session for the same subscriber, only the newest subscriber session, with its
services, is used.
■
Example 1—Activate a service session for an existing subscriber
host1(config)#
service-management owner-session aaa 573498 service-session
“video(4500000, 192.168.10.3)”
■
Example 2—Activate multiple service sessions for an existing subscriber
host1(config)#
service-management owner-session aaa 573498 service-session
“video(4500000, 192.168.10.3)”
host1(config)#
service-management owner-session aaa 573498 service-session
“tiered(1000000, 2000000)”
host1(config)#
service-management owner-session aaa 573498 service-session
“voice(1000000, 10.10.10.1)”
■
Example 3—Include a service session profile when you activate a subscriber’s
service session
host1(config)#
service-management owner-session aaa 426777 service-session
“video(4500000, 192.168.10.3)” service-session-profile vodISP1
■
Use the
no
version to deactivate service sessions based on owner information.
See “Using the CLI to Deactivate Subscriber Service Sessions” on page 677 for
more information about deactivating subscriber service sessions.
■
See service-management owner-session
service-management subscriber-session service-session
■
Use to activate a service for a subscriber by creating a subscriber session and a
service session.
NOTE:
Always activate at least one service session for a subscriber session. The
ability to create a subscriber session without a service session (by omitting the
service-session
keyword) is not currently supported.
■
Use this command in Privileged Exec mode to create a dynamic subscriber
session—dynamic sessions are deleted after a router reboot.
■
Use this command in Global Configuration mode to create persistent subscriber
sessions that are retained across reboots.
■
Include the optional
service-session-profile
keyword to assign a profile to the
service session. The service session profile includes additional attributes, such
as the type of statistics to be captured for the service session.
■
You can create one subscriber session for a subscriber—and multiple service
sessions for a particular subscriber session. If you create a second subscriber
session for the same subscriber, only the newest subscriber session, with its
services, is used.
■
Example 1—Activate a subscriber session with a single service session
Using the CLI to Manage Subscriber Service Sessions
■
673
Chapter 27: Configuring Service Manager
Summary of Contents for JUNOSE 11.0.X MULTICAST ROUTING
Page 6: ...vi...
Page 28: ...xxviii Table of Contents JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 36: ...xxxvi List of Tables JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 42: ...2 Managing Remote Access JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 204: ...164 Managing RADIUS and TACACS JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 292: ...252 Monitoring RADIUS Relay Server JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 336: ...296 RADIUS Client Terminate Reasons JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 368: ...328 Managing L2TP JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 444: ...404 PPP Accounting Statistics JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 494: ...454 Managing DHCP JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 510: ...470 DHCP Local Server Configuration Tasks JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 556: ...516 Configuring DHCP Relay Proxy JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 616: ...576 Managing the Subscriber Environment JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 674: ...634 Managing Subscriber Services JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...
Page 767: ...Part 7 Index Index on page 729 Index 727...
Page 768: ...728 Index JUNOSe 11 0 x Broadband Access Configuration Guide...