Viewing CDR History of SBC and Test Calls

You can view historical Call Detail Records (CDR) of SBC calls and Test calls in the SBC CDR History table. History CDRs are stored on the device’s memory. When a new CDR is generated, the device adds it to the top of the table and all existing entries are shifted one down in the table. The table displays the last 2,048 CDRs. If the table reaches maximum capacity of entries and a new CDR is added, the last CDR entry is removed from the table.

The CDR fields in the table cannot be customized.
If the device restarts, all CDRs are deleted from memory and from the table.
You can mask (hide) certain values, as described in Masking PII in CDRs.
To view SBC and Test Call CDR history:
Web: Open the SBC CDR History table (Monitor menu > Monitor tab > VoIP Status folder > SBC CDR History).

CLI:
All CDR history:
# show voip calls history sbc
CDR history for a specific SIP session ID:
# show voip calls history sbc <session ID>

SBC CDR History Table

Field

Description

Call End Time

Displays the time at which the call ended. The time is displayed in the format, hh:mm:ss, where hh is the hour, mm the minutes and ss the seconds (e.g., 15:06:36).

Endpoint Type

Indicates the type of CDR:

"SBC": CDR belongs to an SBC call.
"TEST": CDR belongs to a Test call.

IP Group

Displays the IP Group of the leg for which the CDR was generated.

Caller

Displays the phone number (source URI user@host) of the party who made the call.

Callee

Displays the phone number (destination URI user@host) of the party to whom the call was made.

Direction

Displays the direction of the call:

"Incoming"
"Outgoing"

Remote IP

Displays the IP address of the call party. For an "Incoming" call, this is the source IP address; for an "Outgoing" call, this is the destination IP address.

Duration

Displays the duration of the call, displayed in the format hh:mm:ss, where hh is hours, mm minutes and ss seconds. For example, 00:01:20 denotes 1 minute and 20 seconds.

Termination Reason

Displays the reason for the call being released (ended). For example, "NORMAL_CALL_CLEAR" indicates a normal termination.

Session ID

Displays the SIP session ID of the call.