Admin State
This attribute is the user‐configurable state of the EVC. Table F‐4 lists the available options.
Option
Enabled
Disabled
MEN Port
This attribute is the physical interface connected to the MEN. The possible options consist of
the Ethernet port(s) and bonding group(s) available on the specific product. In typical config‐
urations, the MEN port is specified as a bonding group. One or more MEN ports can be
directly connected to an EVC. A connected MEN port has an associated status that determines
if it can be used by the EVC to transmit/receive traffic. This status is read‐only to an EVC and
is controlled by external processes (for example, LinkOAM or EVC Advertisement). Ports
disallowed by external processes cannot be used during the validation of the configuration of
an EVC.
S-tag
This attribute is the VLAN ID associated with the EVC s‐tag. The EVC VID is set using the s‐
tag command. If the alias specified during creation is numeric, the s‐tag will default to match.
List of Connected EVC Maps
This attribute lists all EVC maps connected to the EVC, each with an associated status. EVC
maps listed as "Running" can transmit/receive EVC traffic.
NOTE
Not all EVC maps are required to be in the "Running" state for the EVC to be
successfully transporting traffic.
CE-VLAN Preservation
This attribute controls whether to preserve the CE‐VLAN tag within the EVC. This option
must be enabled if multiple CE‐VLANs are forwarded to the EVC (Refer to Rule 9 on page F‐
2). Table F‐5 lists the available options.
65K510DEP08-1A
Table F-4. EVC State Options
Definition
The EVC is in service, and the provisioning is applied if the con‐
ditions are valid.
The EVC is not in service, and the provisioning is not applied.
Appendix F, NetVanta Examples - EVCs
F-5