Manual

Fault Reporting Support, on page 17
Location Reporting Support, on page 17
QoS Support, on page 17
Redundancy Support, on page 17
Troubleshooting Features Support, on page 18
X2 Handover Procedure Support, on page 19
MME Pool size, on page 19
Cell Broadcast Support, on page 20
3GPP Standard Support for Overload Control, on page 21
DHCPv4 Proxy support for HeNBGW with IPSec, on page 22
HeNBGW Multi Operator Core Network (MOCN), on page 23
s1ap-reset/partial-reset messages from HeNBGW, on page 27
X2 Proxy Gateway support, on page 28
AAA Server Group Support
It is a value-added feature to enable VPN service provisioning for enterprise or MVNO customers, however
integrated SeGW is required to be enabled for this feature. It enables each corporate customer to maintain its
own AAA servers with its own unique configurable parameters and custom dictionaries.
This feature provides support for up to 800 AAA (RADIUS and Diameter) server groups and 800 NAS IP
addresses that can be provisioned within a single context or across the entire chassis. A total of 128 servers
can be assigned to an individual server group. Up to 1,600 accounting, authentication and/or mediation servers
are supported per chassis and may be distributed across a maximum of 1,000 nodes. This feature also enables
the AAA servers to be distributed across multiple nodes within the same context.
For more information on AAA Server Group configuration, if you are using StarOS 12.3 or an earlier
release, refer to the AAA and GTPP Interface Administration and Reference. If you are using StarOS 14.0
or a later release, refer to the AAA Interface Administration and Reference.
Important
Access Control List Support
Access Control Lists provide a mechanism for controlling (i.e. permitting, denying, redirecting, etc.) packets
in and out of the system.
IP access lists, or Access Control Lists (ACLs) as they are commonly referred to, are used to control the flow
of packets into and out of the system. They are configured on a per-context basis and consist of "rules" (ACL
rules) or filters that control the action taken on packets that match the filter criteria
Once configured, an ACL can be applied to any of the following:
An individual interface
HeNB-GW Administration Guide, StarOS Release 19
14
HeNB Gateway in Wireless LTE Network
AAA Server Group Support