Nortel Networks 214393-A manual 132Chapter 8 RMON How alarms fire

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132Chapter 8 RMON

132Chapter 8 RMON

Figure 65 How alarms fire

Rising value

Falling value

Alarm fires

No firing

7821EA

It is important to note that the alarm fires during the first interval that the sample goes out of range. No additional events are generated for that threshold until the opposite threshold is crossed. Therefore, it is important to carefully define the rising and falling threshold values for alarms to work as expected. Otherwise, incorrect thresholds causes an alarm to fire at every alarm interval.

A general guideline is to define one of the threshold values to an expected, baseline value, and then define the opposite threshold as the out-of-bounds limit. Because of sample averaging, the value may be equal to ±1 of the baseline units. For example, assume an alarm is defined on octets going out of a port as the variable. The intent of the alarm is to provide notification to the system administrator when excessive traffic occurs on that port. If spanning tree is enabled, then 52 octets are transmitted out of the port every 2 seconds, which is equivalent to baseline traffic of 260 octets every 10 seconds. This alarm should provide the notification the system administrator needs if the lower limit of octets going out is defined at 260 and the upper limit is defined at 320 (or at any value greater than 260 + 52 = 312).

The first time outbound traffic other than spanning tree Bridge Protocol Data Units (BPDUs) occurs, the rising alarm fires. When outbound traffic other than spanning tree ceases, the falling alarm fires. This process provides the system administrator with time intervals of any nonbaseline outbound traffic.

If the alarm is defined with a falling threshold less than 260 (assuming the alarm polling interval is 10 seconds), say 250, then the rising alarm can fire only once (Figure 66). The reason is that for the rising alarm to fire a second time, the falling alarm (the opposite threshold) must fire. Unless the port becomes inactive or

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Nortel Networks 214393-A manual 132Chapter 8 RMON How alarms fire, Rising value Falling value Alarm fires No firing