METRObility Optical Systems R231-47, R231-61, R231-14, R231-59, R231-55, R231-51 Link Loss Return LLR

Models: R231-16 R231-1Y R231-57 R231-49 R231-53 R231-51 R231-17 R231-15 R231-1J R231-61 R231-14 R231-13 R231-1X R231-55 R231-47 R231-59

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Link Loss Return (LLR)

The fiber optic ports of the access line cards have been designed with an LLR function* for troubleshooting a remote connection.

When LLR is enabled, the fiber port’s transmitter shuts down if its receiver fails to detect a valid receive link. LLR should only be enabled on one end of the link and is typically enabled on either the unmanaged or remote device.

The diagram below shows a typical network configuration with a good link status using access line cards for remote connectivity.

 

Switch/Hub

Access

Access

Customer

PC

w/SNMP

Line Card

Line Card

Site

 

 

LLR is OFF

LLR is ON

 

 

 

 

Fiber

 

 

 

 

Cable

 

LED lit = established link

LED unlit = no link

 

If one of the optical conductors is bad (as shown in the diagram box below), the card with LLR enabled will return a no link condition to its link partner. This aids the network administrator in determining the source of the loss.

 

Switch/Hub

Access

Access

Customer

PC

w/SNMP

Line Card

Line Card

Site

 

 

LLR is OFF

LLR is ON

 

 

 

 

Broken

 

 

 

 

Fiber

 

 

 

 

Conductor

 

 

 

Link Loss Returned

 

LED lit = established link

LED unlit = no link

 

IMPORTANT: LLR must not be active on both ends of a configuration. If it is, the link can never be established.

*Units are shipped with the LLR function disabled (DOWN).

18 User Guide

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METRObility Optical Systems R231-47, R231-61, R231-14, R231-59, R231-55, R231-51, R231-1J, R231-57, R231-53 Link Loss Return LLR