Using Snmp Traps - Cisco ASR 5000 Installation Manual

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Using SNMP Traps

slot_# is the chassis slot number in which the particular card that you wish to monitor is installed. For application
cards, slot_# is any integer between 1 and 16. The following is a sample output for this command to monitor
the card in chassis slot 8:
Card 8:
Card Usable : Yes
Card Tests
Boot Mode
show card info slot_#
The following is a sample output for this command issued to monitor the card in chassis slot 8:
Card 8:
If any of this information appears to be erroneous, such as the operational state or an LED state, check for
any of the SNMP alarms listed in
Using SNMP Traps
The system supports SNMP traps that are triggered when conditions indicate the need to replace an application
card. The system provides the traps listed in the table below.
Table 83: SNMP Traps for Application Cards
SNMP Trap
starCardVoltageFailure
starCardBootFailed
starCardFailed
starCardSWFailed
starCardPSCMigrateStart
ASR 5000 Installation Guide
214
: Pass
: Normal
Slot Type
Card Type
Operational State
Last State Change
Administrative State
Card Lock
Reboot Pending
Upgrade In Progress
Card Usable
Single Point of Failure : No
Attachment
Attachment
Temperature
Voltages:
Card LEDs
System LEDs
CPU 0
: SMC
: System Management Card
: Active
: Thursday January 27 16:00:32 EST 2008
: Enabled
: Locked
: No
: No
: Yes
: 24 (System Processor I/O Card)
: 25 (System Processor I/O Card)
: 24 C (limit 101 C)
: Good
: Run/Fail: Green | Active: Green | Standby: Off
: Status: Green | Service: Off
: Kernel Running, Tasks Running
Using SNMP Traps, on page
Description
A voltage regulation failure has been detected in a card.
A card has failed to start up properly. The card is not operational.
The card has failed and is no longer operational.
An unrecoverable software error has occurred on the card.
A packet processing card migration operation has begun. The first
varbind identifies the packet processing card whose tasks are being
migrated from; the second varbind identifies the packet processing
card where the tasks are being migrated to. If a migration is taking
place, it is likely that there is a problem with the original packet
processing card.
Replacing Application Cards
214.

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