Paradyne 8310 MVLt Interfaces Options, General General Interfaces, Control Control Interfaces

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8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration

Table 4-3. Interfaces Options

General (General Interfaces)

A-C-A

 

 

Gives the user the ability to configure and view basic card interface information about a given interface, including binding filters.

Interface Name ± 3 characters. e1a = Ethernet port; s1c, s1d, s1e and s1f = RADSL or MVL interface.

Type ± Static or Dynamic interface type.

Protocol ± HDLC or Ethernet. Interface protocol.

Port List ± Ports available on the card.

MTU (max) ± 64±1600 bytes (Default = 1536). Receipt of packets above the MTU setting will be dropped.

NOTE: The above MTU values are the only values you may enter. Make certain that if you change from the default value, the new numbers are appropriate to your network. Do a card reset or reset the Ethernet interface.

Inbound Filter Name ± Enter the filter name with a maximum of 12 characters. This field appears only if the DSL interface selected is s1c±s1f. To view a list of configured inbound filters, press Ctrl-v.

NOTE: An inbound filter acts on packets in the upstream direction from the client to the NSP server.

Outbound Filter Name ± Enter the filter name with a maximum of 12 characters. This field appears only if the DSL interface selected is s1c±s1f. To view a list of configured outbound filters, press Ctrl-v.

NOTE: An outbound filter acts on packets in the downstream direction from the NSP server to the client.

Control (Control Interfaces)

A-C-B

 

 

Gives the user the ability to start, stop, and monitor (up, down, or testing) the current state of an interface.

NOTE: Stopping the interface disables all of the traffic on that port, including diagnostics. If you want to disable only customer traffic, disable all VNIDs on that port.

There are no user-configurable elements on this screen except for the ability to start and stop the interface. Valid choices for the DSL card are e1a, s1c, s1d, s1e, and s1f.

8000-A2-GB26-10

January 1999

4-9

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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 Document Purpose and Intended Audience About This GuideSection Description Document SummaryDocument Number Document Title Product-Related DocumentsViii What is the Hotwire DSLAM? Hotwire Dslam System DescriptionOptional Hotwire Dslam ComponentsCentral Office CO Input Hotwire Dslam ChassisFront 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 Overview Hotwire Menus and ScreensMenu and Screen Formats Components of a Hotwire MenuComponents of a Hotwire Screen Keys Definition Commonly Used Navigation KeysHotwire Chassis Hotwire Menu HierarchyHotwire Chassis Main Menu Hotwire ± MCC MenuApplications Hotwire ± DSL MenuHotwire DSL DiagnosticsDSL Card Configuration Menu DSL Card Monitoring Menu Logging In to the SystemUser Login Screen Reviewing the Levels of AccessCard Selection Screen D U X X Column Position Display Description HeadingAutomatically Logging Out Accessing the Hotwire ± DSL MenuExiting from the System Manually Logging OutManagement Domain Configuring the Hotwire DslamService Domain Domain TypesFor each DSL card, to See Configuring the DSL CardsConfiguring VNIDs on a DSL Card Configuring the Active Vnid on each DSL Port Addressing a Location Using Dhcp Configuring Static UsersConfiguring Subnet Masks Configuring Subnet AddressingConfiguring IP Filter Rules Configuring the Hotwire Dslam DSL Configuration Card Status Screens MVL and 8510 Radsl Card ConfigurationNvram Clear Card Status Options 1Card Info Card Information Time/DateDOS Machine Nvram Cfg Loader Nvram Configuration LoaderCard Reset Card Status Options 2Apply Download B Card Status Options 3Download Code Download Code and Apply Download F a and B Download Code a or Apply Download BEthernet Port DSL Configuration Ports ScreensPorts Options 1 DSL Ports Radsl Parameters 8510 Radsl Card Ports Options 2DSL Ports MVL Parameters 8310 MVL Card Ports Options 3DSL Configuration Interfaces Screens Control Control Interfaces Interfaces OptionsGeneral General Interfaces DSL Configuration Bridge Screens DSL Configuration Users ScreensPort Vnid Bridge Options 1General General Bridge Parameters Card VnidClient Vnid Bridge Options 2ARP Entry Add ARP Entry B Bridge Options 3DSL Configuration Service Node Screens SN Configuration Service Node OptionsDSL 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 DSL Monitoring Card Status Screens Monitoring the Hotwire DslamCard Info General Card Information Login HistoryCard Status Options Syslog Screen Example Active List Active Ports List DSL Monitoring Physical Layer ScreensPhysical Layer Options 1 Ethernet Stats Ethernet Statistics Physical Layer Options 2Initialized EtherHDLC Ports ± s1c, s1d, s1e, or s1f Physical Layer Options 3EtherHDLC Stats EtherHDLC Statistics DSL Link Perf DSL Link Performance Summary Physical Layer Options 4Customer 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 TCP Statistics TCP Data Statistics Network Protocol Options 2IP Statistics Network Protocol Options 3TCP Connection Statistics Snmp Statistics Network Protocol Options 4Icmp Statistics Icmp Packet Statistics Network Protocol Options 5 Snmp Authentication StatisticsBridge Table DSL Bridge ScreensItem to Display ± Entry number MAC TableClient ARP Table VnidDSL SN Information Screen Filter Table Default filter action ± Forward/discardDSL Monitoring IP Filters Screen IP FiltersDiagnostic Screens Diagnostics and TroubleshootingDSL Packet Echo Test Diagnostics OptionsAlarms Card Alarms SelftestNo Response at Startup TroubleshootingChecking Alarms Major Alarms 1 ActionMajor Alarms 2 Action Margin Threshold Minor Alarms 1 ActionThreshold Minor Alarms 2 ActionLink Down High-Level Troubleshooting Network ProblemsIf the Client cannot Ping the Gateway Router Then Client-to-Service Node SegmentClient Cannot Ping the Gateway Router Physical Client Cannot Reach Service NodeClient-to-Service Node Segment Layer Solution Layer 1 ±Layer 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 Movefromdef=1 DSLAM-to-IPC Segment Layer SolutionClient Cannot Reach Router IPC-to-Router Segment Layer SolutionRouter-to-IPC Segment Layer Solution Cannot Upload Configurations to a Unix ServerExamining Performance Issues Go To Performance Issues ± Viewing Network StatisticsDownload Code Download Only System Automatic Immediate Apply Download CodeEvent Severity Comment Trap # TrapsDSL Card Traps Traps MIB Traps Glossary Domain Default routeDhcp Relay Agent Dhcp ServerInternet HostHost routes HubPacket Service NodeOpenLane DCE ManagerTelnet Static routeSubnet address Subnet maskGL-6 IN-1 IndexIN-2