Paradyne 8546, 8540 manual Minor Alarms 2 Failure Type Action, Error Rate, Link Down

Page 98

Diagnostics and Troubleshooting

Table 5-4. Minor Alarms (2 of 2)

Failure Type

Action

 

 

Error Rate

H If the Error Rate Threshold is < 10-4, then this alarm is a warning

Threshold

that the loop has degraded. The actual bit rate should still be above

(A trap

10 -7. This condition may be temporary due to high temperature or

message sent if

humidity/rain. It may be permanent due to high noise from

the Block Error

additional digital circuits installed in the same cable bundle.

Rate averaged

H If the Error Rate Threshold is >10-4, then this alarm is a warning

over a period of

time exceeds

that the loop has degraded. The actual bit rate may be below 10-7.

This condition may be temporary or permanent. However, if it

the selected

persists, the loop may have to be reengineered for better

value.)

performance by performing one of the following:

 

 

– Remove bridge taps

 

– Change cable gauge on a cable section

 

– Run new cable

 

– Remove other noise-generating digital circuits from the cable

 

bundle

 

 

Link Down

H If the threshold is set low (1–4), and the link is currently down, then

Threshold

there may be a loop or RTU problem. Check both.

(A trap

– Verify that the RTU is powered up, is connected to the loop, and

message sent if

has passed its Selftest.

the number of

– Check the loop for continuity

DSL link down

 

events in

H If the threshold is set low (1–4), and the link is currently up, then an

15 minutes

event had occurred to temporarily knock out the connection. Log

exceeds the

the event and continue normal operation.

selected value.)

H If the threshold is set high (> 4), and the link is currently down, then

 

 

check the Margin statistics over the past hour and day. If the

 

numbers are low, there may be a situation where the DSL modems

 

cannot train. This condition may be temporary or permanent.

 

However, if it persists, the loop may have to be reengineered for

 

better performance by performing one of the following:

 

– Remove bridge taps

 

– Change cable gauge on a cable section

 

– Run new cable

 

– Remove other noise-generating digital circuits from the cable

 

bundle

 

H If the threshold is set high (> 4) and the link is currently up, then

 

there may be a loose connection in the loop plant, or the loop is

 

barely usable. Check the Margin. If the Margin is normal, there may

 

be a loose connection. If the Margin is low, try reducing the speed

 

of the DSL port.

 

 

5-8

April 2000

8000-A2-GB20-50

Image 98
Contents HOTWIREr 8540 and 8546 Radsl Cards Copyright E 2000 Paradyne Corporation All rights reserved Contents Radsl Card Configuration Glossary Index Contents About This Guide Document Purpose and Intended AudienceDocument Summary Product-Related DocumentsVii Viii Hotwire DSL System Description What is the Hotwire DSL System?Central Office CO Customer Premises CP OptionalHotwire DSL Chassis InputApril Front View of a Hotwire 8820 GranDSLAM Chassis DSL Card MCP CardRadsl Cards Use this MCC Card This Hotwire ChassisMCC Card Software Functionality FeaturesLevels of Access Configuring the DSL Cards Monitoring the DSL CardsTroubleshooting and Diagnostics Hotwire DSL System Description Hotwire Menus and Screens Menu and Screen FormatsComponents of a Hotwire Menu Components of a Hotwire Screen Luserlogin or Ruserlogin where L indicates a local loginCommonly Used Navigation Keys Keys DefinitionCommunications Controller MCC Card User’s Guide User Login Screen Hotwire Chassis Hotwire Menu HierarchyHotwire Chassis Main Menu Diagnostics Hotwire DSL MenuHotwire DSL ApplicationsDSL Card Configuration Menu Logging In to the System DSL Card Monitoring MenuCard Selection Screen Column Position Display Description Heading R D U X XManually Logging Out Accessing the Hotwire DSL MenuExiting From the System Automatically Logging OutHotwire Menus and Screens Port Naming Conventions Radsl Card ConfigurationOverview For the Management Domain, perform task On the . . . See Configuring the MCC Card, DSL Cards, and RTUsFor each Service Domain See Perform task MCC Card DCE ManagerServer 10BT DCE Manager Router CardDCE Manager Server DCE Manager RouterISP Router 85468540 DSL Configuration Card Status Screens Card Info System Information DNS Setup Configure DNSCard Status Options 1 Nvram Clear Screen Clear Nvram Card Status Options 2Time/Date Card Status Options 3 Nvram Config LoaderCard Reset Reset System DOS MachineApply Download Card Status Menu Options 4Download Code Download Code and Apply Download Ethernet Port DSL Configuration Ports ScreensPorts Options 1 Ports Options 2 DSL Ports DSL ParametersThresholds for Trap Messages Ports Options 3DSL Ports DSL Parameters cont’d General Interfaces DSL Configuration Interfaces ScreensInterfaces Options 1 Control Control Interface Interfaces Options 2IP Network Negotiate Options Echo Policy Default =Interfaces Options 3 Link OptionsDSL Configuration Users Screens Users * Configure Account Users OptionsDSL Configuration IP Router Screens Message Meaning IP Router Options 1 Static RoutesFilter Table IP Router Options 2Martian Networks Delete Rule Yes/No IP Router Filters IP Filter ConfigurationIP Router Options 3 IP Router Options 4 DSL Configuration Snmp Screens Management System Source Validation for Radsl CardsCommunities/Traps Snmp Communities/Traps Snmp OptionsSecurity Snmp Security DSL Configuration Dhcp Relay Screens Configuring Dhcp Relay Agent dynamic addressing Select Configuration → Dhcp Relay → Domain Names A-G-AInterface IP Address Read-only Dhcp Relay OptionsDomain Names ServersDSL Configuration RTU Screens RTU Options RTU SelectionMonitoring the Hotwire DSL System DSL Monitoring MenuDSL Monitoring Card Status Screens Card Info General Card Information Login HistoryCard Status Options DSL Monitoring Physical Layer Screens Ether Statistics Ethernet Statistics Physical Layer Options 1Active List Active Ports List Physical Layer Options 2 Hdlc Bus Stats Hdlc Bus StatisticsPhysical Layer Options 3 DSL Link Perf DSL Link Performance SummaryAll Data Physical Layer Options 4DSL Perf Stats DSL Performance Stats Customer DataDSL Xmit Status DSL Transmit Stats DSL Error StatsPhysical Layer Options 5 DSL Monitoring Interfaces Screens Status Interface Status Monitor Interfaces OptionsActive List Active Interfaces List DSL Network Protocol Screens Monitoring → Network Protocol B-DUDP Statistics Network Protocol Options 1Socket Statistics Network Protocol Options 2 TCP Data Stats TCP Data StatisticsIP Statistics Network Protocol Options 3TCP Connection Statistics Network Protocol Options 4 Icmp Statistics Icmp Packet StatisticsNetwork Protocol Options 5 Snmp StatisticsNetwork Protocol Options 6 Hdlc Statistics Hdlc StatisticsLCP Stats PPP H B Network Protocol Options 7PPP Stats General H a Ipcp General Stats PPP H CDSL IP Router Screens Route Information Window Routing TableRouting Table Screen ARP Table DSL Configuration RTU Screens RTU Information Diagnostics and Troubleshooting Applications ScreensTraceRoute Ping IP SettingsApplications Options Diagnostic Screens Selftest Diagnostics OptionsAlarms Card Alarms Packet Echo TestMajor Alarms 1 Failure Type Action TroubleshootingChecking Alarms No Response at StartupDSL port Major Alarms 2 Failure Type ActionEthernet port 1. Check cable connections to the DSL chassis RespondingThreshold Minor Alarms 1 Failure Type ActionMargin Link Down Minor Alarms 2 Failure Type ActionError Rate Syslog Messages Example Syslog MessagesExample 3. System Status Message Network Problems Network Problems 1 ActionNetwork Problems 2 Action Interfaces A-CNetwork Problems 3 Action Monitoring the Hotwire DSL SystemDiagnostics and Troubleshooting Download Code Fully Operational System Download CodeApply Download Scenario Two Download Only SystemSnmp Traps Setting Up Snmp Trap FeaturesDSL Snmp Community Strings and Authentication Failure Trap Enable DSL Port Traps DSL Card Traps Table B-1. DSL Card Traps 1 Event Severity Comment Trap #Snmp Traps XDSL margin low Minor Table B-1. DSL Card Traps 4 Event Severity Comment Trap # Enterprise-Specific Traps RTU Related TrapsStandard Traps Table B-2. Standard Traps Event Trap Class CommentSnmp Traps RTU Setup Hotwire 5446 RTU Setup OverviewIP Injection Type IP Address Network Mask Next Hop Router Figure C-1. IP Routing Table ExampleAccessing the Hotwire 5446 RTU IP Injection MIB Downloading the IP Injection ToolAccessing the IP Injection Tool Community String Entries IP and Device MIBs Supported Additional pdn-common MIBs SupportedConfiguration Requirements Network Management Systems Using a MIB Browser From an Snmp workstationProcedures MIB Browser TechniquesIP Injection Tool Group Objects Table Viewable 5446 RTU ARP Table Glossary Filter EthernetEthernet address Gateway addressPacket OpenLane DCEManager Pots splitterTraceRoute TelnetTerminal emulation UpstreamIndex NumbersIN-2
Related manuals
Manual 161 pages 59.8 Kb Manual 12 pages 4.86 Kb