Juniper NETWORK AND SECURITY MANAGER 2010.3 - ADMINISTRATION GUIDE REV1 Administration Manual page 882

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Network and Security Manager Administration Guide
GTP Tunnel
GTP-C Message
GTP-PDU
GTP-U Message
GUI Server
H
H.323
Hardened System
Hello Interval
Hello Packet
Histogram
HLR
Hold Time
832
A GTP tunnel in the GTP-U plane is defined for each PDP Context in the GSNs. A GTP tunnel
in the GTP-C plane is defined for all PDP Contexts with the same PDP address and APN (for
Tunnel Management messages) or for each MS (for messages not related to Tunnel
Management). A GTP tunnel is identified in each node with a TEID, an IP address and a UDP
port number. A GTP tunnel is necessary to forward packets between an external network and
an MS user.
GTP-Control Message. Control plane messages are exchanged between GSN pairs in a path.
The control plane messages are used to transfer GSN capability information between GSN
pairs, to create, update and delete GTP tunnels and for path management.
A GTP Protocol Data Unit is either a GTP-C message or a GTP-U message.
GTP-User Data message. User plane messages are exchanged between GSN pairs or GSN/RNC
pairs in a path. The user plane messages are used to carry user data packets, and signalling
messages for path management and error indication.
The GUI Server manages the system resources and data that drives NSM functionality. The
GUI Server contains the NSM databases, and centralizes information for devices, their
configurations, attack and server objects, and policies.
The H323 Application Layer Gateway (ALG) lets you to secure Voice-over-IP (VoIP)
communication between terminal hosts, such as IP phones and multimedia devices. In such
a telephony system, gatekeeper devices manage call registration, admission, and call status
for VoIP calls. Gatekeepers can reside in the two different zones, or in the same zone.
A hardened system is a secure server with all appropriate security patches and bug fixes; these
systems are designed to resist penetration.
The amount of time that elapses between instances of Hello Packets.
A Hello packet is a message sent out to the current network to announce the presence of the
current routing instance to the network. Hello packets aid in the discovery of neighbors and in
a router being able to connect to other devices on the network. When an OSPF interface is
created, the interface sends Hello packets to the network to announce itself.
A histogram is a vertical graph that represents different amounts by thin, color-coded bands
or bars. These bars represent a frequency distribution; heights of the bars represent observed
frequencies.
Home Location Register.
In OSPF, the maximum amount of time between instances of initiating Shortest Path First
(SPF) computations. In BGP, the maximum amount of time that elapses between message
transmissions between a BGP speaker and its neighbor.
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.

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