Configuring The System As A Standalone Egtp S-Gw; Information Required; Required Local Context Configuration Information - Cisco ASR 5000 Series Administration Manual

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▀ Configuring the System as a Standalone eGTP S-GW

Configuring the System as a Standalone eGTP S-GW
This section provides a high-level series of steps and the associated configuration file examples for configuring the
system to perform as a eGTP S-GW in a test environment. For a more robust configuration example, refer to the Sample
Configuration Files appendix. Information provided in this section includes the following:

Information Required

How This Configuration Works
eGTP S-GW Configuration
Information Required
The following sections describe the minimum amount of information required to configure and make the S-GW
operational on the network. To make the process more efficient, it is recommended that this information be available
prior to configuring the system.
There are additional configuration parameters that are not described in this section. These parameters deal mostly with
fine-tuning the operation of the S-GW in the network. Information on these parameters can be found in the appropriate
sections of the Command Line Interface Reference.

Required Local Context Configuration Information

The following table lists the information that is required to configure the local context on an eGTP S-GW.
Table 3. Required Information for Local Context Configuration
Required
Description
Information
Management Interface Configuration
Interface name
An identification string between 1 and 79 characters (alpha and/or numeric) by which the interface will be
recognized by the system.
Multiple names are needed if multiple interfaces will be configured.
IP address and
IPv4 addresses assigned to the interface.
subnet
Multiple addresses and subnets are needed if multiple interfaces will be configured.
Physical port
The physical port to which the interface will be bound. Ports are identified by the chassis slot number
number
where the line card resides followed by the number of the physical connector on the card. For example, port
17/1 identifies connector number 1 on the card in slot 17.
A single physical port can facilitate multiple interfaces.
▄ Cisco ASR 5000 Series Serving Gateway Administration Guide
Serving Gateway Configuration
OL-22986-01

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