Paradyne 8510 RADSL, 8310 MVLt manual Ports Options 2, DSL Ports Radsl Parameters 8510 Radsl Card

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8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration

Table 4-2. Ports Options (2 of 3)

DSL Ports (RADSL Parameters) 8510 RADSL Card

A-B-B

 

 

Gives the user the ability to configure the operational and alarm parameters of the RADSL ports on the RADSL 8510 card. Each RADSL port is configured separately.

NOTE: For the 8310 MVL card, refer to the DSL Ports (MVL Parameters) 8310 MVL Card section at the end of this table.

Action ± Edit/Reset. Edit to configure the DSL ports, Reset to reset the port and make changes active.

Port # ± Enter Port 1±4 (Default = 0).

Tx Power ± 0 dB, ±3 dB, ±6 dB. Enter the rate that allows you to reduce the transmit power by: ±3 dB or ±6 dB (Default = 0 dB). Short loops require less power, reducing crosstalk and giving better performance on longer loops in the same cable bundle.

SN Tx Power ± 0 dB, ±3 dB, ±6 dB, ±9dB (Default = ±6 dB).

Startup Margin ± The Startup Margin (SM) field is used to determine the quality of the connection of the upstream link on system startup. It is used in conjunction with the adaptive speed fields to determine the initial line speeds of the DSL link. The value is between ±3 and 9. In Adaptive Mode, if the margin falls below SM, the DSL link will be restarted at a slower speed. If the calculated margin of the next speed is greater than SM by 3 dB, the speed will increase. Enter ±3 to 9 (Default = 3).

Reed-Solomon Interleaving ± Long/Short (Default = Long).

Behavior ± Fixed/Adaptive (Default = Adaptive). In fixed rate mode, the DSL port will operate at the specified upstream and downstream speed. In rate adaptive mode, the rates will not exceed the maximum speed and traps are sent when the links drop below the minimum, as the transmission characteristics of the loop change.

SN Type ± Model number of endpoint. For Model 8510 RADSL Card, SN type is 5620. (This field is read-only.)

Fixed: Down Speed* ± 7168/6272/5120/4480/3200/2688/2560/2240/1920/1600/1280/ 1024/960/896/768/640/512/384/256 (Default = 2560 kbps).

Fixed: Up Speed* ± 1088/952/816/680/544/408/272/91 (Default = 1088 kbps). Enter the fixed upstream speed.

Adaptive: Max Dn Speed* ± 7168/6272/5120/4480/3200/2688/2560/2240/1920/1600/ 1280/1024/960/896/768/640/512/384/256 (Default = 7168 kbps). Enter the maximum downstream speed.

Adaptive: Min Dn Speed* ± 7168/6272/5120/4480/3200/2688/2560/2240/1920/1600/ 1280/1024/960/896/768/640/512/384/256 (Default = 640 kbps). Enter the minimum downstream speed.

Adaptive: Max Up Speed* ± 1088/952/816/680/544/408/272/91 (Default = 1088 kbps). Enter the maximum upstream speed.

Adaptive: Min Up Speed* ± 1088/952/816/680/544/408/272/91 (Default = 408 kbps). Enter the minimum upstream speed.

Margin Threshold Offset: ± Sends a trap message if the margin on either end falls below the startup margin by the selected value. Enter a value for the margin threshold trap (±7 dB to +14 dB, or D to Disable). (Default = +3).

Example: With a startup margin of +3 dB and a threshold offset of +3 dB, the Low Margin Trap will be sent if the margin falls below 0 dB.

Link Down Ct: ± Sends a trap message if the number of DSL link down events in 15 minutes exceeds the selected value. Enter a value for the Link Down Count Trap (0 to 1000, or D to Disable). (Default = 0.)

NOTE: If you have made changes to this screen, select Reset in the Action field to make the changes active.

*If you select a downstream speed of 2560 or higher, your upstream speed selection is limited to 1088/952/680/408.

4-6

January 1999

8000-A2-GB26-10

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Contents HOTWIRE Dslam for 8310 MVL and 8510 Radsl Cards Copyright E 1999 Paradyne Corporation All rights reserved Contents Configuring the Hotwire Dslam Traps Contents About This Guide Document Purpose and Intended AudienceDocument Summary Section DescriptionProduct-Related Documents Document Number Document TitleViii Hotwire Dslam System Description What is the Hotwire DSLAM?Optional Hotwire Dslam ComponentsCentral Office CO Hotwire Dslam Chassis InputFront View of a Hotwire 8800 or 8810 Dslam Chassis Radsl or MVL Card Hotwire Dslam FeaturesMCC Card Software Functionality Levels of AccessConfiguring the DSL Cards Monitoring the DSL Cards Troubleshooting and Diagnostics Hotwire Menus and Screens OverviewComponents of a Hotwire Menu Menu and Screen FormatsComponents of a Hotwire Screen Commonly Used Navigation Keys Keys DefinitionHotwire Menu Hierarchy Hotwire Chassis Main MenuHotwire ± MCC Menu Hotwire ChassisHotwire ± DSL Menu Hotwire DSLDiagnostics ApplicationsDSL Card Configuration Menu Logging In to the System DSL Card Monitoring MenuReviewing the Levels of Access User Login ScreenCard Selection Screen Column Position Display Description Heading D U X XAccessing the Hotwire ± DSL Menu Exiting from the SystemManually Logging Out Automatically Logging OutConfiguring the Hotwire Dslam Service DomainDomain Types Management DomainConfiguring the DSL Cards For each DSL card, to SeeConfiguring VNIDs on a DSL Card Configuring the Active Vnid on each DSL Port Configuring Static Users Addressing a Location Using DhcpConfiguring Subnet Addressing Configuring Subnet MasksConfiguring IP Filter Rules Configuring the Hotwire Dslam MVL and 8510 Radsl Card Configuration DSL Configuration Card Status ScreensCard Status Options 1 Card Info Card InformationTime/Date Nvram ClearNvram Cfg Loader Nvram Configuration Loader Card ResetCard Status Options 2 DOS MachineCard Status Options 3 Download Code Download Code and Apply Download F a and BDownload Code a or Apply Download B Apply Download BEthernet Port DSL Configuration Ports ScreensPorts Options 1 Ports Options 2 DSL Ports Radsl Parameters 8510 Radsl CardPorts Options 3 DSL Ports MVL Parameters 8310 MVL CardDSL Configuration Interfaces Screens Control Control Interfaces Interfaces OptionsGeneral General Interfaces DSL Configuration Users Screens DSL Configuration Bridge ScreensBridge Options 1 General General Bridge ParametersCard Vnid Port VnidBridge Options 2 Client VnidBridge Options 3 ARP Entry Add ARP Entry BDSL Configuration Service Node Screens Service Node Options SN ConfigurationDSL Configuration Filters Screen IP Filters IP Filter Table IP Filters IP Filter Configuration screenFilters Options 1 Destination Address ± nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn format IP Filters IP Filter ConfigurationFilters Options 2 Monitoring the Hotwire Dslam DSL Monitoring Card Status ScreensCard Info General Card Information Login HistoryCard Status Options Syslog Screen Example Active List Active Ports List DSL Monitoring Physical Layer ScreensPhysical Layer Options 1 Physical Layer Options 2 Ethernet Stats Ethernet StatisticsInitialized EtherHDLC Ports ± s1c, s1d, s1e, or s1f Physical Layer Options 3EtherHDLC Stats EtherHDLC Statistics Physical Layer Options 4 DSL Link Perf DSL Link Performance SummaryCustomer Data Physical Layer Options 5DSL Perf Stats DSL Performance Stats DSL Xmit Status DSL Transmit Stats DSL Error StatsPhysical Layer Options 6 DSL Monitoring Interfaces Screens Status Interface Status Monitor Interfaces OptionsActive List Active Interfaces List DSL Network Protocol Screens UDP Statistics Network Protocol Options 1Socket Statistics Network Protocol Options 2 TCP Statistics TCP Data StatisticsIP Statistics Network Protocol Options 3TCP Connection Statistics Snmp Statistics Network Protocol Options 4Icmp Statistics Icmp Packet Statistics Snmp Authentication Statistics Network Protocol Options 5DSL Bridge Screens Bridge TableItem to Display ± Entry number MAC TableClient Vnid ARP TableDSL SN Information Screen Default filter action ± Forward/discard DSL Monitoring IP Filters ScreenIP Filters Filter TableDiagnostics and Troubleshooting Diagnostic ScreensDiagnostics Options Alarms Card AlarmsSelftest DSL Packet Echo TestTroubleshooting Checking AlarmsMajor Alarms 1 Action No Response at StartupMajor Alarms 2 Action Minor Alarms 1 Action Margin ThresholdThreshold Minor Alarms 2 ActionLink Down Network Problems High-Level TroubleshootingIf the Client cannot Ping the Gateway Router Then Client-to-Service Node SegmentClient Cannot Ping the Gateway Router Client Cannot Reach Service Node Client-to-Service Node Segment Layer SolutionLayer 1 ± PhysicalLayer 1 ± Physical Service Node-to-DSLAM Segment 1 Layer SolutionClient Cannot Reach Dslam Network Service Node-to-DSLAM Segment 2 Layer SolutionLayer 2 ± Client Cannot Reach IPC DSLAM-to-IPC Segment Layer Solution Movefromdef=1IPC-to-Router Segment Layer Solution Client Cannot Reach RouterCannot Upload Configurations to a Unix Server Router-to-IPC Segment Layer SolutionPerformance Issues ± Viewing Network Statistics Examining Performance Issues Go ToDownload Code Download Code Download Only System Automatic Immediate ApplyEvent Severity Comment Trap # TrapsDSL Card Traps Traps MIB Traps Glossary Default route Dhcp Relay AgentDhcp Server DomainHost Host routesHub InternetService Node OpenLane DCEManager PacketStatic route Subnet addressSubnet mask TelnetGL-6 Index IN-1IN-2