Oracle® Communications Service Broker Signaling Domain Configuration Guide Release 6.0 Part Number E23526-02 |
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This chapter provides an overview of Signaling Domain configuration.
A Signaling Domain is a set of servers, known as Signaling Servers, on which you install Signaling Server Units (SSUs). Service Broker uses SSUs to communicate with a network.
Service Broker provides different types of SSUs. Each type supports a certain protocol that allows Service Broker to communicate with the following networks:
SSU for SS7 networks in which traffic is carried out over SIGTRAN M3UA ("Configuring the SS7 Signaling Server Unit for SIGTRAN" for more information on SIGTRAN SSUs configuration)
SSU for SS7 networks in which traffic is carried out over TDM (see "Configuring the SS7 Signaling Server Unit for TDM" for more information on TDM SSUs configuration)
SSU for SIP networks (see "Configuring SIP Signaling Server Units" for more information on SIP SSU configuration)
SSU for Diameter networks (see "Configuring Diameter Signaling Server Units" for more information on Diameter SSU configuration)
SSU for RADIUS networks (see "Configuring RADIUS Signaling Server Units" for more information on RADIUS SSU configuration)
SSU for communicating with Short Message System Centers (SMSCs) through the SMPP protocol (see "Configuring SMPP Signaling Server Units" for more information)
SSU for communication with the Oracle BRM application through the Portal Communications Protocol (see "Defining PCP Network Entities" for more information on PCP SSU configuration)
SSU for communication with external entities using SOAP or REST over HTTP (see "Configuring the Web Services Signaling Server Unit" for more information)
Depending on your specific requirements, you can group Signaling Servers into groups and dedicate each server group to a specific type of the SSU. In this case, each group of Signaling Servers provides access to a different network. Alternatively, you can deploy different SSUs—for example, SIP SSU and Diameter SSU—on Signaling Servers of the same group.
During the configuration process, you define how an SSU handles traffic received from a network and to which interworking modules the SSU forwards this traffic for further processing. In addition, you specify how an SSU sends traffic from interworking modules to a network.
You need to configure each SSU deployed in the domain separately.
You configure SSUs using one of the following methods:
Administration Console, which provides a graphical user interface
Java MBeans, which expose a set of attributes and operations that you use to configure SSUs programmatically
Each chapter of this guide is dedicated to a specific type of an SSU and describes both configuration methods.