This command displays or sets masks for downstream carrier tones from 33 to 255. Masking a
carrier tone disables the use of that tone on the specified ADSL port. The most significant bit
defines the lowest tone number in a mask.
The following example disables downstream carrier tone 71 for ADSL port 5.
Figure 197 ADSL Downstream Carrier0 Command Example 1
ras> adsl dscarrier0 5 0 01000000 0 0 0 0 0
The following example displays the results.
Figure 198 ADSL Downstream Carrier0 Command Display Example
ras> adsl dscarrier0 5
port
----
|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|
5
00000000 01000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000
Tone:
m1:32-63, m2:64-95, m3:96-127, m4:128-159
m5:160-191, m6:192-223, m7:224-255
This example disables downstream carrier tones 70 and 71 for ADSL port 5.
Figure 199 ADSL Downstream Carrier0 Command Example 2
ras> adsl dscarrier0 5 0 03000000 0 0 0 0 0
49.1.15 ADSL Downstream Carrier1 Command
Syntax:
ras> adsl dscarrier1 <port number> [<m0> <m1> <m2> <m3> <m4> <m5> <m6> <m7>]
where
<m0> - <m7>
<m0>
<m1>
<m2>
<m3>
Chapter 49 ADSL Commands
m1
m2
m3
The downstream carrier tones to be masked (disabled). Each
=
can use up to 8 hexadecimal digits (0~ffffffff). Each
<mx>
represents 32 carrier tones (each hexadecimal digit represents 4
tones).
tones 256~287
=
tones 288~319
=
tones 320~351
=
tones 352~383
=
ds carrier
m4
m5
IES-1248-51 User's Guide
m6
m7
<mx>
313