Chapter 4 Troubleshooting the Installation

Problem Solving with Subsystems

Troubleshooting by Using the Alarm Cards

The alarm cards are installed in the alarm card slots immediately beneath the clock and scheduler card slots. The alarm card has four primary functions:

Redundant generation of the DC MBus supply voltage for the line cards

Power system monitoring functions

OK/FAIL status indication of the CSCs and SFCs

Hardware implementation of the alarm system relay outputs and indicators

The status of these functions is displayed in the LEDs on the faceplate of the alarm card. (See Figure 4-4.)

Monitoring Alarm Card Status

The alarm card faceplate has one pair of LEDs, labeled MBUS, that indicate the operational status of the alarm card.

A green MBUS LED labeled ENABLED indicates that the card has been detected by the system and is okay. A yellow MBUS LED labeled FAIL indicates that the system has detected a fault in the alarm card.

If no faults have been detected on an alarm card, the green MBUS LED labeled ENABLED should be on, and the yellow LED labeled FAIL should be off.

Monitoring Switch Fabric Status

If there are no faults on either CSC 0 or CSC 1, the green LED labeled ENABLED for each CSC should be on, and the yellow LED labeled FAIL for each CSC should be off. If the system detects a CSC fault, it turns off the green ENABLED LED for the faulty card, turns on the yellow FAIL LED, logs a warning message on the system console, and continues operating.

Note If the yellow LED labeled FAIL for a CSF or SFC is on, check the system console for messages describing the fault.

 

 

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Cisco Systems OL-11497-03 manual Troubleshooting by Using the Alarm Cards, Monitoring Alarm Card Status