Replacing a GRP

Figure 3 GRP Ejector Levers, Captive Installation Screws, and Upper Card Cage Slots (Cisco 12012 Shown)

Ejector lever and captive

screw

 

 

EJECT

 

SLO

 

 

T-0SLOT-1

 

AUX

RESET

 

CO

 

 

NSO

 

 

LE

 

Upper

 

 

card cage

LINK

RX

 

TX

COLL

slot 0

MII

 

 

 

RJ

 

 

-45

 

GIGABIT ROUTE PROCESSOR

 

Ejector

lever and

captive

screw

0

ACTIVE

CARRIERRX

PKT

1

ACTIVE

CARRIERRX

PKT

2

ACTIVE

CARRIERRX

PKT

3

ACTIVE

CARRIERRX

PKT

Q OC -3/STM -POS

0

0

ACTIVE

ACTIVE

CARRIER

CARRIERRX

RX

 

CELL

CELL

OC-12/STM-4 ATM

OC-12/STM-4 POS

CRITICAL

MAJOR

MINOR

ACO/LT

ALARM 1ALARM 2

ENABLEDFAIL 0

1CSC

 

0

 

 

1

 

ALARM

2

SFC

 

 

Alarm card slot

H10761

Caution A GRP that is only partially removed from the backplane can halt the system.

Caution Before you replace the GRP, back up the running configuration to a Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) file server or an installed Flash memory card or Flash disk so that you can retrieve it later. If the configuration is not saved, the entire configuration will be lost inside the NVRAM on the removed GRP, and you will have to reenter the entire configuration manually. For instructions on how to save the configuration file, see the “Copying Files to Flash Memory” section on page 41. This procedure is not necessary if you are temporarily removing a GRP; lithium batteries will retain the configuration in memory until you replace the GRP in the system.

Figure 4 shows the ejector levers.

Removing a GRP

 

78-4339-09

15

 

 

 

Page 15
Image 15
Cisco Systems GRP-B manual Shows the ejector levers