Instruction/ maintenance manual of the product 8510 RADSL Paradyne
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HOTWIRE DSLAM FOR 8310 MVL AND 8510 RADSL CARDS USER’S GUIDE Document No. 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999.
Printed on recycled paper A 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Copyright E 1999 Paradyne Corporation. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A. Notice This publication is protected by federal copyright law .
i 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Contents About This Guide H Document Purpose and Intended Audience v . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . H Document Summary vi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents ii 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 H Logging In to the System 2-8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reviewing the Levels of Access 2-9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . User Login Screen 2-9 .
Contents iii 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 5 Monitoring the Hotwir e DSLAM H Overview 5-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . H DSL Monitoring Card Status Screens 5-1 . . . . . . .
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v 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 About This Guide Document Purpose and Intended Audience This guide describes how to configure and operate the software component of the Hotwire Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer (DSLAM) system. It is intended for administrators and operators who maintain the networks that support Hotwire operation.
About This Guide vi 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Document Summary Section Description Chapter 1 Hotwire DSLAM System Description. Provides an overview of the Hotwire 8600 and 8800 systems. Chapter 2 Hotwire Menus and Screens. Describes the operation of Hotwire menus, screens, and commonly used navigation keys.
About This Guide vii 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Pr oduct-Related Documents Document Number Document Title 5020-A2-GN10 Hotwire 5020 POTS Splitter Central Office Installation Instructions 5030-A2-GN1.
About This Guide viii 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999.
1-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Hotwire DSLAM System Description 1 What is the Hotwir e DSLAM? The Hotwire t Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer (DSLAM) is a Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) platform that houses a Management Communications Controller (MCC) card and up to 18 DSL cards.
Hotwire DSLAM System Description 1-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 The following illustration shows a typical Hotwire configuration. Legend: DSL - Digital Subscriber Line SN - Ser vice Node MDF - Main .
Hotwire DSLAM System Description 1-3 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Hotwire DSLAM Chassis There are three types of chassis: H The Hotwire 8600 DSLAM chassis is an independent, standalone system.
Hotwire DSLAM System Description 1-4 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 H The Hotwire 8800 DSLAM chassis is a 20-slot chassis designed to house up to 18 DSL cards and one MCC card.
Hotwire DSLAM System Description 1-5 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 MCC Card The chassis requires one MCC card, which is a processor card that administers and provides diagnostic connectivity to the DSL cards.
Hotwire DSLAM System Description 1-6 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Levels of Access There are two levels of diagnostic/administrative access in the Hotwire DSLAM system: H Administrator The Administrator has complete read/write access to the DSLAM system.
Hotwire DSLAM System Description 1-7 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Monitoring the DSL Cards The Hotwire DSLAM software provides submenu options to monitor the activity of the Hotwire DSL cards.
Hotwire DSLAM System Description 1-8 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T r oubleshooting and Diagnostics The Hotwire DSLAM system provides DSL diagnostic submenu options that: H Display self-test results for CPU health, memory and ports, and resets. H Show major alarms such as Selftest Failure, Processor Failure, and DSL or Ethernet port failure.
2-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Hotwire Menus and Scr eens 2 Overview The Hotwire DSLAM has a menu- and screen-driven user interface system that enables the user to configure and monitor the Hotwire cards.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Menu and Scr een Formats The Hotwire DSLAM uses an ASCII-based text format for its menus and screens. This section describes the components of a typical Hotwire menu and screen. Components of a Hotwire Menu A typical Hotwire menu format looks like this: 1 2 3 1.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-3 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Components of a Hotwire Scr een A typical Hotwire screen looks like this: 2 1 4 3 1. System Header Line is the top line of the screen. This line has two fields that provide system login information.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-4 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 4. Status Line is the last line on the screen. This line displays status information about the selected card. For information about these fields, see Card Selection Screen on page 2-10. Commonly Used Navigation Keys The following table lists navigation keys and their definitions.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-5 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Hotwir e Menu Hierarchy This section describes the menu structure of the Hotwire user interface. Hotwire Chassis Main Menu The following illustration shows the Hotwire Chassis Main Menu. Hotwire Chassis A.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-6 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Hotwire – DSL Menu After selecting a specific DSL card from the Card Selection screen, the DSLAM system displays the Hotwire – DSL Menu. See Monitoring Menu See Configuration Menu* Hotwire – DSL A.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-7 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Card Configuration Menu The following figure illustrates the complete Configuration menu hierarchy from the Hotwire – DSL menu. 98-15899-01 (A) Configuration A. Card Status B. Por ts C. Interf aces D .
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-8 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Card Monitoring Menu The following figure illustrates the complete Monitoring menu hierarchy from the Hotwire – DSL menu. (A) Card Status A. Card Inf o B. Login Histor y C . Syslog (B) Physical La yer A.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-9 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Reviewing the Levels of Access There are two levels of privileges on the Hotwire DSLAM system.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-10 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 NOTE: The login ID and password are case-sensitive; that is, the system recognizes both upper- and lowercase letters.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-1 1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 The status of each DSL card is indicated by codes displayed in any of eight positions to the right of the card selected.
Hotwire Menus and Screens 2-12 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 For more information about the status displayed on this screen, such as major and minor alarms, see T roubleshooting in Chapter 6, Diagnostics and T roubleshooting. Accessing the Hotwire – DSL Menu " Procedur e T o access the Hotwire – DSL menu: 1.
3-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Configuring the Hotwire DSLAM 3 Overview The Hotwire DSLAM enables you to configure and manage the Hotwire MCC and DSL cards.
Configuring the Hotwire DSLAM 3-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Configuring the DSL Cards Use the procedures in the following order to minimally configure DSL cards for user data connectivity . For detailed information on these instructions, see Chapter 4, 8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration .
Configuring the Hotwire DSLAM 3-3 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Configuring VNID(s) on a DSL Card " Procedur e T o configure at least one VNID for this RADSL or MVL card from the Hotwire – DSL Card menu: 1. Follow this menu selection sequence : Configuration → Bridge → Card VNID ( A-E-B ) 2.
Configuring the Hotwire DSLAM 3-4 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Configuring the Active VNID on each DSL Port Y ou can configure multiple VNIDs with dif ferent next hop routers with one active VNID configured per port. " Procedur e T o configure the active VNID on each RADSL or MVL port from the Hotwire – DSL menu: 1.
Configuring the Hotwire DSLAM 3-5 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Configuring Static Users " Procedur e From the Hotwire – DSL menu: 1. Follow this menu selection sequence: Configuration → Bridge → Client VNID ( A-E-D ) 2. Enter the port number at the DSL Port #: prompt.
Configuring the Hotwire DSLAM 3-6 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Configuring Subnet Addressing T o define a subnet entry , the IP address has to be entered as the lower boundary address of the subnet. Otherwise, only a host entry can be configured. For example, a subnet with a mask of 255.
Configuring the Hotwire DSLAM 3-7 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Configuring IP Filter Rules " Procedur e Configure IP Filters and associated rules in the following sequence: 1. Define each filter . An IP filter consists of a set of rules. 2. Configure rules for each filter .
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4-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4 Overview This chapter describes configuration options on the DSL card. Use these options to customize your applications. For information on customizing the MCC card, see the Hotwire Management Communications Controller (MCC) Card, IP Conservative, User ’s Guide.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 NOTE: Only a user who logs in to the Hotwire DSLAM with Administrative permission can configure the DSL card. " Procedur e T o configure card information, time/date, clear NVRAM, upload or download configuration sets, download new firmware, or reset card: 1.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-3 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-1. Card Status Options (2 of 3) NVRAM Cfg Loader (NVRAM Configuration Loader) A-A-D Gives the user the ability to upload or download a copy of the card’s binary configuration data to or from a T rivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) server .
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-4 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-1. Card Status Options (3 of 3) Download Code (Download Code and Apply Download) A-A-F (A and B) Gives the user the ability to download a new version of code and apply the downloaded code.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-5 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Configuration Ports Scr eens Use the system information submenu of the Ports screens to display the DSL Ports screen. " Procedur e T o configure ports: 1. Follow this menu selection sequence: Configuration → Ports ( A-B ) 2.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-6 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-2. Ports Options (2 of 3) DSL Ports (RADSL Parameters) 8510 RADSL Card A-B-B Gives the user the ability to configure the operational and alarm parameters of the RADSL ports on the RADSL 8510 card.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-7 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-2. Ports Options (3 of 3) DSL Ports (MVL Parameters) 8310 MVL Card A-B-B Gives the user the ability to configure the operational and alarm parameters of the MVL ports on the 8310 card.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-8 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Configuration Interfaces Scr eens Use the system information submenu of the Interfaces screens to configure basic interface information.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-9 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 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.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-10 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Configuration Users Scr eens Use the system information submenu of the Users screens to configure login accounts for T elnet sessions directly to the DSL cards. This menu item is not currently supported on this card.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-1 1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-4. Bridge Options (1 of 3) General (General Bridge Parameters) A-E-A Gives the user the ability to configure general bridge parameters. Complete Entry Timeout – Enter the bridge aging timeout (10–1,000,000 seconds) (Default = 300).
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-12 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-4. Bridge Options (2 of 3) Client VNID A-E-D Gives the user the ability to configure static clients on VNIDs. Up to 32 entries per port (static users, DHCP users, or subnets) are allowed.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-13 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-4. Bridge Options (3 of 3) ARP (Parameters and Add ARP Entry) A-E-E (A and B) Select Parameters (A) or ARP Entry (B) Parameters (A) Gives the user the ability to configure general Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) cache parameters.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-14 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Configuration Service Node Scr eens Use the SN Configuration screen to configure endpoint Service Node information. " Procedur e 1. Follow this menu selection sequence: Configuration → SN Configuration ( A-F ).
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-15 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-5. Service Node Options SN Configuration A-F Displays endpoint information for the 5620 RTU or 6310 MVL modem. Port # – Enter the RADSL or MVL port number (1–4).
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-16 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Configuration Filters Scr een Use the IP Router Filters to add, delete, or edit a filter . " Procedur e 1. Follow this menu selection sequence: Configuration → Filters → IP Filters ( A-G-A ).
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-17 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-6. Filters Options (1 of 2) IP Filters (IP Filter T able) A-G-A The IP Filter T able screen displays the following information: Item # – Enter a value from 1–8 to add, delete, or modify individual filter entries.
8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration 4-18 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 4-6. Filters Options (2 of 2) IP Filters (IP Filter Configuration) ( continued) A-G-A Filter Name – Up to 12 characters. Default Filter Action – Forward (Packet)/Discard (Packet) (Default = Forward).
5-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5 Overview The Hotwire DSLAM lets you monitor the activity of the Hotwire DSL cards. When you select Monitoring from the Hotwire DSL Main .
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 " Procedur e T o view general card information, login history , and the system log: 1. Follow this menu selection sequence: Monitoring → Card Status ( B-A ) 2. The Card Status menu appears.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-3 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Syslog Screen Example.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-4 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Monitoring Physical Layer Scr eens Use the Physical Layer screens to display read-only system information about physical ports. " Procedur e T o view the active ports list, Ethernet statistics, and HDLC bus statistics: 1.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-5 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-2. Physical Layer Options (2 of 6) Ethernet Stats (Ethernet Statistics) B-B-B Displays a list of the Ethernet statistics of the LAN port (e1a). The counters increment in real time and you may press Ctrl-r at any time to reset the counters.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-6 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-2. Physical Layer Options (3 of 6) Ethernet Stats (Ethernet Statistics) (continued) B-B-B Packets transmitted – Number of packets transmitted by the Ethernet port and what type. H Multicast – Single packets copied to a specific subset of network addresses.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-7 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-2. Physical Layer Options (4 of 6) DSL Link Perf (DSL Link Performance Summary) B-B-D Displays a summary of the link performance for each of the DSL ports.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-8 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-2. Physical Layer Options (5 of 6) DSL Perf Stats (DSL Performance Stats) B-B-E Displays the link performance for each of the DSL ports. T ells you the number of times the link has been down and the elapsed time the link has been up.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-9 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-2. Physical Layer Options (6 of 6) DSL Error Stats B-B-F Displays the error performance (margin) rates for each of the DSL ports after selecting a specific DSL port number . Margin is a measure of performance.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-10 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Monitoring Interfaces Scr eens Use the Interfaces screens to display read-only system information about interfaces. " Procedur e T o view the active interfaces list and interface status list: 1.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-1 1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-3. Monitor Interfaces Options Active List (Active Interfaces List) B-C-A Displays a list of the current status of all of the active interfaces in the card. if – Number of the interface.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-12 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Network Pr otocol Screens Use the Network Protocol screens to display read-only system information for the management domain.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-13 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-4. Network Protocol Options (1 of 5) Socket Statistics B-D-A Displays management domain information for the interface. Enter the socket name from the active socket list to view information on the application assigned to the specified socket number .
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-14 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-4. Network Protocol Options (2 of 5) TCP Statistics (TCP Data Statistics) B-D-C Displays a summary of the T ransmission Control Protocol (TCP) data activity (packets and bytes transmitted and received) over the backplane of the MCC card.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-15 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-4. Network Protocol Options (3 of 5) TCP Connection Statistics B-D-C When you press Return on the TCP Data Statistics screen, the TCP Connection Statistics screen is displayed, showing a summary of the TCP connection activity on all interfaces that terminate on the DSL card.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-16 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-4. Network Protocol Options (4 of 5) ICMP Statistics (ICMP Packet Statistics) B-D-E Displays a summary of the Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) activity on the backplane that terminates on the DSL card, such as echo replies.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-17 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-4. Network Protocol Options (5 of 5) SNMP Authentication Statistics B-D-F When you press Return on the SNMP Statistics screen, the SNMP Authentication Statistics screen is displayed, giving you additional Community Administration information.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-18 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Bridge Scr eens Use the Bridge screens to display read-only system information. " Procedur e T o view bridge information: 1. Follow this menu selection sequence: Monitoring → Bridge ( B-E ) 2.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-19 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-5. Bridge Options (2 of 3) MAC T able B-E-B Displays the MAC table. Bridge – lb0 – Name of the Logical Bridge (Equivalent to e1a Ethernet). Entry # – Enter the MAC table entry number you wish to view .
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-20 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 5-5. Bridge Options (3 of 3) VNID B-E-D Displays VNID information. Item Number – Enter the item to display . VNID – VNID between 2–4094 (Default = none). Ports – DSL ports that are members of the VNID.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-21 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL SN Information Scr een Use the SN Information screen to display read-only Service Node information. " Procedur e 1. Follow this menu selection sequence: Monitoring → SN Information ( B-F ) 2.
Monitoring the Hotwire DSLAM 5-22 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 DSL Monitoring IP Filters Scr een Use the IP Filters screen to display configured filters. " Procedur e 1. Follow this menu selection sequence: Monitoring → Filters → IP Filters ( B-G-A ) 2.
6-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Diagnostics and T r oubleshooting 6 Diagnostic Scr eens Use the Diagnostics submenu to perform self-tests or view alarm status.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 " Procedur e T o view self-test, card alarm, packet test, and Service Node self-test information: 1. From the Hotwire – DSL Menu, select: Diagnostics ( D ) 2. The Diagnostics menu appears.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-3 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T r oubleshooting The status of each card in the Hotwire DSLAM is indicated on the Card Selection screen (see Components of a Hotwire Screen in Chapter 2, Hotwire Menus and Screens).
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-4 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 6-2. Major Alarms (2 of 2) Alarm Action Ethernet Port Failure 1. Check cable connections to the DSLAM. – If cables are terminated properly , go to Step 2. – If cables are not terminated properly , terminate them correctly .
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-5 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Minor Alarms Use T able 6-3 to determine the appropriate action to take for each Minor Alarm. T able 6-3. Minor Alarms (1 of 2) Alarm Action Config Error 1. Check the Selftest Results display by following the menu selection sequence: Diagnostics → Selftest ( D - A ) 2.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-6 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 6-3. Minor Alarms (2 of 2) Alarm Action Link Down Threshold (A trap message is sent if the number of DSL link down events in 15 minutes exceeds the selected value.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-7 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Network Pr oblems T o provide a practical aid in the isolation and resolution of Layer 2 network difficulties, the guidelines in this section provide information on troubleshooting a generic network containing the devices found in most networks.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-8 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 The following table provides an overview of the sequence of troubleshooting procedures for the DSL card. The following sections address potential problems that may occur in each network segment: I f the Client cannot Ping the Gateway Router and .
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-9 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Client Cannot Reach Service Node T able 6-4. Client-to-Service Node Segment Layer Solution Layer 1 – Physical 1. Make sure the PWR LED on the front of the Service Node is lit. Use only the power adapter shipped with the unit.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-10 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Client Cannot Reach DSLAM This section examines the Service Node-to-DSLAM segment of the network. NOTE: On the DSLAM, verify that the DSL link is up and that there is a MAC address for the client (screen B-E-B ).
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-1 1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 6-5. Service Node-to-DSLAM Segment (2 of 2) Layer Solution Layer 1 – Physical (continued) 5. Make sure the LINE LED on the Service Node is lit. This verifies a DSL connection to the DSLAM.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-12 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Client Cannot Reach IPC This section examines the DSLAM-to-IPC segment of the network.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-13 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 6-6. DSLAM-to-IPC Segment Layer Solution Layer 1 – Physical If the DSL card shows an alarm, go to screen D-B to determine the cause. An Ethernet alarm usually means no connection to the IPC.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-14 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Client Cannot Reach Router T able 6-7 examines the IPC-to-Router segment of the network on the IPC end of the segment. 99-16175-01 O O I I Ne xt Hop Router (NHR) DSLAM Clients NMS WA N Hub SN SN ISP IPC WA N IPC-to-Router Segment NMS ISP Gatew ay Router T able 6-7.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-15 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T able 6-8 examines the Router-to-IPC segment of the network from the router end of the segment.
Diagnostics and T roubleshooting 6-16 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Performance Issues – V iewing Network Statistics The previous sections of this document examined connectivity issues, i.e., the inability to Ping the router . T able 6-9 presents information on viewing DSLAM statistics screens to examine performance issues.
A-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Download Code A The Download Code menu option on the Hotwire DSLAM gives you the ability to upgrade your software with a new version of code and then apply this code to your system. New firmware releases are typically applied to the MCC card, DSL cards, and/or endpoints in your system.
Download Code A-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Download Code When you are attempting to download to the DSL cards, refer to T able 5-1 , Card Status Options, in Chapter 5, 8310 MVL and 8510 RADSL Card Configuration . In general, the following describes what to expect when you have initiated a download from the configuration menu.
B-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 T raps B DSL Card T raps T raps are configured via a T elnet or terminal session. The addition or removal of a card or another hardware component within the Hotwire DSLAM system causes a trap to be generated.
T raps B-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Event MIB T rap # Comment Severity xDSL margin normal normal Margin estimate now above customer set threshold. 103 hot_xdsl.mib (Enterprise MIB) xDSL port failure major Processor detected bad DSL modem chip set.
T raps B-3 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Event MIB T rap # Comment Severity SN loss of power minor Card received “last gasp” message from Service Node, followed by a link down condition one minute later . 17 hot_xdsl.mib (Enterprise MIB) SN self-test failure minor Failure of the Service Node’s hardware components.
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GL-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Glossary A 10-Mbps Ethernet LAN that works on twisted-pair wiring. A symbol (usually numeric) that identifies the interface attached to a network. A software program housed within a device to provide SNMP functionality .
Glossary GL-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Central Processing Unit. The main or only computing device in a data processing system. Cyclic Redundancy Check. A mathematical method of confirming the integrity of received digital data. The address used for routing packets whose destination is not in the routing table.
Glossary GL-3 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 A computer attached to a network that shares its information and devices with the rest of the network. An IP address having a subnet mask of 255.255.255.255. A device connecting several computers to a LAN. Internet Control Message Protocol.
Glossary GL-4 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Network T ime Protocol. Non-V olatile RAM. A proprietary network management program used with HP OpenView that helps a network administrator manage SNMP devices. A group of control and data characters that are switched as a unit within a communications network.
Glossary GL-5 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 A user-specified permanent entry into the routing table that takes precedence over routes chosen by dynamic routing protocols. The subnet portion of an IP address. In a subnetted network, the host portion of an IP address is split into a subnet portion and a host portion using an address (subnet) mask.
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IN-1 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 Index A Active Interfaces List screen, 5-1 1 Active List screen, 5-4 Active Ports List screen, 5-4 Add ARP Entry screen, 4-13 Administrator access, 1-6 Administrators.
Index IN-2 8000-A2-GB26-10 January 1999 N navigation keys, 2-4 network interface options, 4-2, 4-9, 4-15, 4-17, 5-2, 5-4, 5-1 1, 5-13, 5-18, 5-21, 5-22, 6-2 network problems, intranetworking communica.
An important point after buying a device Paradyne 8510 RADSL (or even before the purchase) is to read its user manual. We should do this for several simple reasons:
If you have not bought Paradyne 8510 RADSL yet, this is a good time to familiarize yourself with the basic data on the product. First of all view first pages of the manual, you can find above. You should find there the most important technical data Paradyne 8510 RADSL - thus you can check whether the hardware meets your expectations. When delving into next pages of the user manual, Paradyne 8510 RADSL you will learn all the available features of the product, as well as information on its operation. The information that you get Paradyne 8510 RADSL will certainly help you make a decision on the purchase.
If you already are a holder of Paradyne 8510 RADSL, but have not read the manual yet, you should do it for the reasons described above. You will learn then if you properly used the available features, and whether you have not made any mistakes, which can shorten the lifetime Paradyne 8510 RADSL.
However, one of the most important roles played by the user manual is to help in solving problems with Paradyne 8510 RADSL. Almost always you will find there Troubleshooting, which are the most frequently occurring failures and malfunctions of the device Paradyne 8510 RADSL along with tips on how to solve them. Even if you fail to solve the problem, the manual will show you a further procedure – contact to the customer service center or the nearest service center