  mediaOffendersList 
  rogueMediaOffendersList 
  uFlowOffendersList

Offenders List Details

IP Policing Offenders Lists

ACL Offenders List – The Access Control List policer offenders list.

Aggregate Offenders List – The aggregate policer offenders list.

ARP Offenders List – The ARP policer offenders list.

Bad Ethernet IP Header Offenders List – The bad Ethernet/IP Header policer offenders list. Ethernet/IP headers are considered bad under the following conditions:

  • Only broadcast ARP packets are allowed; all other broadcast packets are considered bad.

  • Anything other than the following unicast/multicast ICMPV6 packets are considered bad.

    • Type 2 (Packet too big)
    • Type 3 (ICMP Time exceeded) Code 0 (hop limit exceeded).
    • Type 128 (ICMPV6 Echo request)
    • Type 129 (ICMPV6 Echo reply)
    • Type 135 Neighbor Solicitation
    • Type 136 Neighbor Advertisement
  • Anything other than the following unicast ICMPV4 packets are considered bad:

    • Type 0 Echo Reply

    • Type 3 Code 4 (Destination unreachable, fragmentation required)

    • Type 8 Echo Request

    • Type 11 Code 0 (Time Exceeded, TTL expired)

  • Only ICMPV6 neighbor discovery packets are allowed under multicast MAC address. Anything else is considered bad.

  • If DestMAC is zero, it is considered a bad packet.

  • Anything other than ethertype (IPV4, IPV6, VLAN) is considered bad.

  • IP Checksum error is considered bad.

  • IP version other than 4 or 6 is considered bad.

  • Bad IP Header length

  • Packet that is not long enough to contain IP header.

  • TTL == 0 is considered bad.

  • IPV4 with options set is considered bad.

  • IPV6 with initial next header field of 0, 60, or 43 is considered bad.

Discard Rule Offenders List – The table of statistics for the discard rule offenders list. For example: ACLi discard rule packets.

IPsec Decrypt Offenders List – The table of statistics for the IPsec Decrypt policer offenders list. For example:

  • Bad IPsec packet

  • Authentication error

  • Invalid SSID

  • IPsec protocol == AH

Media Offenders List – The table of statistics for the media policer offenders list. For example: Media packets exceeding the policing value.

Rogue Media Offenders List – The table of statistics for the rogue media policer offenders list. For example:

  • UDP packets received in the media port range, but the destination UDP port is not allocated for media call
  • Media packets where source port, source address or destination address do not match the allocated media resource

srtpDecryptOffendersList – The table of statistic for SRTP decrypt offenders list.  This contains SRTP packets which failed authentication or were flagged as replay packets. This could indicate malicious media packet attacks or it can be used to troubleshoot "no audio" calls using SRTP.

uFlow Offenders List – The table of statistics for the micro flow policer offenders list. For example: Microflow packet exceeding the policing rate.


Contrasting the Rogue Media Offenders List and the Media Offenders List:

Entries in the Media Offenders List are for allocated media packets that violate the policing rules. The associated call is sending too many media packets. This could indicate a possible “Theft of Service” scenario. Entries in the Rogue Media Offenders List are media packets that the SBC is receiving but no resource is allocated for the packet. This may be a Denial of Service attack or indication that a call was terminated but the other end is still sending media packets.

Logout

Note

Operational mode only.


Command Syntax

> request system logout user <user_Id>

Policy Server

Command Syntax

> request system policyServer remoteServer <server_name>

Security

For additional security configuration details, see PKI Security - CLI.

Command Syntax

% request system security 
	eventLogValidation 
        deleteUserPrivateKey
        generateDefaultKeys
        setUserPrivateKey <uniqueUserPrivateKeyName> <userPrivateKey>
        showPublicKey <default/user>
    generateSipHeaderEncryptionKeys
	pki 
		certificate <certificate name>
			generateCSR
				csrSub (max 255 chars)
				keySize (ketSize1K | keySize2K)
				subjectAlternativeDnsName (0-512 chars)
			importCert certContent (max 4096 chars)
			retrieveCertContent
		uploadCertificate

Command Parameters

request system security Parameters

Parameter

Description

eventLogValidation

deleteUserPrivateKey – Delete an existing user-submitted private key. When the key is removed the SBC will revert back to using its default private key.

generateDefaultKeys – Requests the generation of a new default SBC-generated private key pair.

setUserPrivateKey <uniqueUserPrivateKeyName> <userPrivateKey>Configures the user-submitted private key. The private key is encrypted in CDB using existing CDB encryption methods. The user-submitted private key is only available internally. The key is encrypted and hidden, thus not displayable, once configured in CDB.

showPublicKey <user/default> – Access the public key associated with the chosen private key. 

generateSipHeaderEncryptionKeys

Use this command to generate header encryption keys. A "Success" or "Failure" indication is returned. The SBC then adds the key-Id to each encrypted header based on which key is selected as the correct key for decryption.

The SBC stores up to two sets of keys at any given time. There is no limit to the number of times this command may be executed. Additionally, there is no specific time delay required before reissuing the command.

NOTE: Generating new keys too frequently may lead to a situation where the SBC receives a request with an expired key-id (i.e. the current header encryption key is over-written due to the new key generation) causing unsuccessful decryption of headers. This may lead to call failures any calls caught in the transition to the new key-id.

pki

PKI certification configuration details.

  • certificate <certificateName>The name for a collection of certificates configured on SBC.
    • generateCSR – Use this parameter to generate CSR (Certificate Signing Request).
      • csrSub CSR subject name (max 255 chars). Place the parameter value within quotation marks if a string contains a space.

      • keySize  Size of the key to generate private key via openssl command.

        • keySize1K

        • keySize2K

      • subjectAlternativeDnsName Alternative DNS subject name(s). Multiple alternative names can be specified using "," (comma) separator. (0-512 chars). Example:  "nj.example.com, in.example.com, uk.example.com, ca.example.com, tx.example.com"

    • importCert certContent Import PEM format certificate (max 4096 characters).
      Note: When issuing this command, the SBC enables multi-line mode automatically. To exit multi-line mode you must press Ctrl+D manually.
    • retrieveCertContent – Retrieve content of an existing PKI certificate (local, local-internal and remote).
  • uploadCertificate – Upload a pk12 certificate.



Command Example

To retrieve certificate content of an existing PKI certificate:

% request system security pki certificate server retrieveCertContent
result Certificate:
    Data:
        Version: 1 (0x0)
        Serial Number: 13211600523504912060 (0xb75908ad95e006bc)
    Signature Algorithm: sha1WithRSAEncryption
        Issuer: C=US, ST=MA, L=Westford, O=VeriSign
        Validity
            Not Before: Apr 28 09:56:54 2015 GMT
            Not After : Jul 12 09:56:54 2033 GMT
        Subject: C=IN, ST=TN, L=Chennai
        Subject Public Key Info:
            Public Key Algorithm: rsaEncryption
                Public-Key: (2048 bit)
                Modulus:
                    00:c5:80:dc:59:0a:8d:98:19:0b:bd:be:fd:ab:6c:
                    f7:e9:b6:28:d9:e8:fe:a5:84:fb:45:d9:16:97:f5:
                    fc:9f:df:7b:5b:03:6e:34:38:3f:10:2b:d0:d8:d6:
                    4a:03:5f:2a:78:85:4c:65:d4:0d:a6:e2:d3:be:1a:
                    fc:8b:96:a1:db:15:16:74:3e:9f:2a:34:95:88:6a:
                    49:3b:1e:78:15:bf:5c:e8:ec:a3:0d:8b:d4:2a:39:
                    d6:17:c1:a8:88:94:36:23:23:d5:3b:2c:49:fb:15:
                    d3:e6:7f:72:b0:e4:3d:e6:3a:44:f3:ac:a2:d3:2a:
                    62:f7:2f:d1:d4:a1:82:fe:03:57:49:1d:6b:12:14:
                    2c:28:f8:ef:6c:e0:c2:36:8c:7f:77:2a:32:d9:ce:
                    c7:9e:fc:4f:20:aa:43:db:b1:77:16:e9:d5:b5:44:
                    ff:06:8a:85:d4:74:63:af:3c:5e:f3:a3:e0:83:5a:
                    40:d1:5d:fc:84:36:34:b4:8b:ac:f1:5b:2c:b6:0e:
                    97:bc:1b:cd:a4:f8:17:b3:81:42:41:db:09:bb:79:
                    42:1f:92:dc:43:52:ca:78:e3:db:3d:db:e9:f6:39:
                    15:eb:3a:09:e5:ab:eb:18:5f:7e:14:ec:f9:b6:04:
                    9e:f5:6d:73:f4:ea:85:c4:4a:1f:5a:01:8f:2e:94:
                    b6:0d
                Exponent: 65537 (0x10001)
    Signature Algorithm: sha1WithRSAEncryption
         1a:91:c0:8a:b8:66:4b:a2:67:bc:99:4f:b4:0b:f8:bc:67:0e:
         de:23:37:42:bc:dd:96:64:7c:ef:e1:05:c7:eb:92:06:fa:ef:
         7b:72:ee:7f:26:b5:1c:39:b5:f2:b2:04:6e:2e:0c:1d:7e:1f:
         7a:87:b8:8b:9c:25:e2:8f:77:6f:ac:bb:a0:63:28:51:4f:7c:
         35:30:ad:31:24:85:f3:99:6d:c2:f8:33:eb:49:45:ed:ab:26:
         97:f4:04:a7:0a:06:dd:40:c3:f6:1a:0e:ec:72:0f:40:65:ab:
         34:4a:dc:51:2b:f3:61:b6:3a:1c:26:09:a1:af:37:dc:bf:a5:
         ba:dd
No Trusted Uses.
No Rejected Uses.
Alias: Server Cert
Key Id: 79:70:FC:99:1A:2B:15:A7:A1:33:21:F7:8A:57:0C:A7:07:7B:96:35
 
status 0 


Server Admin

Command Syntax

> request system serverAdmin <server_name>  
	forceCoreDump coreDumpType <full | partial>
	removeCoredump coredumpFileName <filename> 
	restart  
	softReset  
	startSoftwareUpgrade  
		integrityCheck <perform | skip>
		package <pkg_name> 
		rpmName <name> 
		versionCheck <perform | skip> 

Command Parameters

'request system serverAdmin' Command Parameters

ParameterDescription

<serverName>

The unique name of the server.

forceCoreDump


Warning

You should only use the "full" option during a maintenance window, and under the instruction of Ribbon Support. This command takes a number of minutes to complete and can delay the switchover processing, resulting in a short outage.

Use this command to force the termination of a fixed set of application processes with accompanying core dumps for troubleshooting purposes. By default, a full dump is performed if no option is specified.

Before the command executes, the user is prompted to confirm or cancel the operation. If canceled, no further action is taken, and application operation is not affected.

  • coreDumpType– Choose an option below:
    • full (default) – Full set of processes to dump (see Table 2 below).
    • partial – Partial set of processes to dump (see Table 3 below).
removeCoredump

Use this object to remove the specified coredump from the chosen server.

  • coredumpFileName <filename> – The name of the coredump file.
restart Restart the specified server.
softReset Restart the application on the server without rebooting the server.
startSoftwareUpgrade

Use this control to start a software upgrade on the specified server.

  • integrityCheck – Use this flag to specify whether or not to perform an integrity check (signature validation) against SBC software updates and patches as they are uploaded to the SBCsystem.
    • perform (default)
    • skip 
  • package – Name of the new package.
  • rpmName – Name of the rpm/package, if different from the file name of the .tar.gz.
  • versionCheck– Use this flag to perform/skip version checking during software upgrades.
    • perform (default)
    • skip



Full Application Process List

CamProcess

ChmProcess

CpxAppProc

DiamProcess

DnsProcess

DsProcess

EmaProcess

EnmProcessMain

FmMasterProcess

IkeProcess

ImProcess

IpmProcess

PathchkProcess

PesProcess

PipeProcess

PrsProcess

RtmProcess

SamProcess

ScmProcess_0

ScmProcess_1

ScmProcess_2

ScmProcess_3

ScpaProcess

SmProcess

SsaProcess

SsreqProcess



Partial Application Process List

Process

PrsProcess

RtmProcess

SamProcess

ScmProcess_0

ScmProcess_1

ScmProcess_2

ScmProcess_3

SmProcess

Command Examples

To set bond monitoring type to 'network-connect' and leader election algorithm type to 'enhanced':

request system admin sbx1 setHaConfig bondMonitoring network-connect leaderElection enhanced  


To set bond monitoring type to 'direct-connect' and retain current setting of leader election algorithm:

request system admin sbx1 setHaConfig bondMonitoring direct-connect leaderElection currentValue


To load a license file:

request system admin WFDSBC01 license loadLicenseFile bundleName BUND fileName FN
This command will load the license file kept in /opt/sonus/external path. Do you want to continue? [yes,no] yes