Detecting Hardware Problems; Alarm Monitor; About Alarms - Avaya CallPilot 703t Maintenance And Diagnostics

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Component
Time Switch
DS30X

Detecting hardware problems

Typically, you first become aware of a hardware problem when an alarm is raised. All hardware
faults produce an alarm (or series of alarms, depending on the problem) in the Alarm Monitor.
Other indications of a hardware problem include the following:
• user complaints
• call processing difficulties, such as busy signals, static, dropped calls, connection
problems, and cross talk (hearing other conversations)
• system administrator logon difficulties
• alert icons on the Maintenance screen

Alarm Monitor

Use the Alarm Monitor to investigate one or more raised alarms.

About alarms

Alarms are warnings generated by events. Alarms communicate the same information as
events. However, alarms are reported in the Alarm Monitor instead of the Event Browser, and
are managed differently than events:
• Alarms appear in the Alarm Monitor only for Minor, Major, and Critical events (not
Information events). All events can be reported in the Event Browser (depending on
filtering criteria defined in the Event Browser).
• The first time an event occurs, it generates an alarm that appears in the Alarm Monitor.
If the same event continues to occur, a new alarm is not generated. Instead, the time and
date assigned to the original generated alarm is updated.
• Alarms can be cleared from the Alarm Monitor, but the event that generated the alarm is
not cleared from the event log or the Event Browser.
Avaya CallPilot® 703t Server Maintenance and Diagnostics
Dependent components
All multimedia and call channels associated with the same MPB as
the time switch.
All DS30X channels associated with the DS30X link.
Detecting hardware problems
December 2010
59

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