WebSphere brand IBM WebSphere IP Multimedia Subsystem Connector, Version 6.2

getPSIActivation Web service method

This Web service method returns a value indicating the current state of activation (active or inactive) of a service provided by an application.

Usage

This Web service method returns a value indicating the current state of activation (active = 1 or inactive = 0) of a service provided by an application. This enables the entire IMS network to be aware whether the service is either available (active) or not (inactive).

Example

int carolPSIActivation = service.getPSIActivation( "aaa://host.example.com;protocol=diameter;117302099;1", "sipintel10.city.company.com", "realmA.mycompany.com", "sips:carol@ws1234.domain2.com" );

Parameters

Parameter Name Type Description
sessionId String

Identifies a specific session. All messages pertaining to a specific session must include only one Session-Id AVP and the same value must be used throughout the life of a session. The Session ID must be globally and eternally unique, as it is meant to uniquely identify a user session without reference to any other information. This may be needed to correlate historical authentication information with accounting information. Example: aaa://host.example.com;protocol=diameter;-117302099;1

destinationHost String

The fully qualified domain name of the HSS that the Sh subscriber profile Web service will send this request to. This input parameter is optional. Examples include: sipintel15.city.example.com or diameter.example.com

destinationRealm String

The realm that this subscriber belongs to. The destination realm is a required parameter and must be a fully qualified domain name. The value specified must match the specific realmName property that is defined in one of the routex properties in the Diameter_Sh.properties file. If the value does not match any of the specific routes, and a DEFAULT route entry is defined, the DEFAULT route will be used.

publicUserIdentity String
A subscriber is allocated one or more public user identities, which are created by the home operator. A public user identity is either a SIP URL (as defined in RFC 3261) or a TEL URI (as defined in RFC 3966) and helps route a SIP request. Example:
  • sip:Alice.Smith@example.com;transport=tcp
  • sips:carol@ws1234.example.com
  • sip:+358-555-1234567;postd=pp22@example.com;user=phone
  • sip:alice;day=tuesday@example.com
  • tel:+919-123-4567
  • tel:+358-555-1234567;postd=pp22



Terms of use
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