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Accuracy While reasonable efforts have been made to assure the accuracy of this document, Cambium Networks assumes no liability resulting from any inaccuracies or omissions in this document, or from use of the information obtained herein. Cambium reserves the right to make changes to any products described herein to improve reliability, function, or design, and reserves the right to revise this document and to make changes from time to time in content hereof with no obligation to notify any person of revisions or changes.
Contents About This User Guide ............................1 Contacting Cambium Networks ........................2 Purpose ................................3 Cross references .............................. 3 Feedback ................................. 3 Problems and warranty ............................4 Reporting problems ............................4 Repair and service ............................4 Hardware warranty ............................4 Security advice ................................
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Contents To activate demo mode: ........................... 2-17 Activation Key Reclaim ..........................2-17 Displaying a List of Activation-Key-Enabled Features ................2-18 Setting the Time and Date (Optional) ....................... 2-23 Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager) ....................2-25 Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) ......................2-27 Radio Profiles.............................
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Contents Displaying Unit Inventory..........................4-37 Defining a Login Banner ............................ 4-38 Chapter 5: Radio Configuration ........................5-1 Viewing the Radio Status and Settings ....................... 5-2 Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters ......................5-4 Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics ..................... 5-6 Configuring BER Thresholds and Displaying Current BER ................
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Contents Policer (Rate Metering) Overview ......................7-13 Configuring Policer Profiles ........................7-13 Assigning Policers to Interfaces ......................... 7-16 Configuring the Ingress and Egress Byte Compensation ................7-21 Configuring Marking ............................7-22 Marking Overview ............................. 7-22 Enabling Marking ............................7-22 Modifying the 802.1Q Marking Table ....................... 7-22 Modifying the 802.1AD Marking Table .....................
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Contents Blocking Telnet Access ............................9-16 Uploading the Security Log ..........................9-17 Uploading the Configuration Log ........................9-19 Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting ................10-1 Viewing Current Alarms ............................ 10-2 Viewing Alarm Statistics ............................ 10-4 Viewing and Saving the Event Log ........................10-5 Editing Alarm Text and Severity | Disabling Alarms and Event ................
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Contents Assigning an MRMC Script to a Radio Carrier (CLI) ................. 12-16 Configuring the Radio Parameters (CLI) ......................12-18 Entering Radio View (CLI) ........................12-18 Muting and Unmuting a Radio (CLI) ......................12-18 Configuring the Transmit (TX) Frequency (CLI) ..................12-19 Configuring the Transmit (TX) Level (CLI) ....................
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Contents Muting and Unmuting the Remote Radio (CLI) ..................14-2 Displaying the Remote Radio’s RX Level (CLI) ................... 14-3 Configuring the Remote Radio’s TX Level (CLI) ..................14-3 Displaying the Remote Unit’s Most Severe Alarm (CLI) ................14-3 Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) ................... 14-4 Displaying General Modem Status and Defective Block PMs (CLI) ............
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Contents Configuring an Ethernet Interface as a Synchronization Source (CLI) ............17-4 Configuring a Radio Interface as a Synchronization Source (CLI) .............. 17-5 Configuring the Outgoing Clock (CLI) ........................ 17-8 Configuring SSM Messages (CLI) ........................17-10 Displaying Synchronization Status and Parameters (CLI)................17-11 Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) ..................
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Contents List of Figures Figure 1 Main Web EMS Page ............................... 1-4 Figure 2 Displaying a Representation of the Front Panel ......................1-4 Figure 3 Main Web EMS Page with Representation of Front Panel ....................1-5 Figure 4 Related Pages Drop-Down List ............................1-6 Figure 5 Related Pages Drop-Down List ............................
About This User Guide This document explains how to configure and operate a PTP 850E system. This document applies to software version 10.9 The PTP 850 system is a modular system with a wide variety of configuration options. Not all configurations are described in this manual.
About This User Guide Problems and warranty Contacting Cambium Networks Support website: https://support.cambiumnetworks.com Main website: http://www.cambiumnetworks.com Sales enquiries: solutions@cambiumnetworks.com Support enquiries: https://support.cambiumnetworks.com Repair enquiries https://support.cambiumnetworks.com Telephone number list: http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/support/contact-support Cambium Networks Limited, Address: Unit B2, Linhay Business Park, Eastern Road...
Cambium Networks disclaims all liability whatsoever, implied or express, for any risk of damage, loss or reduction in system performance arising directly or indirectly out of the failure of the customer, or anyone acting on the customer's behalf, to abide by the instructions, system parameters, or recommendations made in this document.
Hardware warranty Cambium Networks’s standard hardware warranty is for one (1) year from date of shipment from Cambium Networks or a Cambium distributor. Cambium Networks warrants that hardware will conform to the relevant published specifications and will be free from material defects in material and workmanship under normal use and service.
Security advice Security advice Cambium Networks systems and equipment provide security parameters that can be configured by the operator based on their particular operating environment. Cambium recommends setting and using these parameters following industry recognized security practices. Security aspects to be considered are protecting the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of information and assets.
Warnings, cautions, and notes The following describes how warnings and cautions are used in this document and in all documents of the Cambium Networks document set. Warnings Warnings precede instructions that contain potentially hazardous situations. Warnings are used to alert the reader to possible hazards that could cause loss of life or physical injury.
About This User Guide Caring for the environment Caring for the environment The following information describes national or regional requirements for the disposal of Cambium Networks supplied equipment and for the approved disposal of surplus packaging. In EU countries The following information is provided to enable regulatory compliance with the European Union (EU) directives identified and any amendments made to these directives when using Cambium equipment in EU countries.
This user manual provides instructions for configuring and operating the following systems: • Configuration Tips • PTP 850E Each of these systems can be used with a PoE (PoE Injector Overview). Wherever applicable, the manual notes the specific distinctions between these products. The manual also notes when specific features are only applicable to certain products and not others.
Ethernet Port configuration • The Ethernet ports of a PTP 850E are not enabled by default in a new unit. You must manually enable the Ethernet port or ports in order for the unit to process Ethernet traffic. See Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager) •...
PTP 850E can be installed in many different types of remote outdoor locations. PTP 850E operates over 250, 500, 1000 and 2000 MHz channels to deliver up to 20 Gbps of Ethernet throughput in several system configurations.
The alarms and system configuration details shown in this manual do not necessarily represent actual parameters and values on a fully operating PTP 850E system. Some of the pages and tasks described in this Manual may not be available to all users, based on the actual system configuration, activation key, and other details.
Chapter 1: Introduction System Overview Related Pages Drop-Down List Certain pages include a Related Pages drop-down list on the upper right of the main section of the page. You can navigate to a page related to the current page by selecting the page from this list. Figure 4 Related Pages Drop-Down List Export to CSV Option Certain pages include an Export to CSV button on the lower right of the main section of the page.
Chapter 1: Introduction System Overview Unit Summary Page The Unit Summary page is the first page that appears when you log into the Web EMS. It gathers the unit parameters, current alarms and unit inventory information on a single page for quick viewing. Figure 6 Unit Summary Page The Unit Summary page includes: Unit Parameters –...
Chapter 1: Introduction System Overview Radio Summary Page The Radio Summary page gathers the key link and radio parameters on a single page for quick viewing. To display the Radio Summary page, select Radio Summary from the Web EMS main menu. Figure 8 Radio Summary Page The Radio Summary page includes: •...
Chapter 1: Introduction Reference Guide to Web EMS Menu Structure Reference Guide to Web EMS Menu Structure The following table shows the Web EMS menu hierarchy, with links to the sections in this document that provide instructions for the relevant menu item. Note Some menu items are only available if the relevant activation key or feature is enabled.
Chapter 1: Introduction Reference Guide to Web EMS Menu Structure Sub-Menus For Further Information Activation Key > Activation Key Overview Displaying a List of Activation-Key-Enabled Features Security > General > Configuration Planned for future release. Security > General > Security Log Upload Uploading the Security Log Security >...
Chapter 1: Introduction Reference Guide to Web EMS Menu Structure Table 3 Web EMS Menu Hierarchy – Radio Menu Sub-Menus For Further Information Radio Parameters Configuring the Radio Parameters Remote Radio Parameters Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters Radio BER Thresholds Configuring BER Thresholds and Displaying Current BER Ethernet Interface >...
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Chapter 1: Introduction Reference Guide to Web EMS Menu Structure Sub-Menus For Further Information PM & Statistics > RMON RMON Statistics PM & Statistics > Port TX Port TX Statistics PM & Statistics > Port RX Port RX Statistics PM & Statistics > Egress CoS Statistics Egress CoS Statistics PM &...
Chapter 1: Introduction Reference Guide to Web EMS Menu Structure Sub-Menus For Further Information Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Local System > Port Planned for future release. Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Local System > Planned for future release. Management Protocols >...
Chapter 1: Introduction Reference Guide to Web EMS Menu Structure Table 6 Web EMS Menu Hierarchy – Quick Configuration Menu Sub-Menus For Further Information From CeraPlan Planned for future release. Platform Setup Performing Quick Platform Setup PIPE > Single Carrier Configuring a 1+0 Link Using the Quick Configuration Wizard Table 7 Web EMS Menu Hierarchy –...
Chapter 2: Getting Started This section includes: • Assigning IP Addresses in the Network • Establishing a Connection Logging on • • Changing Your Password Performing Quick Platform Setup • • Configuring In-Band Management • Changing the Management IP Address •...
Assigning IP Addresses in the Network Before connection over the radio hop is established, it is of high importance that you assign the PTP 850E unit a dedicated IP address, according to an IP plan for the total network. See Changing the Management IP Address.
Establishing a Connection Connect the PTP 850E unit to a PC by means of a Twisted Pair cable. The cable is connected to the MGT port on the PTP 850E and to the LAN port on the PC. Refer to the Installation Guide for the type of unit you are connecting for cable connection instructions.
PC Setup To obtain contact between the PC and the PTP 850E unit, it is necessary to configure an IP address on the PC within the same subnet as the PTP 850E unit. The default PTP 850E IP address is 192.168.1.1. Set the PC address to e.g.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Logging on Logging on 1. Open an Internet browser (Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox). 2. Enter the default IP address “192.168.1.1” in the Address Bar. The Login page opens. Figure 11 Login Page 3. In the Login window, enter the following: User Name: admin Password: admin 4.
In addition to the Admin password, there is an additional password protected user account, “root user”, which is configured in the system. The root user password and instructions for changing this password are available from Cambium Networks Customer Support. It is strongly recommended to change this password. To change your password: 1.
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In addition to the Admin password, there is an additional password protected user account, “root user”, which is configured in the system. The root user password and instructions for changing this password are available from Cambium Networks Customer Support. It is strongly recommended to change this password. phn-3963_008v000...
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Chapter 2: Getting Started Performing Quick Platform Setup 2. In the IPv4 Address section, configure the unit’s management IP address, subnet mask, and, optionally, a default gateway. If you want to use an IPv6 address, see Changing the Management IP Address.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Performing Quick Platform Setup 6. Click Finish. The Selection Summary page opens. To go back and change any of the parameters, click Back. To implement the new parameters, click Submit. Figure 14 Quick Configuration– Platform Setup Summary Page phn-3963_008v000 Page 2-11...
Each PTP 850E unit includes a pre-defined management service with Service ID 1025. The management service is a multipoint service that connects the two local management ports and the network element host CPU in a single service. In order to enable in-band management, you must add at least one service point to the management service, in the direction of the remote site or sites from which you want to access the unit for management.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Changing the Management IP Address Changing the Management IP Address Related Topics: • Configuring In-Band Management • Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications • Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address To change the management IP address of the local unit: 1.
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Chapter 2: Getting Started Changing the Management IP Address 8. If you entered an IPv6 address, enter the IPv6 prefix length in the IPv6 Prefix-Length field. 9. Optionally, if you entered an IPv6 address, enter the default gateway in IPv6 format in the IPv6 Default Gateway field.
Each device contains a single unified activation key cipher. New PTP 850E units are delivered with a default activation key that enables you to manage and configure the unit. Additional feature and capacity support requires you to enter an activation key cipher in the Activation Key Configuration page.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Configuring the Activation Key Demo mode is available, which enables all features for 60 days. When demo mode expires, the most recent valid activation key goes into effect. The 60-day period is only counted when the system is powered up. 10 days before demo mode expires, an alarm is raised indicating that demo mode is about to expire.
Activation Key Reclaim If it is necessary to deactivate an PTP 850E device, whether to return it for repairs or for any other reason, the device’s activation key can be reclaimed for a credit that can be applied to activation keys for other devices.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Configuring the Activation Key Displaying a List of Activation-Key-Enabled Features To display the status of activation key coverage for features and capacities in the PTP 850: 1. Select Platform > Activation Key > Activation Key Overview. The Activation Key Overview page opens. Figure 18 Activation Key Overview Page The Activation Key Overview page displays the activation-key-enabled features and capacities for the PTP 850, and indicates the activation key status of each feature according to the activation key currently implemented in the...
H-QoS Not relevant in the current release. Network Resiliency Not relevant for PTP 850E. Ethernet OAM – Fault Enables Connectivity Fault Management (FM) per Y.1731 (CET mode only). Management Ethernet OAM –...
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(quantity) ACM (quantity) Displays the number of radio carriers that are allowed to use ACM under the current activation key. Narrow CHBW 1.75MHz Not relevant for PTP 850E. script (quantity) Header De-Duplication Not relevant in the current release. (quantity) XPIC (quantity) Not relevant in the current release.
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Chapter 2: Getting Started Configuring the Activation Key Activation Key Name Description Radio capacity level 6 Displays the number of radio carriers for which there is permission to use up to 225 Mbps. Radio capacity level 7 Displays the number of radio carriers for which there is permission to use up to 250 Mbps.
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Chapter 2: Getting Started Configuring the Activation Key Activation Key Name Description Radio capacity level 25 Displays the number of radio carriers for which there is permission to use up to 10000 Mbps. Auto State Propagation and Enables the use of Link Loss Forwarding (LLF) with Automatic State Propagation (ASP).
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). Every PTP 850E unit holds the UTC offset and daylight savings time information for the location of the unit. Each management unit presenting the information uses its own UTC offset to present the information in the correct time.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Setting the Time and Date (Optional) 3. Click Apply. Table 11 Time Services Parameters Parameter Definition Date & Time UTC Date and Time The UTC date and time. Configuration Local Current Date and Read-only. The calculated local date and time, based Time on the local clock, Universal Time Coordinated (UTC), and Daylight Savings Time (DST) configurations.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager) Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager) By default: • Ethernet traffic interfaces are disabled and must be manually enabled. • The Ethernet management interface is enabled. • Radio interfaces are enabled. Note In release 10.6, only Ethernet Slot 1, Port 7 is supported, along with the radio and management interfaces.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager) Figure 21 Interface Manager – Edit Page 3. In the Admin status field, select Up to enable the interface or Down to disable the interface. 4. Click Apply, then Close. To enable or disable multiple interfaces: 1.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) Related Topics: • Displaying MRMC Status Multi-Rate Multi-Constellation (MRMC) radio scripts define how the radio utilizes its available capacity. Each script is a pre-defined collection of configuration settings that specify the radio’s transmit and receive levels, link modulation, channel spacing, and bit rate.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) 3. Click Configure Script. A separate MRMC Symmetrical Scripts page opens similar to the page shown below. Figure 24 MRMC Symmetrical Scripts Page – Configuration 4. In the MRMC Script operational mode field, select the ACM mode: Fixed or Adaptive. Fixed ACM mode applies constant Tx and Rx rates.
The script's occupied bandwidth. Script Name The name of the script. ACM Support Indicates whether the script supports ACM. All PTP 850E scripts support ACM. Supported QAM MRMC Symmetrical Scripts Main Page only: Displays the range of modulation levels, in QAM, supported by the script.
ACM that provides further flexibility to mitigate fading at BPSK by reducing the channel spacing to one half or one quarter of the original channel bandwidth when fading conditions make this appropriate. Note Profiles 0 and 1 are not supported in release 10.6. Table 13 Available Radio Profiles – PTP 850E Profile Modulation Script 5703...
Chapter 2: Getting Started Configuring the Radio Parameters Configuring the Radio Parameters In order to establish a radio link, you must: 1. Verify that the radio is muted (the TX Mute Status should be On). 2. Configure the radio frequencies. Note: Even if you are using the default frequencies, it is mandatory to actually configure the frequencies.
Chapter 2: Getting Started Configuring the Radio Parameters Figure 25 Radio Parameters Page 2. For multi-carrier units, select the carrier in the Radio table and click Edit. A separate Radio Parameters page opens. i. In the TX Frequency (MHz) field, set the transmission radio frequency in MHz. ii.
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Chapter 2: Getting Started Configuring the Radio Parameters Note: In contrast to an ordinary mute, a timed mute is not persistent. This means that if the unit is reset, the radio is not muted when the unit comes back online, even if the timer had not expired. ii.
Creating Service(s) for Traffic Note: The RSL Connector Source field is not relevant for PTP 850E. Creating Service(s) for Traffic In order to pass traffic through the PTP 850E, you must configure Ethernet traffic services. For configuration instructions, see Configuring Ethernet Service(s).
Chapter 3: Configuration Guide This section includes: Configuring a Link Using the Quick Configuration Wizard • Configuring a Link Using the Quick Configuration Wizard The Web EMS provides wizards to configure radio links. The wizards guide you through configuration of the basic radio parameters and services necessary to establish a working pipe link.
Chapter 3: Configuration Guide Configuring a Link Using the Quick Configuration Wizard 2. In the PIPE Type field, select the Attached Interface type for the service that will connect the radio and Ethernet interfaces. Options are: dot1q – All C-VLANs and untagged frames are classified into the service. s-tag –...
Chapter 3: Configuration Guide Configuring a Link Using the Quick Configuration Wizard 7. In the TX Frequency (MHz) field, set the transmission radio frequency in MHz. 8. In the RX Frequency (MHz) field, set the received radio frequency in MHz. 9.
Chapter 3: Configuration Guide Configuring a Link Using the Quick Configuration Wizard Figure 30 1+0 Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 5 4 In the In Band Management field, select Yes to configure in-band management, or No if you do not need in- band management.
Chapter 3: Configuration Guide Configuring a Link Using the Quick Configuration Wizard Figure 32 1+0 Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 6 (Summary Page) 8 To complete configuration of the link, click Submit. If you want to go back and change any of the parameters, click Back.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring a Link Using the Quick Configuration Wizard Chapter 4: Unit Management This section includes: • Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications • Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address Configuration SNMP • • Configuring Trap Managers Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server •...
Chapter 4: Unit Management Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications You can specify which IP protocol the unit will use when initiating communications, such as downloading software, sending traps, pinging, or exporting configurations. The options are IPv4 or IPv6. To set the IP protocol version of the local unit: 1.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address You can configure the IP address of a remote unit. To configure the IP address of a remote unit: 1. Select Platform > Management > Networking > Remote. The Remote Networking Configuration page opens. Figure 34 Remote Networking Configuration Page 2.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address Changing the Subnet of the Remote IP Address If you wish to change the Remote IPv4 Address to a different subnet: 1. Change the address of the Remote Default Gateway to 0.0.0.0. 2.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuration SNMP Configuration SNMP PTP 850E support SNMP v1, V2c, and v3. You can set community strings for access to PTP 850 units. PTP 850E support the following MIBs: • RFC-1213 (MIB II). • RMON MIB.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuration SNMP 3. In the SNMP Read Community field, enter the community string for the SNMP read community. 4. In the SNMP Write Community field, enter the community string for the SNMP write community 5. In the SNMP Trap Version field, select V1, V2, or V3 to specify the SNMP version. Note The SNMP MIB Version field displays the current SNMP MIB version the unit is using.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuration SNMP Figure 37 V3 Users - Add Page 3. Configure the SNMP V3 Authentication parameters, as described below. 4. Click Apply, then Close. Table 14 SNMP V3 Authentication Parameters Parameter Definition User Name Enter the SNMPv3 user name. Password Enter a password for SNMPv3 authentication.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring Trap Managers Configuring Trap Managers You can configure trap forwarding parameters by editing the Trap Managers table. Each line in the Trap Managers table displays the setup for a manager defined in the system. To configure trap managers: 1.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring Trap Managers Figure 39 Trap Managers - Edit Page 3. Configure the trap manager parameters, as described in Table 21 Trap Manager Parameters. 4. Click Apply, then Close. Table 15 Trap Manager Parameters Parameter Definition If the IP address family is configured to be IPv4, enter the destination IPv4 IPv4 Address address.
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Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring Trap Managers Parameter Definition V3 User Name If the SNMP Trap version selected in Figure 100 SNMP Parameters Page page is V3, enter the name of a V3 user defined in the system. To view or define a V3 user, use the Figure 101 V3 Users Page page.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server Several tasks, such as software upgrade (except when performed using HTTP or HTTPS) and configuration backup, export, and import, require the use of FTP or SFTP. The PTP 850 can function as an FTP or SFTP client. If you wish to use FTP/SFTP, you must install FTP/SFTP server software on the PC or laptop you are using.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server Figure 40 FileZilla Server User Configuration 2. Create a shared FTP/SFTP folder on the PC or laptop you are using to perform the software upgrade (for example, C:\FTPServer). 3.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server Figure 41 FileZilla Server Shared Folder Setup phn-3963_008v000 Page 4-13...
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring the Internal Ports for FTP or SFTP Configuring the Internal Ports for FTP or SFTP By default, the following PTP 850 ports are used for FTP and SFTP when the PTP 850 unit is acting as an FTP or SFTP client (e.g., software downloads, configuration file backup and restore operations): •...
Chapter 4: Unit Management Upgrading the Software Upgrading the Software PTP 850 software and firmware releases are provided in a single bundle that includes software and firmware for all components in the system. Software is first downloaded to the system, then installed. After installation, a reset is automatically performed on all components whose software was upgraded.
Downloading and Installing Software You can download software using HTTP, HTTPS, FTP or SFTP. When downloading software via HTTPS or HTTPS, the PTP 850E functions as the server, and you can download the software directly to the PTP 850E unit.
Upgrading the Software When downloading software via FTP or SFTP, the PTP 850E functions as an FTP or SFTP client. You must install FTP or SFTP server software on the PC or laptop you are using to perform the software upgrade. For details, see Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Upgrading the Software Figure 45 Download & Install page – HTTP/ HTTPS Download – File Selected 7. Click Download. The download begins. You can view the status of the download in the Download Status field. Note To Discontinue the download process, Click Abort.
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Chapter 4: Unit Management Upgrading the Software 6. Click FTP Parameters to view the FTP Parameters page. phn-3963_008v000 Page 4-19...
Chapter 4: Unit Management Upgrading the Software Figure 47 FTP Parameters Page 7. In the File Transfer Protocol field, select the file transfer protocol you want to use (FTP or SFTP). 8. In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP server. 9.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Upgrading the Software Installing Software Note For Instructions on how to configure a timed installation, see Configuring a Timed Installation. To Install software: 1. Download the software version you want to install. See Downloading and installing Software. 2.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Upgrading the Software Table 17 Download & Install Status Parameters Parameter Definition Download status The status of any pending software download. Possible values are: Ready – The default value, which appears when no download is in progress. •...
Chapter 4: Unit Management Upgrading the Software Figure 48 Install parameters Page. 4. Select Yes in the Timed Installation field. 5. Click Apply. The Software Management timer field appears. Figure 49 Install parameters page- Software Management Timer. 6. In the Software management timer field, enter the amount of time, in hours and minutes, you want to defer the installation.
You can import and export PTP 850 configuration files. This enables you to copy the system configuration to multiple PTP 850 units. You can also backup and save configuration files. Configuration files can only be copied between units of the same type, i.e., PTP 850E to PTP 850E to PTP 850E. This section includes: •...
Chapter 4: Unit Management Backing Up and Restoring Configurations 1. Select Platform > Configuration > Backup Files. The Backup Files page opens. For a description of the information provided in the Backup Files page, see Table 17 Backup Files Page Columns.
2. Install and configure an FTP server on the PC or laptop you are using to perform the import or export. See Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server. 3. In the PTP 850E Web EMS, select Platform > Configuration > Configuration Management. The Configuration Management page opens. Figure 51 Configuration Management Page 4.
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Chapter 4: Unit Management Backing Up and Restoring Configurations 9. If the IP address family is configured to be IPv6, enter the IPv6 address of the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP server in the Server IPv6 Address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications. 10.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Backing Up and Restoring Configurations Exporting a Configuration File You can export a saved configuration file from one of the system's three restore points to a PC or laptop. To export a configuration file: 1. Verify that you have followed all the steps in Setting the Configuration Management Parameters.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Backing Up and Restoring Configurations Deleting a Configuration File You can delete a saved configuration file from any of the system's three restore points: To delete a configuration file: 1. Select Platform > Configuration > Configuration Management. The Configuration Management page opens (Figure 116).
Chapter 4: Unit Management Backing Up and Restoring Configurations Editing CLI Scripts The configuration file package includes a text file that enables you to write CLI scripts in a backed-up configuration that are executed after restoring the configuration. To edit a CLI script: 1.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Setting the Unit to the Factory Default Configuration Setting the Unit to the Factory Default Configuration You can restore the unit to its factory default configuration, while retaining the unit’s IP address settings and logs. To restore the factory default settings: 1.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Performing a Hard (Cold) Reset Performing a Hard (Cold) Reset To initiate a hard (cold) reset on the unit: 1. Select Platform > Shelf Management > Chassis Configuration. The Chassis Configuration page opens (Figure 53). 2. Click Reset. 3.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring Unit Parameters Configuring Unit Parameters To view and configure system information: 1. Select Platform > Management > Unit Parameters. The Unit Parameters page opens. Table 25 describes the fields in the Unit Parameters page. Figure 54 Unit Parameters Page Table 19 Unit Parameters Parameter Definition...
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Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring Unit Parameters Parameter Definition Longitude The unit's longitude coordinates. Latitude The unit's latitude coordinates. Web Language Enables you to select the language in which the Web EMS is displayed. In release 10.9, the following languages are available: •...
Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring NTP Configuring NTP PTP 850E supports Network Time Protocol (NTP). NTP distributes Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) throughout the system, using a jitter buffer to neutralize the effects of variable latency. To view and configure the NTP Parameters: 1.
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Chapter 4: Unit Management Configuring NTP Parameter Definition Poll interval Displays the interval used by the NTP client to maintain synchronization with the current NTP server. Sync on NTP server IP Displays the IP address of the remote NTP server on which the NTP client address is currently locked.
Chapter 4: Unit Management Displaying Unit Inventory Displaying Unit Inventory To view the unit's part number and serial number: Select Platform > Management > Inventory. The Inventory page opens, showing the unit's part number and serial number. Figure 56 Inventory Page phn-3963_008v000 Page 4-37...
Chapter 4: Unit Management Defining a Login Banner Defining a Login Banner You can define a login banner of up to 2,000 bytes. This banner will appear every time a user establishes a connection with the Web EMS. The banner appears before the login prompt, so that users will always see the login banner and must manually close the banner before logging in to the Web EMS.
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration This section includes: Viewing the Radio Status and Settings • • Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics • Related topics: Configuring the Radio Parameters • • Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) •...
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Viewing the Radio Status and Settings Viewing the Radio Status and Settings You can configure the radios and display the radio parameters in the Radio Parameters page. Note For instructions how to configure the radio parameters, see Configuring the Radio Parameters.
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Viewing the Radio Status and Settings Table 30 lists and describes the parameters displayed in the Status parameters section of the Radio Parameters page. The configurable parameters are described in Configuring the Radio Parameters. Table 21 Radio Status Parameters Parameter Description Type...
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters You can view and configure the parameters of the carrier or carriers at the remote side of the link in the Remote Radio Parameters page. To display the remote radio parameters: 1.
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Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters Parameter Definition Remote Radio Mute To mute the TX output of the remote radio, select On. To unmute the TX output of the remote radio, select Off. Remote IP Address The IPv4 IP address of the remote unit. Remote IPv6 Address The IPv6 IP address of the remote unit.
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics This section includes: • Configuring BER Thresholds and Displaying Current BER • Displaying MRMC Status • Displaying MRMC PMs • Displaying and Clearing Defective Block Counters Displaying Signal Level PMs and Configuring Signal Level PM Thresholds •...
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics You can also display the current BER level. To configure the BER thresholds and Excessive BER Administration, and display current BER levels 1. Select Radio > Radio BER Thresholds. The Radio BER Thresholds page opens. The current BER level is displayed, per radio, in the Radio BER column.
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Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Table 23 describes the MRMC status parameters. Note To display the same parameters for an individual radio in a separate page, select the radio in the MRMC script status table and click Edit. phn-3963_008v000 Page 5-8...
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Table 23 MRMC Status Parameters Parameter Definition Radio Location Displays the location of the radio. Operational MRMC Script ID The current MRMC script. Script Name The name of the script. Script Standard Indicates whether the script is compatible with ETSI or FCC (ANSI) standards, or both.
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Displaying MRMC PMs Related Topics: Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) • To display Multi-Rate Multi-Constellation PMs, including information on ACM profile fluctuations per interval per radio: 1. Select Radio > PM & Statistics > MRMC. The MRMC PM Report page opens. Figure 62 MRMC PM Report Page 2.
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Parameter Definition Min bitrate Displays the minimum total radio throughput (Mbps) delivered during the interval. Displays the maximum total radio throughput (Mbps) delivered during Max bitrate the interval. Integrity Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval are reliable.
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Displaying Signal Level PMs and Configuring Signal Level PM Thresholds To display signal level PMs per radio: 1. Select Radio > PM & Statistics > Signal Level. The Signal Level PM report page opens. Figure 64 Signal Level PM Report Page 2.
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Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Parameter Definition TSL exceed threshold The number of seconds the measured TSL exceeded the threshold during seconds the interval. TSL thresholds are configured in the Radio Thresholds page. Configuring BER Thresholds and Displaying Current BER RSL exceed threshold1 The number of seconds the measured RSL exceeded RSL threshold 1 seconds...
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Table 26 Signal Level Thresholds Parameter Definition RX Level Threshold 1 Specify the threshold for counting exceeded seconds if the RSL is below (dBm) this level. RX Level Threshold 2 Specify a second threshold for counting exceeded seconds if the RSL is (dBm) below this level.
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Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Parameter Definition Interval For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval. Displays the number of seconds in the measuring interval during which errors occurred.
Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Displaying MSE PMs and Configuring MSE PM Thresholds To display modem MSE (Minimum Square Error) PMs per radio: 1. Select Radio > PM & Statistics > MSE. The MSE PM report page opens. Figure 67 MSE PM Report Page 2.
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Chapter 5: Radio Configuration Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics Parameter Definition Exceed threshold seconds Displays the number of seconds the MSE exceeded the MSE PM threshold during the interval. The MSE PM is configured in the Radio Thresholds page.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces This section includes: • Configuring Ethernet Service(s) • Setting the MRU Size and the S-VLAN Ethertype • Configuring Ethernet Interfaces Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding. • • Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics Related topics: •...
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Configuring Ethernet Service(s) This section includes: • Ethernet Services Overview • General Guidelines for Provisioning Ethernet Services • The Ethernet Services Page • Adding an Ethernet Service Editing a Service • •...
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) General Guidelines for Provisioning Ethernet Services When provisioning Ethernet services, it is recommended to follow these guidelines: Use the same Service ID for all service fragments along the path of the service. •...
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Table 29 Ethernet Services Page Parameters Parameter Definition Services ID A unique ID for the service. Service Type The service type: • MP – Multipoint P2P – Point-to-Point • • MNG – Management Note: In release 10.6, only P2P and MNG services are supported.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Figure 70 Ethernet Services - Add page 3. In the Service ID field, select a unique ID for the service. You can choose any unused value from 1 to 1024. Once you have added the service, you cannot change the Service ID. Service ID 1025 is reserved for a pre-defined management service.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) 9. In the Default CoS field, enter a default Class of Service (CoS) value (0-7). This value is assigned to frames at the service level if CoS Mode is set to Default-CoS. Otherwise, this value is not used, and frames retain whatever CoS value they were assigned at the service point or logical interface level.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) To disable the selected services, in the Multiple Selection Operation section underneath the Ethernet Services Configuration Table, select Reserved and click Apply. To delete the selected services, select Delete underneath the Ethernet Services Configuration Table. Before deleting a service, you must delete any service points attached to the service, as described in Deleting a Service Point.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Each service point for a Point-to-Point or Multipoint service can be either a Service Access Point (SAP) or a Service Network Point (SNP). A Point-to-Point service can also use Pipe service points. •...
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Figure 72 Ethernet Service Points Page You can choose to display the following sets of attributes by selecting the appropriate button above the SP Attributes table: • General – See Ethernet Service Points – General SP Attributes Table Ingress –...
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Parameter Definition Service point type The service point type. Options are: SAP – Service Access Point. • SNP – Service Network Point. • • MNG – Management service point. PIPE – Pipe service point. •...
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Parameter Definition S-Vlan encapsulation The S-VLAN classified into the service point. Options are 1-4094, Untagged, or N.A. (Not Applicable). Once you have added the service point, you cannot change this parameter. If you selected Bundle-S in the Attached Interface Type field, select the S- VLAN value to classify into the service point (1-4094), or select Untagged.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Figure 73 Ethernet Service Points Page – Ingress Attributes Table 32 Service Point Ingress Attributes Parameter Definition Service point ID This ID is unique within the service. For Point-to-Point and Multipoint services, the range of values is 1-32.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Parameter Definition CoS Mode Indicates how the service point handles the CoS of frames that pass through the service point. Options are: sp-def-cos – The service point re-defines the CoS of frames that pass •...
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Parameter Definition Service point type The service point type. Options are: SAP – Service Access Point. • SNP – Service Network Point. • • MNG – Management service point. PIPE – Pipe service point. •...
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Parameter Definition Marking admin Determines whether re-marking of the outer VLAN (C-VLAN or S-VLAN) of tagged frames that pass through the service point is enabled. If Marking admin is set to Enable, and CoS preservation for the relevant outer VLAN is set to Disable, the SAP re-marks the C-VLAN or S-VLAN 802.1p UP bits of egress frames according to the calculated CoS and Color, and the user-configurable 802.1Q and 802.1AD marking tables.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Figure 75 Ethernet Service Points - Add Page 6. Configure the service point attributes, as described in Table Table 46, and Table 47. Note Optionally, you can select from a list of pre-defined service point options in the Pre defined options field at the top of the Ethernet Service Points - Add page.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) 7. Click Apply, then Close. Editing a Service Point To edit a service point: 1. Select Ethernet > Services. The Ethernet Services page opens (Figure 93). 2. Select the relevant service in the Ethernet Services Configuration table. 3.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) 6. Click Add. The Attached VLAN List - Add page opens. Figure 77 Attached VLAN List - Add Page 7. Configure the VLAN Classification parameters, described in Table 48. 8. Click Apply, then Close. Table 34 VLAN Classification Parameters Parameter Definition...
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Parameter Definition S-Vlan Encapsulation Read-only. If the Attached Interface Type for the service point is Bundle-S, this field displays the S-VLAN encapsulation selected when the service point was created. If the Attached Interface Type for the service point is Bundle-C, this field is inactive.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Setting the MRU Size and the S-VLAN Ethertype Setting the MRU Size and the S-VLAN Ethertype To configure the size of the MRU (Maximum Receive Unit) and the S-VLAN Ethertype: 1. Select Ethernet > General Configuration. The Ethernet General Configuration page opens. Figure 78 Ethernet General Configuration Page 2.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Interfaces Related Topics: • Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager) • Performing Ethernet Loopback • Configuring Ethernet Service(s) • Quality of Service (QoS) The PTP 850’s switching fabric distinguishes between physical interfaces and logical interfaces. Physical and logical interfaces serve different purposes in the switching fabric.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Interfaces The QSFP port (Port 4) is displayed as follows. • In a 4x1/10G configuration the QSFP port can provide four Ethernet interfaces: Eth3, Eth4, Eth 5, and Eth6. In this configuration, a QSFP transceiver is attached to the QSFP port, and an MPO-MPO cable is connected between the transceiver and a splitter on the other side of the link.
Flow Control, as defined in IEEE 802.3x. It is also recommended to configure shapers on the third- party switch so as to limit the packet flow from the switch to the PTP 850E unit to 2.5 Gbps. After changing the speed of an SFP+ interface, you must reset the unit in order for the change to take effect.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding Automatic state propagation enables propagation of radio failures back to the Ethernet port. You can also configure Automatic State Propagation to close the Ethernet port based on a radio failure at the remote carrier. Automatic state propagation is configured as pairs of interfaces.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding A trigger delay time can be configured, so that when a triggering event takes place, the ASP mechanism does not propagate the event until this delay time has elapsed. A trigger delay from 0 to 10,000 ms can be set per LLD ID. The delay time must be configured via CLI.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding 6. Optionally, in theASP trigger by remote fault field, select Enable if you want to configure the system to disable the Controlled Ethernet Interface upon a radio failure at the remote side of the link from the Monitored Radio Interface.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics PTP 850 stores and displays statistics in accordance with RMON and RMON2 standards. You can display various peak TX and RX rates (per second) and average TX and RX rates (per second), both in bytes and in packets, for each measured time interval.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics Note If you click the table title itself, all columns are hidden. To un-hide the columns, click the table title again. Egress CoS Statistics You can display packet egress statistics per CoS value. For each CoS value, the following statistics are displayed per Color (Green and Yellow): •...
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics Figure 85 Egress Cos Statistics Page 2. In the Show Service bundle ID field, select 1. Note Service Bundles are bundles of queues, grouped together in order to configure common egress characteristics for specific services.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics 3. Click Apply. Port TX Statistics The Ethernet Port TX PM report page displays PMs that measure various peak transmission rates (per second) and average transmission rates (per second), both in bytes and in packets, for each measured time interval. The page also displays the number of seconds in the interval during which transmission rates exceeded the configured threshold.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics Parameter Definition TX bytes Layer 1 exceed The number of seconds the TX bytes exceeded the specified threshold threshold (sec) during the interval. For instructions on setting the threshold, see Setting the Ethernet Port TX Threshold.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics Enabling or Disabling Gathering of Port TX PM Statistics per Interface To select the interfaces for which to gather and display Port TX PMs: 1. In the Ethernet Port TX PM Report page, click PM Admin. The Ethernet PM Port Admin page opens. Figure 88 Ethernet PM Port Admin Page 2.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics Setting the Ethernet Port TX Threshold The TX bytes Layer 1 exceed threshold (sec) column shows, for each interval, the number of seconds the TX bytes exceeded the specified threshold during the interval: To view and set this threshold: 1.
Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics Figure 90: Ethernet Port RX PM Report Page 2. In the Interface field, select the interface for which you want to display PMs. 3. In the Interval Type field: To display reports for the past 24 hours, in 15 minute intervals, select 15 minutes.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics Figure 91 Ethernet PM Port Admin Page 2. In the field to the right of the interface, select Enable or Disable to enable or disable the gathering of Port PMs on the interface.
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Chapter 6: Ethernet Services and Interfaces Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics 2. For each interface, you can enter a threshold, in bytes per second, between 0 and 4294967295. 3. Click Apply, then Close. phn-3963_008v000 Page 6-36...
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) QoS Overview QoS Overview Quality of Service (QoS) deals with the way frames are handled within the switching fabric. QoS is required in order to deal with many different network scenarios, such as traffic congestion, packet availability, and delay restrictions.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) QoS Overview The egress path consists of the following QoS building blocks: Queue Manager – This is the mechanism responsible for managing the transmission queues, utilizing smart • WRED per queue and per packet color (Green or Yellow). Scheduling and Shaping –...
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Classification Configuring Classification The hierarchical classifier consists of the following levels: • Logical interface-level classification • Service point-level classification • Service level classification This section explains how to configure classification at the logical interface level. •...
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Classification For example, if the frame is an untagged IP Ethernet frame, a match will not be found until the third priority level (DSCP). The CoS and Color values defined for the frame’s DSCP value will be applied to the frame. You can disable some of these classification methods by configuring them as un-trusted.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Classification Figure 95 Logical Interfaces - Edit Page 3. Configure the parameters described in Table 4. Click Apply, then Close. Note The Ingress byte compensation and Egress byte compensation fields are described in Configuring the Ingress and Egress Byte Compensation.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Classification Parameter Definition Trust DSCP Select the interface's trust mode for DSCP: Trust – The interface performs QoS and color classification according to a user-configurable table for DSCP to CoS and color classification. DSCP classification has priority over MPLS classification, so that if a match is found with the DSCP value of the ingressing frame, MPLS bits are not considered.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Classification Figure 96 802.1Q Classification Page 2. Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The 802.1Q Classification – Edit page opens. Figure 97 802.1Q Classification - Edit Page 3. Modify the parameters you want to change: 802.1Q UP –...
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Classification 4. Click Apply, then Close. Modifying the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI Bit Classification Table To modify the classification criteria for 802.1AD User Priority (UP) bits: 1. Select Ethernet > QoS > Classification > 802.1AD. The 802.1AD Classification page opens. Figure 98 802.1AD Classification Page 2.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Classification 3. Modify the parameters you want to change: 802.1AD UP – Read-only. The User Priority (UP) bit to be mapped. 802.1ADQ DEI – Read-only. The DEI bit to be mapped. 802.1AD CoS – The CoS assigned to frames with the designated UP and DEI. 802.1AD Color –...
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Classification 3. Modify the parameters you want to change: DSCP – Read-only. The DSCP value to be mapped. Binary – Read-only. The binary representation of the DSCP value. Description – Read-only. The description of the DSCP value. CoS –...
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Classification 2. Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The MPLS Classification - Edit page opens. Figure 103 MPLS Classification - Edit Page 3. Modify the parameters you want to change: MPLS EXP –...
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) Table 39 Policer Profile Parameters Parameter Definition Profile ID A unique ID for the policer profile. You can choose from any unused value from 1 to 250. Once you have added the profile, you cannot change the Profile ID.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) To delete multiple policer profiles: 1. Select the profiles in the Policer Profile table or select all the profiles by selecting the check box in the top row. 2. Click Delete. The profiles are deleted. Assigning Policers to Interfaces To assign policers to a logical interface: 1.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) 2. Select the interface in the Ethernet Logical Port Configuration Table and click Policers. The Policers page opens. By default, the Policers page opens to the Unicast Policer table (Figure 133).
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) Assigning Multicast Policers To assign a policer for multicast traffic to a logical interface: 1 Select Ethernet > Interfaces > Logical Interfaces. The Logical Interfaces page opens (Figure 118). 2 Select the interface in the Ethernet Logical Port Configuration table and click Policers. The Policers page opens. By default, the Policers page opens to the Unicast Policer table (Figure 133).
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) Assigning Unknown Multicast Policers Unknown multicast packets are multicast packets with unknown destination MAC addresses. To assign a policer for unknown multicast traffic to a logical interface: 1 Select Ethernet > Interfaces > Logical Interfaces. The Logical Interfaces page opens (Figure 118).
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) 4. In the Policer profile field, select a profile from the policer profiles defined in the system. The Policer profile drop-down list includes the ID and description of all defined profiles. 5.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) 4. In the Ethertype 1 profile field, select a profile from the policer profiles defined in the system. The Ethertype 1 profile drop-down list includes the ID and description of all defined profiles. 5.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Marking Configuring Marking This section includes: Marking Overview • • Enabling Marking Modifying the 802.1Q Marking Table • • Modifying the 802.1AD Marking Table Marking Overview When enabled, PTP 850's marking mechanism modifies each frame’s 802.1p UP bit and CFI/DEI bits according to the classifier decision.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Marking 1. Select Ethernet > QoS > Marking > 802.1Q. The 802.1Q Marking page opens. Each row in the 802.1Q Marking page represents a CoS and color combination. Figure 112 802.1Q Marking Page 2.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Marking Modifying the 802.1AD Marking Table The 802.1AD Marking table enables you to modify the CoS to UP and DEI bit mapping that is implemented when marking is enabled. To modify the 802.1AD Marking table: 1.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring WRED Configuring WRED This section includes: • WRED Overview • Configuring WRED Profiles • Assigning WRED Profiles to Queues WRED Overview Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) enables differentiation between higher and lower priority traffic based on CoS.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring WRED Figure 116 WRED Profile Page 2. Click ADD. The WRED Profile - Add page opens, with default values displayed. Figure 117 WRED Profile - Add Page 3. In the WRED Profile ID field, select a unique ID to identify the profile. Permitted values are 1-30. 4.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring WRED 8. In the Yellow curve max point field, enter the maximum throughput of yellow packets for queues with this profile, in Kbytes (0-8192). After this value is reached, all yellow packets in the queue are dropped. 9.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring WRED Assigning WRED Profiles to Queues To assign a WRED profile to a queue: 1. Select Ethernet > Interfaces > Logical Interfaces. The Logical Interfaces page opens (Figure 182). 2. Select an interface in the Ethernet Logical Port Configuration table and click WRED. The WRED page opens. Figure 118 Logical Interfaces –...
Egress Shaping Overview Egress shaping determines the traffic profile for each queue. PTP 850E can perform queue shaping on the queue level, using dual leaky bucket shaping. On the queue level, you can configure up to 31 single leaky bucket shaper profiles.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Egress Shaping Figure 120 Queue Shaper Profile Page 2. Click Add. The Queue Shaper – Add page opens, with default values displayed. Figure 121 Queue Shaper Profile – Add Page 3. Configure the profile’s parameters. See Table Queue Shaper Profile Parameters for a description of the queue shaper profile parameters.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Egress Shaping Table 40 Queue Shaper Profile Parameters Parameter Definition Profile ID A unique ID for the queue shaper profile. You can choose any unused value from 1 to 32. Once you have added the profile, you cannot change the Profile ID. Description A description of the queue shaper profile.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Egress Shaping 2. Select an interface in the Ethernet Logical Port Configuration table and click Shaper. The Logical Interfaces – Shaper page opens, with the Egress Queue Shaper Configuration table open by default. All queue shaper profiles defined in the system are listed in the table.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Egress Shaping 7. Click Apply, then Close. To assign a different queue shaper profile to a queue: 1. Select Ethernet > Interfaces > Logical Interfaces. The Logical Interfaces page opens (Figure 118). 2. Select an interface in the Ethernet Logical Port Configuration table and click Shaper. The Logical Interfaces – Shaper page opens, with the Egress Queue Shaper Configuration table open by default (Figure 149).
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Scheduling Configuring Scheduling This section includes: • Scheduling Overview • Configuring Priority Profiles • Configuring WFQ Profiles • Assigning a Priority Profile to an Interface Assigning a WFQ Profile to an Interface • Scheduling Overview Scheduling determines the priority among the queues.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Scheduling Figure 124 Scheduler Priority Profile Page 2. Click Add. The Scheduler Priority Profile – Add page opens, with default values displayed. phn-3963_008v000 Page 7-35...
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Scheduling Figure 125 Scheduler Priority Profile – Add Page 3. In the Profile ID field, select a unique Profile ID between 1 and 8. 4. For each CoS value, enter the Green priority, from 4 (highest) to 1 (lowest) (1-4). This priority is applied to Green frames with that CoS egressing a queue to which the profile is assigned.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Scheduling 2. Select the profile you want to edit and click Edit. The Scheduler Priority Profile – Edit page opens. This page is similar to the Scheduler Priority Profile – Add page (Figure 154).
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Scheduling Configuring WFQ Profiles WFQ profiles determine the relative weight per queue. Each profile contains eight CoS-based weight values, corresponding to eight queues in an interface to which the profile is assigned. You can configure up to five WFQ profiles.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Scheduling Figure 127 Scheduler WFQ Profile – Add Page 3. In the Profile ID field, select a unique Profile ID between 2 and 7. Profile ID 1 is used for a pre-defined WFQ profile.
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Scheduling Deleting a WFQ Profile To delete a scheduler WFQ profile, select the profile in the Scheduler WFQ Profiles page (Figure 155) and click Delete. The profile is deleted. To delete multiple scheduler WFQ profiles: 1.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring Scheduling 1. Select Ethernet > Interfaces > Logical Interfaces. The Logical Interfaces page opens (Figure 182). 2. Select an interface in the Ethernet Logical Port Configuration table and click Scheduler. The Logical Interfaces – Scheduler page opens, with the Egress Port Scheduling Priority Configuration –...
Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring and Displaying Queue-Level PMs Configuring and Displaying Queue-Level PMs PTP 850 devices support advanced traffic PMs per CoS queue and service bundle. For each logical interface, you can configure thresholds for Green and Yellow traffic per queue. You can then display the following PMs for 15- minute and 24-hour intervals, per queue and color: Maximum bytes passed per second •...
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring and Displaying Queue-Level PMs To configure queue-level PMs: 1 Select Ethernet > PM & Statistics > Egress CoS PM > Configuration. The Egress CoS PM Configuration page opens. Figure 130 Egress CoS PM Configuration Page 2 Click Add.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring and Displaying Queue-Level PMs Figure 131 Egress CoS PM Configuration – Add Page 3 In the Interface Location field, select the interface for which you want to configure the collection rule. 4 In the Service Bundle field, select a service bundle (1-6). 5 In the Admin field, select Enable to enable the collection rule.
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Chapter 7: Quality of Service (QoS) Configuring and Displaying Queue-Level PMs Figure 132 Egress CoS PM Page The Integrity column indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval are valid. An X in the column indicates that the values are invalid. This can occur for a number of reasons, including but not limited to a disconnected cable, a missing SFP module, muting of a radio interface, and an operational status of Down.
Chapter 8: Synchronization Configuring the Sync Source Configuring the Sync Source Note To configure a sync source on which the sync source Quality parameter must be set according to ANSI specifications and you must change the ETSI/ANSI mode to ANSI before configuring the sync source.
Chapter 8: Synchronization Configuring the Sync Source Table 41 Sync Source Parameters Parameter Definition System Reference Quality The quality of the current synchronization source interface. A value of DNU indicates that no synchronization source interfaces are currently defined. Current Active Sync Source The currently active system synchronization source interface.
Chapter 8: Synchronization Configuring the Sync Source In the Sync Interface field, select the interface you want to define as a synchronization source. You can select from the following interface types: Ethernet interfaces Radio interface Note In order to select an Ethernet interface, you must first specify the media type for this interface. See Configuring Ethernet Interfaces.
Chapter 8: Synchronization Configuring the Sync Source Edit the parameters, as defined above. You can edit all the parameters except Sync Interface, which is read-only. Click Apply, then Close. Deleting a Sync Source To delete a synchronization source: Select the synchronization source in the Sync Source page (Figure 182).
SSM message administration is not supported in release 10.6. It is supported in release 10.9. In order to provide topological resiliency for synchronization transfer, PTP 850E implements the passing of SSM messages over the radio interfaces. SSM timing in PTP 850E complies with ITU-T G.781.
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Chapter 8: Synchronization Configuring the Outgoing Clock and SSM Messages Figure 135 Outgoing Clock Page 2 Select the interface you want to configure and click Edit. The Outgoing Clock – Edit page opens. Figure 136 Outgoing Clock – Edit Page In the Outgoing clock source field, select the interface's synchronization source.
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring the Outgoing Clock and SSM Messages Chapter 9: Access Management and Security This section includes: Configuring the General Access Control Parameters • • Configuring the Password Security Parameters Configuring the Session Timeout • •...
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring the General Access Control Parameters Configuring the General Access Control Parameters To avoid unauthorized login to the system, PTP 850 automatically blocks users upon a configurable number of failed login attempts. You can also configure PTP 850 to block users that have not logged into the unit for a defined number of days.
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Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring the General Access Control Parameters Once a user is blocked, you can unblock the user from the User Accounts page. To unblock a user: 1. Select Platform > Security > Access Control > User Accounts. The Access Control User Accounts page opens (Figure 195).
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring the Password Security Parameters Configuring the Password Security Parameters To configure enhanced security requirements for user passwords: 1. Select Platform > Security > Access Control > Password Management. The Access Control Password Management page opens. Figure 139 Access Control Password Management Page 2.
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring the Session Timeout Configuring the Session Timeout By default, there is a 10 minute session timeout. If you do not perform any activity on the system for the period of time defined as the session timeout, the user session times out and you will have to log in to the system again. To modify the session timeout: 1.
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring Users Configuring Users This section includes: • User Configuration Overview • Configuring User Profiles • Configuring Users Related topics: Changing Your Password • User Configuration Overview User configuration is based on the Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) model. According to the RBAC model, permissions to perform certain operations are assigned to specific roles.
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Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring Users To add a user profile: 1. Select Platform > Security > Access Control > User Profiles. The Access Control User Profiles page opens. Figure 141 Access Control User Profiles Page 2. Click Add. The Access Control User Profiles - Add page opens. phn-3963_008v000 Page 9-7...
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Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring Users Figure 142 Access Control User Profiles - Add Page 3. In the Profile field, enter a name for the profile. The profile name can include up to 49 characters. Once you have created the user profile, you cannot change its name. Note The Usage counter field displays the number of users to whom the user profile is assigned.
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring Users Configuring Users You can configure up to 2,000 users. Each user has a user name, password, and user profile. The user profile defines a set of read and write permission levels per functionality group. See Configuring User Profiles.
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Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring Users Figure 144 Access Control User Accounts - Add Page 3. In the User name field, enter a user name for the user. The user name can be up to 32 characters. 4. In the Profile field, select a User Profile. The User Profile defines the user’s access levels for functionality groups in the system.
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Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring Users To edit a user’s account details, select the user and click Edit. You can edit all of the user account parameters except the User name and password. To add a user, click Add. To delete a user, select the user and click Delete.
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS The web interface protocol for accessing PTP 850 can be configured to HTTP (default) or HTTPS. It cannot be set to both at the same time. Before setting the protocol to HTTPS, you must: 1.
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Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS Figure 145 Security Certificate Request Page 2. In the Common Name field, enter the fully–qualified domain name for your web server. You must enter the exact domain name. 3.
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS Figure 146 FTP Parameters Page (Security Certificate Request) 12. In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the SFTP server. 13. In the Password field, enter the password you configured in the SFTP server. If you did not configure a password for your SFTP user, simply leave this field blank.
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Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS 2. Click FTP Parameters to display the FTP Parameters page Figure 148 FTP Parameters Page (Security Certification Download & Install) 3. In the User name for logging field, enter the user name you configured in the SFTP server. 4.
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Blocking Telnet Access 6. In the File Name field, enter the certificate’s file name in the SFTP server. 7. If the IP address family is configured to be IPv4, enter the IPv4 address of the PC or laptop you are using as the SFTP server in the Server IPV4 address field.
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Uploading the Security Log Uploading the Security Log The security log is an internal system file which records all changes performed to any security feature, as well as all security related events. When uploading the security log, the PTP 850 functions as an FTP or SFTP client. You must install FTP or SFTP server software on the PC or laptop you are using to perform the import or export.
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Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Uploading the Security Log Figure 151 FTP Parameters Page (Security Log Upload) 4. In the File transfer protocol field, select the file transfer protocol you want to use (FTP or SFTP). 5. In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP server. 6.
Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Uploading the Configuration Log Uploading the Configuration Log The configuration log lists actions performed by users to configure the system. This file is mostly used for security, to identify suspicious user actions. It can also be used for troubleshooting. When uploading the configuration log, the PTP 850 functions as an FTP or SFTP client.
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Chapter 9: Access Management and Security Uploading the Configuration Log Figure 153 Configuration Log Upload Page 4. In the File transfer protocol field, select the file transfer protocol you want to use (FTP or SFTP). 5. In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP server. 6.
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Uploading the Configuration Log Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting This section includes: • Viewing Current Alarms • Viewing Alarm Statistics • Viewing and Savin the Event Log Editing Alarm Text and Severity and Disabling Alarms and Events •...
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Viewing Current Alarms Viewing Current Alarms To display a list of current alarms in the unit: 1. Select Faults > Current Alarms. The Current Alarms page opens. The Current Alarms page displays current alarms in the unit. Each row in the Current Alarms table describes an alarm and provides basic information about the alarm.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Viewing Current Alarms Table 42 Alarm Information Parameter Definition Sequence Number (#) A unique sequence number assigned to the alarm by the system. Time The date and time the alarm was triggered. Severity The severity of the alarm. In the Current Alarms table, the severity is indicated by a symbol.
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Viewing Alarm Statistics Viewing Alarm Statistics To display a summary of alarms per module and per interface: 1. Select Faults > Alarm Statistics. The Alarm Statistics page opens. Figure 156 Alarm Statistics Page The Alarm Statistics page displays the number of current alarms per severity level for each module, interface, and virtual interface (such as Multi-Carrier ABC groups) in the unit.
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Viewing and Saving the Event Log Viewing and Saving the Event Log The Event Log displays a list of current and historical events and information about each event. To display the Event Log: 1. Select Faults > Event Log. The Event Log opens. For a description of the information provided in the Event Log, Table 58 Event Log Information.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Viewing and Saving the Event Log Parameter Definition User Text Additional text that has been added to the system-defined description of the event by users. Note: You can add user text to events in the Alarm Configuration page. Editing Alarm Text and Severity.
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Editing Alarm Text and Severity | Disabling Alarms and Event Editing Alarm Text and Severity | Disabling Alarms and Event You can view a list of alarm types, edit the severity level assigned to individual alarm types, and add additional descriptive text to individual alarm types.
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Editing Alarm Text and Severity | Disabling Alarms and Event Parameter Definition Severity The severity assigned to the alarm type. You can edit the severity in the Alarm Configuration – Edit page. See Editing an Alarm Type.
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Editing Alarm Text and Severity | Disabling Alarms and Event To change the severity of an alarm type and add additional text to the alarm type's description: 1. Select the alarm type in the Alarm Configuration page (Figure 231).
Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds and Displaying Voltage Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds and Displaying Voltage PMs You can configure undervoltage and overvoltage alarm thresholds and display voltage PMs. The default thresholds for PTP 850E are: • Undervoltage Raise Threshold: 32V •...
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds and Displaying Voltage 2 Click Edit. The Voltage Alarm Configuration – Edit page opens. Figure 162 Voltage Alarm Configuration – Edit Page 3 Select the thresholds you want in the Undervoltage clear threshold (V), Undervoltage raise threshold (V), Overvoltage clear threshold (V), and Overvoltage raise threshold (V) fields.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds and Displaying Voltage • To display reports for the past month, in daily intervals, select 24 hours. Table 45 Voltage PMs Parameter Definition Interval For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval.
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Uploading Unit Info Uploading Unit Info You can generate a Unit Information file, which includes technical data about the unit. This file can be uploaded and forwarded to customer support, at their request, to help in analyzing issues that may occur. When uploading a Unit Information file, the PTP 850 functions as an FTP or SFTP client.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Uploading Unit Info 4. In the File transfer protocol field, select the file transfer protocol you want to use (FTP or SFTP). 5. In the Username in server field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP server. 6.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Uploading Unit Info File-in-transfer – The upload operation is in progress. Success – The file has been successfully uploaded. Failure – The file was not successfully uploaded. If you try to export the file before it has been created, the following error message appears: Error #3-Invalid set value.
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Performing Diagnostics This section includes: • Performing Radio Loopback • Performing Ethernet Loopback • Configuring Service OAM (SOAM) Fault Management (FM) Performing Radio Loopback Note To perform radio loopback, the radio must be set to its maximum TX power. To perform loopback on a radio: 1.
Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Performing Ethernet Loopback Ethernet loopbacks can be performed on any logical Ethernet interface except a LAG. When Ethernet loopback is enabled on an interface, the system loops back all packets ingressing the interface. This enables loopbacks to be performed over the link from other points in the network.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics • Displaying Remote MEPs Displaying Last Invalid CCMS • SOAM Overview The Y.1731 standards and the MEF-30 specifications define Service OAM (SOAM). SOAM is concerned with detecting, isolating, and reporting connectivity faults spanning networks comprising multiple LANs, including LANs other than IEEE 802.3 media.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Figure 167 SOAM MD Page 2. Click Add. The SOAM MD – Add page opens. Figure 168 SOAM MD Page 3. In the MD Name field, enter an identifier for the MD (up to 43 alphanumeric characters). The MD Name should be unique over the domain.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Note In the current release, the MD level is not relevant to the SOAM functionality. 6. Click Apply, then Close. The MHF (MIP) Creation field displays the contents of MHF format included in the CCMs sent in this MD (in the current release, this is MHF none and MHF default).
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Figure 170 SOAM MA/MEG – Add Page 3. Configure the fields described in Table 63. 4. Click Apply, then Close. Table 62 describes the status (read-only) fields in the SOAM MA/MEG Component table. Table 46 SOAM MA/MEG Configuration Parameters Parameter Definition...
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Parameter Definition MEG Level Select a MEG level (0-7). The MEG level must be the same for MEGs on both sides of the link. Higher levels take priority over lower levels. If MEGs are nested, the OAM flow of each MEG must be clearly identifiable and separable from the OAM flows of the other MEGs.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Parameter Definition Determines whether MIPs are created on the MEG. Options are: MHF (MIP) Creation • MHF none – No MIPs are created. • MHF default – MIPs are created automatically on any service point in the MEG’s Ethernet service.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics 2. Click Add. The Add MEP page opens. Figure 172 Add MEP Page 3. In the MEP ID field, enter a MEP ID (1-8191). 4. Click Apply, then Close. Configuring the Local MEPs Once you have added local and remote MEPs, you must define the MEPs and determine which are the local MEPs: 1.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Note To display MEPs belonging to a specific MEG, select the MEG in the Filter by MA/MEG field near the top of the SOAM MEP page. To display all MEPs configured for the unit, select All. 2.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics 5. In the Direction field, select Up or Down. 6. In the MEP ID field, select a MEP ID from the list of MEPs you have added to the selected MEG. 7. In the Service Point field, select the service point on which you want to place the MEP. 8.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Parameter Definition MEP ID The MEP ID. Interface Location The interface on which the service point associated with the MEP is located. SP ID The service point ID. In this release, onlyUp or Down is supported. MEP Direction The initial Indicates the status of the defect SOAM state machine.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Figure 177 SOAM MEP - Edit Page 3. In the MEP Active field, select True. 4. In the MEP CCM TX Enable field, select True. 5. In the CCM and LTM Priority field, select the p-bit that will be included in CCMs sent by this MEP (0 to 7). It is recommended to select 7.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Figure 178 SOAM MEP DB Table Table 64 lists and describes the parameters displayed in the SOAM MEP DB table. To return to the SOAM MEP page, click Back to MEP. Table 49 SOAM MEP DB Table Parameters Parameter Definition RMEP ID...
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics 2. Select a MEP and click Last Invalid CCMS. The MEP Last Invalid CCMS page opens. Figure 179 MEP Last Invalid CCMS Page The Last RX error CCM message field displays the frame of the last CCM that contains an error message received by the MEP.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Performing Loopback To perform loopback on a MEP: 1. In the SOAM MEP page (Figure 247), select the MEP on which you want to perform the loopback. 2. Click Loopback. The SOAM MEP – Loopback page opens. phn-3963_008v000 Page 10-31...
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics Figure 180 SOAM MEP Loopback Page 3. In the Loopback Destination area, select from the following options: MEP ID – If you select MEP ID, you must enter the MEP ID of the MEP on the interface to which you want to perform the loopback in the Loopback Messages Destination MEP ID field.
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Chapter 10: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting Performing Diagnostics MAC Address (default) – If you select MAC Address, you must enter the MAC address of the interface to which you want to send the loopback in the Loopback Messages Destination MAC Address.
Chapter 11: Web EMS Utilities Performing Diagnostics Chapter 11: Web EMS Utilities This section includes: • Restarting the HTTP Server • Calculating an ifIndex Displaying, Searching, and Saving a list of MIB Entities • phn-3963_008v000 Page 11-1...
Chapter 11: Web EMS Utilities Calculating an ifIndex Restarting the HTTP Server To restart the unit’s HTTP server: Select Utilities > Restart HTTP. The Restart HTTP page opens. Figure 181 Restart HTTP Page Click Restart. The system prompts you for confirmation. Click OK.
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Chapter 11: Web EMS Utilities Calculating an ifIndex Figure 182 ifIndex Calculator Page • If you have an ifIndex and you want to determine which hardware item in the unit it represents, enter the number in the ifIndex number field and click Calculate Index to name. A description of the object appears in the Result field.
Chapter 11: Web EMS Utilities Displaying, Searching, and Saving a list of MIB Entities Displaying, Searching, and Saving a list of MIB Entities To display a list of entities in the PTP 850 private MIB: Select Utilities > ifCalculator. The ifIndex Calculator page opens. Figure 183 MIB Reference Table Page Note Some of the entities listed in the Table may not be relevant to the particular unit you are using.
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Displaying, Searching, and Saving a list of MIB Entities Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) This section includes: General (CLI) • • Establishing a Connection (CLI) Logging On (CLI) • • General CLI Commands Changing Your Password (CLI) •...
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Establishing a Connection (CLI) General (CLI) Before connection over the radio hop is established, it is of high importance that you assign to the PTP 850 unit a dedicated IP address, according to an IP plan for the total network. See Changing the Management IP Address (CLI).
A password prompt appears. Enter the default password: admin The root prompt appears. For example: login: admin Password: Wind River Linux glibc_cgl (cgl) 4.1 CE.1.0 Last login: Mon Apr 13 11:27:02 on console Wind River Linux glibc_cgl (cgl) 4.1 CE.1.0 PTP 850E root> phn-3963_008v000 Page 12-3...
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) General CLI Commands General CLI Commands To display all command levels available from your current level, press <TAB> twice. For example, if you press <TAB> twice at the root level, the following is displayed: root> auto-state-propagation ethernet exit...
The root user password and instructions for changing this password are available from Cambium Networks Customer Support. It is strongly recommended to change this password. To change your password, enter the following command in root view: root>...
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Configuring In-Band Management (CLI) Configuring In-Band Management (CLI) In Release 10.9, in-band management must be enabled via the Web EMS. See Configuring In-Band Management (CLI). phn-3963_008v000 Page 12-6...
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Changing the Management IP Address (CLI) Changing the Management IP Address (CLI) Related Topics: • Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications (CLI) • Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address (CLI) You can enter the unit's address in IPv4 format and/or in IPv6 format. The unit will receive communications whether they were sent to its IPv4 address or its IPv6 address.
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Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Changing the Management IP Address (CLI) Table 51 IP Address (IPv6) CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description ipv6-address Eight groups of four Any valid IPv6 address. The IP address for the hexadecimal digits unit.
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Configuring the Activation Key (CLI) Configuring the Activation Key (CLI) This section includes: • Activation Key Overview (CLI) • Viewing the Activation Key Status Parameters (CLI) • Entering the Activation Key (CLI) • Activating a Demo Activation Key (CLI) Displaying a List of Activation-Key-Enabled Features (CLI) •...
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Configuring the Activation Key (CLI) Entering the Activation Key (CLI) To enter the activation key, enter the following command in root view. root> platform activation-key set key string <key string> If the activation key is not legal (e.g., a typing mistake or an invalid serial number), an Activation Key Loading Failure event is sent to the Event Log.
• Configuring NTP (CLI) PTP 850E uses the Universal Time Coordinated (UTC) standard for time and date configuration. UTC is a more updated and accurate method of date coordination than the earlier date standard, Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). Every PT 850E unit holds the UTC offset and daylight savings time information for the location of the unit. Each management unit presenting the information uses its own UTC offset to present the information with the correct time.
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Setting the Time and Date (Optional) (CLI) The following command sets the GMT date and time to January 30, 2014, 3:07 pm and 58 seconds: root> platform management time-services utc set date-and-time 30-01- 2014,15:07:58 The following command sets the GMT offset to 13 hours and 32 minutes: root>...
– a radio interface. slot Number Ethernet: 1 The slot on which the interface is located. Radio in PTP 850E or PTP 850E: 2 port Number GbE 1: 1 The specific interface you want to enable or disable. GbE 2: 2...
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Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Enabling the Interfaces (CLI) The following command enables Ethernet port 7: root> platform if-manager set interface-type ethernet slot 1 port 7 admin The following command enables radio interface: root> platform if-manager set interface-type radio slot 1 port 1 admin up The following command disables the radio interface: root>...
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) (CLI) Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) (CLI) Multi-Rate Multi-Constellation (MRMC) radio scripts define how the radio utilizes its available capacity. Each script is a pre-defined collection of configuration settings that specify the radio’s transmit and receive levels, link modulation, channel spacing, and bit rate.
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) (CLI) radio [1/1]>mrmc script show script-type normal acm-support yes Script |Script-Name ---------------------------------------------------- <5703> |mdN_A250250N_5_5703 <5704> |mdN_A500500N_5_5704 <5706> |mdN_A10001000N_5_5706 <5710> |mdN_A20002000N_5_5710 ---------------------------------------------------- radio [1/1]> Assigning an MRMC Script to a Radio Carrier (CLI) Once you have a list of valid scripts, you can assign a script to the radio carrier.
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Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description min-profile Number See Table 14. Adaptive ACM mode only: The minimum profile for the script. For example, if you select a minimum profile of 3, the system will not go below profile 3 regardless of the channel fading conditions.
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Configuring the Radio Parameters (CLI) Configuring the Radio Parameters (CLI) In order to establish a radio link, you must: • Enter radio view. Verify that the radio is muted (the Mute Status should be On). •...
<enable|disable> Note: The following command sets the TX frequency of the radio in an PTP 850E unit to 71000000 KHz, and sets the RX frequency of the remote unit to the same value. radio[1/1]> rf set tx-frequency 71000000 local-remote enable The following command sets the TX frequency of the radio in an PTP 850E unit to 71000000 KHz, but does not set the RX frequency of the remote unit.
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Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Configuring the Radio Parameters (CLI) To display whether Adaptive TX Power is enabled, enter the following command in radio view: radio[1/1]>rf adaptive-power show status The output of this command is: radio [x/x]>rf adaptive-power show status RF adaptive power admin status: [enable/disable] RF adaptive power operational status: [up/down] means the feature is enabled and fully functional for that...
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Configuring the RSL Threshold Alarm (CLI) Configuring the RSL Threshold Alarm (CLI) You can enable an alarm to be triggered in the event that the RSL falls beneath a defined threshold. This alarm is alarm ID 1610, Radio Receive Signal Level is below the configured threshold. By default, the alarm is disabled. To enable the RSL threshold alarm, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>...
Chapter 12: Getting Started (CLI) Creating Service(s) for Traffic (CLI) Creating Service(s) for Traffic (CLI) In order to pass traffic through the PTP 850, you must configure Ethernet traffic services. For configuration instructions, see Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI). phn-3963_008v000 Page 12-22...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Creating Service(s) for Traffic (CLI) Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) This section includes: Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications (CLI) • • Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address (CLI) Configuring SNMP (CLI) • •...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications (CLI) Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications (CLI) You can specify which IP protocol the unit will use when initiating communications, such as downloading software, sending traps, pinging, or exporting configurations.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address (CLI) Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address (CLI) You can configure the remote unit’s IP address, subnet mask and default gateway in IPv4 format and/or in IPv6 format. The remote unit will receive communications whether they were sent to its IPv4 address or its IPv6 address.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Configuring the Remote Unit’s IP Address (CLI) Configuring the Remote Radio's IP Address in IPv6 format (CLI) To set the remote radio’s IP Address, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>remote-unit set ip-address-ipv6 <ipv6-address> To display the remote radio’s IP Address, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>remote-unit show ip-address-ipv6 To set the remote radio’s prefix length , enter the following command in radio view:...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Configuring SNMP (CLI) Configuring SNMP (CLI) PTP 850 supports SNMP v1, V2c, and v3. You can set community strings for access to PTP 850 units. PTP 850Eupports the following MIBs: • RFC-1213 (MIB II). • RMON MIB.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Configuring SNMP (CLI) The following commands enable SNMP v2 on the unit, and set the read community to “public” and the write community to “private”: root> platform security protocols-control snmp admin set enable root> platform security protocols-control snmp version set v2 root>...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Configuring SNMP (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description v3-encryption- Variable None Defines the encryption (privacy) mode protocol to be used for this user. v3-auth- Variable None Defines the authentication algorithm algorithm to be used for this user. v3-access- Variable readWrite...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Configuring SNMP (CLI) Configuring Trap Managers (CLI) To display the current SNMP trap manager settings, enter the following command in root view: root> platform security protocols-control snmp trap-manager show To modify the settings of an SNMP trap manger, enter the following command in root view: root>...
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Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Configuring SNMP (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description manager-v3- Text String. The name of a V3 user If the SNMP Trap version selected in user defined in the system. platform security protocols- control snmp version set is V3, enter the name of a V3 user defined in the system.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Configuring the Internal Ports for FTP or SFTP (CLI) Configuring the Internal Ports for FTP or SFTP (CLI) By default, the following PTP 850 ports are used for FTP and SFTP when the PTP 850 unit is acting as an FTP or SFTP client (e.g., software downloads, configuration file backup and restore operations): •...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Upgrading the Software (CLI) Upgrading the Software (CLI) PTP 850 software and firmware releases are provided in a single bundle that includes software and firmware for all components in the system. Software is first downloaded to the system, then installed. After installation, a reset is automatically performed on all components whose software was upgraded.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Upgrading the Software (CLI) Configuring a Software Download (CLI) You can download software using HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, or SFTP. When downloading software via HTTP or HTTPS, the PTP 850 functions as the server, and you can download the software directly to the PTP 850 unit.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Upgrading the Software (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description directory Text String. The directory path from which you are downloading the files. Enter the path relative to the FTP user's home directory, not the absolute path. To leave the path blank, enter //.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Upgrading the Software (CLI) Installing and Upgrading Software (CLI) To install or upgrade the software, enter the following command in root view after downloading the software bundle: root> platform software install version If you wish to delay the start of installation, enter instead the following command. The time you enter in HH:MM format is the amount of time to delay until the start of the installation process: root>...
PTP 850 units. You can also backup and save configuration files. Configuration files can only be copied between units of the same type, i.e., PTP 850E to PTP 850E to PTP 850E. Note that you can also write CLI scripts that will automatically execute a series of commands when the configuration file is restored.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Backing Up and Restoring Configurations (CLI) Setting the Configuration Management Parameters (CLI) When importing and exporting configuration files, the PTP 850 functions as an FTP or SFTP client. You must install FTP or SFTP server software on the PC or laptop you are using to perform the import or export. For details, see Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Backing Up and Restoring Configurations (CLI) Parameter Permitted Input Type Values Description directory Text String. The location of the file you are downloading or uploading. If the location is the root shared folder, it should be left empty. If the location is a sub- folder under the root shared folder, specify the folder name.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Backing Up and Restoring Configurations (CLI) The following commands save the current configuration as a configuration at Restore Point 1, and export the file to the external server location: root> platform configuration configuration-file add restore-point-1 root>...
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Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Backing Up and Restoring Configurations (CLI) 2. Export the configuration from the restore point to a PC or laptop. See Backing up and Exporting a Configuration File (CLI). 3. On the PC or laptop, unzip the file Configuration_files.zip. 4.
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Setting the Unit to the Factory Default Configuration (CLI) Setting the Unit to the Factory Default Configuration (CLI) To restore the unit to its factory default configuration, while retaining the unit’s IP address settings and logs, enter the following commands in root view: root>...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Performing a Hard (Cold) Reset (CLI) Performing a Hard (Cold) Reset (CLI) To initiate a hard (cold) reset on the unit, enter the following command in root view: root> platform management chassis reset The following prompt appears: You are about to reset the shelf Are you sure? :(yes/no): Enter...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Resetting the Remote Unit (CLI) Resetting the Remote Unit (CLI) To initiate a hard (cold) reset on the remote unit, go to radio view and enter the following command: radio [1/1]>remote-unit reset unit The following prompt appears: Are you sure you want to reset the remote unit Are you sure? (yes/no): Enter...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Configuring Unit Parameters (CLI) Configuring Unit Parameters (CLI) You can view and configure system information: To configure a name for the unit, enter the following command in root view: root> platform management system-name set name <name> To define a location for the unit, enter the following command in root view: root>...
Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Displaying Unit Inventory (CLI) Configuring NTP (CLI) PTP 850 supports Network Time Protocol (NTP). NTP distributes Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) throughout the system, using a jitter buffer to neutralize the effects of variable latency. To configure NTP, enter the following command in root view: root>...
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Chapter 13: Unit Management (CLI) Displaying Unit Inventory (CLI) company name : Cambium Networks product name : AODU DC, All-outdoor, dual radio carriers in one product product description : AODU DC, All-outdoor, dual radio carriers in one product root> phn-3963_008v000...
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Displaying Unit Inventory (CLI) Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) This section includes: • Viewing and Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters (CLI) • Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Related topics: • Entering Radio View (CLI) Muting and Unmuting a Radio (CLI) •...
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Viewing and Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters (CLI) Viewing and Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters (CLI) This section includes: • Displaying Communication Status with the Remote Radio (CLI) • Displaying the Remote Radio’s Link ID (CLI) •...
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Viewing and Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters (CLI) The following command mutes the remote radio: radio[2/1]>remote-unit mute set admin on The following command unmutes the remote radio: radio[2/1]>remote-unit mute set admin off Displaying the Remote Radio’s RX Level (CLI) To display the remote radio’s RX level, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>remote-unit show rx-level Configuring the Remote Radio’s TX Level (CLI)
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) This section includes: • Displaying General Modem Status and Defective Block PMs (CLI) • Displaying Excessive BER (Aggregate) PMs (CLI) •...
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Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) To display modem BER PMs in 15-minute intervals, enter the following command in radio view: radio [x/x]>framer pm-aggregate show interval 15min The following is a partial sample output of the command: framer pm-aggregate show interval 15min radio [2/1]>framer pm-aggregate show interval 15min...
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Parameter Description Integrity Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval are reliable. "1" in the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that time.
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Table 71 Excessive BER CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description admin Variable enable Enables or disables propagation of excessive BER as a fault. disable threshold Variable 1e -3 The level above which an excessive BER alarm...
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Table 73 TSL Thresholds CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description threshold Number -10 - 34 The TSL threshold (dBm). The following command sets the TSL threshold to 10 dBm: radio [2/1]>rf pm-tsl set threshold 10 Displaying RSL and TSL Levels (CLI) You can display the RSL (RX Signal Level) and TSL (TX Signal Level) PMs in either 15-minute or daily intervals.
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Table 74 RSL and TSL PMs (CLI) Parameter Description Interval The number of the interval: 1-30 for daily PM reports, and 1-96 for 15 minute PM reports. Integrity Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval are reliable.
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Table 75 Signal Level Threshold CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description threshold Variable 1e -6 The BER level above which a Signal Degrade alarm is issued for errors detected over the 1e -7 radio link.
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Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) radio [2/1]>modem pm-mse show interval 15min Modem MSE PM Table: =================== Interval Integrity Min MSE (dB) Max MSE (dB) Exceed threshold seconds =============================================================== 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00...
Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Table 77 MSE PMs (CLI) Parameter Description Interval The number of the interval: 1-30 for daily PM reports, and 1-96 for 15 minute PM reports. Integrity Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval are reliable.
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Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) MRMC PM Table: ============== Interval Integrity Min profile Max profile Min bitrate Max bitrate ============================================================================ 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389...
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Chapter 14: Radio Configuration (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Parameter Description Min profile Indicates the minimum ACM profile that was measured during the interval. Max profile Indicates the maximum ACM profile that was measured during the interval. Min bitrate Indicates the minimum total radio throughput (Mbps), delivered during the interval.
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring and Viewing Radio PMs and Statistics (CLI) Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) This section includes: • Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) • Setting the MRU Size and the S-VLAN Ethertype (CLI) •...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) • Use meaningful EVC IDs. Give the same EVC ID (service name) to all service fragments along the path of the service. • • Do not reuse the same EVC ID within the same region. It is recommended to follow these guidelines for creating service points: •...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description evc- Text String Up to 64 A text description of the service. This parameter description characters. does not affect the network element’s behavior, but is used by the NMS for topology management.
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) service info: service id: 1 service type: p2p service admin: operational Maximal MAC address learning entries: 131072 default cos: 0 cos mode: preserve-sp-cos-decision EVC id: N.A. EVC description: N.A. split horizon group: disable configured multicast grouping: no service[1]>...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Service[SID]> service admin show state Table 82 Ethernet Service Operational State CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description service admin Variable Operational The administrative state of the service: mode reserved operational - The service is functional.
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) The following commands configure Service 10 to assign a CoS value of 7 to frames traversing the service: service[10]>service cos-mode set cos-mode default-cos service[10]>service default-cos set cos 7 The following command configures Service 10 to preserve the CoS decision made at the interface or service point level for frames traveling through the service: service[10]>service cos-mode set cos-mode preserve-sp-cos-decision Configuring a Service’s EVC ID and Description (CLI)
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Table 85 Deleting Ethernet Service CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description Number Any defined Service The Service ID. The following command deletes Service 10: root>ethernet service delete sid 10 The following command deletes Services 10 through 15: root>ethernet service delete sid 10 to 15 Configuring Service Points (CLI)
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Service Point Type Pipe Management Service Type Point-to-Point Multipoint Table 118 shows which service point types can co-exist on the same interface. Table 87 Service Point Types per Interface Pipe Only one MNG SP is allowed per interface.
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) SAP Classification (CLI) SAPs can be used with the following Interface Types: All to one – All C-VLANs and untagged frames that enter the interface are classified to the same service point. •...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) SP Type Attached 802.1q Bundle- Bundle- All to One Q in 802.1q S-Tag Type Interface Type S-Tag Pipe 802.1q S-Tag 802.1q Q in Q S-Tag Table 89 Legal Service Point – Interface Type Combinations per Interface – Pipe and MNG SP Type Pipe Attached...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Adding a Service Point (CLI) The command syntax for adding a service point depends on the interface type of the service point. The interface type determines which frames enter the service via this service point. To add a service point with an All-to-One interface type, go to service view for the service and enter the following command: service[SID]>sp add sp-type <sp-type>...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Table 90 Add Service Point CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description sp-type Variable SAP - Service Access Point SNP - Service Network Point pipe PIPE - Pipe service point MNG - Management service point int-type Variable...
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The group must be defined lag1 before you add the service point. lag2 Note: Multi-Carrier ABC and HSB protection are only relevant for PTP 850E units. lag3 lag4 mc-abc1 mc-abc2 mc-abc3...
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The following command adds an SAP service point with Service Point ID 10 to Service 37, with interface type qinq. This service point is located on radio carrier 2 in a PTP 850E unit. S-VLAN 100 and C-VLAN 200 are classified to the service point.
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) The following commands create a Smart Pipe service between Eth1 and radio carrier 1. This service carries S-VLANs and untagged frames between the two interfaces: root> ethernet service add type p2p sid 10 admin operational evc-id test description east_west root>...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) The following command allows frames with a broadcast destination MAC address to ingress Service 37 via Service Point 1. service[37]>sp broadcast set spid 1 state allow The following command prevents frames with a broadcast destination MAC address from ingressing Service 37 via Service Point 1.
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) The following command configures Service Point 1 in Service 37 to preserve the CoS decision made at the interface level for frames that ingress the service point: service[37]>sp cos-mode set spid 1 mode interface-decision Enabling and Disabling Flooding (CLI) The ingress service point for a frame can forward the frame within the service by means of flooding or dynamic MAC address learning in the service.
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) • Configuring C-VLAN CoS Preservation (CLI) Configuring C-VLAN Preservation (CLI) • • Configuring S-VLAN CoS Preservation (CLI) Configuring C-VLAN CoS Preservation (CLI) To configure CoS preservation for C-VLAN-tagged frames, go to service view for the service and enter the following command: service[SID]>sp cvlan-cos-preservation-mode set spid <sp-id>...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description sp-id Number 1-32 for P2P and The Service Point ID. MP services. 1-30 for MNG services. c-vlan Variable enable Determines whether the original C-VLAN ID is preservation preserved or restored for frames egressing from disable...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Table 96 S-VLAN CoS Preservation CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description sp-id Number 1-32 for P2P and The Service Point ID. MP services. 1-30 for MNG services. s-vlan cos Variable enable...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Table 97 Service Bundle CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description sp-id Number 1-32 for P2P and The Service Point ID. MP services. 1-30 for MNG services. service- Number 1 –...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Table 98 VLAN Bundle to Service Point CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description sp-id Number 1-32 for P2P and MP services. The Service Point ID. 1-30 for MNG services. vlan Number 1-4094 (except 4092, which is...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Table 100 Delete Service Point Attributes CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description sp-id Number 1-32 for P2P and MP services. The Service Point ID. 1-30 for MNG services. The following command deletes Service Point 10 from Service 37: service[37]>sp delete spid 10 Defining the MAC Address Forwarding Table for a Service (CLI)
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description mac limit Number 16 to 131,072, in multiples of The maximum MAC address table size for the service. This maximum only applies to dynamic, not static, MAC address table entries.
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description static mac Six groups of The MAC address. hexadecimal digits sp-id Number 1-32 The Service Point ID of the service point associated with the MAC address. The following command adds MAC address 00:11:22:33:44:55 to the MAC address forwarding table for Service 10, and associates the MAC address with Service Point ID 1 on Service 10: service[10]>service mac-learning-table set-static-...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI) Note The ability to flush the MAC address forwarding table per-service and per-interface is planned for future release. To perform a global flush of the MAC address forwarding table, enter the following command: root>...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Setting the MRU Size and the S-VLAN Ethertype (CLI) Setting the MRU Size and the S-VLAN Ethertype (CLI) The following parameters are configured globally for the PTP 850 switch: • S- VLAN Ethertype – Defines the ethertype recognized by the system as the S-VLAN ethertype. •...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Interfaces (CLI) Configuring the C-VLAN Ethertype (CLI) The system C-VLAN Ethertype is set by the system as 0x8100. To display the system C-VLAN ethertype, enter the following command in root view: root>...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Interfaces (CLI) Note You cannot change the configuration of the Management interface. By default, the Management interface has the following configuration: • Auto negotiation ON • Full Duplex • RJ45 - 100Mbps This section includes: Entering Interface View (CLI) •...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Interfaces (CLI) The QSFP port (Port 4), is displayed as follows. • In a 4x1/10G configuration the QSFP port can provide four Ethernet interfaces: Eth3, Eth4, Eth 5, and Eth6. In this configuration, a QSFP transceiver is attached to the QSFP port, and an MPO-MPO cable is connected between the transceiver and a splitter on the other side of the link.
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Interfaces (CLI) To display an interface’s current operational state (up or down), go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [1/x]>operational state show The following command shows the attributes of Eth 7: eth type eth [1/7]>summary show The following command shows the operational state of Eth 7: eth type eth [1/7]>operational state show...
Control, as defined in IEEE 802.3x. It is also recommended to configure shapers on the third-party switch so as to limit the packet flow from the switch to the PTP 850E unit to 2.5 Gbps. After changing the speed of an SFP+ interface to or from 10000fd, you must reset the unit in order for the change to take effect.
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Interfaces (CLI) eth type eth [x/x]>ifg set <ifg> Table 111 Interface IFG CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description Number 6 - 15 Sets the interface’s IFG (in bytes). The following command sets the ifg for GbE 1 to 12: eth type eth [1/1]>ifg set 12 The following displays the currently configured ifg for GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]>ifg get...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Ethernet Interfaces (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description description Text String Up to 40 characters Adds a text description to the interface. The following command adds the description “Line” to GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]>description set Line phn-3963_008v000 Page 15-35...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding (CLI) Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding (CLI) Automatic state propagation enables propagation of radio failures back to the Ethernet port. You can also configure Automatic State Propagation to close the Ethernet port based on a radio failure at the remote carrier.
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding (CLI) In addition, when a local triggering event takes place, the ASP mechanism sends an indication to the remote side of the link. Even when no triggering event has taken place, the ASP mechanism sends periodic update messages indicating that no triggering event has taken place.
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description llf-id Number 1-31 An ID for Link Loss Forwarding (LLF). When remote-fault-trigger-admin is set to enable, ASP events at the other side of the link are propagated to Controlled Interfaces with LLF IDs that match the LLF IDs of affected...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding (CLI) A failure on the remote side of the link is propagated to any of local Ethernet ports 3 or 4 that share an LLF ID with an Ethernet interface in an ASP pair with the remote radio. The trigger delay for Ethernet port 3 is 100 ms.
• Displaying RMON Statistics (CLI) • PTP 850E stores and displays statistics in accordance with RMON and RMON2 standards. To display RMON statistics for a physical interface, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [1/x]>rmon statistics show clear-on-read <clear-on-read>...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics (CLI) To display RMON statistics for a physical interface, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]>rmon statistics show clear-on-read <clear-on-read> layer-1 <layer-1>...
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description tx-layer1-rate- Number 0-4294967295 The exceed threshold for port TX PMs, in thershold bytes per second. The following commands bring you to interface view for Ethernet port 1, enable PM gathering, and set the thresholds for RX and TX PMs at 850,000,000 bytes per second: root>...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics (CLI) eth type eth [x/x]> pm show rx-bytes-layer1 interval 24hr To display Layer 2 RX PMs, in bytes per second, in 15-minute intervals, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]>...
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Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics (CLI) Parameter Definition Interval For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval. Indicates whether the values received during the measured interval are Invalid data flag valid.
Chapter 15: Ethernet Services and Interfaces (CLI) Viewing Ethernet PMs and Statistics (CLI) Parameter Definition Average TX Multicast The average rate of TX multicast packets per second for the measured Packets time interval. The peak TX rate, in bytes per second, for the measured time interval Peak TX Bytes in Layer1 (including preamble and IFG).
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) PTP 850 performs the classification on each frame ingressing the system via the logical interface. Classification is performed step by step from the highest priority to the lowest priority classification method. Once a match is found, the classifier determines the CoS and Color decision for the frame for the logical interface-level.
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description inner-vlan-id Number 1 – 4094 (except Optional. Include this parameter when 4092, which is you want to map double-tagged frames to reserved for the specific CoS and Color values.
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) Configuring Trust Mode for 802.1p Classification (CLI) To define the trust mode for 802.1p classification, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]>classification set 802.1p <802.1p> Note If you change the trust mode for DSCP, the trust mode for MPLS is automatically changed to the same setting.
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) Configuring Trust Mode for DSCP Classification (CLI) To define the trust mode for DSCP classification, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]>classification set ip-dscp <ip-dscp> To display the trust mode for DSCP classification, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: Table 120 Trust Mode for DSCP CLI Parameters...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) DSCP DSCP (bin) Description CoS (Configurable) Color (Configurable) 011010 AF31 Green 011100 AF32 Yellow 011110 AF33 Yellow 100010 AF41 Green 100100 AF42 Yellow 100110 AF43 Yellow 101110 Green 001000 Green 010000 Green 011000...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) Table 122 Modify DSCP Classification Table CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description dscp Number Valid DSCP values. The DSCP value to be mapped. Refer to the DSCP column in the table above.
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) Table 123 Trust Mode for MPLS CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description mpls Variable Trust Select the interface's trust mode for MPLS bits: un-trust – The interface performs QoS and trust color classification according to a user- configurable table for MPLS EXP to CoS...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description mpls-exp Number 0 – 7 The MPLS EXP bit to be mapped. Number 0 – 7 The CoS assigned to frames with the designated MPLS EXP bit value. color Variable green...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) Table 126: 802.1p Trust Mode CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Description Values 802.1p Variable trust Enter the interface's trust mode for user priority (UP) bits: un-trust • trust – The interface performs QoS and color classification according to UP and CFI/DEI bits according to user-configurable tables for 802.1q UP bits (C-VLAN frames) or 802.1AD UP bits (S-...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) Modifying the C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI Bit Classification Table (CLI) The following table shows the default values for the C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI bit classification table. Table 127: C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI Bit Classification Table Default Values 802.1 UP CoS (configurable) Color (configurable)
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) The following command maps frames with an 802.1p UP bit value of 1 and a CFI bit value of 0 to CoS 1 and Green color: root> ethernet qos 802.1q-up-bits-mapping-tbl set 802.1p 1 cfi 0 cos 1 color green Modifying the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI Bit Classification Table (CLI) The following table shows the default values for the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI bit classification table.
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Classification (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description Number 0 – 7 The CoS assigned to frames with the designated UP and CFI. color Variable green The Color assigned to frames with the yellow designated UP and CFI.
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) This section includes: • Overview of Rate Metering (Policing) (CLI) • Configuring Rate Meter (Policer) Profiles (CLI) • Displaying Rate Meter Profiles (CLI) •...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description profile-id Number 1 – 250 A unique ID for the rate meter (policer) profile. 0, or 64,000 - The Committed Information Rate (CIR) Number 1,000,000,000 defined for the rate meter (policer), in bits...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) • CBS – 5 Kbytes EIR – 64,000 bps • • EBS – 5 Kbytes Color Blind mode • • Coupling Flag disabled The following command edits the rate meter (policer) profile with Profile ID 50, and changes its name to “256 kBytes.”...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) • Per frame type (unicast, multicast, and broadcast) Per frame ethertype • This section includes: Assigning a Rate Meter (Policer) for Unicast Traffic (CLI) • • Assigning a Rate Meter (Policer) for Multicast Traffic (CLI) Assigning a Rate Meter (Policer) for Broadcast Traffic (CLI) •...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) Table 133 Assigning Rate Meter for Unicast Traffic CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description admin-state Variable enable Enables or disables rate metering on unicast traffic flows from the logical disable interface.
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) eth type eth [1/7]>rate-meter unknown-unicast add capability admin-state enable profile-id 1 The following command changes the rate meter (policer) profile for unknown unicast traffic on Eth 7 to 4: eth type eth [1/7]>rate-meter unknown-unicast edit admin-state enable profile-id 4 Assigning a Rate Meter (Policer) for Multicast Traffic (CLI)
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) Table 135 Assigning Rate Meter for Multicast Traffic CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description admin-state Variable enable Enables or disables rate metering on multicast traffic flows from the logical disable interface.
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) eth type eth [1/7]>rate-meter unknown-multicast add capability admin- state enable profile-id 1 The following command changes the rate meter (policer) profile for unknown multicast traffic on Eth 7 to 4: eth type eth [1/7]>rate-meter unknown-multicast edit admin-state enable profile-id 4 Assigning a Rate Meter (Policer) for Broadcast Traffic (CLI)
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) Table 137 Assigning Rate Meter for Broadcast Traffic CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description admin-state Variable enable Enables or disables rate metering on broadcast traffic flows from the logical disable interface.
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) Table 138 Assigning Rate Meter per Ethertype CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description ethertype# Variable ethertype1 Identifies which of three possible policer- per-Ethertype combinations you are ethertype2 defining.
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Policers (Rate Metering) (CLI) To configure the rate meter (policer) line compensation value for an interface, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter-compensation-value set <value> To display the rate meter (policer) line compensation value for an interface, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter-compensation-value get...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Marking (CLI) Configuring Marking (CLI) This section includes: • Marking Overview (CLI) • Configuring Marking Mode on a Service Point (CLI) • Marking Table for C-VLAN UP Bits (CLI) • Marking Table for S-VLAN UP Bits (CLI) Marking Overview (CLI) When enabled, PTP 850’s marking mechanism modifies each frame’s 802.1p UP bit and CFI/DEI bits according to the classifier decision.
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Marking (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description sp-id Number 1-32 for P2P and MP The Service Point ID. services. 1-30 for MNG services. mode Variable enable Determines whether re-marking of the outer VLAN (C-VLAN or S-VLAN) of tagged disable frames that pass through the service point...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Marking (CLI) Table 141 Marking Table for C-VLAN UP Bits Color 802.1q (Configurable) CFI Color (Configurable) Green Yellow Green Yellow Green Yellow Green Yellow Green Yellow Green Yellow Green Yellow Green Yellow To modify the 802.1q CoS and Color to UP and CFI bit mapping table, enter the following command in root view: root>...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Marking (CLI) Example The following command maps CoS 0, Green, to 802.1p UP bit 0, and CFI bit 0: root> ethernet qos 802.1q-up-bits-marking-tbl set cos 0 color green 802.1p 0 cfi 0 Marking Table for S-VLAN UP Bits (CLI) When marking is performed, the following table is used by the marker to decide which CoS and Color to use as the egress CoS and Color bits for S-VLAN-tagged frames.
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Marking (CLI) Table 144 802.1ad UP Marking Table (S-VLAN) CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description Number 0 – 7 The CoS value to be mapped. color Variable green The Color to be mapped. yellow 802.1p Number...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring WRED (CLI) Configuring WRED (CLI) This section includes: • WRED Overview (CLI) • Configuring WRED Profiles (CLI) • Assigning a WRED Profile to a Queue (CLI) WRED Overview (CLI) Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) enables differentiation between higher and lower priority traffic based on CoS.
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring WRED (CLI) root> ethernet qos wred-profile-tbl show profile-id <profile-id> To delete a WRED profile, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet qos wred-profile-tbl delete profile-id <profile id> You cannot delete a WRED profile that is assigned to a queue. You must first remove the WRED profile from the queue by replacing it with a different WRED profile.
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring WRED (CLI) The new profile has the following parameters: profile-id – 2 • • green-min-threshold – 8000 Kbytes green-max-threshold – 8000 Kbytes • • green-max-drop – 100% yellow-min-threshold – 8000 Kbytes • •...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring WRED (CLI) Examples The following command assigns WRED Profile 2 to the CoS 0 queue in Service Bundle 1, on GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]> wred set service-bundle-id 1 cos 0 profile-id 2 The following command displays the WRED profile assigned to the CoS 0 queue in Service Bundle 1, on GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]>...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Shapers (CLI) Configuring Shapers (CLI) This section includes: • Overview of Egress Shaping (CLI) • Configuring Egress Line Compensation for Shaping (CLI) Overview of Egress Shaping (CLI) Egress shaping determines the traffic profile for each queue. PTP 850 performs egress shaping on the following levels: Queue level –...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Shapers (CLI) root> ethernet qos queue-shaper-profile-tbl-broadband show profile-id <profile-id> To delete a queue shaper profile, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet qos queue-shaper-profile-tbl-broadband delete profile-id <profile id> You cannot delete a queue shaper profile if it is attached to a queue. You must first remove the profile from the queue.
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Shapers (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description admin-state Variable enable Select to enable egress queue enable shaping on the queue, or disable disable disable egress queue shaping on the queue. If you set shaping to , the disable shaper profile remains attached to the...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Scheduling (CLI) Profile ID (1-9) Green Priority Yellow Priority (user defined) (read only) Description Best Effort Data Service 4 Data Service 3 Data Service 2 Data Service 1 Real Time 2 (Video with large buffer) Real Time 1 (Video with small buffer) Management (Sync, PDUs, etc.) When the service bundle state is Green (committed state), the service bundle priorities are as defined in the Green...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Scheduling (CLI) Parameter Permitted Input Type Values Description cos5-priority Number 1 – 4 The Green priority for the CoS 5 queue, from 4 (highest) to 1 (lowest). This priority is applied to Green frames with CoS 5 egressing the service bundle to which the profile is assigned.
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Scheduling (CLI) root> ethernet qos port-priority-profile-tbl edit profile-id 1 cos0- priority 1 description c0_p1 cos1-priority 1 description c1_p1 cos2- priority 1 description c2_p1 cos3-priority 2 description c3_p2 cos4- priority 2 description c4_p2 cos5-priority 3 description c5_p3 cos6- priority 3 description c6_p3 cos7-priority 4 description c7_p4 Attaching a Priority Profile to an Interface (CLI) To attach a priority profile to an interface, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command:...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Scheduling (CLI) Configuring Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ) (CLI) This section includes: Overview of WFQ (CLI) • • Configuring a WFQ Profile (CLI) Attaching a WFQ Profile to an Interface (CLI) • Overview of WFQ (CLI) The scheduler serves the queues based on their priority, but when two or more queues have data to transmit and their priority is the same, the scheduler uses Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ) to determine the priorities within each priority.
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Scheduling (CLI) root> ethernet qos wfq-weight-profile-tbl add profile-id <profile.id> cos0-weight <cos0-weight> cos1-weight <cos1-weight> cos2-weight <cos2- weight> cos3-weight <cos3-weight> cos4-weight <cos4-weight> cos5-weight <cos5-weight> cos6-weight <cos6-weight> cos7-weight <cos7-weight> To edit an existing WFQ profile, enter the following command in root view: root>...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Scheduling (CLI) Queue Weight (Green) Queue Weight (Yellow – not visible to users, and cannot be edited) The following command edits the profile you created in the previous command so that CoS 6 queues have a weight of 20 instead of 15: root>...
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Configuring Scheduling (CLI) Queue Weight (Green) eth type eth [1/1]> phn-3963_008v000 Page 16-46...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Displaying Egress Statistics (CLI) Displaying Egress Statistics (CLI) PTP 850 collects egress PMs at the queue level and the service bundle level. Displaying Queue-Level PMs (CLI) PTP 850 supports the following counters per queue at the queue level: •...
Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Displaying Egress Statistics (CLI) Parameter Permitted Input Type Values Description layer-1 Boolean – Statistics are represented as Layer 1 statistics, including preamble and IFG. – Statistics are represented as Layer 2 statistics. The following command displays PMs for the CoS 0 queue in Service Bundle 1, on GbE 2. The PMs are cleared after they are displayed.
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Chapter 16: Quality of Service (QoS) (CLI) Displaying Egress Statistics (CLI) Parameter Permitted Input Type Values Description service- Number 1 – 63 The service bundle for which you want to display bundle-id PMs. Note: the current release, only Service Bundle 1 is supported.
Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Changing the ETSI/ANSI Mode (CLI) Changing the ETSI/ANSI Mode (CLI) By default, PTP 850 units are set to ETSI mode. No mode change is necessary to configure an MRMC script, even if an FCC (ANSI) script is used. However, to configure a sync source on which the sync source Quality parameter must be set according to ANSI specifications.
Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Configuring the Sync Source (CLI) Configuring the Sync Source (CLI) Note To configure a sync source on which the sync source Quality parameter must be set according to ANSI specifications, change the ETSI/ANSI mode to ANSI before configuring the sync source. See Changing the ETSI/ANSI Mode (CLI).
Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Configuring the Sync Source (CLI) Configuring an Ethernet Interface as a Synchronization Source (CLI) Note In order to select an Ethernet interface, you must first specify the media type for this interface. See Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI).
Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Configuring the Sync Source (CLI) Table 159 Sync Source Ethernet CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description slot Number port Number The interface to be configured as a synchronization source. priority Number 1 – 16 The priority of this synchronization source relative to other synchronization sources configured in the unit.
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Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Configuring the Sync Source (CLI) root> platform sync source add radio-interface slot <slot> port <port> radio-channel <radio-channel> priority <priority> quality <quality> To edit the parameters of an existing radio interface synchronization source, enter the following command in root view: root>...
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Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Configuring the Sync Source (CLI) The following command changes the priority of this synchronization source to 14: root> platform sync source edit radio-interface slot 2 port 1 radio- channel 0 priority 14 The following command removes this synchronization source: root>...
Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Configuring the Outgoing Clock (CLI) Configuring the Outgoing Clock (CLI) For each interface, you can choose between using the system clock or the interface’s internal clock as its synchronization source. By default, interfaces use the system clock. When configuring the outgoing clock, the Sync mode must be set to its default setting of automatic.
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Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Configuring the Outgoing Clock (CLI) The following command sets the clock source for radio interface 2 to its internal clock: root> platform sync interface-clock set radio-interface slot 2 port 2 radio-channel 0 source local-clock The following command sets the clock source for Ethernet port 2 to the system clock: root>...
Configuring SSM Messages (CLI) Configuring SSM Messages (CLI) In order to provide topological resiliency for synchronization transfer, PTP 850E implements the passing of SSM messages over the Ethernet and radio interfaces. SSM timing in PTP 850E complies with ITU-T G.781.
Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Displaying Synchronization Status and Parameters (CLI) The following command enables SSM on Ethernet port 1: root> platform sync ssm admin eth-interface slot 1 port 1 admin on Displaying Synchronization Status and Parameters (CLI) To display the synchronization sources configured in the system, enter the following command in root view: root>...
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Chapter 17: Synchronization (CLI) Displaying Synchronization Status and Parameters (CLI) To display the current system clock status, enter the following command in root view: root> platform sync clu-state show The following is a sample system clock status display output: CLU is in Free-running mode phn-3963_008v000 Page 17-12...
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Displaying Synchronization Status and Parameters (CLI) Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) This section includes: • Configuring the General Access Control Parameters (CLI) • Configuring the Password Security Parameters (CLI) • Configuring Users (CLI) Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS (CLI) •...
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring the General Access Control Parameters (CLI) Configuring the General Access Control Parameters (CLI) To avoid unauthorized login to the system, the following parameters should be set: • Inactivity Timeout • Blocking access due to login failures •...
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring the General Access Control Parameters (CLI) To define the period (in minutes) for which a user is blocked after the configured number of failed login attempts, enter the following command in root view: root>...
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Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring the General Access Control Parameters (CLI) Table 164 Blocking Unused Accounts CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description period Number 0, 30 - 90 The number of days after which a user is prevented from logging into the system if the user has not logged in for the configured number of days.
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring the Password Security Parameters (CLI) Configuring the Password Security Parameters (CLI) You can configure enhanced security requirements for user passwords. This section includes: • Configuring Password Aging (CLI) • Configuring Password Strength Enforcement (CLI) Forcing Password Change Upon First Login (CLI) •...
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring the Password Security Parameters (CLI) Table 166 Password Strength Enforcement CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description password Number 0, 20 - 90 The number of days that user passwords aging will remain valid from the first time the user logs into the system.
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring the Password Security Parameters (CLI) Displaying the System Password Settings (CLI) Use the following command to display the system password settings: root> platform security access-control password show-all phn-3963_008v000 Page 18-7...
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring Users (CLI) Configuring Users (CLI) This section includes: • User Configuration Overview (CLI) • Configuring User Profiles (CLI) • Configuring User Accounts (CLI) Related topics: Logging On (CLI) • User Configuration Overview (CLI) User configuration is based on the Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) model.
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Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring Users (CLI) root> platform security access-control profile add name <profile-name> To edit the settings of a user profile, enter the following command: root> platform security access-control profile edit group name <profile- name> group <group> write-lvl <write-lvl> read-lvl <read-lvl> Table 168 User Profile CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type...
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring Users (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description profile--name Text String Up to 49 characters The name of the user profile. profile-name Text String Up to 49 characters The name of the user profile. channel-type Variable Serial...
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Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring Users (CLI) root> platform security access-control user-account edit expired-date user-name <user-name> expired-date <expired-date> To change a user account's profile, enter the following command: root> platform security access-control user-account edit profile-name user-name <user-name> profile-name <profile name> To delete a user account, enter the following command: root>...
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS (CLI) Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS (CLI) The web interface protocol for accessing PTP 850 can be configured to HTTP (default) or HTTPS. It cannot be set to both at the same time.
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Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS (CLI) root> platform security csr-show-server-parameters To generate and upload a CSR, enter the following command in root view: root> platform security csr-generate-and-upload To display the status of a pending CSR generation and upload operation, enter the following command in root view: root>...
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description server-path Text String The directory path to which you are uploading the CSR. Enter the path relative to the SFTP user's home directory, not the absolute path.If the location is the home directory, it should be left empty.
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS (CLI) Table 172 Certificate Download and Install CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description server-ipv4 Dotted Any valid IPv4 IP The IPv4 address of the PC or laptop you decimal address.
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Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS (CLI) root> platform security url-protocol-set url-protocol http To display which protocol is currently enabled, enter the following command in root view: root> platform security url-protocol-show phn-3963_008v000 Page 18-16...
Configuring HTTPS Cipher Hardening (CLI) Configuring HTTPS Cipher Hardening (CLI) You can configure the PTP 850E to operate in HTTPS strong mode. In HTTPS strong mode, SSLv3, TLSv1.0, and TLSv1.1 are disabled completely and only certain ciphers are supported in TLSv1.2.
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Blocking Telnet Access (CLI) Blocking Telnet Access (CLI) You can block telnet access to the unit. By default, telnet access is not blocked. To block telnet access, enter the following command: root> platform security protocols-control telnet admin set disable To unblock telnet access, enter the following command: root>...
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Uploading the Security Log (CLI) Uploading the Security Log (CLI) The security log is an internal system file which records all changes performed to any security feature, as well as all security related events. In order to read the security log, you must upload the log to an FTP or SFTP server.
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Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Uploading the Security Log (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description protocol Variable sftp username Text String The user name for the FTP or SFTP session. password Text String The password for the FTP or SFTP session.
Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Uploading the Configuration Log (CLI) Uploading the Configuration Log (CLI) The configuration log lists actions performed by users to configure the system. This file is mostly used for security, to identify suspicious user actions. It can also be used for troubleshooting. In order to upload the configuration log, you must install an FTP or SFTP server on the laptop or PC from which you are performing the upload.
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Chapter 18: Access Management and Security (CLI) Uploading the Configuration Log (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description file-name Text String The name you want to give the file you are exporting. Note: You must add the suffix .zip to the file name.
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Uploading the Configuration Log (CLI) Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) This section includes: • Viewing Current Alarms (CLI) • Viewing the Event Log (CLI) • Editing Alarm Text and Severity (CLI) Configuring a Timeout for Trap Generation (CLI) •...
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Viewing Current Alarms (CLI) Viewing Current Alarms (CLI) To display all alarms currently raised on the unit, enter the following command in root view: root> platform status current-alarm show module unit To display the most severe alarm currently raised in the unit, enter the following command in root view: root>...
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Viewing the Event Log (CLI) Viewing the Event Log (CLI) The Event Log displays a list of current and historical events and information about each event. To display the event log, enter the following command in root view: root>...
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Editing Alarm Text and Severity (CLI) Editing Alarm Text and Severity (CLI) You can view a list of alarm types, edit the severity level assigned to individual alarm types, and add additional descriptive text to individual alarm types. This section includes: Displaying Alarm Information (CLI) •...
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Editing Alarm Text and Severity (CLI) Example The following command changes the severity level of alarm type 401 (Ethernet Loss of Carrier) to minor: root> platform status alarm-management set alarm-id 401 severity-level minor Setting Alarms to their Default Values (CLI) To restore an alarm type’s severity level and description to their default values, enter the following command in root view:...
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Configuring a Timeout for Trap Generation (CLI) Configuring a Timeout for Trap Generation (CLI) You can configure a wait time of up to 120 seconds after an alarm is cleared in the system before the alarm is actually reported as being cleared.
Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds and Displaying Voltage PMs (CLI) Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds and Displaying Voltage PMs (CLI) You can configure undervoltage and overvoltage alarm thresholds. The default thresholds for PTP 850E are: • Undervoltage Raise Threshold: 36V Undervoltage Clear Threshold: 38V •...
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds and Displaying Voltage PMs (CLI) For example: The Integrity column indicates whether the PM is valid: 0 indicates a valid entry. • 1 indicates an invalid entry. This can be caused by a power surge or power failure that occurred during the interval. phn-3963_008v000 Page 19-8...
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Uploading Unit Info (CLI) Uploading Unit Info (CLI) You can generate a unit information file, which includes technical data about the unit. This file can be forwarded to customer support, at their request, to help in analyzing issues that may occur. Note For troubleshooting, it is important that an updated configuration file be included in Unit Info files that are sent to customer support.
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Uploading Unit Info (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description server-ipv4 Dotted Any valid IPv4 address. The IPv4 address of the PC or laptop you decimal are using as the FTP or SFTP server. format.
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Uploading Unit Info (CLI) root> platform security configuration-log-upload-params set path \\ file- name cfg_log ip-address 192.168.1.99 protocol ftp username anonymous password 12345 root> platform unit-info channel set protocol ftp The following commands create a unit information file and export the file to the external server location: root>...
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Activating the Radio Logger (CLI) Activating the Radio Logger (CLI) The Radio Logger, when it is activated, gathers technical data about the radio and its operation. By default, the Radio Logger is inactive. It should only be activated by technical support personnel, or by the customer upon request of Customer Support team.
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) This section includes: • Performing Radio Loopback (CLI) • Performing Ethernet Loopback (CLI) Performing Radio Loopback (CLI) You can perform loopback on a radio. To set the timeout for a radio loopback, enter the following command: radio[x/x]>...
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) To configure the loopback duration time, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth[x/x]> loopback set duration <loopback-duration> You can select whether to swap DA and SA MAC addresses during the loopback. Swapping addresses prevents Ethernet loops from occurring.
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) root> ethernet soam md create md-id <md-id> md-format none md-name <md- name> md-level <md-level> Note Support for MDs with the MD format Character String is planned for future release. In this release, the software enables you to configure such MDs, but they have no functionality.
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) root> ethernet soam meg create meg-id <meg-id> meg-fmt charString meg- name <meg-name> meg-level <meg-level> service-id <0-4095> Note In the current release, charString is the only available MEG name format. The following command creates MEG ID 1, named FR-10, with MEG level 4, assigned to Ethernet service 20. root>...
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description meg-level Number The MEG level must be the same for MEGs on both sides of the link. Higher levels take priority over lower levels. If MEGs are nested, the OAM flow of each MEG must be clearly identifiable and separable from the OAM flows of the other MEGs.
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description Variable interval1s interval1s – One second (default) interval10s interval10s – 10 seconds interval1min interval1min – One minute interval10min interval10min – 10 minutes It takes a MEP 3.5 times the CCM interval to determine a change in the status of its peer MEP.
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) Adding Local and Remote MEPs (CLI) To add a MEP, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet soam meg mep add meg-id <meg-id> mep-id <mep-id> The following command adds MEP 25 on MEG 2. root>...
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) Enabling Local MEPs (CLI) Once you have added a MEP and defined it as a local MEP, you must enable the MEP by setting the MEP to Active, enabling CCM messages from the MEP, and assigning a CCM-LTM priority to the MEP. To set a MEP to Active, enter the following command in root view: root>...
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description ccm-enabled Variable true true – CCM messages are enabled on the MEP. false false – CCM messages are disabled on the MEP. ccm-ltm- Number The p-bit included in CCMs sent by this MEP.
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) To display a list of remote MEPs (RMEPs) and their parameters per MEG and local MEP, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet soam mep rmep show meg-id meg-id < meg-id <meg-id> mep-id <mep-id>...
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) Parameter Description MD Level The maintenance level of the MD (0-7). MEG Parameters MA ID The MA/MEG ID. Format charString in the current release. Name The MA/MEG name (43 characters). Level The MEG Level (0-7).
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) Parameter Description operState The operational state of the remote MEP. OKorFail Time The timestamp marked by the remote MEP indicating the most recent CCM OK or failure it recorded. If none, this field indicates the amount of time, in msec intervals, since SOAM was activated.
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) To display the same information without the last RX error CCM and fault messages, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet soam mep status general show meg-id <meg-id> mep-id <mep- id>...
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) For example, the following command sets the loopback frame size to 128 and the pattern to zero for MEP 25 on MEG 1 to 5 seconds: root> ethernet soam loopback data set meg-id 1 mep-id 25 size 128 pattern zeroPattern To set the loopback priority bit size and drop-enable parameters, enter the following command in root view: root>...
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Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Performing Diagnostics (CLI) To stop a loopback that is already in progress, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet soam loopback stop meg-id <meg-id> mep-id <mep-id> Table 184 Loopback CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values...
Chapter 19: Alarm Management and Troubleshooting (CLI) Working in CW Mode (Single or Dual Tone) (CLI) Working in CW Mode (Single or Dual Tone) (CLI) CW mode enables you to transmit a single or dual frequency tones, for debugging purposes. To work in CW mode, enter the following command: radio[x/x] modem tx-source set admin enable Once you are in CW mode, you can choose to transmit in a single tone or two tones.
Chapter 20: Maintenance Temperature Ranges Temperature Ranges The following are the permissible unit temperature ranges for PTP 850E. • -33°C to 55° – Temperature range for continuous operating temperature with high reliability. -45°C to 60°C – Temperature range for exceptional temperatures, tested successfully, with limited margins.
PTP 850E Connector Pin-outs PTP 850E Connector Pin-outs The PTP 850E has an optical SFP cage, an optical SFP/SFP+ cage, and a QSFP cage for traffic and one RJ-45 port for management and PoE. For power, the PTP 850E has a DC power interface (-48V) (P1). Optionally, when used in all-outdoor configurations, the PTP 850E can also receive PoE power from a Ceragon-approved PoE injector via P2, an RJ-45 port that is also used for management.
Chapter 20: Maintenance PTP 850E Connector Pin-outs Protection/XPIC Port This port is reserved for future use. RSL Interface PTP 850E uses a two-pin connection to measure the RSL level using standard voltmeter test leads: Figure 185: RSL Pins phn-3963_008v000 Page 20-5...
Chapter 20: Maintenance PTP 850E LEDs PTP 850E LEDs The PTP 850E provides the following LEDs to indicate the status of the unit's interfaces, and the unit as a whole: P2 MGT/PoE GbE Electrical Interface (RJ-45) LEDs • • P4/Eth3-7 40G Optical Interface (QSFP) LED P5/Eth7 10G Optical Interface (SFP+) LEDs •...
Chapter 20: Maintenance PTP 850E LEDs • Red Blinking - The power is on, and one or more major or critical alarms are raised. Green - The power is on, the unit is up, the radio is up, and no major or critical alarms are raised.
Chapter 20: Maintenance PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Standard PoE PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Standard PoE Figure 186: PoE Injector Connectors PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Standard PoE This section applies to the standard PoE Injector units with the following marketing models: •...
Chapter 20: Maintenance PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Standard PoE Data Port Table 188: PoE Injector RJ-45 Data Port Supporting 10/100/1000Base-T Pin no. Description BI_DA+ (Bi-directional pair +A) BI_DA- (Bi-directional pair -A) BI_DB+ (Bi-directional pair +B) BI_DC+ (Bi-directional pair +C) BI_DC- (Bi-directional pair -C) BI_DB- (Bi-directional pair -B) BI_DD+ (Bi-directional pair +D)
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Chapter 20: Maintenance PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Standard PoE • Green - The power is on, and all carriers are operational (up). Orange - A signal degrade condition exists in at least one carrier. • • Red - A loss of frame (LOF) or excessive BER condition exists in at least one carrier. phn-3963_008v000 Page 20-10...
Chapter 20: Maintenance PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE This section applies the passive PoE used with power redundancy. The marketing model of this PoE is: AC_POE_STD_PWR_INDOOR PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE RJ-45 output pinout: 3,4,5,6 (+) and 1,2,7,8 (-) AC Input Specifications AC Input Voltage Rating: 100VAC to 240VAC...
Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Chapter 21: Alarms List The following table lists all alarms used in the PTP 850 products. Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes User enabled framer digital Alarm Framer digital loopback Warning...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Slot X port XX is mirrored to Mirroring is enabled by user Alarm Minor Disable mirroring. slot Y port YY configuration.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Event Ethernet interface is up Warning Event Ethernet interface is down Warning Check link performance. Fade in the link. Check IF cable and replace if Defective IF cable.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Event Radio interface is down Warning Reset the system. Alarm Corrupted inventory file Warning The inventory file is corrupted Reinstall the software.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Event License key loading failure Major Event License key loaded successfully Warning The current configuration does not Get the list of features' match the licensed feature set.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Add radio module. Radio protection function is missing 14. Replace a defective existing 1007 Alarm Radio protection no mate Major radio module, module defected or radio module.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes User approved download of 1111 Event Warning software version file 1112 Event Software download status: Warning 1113 Event Missing components: Warning Incomplete file set;...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Mark sure protocol details are Communications failure. Configuration file transfer properly configured. 1158 Event Warning failure File not found in server Make sure file exists.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Radio MRMC script LUT file is Download the specific radio MRMC 1302 Alarm Critical Missing radio MRMC script LUT file not found script LUT file Radio MRMC script modem file...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Check for obstruction in link path. RSL is very low due to: Check the antennae alignment Weather conditions, and link planning.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Check IF cable and connectors. Verify that the N-Type connector inner pin is not Cable is not connected to RMC spliced.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Check installation conditions. Installation conditions. Verify operation as per 1706 Alarm RFU extreme temperature Warning product's specs. Defective RFU. Replace RFU.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Installation conditions. Check installation conditions. 1713 Alarm RFU PA extreme temperature Warning Defective RFU. Replace RFU. 1721 Event RFU reset Major 1722...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Check that the fault is not due to rain/multi-path fading or lack of LOS. Improper installation. Check link settings (TX power, TX 1729 Alarm RFU RX level path2 out of range...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Check ETH cable and connectors Power is enabled but Replace RIC (Radio Interface consumption reached the Card) threshold. 1732 Alarm Power supply cable short...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes 1741 Event Card was inserted to slot Warning Card was inserted to slot Reset Card. 1742 Alarm Card is in interconnection Major Card is down as a result of card failure state...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes FAN Card is missing. Insert FAN Card. 1755 Alarm FAN Card is missing in slot Critical Disable slot. Slot enabled when empty.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes User command 1767 Event RFU installation in progress Warning User command 1768 Event RFU installation successfully Warning completed 1769 Event Unit Perform Power up...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes RFU software download is not Wrong type of XCVR, the XCVR 1775 Alarm Critical Replace the XCVR possible. hardware is METRO.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Line is not properly Reconnect line. 2003 Alarm Loss of Signal (LOS) on TDM- Major connected. LIC's front panel clock port Check line cables.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Line is not properly Reconnect line. 2012 Alarm Alarm Indication Signal (AIS) on Major connected. TDM-LIC TDM port Check line cables.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Line is not properly Reconnect line. 2022 Alarm Excessive BER on TDM-LIC Major connected. STM1/OC3 port Check line cables. External equipment is faulty.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Line is not properly Install SFP properly. 2030 Alarm Signal Degrade on TDM-LIC Minor connected. STM1/OC3 port Reconnect line. SFP is not properly installed.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Line is not properly Reconnect line. 2036 Alarm Payload Mismatch Path (PLM) Minor connected. received on TDM-LIC Check line cables. VC12/VT1.5 External equipment is faulty.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes The user has issued a lockout Clear the lockout command 2042 Alarm TDM-LIC card protection group Minor command lockout command is on TDM-LIC card is not installed Install the missing TDM-LIC...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Reconnect line. Line is not properly Alarm Indication Signal on Line connected. Check line cables. 2102 Alarm Interface (MS-AIS/AIS-L) Minor received.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Replace SFP or insert SFP if it SFP Transmit Failure on STM- is not inserted correctly. 2111 Alarm Critical SFP is faulty.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Check link performance on all radio channels in Multi Carrier ABC group. Check radio alarms for All channels in Multi Carrier ABC 2200 Alarm Multi Carrier ABC LOF.
Page 543
Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Replace RMC. Hardware failure between RMC Replace TCC. 2206 Alarm LVDS RX Error Slot 5. Major and TCC cards. Replace chassis.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Multi Carrier ABC Channel Id Compare Channel ID configuration 2221 Alarm Warning Configuration failure. Mismatch Ch3. with remote side. Multi Carrier ABC Channel Id Compare Channel ID configuration 2222...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Multi Carrier ABC Channel Id 2241 Alarm Warning Admin state for channel is down. Enable admin state for channel. Manual Disabled Ch7.
Page 546
Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes 4000 Alarm Card has one or more HW Critical One or more HW faults. Replace card. failures 4001 Alarm Card can not function in Warning...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes The pipe interface clock-source 5014 Alarm in signal-interface table is not Major system-clock The pipe is missing an edge 5015 Alarm Major...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes 5035 soam-def- Cross Connect CCM received Major CCM from another MAID or lower Check MA/MEG and MEP xcon- MEG level have been received configurations failure...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes 5100 Alarm Master key mismatch cross Critical Master Key was not set correctly. Verify the Master Key. over the link 5101 Alarm No Master Key set, default...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Radiuo encryption not No Payload Encryption Activation Insert suitable Activation Key and 5112 Alarm Major supported Key inserted reboot the unit A connectivity failure in Specific defect dependent: User...
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes Not all MIMO carriers are set Load same MIMO compatible to same radio script or script is radio script to all MIMO not compatible for MIMO.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE Alarm ID Type Description Severity Probable Cause Corrective Action Notes 5102 Alarm Payload REncryption failure Critical Radio LOF on Tx/Rx direction. Validate the MSE on both sides of the link. The session key does not match across the link.
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Chapter 21: Alarms List PoE Injector Pin-outs and LEDs – Passive PoE (1) Supported by PTP 850E (2) Supported by PTP 850E only phn-3963_008v000 Page 21-50...
Glossary Term Definition Adaptive Bandwidth Control Adaptive Bandwidth Notification Alternating Current ACAP Adjacent Channel Alternate Polarization ACCP Adjacent Channel Co-Polarization Adaptive Coded Modulation Adaptive Clock Recovery Advanced Encryption Standard Advanced Frequency Reuse Automatic Gain Control Alarm Indicating Signal Automatic Level Control AMCC Advanced Multi-Carrier Configuration ANSI...
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Term Definition Committed Burst Size CCDP Co-Channel Dual Polarization CCITT Comité Consultatif International de Télégraph et des Télécommunications (ITU) Carrier-Ethernet Transport Connectivity Fault Management Committed Information Rate Command Line Interface Clock CODEC Coder/Decoder Class of Service Destination Address Direct Current Diversity Circulator Block Data Communication Channel Digital Cross Connect...
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Term Definition Frame Check Sequence File Transfer Protocol Gigabit Ethernet Generic Framing Procedure (Procedure for mapping of Ethernet traffic over a transport network) Ground Generic Routing Encapsulation GPRS Tunneling Protocol HBER High Bit Error Rate HDLC High-level Data Link Control High Frequency (3-30 MHz) Hot-Standby HTTP...
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Term Definition LCAS Link Capacity Adjustment Scheme Light Emitting Diode Line Interface Unit LLDP Link Layer Discovery Protocol Link Loss Forwarding License Management System Local Oscillator Loss of Carrier Loss of Frame Loss of Signal Large Scale Integration Long-Term Evolution MAID Maintenance Association Identifier MPLS...
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Term Definition Peak Burst Rate Personal Computer Printed Circuit Board Packed Delay Variation Peak Information Rate Phase Locked Loop Performance Monitoring Provider Network PROM Programmable Read Only Memory Packet Switched Network Precision Timing Protocol Power Quality of Experience Quality of Service RBAC Role Based Access Control RCVR...
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Term Definition SETS Synchronous Equipment Timing Source SFTP Secure FTP Service Level Agreements SNCP Simple Network Connection Protection SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol Service Network Point Signal to Noise Ratio SNTP Simple Network Time Protocol Section OverHead (ETSI) SONET Synchronous Optical NETwork Service Point Secured Shell (Protocol) Synchronization Status Message...
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Term Definition Waveguide WRED Weighted Random Early Detection Weighted Round Robin XCVR Transceiver (Transmitter/Receiver) XMTR Transmitter Crystal Oscillator Cross Polar Differentiation Cross Polariztion Isolation XPIC Cross Polarization Interference Cancellation phn-3963_008v000 Page VII...