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Lte outbound roaming_session
Lte outbound roaming_session
SamirMohanty1
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82 slides
Jun 24, 2019
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About This Presentation
Lte outbound roaming_session
Size:
2.02 MB
Language:
en
Added:
Jun 24, 2019
Slides:
82 pages
Slide Content
Slide 1
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 1
LTE Outbound Roaming
Session for PCRF
Samir Mohanty
Slide 2
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 2
Agenda
Overview
Roaming Network Architecture
QoS in details
PCRF Roaming Feature
Configuring Roaming Tables
Lab Session
Q&A
Slide 3
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 3
LTE Outbound Roaming Overview
Service to ATT LTE subscribers roaming on
another carrier’s PLMN network with compatible
LTE devices.
Serving both 2G/3G and 4G roaming needs for
outbound LTE subscribers.
Traffic will pass through the IXC Zone, which is a
new zone physically connected to the core zone in
the Gn VRF.
Slide 4
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 4
LTE Roaming Architecture
Slide 5
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 5
GERAN/UTRAN Roaming Architecture
with S4-SGSN
Slide 6
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 6
GERAN/UTRAN Roaming Architecture
with Gn/Gp SGSN connected to
PGW
Slide 7
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 7
Nodes, Interfaces and Protocols
Node InterfaceProtocol
SGW – PGW S8 GTP (GTP-C 3GPP TS 29.274 and GTP-
U 3GPP TS 29.281)
MME - HSS S6a Diameter Base Protocol (IETF RFC 3588)
and 3GPP TS 29.272)
S4-SGSN - HSS S6d Diameter Base Protocol (IETF RFC 3588)
and 3GPP TS 29.272)
Gn/Gp SGSN -
HLR
Gr MAP protocol over SS7
hPCRF - vPCRF S9 Diameter Base Protocol (IETF RFC 3588)
and 3GPP TS 29.125)
Slide 8
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 8
3GPP and GSMA
3GPP Specs describe 10 ways to roam
GSM IR.88 reduces the number to 4
Interfaces to support:
1.S8:Inter-PLMN reference point providing user and control plane between
the Serving GW in the VPLMN and the PDN GW in the HPLMN. S8 is the
inter PLMN variant of S5. The S8 interface (GTP based) uses GTP version 1
for the User plane, and GTP version 2 for the Control plane. Nodes supporting
the S8-GTP based interface are compliant to 3GPP TS 29.274 Release 8 or
later, and 3GPP TS 29.281 Release 8 or later.
2.Gp:Inter-PLMN reference point providing user and control plane between
the SGSN in the VPLMN and the PDN GW in the HPLMN acting as a GGSN.
Gp is the inter PLMN variant of Gn.
Slide 9
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 9
Scenario 1: HPMN only has PGW as the gateway
for roaming, 2G/3G Access via Gp interface
NOTE: For simplicity, HSS, PCRF, and MME
are omitted in the figures.
Slide 10
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 10
Scenario 2: HPMN has both GGSN and PGW as
the gateway for roaming, 2G/3G Access via Gp
interface
NOTE: For simplicity, HSS, PCRF, and MME
are omitted in the figures.
Slide 11
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 11
Scenario 3: HPMN has only PGW as the gateway
for roaming, 2G/3G Access via S4/S8 interfaces.
NOTE: For simplicity, HSS, PCRF, and MME
are omitted in the figures.
Slide 12
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 12
Scenario 4: HPMN has both PGW and GGSN as
the gateway for roaming, 2G/3G Access via S4/S8
or Gp interfaces
NOTE: For simplicity, HSS, PCRF, and MME
are omitted in the figures.
Slide 13
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 13
SMS over SGs Roaming Architecture
Slide 14
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 14
Circuit Switched Fallback (CSFB)
Roaming Architecture
Slide 15
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 15
GRX Network
GRX: GRPS Roaming eXchange
GRX created to carry GTP-tunnels between
different GSM operators
GRX interconnects in excess of 300 networks and
has proven highly successful
GRX specification does not meet requirements of
an all-IP LTE network
IPX as replacement
Slide 16
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 16
GRX Model (GPRS Roaming eXchage)
Slide 17
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 17
IPX Network
IPX: IP Packet eXchange
IPX is an inter-Service Provider IP backbone
network architecture which connects Mobile
Network Operators (MNOs), Fixed Network
Operators (FNOs) Internet Service Providers (ISPs)
and Application Service Providers (ASPs)
Core enhancement to GRX are end-to-end QoS
and introduction of IPX Proxy
IPX is isolated from the public Internet and security
rules are defined to prevent unintended access
to/from
Slide 18
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 18
IPX Model (IP eXchange)
End-to-end SLA
Slide 19
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 19
GRX and IPX Networks
GRX becomes one of the Service Community types
in the IPX Network
Only Service Providers that are GPRS/UMTS/LTE
network operators connect to the GRX
Other types of Service Providers in the IPX Network
do not connect to the GRX service
Slide 20
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 20
GRX and IPX Networks (cont.)
Slide 21
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 21
Aicent IPX
Slide 22
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 22
ATT Logical Architecture
Slide 23
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 23
Impacted Elements
Slide 24
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 24
Roaming Architecture with DEA
Slide 25
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 25
Slide 26
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 26
Syniverse IPX Topology
Slide 27
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 27
SPGW/GGSN Connectivity to VPLMN
Slide 28
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 28
Overall ATT Mobile Core
Slide 29
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 29
ASR5500 Overview
Slide 30
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 30
Neo Consumer Architecture
Slide 31
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 31
DNS Flow Diagram
Slide 32
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 32
High Level Logical View of IXC Zone
Slide 33
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 33
High Level Logical Network View
Slide 34
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 34
Functions of IXC Zone
Access to GRX/IPX providers for both inbound and
outbound roaming.
Access layer for roaming specific platforms such as
DEA and IXC DNS.
Security between external GRX/IPX providers and
core zone.
•A pair of IXC firewalls will control access into the IXC
zone.
•There will also be intrusion protection systems deployed
in the zone to inspect all DNS traffic.
Slide 35
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 35
EPS Bearers
EPS bearers provide the UE access to PDN
services and associated applications
Default Bearer is established during initial attach
and maintained throughout the lifetime of the
connection (always-on IP connectivity)
Additional Dedicated Bearers can be established
dynamically when UE requests specific services
(e.g. VoLTE)
Slide 36
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 36
LTE Bearer Stacking
Slide 37
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 37
ESP Bearers Types
2 types of EPS Bearers
Guaranteed Bit Rate (GBR)
Associated ARP and QCI
Allocates resources at admission control
May have separate Maximum Bit Rate (MBR)
Non-Guaranteed Bit Rate (non-GBR)
Associated ARP and QCI
No resource reservation
May have a Maximum Bit Rate (MBR)
Slide 38
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 38
EPS Bearer Types (cont.)
GBR bearers are established on demand
Inactivity timers used to free up resources
Non-GBR bearers can remain established for long
periods (always connected)
Slide 39
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 39
QoS Performance Measures
Throughput: Bit rate, i.e. speed
Delay: Specified by the packet delay budget. LTE
defines nine categories for delay, with 50 ms being
tightest and 300 ms being the slackest. The latter
value is used for delay tolerant applications
Packet Loss: Defined as the Packet Error Loss
Rate, and is similar to the packet delay budget in
having nine categories with 10−6 being best and
10−2 being the worst
Priority: Specified by the Allocation/Retention
Priority (APR) parameter
Slide 40
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 40
Service Level QoS Parameters
Applied per SDF (Service Data Flow) or per SDF
aggregate
Parameters are:
QCI: QoS Class Identifier
ARP: Allocation and Retention Priority
GBR: Guaranteed Bit Rate
MBR: Maximum Bit Rate
AMBR: Aggregate Maximum Bit Rate
Slide 41
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 41
QCI and ARP
QoS Class Identifier (QCI)
To control packet forwarding treatment
Allocation and Retention Priority (ARP)
To decide if bearer establishment can be accepted or
rejected in case resource limitations exist
Slide 42
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 42
QoS Class Identifier
QCI: QoS Class Identifier
Used as a reference to a specific packet forwarding
behavior (e.g. packet loss rate,packet delay budget)
to be provided to a service data flow (SDF)
May be implemented in the access network by the
QCI referencing node specific parameters that
control packet forwarding treatment (e.g.
scheduling weights, admission thresholds, queue
management thresholds, link layer protocol
configuration, etc.), that have been pre-configured
by the operator at a specific node(s) (e.g. eNodeB).
Slide 43
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 43
Standardized QCI Values
Slide 44
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 44
Allocation/Retention Priority (ARP)
ARP encoding:
PCI: Pre-emption Capability
PL: Priority Level
PVI: Pre-emption Vulnerability
Bits
Octets 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
1 Type = 155 (decimal)
2 to 3 Length = n
4 Spare Instance
5 SparePCI PL SparePVI
6 to (n+4)These octet(s) is/are present only if explicitly specified
Slide 45
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 45
Priority Level
PL: Priority Level
Used for deciding whether a bearer establishment
or modification request can be accepted or needs
to be rejected in case of resource limitations
Typically used for admission control of GBR traffic
Also used to decide which existing bearers to pre-
empt during resource limitations
Values 1 to 15 with 1 as the highest priority level
Slide 46
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 46
Pre-emption Vulnerability
PVI: Pre-emption Vulnerability
1-bit value: 0 or 1
Indicates whether a service data flow can lose
resources assigned to it in order to admit a service
data flow with a higher priority level
Enabled: 0
Disabled: 1
Default EPS-Bearer has PVI enabled
Slide 47
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 47
Pre-emption Capability
PCI: Pre-emption Capability
1-bit value: 0 or 1
Indicates whether a service data flow can get
resources that were already assigned to another
service data flow with a lower priority level
Enabled: 0
Disabled: 1
Default EPS-Bearer has PCI disabled
Slide 48
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 48
Dedicated EPS Bearer Rates
GBR (Guaranteed Bit Rate): Network resources
allocated based on GBR are fixed and do not
change after bearer establishment or modification.
This is hence a guaranteed service data flow.
MBR (Maximum Bit Rate): This parameter limits the
bit rate that can be expected to be provided to GBR
bearer, and is enforced by network shaper to
restrict the traffic to its maximum bit rate
agreement.
Slide 49
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 49
Default EPS Bearer Rates
AMBR (Aggregate Maximum Bit Rate): This
parameter is used for non-GBR flows, and has two
types, APN-AMBR and UE-AMBR
APN-AMBR (Access Point Name AMBR): The
APN-AMBR parameter refers to the maximum bit
rate that can be consumed by all non-GBR bearers
and all PDN connections of a specific APN. This
parameter is enforced in both the downlink and the
uplink.
UE-AMBR (User Equipment AMBR): refers to the
maximum bit rate allowed for all non-GBR bearer
aggregates for the respective UE. The parameter is
enforced in both the downlink and the uplink.
Slide 50
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 50
Uplink/Downlink
GBR and MBR are defined per bearer while the
AMBR parameters are defined per a group of
bearers
All throughput parameters (GBR, MBR, APN-AMBR
and UE-AMBR) have two components, one for
downlink and another for uplink.
Uplink and downlink are usually set to different
values (higher downlink)
Slide 51
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 51
Default Bearer Setup@ccTbsRabTrM;N
r=Av>TrvMTdRaT
Au-TgnT==7
HSS sends APN-
AMBR, ARP and
QCI to MME==7Tbgni sbT
i sostosFTAncT
FdehsbTt RT(7T
onRgskg
MME stores
receicev QoS
values in UE
contextrM;N r=AvmAu-mrvMT
bsRgTtRTucv
APN-AMBR/QCI/ARP
sent in CSRrM;N
r=AvmAu-mrvMT
SniBdiasaTgnTMuvB
APN-
AMBR/QCI/ARP
forwarded to PCRFMuvB Tpnat StsbT
AncTFdehsbTt ST
RssasaTdRaT
i sbWnRabTydo<TgnT
MGC TBt gCTRsBT
Fdehsb
PCRF modifies
QoS values if
needed and
responds back to
PGW with new
valuesMGC TSni Bdi abT
RsBTFde hsbTtRT
isbWnRbs
PGW forwards
new values in
response
Slide 52
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 52
ATT QoS Settings for Default EPS Bearer
APN-AMBR based on SSTI (Subscribed Speed Tier
Indicator) from MIND
QCI set to 8
ARP: Priority 10, PCI and PVI enabled
Speed Tier
Indicator
APN-AMBR DL APN-AMBR UL
Low 3.072Mbps (LTE/3G) 3.072Mbps (LTE/3G)
Medium 6.144Mpbs(LTE/3G) 6.144Mpbs(LTE) – 5.696Mbps
(3G)
High 70Mbps(LTE) – 21Mbps(3G) 25Mbps(LTE) – 5.696Mbps (3G)
Slide 53
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 53
PCRF behavior in ATT
For POST subscribers (grandfathered unlimited)
PCRF mirrors back QoS values received from PGW
For MRC (Monthly Recurring Charge– new
subscribers or ungrandfathered) and SBP (Session
Based Pricing) based on the SSTI of the subscriber
APN-AMBR is enforced
For MRC and SBP subscribers threshold triggers
are set in the PGW
For MRC if the threshold is reached (e.g.
3GB/month) speed is throttled
For SBP the session is blocked
Slide 54
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 54
QoS while roaming
QoS values for on-net subscribers might not be
supported on visited PLMN
QCI value restrictions might be in place in visited
PLMN (e.g. ATT currently does not allow QCI=7)
Speed restrictions might be in place in visited
PLMN
Initial HSS provided values might not be mapped as
desired in visited MME
PCRF assigned QoS values might mot be
acceptable in visited PLMN
Slide 55
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 55
PCRF Roaming Feature
Introduced to address potential QoS issues for
roaming subscribers
Addition of 2 new tables in PCRF decision core:
Location Mapping Table: Allows PCRF to
differentiate QoS assignments based on PLMN ID
(MCC/MNC) and APN
QoS Mapping Table: Once PLMNID/APN
determined, allows granular QoS assignments
based on RAT type, Billing Plan and Tracking or
Routing Areas
Slide 56
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 56
Location Mapping Decision Table
LocMapping Table maps the APN and PLMNID to a
ROAMING-GROUP
ROAMING-GROUP used as Input to QoS Mapping
Table
LOCMapping Table
Input Input Output
apn plmnid ROAMING_GROUP
PHONE 302720 1
BROADBAND 302720 1
any any 0
Slide 57
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 57
QoS Mapping Decision Table
QOSMapping table maps roaming_group, RAT
type, RAI/TAI, billing plan and SSTI attributes to
QoS_Ref, roaming_zone and domestic
If QoS_Ref is not defined (operator error) then subscriber will be defaulted to POST and
QoS values will be mirrored back to PCEF
Catch all entry for Roaming_Group=1 is to cover CCR-Update cases
QoSMapping Table
Input Input Input Input Input Input Input Input Output Output Output
ROAMING_GROUPrat_typeRAI_LAC RAI_RAC TAI_TAC_HB TAI_TAC_LB billing_plan ssti QOS_REF
ROAMING_ZON
E domestic
1 EUTRAN ANY ANY ANY ANY MRC H 1 Off-Net No
1 EUTRAN ANY ANY ANY ANY SBP H 2 Off-Net No
1 ANY ANY ANY ANY ANY ANY ANY mirror
ANY ANY ANY ANY ANY ANY ANY ANY 0
Slide 58
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 58
QoS Profiles Table
Output from the QoS Mapping Table is QoS Ref
Assigns a specific QoS to subscriber
AMBR values should be consistent with GTP Coding (TS29.274 and 29.060); otherwise,
PGW will choose the largest value that conforms with GTP code but lower than what's
provisioned
QoSProfiles Table
QoSRef APNAMBR-ULAPNAMBR-DL QoS Class PCI PL (Priority
Level)
PVI
1 100kbps 100kbps Interactive-4 Disabled 10 Disabled
2 1500Kbps 3500Kpbs Interactive-4 Disabled 10 Disabled
3 10000kpbs40000kbps Interactive-4 Disabled 10 Disabled
Slide 59
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 59
QoS Class to QCI mapping
QOS-Class to QCI mapping
QoS Class QCI
Conversational-1 1
Conversational-2 2
Streaming-1 3
Streaming-2 4
Interactive-1 5
Interactive-2 6
Interactive-3 7
Interactive-4 8
Background 9
Slide 60
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 60
RMS Table
Roaming Management Service Table
Maintained by ATT
Downloaded nightly to PCRF
Contains all known MCC/MNC and SGSN IP
addresses from ATT and foreign PLMNs
Output is Roaming Zone and Domestic indicator
Slide 61
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 61
Decision Logic
Credit Control Request (MCC/MNC,
SGSN-IP-Address, APN) received by
PCRF from PCEF (PGW)
is
MCC/MNC
defined in
RMS table?
No
Yes
Use MCC/MNC and Roaming Zone values from RMS table
is SGSN_IP
address
defined in
RMS table?7ktgTdRaTsksohgsTgCsT
asSdhegTWinosbbtRPT
8vndp tRPTGnRsT
1E;F;73 >TdRaTasSdhegT
AncTFdehsTonRStPhisaT
ydbsaTnRTcWssaT3tsiT
dRaTvr3 Tg,Ws2
Exit and execute the
default processing
(Roaming zone
=ON_NET, and default
QoS value configured
based on Speed Tier
and RAT type)
No
Yes
Slide 62
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 62
Decision Logic (cont.)
is
ROAMING
GROUP = 0?
Select first ROAMING_GROUP to match
MCC/MNC and APN the Location Mapping Table
Yes7ktgTdRaTsksohgsT
asSdhegTWinosbbtRPT
8vndp tRPTGnRsT1Binp T
v=cTgdyes>TdRaTasSdhegT
AncTFdehsTonRStPhisaT
ydbsaTnRTcWssaT3tsiT
dRaTvr3 Tg,Ws2f
Exit and execute
default processing
(Roaming zone =From
RMS table, and default
QoS value configured
based on Speed Tier
and RAT type).
No
From the Qos Mapping Table select the first entry
that matches Roaming Group, RAT, TAI or RAI,
Billing Plan, SSTI
Slide 63
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 63
Decision Logic (cont.)
is QoS_Ref
equal to
“mirror”?
Yes7ktgTdRaTp tiiniTydo< T
isostFsaTAncTFdehsb
Exit and mirror back
received QoS values
No
is QoS_Ref
equal to 0?
Yes7ktgTdRaTsksohgsT
asSdhegTWinosbbtRPT
8vndp tRPTGnRsT1Binp T
v=cTgdyes>TdRaTasSdhegT
AncTFdehsTonRStPhisaT
ydbsaTnRTTcWssaT3 tsiT
dRaTvr3 T3,Ws2
Exit and execute
default processing
(Roaming zone =From
RMS table, and default
QoS value configured
based on Speed Tier
and RAT Type)
NoO
Binp TgCsTAncTMinStesbT3dyesT8AncMinStesb2T
hbtRPTgCsTAncvsSTdbT< s,TbsesogTAncTFdehsb
O
MuvBTisWetsbTBtgCTuurN-TBtgCTgCsTbsesogsaT
AncTFdehsb>TstgCsiTr=AvTniT
r=AvmAu-mrvM
•From the QoS Profiles Table (QoSProfiles)
using the QoSRef as key select QoS values
•PCRF replies with CCA-I with the selected
QoS values, either AMBR or
AMBR/QCI/ARP
Slide 64
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 64
Implementation
Initial creation of Location Mapping Table and QoS
Mapping Table
Done as part of the Implementation Guide
Following slides will cover the addition of a visited
PLMN for customized QoS assignment to roaming
ATT subscribers
Slide 65
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 65
PCRF Log in
Log in to PCRF, click Cisco logo
Select Decision Tables
Slide 66
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 66
Decision Tables
Slide 67
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 67
Location Mapping Table
Select Location Mapping Table
Use green down arrow key to add a row and green minus sign to
remove a row under Actions
Enter new PLMN_ID, APN and ROAMING_GROUP
At a minimum, LOCMapping table should have the catch-all entry
(*ANY*,*ANY*,0)
Add
Remove
Slide 68
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 68
Import table from CSV file
In place of manual entry, a CSV file is imported
Slide 69
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 69
Select CSV file to import
Slide 70
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 70
QoS Mapping Table
Select QoS Mapping Table
Use green down arrow key to add a row and green minus sign
to remove a row under Actions
At a minimum, QOSMapping table should have the catch-all
entry
Add
Remove
Slide 71
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 71
Import table from CSV file
In place of manual entry, a CSV file is imported
Slide 72
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 72
Select CSV file to import
Slide 73
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 73
QoS Defintion
Two types of QoS definitions
APN Aggregate: To set only APN-AMBR DL/UL
Extended Default EPS Bearer: To set APN-AMBR
DL/UL, QCI and ARP
QoS Definitions are named and an appropriate
naming scheme is required, e.g.:
AGG_LOR_01
AGG_LOR_EXT_01
Slide 74
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 74
APN Aggregate Definition
Log in to PCRF and select PCRF
Go to Configuration->QOS -> QOS Information
Click “+” to add new QOS. Select APN Aggregate
for QOS Level
Populate the necessary fields.
Slide 75
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 75
APN Aggregate Definition (cont.)
Slide 76
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 76
Extended Default EPS Bearer
Log in to PCRF and select PCRF
Go to Configuration->QOS -> QOS Information
Click “+” to add new QOS. Select Extended Default
EPS Bearer for QoS Level
Populate the necessary fields.
Slide 77
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 77
Extended Default EPS Bearer
Slide 78
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 78
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Slide 79
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 79
Lab Session
Slide 80
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 80
Q&A
Slide 81
© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicBRKSPG-2022 81
Thank You
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