Ceragon FibeAir IP-20 All-Outdoor Series User Manual

Ceragon FibeAir IP-20 All-Outdoor Series User Manual

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User Guide
FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor
Products:
IP-20C
IP-20C-HP
IP-20S
IP-20E
IP-20V
July 2019
Rev W | CeraOS 10.9
© Copyright 2019 by Ceragon Networks Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Summary of Contents for Ceragon FibeAir IP-20 All-Outdoor Series

  • Page 1 User Guide FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products: IP-20C IP-20C-HP IP-20S IP-20E IP-20V July 2019 Rev W | CeraOS 10.9 © Copyright 2019 by Ceragon Networks Ltd. All rights reserved.
  • Page 2 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Notice This document contains information that is proprietary to Ceragon Networks Ltd. No part of this publication may be reproduced, modified, or distributed without prior written authorization of Ceragon Networks Ltd. This document is provided as is, without warranty of any kind.
  • Page 3: Table Of Contents

    2.10.3 Entering the Activation Key ....................... 82 2.10.4 Activating Demo Mode ......................82 2.10.5 Activation Key Reclaim ....................... 82 2.10.6 Displaying a List of Activation-Key-Enabled Features ..............84 2.11 Setting the Time and Date (Optional) ..................88 Page 3 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 4 3.5.6 Displaying LACP Parameters and Statistics ................173 Configuring XPIC........................180 3.6.1 XPIC Overview .......................... 180 3.6.2 Configuring the Radio Carriers ....................180 3.6.3 Creating an XPIC Group ......................180 3.6.4 Performing Antenna Alignment for XPIC ................. 181 Page 4 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 5 4.7.1 Viewing Current Software Versions ..................235 4.7.2 Software Upgrade Overview ....................236 4.7.3 Downloading and Installing Software ..................236 4.7.4 Configuring a Timed Installation ....................243 Backing Up and Restoring Configurations ................245 Page 5 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 6 6.1.3 The Ethernet Services Page ...................... 304 6.1.4 Adding an Ethernet Service ...................... 305 6.1.5 Editing a Service ........................307 6.1.6 Deleting a Service ........................307 6.1.7 Enabling, Disabling, or Deleting Multiple Services ..............307 Page 6 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 7 7.7.1 Scheduling Overview ........................ 384 7.7.2 Configuring Priority Profiles ..................... 384 7.7.3 Configuring WFQ Profiles ......................390 7.7.4 Assigning a Priority Profile to an Interface................394 7.7.5 Assigning a WFQ Profile to an Interface .................. 394 Page 7 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 8 10.5.5 Configuring a RADIUS Server ....................446 10.6 Configuring X.509 CSR Certificates and HTTPS ................ 470 10.6.1 Generating a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) File ..............470 10.6.2 Downloading a Certificate ......................473 Page 8 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 9 13.9.1 Activation Key Overview (CLI) ....................526 13.9.2 Viewing the Activation Key Status Parameters (CLI) ..............526 13.9.3 Entering the Activation Key (CLI) ..................... 527 13.9.4 Activating Demo Mode (CLI) ....................527 13.9.5 Activation Key Reclaim (CLI)..................... 527 Page 9 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 10 14.4.6 Enabling and Disabling the LAG Group Shutdown in Case of Degradation Event Option (CLI)554 14.4.7 Configuring Enhanced LAG Distribution (CLI) ................555 14.4.8 Displaying LACP Parameters and Statistics (CLI) ..............555 14.5 Configuring XPIC (CLI) ......................560 14.5.1 XPIC Overview (CLI) ........................560 Page 10 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 11 15.3.3 Displaying the SNMP Settings (CLI) ..................592 15.3.4 Configuring Trap Managers (CLI) ..................... 592 15.4 Configuring the Internal Ports for FTP or SFTP (CLI) ..............595 15.5 Upgrading the Software (CLI) ....................596 Page 11 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 12 16.6.8 Configuring the MSE Thresholds and Displaying the MSE PMs (CLI) ........631 16.6.9 Configuring the XPI Thresholds and Displaying the XPI PMs (CLI) ........... 633 16.6.10 Displaying ACM PMs (CLI) ..................636 Page 12 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 13 18.2.4 Deleting a Rate Meter Profile (CLI) ..................725 18.2.5 Attaching a Rate Meter (Policer) to an Interface (CLI) ............. 726 18.2.6 Configuring the Line Compensation Value for a Rate Meter (Policer) (CLI)......731 Page 13 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 14 20.3.1 Configuring an Ethernet Interface as a Synchronization Source (CLI) ........789 20.3.2 Configuring a Radio Interface as a Synchronization Source (CLI) ..........790 20.3.3 Clearing All Sync Sources (CLI) ....................791 20.4 Configuring the Outgoing Clock (CLI) ..................792 Page 14 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 15 Configuring a Timeout for Trap Generation (CLI) ..............821 22.5 Disabling Alarms and Events (CLI) .................... 822 22.6 Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds and Displaying Voltage PMs (CLI) ....... 823 22.7 Uploading Unit Info (CLI) ......................825 Page 15 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 16 23.7.4 MGT/PROT - Management (FE-Standard) and Protection (FE-Non-Standard) ......863 23.7.5 DC ............................. 864 23.7.6 RSL Interface ..........................864 23.8 IP-20S LEDs ..........................864 23.8.1 Electrical GbE Interface (RJ-45) LEDs ..................864 Page 16 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 17 Status LED ......................880 23.13 PoE Injector Pin-outs ........................ 881 23.13.1 PoE Port ......................... 881 23.13.2 Data Port ........................ 881 23.13.3 DC ........................... 882 23.14 PoE Injector LEDs ........................882 23.14.1 Radio LED ....................... 882 Page 17 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 18 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Section V: Appendices....................883 24. Alarms List ......................884 25. Abbreviations ....................... 939 Page 18 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 19 Figure 34: Frequency Scanner Page – IP-20V – Continuous Mode ............101 Figure 35: Frequency Scanner Page – IP-20E – Single Mode ...............102 Figure 36: Frequency Scanner Results – Graph Format (IP-20V – Continuous Mode) ......104 Page 19 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 20 Figure 57: 2 + 0 Multi Carrier ABC Quick Configuration Wizard – Radio Parameters Configuration Page ................................134 Figure 58: 2 + 0 Multi Carrier ABC Quick Configuration Wizard – Radio Parameters Configuration Page (XPIC) ..............................135 Page 20 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 21 Figure 91: Multiband Configuration with Direct Inband Management to the Paired Unit ....163 Figure 92: Multiband Configuration with Direct Inband Management to the IP-20C, IP-20C-HP, or IP- 20S ................................164 Figure 93: Create LAG Group – Page 1 ....................168 Page 21 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 22 Figure 126: MIMO 4x4 - Edit Members Page ..................205 Figure 127: Diversity Groups - Edit Members Page................205 Figure 128: Advanced Space Diversity (ASD) ..................207 Figure 129: ASD Data Paths ........................208 Figure 130: Advanced Multi Carrier Configuration Page..............210 Page 22 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 23 Figure 163: Install Parameters Page .....................243 Figure 164: Install Parameters Page .....................244 Figure 165: Backup Files Page ......................246 Figure 166: Configuration Management Page ..................247 Figure 167: FTP Parameters Page (Configuration Management) ............248 Page 23 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 24 Figure 200: Aggregate PM Report Page ....................290 Figure 201: MSE PM Report Page ......................291 Figure 202: Modem MSE Thresholds Configuration – Edit Page............292 Figure 203: XPI PM Report Page......................293 Figure 204: XPI Thresholds Configuration – Edit Page .................294 Page 24 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 25 Figure 237: 802.1Q Classification Page ....................349 Figure 238: 802.1Q Classification - Edit Page ..................349 Figure 239: 802.1AD Classification Page ....................350 Figure 240: 802.1Q Classification - Edit Page ..................350 Figure 241: DSCP Classification Page....................351 Page 25 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 26 Figure 272: Logical Interfaces – Scheduler – Egress Port Scheduling WFQ ..........395 Figure 273: Egress CoS PM Configuration Page ...................397 Figure 274: Egress CoS PM Configuration – Add Page .................398 Figure 275: Egress CoS PM Page ......................399 Page 26 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 27 Figure 309: Access Control User Accounts Page ..................440 Figure 310: Access Control User Accounts - Add Page .................440 Figure 311: Radius Configuration Page ....................443 Figure 312: Radius Configuration – Edit Page ..................444 Page 27 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 28 Figure 344: Event Log ...........................482 Figure 345: Alarm Configuration Page ....................484 Figure 346: Alarm Configuration Page – Expanded ................485 Figure 347: Alarm Configuration - Edit Page ..................486 Figure 348: Voltage Alarm Configuration Page ..................487 Page 28 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 29 Figure 381: IP-20S DC Connector ......................864 Figure 382: IP-20E Interfaces – ESE ......................868 Figure 383: IP-20E Interfaces – ESS ......................869 Figure 384: IP-20E Interfaces – ESP ......................870 Figure 385: Two-Wire to PoE Port Power Adaptor ................872 Page 29 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 30 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 386: RSL Pins ..........................872 Figure 387: IP-20V Interfaces .......................876 Figure 388: Two-Wire to PoE Port Power Adaptor ................877 Figure 389: RSL Pins ..........................878 Figure 390: PoE Injector Connectors ....................881 Page 30 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 31 Table 32: SFP Inventory Parameters ....................257 Table 33: SFP Digital Diagnostic Monitoring (DDM) Parameters ............258 Table 34: DDM PMs ..........................259 Table 35: Radio Status Parameters ......................265 Table 36: Remote Radio Parameters ....................267 Page 31 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 32 Table 69: LLDP Local System Port Parameters ..................415 Table 70: LLDP Local System Management Parameters ..............417 Table 71: LLDP Statistics ........................418 Table 72: LLDP Port TX Statistics ......................419 Table 73: LLDP Port RX Statistics ......................419 Page 32 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 33 Table 107: Configuration Management CLI Parameters ..............601 Table 108: Configuration Backup and Restore CLI Parameters ............602 Table 109: Configuration Import and Restore CLI Parameters ............603 Table 110: Unit Parameters CLI Parameters ..................605 Page 33 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 34 Table 144: Service Point Enable/Disable Flooding CLI Parameters ............669 Table 145: C-VLAN CoS Preservation Mode CLI Parameters ..............672 Table 146: C-VLAN Preservation CLI Parameters .................674 Table 147: S-VLAN CoS Preservation CLI Parameters................675 Page 34 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 35 Table 181: MPLS EXP Bit Classification Table Modification CLI Parameters ........721 Table 182: Default CoS CLI Parameters ....................722 Table 183: Rate Meter Profile CLI Parameters ..................723 Table 184: Assigning Rate Meter for Unicast Traffic CLI Parameters ...........727 Page 35 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 36 Table 217: SyncE Regenerator CLI Parameters ..................787 Table 218: Sync Source Ethernet CLI Parameters ................789 Table 219: Sync Source Radio CLI Parameters ..................791 Table 220: Outgoing Clock CLI Parameters ..................792 Table 222: 1588 Transparent Clock CLI Parameters ................797 Page 36 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 37 Table 256: IP-20S MGT/PROT Interface - RJ-45 Pinouts ...............863 Table 257: IP-20E Port Distribution Per Hardware Model ..............867 Table 258: IP-20E Eth1/PoE Interface- RJ-45..................871 Table 259: IP-20E MGT Interface - RJ-45/ Pinouts ................871 Page 37 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 38 Table 260: IP-20V MGT Interface - RJ-45/ Pinouts ................877 Table 261: PoE Injector PoE Port - RJ-45 Pinouts .................881 Table 262: PoE Injector RJ-45 Data Port Supporting 10/100/1000Base-T ...........881 Table 263: Alarms ..........................884 Table 264: Abbreviations ........................939 Page 38 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 39 Do not look into coaxial connectors at closer than reading distance (30 cm). Do not look into an open waveguide unless you are absolutely sure that the power is turned off. Page 39 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 40 Restricted Access Area: DC powered equipment should only be installed in a Restricted Access Area. Installation Codes: The equipment must be installed according to country national electrical codes. For North America, equipment must be installed in accordance Page 40 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 41 är kopplad till kabel-TV nät kan i vissa fall medfőra risk főr brand. Főr att undvika detta skall vid anslutning av utrustningen till kabel-TV nät galvanisk isolator finnas mellan utrustningen och kabel-TV nätet. Page 41 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 42 Gefahrenrisiko: Durch Abtrennen einer Stromquelle wird nur ein Stromversorgungsmodul abgetrennt. Um die Einheit vollständig zu isolieren, trennen Sie alle Stromversorgungen ab. Maschinenlärminformations-Verordnung - 3. GPSGV, der höchste Schalldruckpegel beträgt 70 dB(A) oder weniger gemäß EN ISO 7779. Page 42 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 43: Table 1: Electronic Information Products Declaration Of Hazardous/Toxic Substances

    (Cd) Chromium Biphenyls (PBB) Diphenyl Ethers (Cr VI) (PBDE) PCB/Circuit Comply Comply Comply Comply Comply Comply Modules Mechanical Comply Comply Comply Comply Comply Comply Parts Cables Comply Comply Comply Comply Comply Comply Page 43 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 44 FibeAir IP-20E Technical Description • FibeAir IP-20E Installation Guide FibeAir IP-20V Technical Description • • FibeAir IP-20V Installation Guide • FibeAir IP-20 Series MIB Reference • Release Notes for FibeAir IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Page 44 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 45: Section I: Introduction

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Section I: Introduction Page 45 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 46: Introduction

    IP-20E • IP-20V • Each of these products except IP-20C-HP can be used with a Ceragon-approved PoE Injector. 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.
  • Page 47: Configuration Tips

    7 to ensure that management packets receive high priority and are not discarded in instances of network congestion. See Configuring Ethernet Service(s). For instructions on configuring in-band management on the IP-20, see Configuring In-Band Management. Page 47 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 48 Also, the Admin status of the port must be set to Down before applying the MIMO 4x4 or SD 2+2 configuration. See Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager). Page 48 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 49: Ip-20C Overview

    IP-20C-HP nodes in the site. The diplexer units, because they are passive, are much less likely to require replacement, so the maintenance of spare parts for the diplexer units is much less of a concern for the operator. Page 49 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 50: Ip-20S Overview

    IP-20E R2H hardware models, the following terms are used: • IP-20E R2H ESP – Includes all IP-20E R2 models that support a 10G interface and include ESP in their marketing models. IP-20E R2H – All other IP-20E R2H models. • Page 50 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 51: Ip-20V Overview

    DC power supply to the IP-20C, IP-20S, IP-20E, or IP-20V unit. To do so, the PoE injector combines 48VDC input and GbE signals via a standard CAT5E cable using a proprietary Ceragon design. The PoE injector can be ordered with a DC feed protection and with +24VDC support, as well as EMC surge protection for both indoor and outdoor installation options.
  • Page 52: Fibeair Ip-20 Assured Platform

    The following products are included in the FibeAir IP-20 Assured platform: • FibeAir IP-20C Assured • FibeAir IP-20S Assured Note: CeraOS 10.9 cannot be used in FibeAir IP-20 Assured platforms. For FibeAir IP-20 Assured, use CeraOS 8.3. Page 52 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 53: The Web-Based Element Management System

    IP-20 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. Page 53 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 54: Web Ems

    ◦ Click to hide the sub-options under a menu item. The main section of the page provides the page's basic functionality. • Figure 1: Main Web EMS Page Page 54 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 55: Figure 2: Displaying A Representation Of The Front Panel

    Figure 2: Displaying a Representation of the Front Panel Figure 3: Main Web EMS Page with Representation of Front Panel – IP-20C and IP-20S Figure 4: Main Web EMS Page with Representation of Front Panel – IP-20C-HP Page 55 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 56: Figure 5: Main Web Ems Page With Representation Of Front Panel - Ip-20E

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 5: Main Web EMS Page with Representation of Front Panel – IP-20E Figure 6: Main Web EMS Page with Representation of Front Panel – IP-20V Page 56 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 57: Figure 7: Main Web Ems Page With Active And Standby Tabs

    HSB radio protection, see Configuring Unit Protection with HSB Radio Protection (External Protection). Note: HSB protection is only available for IP-20C and IP-20S. Figure 7: Main Web EMS Page with Active and Standby Tabs Page 57 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 58: The Unit Summary Page

    To customize which columns appear in a section, click next to the section title. A list of columns is displayed. Select only the columns you want to display and click again. Page 58 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 59: The Radio Summary Page

    For additional information, see Configuring the Remote Radio Parameters. • Radio Transmitter – Mute status, maximum and operational TX level, modulation, and bit rate. For additional information, see Configuring the Radio Parameters. Page 59 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 60: Figure 12: Radio Summary Page - Customizing Columns

    Select only the columns you want to display and click again. Note: When one or more columns are hidden, the icon turns white ( ). Figure 12: Radio Summary Page – Customizing Columns Page 60 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 61: Reference Guide To Web Ems Menu Structure

    Backing Up and Restoring Configurations Activation Key > Activation Key Configuration Configuring the Activation Key Activation Key > Activation Key Overview Displaying a List of Activation-Key-Enabled Features Security > General > Configuration Operating in FIPS Mode Page 61 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 62: Table 3: Ip-20 Web Ems Menu Hierarchy - Faults Menu

    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 ATPC Configuring ATPC and ATPC Override Timer Page 62 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 63: Table 5: Ip-20 Web Ems Menu Hierarchy - Ethernet Menu

    Table 5: IP-20 Web EMS Menu Hierarchy – Ethernet Menu Sub-Menus For Further Information General Configuration Setting the MRU Size and the S-VLAN Ethertype Services Configuring Ethernet Service(s) Interfaces > Physical Interfaces Configuring Ethernet Interfaces Page 63 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 64 Configuring Queue Shaper Profiles QoS > Shaper > Service Bundle Profiles Configuring Service Bundle Shaper Profiles QoS > Scheduler > Priority Profiles Configuring Priority Profiles QoS > Scheduler > WFQ Profiles Configuring WFQ Profiles Page 64 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 65 Protocols > LACP > Port > Statistics Displaying LACP Port Statistics Protocols > LACP > Port > Debug Displaying LACP Port Debug Statistics Interfaces > Groups > LAG Configuring Link Aggregation (LAG) and LACP Page 65 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 66: Table 6: Ip-20 Web Ems Menu Hierarchy - Sync Menu

    Table 8: IP-20 Web EMS Menu Hierarchy – Utilities Menu Sub-Menus For Further Information Restart HTTP Restarting the HTTP Server ifIndex Calculator Calculating an ifIndex MIB Reference Guide Displaying, Searching, and Saving a list of MIB Entities Page 66 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 67: Section Ii: Web Ems Configuration

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Section II: Web EMS Configuration Page 67 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 68: Getting Started

    Connect the IP-20 unit to a PC by means of a TP cable. The cable is connected to the MGT port on the IP-20 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. Page 68 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 69: Pc Setup

    3 Select Local Area Connection > Properties > Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IP), and set the following parameters: ◦ IP address: 192.168.1.10 ◦ Subnet mask 255.255.255.0 ◦ No default gateway 4 Click OK to apply the settings. Figure 13: Internet Protocol Properties Window Page 69 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 70: Logging On

    If the unit's IP address has been changed from its default of 192.168.1.1, and you do not know the new IP address, you can log into the unit by establishing a connection directly to the CPU. This requires a Ceragon Networks proprietary Ethernet cable. This cable should be ordered from Ceragon Networks, according to the following table.
  • Page 71 User Name: admin ◦ Password: admin 7 Click Apply. 8 After a connection is established, you can view or configure the unit's IP address using the Web EMS. See Changing the Management IP Address. Page 71 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 72: Changing Your Password

    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 Ceragon Customer Support. It is strongly recommended to change this password.
  • Page 73: Applying A Pre-Defined Configuration File

    Point-to-Point ◦ Multipoint The pre-defined configuration file is generated by Ceragon Global Services and provided as a service. The pre-defined configuration file must be compatible with the CeraOS version the IP-20 device is running. Configuration files created for CeraOS 9.2 cannot be used with later CeraOS versions.
  • Page 74: Figure 16: Quick Configuration - From File Page

    Note: If the pre-defined configuration file included a new IP address for the unit, make sure to configure an IP address on the PC or laptop you are using to perform the configuration within the same subnet as the IP-20 unit’s new IP address. Page 74 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 75: Performing Quick Platform Setup

    IP-20 unit. To use the Platform Setup page: 1 Select Quick Configuration > Platform Setup. The Quick Configuration – Platform Setup page opens. Figure 18: Quick Configuration – Platform Setup Page Page 75 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 76 If you set Demo admin to Disable, the Activation Key field is displayed. Enter a valid activation key in this field. For a full explanation of activation keys, see Configuring the Activation Key. Page 76 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 77: Figure 19: Quick Configuration - Platform Setup Summary Page

    7 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 19: Quick Configuration – Platform Setup Summary Page Page 77 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 78: Mate Management Access (Ip Forwarding)

    Note: In order to use in-band management, it must be supported on the external switch. For instructions on adding service points, see Configuring Service Points. Page 78 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 79: Changing The Management Ip Address

    7 If you entered an IPv6 address, enter the IPv6 prefix length in the IPv6 Prefix- Length field. 8 Optionally, if you entered an IPv6 address, enter the default gateway in IPv6 format in the Default Gateway IPv6 field. 9 Click Apply. Page 79 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 80: Configuring The Activation Key

    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. Page 80 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 81: Viewing The Activation Key Status Parameters

    Violation runtime counter (hours) In the event of an Activation Key Violation alarm, this field displays the number of hours remaining in the 48- hour activation key violation grace period. Page 81 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 82: Entering The Activation Key

    300M and later purchased one upgrade activation key to 350M, credit is given as if the customer had purchased one activation key for 350M and one activation key for 300M. Page 82 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 83 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 For instructions on how to reclaim an activation key, refer to the User Guide for the Ceragon Activation Key Management System, Rev A.15 or later, Chapter 7, Reclaiming an Activation Key.
  • Page 84: Displaying A List Of Activation-Key-Enabled Features

    Indicates whether the feature is allowed under the activation key that is currently installed in the unit. Activation key violation status Indicates whether the system configuration violates the currently installed activation key with respect to this feature. Page 84 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 85: Table 12: Activation Key-Enabled-Features Description

    Displays the number of 10G traffic ports allowed under the current activation key. Only (quantity) relevant for FibeAir IP-20E and IP-20V devices. ACM (quantity) Displays the number of radio carriers that are allowed to use ACM under the current activation key. Page 85 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 86 Displays the number of radio carriers for which there is permission to use up to 150 Mbps. Radio capacity level 5 Displays the number of radio carriers for which there is permission to use up to 200 Mbps. Page 86 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 87 Ethernet port carrying traffic to the unit paired with the IP-20E. No activation key is required for the IP- unit paired with the IP- 20E. Page 87 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 88: Setting The Time And Date (Optional)

    To display and configure the UTC parameters: 1 Select Platform > Management > Time Services. The Time Services page opens. Figure 23: Time Services Page 2 Configure the fields listed in Table 13. Page 88 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 89: Table 13: Time Services Parameters

    The month when Daylight Savings Time ends. The date in the month when Daylight Savings Time ends. DST Offset (Hours) The required offset, in hours, for Daylight Savings Time. Only positive offset is supported. Page 89 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 90: Enabling The Interfaces (Interface Manager)

    RJ-45 cables. Table 14: Ethernet Splitter Cable and Gland for Dual Ethernet Port Marketing Model Item Description IP-20_Ethernet_Splitter_cable CABLE,DP TO 2xRJ45F, 1.0M, WITH GLANDS, UV PROTECTED Page 90 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 91: Figure 24: Interface Manager Page

    Figure 24: Interface Manager Page To enable or disable an individual interface: 1 Select the interface in the Interface Manager table. Page 91 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 92: Figure 25: Interface Manager - Edit Page

    Manager Table, select Admin status – Up or Admin status – Down. Figure 26: Multiple Selection Operation Section (Interface Manager Page) 3 Click Apply. Note: The Operational Status field displays the current, actual operational state of the interface (Up or Down). Page 92 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 93: Configuring The Radio (Mrmc) Script(S)

    Release Notes for the CeraOS version you are using. The following figures show scripts supported by the IP-20C and IP-20E. Figure 27: MRMC Symmetrical Scripts Page (IP-20C) (ETSI) Page 93 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 94: Figure 28: Mrmc Symmetrical Scripts Page (Ip-20E) (Etsi)

    3 Select the script you want to assign to the radio. The currently-assigned script is marked by a check mark (Script ID 1504 in the image above). 4 Click Configure Script. A separate MRMC Symmetrical Scripts page opens similar to the page shown below. Page 94 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 95: Figure 30: Mrmc Symmetrical Scripts Page - Configuration (Ip-20C/Ip-20C-Hp)

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 30: MRMC Symmetrical Scripts Page – Configuration (IP-20C/IP-20C-HP) Page 95 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 96: Figure 31: Mrmc Symmetrical Scripts Page - Configuration (Ip-20E)

    In Adaptive ACM mode, Tx and Rx rates are dynamic. An ACM-enabled radio system automatically chooses which profile to use according to the channel fading conditions. If you select Adaptive, two fields are displayed enabling you to select minimum and maximum ACM profiles. Page 96 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 97: Figure 32: Mrmc Symmetrical Scripts Page - Configuration - Adaptive Mode (Ip-20C/Ip-20C-Hp)

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 32: MRMC Symmetrical Scripts Page – Configuration – Adaptive Mode (IP-20C/IP-20C-HP) Figure 33: MRMC Symmetrical Scripts Page – Configuration – Adaptive Mode (IP-20E) Page 97 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 98: Table 15: Mrmc Symmetrical Scripts Page Parameters

    Adaptive ACM mode only: The maximum profile for the script. For example, if you select a maximum profile of 5, the system will not climb above profile 5, even if channel fading conditions allow it. Page 98 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 99: Radio Profiles

    Profile Modulation Profile 0 BPSK Profile 1 QPSK Profile 2 8 QAM Profile 3 16 QAM Profile 4 32 QAM Profile 5 64 QAM Profile 6 128 QAM Profile 7 256 QAM Page 99 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 100: Table 18: Available Radio Profiles - Ip-20V

    Profile Modulation Profile 0 BPSK Profile 1 QPSK Profile 2 8 QAM Profile 3 16 QAM Profile 4 32 QAM Profile 5 64 QAM Profile 6 128 QAM Profile 7 256 QAM Page 100 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 101: Running The Frequency Scanner (Ip-20E And Ip-20V)

    The link is down during the scan. To perform a frequency scan: 1 Select Radio > Frequency Scanner. The Frequency Scanner page opens. Figure 34: Frequency Scanner Page – IP-20V – Continuous Mode Page 101 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 102: Figure 35: Frequency Scanner Page - Ip-20E - Single Mode

    Continuous mode, it will not be possible to de-activate the Frequency Scanner. 4 Click Apply to save the scan configuration. 5 Click Scan: Page 102 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 103 In Single Mode, the same as the RSL Sample Value. • Maximum RSL (dBm) – In Continuous Mode, the highest RSL value measured for the scanned channel. In Single Mode, the same as the RSL Sample Value. Page 103 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 104: Figure 36: Frequency Scanner Results - Graph Format (Ip-20V - Continuous Mode)

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 36: Frequency Scanner Results – Graph Format (IP-20V – Continuous Mode) Figure 37: Frequency Scanner Results – Graph Format (IP-20E – Single Mode) Page 104 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 105: Configuring The Radio Parameters

    For multi-carrier units, the Radio Parameters page initially displays a table as shown in Figure 38. ◦ For single-carrier units, a page appears, similar to Figure 39 (which shows an IP-20C/IP-20C-HP page). Figure 38: Radio Parameters Page – IP-20C/IP-20C-HP Page 105 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 106: Figure 39: Radio Parameters Page Per Carrier - Ip-20C/Ip-20C-Hp

    Edit. A separate Radio Parameters page opens. The page is essentially identical to the IP-20S, IP-20E, and IP-20V page, except for the addition of a Radio location parameter. Figure 39: Radio Parameters Page Per Carrier – IP-20C/IP-20C-HP Page 106 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 107 RSL port is not accurate and should be used only as an aid). Note that the voltage measured at the RSL port is not accurate and should be used only as an aid). Page 107 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 108 RSL at the BNC connector. For a description of the read-only parameters in the Status parameters section, see Viewing the Radio Status and Settings. Page 108 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 109: Enabling Link Id Mismatch Security

    To display the current Link ID Mismatch Security setting, enter the following command in root view: root> platform security link-id mismatch security show admin By default, Link ID Mismatch Security is disabled. Page 109 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 110: Enabling Acm With Adaptive Transmit Power

    2 For multi-carrier units, select the carrier in the Radio table (see Figure 38) and click Edit. A separate Radio Parameters page opens. The page is essentially identical to the single-carrier page, except for the addition of a Radio location parameter. Page 110 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 111: Figure 40: Radio Parameters Page Per Carrier - Ip-20C

    Adaptive mode with the Minimum and Maximum Profile set to the same value), you can set Adaptive TX Power to Enable, but the Adaptive TX power operational status field will indicate Down. Page 111 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 112: Operating In Fips Mode

    2.17.1 Requirements for FIPS Compliance For a full list of FIPS requirements, refer to the Ceragon IP-20 FIPS 140-2 Security Policy, available upon request. It is the responsibility of the customer to ensure that these requirements are met.
  • Page 113: Configuring Grouping (Optional)

    After any system reset, the length of time before users can log back into the system is longer than usual due to FIPS-related self-testing. For a full list of FIPS requirements, including software configuration requirements, refer to the Ceragon IP-20 FIPS 140-2 Security Policy, available upon request. 2.18 Configuring Grouping (Optional) At this point in the configuration process, you should configure any interface groups that need to be set up according to your network plan.
  • Page 114: Configuration Guide

    1+1 HSB with Space Diversity IP-20C Configuring 1+1 HSB with Space Diversity MIMO and Space Diversity IP-20C Configuring MIMO and Space Diversity ASD 2+0 (XPIC) IP-20C Configuring Advanced Space IP_20C-HP Diversity (ASD) Page 114 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 115: Configuring A Link Using The Quick Configuration Wizard

    Because the Quick Configuration wizard creates Pipe links, you cannot add an interface to a link using the Quick Configuration wizard if any service points are attached to the interface prior to configuring the link. See Deleting a Service Point. Page 115 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 116: Configuring A 1+0 Link Using The Quick Configuration Wizard

    To create a LAG, click Create LAG. The Create LAG Group page opens. For instructions on creating LAG groups, see Configuring Link Aggregation (LAG) and LACP. 4 Click Next. Page 2 of the 1+0 Quick Configuration wizard opens. Page 116 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 117: Figure 43: 1+0 Quick Configuration Wizard

    Figure 44: 1+0 Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 3 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. Page 117 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 118: Figure 45: 1+0 Quick Configuration Wizard

    Fixed ACM script you can specify a maximum profile to inhibit inefficient transmission levels. ◦ In Adaptive ACM mode, TX and RX rates are dynamic. An ACM-enabled radio system automatically chooses which profile to use according to the channel fading conditions. Page 118 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 119: Figure 46: 1+0 Quick Configuration Wizard

    Untagged to a specific VLAN. See Mate Management Access (IP Forwarding) (CLI). 18 If you want to use the Ethernet interface as well as the radio interface for in- band management, select In Band includes Ethernet interface. Page 119 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 120: Configuring A 1+0 (Repeater) Link Using The Quick Configuration Wizard

    Figure 48: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 1 2 In the Radio #1 Interface field, select the first radio interface for the link. 3 Click Next. Page 2 of the 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration wizard opens. Page 120 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 121: Figure 49: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard

    For a full explanation of Ethernet Services, service types, and attached interface types, see Configuring Ethernet Service(s). 6 Click Next. Page 3 of the 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration wizard opens. Figure 50: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 3 Page 121 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 122: Figure 51: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard

    12 Do one of the following: ◦ If you selected Fixed in the Operational Mode field, the next field is Profile. Select the ACM profile for the radio in the Profile field. Page 122 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 123: Figure 52: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard

    You can only select Untagged if you are not using IP Forwarding. If you select Untagged and you want to configure IP Forwarding later, you will first have to change Untagged to a specific VLAN. See Mate Management Access (IP Forwarding) (CLI). Page 123 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 124: Configuring A 2 X (1+0) Link Using The Quick Configuration Wizard

    1 Select Quick Configuration > PIPE > Single Carrier > 2 X (1 + 0). Page 1 of the 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration wizard opens. Figure 54: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 1 Page 124 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 125: Figure 48: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard

    Aggregation (LAG) and LACP. 4 Click Next. Page 2 of the 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration wizard opens. Figure 55: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 2 Page 125 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 126: Figure 48: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard

    Note: To create a LAG, click Create LAG. The Create LAG Group page opens. For instructions on creating LAG groups, see Configuring Link Aggregation (LAG) and LACP. Page 126 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 127: Figure 48: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard

    Figure 58: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 5 12 If you want to set up an XPIC configuration, select XPIC. For full instructions on configuring XPIC, including antenna alignment instructions, see Configuring XPIC. Page 127 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 128: Figure 48: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard - Page 6 (Xpic)

    13 Click Next. Page 6 of the 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration wizard opens. Figure 59: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 6 (XPIC) Figure 60: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 6 (Non-XPIC) Page 128 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 129: Figure 48: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard - Page 7 (Xpic)

    16 Click Next. Page 7 of the 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration wizard opens. Figure 61: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 7 (XPIC) Figure 62: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard – Page 7 (Non-XPIC) Page 129 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 130: Figure 48: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard

    20 In the First In Band Management field, select Yes to configure in-band management for the first 1+0 link, or No if you do not need in-band management for this link. If you select Yes, the Management VLAN field appears. Page 130 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 131: Figure 48: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard

    26 If you want to use the Ethernet interface as well as the radio interface for in- band management, select In Band includes Ethernet interface. 27 Click Finish. The Summary page opens. This page displays the parameters you have selected for the group. Page 131 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 132: Figure 48: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard -Summary Page (Xpic)

    Figure 66: 2 X (1 + 0) Quick Configuration Wizard –Summary Page (No XPIC) 28 To complete configuration of the links, click Submit. If you want to go back and change any of the parameters, click Back. After you click Submit, the unit is reset. Page 132 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 133: Configuring A 2+0 Multi-Carrier Abc Link Using The Quick Configuration Wizard

    For a full explanation of Ethernet Services, service types, and attached interface types, see Configuring Ethernet Service(s). 5 Click Next. The Radio #2 Selection page opens. Figure 68: 2 + 0 Multi Carrier ABC Quick Configuration Wizard – Radio #2 Selection Page Page 133 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 134: Figure 56: 2 + 0 Multi Carrier Abc Quick Configuration Wizard - Radio Xpic Configuration Page

    If you selected XPIC in the Radio XPIC Configuration page, you configure the parameters for the group rather than the individual interfaces. Figure 70: 2 + 0 Multi Carrier ABC Quick Configuration Wizard – Radio Parameters Configuration Page Page 134 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 135: Figure 58: 2 + 0 Multi Carrier Abc Quick Configuration Wizard - Radio Parameters Configuration Page (Xpic)

    10 Click Next. The Radio MRMC Script Configuration page opens. You can configure the MRMC script parameters for each interface. For an XPIC group, you configure the parameters for the group rather than the individual interfaces. Page 135 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 136 If you selected Fixed in the Operational Mode field, the next field is Profile. Select the ACM profile in the Profile field. ◦ If you selected Adaptive in the Operational Mode field, the following two fields are displayed: Page 136 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 137 18 If you want to use the Ethernet interface as well as the radio interface for in- band management, select In Band includes Ethernet interface. 19 Click Finish. The Summary page opens. This page displays the parameters you have selected for the group. Page 137 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 138 20 To complete configuration of the Multi-Carrier ABC group, click Submit. If you want to go back and change any of the parameters, click Back. After you click Submit, the unit is reset. Page 138 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 139: Configuring A Multiband (Enhanced Multi-Carrier Abc) Link Using The Quick Configuration Wizard

    6 In the Ethernet Interface field, select the port connected to the external switch. This should be Ethernet: Slot 1, Port 1. 7 In the Radio #1 Interface field, select Radio: Slot 2, Port 1. Page 139 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 140 Failure to properly set this parameter may lead to frequent pauses as the queue fills up during low capacity periods, such as when weather conditions cause the ACM profile to drop. Page 140 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 141 Page 141 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 142 Maximum profile – Enter the maximum profile for the script. See Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s). ◦ Minimum profile – Enter the minimum profile for the script. See Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s). Page 142 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 143 If you want to manage the IP-20C, IP-20C-HP, or IP-20S via the IP-20E, refer to the instructions in Inband Management via the IP-20E. 21 Click Finish. The Summary page opens. This page displays the parameters you have selected for the group. Page 143 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 144 See Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding. 3 Configure Bandwidth Notification: Select Ethernet > Protocols > Bandwidth Notification. The Bandwidth Notification page opens. Figure 82: Bandwidth Notification Page (Empty) Page 144 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 145 In the Monitored Interface field, select the interface or group connected to the IP-20E. vii Click Apply. The configuration is added to the Bandwidth Notification page with the Protocol Type Radio BNM. Figure 84: Bandwidth Notification Page (Populated with Radio BNM) Page 145 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 146: Configuring Multi-Carrier Abc

    1 Select Radio > Groups > Multi Carrier ABC. The Multi Carrier ABC page opens. Figure 85: Multi-Carrier ABC Group Page (Empty) 2 Click Create Group. The first page of the Create ABC Group wizard opens. Page 146 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 147 Radio slot 2 port 2 is selected second. 8 Click Next. The next page of the Create Group wizard opens. 9 In the Member 2 field, select a radio interface. 10 Click Next. A summary page opens. Page 147 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 148: Configuring The Multi-Carrier Abc Minimum Bandwidth Override Option

    FibeAir IP-20 unit, you must perform all of the following steps: Enable the Multi-Carrier ABC minimum bandwidth option and set a threshold • on the IP-20C or IP-20C-HP unit, as described below. Page 148 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 149 (in Mbps). If the group’s bandwidth capacity falls beneath this threshold, the group is automatically placed in Operational State Down until the bandwidth capacity exceeds this threshold. 4 Click Apply. Page 149 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 150: Adding And Removing Group Members

    3 Remove each member of the group. See Adding and Removing Group Members. 4 Click Close to close the Multi Carrier ABC – Add/Remove Members page. 5 Select the group and click Delete. Page 150 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 151: Configuring Multiband (Enhanced Multi-Carrier Abc)

    Multiband link to CeraOS 10.5 or to CeraOS 10.7 or higher from an earlier version, make sure to upgrade the remote unit first when using inband management to avoid loss of management. Page 151 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 152 ACM profile on one unit and a low ACM profile on the other unit, there should be no more than a 1.6 ms difference between the latency of the two radio carriers in the Multiband link. Page 152 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 153 Switch Eth2 Group Eth3 Traffic IP-20E Eth1 Carrier 1 Eth2 Management Pipe Carrier 2 (Optional) and/or Synchronization (Optional) Multi-Carrier Eth 3 ABC Group IP-20C/IP-20C-HP Figure 91: Multiband Operation – IP-20E and IP-20C/IP-20C-HP Page 153 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 154: Multiband Configuration

    3 Verify that no service points are configured on the Eth2 port of the IP-20E. If there are service points on Eth2, remove them. See Deleting a Service Point. 4 Set Eth2 on the IP-20E to Admin – Down. See Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager). Page 154 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 155 Figure 94: Create ABC Group Wizard – Page 1 iii In the Group ID field, select Enhanced Multi Carrier ABC (Group #1). iv Optionally, in the Group Name field, enter a descriptive name for the group. Page 155 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 156 When using Fixed ACM mode, set this parameter to the actual rate you want the paired unit to broadcast. ◦ When using Adaptive ACM mode, set this parameter to the maximum of the paired unit’s capacity. Page 156 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 157 Click Submit. The group is added to the Multi Carrier ABC page. Figure 98: Multi Carrier ABC Groups Page (Populated with Multiband Group) xii Reset the IP-20E. See Performing a Hard (Cold) Reset. Page 157 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 158 8 If the paired unit is an IP-20C, IP-20C-HP, or IP-20S, configure Radio BNM: Note: If the paired unit is a third-party radio, enable 802.3X Flow Control. Select Ethernet > Protocols > Bandwidth Notification. The Bandwidth Notification page opens. Figure 99: Bandwidth Notification Page (Empty) Page 158 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 159 In the Monitored Interface field, select the interface or group connected to the IP-20E. vii Click Apply. The configuration is added to the Bandwidth Notification page with the Protocol Type Radio BNM. Figure 101: Bandwidth Notification Page (Populated with Radio BNM) Page 159 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 160: Multiband Management

    Management. The following options are available for managing the paired unit in a Multiband configuration: • Inband management via the IP-20E Inband management directly from the external switch • • Out-of-Band management Page 160 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 161: Table 20: Multiband Cable For Use With Csfp Port

    Paired Unit Figure 102: Multiband Cable for Use with CSFP Port Table 20: Multiband Cable for Use with CSFP Port Cable Marketing Model Cable Description IP-20_FO_SM_LC2SNG2LC_ARM_5m CABLE,FO,DUAL LC TO LC/LC SPLIT,5.3M,SM,3xM28 GLAND,OUTDOOR Page 161 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 162 A management service must be defined between the management port of the IP-20E and Eth3 on the IP-20E. This transmits management to the paired unit. See Configuring In-Band Management. Note: To avoid loops, in-band management must not be configured on the slave unit. Page 162 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 163 IP-20E (ESP) GbE Port Traffic Power Eth1/PoE Eth2 Power Management (IP-20C) Source Eth 3 MGT/PROT IP-20C, IP-20C-HP, or IP-20S (ESS) Figure 104: Multiband Configuration with Direct Inband Management to the Paired Unit Page 163 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 164 IP-20E (ESP) Traffic Power Eth1/PoE Power Source Eth2 Eth 3 Management (IP-20C/IP-20S) MGT/PROT IP-20C, IP-20C-HP, or IP-20S (ESS) Figure 105: Multiband Configuration with Direct Inband Management to the IP- 20C, IP-20C-HP, or IP-20S Page 164 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 165: Configuring Synchronization In A Multiband Node

    In ring configurations, configure priority order in the direction of traffic on the ring. For instructions on configuring SyncE, see Configuring the Sync Source. For instructions on configuring 1588 Transparent Clock, see Configuring 1588 Transparent Clock. Page 165 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 166: Configuring Link Aggregation (Lag) And Lacp

    “down”. This restriction does not apply to radio interfaces. For instructions on setting the administrative state of an interface, see Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager). Page 166 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 167: Configuring A Lag Group

    LACP can only be used with Ethernet interfaces. LACP cannot be used with Enhanced LAG Distribution or with the LAG Group Shutdown in Case of Degradation Event feature. 3.5.2 Configuring a LAG Group Page 167 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 168 6 Click Next. A new Create LAG Group page opens. Figure 107: Create LAG Group – Page 2 7 In the Member 2 field, select an additional interface to assign to the LAG Group. Page 168 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 169 10 Click Submit. If all the interfaces meet the criteria listed above, a message appears that the LAG group has been successfully created. If not, a message appears indicating that the LAG group was not created and giving the reason. Page 169 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 170 When removing an interface from a LAG group, the removed interface is assigned the default interface values. For information about the LAG degrade field, see Enabling and Disabling LAG Group Shutdown in Case of Degradation Event . Page 170 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 171: Enabling And Disabling Lag Group Shutdown In Case Of Degradation Event

    To configure enhanced LAG distribution: 1 Select Ethernet > Groups > LAG. The LAG page opens. 2 Click LAG DF underneath the Link Aggregation table. The LAG Distribution Function (DF) page opens. Page 171 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 172: Deleting A Lag Group

    1 Select the LAG groups in the Link Aggregation table or select all the LAG groups by selecting the check box in the top row. 2 Click Delete underneath the Link Aggregation table. Page 172 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 173: Displaying Lacp Parameters And Statistics

    You can display the following LACP parameters and statistics: LACP Aggregation (per LAG) • LACP Port Status • • LACP Port Statistics • LACP Port Debug Statistics Note: IP-20 does not support any LACP write parameters. Page 173 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 174: Table 21: Lacp Aggregation Status Parameters

    Partner of this Aggregator. Partner System Priority The priority value associated with the Partner’s System ID. Partner Operational Key The current operational value of the Key for the Aggregator’s current Protocol partner. Page 174 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 175 3.5.6.2 Displaying LACP Port Status Parameters To display LACP port status parameters: 1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LACP > Port > Status to open the LACP Port Status page. Figure 112: LACP Port Status Page Page 175 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 176: Table 22: Lacp Port Status Parameters

    Indicates whether the Aggregation Port is able to aggregate or is only able to operate as an individual link. Actor System ID The MAC Address value that defines the value of the System ID for the system that contains this Aggregation Port. Page 176 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 177 System Priority Partner Administrative The current administrative value of the port number for the protocol Port partner. Partner Administrative The current administrative value of the port priority for the protocol Port Priority partner. Page 177 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 178: Table 23: Lacp Port Statistics

    The number of LACPDUs that this port has received. Unknown RX The number of unknown protocol frames that this port has received. Illegal RX The number of illegal protocol frames that this port has received. Page 178 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 179: Table 24: Lacp Port Debug Statistics

    The state of the Mux state machine for the Aggregation port. Possible values are Collecting, Distributing, Attached, and Detached. Debug Mux Reason A text string indicating the reason for the most reason change in the state of the Mux machine. Page 179 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 180: Configuring Xpic

    3 In the XPIC page, create an XPIC group that consists of the two RMCs that will be in the XPIC group. See Creating an XPIC Group. 3.6.3 Creating an XPIC Group To create an XPIC group: 1 Select Radio > Groups > XPIC. The XPIC page opens. Page 180 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 181: Performing Antenna Alignment For Xpic

    RSL of the second carrier link (the “RSL ”), measure the RSL of the wanted first carrier (the “RSL ”) and determine the XPI. The XPI should unwanted match the XPI with the second carriers muted. Page 181 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 182 XPI to make sure it subsequently exceeds 25dB. A normal XPI level in clear sky conditions is between 25 and 30dB. Page 182 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 183: Configuring Unit Protection With Hsb Radio Protection (External Protection)

    • Split Protection Mode – Only available for optical Ethernet ports. An optical splitter cable is used to connect to both the active and the standby optical Ethernet ports. Page 183 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 184 Select the interface and click Edit. The Logical Interfaces – Edit page opens. Figure 117: Logical Interfaces – Edit Page iii In the Interface Mode field, select LACP. iv Click Apply, then Close. Page 184 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 185: Configuring Hsb Radio Protection

    Protection Administration, the system will determine which unit becomes the Active unit. 2 Select Platform > Shelf Management > Unit Redundancy. The Unit Redundancy (HSB Protection) page opens. Figure 118: Unit Redundancy Page Page 185 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 186 Standby unit parameters. Even when a switchover occurs, the unit displayed in the Web EMS is always the currently Active unit. Note: The parameters that are editable on the Standby tab are described in Editing Standby Unit Settings. Page 186 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 187: Configuring 2+2 Hsb Protection On An Ip-20C Or Ip-20C-Hp Unit

    To enable the second radio carrier on both units, use the Interface Manager page (see Figure 24). The following figure shows the Interface Manager page with both radio carriers enabled. Figure 120: Interface Manager Page – Both Radio Carriers Enabled Page 187 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 188: Viewing The Configuration Of The Standby Unit

    Activation Key). • Defining user accounts – Refer to the Access Control User Accounts Page (see Configuring Users). Setting synchronization settings – Refer to the SyncE Regenerator • page (see Configuring SyncE Regenerator). Page 188 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 189: Viewing Link And Protection Status And Activity

    At any point, you can manually switch to the Standby unit, provided that the highest protection fault level in the Standby unit is no higher than the highest protection fault level on the Active unit. Page 189 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 190: Disabling Automatic Switchover To The Standby Unit

    To disable protection: 1 Select Platform > Shelf Management > Unit Redundancy. The Unit Redundancy (HSB Protection) page opens (Figure 118). 2 Select Disable in the Protection Admin field. 3 Click Apply. Page 190 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 191: Configuring 1+1 Hsb With Space Diversity

    2 Click Create Group. The Create Diversity Group page opens. Figure 123: Create Diversity Group – Page 1 3 In the Group Type field, select 1+0 Space Diversity. 4 Click Next. The Selection Summary page opens. Page 191 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 192 7 In the Admin state field, select Enable. 8 Click Apply. 9 Repeat Steps 1 through 8 for the second unit. Note: The identity of the active and standby units is not determined until unit protection is configured. Page 192 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 193 If you mute the interface before configuring unit protection, you must make sure to manually mute the interface on both IP-20 units. Otherwise, configuring unit protection will override the mute configuration. Page 193 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 194: Configuring Mimo And Space Diversity

    2+2 HSB Space Diversity provides both equipment protection and signal protection. If one unit goes out of service, the other unit takes over and maintains the link until the other unit is restored to service and Space Diversity operation resumes. Page 194 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 195: Upgrading A 4X4 Mimo Link From An Earlier Version To Ceraos 10.5 Or Higher

    4. Wait for the link to be restored between the Master units. 5. Mute both radio carriers on the remote Slave unit. 6. Upgrade the remote Slave unit. 7. Unmute both radio carriers on the remote Slave unit. Page 195 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 196: Configuring A 4X4 Mimo Link

    Lower unit (Slave) on the remote side of the link. To configure a 4x4 MIMO group: Select Radio > Groups> AMCC. The Advanced Multi Carrier Configuration page opens. Figure 126: Advanced Multi Carrier Configuration Page Page 196 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 197 In the Member #1 field, select one of the radio carriers. vii In the Member Role field, select MIMO Master if the unit is the Master unit, or MIMO Slave if the unit is the Slave unit. Page 197 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 198 Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s). Make sure the script you select supports MIMO. Note: For a list of available scripts, including an indication of which scripts support MIMO, refer to the Release Notes for the CeraOS release you are using. Page 198 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 199 Click Submit to configure the group. If you changed the MRMC script from the script that had previously been configured, or if you set the Group Admin Status to Enable, the unit is reset. Page 199 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 200 Master IP-20 Switch ASP – Remote Fault Trigger Eth1 Enabled Carrier 1 Eth3/ GbE Port Carrier 2 MIMO Signaling MGT/ Cable MIMO PROT Group EXT REF Slave IP-20 Figure 132: 4x4 MIMO Configuration Page 200 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 201: Configuring A 2X2 Mimo Link

    4 Click Next. The Create Diversity Group page is updated and displays your system configuration. Figure 134: Create Diversity Group Page – MIMO 2x2 – Page 2 5 Click Submit to create the 2x2 MIMO group. Page 201 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 202 Figure 135: Diversity Groups – 2x2 MIMO - Edit Page In the Admin state field, select Enable. iii Click Apply. 7 In the Role field, leave the setting Not-relevant. 8 Verify that the MMI levels are appropriate. See Viewing MMI Levels. Page 202 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 203: Configuring A 1+0 Or 2+2 Space Diversity Link

    2+0 Space Diversity 4 Click Next. The Create Diversity Group page is updated and displays your system configuration. Figure 137: Create Diversity Group – Page 2 5 Click Submit to create the Diversity group. Page 203 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 204 In the Role field: ◦ For 1+0 Space Diversity groups, leave the setting Not-relevant. ◦ For 2+2 Space Diversity groups, set the role of the group to Master or Slave. iv Click Apply. Page 204 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 205: Viewing Mmi Levels

    1 Select Radio > Groups> Diversity. The Diversity Groups page opens. 2 Select the 2x2 MIMO group from the table. 3 Click Edit Members. The Diversity Groups - Edit Members page opens. Figure 140: Diversity Groups - Edit Members Page Page 205 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 206: Deleting A Mimo Or Space Diversity Group

    When the MIMO or Space Diversity group is disabled, the system is automatically reset. 2 Select the group from the table. 3 Click Delete. The Delete MIMO confirmation page opens. 4 Confirm the operation. Page 206 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 207: Configuring Advanced Space Diversity (Asd)

    XPIC script. Following alignment, the ASD groups are configured and a special ASD script (28 MHz or 56 MHz) is applied to each of the three ASD groups. • MRMC Script 1951 – 28 MHz • MRMC Script 1953 – 56 MHz Page 207 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 208 Site 1 (RX diversity). These signals are combined using Baseband Combining (BBC). This adds 3dB in system gain since the signal practically doubles its level as it is received in a phase-synchronized manner by two receivers. Page 208 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 209: Configuring An Asd Link

    RSL that is expected according to the site plan, at 2048 QAM. 9 Unmute the carriers of the Master unit. At this point, all of the carriers in the ASD link should be unmuted. 10 Configure ASD on each unit: Page 209 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 210 Figure 144: AMCC Group - Select Group Parameters Page iii In the Group Type field: ◦ At Site 1 (two units), select Dual ASD. ◦ At Site 1 (one unit), select Single ASD. Page 210 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 211 For the Slave unit at Site 1, select Slave. The Member Role for Member #2 is automatically set to Slave. ◦ For the unit at Site 2, select Master. The Member Role for Member #2 is automatically set to Master. Page 211 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 212 Note: Make sure to set the same MRMC parameters for all the radio carriers in the ASD link. Refer to Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) for a list of available radio profiles. Page 212 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 213: Viewing Asd Status

    Master Only – The Slave unit is not operational. • • ASD Configuration not supported – The link has been misconfigured. Make sure that each radio carrier is configured with the same radio parameters and MRMC scripts and parameters. Page 213 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 214: Deleting An Asd Group

    4 Once the unit comes back online, return to the Advanced Multi Carrier Configuration page opens (Figure 147), select the group, and click Delete. The group is deleted. Page 214 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 215: Configuring Advanced Frequency Reuse (Afr)

    IP-20C or Hub Site IP-20S Dual-Modem IP-20C frequency spot Figure 150: AFR 1+0 Deployment For more detailed information about planning links with AFR, refer to the Advanced Frequency Reuse (AFR) Link Planning Guide. Page 215 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 216: Initial Link Configuration And Alignment For Afr

    After you configure AFR on the Tails Sites, the link between the Hub Site and the Tail Sites will be lost. The links will be restored after you configure AFR on the Hub site and the Hub site comes back up after unit reset. Page 216 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 217 ◦ If you are configuring a Tail site, select AFR Tail. 4 In the Group admin status field, select Enable. 5 Click Next. The AMCC Group – Select Members Parameters page opens. Page 217 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 218 Figure 154: AMCC Group – Select Members Parameters Page (Hub Site) Figure 155: AMCC Group – Select Members Parameters Page (Tail Site) 6 In the Member #1 field, select a radio interface. Page 218 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 219 Figure 156: AMCC Group – Selection Summary Page 11 Click Submit. The unit is automatically reset. Once AFR has been configured on the Hub site and both Tail sites, the configuration is complete. Page 219 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 220: Deleting An Afr Group

    5 In the Advanced Multi Carrier Configuration page, select the group and click Delete. Once you have performed this procedure for the Hub site and both Tail sites, you can reconfigure the links according to the new network plan. Page 220 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 221: Operating An Ip-20C Or Ip-20C-Hp In Single Radio Carrier Mode

    2 Disable Multi-Carrier ABC, as described in Deleting a Multi-Carrier ABC Group. 3 Disable one of the two radio interfaces, as described in Enabling the Interfaces (Interface Manager). 4 Mute the disabled radio interface, as described in Configuring the Radio Parameters. Page 221 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 222: Unit Management

    The options are IPv4 or IPv6. To set the IP protocol version of the local unit: 1 Select Platform > Management > Networking > Local. The Local Networking Configuration page opens. Page 222 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 223 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 159: Local Networking Configuration Page 2 In the IP address Family field, select the IP protocol the unit will use when initiating communications. The options are IPv4 or IPv6. Page 223 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 224: Configuring The Remote Unit's Ip Address

    For multi-carrier units, the Radio Parameters page initially displays a table as shown in Figure 160. ◦ For single-carrier units, the page appears as shown in Figure 161. Figure 160: Remote Networking Configuration Page – IP-20C/IP-20C-HP Page 224 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 225 2 For multi-carrier units, select the carrier in the Radio table (see Figure 160) and click Edit. A separate Remote IP Configuration page opens. The page is identical to the single-carrier page. Figure 162: Remote IP Configuration Page Per Carrier – IP-20C/IP-20C-HP Page 225 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 226: Changing The Subnet Of The Remote Ip Address

    Similarly, if you wish to change the Remote IPv6 Address to a different subnet: 1 Change the address of the Remote IPv6 Default Gateway to 0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0. 2 Click Apply. 3 Set the Remote IPv6 Address as desired, and the Remote IPv6 Default Gateway as desired. Page 226 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 227: Configuring Snmp

    2 In the Admin field, select Enable to enable SNMP monitoring, or Disable to disable SNMP monitoring. Note: The Operational Status field indicates whether SNMP monitoring is currently active (Up) or inactive (Down). Page 227 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 228 To add an SNMP user: 1 Select Platform > Management SNMP > V3 Users. The V3 Users page opens. Figure 164: V3 Users Page 2 Click Add. The V3 Users - Add page opens. Page 228 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 229: Configuring Trap Managers

    Each line in the Trap Managers table displays the setup for a manager defined in the system. To configure trap managers: 1 Select Platform > Management > SNMP > Trap Managers. The Trap Managers page opens. Page 229 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 230 2 Select a trap manager and click Edit. The Trap Managers Edit page opens. Figure 167: Trap Managers - Edit Page 3 Configure the trap manager parameters, as described in Table 26. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 230 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 231: Table 26: Trap Manager Parameters

    V3 user defined in the system. To view or define a V3 user, use the V3 Users page. Note: Make sure that an identical V3 user is also defined on the manager's side. Page 231 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 232: Installing And Configuring An Ftp Or Sftp Server

    In the Add user account window, enter a user name and click OK. iv In the Users window, select Enable account and, optionally, select Password and enter a password. In the Users window, click OK. Figure 168: FileZilla Server User Configuration Page 232 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 233 Click Set as home directory to make the Shared folder the root directory for your FTP server. viii Click OK to close the Users window. Figure 169: FileZilla Server Shared Folder Setup Page 233 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 234: Configuring The Internal Ports For Ftp Or Sftp

    From any of these pages, click FTP Port. The FTP Port page opens. Figure 170: FTP Port Page Edit the File transfer port number for FTP and or SFTP and click Apply. Page 234 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 235: Upgrading The Software

    Upon installation, this version will become the Installed Version. Reset Type The level of reset required by the component in order for the Installed Version to become the Active Version. A cold (hard) reset powers down and powers Page 235 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 236: Software Upgrade Overview

    HTTP and HTTPS can only be used to download files for CeraOS 9.5 and later. If there is a requirement to downgrade from CeraOS 9.5 or higher to an earlier version using HTTP or HTTPS, contact Ceragon Customer Support for assistance.
  • Page 237 4 Click Choose File. A browse window opens. 5 Navigate to the directory in which the software file is located and select the file. The selected file must be a ZIP file. Page 237 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 238 8 Once the download has been completed, verify that the version you want to install has been downloaded. You can check the downloaded version for each component by viewing the Downloaded Version column in the Versions page. See Viewing Current Software Versions. Page 238 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 239 3 Unzip the new software package for IP-20 into your shared FTP or SFTP folder. 4 In the IP-20’s Web EMS, select Platform > Software > Download & Install. The Download & Install page opens. 5 Select FTP. Figure 174: Download & Install Page – FTP Page 239 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 240 15 Once the download has been completed, verify that the version you want to install has been downloaded. You can check the downloaded version for each component by viewing the Downloaded Version column in the Versions page. See Viewing Current Software Versions. Page 240 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 241 Download Success is displayed in the Download status field, until the unit displays the message No new software modules found. • In case of failure, wait at least 30 minutes and repeat the software download. Page 241 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 242: Table 28: Download & Install Status Parameters

    • Download Failure • All components already found in the system When the system is reset, the Download Status returns to Ready. Download progress Displays the progress of the current software download. Page 242 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 243: Configuring A Timed Installation

    (Figure 174). 3 Click Install Parameters. The Install Parameters page opens. Figure 176: Install Parameters Page 4 Select Yes in the Timed installation field. 5 Click Apply. The Software management timer field appears. Page 243 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 244 For example, in Figure 177, the timer is set for two hours after the timer was configured (02:00). 7 Click Apply, then Close to close the Install Parameters page. Page 244 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 245: Backing Up And Restoring Configurations

    To display the configuration files currently saved at the system restore points: Page 245 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 246: Table 29: Backup Files Page Columns

    The System ID, if any, of the unit from which the configuration file was created. This is taken from the Name field in the Unit Parameters page. See Configuring Unit Parameters. Valid Reserved for future use. Page 246 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 247: Setting The Configuration Management Parameters

    See Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server. 3 In the IP-20 Web EMS, select Platform > Configuration > Configuration Management. The Configuration Management page opens. Figure 179: Configuration Management Page Page 247 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 248 .zip manually. 11 Click Apply, then Close, to save the FTP parameters and return to the Configuration Management page. 12 In the File number field, select from three system restore points: Page 248 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 249: Exporting A Configuration File

    The next time the system is reset, the File Transfer status field returns to Ready. 4.8.5 Importing a Configuration File You can import a saved configuration file from a PC or laptop to one of the system's three restore points. To import a configuration file: Page 249 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 250: Deleting A Configuration File

    2 In the File Number field, select the restore point to which you want to back up the file. If another configuration file is already saved to that restore point, it will be overwritten by the file you back up. Page 250 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 251: Restoring A Saved Configuration

    4 Edit the cli_script.txt file using clish commands, one per line. 5 Save and close the cli_script.txt file, and add it back into the Configuration_files.zip file. 6 Import the updated Configuration_files.zip file back into the unit. See Importing a Configuration File. Page 251 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 252: Setting The Unit To The Factory Default Configuration

    1 Select Platform > Shelf Management > Chassis Configuration. The Chassis Configuration page opens (Figure 181). 2 Click Reset. 3 A prompt appears asking if you want to proceed with the reset. Click Yes to initiate the reset. The unit is reset. Page 252 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 253: Configuring Unit Parameters

    The type of measurement you want the system to use: Metric or Imperial. format Unit The current temperature of the unit. If the unit temperature goes lower than - Temperature 40°C or higher than 90°C, the unit raises an extreme temperature alarm Page 253 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 254: Configuring Ntp

    4 In the NTP server IP address field, enter the IP address of the NTP server. 5 Click Apply. Table 31 describes the status parameters that appear in the NTP Configuration page. Page 254 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 255: Displaying Unit Inventory

    To view the unit's part number and serial number: 1 Select Platform > Management > Inventory. The Inventory page opens, showing the unit's part number and serial number. Figure 184: Inventory Page Page 255 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 256: Displaying Sfp Ddm And Inventory Information

    They are only updated if the alarm is cleared, then raised again. If there is no signal on the interface, a Loss of Carrier alarm (LOC) is raised, and this alarm masks the DDM alarms. Figure 185: SFP Alarm Example Page 256 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 257: Displaying Information About An Sfp Module

    Always displays LC. Transceiver Type Displays a description of the SFP module. Vendor Name Displays the name of the SFP’s vendor. Vendor Part Number Displays the vendor’s part number for the SFP module. Page 257 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 258: Table 33: Sfp Digital Diagnostic Monitoring (Ddm) Parameters

    If the Admin status of the port is Down, the TX Power Level is displayed as -40 DBm and the Bias Current is displayed as 0 mA. The Temperature is always shown as long as the SFP module is inserted in the port. Page 258 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 259: Displaying Pms About An Sfp Module

    The average RX power during the interval (dBm). Min TX Power (dBm) The minimum TX power during the interval (dBm). Max TX Power (dBm) The maximum TX power during the interval (dBm). Page 259 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 260 An x in the column indicates that the values are not reliable. Possible causes are (i) an LOC alarm, (ii) changing the Admin status of the interface, or (iii) unit reset. Page 260 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 261: Defining A Login Banner

    Figure 188: Login Banner Page 2 Enter a text message of up to 2,000 bytes. 3 To display a test banner as it will appear to users, click Test Banner. 4 Click Apply. Page 261 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 262: Radio Configuration

    Configuring XPIC • Configuring Unit Protection with HSB Radio Protection (External Protection) • Configuring MIMO and Space Diversity Operating an IP-20C or IP-20C-HP in Single Radio Carrier Mode • • Performing Radio Loopback Page 262 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 263: Viewing The Radio Status And Settings

    2 For multi-carrier units, select the carrier in the Radio table (see Figure 189) and click Edit. A separate Radio Parameters page opens. The page is essentially identical to the Single-carrier page, except for the addition of a Radio location parameter. Page 263 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 264 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 190: Radio Parameters Page Per Carrier – IP-20C/IP-20C-HP Page 264 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 265: Table 35: Radio Status Parameters

    MRMC script and determine the current interference level for each channel. This enables you to select the best channel in accordance with current interference levels. See Running the Frequency Scanner (IP-20E and IP- 20V). Page 265 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 266: Configuring The Remote Radio Parameters

    2 For multi-carrier units, select the carrier in the Remote Radio table (see Figure 191) and click Edit. A separate Remote Radio Parameters page opens. The page is identical to the single-carrier page. Page 266 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 267: Table 36: Remote Radio Parameters

    Enter a unique identifier from 1 to 65535. Remote Tx Output Level The remote unit's Tx output level, if the remote unit has been configured to operate at a fixed Tx level (in dBm). Page 267 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 268: Configuring Atpc And Atpc Override Timer

    For multi-carrier units, the Radio Parameters page initially displays a table as shown in Figure 194. ◦ For single-carrier units, a page appears, similar to Figure 195 (which shows an IP-20C/IP-20C-HP page). Page 268 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 269 MRMC script, and RFU type. 6 In the ATPC Override Admin field, select Enable to enable ATPC override or Disable to disable ATPC override. You can only enable ATPC override if ATPC itself is enabled. Page 269 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 270 12 In the Remote Reference RX Level (dBm) field, enter a number between -70 and -30 as the reference value for the ATPC mechanism on the remote radio carrier. 13 Click Apply. To cancel an ATPC override state on the local unit, click Cancel Override. Page 270 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 271: Configuring Header De-Duplication And Frame Cut-Through

    Figure 196. ◦ For IP-20S units, a page appears, similar to Figure 197 (which shows an IP- 20C/IP-20C-HP page). Figure 196: Radio Ethernet Interface Configuration Page – IP-20C/IP-20C-HP Page 271 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 272 Tunnel-Layer4 – Header De-Duplication operates on Layer 2, Layer 3, and on the Tunnel, T-3, and T-4 layers for packets carrying GTP or GRE frames. 6 Click Apply, then Close Note: The Utilization threshold field is not applicable. Page 272 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 273: Viewing Header De-Duplication And Frame Cut-Through Counters

    For multi-carrier units, the Radio Ethernet Interface Configuration page initially displays a table as shown in Figure 198. ◦ For single-carrier units, the page appears as shown in Figure 199. Figure 198: Radio Ethernet Interface Counters Page – IP-20C/IP-20C-HP Page 273 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 274 2 For multi-carrier units, select the carrier in the Header Compression Counters table (Figure 198) and click View. A separate Radio Ethernet Interface Configuration page opens. The page is essentially identical to the single-carrier page. Page 274 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 275: Table 37: Radio Ethernet Interface Counters Fields

    Bytes on the TX side that were compressed by Header De-Duplication. bytes TX frames before Frames on the TX side before Header De-Duplication. enhanced HC TX frames Frames on the TX side that were compressed by Header De-Duplication. compressed by enhanced HC Page 275 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 276 The number of idle bytes transmitted since the last time the Radio Ethernet Interface counters were cleared. Cut Through Counters TX frames The number of frames that have been transmitted via Frame Cut-Through since the last time the Radio Ethernet Interface counters were cleared. Page 276 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 277: Configuring Aes-256 Payload Encryption

    For multi-carrier units, the Payload Encryption page initially displays a table as shown in Figure 201. ◦ For IP-20S units, a page appears, similar to Figure 202 (which shows an IP- 20C/IP-20C-HP page). Page 277 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 278 6 Configure the master key by doing one of the following: ◦ Enter a master key in the Master Key field. You must enter between 8 and 32 ASCII characters. ◦ Click Generate key to generate a master key automatically. Page 278 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 279 This step will cause the link status to be Down until payload encryption is successfully enabled on the local unit. However, the RSL measured on the link should remain at an acceptable level. Page 279 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 280 See Disabling Automatic Switchover to the Standby Unit. 13 Verify that there are no alarms on the link. Note: Any time payload encryption fails, the Operational status of the link is Down until payload encryption is successfully restored. Page 280 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 281: Configuring And Viewing Radio Pms And Statistics

    MSE PM thresholds are configured from the MSE PM Report page. See Displaying MSE PMs and Configuring MSE PM Thresholds. • XPI PM thresholds are configured from the XPI PM Report page. See Displaying XPI PMs and Configuring XPI PM Thresholds. Page 281 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 282 Excessive BER administration is enabled or disabled for the entire unit rather than for specific radios. 3 In the Thresholds table, select the radio for which you want to configure thresholds. Page 282 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 283 6 In the Signal Degrade BER Threshold field, select the level above which a Signal Degrade alarm is issued for errors detected over the radio link. The range of values is 1e-6 to 1e-15. 7 Click Apply, then Close. Page 283 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 284: Displaying Mrmc Status

    The current TX profile. TX QAM The current TX modulation. TX bit-rate The current TX bit-rate. RX profile The current RX profile. RX QAM The current RX modulation. RX bit-rate The current RX bit-rate. Page 284 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 285: Displaying Mrmc Pms

    Displays the minimum ACM profile that was measured during the interval. Max profile Displays the maximum ACM profile that was measured during the interval. Min bitrate Displays the minimum total radio throughput (Mbps) delivered during the interval. Page 285 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 286: Displaying And Clearing Defective Block Counters

    For multi-carrier units, the Counters page initially displays a table as shown in Figure 208. ◦ For single-carrier units, the Counters page appears as shown in Figure 209. Figure 208: Counters Page – Multi-Carrier Page 286 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 287 Figure 208) and click View to display a page for that carrier. A separate Counters page opens. Figure 210: Counters Page Per Carrier – Multi-Carrier 3 To clear the counters, click Clear Counters. Page 287 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 288: Displaying Signal Level Pms And Configuring Signal Level Pm Thresholds

    TSL exceed threshold The number of seconds the measured TSL exceeded the threshold seconds during the interval. TSL thresholds are configured in the Radio Thresholds page. See Configuring BER Thresholds and Displaying Current BER. Page 288 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 289: Table 41: Signal Level Thresholds

    Specify a second threshold for counting exceeded seconds if the RSL is below this level. TX Level Threshold (dBm) Specify the threshold for counting exceeded seconds if the TSL is below this level. Page 289 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 290: Displaying Modem Ber (Aggregate) Pms

    Displays the number of severe error seconds in the measuring interval. Displays the Unavailable Seconds value of the measured interval. The value can be between 0 and 900 seconds (15 minutes). Displays the number of background block errors during the measured interval. Page 290 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 291: Displaying Mse Pms And Configuring Mse Pm Thresholds

    Modem MSE PM table and click View. Table 43: Modem MSE 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. Page 291 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 292 Thresholds Configuration– Edit Page opens. For each radio, specify the modem MSE (Mean Square Error) threshold for calculating MSE Exceed Threshold seconds, and click Apply. Figure 215: Modem MSE Thresholds Configuration – Edit Page Page 292 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 293: Displaying Xpi Pms And Configuring Xpi Pm Thresholds

    Min XPI (dB) The minimum XPI level that was measured during the interval. Max XPI (dB) The maximum XPI level that was measured during the interval. Page 293 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 294 To set the XPI PM thresholds, click Thresholds. The XPI Thresholds Configuration– Edit Page opens. For each radio, specify the modem XPI threshold for calculating XPI Exceed Threshold seconds, and click Apply. Figure 217: XPI Thresholds Configuration – Edit Page Page 294 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 295: Displaying Traffic Pms

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 5.6.9 Displaying Traffic PMs This section includes: • Displaying Capacity and Throughput PMs • Displaying Utilization PMs Displaying Frame Error Rate PMs • Page 295 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 296: Figure 205: Capacity Pm Report Page

    900. To display capacity and throughput PMs per radio: 1 Select Radio > PM & Statistics > Traffic > Capacity/Throughput. The Capacity PM report page opens. Figure 218: Capacity PM Report Page Page 296 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 297: Figure 206: Ethernet Radio Capacity And Throughput Threshold Page

    Displays the number of seconds during the measured time interval Threshold during which the L1 bandwidth exceeded the configured capacity threshold. Peak throughput Displays the highest throughput, in Mbps, that occurred for the selected (Mbps) radio during the measured time interval. Page 297 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 298 Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that time. Page 298 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 299: Figure 207: Utilization Pm Report Page

    To display reports in 15-minute intervals, select 15 minutes. ◦ To display reports in daily intervals, select 24 hours. To set the thresholds for utilization PMs: 1 Select Threshold. The Utilization Threshold page opens. Page 299 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 300: Figure 208: Ethernet Radio Utilization Threshold Page

    Indicates whether the values received at time and date of the measured interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that time. Page 300 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 301: Figure 222: Frame Error Pm Report Page

    Table 47 describes the capacity and throughput PMs. Note: To display the same parameters for a specific interval in a separate page, select the interval in the PM table and click View. Page 301 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 302: Table 47: Frame Error Rate Pms

    Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that time. Page 302 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 303: Ethernet Services And Interfaces

    Configuring In- Band Management. A service point is a logical entity attached to a physical or logical interface. Service points define the movement of frames through the service. Each service point Page 303 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 304: General Guidelines For Provisioning Ethernet Services

    The Ethernet Services page is the starting point for defining Ethernet services on the IP-20. To open the Ethernet Services page: 1 Select Ethernet > Services. The Ethernet Services page opens. Figure 223: Ethernet Services Page Page 304 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 305: Adding An Ethernet Service

    To add an Ethernet service: 1 Select Ethernet > Services. The Ethernet Services page opens (Figure 223). 2 In the Ethernet Services page, click Add. The Ethernet Services – Add page opens. Page 305 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 306: Figure 211: Ethernet Services - Add Page

    You can select a value from 16 to 131,072, in multiples of 16. This maximum only applies to dynamic, not static, MAC address table entries. Page 306 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 307: Editing A Service

    1 Select Ethernet > Services. The Ethernet Services page opens (Figure 223). 2 Select the services in the Ethernet Services Configuration table, or select all the services by selecting the check box in the top row. Page 307 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 308: Viewing Service Details

    3 In the Ethernet Services page, click Service Details. The Ethernet Services – Service Details page opens. The Service Details page contains the same fields as the Add page (Figure 224). However, in the Service Details page, these fields are read-only. Page 308 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 309: Configuring Service Points

    This section includes: • Ethernet Services Points Overview • The Ethernet Service Points Page Adding a Service Point • • Editing a Service Point • Deleting a Service Point Attaching VLANs • Page 309 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 310 Management services utilize Management (MNG) service points. A Point-to-Point or Multipoint service can hold up to 32 service points. A management service can hold up to 30 service points. Page 310 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 311: Figure 213: Ethernet Service Points Page

    Egress – See Ethernet Service Points – Egress Attributes • To return to the Ethernet Services page at any time, click Back to Services table at the top of the Ethernet Service Points page. Page 311 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 312: Table 49: General Service Point Attributes

    Once you have added the service point, you cannot change this parameter. Interface location The physical or logical interface on which the service point is located. Once you have added the service point, you cannot change this parameter. Page 312 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 313: Table 50: Attached Interface Types

    All-to-One All C-VLANs and untagged frames that enter the interface are classified into the service point. Q-in-Q A single S-VLAN and C-VLAN SAP and MNG combination is classified into the service point. Page 313 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 314: Figure 227: Ethernet Service Points Page - Ingress Attributes

    Disable to disable flooding. Allow broadcast Indicates whether frames with a broadcast destination MAC address are allowed to ingress the service via this service point. Select Allow to allow broadcast or Disable to disable broadcast. Page 314 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 315 The default CoS. If the CoS Mode is sp-def-cos, this is the CoS assigned to frames that pass through the service point. This decision can be overwritten at the service level. Possible values are 0 to 7. Page 315 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 316: Figure 215: Ethernet Service Points Page - Egress Attributes

    If C-VLAN CoS preservation is disabled, the C-VLAN CoS value of frames egressing the service point is set at whatever value might have been re-assigned by the interface, service point, or service, or whatever value results from marking (see Marking admin, below). Page 316 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 317 If Marking admin and CoS preservation for the relevant outer VLAN are both set to Disable, re-marking is applied, but only according to the values defined for Green frames in the 802.1Q and 802.1AD marking tables. Page 317 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 318 This can be used to assign one of the available service bundles from the H-QoS hierarchy queues to the service point. This enables you to personalize the QoS egress path. Permitted values are 1-63. Page 318 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 319: Figure 216: Ethernet Service Points - Add Page

    4 Select the relevant service point in the Ethernet Services Points – General SP Attributes table. 5 Click Add. The Ethernet Service Points – Add page opens. Figure 229: Ethernet Service Points - Add Page Page 319 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 320 However, you can manually change these parameter values. The pre-defined options are customized to the type of service to which you are adding the service point. 7 Click Apply, then Close. Page 320 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 321 Point page, except Service Point ID, Service Point Type, Interface Location, and Attached Interface Type. 6 Edit the service point attributes, as described in Table 49, Table 51, and Table 52. 7 Click Apply, then Close. Page 321 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 322 3 Click Service Points. The Ethernet Service Points page opens (Figure 226). 4 Select the relevant service point in the Ethernet Services Points – General SP Attributes table. 5 Click Delete. The service point is deleted. Page 322 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 323: Figure 217: Attached Vlan List Page

    4 Select the relevant service point in the Ethernet Services Points – General SP Attributes table. 5 Click Attached VLAN. The Attached VLAN List page opens. Figure 230: Attached VLAN List Page 6 Click Add. The Attached VLAN List - Add page opens. Page 323 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 324: Figure 218: Attached Vlan List - Add Page

    CoS and Color values defined below override the CoS and Color decisions made at the interface level. However, if the service point or service are configured to apply their own CoS and Color decisions, those decisions override the decision made here. Page 324 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 325 Classification table and click Edit. You can edit all the fields that can be configured in the Attached VLAN List – Add page. To delete a VLAN Classification table entry, select the entry in the VLAN Classification table and click Delete. Page 325 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 326: Setting The Mru Size And The S-Vlan Ethertype

    S-VLAN ethertype. Options are: 0x8100, 0x88A8, 0x9100, and 0x9200. The default value is 0x88A8. Note: The C-VLAN Ethertype is set at 0x8100 and cannot be modified. 4 Click Apply. Page 326 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 327: Configuring Ethernet Interfaces

    Ethernet: Slot 1, Port 4 is only used for P4 on an IP-20C 2E2SX or IP-20S 2E2S, when used as a traffic port. When P4 is used as an Extension port (IP-20C only), it is not displayed at all. Page 327 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 328: Figure 221: Physical Interfaces - Edit Page

    Ethernet SFP+ interfaces (IP-20V and IP-20E R2H ESP models only) – Only 1000 and 10000 are supported. ◦ Radio interfaces – The parameter is read-only and set by the system to 1000. Page 328 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 329: Table 54: Physical Interface Status Parameters

    Actual port duplex Displays the actual duplex status of the interface for the link as agreed by the two sides of the link after the auto negotiation process. Page 329 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 330: Configuring Automatic State Propagation And Link Loss Forwarding

    Even when no triggering event has taken place, the ASP mechanism sends periodic update messages indicating that no triggering event has taken place. Page 330 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 331: Figure 222: Asp & Llf Page

    Monitored Radio Interface, defined below. 4 In the Monitored Radio interface field, select the Monitored Radio Interface. The Controlled Ethernet Interface, defined above, is disabled upon a failure indication on the Monitored Radio Interface. Page 331 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 332 1 Select the interface pairs in the Automatic state propagation configuration table or select all the interfaces by selecting the check box in the top row. 2 Click Delete. The interface pairs are removed from the Automatic state propagation configuration table. Page 332 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 333: Viewing Ethernet Pms And Statistics

    1 In the header row, select the arrow next to any of the columns. 2 Select Columns. 3 Mark the interfaces you want to display and clear the interfaces you do not want to display. Page 333 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 334: Egress Cos Statistics

    1 Select Ethernet > PM & Statistics > Egress CoS Statistics. The Egress CoS Statistics page opens. Figure 239: Egress CoS Statistics Page 2 In the Show Service bundle ID field, select 1. Page 334 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 335: Figure 227: Egress Cos Statistics - Edit Page

    Figure 240: Egress CoS Statistics – Edit Page 2 In the Clear on read field, select Yes to have statistics for the CoS value cleared every time you open the page. 3 Click Apply. Page 335 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 336: Port Tx Statistics

    This section includes: • Displaying Ethernet Port TX PMs Enabling or Disabling Gathering of Port TX PM Statistics per Interface • • Setting the Ethernet Port TX Threshold Page 336 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 337: Figure 228: Ethernet Port Tx Pm Report Page

    An x in the column indicates that the values are not valid (for example, because of a power surge or power failure that occurred during the interval). To clear the PMs, click Clear All. Page 337 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 338: Figure 229: Ethernet Pm Port Admin Page

    Figure 242: Ethernet PM Port Admin Page 2 Select the interface. 3 Click Enable Port PM or Disable Port PM to enable or disable the gathering of Port TX PMs on the selected interface. 4 Click Close. Page 338 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 339: Port Rx Statistics

    This section includes: • Displaying Ethernet Port RX PMs • Enabling or Disabling Gathering of Port RX PM Statistics per Interface • Setting the Ethernet Port RX Threshold Page 339 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 340: Figure 231: Ethernet Port Rx Pm Report Page

    An x in the column indicates that the values are not valid (for example, because of a power surge or power failure that occurred during the interval). To clear the PMs, click Clear All. Page 340 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 341: Figure 232: Ethernet Pm Port Admin Page

    Figure 245: Ethernet PM Port Admin Page 2 Select the interface. 3 Click Enable Port PM or Disable Port PM to enable or disable the gathering of Port RX PMs on the selected interface. 4 Click Close. Page 341 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 342: Figure 233: Ethernet Port Rx Threshold Page

    1 In the Ethernet Port RX PM Report page, click Threshold. The Ethernet Port Rx Threshold page opens. Figure 246: Ethernet Port Rx Threshold Page 2 Enter a threshold, between 0 and 4294967295. 3 Click Apply, then Close. Page 342 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 343: Quality Of Service (Qos)

    Shaper (Optional) Standard QoS/ H-QoS Egress Ingress CET/Pipe Marker Services (Optional) Rate Limit GE/Radio Classifier Port (Policing) Queue Scheduler/ GE/Radio Port Manager Shaper (Optional) Standard QoS/ H-QoS Figure 247: QoS Block Diagram Page 343 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 344 Marker – This mechanism provides the ability to modify priority bits in frames • based on the calculated CoS and Color. For a more detailed description of QoS in the IP-20, refer to the Technical Description for the IP-20 product type you are using. Page 344 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 345: Configuring Classification

    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. Page 345 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 346: Configuring Ingress Path Classification On A Logical Interface

    The following sections explain how to modify the classification tables per bit type. To configure the classification criteria for a logical interface: 1 Select Ethernet > Interfaces > Logical Interfaces. The Logical Interfaces page opens. Page 346 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 347: Figure 235: Logical Interfaces Page

    3 Configure the parameters described in Table 57. 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. Page 347 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 348: Table 57: Logical Interface Classification Parameters

    Default port CoS Select the default CoS value for frames passing through the interface (0 to 7). This value can be overwritten on the service point and service level. Page 348 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 349: Modifying The C-Vlan 802.1Q Up And Cfi Bit Classification Table

    2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The 802.1Q Classification – Edit page opens. Figure 251: 802.1Q Classification - Edit Page 3 Modify the parameters you want to change: ◦ 802.1Q UP – Read-only. The User Priority (UP) bit to be mapped. Page 349 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 350: Modifying The S-Vlan 802.1 Up And Dei Bit Classification Table

    2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The 802.1AD Classification - Edit page opens. Figure 253: 802.1Q Classification - Edit Page 3 Modify the parameters you want to change: ◦ 802.1AD UP – Read-only. The User Priority (UP) bit to be mapped. Page 350 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 351: Modifying The Dscp Classification Table

    1 Select Ethernet > QoS > Classification > DSCP. The DSCP Classification page opens. Figure 254: DSCP Classification Page 2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The DSCP Classification - Edit page opens. Page 351 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 352: Modifying The Mpls Exp Bit Classification Table

    Classification by MPLS bits is supported in both untagged and 802.1Q provider-tagged frames. To modify the classification criteria for MPLS EXP bits: 1 Select Ethernet > QoS > Classification > MPLS. The MPLS Classification page opens. Page 352 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 353 CoS – The CoS assigned to frames with the designated MPLS EXP value. ◦ Color – The Color assigned to frames with the designated MPLS EXP value. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 353 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 354: Modifying The Mac Da Classification Table

    1 Select Ethernet > QoS > Classification > MAC DA. The MAC DA Classification page opens. Figure 258: MAC DA Classification Page 2 Click Add. The MAC DA Classification – Add page opens. Figure 259: MAC DA Classification – Add Page Page 354 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 355 To delete an entry from the MAC DA Classification Table: 1 In the MAC DA Classification page, select the row you want to delete and click Delete. A confirmation window opens. 2 Click OK. Page 355 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 356: Configuring Policers (Rate Metering)

    7.3.2 Configuring Policer Profiles This section includes: • Adding a Policer Profile Editing a Policer Profile • Deleting a Policer Profile • Page 356 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 357 2 Click Add. The Policer Profile - Add page opens. Figure 262: Policer Profile - Add Page 3 Configure the profile’s parameters. See Table 58 for a description of the policer profile parameters. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 357 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 358: Table 58: Policer Profile Parameters

    Select Enable or Disable. When enabled, frames that ingress as yellow may be converted to green when there are no available yellow credits in the EIR bucket. Coupling Flag is only relevant in Color Aware mode. Page 358 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 359 The Policer Profile Table - Edit page is identical to the Policer Profile Table - Add page (Figure 262). You can edit any parameter that can be configured in the Policer Profile Table Add page, except the Profile ID. Page 359 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 360: Assigning Policers To Interfaces

    Figure 263: Logical Interfaces – Policers Page – Unicast Policer (Default) For a logical interface, you can assign policers to the following traffic flows: • Unicast Policer Multicast Policer • • Broadcast Policer • Ethertype Policers Page 360 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 361 4 In the Unicast admin field, select Enable to enable policing on unicast traffic flows from the logical interface, or Disable to disable policing on unicast traffic flows from the logical interface. 5 Click Apply. Page 361 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 362 5 In the Multicast admin field, select Enable to enable policing on multicast traffic flows from the logical interface, or Disable to disable policing on multicast traffic flows from the logical interface. 6 Click Apply. Page 362 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 363 5 In the Broadcast admin field, select Enable to enable policing on broadcast traffic flows from the logical interface, or Disable to disable policing on broadcast traffic flows from the logical interface. 6 Click Apply. Page 363 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 364 Disable to disable policing on the logical interface for the specified ethertype. 7 Click Apply. 8 To assign policers to additional Ethertypes, select Ethertype type 2 Policer and Ethertype type 3 Policer and repeat the steps above. Page 364 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 365: Configuring The Ingress And Egress Byte Compensation

    The outer frame is C-VLAN, and C-VLAN CoS preservation is disabled. If marking and CoS preservation for the relevant outer VLAN are both disabled, special marking is applied. Special marking means that marking is performed, but Page 365 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 366: Enabling Marking

    Each row in the 802.1Q Marking page represents a CoS and color combination. Figure 267: 802.1Q Marking Page 2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The 802.1Q Marking - Edit page opens. Page 366 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 367: Modifying The 802.1Ad Marking Table

    1 Select Ethernet > QoS > Marking > 802.1AD. The 802.1AD Marking page opens. Each row in the 802.1AD Marking page represents a CoS and color combination. Figure 269: 802.1AD Marking Page Page 367 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 368 2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The 802.1AD Marking - Edit page opens. Figure 270: 802.1AD Marking - Edit Page 3 Enter the new 802.1AD UP and 802.1AD DEI values. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 368 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 369: Configuring Wred

    TCP flows will be restrained before traffic congestion occurs. 7.5.2 Configuring WRED Profiles This section includes: Adding a WRED Profile • • Editing a WRED Profile • Deleting a WRED Profile Page 369 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 370 5 In the Green curve max point field, enter the maximum throughput of green packets for queues with this profile, in Kbytes (0-8192). When this value is reached, all green packets in the queue are dropped. Page 370 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 371 9 In the Yellow curve max drop ratio field, enter the maximum percentage (1- 100) of dropped yellow packets for queues with this profile. 10 Click Apply, then Close. Page 371 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 372 This page is similar to the WRED Profile – Add page (Figure 272). You can edit any parameter except the WRED Profile ID. 3 Modify the profile. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 372 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 373: Assigning Wred Profiles To Queues

    In the current release, only Service Bundle 1 is supported. 4 Select a CoS Queue ID and click Edit. The Logical Interfaces – WRED – Edit page opens. Page 373 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 374: Configuring Egress Shaping

    Egress shaping on the interface level is planned for future release. 7.6.2 Configuring Queue Shaper Profiles This section includes: • Adding a Queue Shaper Profile • Editing a Queue Shaper Profile Deleting a Queue Shaper Profile • Page 374 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 375 5 In the CIR field, enter the Committed Information Rate (CIR) assigned to the profile, in bits per second. Permitted values are: ◦ 16,000 - 32,000,000 bps, with granularity of 16,000. ◦ 32,000,000 - 131,008,000 bps, with granularity of 64,000. 6 Click Apply, then Close. Page 375 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 376 Edit page opens. This page is similar to the Queue Shaper Profile – Add page (Figure 276). You can edit any parameter except the Profile ID. 3 Modify the profile. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 376 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 377: Configuring Service Bundle Shaper Profiles

    2 Click Delete. The profiles are deleted. 7.6.3 Configuring Service Bundle Shaper Profiles This section includes: • Adding a Service Bundle Shaper Profile • Editing a Service Bundle Shaper Profile • Deleting a Service Bundle Shaper Profile Page 377 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 378 5 In the CIR field, enter the Committed Information Rate (CIR) assigned to the profile, in bits per second. Permitted values are: ◦ 0 – 32,000,000 bps, with granularity of 16,000. ◦ 32,000,000 – 1,000,000,000 bps, with granularity of 64,000. Page 378 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 379 6 In the PIR field, enter the Peak Information Rate (PIR) assigned to the profile, in bits per second. Permitted values are: ◦ 16,000 – 32,000,000 bps, with granularity of 16,000. ◦ 32,000,000 – 1,000,000,000 bps, with granularity of 64,000. 7 Click Apply, then Close. Page 379 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 380 Profile – Edit page opens. This page is similar to the Service Bundle Shaper Profile – Add page (Figure 278). You can edit any parameter except the Profile 3 Modify the profile. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 380 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 381: Assigning A Queue Shaper Profile To A Queue

    Shaper Configuration table open by default. All queue shaper profiles defined in the system are listed in the table. Figure 279: Logical Interfaces – Shaper – Egress Queue Shaper 3 Click Add. The Egress Queue Shaper Configuration – Add page opens. Page 381 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 382: Assigning A Service Bundle Shaper Profile To A Service Bundle

    7 Click Apply, then Close. 7.6.5 Assigning a Service Bundle Shaper Profile to a Service Bundle To assign a service bundle shaper profile to a service bundle: Page 382 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 383 See Configuring Service Bundle Shaper Profiles. 6 In the Shaper Admin field, select Enable to enable egress service bundle shaping, or Disable to disable egress service bundle shaping. 7 Click Apply, then Close. Page 383 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 384: Configuring Scheduling

    CoS-based priorities, corresponding to eight queues in an interface to which the profile is assigned. You can configure up to eight priority profiles. A ninth profile, Profile ID 9, is pre-configured. You can configure Green priorities from 4 Page 384 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 385 (highest) to 1 (lowest). An additional four Yellow priority profiles are defined automatically. This section includes: • Adding a Scheduler Priority Profile Editing a Service Scheduler Priority Profile • • Deleting a Scheduler Priority Profile Page 385 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 386 1 Select Ethernet > QoS > Scheduler > Priority Profiles. The Scheduler Priority Profile page opens. Figure 283: Scheduler Priority Profile Page 2 Click Add. The Scheduler Priority Profile – Add page opens, with default values displayed. Page 386 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 387 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 284: Scheduler Priority Profile – Add Page 3 In the Profile ID field, select a unique Profile ID between 1 and 8. Page 387 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 388 5 Optionally, you can enter a description of up to 20 characters in the field to the right of each CoS value. 6 Click Apply, then Close. Note: The Yellow priority values are assigned automatically by the system. Page 388 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 389 – Edit page opens. This page is similar to the Scheduler Priority Profile – Add page (Figure 284). You can edit any parameter except the Profile ID. 3 Modify the profile. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 389 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 390: Configuring Wfq Profiles

    You can configure up to five WFQ profiles. A sixth profile, Profile ID 1, is pre-configured. This section includes: • Adding a WFQ Profile • Editing a WFQ Priority Profile Deleting a WFQ Profile • Page 390 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 391 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. 4 For each CoS value, enter the weight for that CoS, from 1 to 20. Page 391 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 392 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 5 Click Apply, then Close. Page 392 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 393 Edit page opens. This page is similar to the Scheduler WFQ Profile – Add page (Figure 286). You can edit any parameter except the Profile ID. 3 Modify the profile. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 393 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 394: Assigning A Priority Profile To An Interface

    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 – Edit page open by default (Figure 287). Page 394 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 395 Figure 288: Logical Interfaces – Scheduler – Egress Port Scheduling WFQ 4 In the Profile ID field, select from a list of configured scheduling priority profiles. See Configuring WFQ Profiles. 5 Click Apply, then Close. Page 395 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 396: Configuring And Displaying Queue-Level Pms

    PMs for queue traffic are saved for 30 days, after which they are removed from the database. It is important to note that they are not persistent, which means they are not saved in the event of unit reset. Page 396 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 397 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 To configure queue-level PMs: 1 Select Ethernet > PM & Statistics > Egress CoS PM > Configuration. The Egress CoS PM Configuration page opens. Figure 289: Egress CoS PM Configuration Page Page 397 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 398 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 2 Click Add. The Egress CoS PM Configuration – Add page opens. Figure 290: Egress CoS PM Configuration – Add Page Page 398 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 399 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. Page 399 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 400: Ethernet Protocols

    When bandwidth degrades from the nominal value in the Monitored Interface, messages relaying the actual bandwidth values are periodically sent over the Control Interface. A termination message is sent once the bandwidth returns to its nominal level. Page 400 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 401: Adding An Abn Entity

    5 In the Admin field, select Up to enable ABN monitoring or Down to disable ABN monitoring. 6 In the Monitored Interface field, select the Monitored Interface. This is the interface which is constantly monitored for its bandwidth value. Page 401 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 402: Editing An Abn Entity

    Nominal BW, the Current BW, and the Version. 4 Edit the ABN entity attributes, as described in Adding an ABN entity. 5 Click Apply, then Close. Page 402 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 403: Deleting An Abn Entity

    • On – Holdoff measurement time has ended and the current bandwidth is still below the nominal value. Holdoff Start Time (mSec) The Holdoff start time for the last event. Page 403 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 404: Configuring Lldp

    To display a summary of the important LLDP management information regarding the unit's nearest neighbor (peer): 1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LLDP > Remote Management. The LLDP Remote Management page opens. Page 404 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 405: Configuring The General Lldp Parameters

    IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications. To display and configure the general LLDP parameters for the unit: 1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Configuration > Parameters. The LLDP Configuration Parameters page opens. Page 405 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 406: Table 62: Lldp Read-Only Configuration Parameters

    Admin status becomes Disabled until it will process a request to reinitialize LLDP. For instructions on disabling or enabling LLDP on a port, see Configuring the LLDP Port Parameters. In this release, the Reinit Delay is set at 2. Page 406 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 407: Configuring The Lldp Port Parameters

    1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Configuration > Port Configuration. The LLDP Port Configuration page opens. Figure 297: LLDP Port Configuration Page 2 Select an interface and click Edit. The LLDP Port Configuration - Edit page opens. Page 407 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 408: Table 64: Lldp Port Configuration Status Parameters

    PortDesc – The LLDP agent transmits Port Description TLVs. • SysName – The LLDP agent transmits System Name TLVs. • SysDesc – The LLDP agent transmits System Description TLVs. • SysCap – The LLDP agent transmits System Capabilities TLVs. Page 408 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 409: Displaying The Unit's Management Parameters

    To displays the MAC address associated with the unit for purposes of LLDP transmissions: 1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Configuration > Management TLV. The LLDP Management TLV Configuration page opens. Page 409 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 410: Table 65: Lldp Management Tlv Parameters

    Defines the type of the management address identifier encoding used for the Management Address. Tx Enable Indicates whether the unit's Management Address is transmitted with LLDPDUs. In this release, the Management Address is always sent. Page 410 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 411: Displaying Peer Unit's Management Parameters

    Remote ID An arbitrary local integer value used by this agent to identify a particular connection instance, unique only for the indicated remote system. Time Mark The time the entry was created. Page 411 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 412: Table 67: Lldp Remote System Table Parameters

    An octet string used to identify the port component associated with the remote system. Port Sub type The type of port identifier encoding used in the peer's Port ID. Time Mark The time the entry was created. Page 412 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 413: Displaying The Local Unit's Parameters

    Chassis ID The MAC Address of the local unit. Chassis ID SubType The type of encoding used to identify the local unit. In this release, this parameter is always set to MAC Address. Page 413 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 414 0 – other 1 – repeater 2 – bridge 3 – wlanAccessPoint 4 – router 5 – telephone 6 – docsisCableDevice 7 – stationOnly 8 – cVLANComponent 9 – sVLANComponent 10 – twoPortMACRelay Page 414 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 415: Table 69: Lldp Local System Port Parameters

    Port Sub Type The type of encoding used to identify the port in LLDP transmissions. In this release, this parameter is always set to MAC Address. Port Description A description of the port. Page 415 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 416 2 To display all the parameters, select a row and click View. Figure 306: LLDP Local System Management – View Page Table 70 describes the parameters in the LLDP Local System Management page. These parameters are read-only. Page 416 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 417: Displaying Lldp Statistics

    1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Statistic > General. The LLDP Statistic page opens. Figure 307: LLDP Statistic Page Table 71 describes the statistics in the LLDP Statistic page. Page 417 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 418: Table 71: Lldp Statistics

    1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Statistic > Port TX. The LLDP Port TX Statistic page opens. Figure 308: LLDP Port TX Statistics Page Table 72 describes the statistics in the LLDP Port TX Statistic page. Page 418 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 419: Table 72: Lldp Port Tx Statistics

    Table 73 describes the statistics in the LLDP Port TX Statistic page. Table 73: LLDP Port RX Statistics Parameter Definition Interface Location The index value used to identify the port in LLDP transmissions. Destination Address The LLDP MAC address associated with this entry. Page 419 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 420 This counter is set to zero during agent initialization. This counter is incremented only once when the complete set of information is invalidated (aged out) from all related tables on a particular port. Partial ageing is not allowed. Page 420 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 421: Synchronization

    Sync mode, enter the following command in root view: root> platform sync mode show 2 In the Web EMS, select Sync > SyncE Regenerator. The SyncE Regenerator page opens. Figure 310: SyncE Regenerator Page Page 421 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 422 Ethernet interface. If the two interfaces are the same type, the operation will fail. Only one radio port is available for IP-20S, IP-20E, and IP-20V units. 6 Click Apply. Page 422 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 423: Configuring The Sync Source

    When configuring an Ethernet interface as a Sync source, the Media Type of the interface must be RJ45 or SFP, not Auto-Type. To view and configure the Media Type of an Ethernet interface, see Configuring Ethernet Interfaces. Page 423 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 424: Viewing The Sync Source Status

    SSM messages. For instructions how to enable SSM, see Configuring the Outgoing Clock and SSM Messages. Sync Interface Displays the priority assigned to this synchronization source. Priority Sync Interface Displays the current actual synchronization quality of the interface. Quality Status Page 424 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 425: Adding A Sync Source

    You cannot assign the same priority to more than one synchronization source. Once a priority value has been assigned, it no longer appears in the Sync Interface Priority dropdown list. 5 Click Apply, then Close. Page 425 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 426: Editing A Sync Source

    In order to prevent loops, an SSM with quality “Do Not Use” is sent from the active source interface (both radio and Ethernet) In order for an interface to transmit SSM messages, SSM must be enabled on the interface. By default, SSM is disabled on all interfaces. Page 426 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 427 Figure 315: Outgoing Clock – Edit Page 3 In the Outgoing clock source field, select the interface's synchronization source. Options are: ◦ Local Clock – The interface uses its internal clock as its synchronization source. Page 427 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 428 4 In Sync Radio Channel field, use the default value of 0. 5 In the SSM Admin field, select On or Off to enable or disable SSM for the interface. By default, SSM is disabled on all interfaces. Page 428 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 429: Configuring 1588 Transparent Clock

    Sync source, with lower priority than the radio interface. See Adding a Sync Source. 5 Verify that the Sync Interface Quality Status of the first Sync source is not Failure. See Viewing the Sync Source Status. Page 429 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 430 Figure 316: 1588 General Configuration Page 7 In the 1588 PTP field, select Enable. 8 Click Apply. 9 Select Sync > 1588 > Transparent Clock. The 1588 Transparent Clock page opens. Figure 317: 1588 Transparent Clock Page Page 430 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 431 2 In the 1588 PTP field, select Disable. 3 Click Apply. Note: Disabling 1588 PTP disables both Transparent Clock and Boundary Clock, and can drastically affect time synchronization performance in the entire network. Page 431 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 432: Access Management And Security

    Another security feature, HTTPS cipher hardening, can be configured via CLI. For instructions, see Configuring HTTPS Cipher Hardening (CLI). Related topics: • Changing Your Password • Operating in FIPS Mode Configuring AES-256 Payload Encryption • Page 432 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 433: Configuring The General Access Control Parameters

    0, or 30-90. If you enter 0, this feature is disabled. The default value is 0. 5 Click Apply. Once a user is blocked, you can unblock the user from the User Accounts page. To unblock a user: Page 433 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 434 2 Select the user and click Edit. The Access Control User Accounts - Edit page opens. Figure 320: Access Control User Accounts - Edit Page 3 In the Blocked field, select No. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 434 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 435: Configuring The Password Security Parameters

    You can enter 20-90, or No Aging. If you select No Aging, password aging is disabled and passwords remain valid indefinitely. 5 Click Apply. Page 435 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 436: Configuring The Session Timeout

    1 Select Platform > Security > Protocols Control. The Protocols Control page opens. Figure 322: Protocols Control Page 2 In the Session timeout (Minutes) field, select a session timeout, in minutes, from 1 to 60. 3 Click Apply. Page 436 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 437: Configuring Users

    The system includes a number of pre-defined user profiles. You can edit these profiles, and add user profiles. Together, the system supports up to 50 user profiles. Page 437 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 438 1 Select Platform > Security > Access Control > User Profiles. The Access Control User Profiles page opens. Figure 323: Access Control User Profiles Page 2 Click Add. The Access Control User Profiles - Add page opens. Page 438 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 439 To edit a user profile, select the profile and click Edit. You can edit all of the profile parameters except the profile name. To delete a user profile, select the profile and click Delete. Note: You cannot delete a user profile if the profile is assigned to any users. Page 439 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 440: Configuring Users

    2 Click Add. The Access Control User Profiles - Add page opens. Figure 326: 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. Page 440 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 441 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. Page 441 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 442: Configuring Radius

    10.5.2 Activating RADIUS Authentication To activate RADIUS authentication: 1 Select Platform > Security > Access Control > Radius > Radius Configuration. The Radius Configuration page opens. Page 442 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 443: Configuring The Radius Server Attributes

    ◦ Select Server ID 1 to configure the Primary Radius server. ◦ Select Server ID 2 to configure the Secondary Radius server. 3 Click Edit. The Radius Configuration – Edit page opens. Page 443 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 444: Viewing Radius User Permissions And Connectivity

    You can view RADIUS user connectivity and permissions information for all Radius users currently connected. To view RADIUS users: 1 Select Platform > Security > Access Control > Radius > Radius Users. The Radius Users page opens. Page 444 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 445 The User Instances column displays the number of open sessions the user currently has. To view the user’s authorized access levels, click + next to the user name. The page refreshes and displays the additional access level information. Page 445 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 446: Configuring A Radius Server

    Linux FreeRADIUS server to work with an IP-20. For the sake of simplicity, the subsections describe how to create three users: an Advanced user with Advanced read/write permissions, a Normal user with regular read/write permissions, and a Viewer user with no read/write permissions. Page 446 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 447 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 10.5.5.1 Configuring a Win 2008 RADIUS Server The following sub-sections describe how to configure a Win 2008 RADIUS Server to work with an IP-20 device. Page 447 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 448 In the Server Manager, navigate to Configuration > Local Users and Groups. Right click Groups and create the following three user groups: ◦ Radius_Advanced ◦ Radius_Normal ◦ Radius_Viewer Figure 331: Server Manager – Creating User Groups Page 448 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 449 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 2 Create three users: ◦ ◦ ◦ Figure 332: Server Manager – Creating Users Page 449 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 450 Figure 333: Server Manager – User Password Settings 4 Attach each user to a group, as follows: ◦ Attach u1 to Radius_Advanced ◦ Attach u2 to Radius_Normal ◦ Attach u3 to Radius_Viewer Page 450 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 451 3 In the New RADIUS Client window: Select the Enable this RADIUS client check box. Enter a descriptive Friendly name for the device, such as IP-20X iii Enter the device IP Address. Page 451 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 452 Confirm shared secret. Note down the secret because you will need to enter the same value in the Secret field of the Radius Configuration – Edit page (Figure 328). Page 452 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 453 Figure 335: Create Network Policy – Specify Name and Connection Type 4 Click Next. 5 In the Specify Conditions window, click Add. 6 In the Select Condition window that appears, select the User Groups condition and click Add. Page 453 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 454 8 In the Select Group window that appears, click Advanced. 9 In the Select Group window that appears, click Find Now to list all groups, and then select the appropriate group from the list: Radius_Advanced, Radius_Normal, or Radius_Viewer. 10 Click OK. Page 454 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 455 Figure 337: Create Network Policy – User Group added to Policy’s Conditions 11 Click OK to save settings. 12 Click Next. 13 In the Specify Access Permission window that appears, select the Access Granted option. Page 455 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 456 Figure 338: Create Network Policy – Specifying Access Permission 14 Click Next. 15 In the Configure Authentication Methods window that appears, make sure only the Unencrypted Authentication (PAP, SPAP) option is selected. Page 456 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 457 Figure 339: Create Network Policy – Configuring Authentication Methods 16 In the query window that appears, click No. Figure 340: Create Network Policy – Insecure Authentication Method Query 17 In the Configure Constraints window that appears, click Next. Page 457 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 458 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 341: Create Network Policy – Configuring Constraints 18 In the Configure Settings window that appears: Remove all Standard RADIUS attributes. Make sure the Attributes table is empty. Page 458 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 459 Select the Vendor Specific checkbox and click Add under the Attributes table. 19 In the Add Vendor Specific Attribute window that appears: Select Custom in the Vendor drop down field. Click Add. Page 459 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 460 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 343: Create Network Policy – Adding Vendor Specific Attributes 20 In the Attribute Information window that appears, click Add. Figure 344: Create Network Policy – Selecting to Add Attribute Information Page 460 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 461 Thus for example, enter 2 for all twelve attributes if you are configuring a policy for the Radius_Advanced group. This gives Advanced read permissions and Advanced write permissions, for all six functional groups, to the members of the Radius_Advanced group. Page 461 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 462 Thus for example, enter 127 to allow access from all channels: Serial + Telnet + SSH + Web + NMS + SNMP +SNMPv3; Or enter 24 to allow access only from NMS + SNMP channels. iii Click OK. Page 462 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 463 26 Reset the Network Policy Server (NPS) by stopping and starting the NPS service as follows: Right click the NPS (Local) node, and select Stop NPS Service. Right click the NPS (Local) node, and select Start NPS Service. Page 463 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 464 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 348: Create Network Policy – Stopping/Starting NPS Services Page 464 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 465 The following sub-sections describe how to configure a Linux FreeRADIUS server to work with an IP-20 device. To so do, you will need to modify the following three files: • /etc/raddb/users • /etc/raddb/clients.conf • /usr/share/freeradius/dictionary.ceragon Page 465 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 466 = regular, security-wo = regular, mng-ro = regular, mng-wo = regular, radio-ro = regular, radio-wo = regular, tdm-ro = regular, tdm-wo = regular, eth-ro = regular, eth-wo = regular, sync-ro = regular, Page 466 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 467 = none, tdm-wo = none, eth-ro = none, eth-wo = none, sync-ro = none, sync-wo = none, access_channel = u3accesschannel, fall-through = yes 2 Save the changes in the file. /etc/raddb/users Page 467 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 468 1 In the file, configure the usr/share/freeradius/dictionary.ceragon values of the access channels according to the following example: access channel for u1 user:serial+telnet+ssh+web+nms+snmp+snmpV4 VALUE ACCESS_CHANNEL u1accesschannel 2 Save the changes to the file. usr/share/freeradius/dictionary.ceragon Page 468 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 469 Radius Configuration – Edit page (Figure 328). ◦ is not mandatory, but should be added, and should be shortname different for each RADIUS client. 2 Save the changes to the file. /etc/raddb/clients.conf Page 469 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 470: Configuring X.509 Csr Certificates And Https

    10.6.1 Generating a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) File To generate a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) file: 1 Select Platform > Security > X.509 Certificate > CSR. The Security Certificate Request page opens. Page 470 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 471 8 In the Email field, enter an e-mail address that can be used to contact your organization. 9 In the File Format field, select PEM or DER to determine the file format. Note: In this version, only PEM is supported. 10 Click Apply to save your settings. Page 471 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 472 Ready – The default value, which appears when CSR generation and upload is in progress. File-in-transfer – The upload operation is in progress. • • Success – The file has been successfully uploaded. • Failure – The file was not successfully uploaded. Page 472 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 473: Downloading A Certificate

    Security Certification Download and Install page opens. Figure 351: Security Certification Download and Install Page 2 Click FTP Parameters to display the FTP Parameters page. Figure 352: FTP Parameters Page (Security Certification Download & Install) Page 473 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 474: Blocking Telnet Access

    You can block telnet access to the unit. By default, telnet access is not blocked. To block telnet access: 1 Select Platform > Security > Protocols Control. The Protocols Control page opens. Page 474 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 475: Uploading The Security Log

    1 Install and configure an FTP server on the PC or laptop you are using to perform the upload. See Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server. 2 Select Platform > Security > General > Security Log Upload. The Security Log Upload page opens. Page 475 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 476 3 Click FTP Parameters to display the FTP Parameters page. Figure 355: FTP Parameters Page (Security Log Upload) 4 In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP server. Page 476 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 477: Uploading The Configuration Log

    1 Install and configure an FTP server on the PC or laptop you are using to perform the upload. See Installing and Configuring an FTP or SFTP Server. 2 Select Platform > Security > General > Configuration Log Upload. The Configuration Log Upload page opens. Page 477 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 478 3 Click FTP Parameters to display the FTP Parameters page. Figure 357: FTP Parameters Page (Configuration Log Upload) 4 In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP server. Page 478 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 479 Success – The file has been successfully uploaded. • • Failure – The file was not successfully uploaded. The File transfer progress field displays the progress of any current configuration log upload operation. Page 479 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 480: Alarm Management And Troubleshooting

    Table 75: Alarm Information. Figure 358: Current Alarms Page 2 To view more detailed information about an alarm, click + at the beginning of the row or select the alarm and click View. Page 480 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 481: Table 75: Alarm Information

    This field only appears in the Current Alarms - View page. One or more possible corrective actions to be taken in troubleshooting the alarm. Alarm ID A unique ID that identifies the alarm type. Page 481 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 482: Viewing Alarm Statistics

    Event Log, see Table 76: Event Log Information. 2 To export the Event Log to a CSV file, click Export to CSV in the lower right corner of the Event Log page. Figure 361: Event Log Page 482 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 483: Table 76: Event Log Information

    Note: You can add user text to events in the Alarm Configuration page. See Editing Alarm Text and Severity and Disabling Alarms and Events. Origin The module that generated the event. Page 483 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 484: Editing Alarm Text And Severity And Disabling Alarms And Events

    The severity assigned to the alarm type. You can edit the severity in the Alarm Configuration – Edit page. See Editing an Alarm Type and Disabling Alarms and Events. Description A system-defined description of the alarm. Page 484 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 485: Viewing The Probable Cause And Corrective Actions For An Alarm Type

    If an alarm is disabled while raised, the timeout count begins to run upon disabling the alarm, and an alarm cleared trap is sent when the timeout expires. Page 485 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 486: Setting Alarms To Their Default Values

    5 Click Apply, then Close. 11.4.4 Setting Alarms to their Default Values To set all alarms to their default severity levels and text descriptions, click Set All to Default in the Alarm Configuration page (Figure 362). Page 486 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 487: Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds And Displaying Voltage Pms

    1 Select Faults > Voltage Alarm Configuration. The Voltage Alarm Configuration page opens. Note: You can also open the Voltage Alarm Configuration page by selecting Platform > PM & Statistics > Voltage and clicking Thresholds. Figure 365: Voltage Alarm Configuration Page Page 487 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 488 Overvoltage raise threshold (V) fields. The configurable values for these thresholds are 0-100V. 4 Click Apply. To display voltage PMs: 1 Select Platform > PM & Statistics > Voltage. The Voltage PM Report page opens. Figure 367: Voltage PM Report Page Page 488 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 489: Table 78: Voltage Pms

    Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred during the interval. Page 489 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 490: Uploading Unit Info

    4 In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP server. 5 In the Password field, enter the password you configured in the FTP server. If you did not configure a password for your FTP user, simply leave this field blank. Page 490 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 491 Error #3-Invalid set value. If this occurs, wait about two minutes then click Export again. ◦ File transfer progress – Displays the progress of the current Unit Information file upload operation. Page 491 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 492: Performing Diagnostics

    You cannot perform loopback directly on a Multi-Carrier ABC group. To perform traffic-level diagnostics on a Multi-Carrier ABC group, the loopback must be activated for all members of the group. Radio-level diagnostics can still be performed on individual members of the group. Page 492 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 493: Performing Ethernet Loopback

    1 Select Ethernet > Interfaces > Logical Interfaces. The Logical Interfaces page opens (Figure 248). 2 Select an interface in the Ethernet Logical Port Configuration table and click Loopback. The Logical Interfaces – Loopback page opens. Figure 371: Logical Interfaces – Loopback Page Page 493 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 494: Configuring Service Oam (Soam) Fault Management (Fm)

    This section includes: • SOAM Overview Configuring MDs • Configuring MA/MEGs • • Configuring MEPs • Displaying Remote MEPs Displaying Last Invalid CCMS • • Configuring MIPs with MHF Default • Performing Loopback Page 494 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 495 CCM (Continuity Check Message) – MEPs in the network exchange CCMs with • their peers at defined intervals. This enables each MEP to detect loss of connectivity or failure in the remote MEP. Page 495 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 496 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. 4 In the MD Format field, select None. Page 496 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 497 CCMs sent in this MD (in the current release, this is MHF none and MHF default). The Sender TLV Content field displays the type of TLVs included in the CCMs sent in this MD (in the current release, this is only Send ID Chassis). Page 497 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 498 To add a MEG: 1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > SOAM > MA/MEG. The SOAM MA/MEG page opens. Figure 374: SOAM MA/MEG Page 2 Click Add MEG. The SOAM MA/MEG – Add page opens. Page 498 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 499: Table 79: Soam Ma/Meg Configuration Parameters

    OAM frames belonging to nested MEGs of customers, providers and operators. The default MEG level assignment among customer, provider, and operator roles is: • The customer role is assigned MEG levels 6 and 7. Page 499 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 500: Table 80: Soam Ma/Meg Status Parameters

    Interface Status TLV TX An Interface Status TLV is transmitted in the CCM frame, indicating the operational status of the interface on which the transmitting MEP is configured (Up or Down). Page 500 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 501 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Parameter Definition MEP List Lists all local and remote MEPs that have been defined for the MEG. Page 501 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 502 2 Configure the local MEPs. At this point, you determine which MEPs are local MEPs. The system automatically defines the other MEPs you configured in the previous step as remote MEPs. See Configuring the Local MEPs. 3 Enable the Local MEPs. See Enabling Local MEPs. Page 502 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 503 Figure 376: MEP List Page 2 Click Add. The Add MEP page opens. Figure 377: Add MEP Page 3 In the MEP ID field, enter a MEP ID (1-8191). 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 503 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 504 2 Click Add. Page 1 of the Add SOAM MEP wizard opens. Figure 379: Add SOAM MEP Wizard – Page 1 3 In the MA/MEG Name field, select an MA/MEG. 4 Click Next. Page 2 of the Add SOAM MEP wizard opens. Page 504 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 505 8 Click Finish. The Add SOAM MEP wizard displays the parameters you have selected. Figure 381: Add SOAM MEP Wizard –Summary Page 9 Verify that you want to submit the displayed parameters and click Submit. Page 505 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 506: Table 81: Soam Mep Parameters

    Once you have configured at least one local MEP, all other MEPs that you have added but not configured as local MEPs are displayed here and are considered to be remote MEPs. Page 506 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 507 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. 6 Click Apply, then Close. Page 507 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 508: Table 82: Soam Mep Db Table Parameters

    The Port Status TLV in the most recent CCM received from the Status TLV remote MEP. Reserved for future use. RMEP Last rx CCM Displays the operational status of the interface on which the remote Interface Status TLV MEP has been defined. Page 508 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 509 Definition RMEP Last rx CCM Chassis Displays the format of the remote chassis (always the MAC address). ID Format RMEP Last rx CCM Chassis Displays the MAC address of the remote chassis. Page 509 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 510 The Last RX Xcon fault message field displays the frame of the last CCM that contains a cross-connect error received by the MEP. Note: A cross-connect error occurs when a CCM is received from a remote MEP that has not been defined locally. Page 510 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 511 1 Create a MEG with the MHF none attribute on the intended Ethernet service. See Configuring MA/MEGs. 2 Select the MEG and click Edit. The SOAM MA/MEG – Edit page opens. 3 In the MIP Creation field, select MHF Default. 4 Click Apply, then Close. Page 511 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 512 1 In the SOAM MEP page (Figure 378), select the MEP on which you want to perform the loopback. 2 Click Loopback. The SOAM MEP – Loopback page opens. Figure 385: SOAM MEP Loopback Page Page 512 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 513 A MIP has been defined on the destination interface. See Configuring MIPs with MHF Default. Note: To manually stop a loopback, you must use the CLI. Enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet soam loopback stop meg-id <meg-id> mep-id <mep-id> Page 513 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 514: Web Ems Utilities

    Calculate the ifIndex for any object in the system. Determine the object represented by any valid ifIndex. • To use the ifIndex calculator: 1 Select Utilities > ifCalculator. The ifIndex Calculator page opens. Page 514 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 515: Displaying, Searching, And Saving A List Of Mib Entities

    1 Select Utilities > ifCalculator. The ifIndex Calculator page opens. Figure 388: MIB Reference Table Page The MIB Reference Table is customized to the type of IP-20 product you are using. There are three separate versions of the MIB Reference Table: Page 515 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 516 To search for a text string, enter the string in the Search field and press <Enter>. Items that contain the string are displayed in yellow. Searches are not case-sensitive. • To save the MIB Reference Table as a .csv file, click Save to File. Page 516 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 517: Section Iii: Cli Configuration

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Section III: CLI Configuration Page 517 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 518: Getting Started (Cli)

    Guide for the type of unit you are connecting for cable connection instructions. Note: The IP-20 IP address, as well as the password, should be changed before operating the system. See Changing the Management IP Address (CLI) and Changing Your Password (CLI). Page 518 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 519: Pc Setup (Cli)

    At the prompt, enter the default login user name: admin A password prompt appears. Enter the default password: admin The root prompt appears. For example: login: admin Password: Last login: Mon Apr 13 11:27:02 on console IP20C root> Page 519 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 520: General Cli Commands

    This parameter can be an integer from 64 to 1480. The default value is 64. command is available from all views (e.g., root, interface views, group ping views). Page 520 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 521: Changing Your Password (Cli)

    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 Ceragon Customer Support. It is strongly recommended to change this password.
  • Page 522: Mate Management Access (Ip Forwarding) (Cli)

    Note: When you enable or disable Mate Management Access, the unit is reset. To disable Mate Management Access, enter the following command: root> platform management mate-access admin disable Page 522 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 523 To display whether Mate Management Access is enabled, enter the following command: root> platform management mate-access show Notes: Mate Management Access can only be configured via CLI. Upon recovery from a failure event, management may be lost for up to 40 seconds. Page 523 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 524: Configuring In-Band Management (Cli)

    Any valid subnet mask. The subnet mask for the unit. gateway Dotted decimal format. Any valid IPv4 address. The default gateway for the unit (optional). name Text String. Enter a name (optional). Page 524 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 525: Table 85: Ip Address (Ipv6) Cli Parameters

    The command below sets the following parameters: • IPv6 Address - FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 • Prefix length – 64 Default Gateway - FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 • root> platform management ip set ipv6-address FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 prefix-length 64 gateway FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 Page 525 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 526: Configuring The Activation Key (Cli)

    13.9.2 Viewing the Activation Key Status Parameters (CLI) To display information about the currently installed activation key, enter the following command in root view: root> platform activation-key show information Page 526 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 527: Entering The Activation Key (Cli)

    350M and one activation key for 300M. For instructions on how to reclaim an activation key, refer to the User Guide for the Ceragon Activation Key Management System, Rev A.15 or later, Chapter 7, Reclaiming an Activation Key. During the activation key reclaim procedure, you will need to obtain a Validation Number from the IP-20 unit.
  • Page 528: Displaying A List Of Activation-Key-Enabled Features (Cli)

    Table 86: Local Time Configuration CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description date-and-time Number dd-mm-yyyy,hh:mm:ss Sets the UTC time. where: dd = date mm = month yyyy= year hh = hour mm = minutes ss = seconds Page 528 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 529: Setting The Daylight Savings Time (Cli)

    The following command configures daylight savings time as starting on May 30 and ending on October 1, with an offset of 20 hours. root> platform management time-services daylight-savings-time set start-date-month 5 start-date-day 30 end-date-month 10 end- date-day 1 offset 20 Page 529 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 530: Enabling The Interfaces (Cli)

    The other end of the cable is labelled GbE2. This is used for the RJ-45 • connection to Eth 2 (traffic). To enable or disable an interface, enter the following command in root view: Page 530 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 531: Table 88: Interface Configuration Cli Parameters

    The following command disables radio interface 1: root> platform if-manager set interface-type radio slot 2 port 1 admin down The following command disables Ethernet port 3: root> platform if-manager set interface-type ethernet slot 1 port 3 admin down Page 531 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 532: Configuring The Radio (Mrmc) Script(S) (Cli)

    2 in a multi-carrier unit: radio[2/2]>mrmc script show script-type normal acm-support yes The following command displays available symmetrical (normal) scripts for radio carrier 1: radio[2/1]>mrmc script show script-type normal acm-support yes Page 532 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 533: Assigning An Mrmc Script To A Radio Carrier (Cli)

    (MRMC) Script(s) (CLI). For example, if you select a maximum profile of 5, the system will not climb above profile 5, even if channel fading conditions allow it. Page 533 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 534 5, to the radio carrier in an IP-20E unit. This is the functional equivalent of assigning a fixed profile. radio[2/1]>mrmc set acm-support script-id 4701 modulation max- profile 5 min-profile 5 Page 534 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 535: Configuring The Radio Parameters (Cli)

    Radio Carrier 2 (IP-20C and IP-20C-HP only): 2 The following command enters radio view for radio carrier 1: root> radio slot 2 port 1 The following prompt appears: radio[2/1]> Page 535 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 536: Muting And Unmuting A Radio (Cli)

    The following command configures a timed mute on radio carrier 1. This mute will automatically expire in 30 minutes. radio[2/1]> rf mute set admin on-with-timer timeout-value 30 Page 536 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 537: Configuring The Transmit (Tx) Frequency (Cli)

    The following command sets the TX frequency of the radio in an IP-20E unit to 71000000 KHz, but does not set the RX frequency of the remote unit. radio[2/1]> rf set rx-frequency 71000000 local-remote disable Page 537 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 538: Configuring The Transmit (Tx) Level (Cli)

    Number Depends on hardware The desired TX signal model. level (TSL), in dBm. The following command sets the TX level of radio carrier 1 to 10 dBm: radio[2/1]>rf set tx-level 10 Page 538 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 539: Enabling Acm With Adaptive Transmit Power (Cli)

    Adaptive mode. If the script is configured to Fixed mode (or Adaptive mode with the Minimum and Maximum Profile set to the same value), you can set adaptive-power admin to enable, but the adaptive power operational status field will indicate down. Page 539 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 540: Configuring The Rsl Threshold Alarm (Cli)

    The alarm is cleared when the RSL goes above the configured threshold. The alarm is masked if the radio interface is disabled, the radio does not exist, or a communication-failure alarm (Alarm ID #1703) is raised. Page 540 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 541: Operating In Fips Mode (Cli)

    13.16.1 Requirements for FIPS Compliance (CLI) For a full list of FIPS requirements, refer to the Ceragon IP-20 FIPS 140-2 Security Policy, available upon request. It is the responsibility of the customer to ensure that these requirements are met.
  • Page 542: Creating Service(S) For Traffic (Cli)

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 13.18 Creating Service(s) for Traffic (CLI) In order to pass traffic through the IP-20, you must configure Ethernet traffic services. For configuration instructions, see Configuring Ethernet Services (CLI). Page 542 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 543: Configuration Guide (Cli)

    IP-20C (hub site or tail site) Configuring Advanced Frequency IP-20S (tail site only) Reuse (AFR) (CLI) IP-20C in Single Radio Carrier Mode IP-20C Operating an IP-20C or IP-20C-HP in IP-20C-HP Single Radio Carrier Mode (CLI) Page 543 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 544: Configuring Multi-Carrier Abc (Cli)

    [1]> attach-member slot 2 port <port> channel-id <1-16> ◦ The Channel ID identifies the interface within the group. 4 Repeat for the second radio interface. Page 544 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 545: Configuring The Multi-Carrier Abc Minimum Bandwidth Override Option (Cli)

    Ethernet interface that faces the upstream IP-20 unit. See Configuring Automatic State Propagation and Link Loss Forwarding (CLI). • Enable the LAG group shutdown in case of degradation event option on the upstream IP-20 unit. Page 545 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 546: Removing Members From A Multi-Carrier Abc Group (Cli)

    1 Remove the members from the group. See Removing Members from a Multi- Carrier ABC Group (CLI). 2 Delete the group by entering the following command in root view: root> multi-carrier-abc delete group group_id 1 Page 546 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 547: Configuring Multiband (Enhanced Multi-Carrier Abc) (Cli)

    In Multi-Carrier ABC Group view, use the following command to set the maximum traffic that the IP-20E will pass to the paired unit ◦ When using Fixed ACM mode, set this parameter to the actual rate you want the paired unit to broadcast. Page 547 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 548: Multiband Management (Cli)

    Management (CLI). The following options are available for managing the IP-20C, IP-20C-HP, or IP-20S unit in a Multiband configuration: Inband management via the IP-20E • • Inband management directly from the external switch Page 548 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 549: Configuring Synchronization In A Multiband Node (Cli)

    RX capacity, go to Multi-Carrier ABC group view and enter the following command: multi-carrier-abc enhanced-group-id [1] slot [1]>summary-show To display port counters for a Multiband group, go to Multi-Carrier ABC group view and enter the following command: multi-carrier-abc enhanced-group-id [1] slot [1]>show-ethernet- port-counters Page 549 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 550: Configuring Link Aggregation (Lag) And Lacp (Optional) (Cli)

    There are no restrictions on the number of interfaces that can be included in a LAG. It is recommended, but not required, that each interface in the LAG have the same parameters (e.g., speed, duplex mode). Page 550 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 551: Configuring A Lag Group (Cli)

    LAG and enter the following command: eth group [lagx]>lacp admin show The following commands enable LACP for LAG group 1: root> ethernet interfaces group lag1 eth group [lag1]>lacp admin set enable eth group [lag1]> Page 551 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 552: Viewing Lag Details (Cli)

    Ethernet: 1 Depends on the Radio: 2 interface and unit type. port Number GbE 1: 1 The port number of the interface. GbE 2: 2 GbE 3: 3 Radio Carrier 1: 1 Page 552 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 553 Static-lag group name: lag2 The following commands display details about the LAG: root> ethernet interfaces group lag2 eth group [lag2]> eth group [lag2]> port static-lag show members Static-lag members ------------------- Eth#[1/1] Eth#[1/2] Radio#[2/1] Page 553 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 554: Enabling And Disabling The Lag Group Shutdown In Case Of Degradation Event Option (Cli)554

    To display the current LAG group shutdown in case of degradation event option setting, go to interface view for the LAG and enter the following command: eth group [lagx]> static-lag show lag-degrade-admin Page 554 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 555: Configuring Enhanced Lag Distribution (Cli)

    You can display the following LACP parameters and statistics: LACP Aggregation (per LAG) • LACP Port Status • • LACP Port Statistics • LACP Port Debug Statistics Note: IP-20 does not support any LACP write parameters. Page 555 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 556: Table 97: Lacp Aggregation Status Parameters (Cli)

    The priority value associated with the Partner’s System ID. Partner Oper Key The current operational value of the Key for the Aggregator’s current Protocol partner. Collector Max Delay The maximum delay, in tens of microseconds. Page 556 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 557: Table 98: Lacp Port Status Parameters (Cli)

    System ID The MAC Address value that defines the value of the System ID for the system that contains this Aggregation Port. Port Priority The priority value assigned to this Aggregation Port. Page 557 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 558 Partner Oper System ID The MAC Address value representing the current value of the Aggregation Port’s protocol Partner’s System ID. Partner Oper Port The Priority value assigned to this Aggregation port by the Partner. Priority Page 558 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 559: Table 99: Lacp Port Statistics (Cli)

    The number of LACPDUs that this port has transmitted. Illegal RX The number of illegal protocol frames that this port has received. Unknown RX The number of unknown protocol frames that this port has received. Page 559 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 560: Configuring Xpic (Cli)

    Create an XPIC group. See Creating an XPIC Group (CLI). 14.5.3 Creating an XPIC Group (CLI) To create an XPIC group, enter the following commands: root> radio-groups radio-groups> radio-groups> xpic set admin enable Page 560 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 561: Performing Antenna Alignment For Xpic (Cli)

    RSL of the vertical carrier of the remote unit, within ±2dB. The RSL of the vertical carrier of the local unit should match the RSL of the horizontal carrier of the remote unit, within ±2dB. Page 561 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 562: Displaying Xpic Status (Cli)

    To display the status of an XPIC group, enter the following command in radio- groups view: radio-groups> xpic show status The following is a typical command output: XPIC: Carrier 1: Radio #[2/1] ; Carrier 2: Radio #[2/2] Admin mode: enable XPIC state: XPIC-Idle Page 562 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 563: Configuring Unit Protection With Hsb Radio Protection (External Protection) (Cli)

    • Split Protection Mode – Only available for optical Ethernet ports. An optical splitter cable is used to connect to both the active and the standby optical Ethernet ports. Page 563 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 564 To disable LACP mode, enter the following command in Ethernet interface view: eth type eth [1/x]>interface-mode-set interface-mode NONE To display an interface’s current LACP setting, enter the following command in Ethernet interface view: eth type eth [1/x]>interface-mode-show Page 564 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 565: Configuring Hsb Radio Protection (Cli)

    MRMC scripts, unmuting the radio, and setting up radio groups such as XPIC or Multi-Carrier ABC (Multi-Radio). Perform all necessary Ethernet configurations on the Active unit, such as defining Ethernet services. Page 565 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 566: Configuring 2+2 Hsb Protection On An Ip-20C Or Ip-20C-Hp Unit (Cli)

    Setting the Unit Name. Refer to the description of platform management in Configuring Unit Parameters (CLI). system-name set name • Disabling/enabling Radio TX-mute. Refer to the description of rf mute set in Muting and Unmuting a Radio (CLI). admin Page 566 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 567 To configure these settings in the standby unit, first enter the mate/root context, as described in Performing CLI operations on the Standby unit (CLI), then run the relevant commands, and then switch back to the active unit. Page 567 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 568: Viewing Link And Protection Status And Activity (Cli)

    At any point, you can manually switch to the Standby unit, provided that the highest protection fault level in the Standby unit is no higher than the highest protection fault level on the Active unit. Page 568 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 569: Disabling Automatic Switchover To The Standby Unit (Cli)

    IP address (192.168.1.1) To disable protection, enter the following command in root view. root> platform management protection set admin disable Page 569 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 570: Configuring 1+1 Hsb With Space Diversity (Cli)

    If you mute the interface before configuring unit protection, you must make sure to manually mute the interface on both IP-20 units. Otherwise, configuring unit protection will override the mute configuration. Page 570 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 571: Configuring Mimo And Space Diversity (Cli)

    Technical Description for the product and CeraOS version you are using. 2+2 HSB Space Diversity provides both equipment protection and signal protection. If one unit goes out of service, the other unit takes over and maintains Page 571 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 572: Upgrading A 4X4 Mimo Link From An Earlier Version To Ceraos 10.5 Or Higher (Cli)

    4. Wait for the link to be restored between the Master units. 5. Mute both radio carriers on the remote Slave unit. 6. Upgrade the remote Slave unit. 7. Unmute both radio carriers on the remote Slave unit. Page 572 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 573: Configuring A 4X4 Mimo Link (Cli)

    To display details about the group, enter the following command in root view: root> amcc show group_id <1-4> group_type mimo_4x4 The following commands configure a Master group on Unit 1 and a Slave group on Unit 2: Page 573 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 574: Configuring A 2X2 Mimo Link (Cli)

    To reset MIMO, enter the following command in root view: root > radio mimo reset group 1 3 Verify that the XPIC levels are appropriate. See Viewing MMI Levels (CLI). Note: XPI is not relevant for 2x2 MIMO. Page 574 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 575: Configuring A 1+0 Or 2+2 Space Diversity Link (Cli)

    MIMO state: MIMO-Disabled. MIMO advanced state: disabled. MIMO RFU role: slave. MIMO 1st carrier MMI: -0.0 MIMO 2nd carrier MMI: -0.0 MIMO 1st carrier XPI: 99.0 MIMO 2nd carrier XPI: 99.0 Page 575 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 576: Deleting A 4X4 Mimo Group (Cli)

    2 In group view, enter the following commands to remove the unit’s two carriers from the group: mimo-4X4-group[x]> amcc detach slot 2 port 1 mimo-4X4-group[x]> amcc detach slot 2 port 2 3 In group view, enter the following command to disable the group: Page 576 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 577: Deleting A 2X2 Mimo Or Space Diversity Group (Cli)

    When the MIMO or Space Diversity group is disabled, the system is automatically reset. 2 Delete the MIMO or Space Diversity group by entering the following command in root view: root > radio mimo delete group 1 Page 577 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 578: Configuring Advanced Space Diversity (Asd) (Cli)

    RSL that is expected according to the site plan, at 2048 QAM. 9 Unmute the carriers of the Master unit. At this point, all of the carriers in the ASD link should be unmuted. Page 578 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 579 To display details about the group at Site 1 enter the following command in root view: root>amcc show group_id 1 group_type dual-asd To display details about the group at Site 2 enter the following command in root view: root>amcc show group_id 1 group_type single-asd Page 579 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 580 2 port 1 role master attached to group_id 1 group_type single-asd single-asd-group[1]>amcc attach slot 2 port 2 role master slot 2 port 2 role master attached to group_id 1 group_type single-asd single-asd-group[1]>set admin enable group_id 1 group_type single-asd 'Admin Enabled' single-asd-group[1]> Page 580 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 581: Viewing Asd Status (Cli)

    <1-4> group_type <single asd|dual-asd> The following sequence of commands disables the ASD group at one of the units at Site 1: root>amcc group group_id 1 group_type dual-asd dual-asd-group[1]> Page 581 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 582 2 port 1 detached from group_id 1 group_type dual-asd dual-asd-group[1]>amcc detach slot 2 port 2 slot 2 port 2 detached from group_id 1 group_type dual-asd dual-asd-group[1]>exit root> root>amcc delete group group_id 1 group_type dual-asd group_id 1 group_type dual-asd deleted root> Page 582 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 583: Configuring Advanced Frequency Reuse (Afr) (Cli)

    4 Enter the following command to enable the group. When you execute the command, the unit is automatically reset. Page 583 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 584: Deleting An Afr Group (Cli)

    [1]> amcc detach slot 2 port <port> 4 Exit group view and enter the following command in root view to delete the group: root> amcc delete group group_id 1 Page 584 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 585: Operating An Ip-20C Or Ip-20C-Hp In Single Radio Carrier Mode (Cli)

    2 Disable Multi-Carrier ABC, as described in Deleting a Multi-Carrier ABC Group (CLI). 3 Disable one of the two radio interfaces, as described in Enabling the Interfaces (CLI). 4 Mute the disabled radio interface, as described in Muting and Unmuting a Radio (CLI). Page 585 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 586: Unit Management (Cli)

    To set the remote radio’s IP Address, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>remote-unit set ip-address <ipv4-address> To display the remote radio’s IP Address, enter the following command in radio view: Page 586 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 587: Configuring The Remote Radio's Ip Address In Ipv6 Format (Cli)

    To set the remote radio’s prefix length, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>remote-unit set prefix-length <prefix-length > To display the remote radio’s prefix-length, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>remote-unit show prefix-length Page 587 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 588: Table 102: Remote Unit Ip Address (Ipv6) Cli Parameters

    IPv6 FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 The following commands set the IP address of the remote radio as FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329, with a prefix length of 64: radio[2/2]>remote-unit set ip-address-ipv6 FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 radio[2/2]>remote-unit set prefix-length 64 Page 588 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 589: Configuring Snmp (Cli)

    Text String Any valid SNMP read The community string for the community. SNMP read community. write-community Text String Any valid SNMP write The community string for the community. SNMP write community. Page 589 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 590 “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> platform security protocols-control snmpv1v2 set read- community public write-community private Page 590 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 591: Configuring Snmpv3 (Cli)

    (privacy) protocol to be used for this user. v3-auth-algorithm Variable None Defines the authentication algorithm to be used for this user. v3-access-mode Variable readWrite Defines the access permission level for this readOnly user. Page 591 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 592: Displaying The Snmp Settings (Cli)

    15.3.4 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 Page 592 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 593: Table 105: Trap Managers Cli Parameters

    V3, enter the name of a V3 user defined in the system. Note: Make sure that an identical V3 user is also defined on the manager's side Page 593 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 594 12 minutes. root> platform security protocols-control snmp trap-manager set manager-id 2 manager-admin enable manager-ip 192.168.1.250 manager-port 164 manager-community private manager-description text root> platform security protocols-control snmp trap-manager heartbeat manager-id 2 manager-heartbeat 12 Page 594 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 595: Configuring The Internal Ports For Ftp Or Sftp (Cli)

    125 root> platform management file-transfer port-config protocol sftp port-number 126 root>platform management file-transfer port-show Port config table: ================== File transfer File transfer port protocol number ===================================== sftp root> Page 595 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 596: Upgrading The Software (Cli)

    When upgrading a node with unit protection, upgrade the standby unit first, then the active unit. 15.5.2 Viewing Current Software Versions (CLI) To display all current software versions, enter the following command in root view: root> platform software show versions Page 596 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 597: Configuring A Software Download (Cli)

    Enter the path relative to the FTP user's home directory, not the absolute path. If the location is the home directory, it should be left empty. If the Page 597 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 598: Downloading A Software Package (Cli)

    • In case of failure, wait at least 30 minutes and repeat the software download. Page 598 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 599: Installing And Upgrading Software (Cli)

    IP-20C, IP-20C-HP to IP-20C-HP, IP-20S to IP-20S, IP-20E to IP-20E, and IP-20V to IP-20V. Note that you can also write CLI scripts that will automatically execute a series of commands when the configuration file is restored. For information, refer to Editing CLI Scripts (CLI). Page 599 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 600: Configuration Management Overview (Cli)

    See Setting the Time and Date (Optional) (CLI). To set the FTP or SFTP parameters for configuration file import and export, enter one of the following commands in root view: Page 600 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 601: Table 107: Configuration Management Cli Parameters

    Otherwise, the file import may fail. You can export the file using any name, then add the suffix .zip manually. username Text String. The user name you configured in the FTP server. Page 601 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 602: Backing Up And Exporting A Configuration File (Cli)

    Setting the Configuration Management Parameters and Backing up and Exporting a Configuration File. To import a configuration file, enter the following command in root view: root> platform configuration configuration-file import <restore-point> Page 602 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 603: Editing Cli Scripts (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: Page 603 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 604: Performing A Hard (Cold) Reset (Cli)

    <unit_measure_format> To display the type of measurement unit used by the system, enter the following command in root view: root> platform management show unit_measure_format Page 604 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 605: Configuring Ntp (Cli)

    Enter enable or disable to enable or disable the NTP server. disable ntp-version Variable. Enter the NTP version you want to use. NTPv4 provides interoperability with NTP v3 and with SNTP. Page 605 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 606 The following command enables NTP, using NTP v4, and sets the IP address of the NTP server as 62.90.139.210. root> platform management ntp set admin enable ntp-version ntpv4 ntp-server-ip-address-1 Page 606 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 607: Displaying Unit Inventory (Cli)

    : IP-20 Subtype : 350 part number : 22-0001-0| serial number : F493606212 company name : Ceragon Networks Ltd. 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>...
  • Page 608: Displaying Sfp Ddm And Inventory Information (Cli)

    Displays the vendor’s part number for the SFP module. Vendor Serial Number Displays the vendor’s serial number for the SFP module. Vendor Revision Displays the revision number of the serial number provided by the vendor for the SFP module. Page 608 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 609: Displaying Dynamic (Ddm) Information About An Sfp Module (Cli)

    If the Admin status of the port is Down, the TX Power Level is displayed as -40 DBm and the Bias Current is displayed as 0 mA. The Temperature is always shown as long as the SFP module is inserted in the port. Page 609 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 610: Displaying Ddm Pms About An Sfp Module (Cli)

    RX and TX power levels are collected five times per 15-minute interval. 15- minute PM data is saved for 24 hours. 24-hour PM data, which is updated every 15 minutes, is saved for 30 days. Page 610 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 611: Radio Configuration (Cli)

    Note that to view and configure radio parameters, you must first enter the radio’s view level in the CLI. For details, refer to Entering Radio View (CLI). Note: For convenience, this User Guide generally shows the radio prompt radio[2/1]> Page 611 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 612: Viewing And Configuring The Remote Radio Parameters (Cli)

    Mutes (on) or unmutes (off) the remote unit. 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 Page 612 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 613: Displaying The Remote Radio's Rx Level (Cli)

    -55 16.1.7 Displaying the Remote Unit’s Most Severe Alarm (CLI) To display the most severe alarm currently raised in the unit, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>remote-unit show most-severe-alarm Page 613 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 614: Configuring Atpc And Atpc Override Timer (Cli)

    TX override is enabled with the timer set to a lower-than-desired value. To enable ATPC override, enter the following command in radio view. ATPC must be enabled before you enable ATPC override. radio[x/x]>atpc override set admin <override admin> Page 614 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 615: Table 117: Radio Atpc Cli Parameters

    The following commands enable ATPC mode and ATPC override for radio carrier 1, with an RSL reference level of -55, an ATPC override timeout of 15 minutes, and an override TX level of 18 dBm: Page 615 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 616 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 radio[2/1]>atpc set admin enable radio[2/1]>atpc set rx-level atpc_ref_rx_level -55 radio[2/1]>atpc set override timeout 900 radio[2/1]>atpc override set admin enable radio[2/1]> atpc set override-tx-level 18 Page 616 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 617: Configuring Header De-Duplication (Cli)

    2, Layer 3, and on the Tunnel layer for packets carrying GTP or GRE frames. Tunnel-Layer3 - Header De-Duplication operates on Layer 2, Layer 3, and on the Tunnel and T-3 layers for packets carrying GTP or GRE frames. Page 617 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 618 4 layers for packets carrying GTP or GRE frames. The following command enables Layer 2 Header De-Duplication on radio carrier 1: root> radio slot 2 port 1 radio[2/1]> compression header-compression set Layer2 Page 618 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 619: Displaying Header De-Duplication Information (Cli)

    Frame Cut-Through cannot be used together with 1588 Transparent Clock. To enable Frame Cut-Through, enter the following command in radio view: radio[2/1]> cut-through mode yes To disable Frame Cut-Through, enter the following command in radio view: Page 619 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 620 To display the number of frames and bytes that have been transmitted via Frame Cut-Through, enter the following command in radio view: radio[2/1]> cut-through show-counters Page 620 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 621: Configuring Aes-256 Payload Encryption (Cli)

    The following is a sample output of this command in which payload encryption is enabled but not operational on radio interface 1, and disabled on radio interface Page 621 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 622 Once payload encryption has been enabled on both sides of the link, the Key Exchange Protocol periodically Page 622 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 623 Enter the regeneration interval in hours and minutes (HH:MM). For example, the following command configures radio interface 1 to regenerate the session key every 4 hours and 15 minutes: Payload Encryption [2/1]> payload encryption session-key period set 04:15 Page 623 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 624 Warning! Executing this command on a FIPS-enabled unit formats the unit’s disk, and renders the unit non-operational. If it is necessary to use this command, contact Ceragon Technical Support for instructions how to re-configure the unit. This command has no effect on units that are not enabled for FIPS.
  • Page 625: 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 framer pm-aggregate show command: interval 15min Page 625 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 626: Table 119: Aggregate Pms (Cli)

    Indicates the number of seconds in the measuring interval during which errors occurred. Indicates the number of severe error seconds in the measuring interval. Page 626 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 627: Displaying Ber Level And Configuring Ber Parameters (Cli)

    1e-7 link. 1e-8 1e-9 1e-10 The following command enables excessive-ber root> radio excessive-ber set admin enable The following command sets the excessive BER threshold to 1e-5: radio [2/1]>modem excessive-ber set threshold 1e-5 Page 627 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 628: Configuring Rsl Thresholds (Cli)

    To display RSL and TSL PMs in 15-minute intervals, enter the following command in radio view: radio [x/x]>rf pm-rsl-tsl show interval 15min To display RSL and TSL PMs in daily intervals, enter the following command in radio view: radio [x/x]>rf pm-rsl-tsl show interval 24hr Page 628 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 629 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 The following is the output format of the commands: rf pm-rsl-tsl show Page 629 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 630: Configuring The Signal Level Threshold (Cli)

    [x/x]>modem signal-degrade set threshold 1e-7 To display the Signal Degrade BER threshold, enter the following command in radio view: radio [x/x]>modem signal-degrade show threshold Page 630 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 631: Configuring The Mse Thresholds And Displaying The Mse Pms (Cli)

    Description threshold Number -99 - -1 The MSE threshold. To display MSE (Mean Square Error) PMs in 15-minute intervals, enter the following command in radio view: radio [x/x]>modem pm-mse show interval 15min Page 631 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 632 Max MSE (dB) Exceed threshold seconds =============================================================== 0.00 0.00 63745 0.00 0.00 37062 0.00 0.00 3495 0.00 0.00 85976 0.00 0.00 46173 0.00 0.00 24185 0.00 0.00 85988 0.00 0.00 54981 radio [2/1]>modem Page 632 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 633: Configuring The Xpi Thresholds And Displaying The Xpi Pms (Cli)

    Table 127: XPI Threshold CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description threshold Number 0-99 The XPI threshold. To display XPI PMs in 15-minute intervals, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>modem pm-xpi show interval 15min Page 633 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 634 0.00 55.00 0.00 55.00 0.00 55.00 0.00 55.00 0.00 55.00 0.00 radio [2/1]> To display XPI PMs in daily intervals, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x]>modem pm-xpi show interval 24hr Page 634 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 635: Table 128: Xpi Pms (Cli)

    Indicates the highest XPI value in dB, measured during the interval. XPI Below Threshold Seconds Indicates the number of seconds the XPI value was lower than the XPI threshold during the interval. Page 635 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 636: Displaying Acm Pms (Cli)

    43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 43389 radio [2/1]> To display ACM PMs in daily intervals, enter the following command in radio view: radio [x/x]>mrmc pm-acm show interval 24hr Page 636 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 637: Table 129: Acm Pms (Cli)

    Indicates the maximum ACM profile that was measured during the interval. Min bitrate Indicates the minimum total radio throughput (Mbps), delivered during the interval. Max bitrate Indicates the maximum total radio throughput (Mbps), delivered during the interval. Page 637 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 638: Ethernet Services And Interfaces (Cli)

    32 service points. A Management service can hold up 30 service points. For a more detailed overview of the IP-20 service-oriented Ethernet switching engine, refer to the Technical Description for the IP-20 product type you are using. Page 638 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 639: General Guidelines For Provisioning Ethernet Services (Cli)

    Use the commands described in the following sections to define a service and its parameters. After defining the service, you must add service points to the service in order for the service to carry traffic. Page 639 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 640: Table 130: Adding Ethernet Service Cli Parameters

    NMS for topology management. evc-description Text String Up to 64 characters. A text description of the service. This parameter does not affect the network element’s behavior, but is used by the Page 640 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 641 10 admin operational evc-id Ring_1 description east_west These services are immediately enabled, although service points must be added to the services in order for the services to carry traffic. Page 641 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 642 17.1.3.2 Entering Service View (CLI) To view service details and set the service’s parameters, you must enter the service’s view level in the CLI. To enter a service’s view level: root> ethernet service sid <sid> Page 642 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 643: Table 131: Entering Ethernet Service View Cli Parameters

    ID. Service ID 257 is reserved for a pre-defined management service. The following command enters service view for the service with Service ID 10: root> ethernet service sid 10 The following prompt appears: service[10]> Page 643 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 644 To display the attributes of a service and its service points, go to service view for the service and enter the following command: service[SID]>service detailed-info show Page 644 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 645: Table 132: Displaying Ethernet Service Details Cli Parameters

    <sid> Table 132: Displaying Ethernet Service Details CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Default Description Values Number Any defined None The Service ID. Service ID. For example: Page 645 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 646: Table 133: Ethernet Service Operational State Cli Parameters

    Operational. In this mode, the service occupies system resources but is unable to receive and transmit data. The following command sets Service 10 to be operational: service[10]>service admin set operational Page 646 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 647: Table 134: Ethernet Service Cos Mode Cli Parameters

    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 Page 647 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 648 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 Page 648 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 649: Table 135: Ethernet Service Evc Cli Parameters

    NMS for topology management. The following commands add the EVC ID "East_West" and the EVC description "Line_to_Radio" to Service 10: service[10]>service evcid set East_West service[10]>service description set Line_to_Radio Page 649 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 650: Table 136: Deleting Ethernet Service Cli Parameters

    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 Page 650 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 651: Configuring Service Points (Cli)

    Adding a Service Point (CLI) • • Configuring Service Point Ingress Attributes (CLI) • Configuring Service Point Egress Attributes (CLI) Displaying Service Point Attributes (CLI) • • Deleting a Service Point (CLI) Page 651 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 652: Table 137: Service Points Per Service Type

    Table 138 shows which service point types can co-exist on the same interface. Table 138: Service Point Types per Interface Pipe Only one MNG SP is allowed per interface. PIPE Only one Pipe SP is allowed per interface. Page 652 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 653 17.1.4.2 Service Point Classification (CLI) This section includes: • Overview of Service Point Classification (CLI) • SAP Classification (CLI) SNP Classification (CLI) • • Pipe Service Point Classification (CLI) • MNG Service Point Classification (CLI) Page 653 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 654 Since more than one service point may be associated with a single interface, frames are assigned to the earliest defined service point in case of conflict. Page 654 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 655 Bundle C-Tag – A set of multiple C-VLANs is classified to the service point. • • Bundle S-Tag – A single S-VLAN and a set of multiple C-VLANs are classified to the service point. Page 655 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 656 SNPs can be used with the following Attached Interface Types: • Dot1q – A single C-VLAN is classified to the service point. S-Tag – A single S-VLAN is classified to the service point. • Page 656 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 657 Dot1q – All C-VLANs and untagged frames that enter the interface are classified to the same service point. • S-Tag – All S-VLANs and untagged frames that enter the interface are classified to the same service point. Page 657 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 658: Table 139: Legal Service Point - Interface Type Combinations Per Interface - Sap And Snp

    Table 140: Legal Service Point – Interface Type Combinations per Interface – Pipe and SP Type Pipe Type Attached 802.1q S-Tag 802.1q Q in Q S-Tag Interface Type 802.1q Bundle-C Bundle-S All to One Page 658 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 659 802.1q Only one Pipe SP Allowed S-Tag Only one Pipe SP Allowed 802.1q Only 1 MNG SP Allowed Q in Q Only 1 MNG SP Allowed S-Tag Only 1 MNG SP Allowed Page 659 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 660 To add a Pipe service point, go to service view for the service and enter the following command: service[SID]>sp add sp-type pipe int-type <int-type> spid <sp- id> [interface|group] <interface|group> slot <slot> port <port> sp-name <sp-name> Page 660 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 661: Table 141: Add Service Point Cli Parameters

    Variable When you are defining the service point on an HSB group (rp1 - rp-4), a LAG (lag1 - lag4), or a Multi-Carrier ABC group (mc-abc1 - mc-abc4), Page 661 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 662 This parameter is only relevant for service management service), points with the interface type qinq. or Untagged sp-name Text string Up to 20 characters. A descriptive name for the service point (optional). Page 662 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 663 100 sp-name test1 The following command adds a Pipe service point with Service Point ID 1 to Service 1, with interface type dot1q. This service point is connected to Eth1. Page 663 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 664 1 interface eth slot 1 port 1 sp-name test1 service[10]> service[10]>sp add sp-type pipe int-type s-tag spid 2 interface radio slot 2 port 1 sp-name test2 service[10]> Page 664 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 665 CoS of ingress frames and how the service point forwards frames to their next destination within the service. This section includes: • Enabling and Disabling Broadcast Frames (CLI) • CoS Preservation and Modification on a Service Point (CLI) Enabling and Disabling Flooding (CLI) • Page 665 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 666: Table 142: Enable/Disable Broadcast Frames Cli Parameters

    1 state allow The following command prevents frames with a broadcast destination MAC address from ingressing Service 37 via Service Point 1. service[37]>sp broadcast set spid 1 state disable Page 666 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 667: Table 143: Service Point Cos Preservation Cli Parameters

    MAC DA match. Number 0 – 7 If cos-mode is sp-def-cos, this is the CoS assigned to frames that pass through the Page 667 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 668 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 Page 668 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 669: Table 144: Service Point Enable/Disable Flooding Cli Parameters

    1 state allow The following command configures Service Point 1 in Service 37 not to flood incoming frames with unknown MAC addresses to other service points: service[37]>sp flooding set spid 1 state disable Page 669 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 670 This includes VLAN preservation and marking attributes. This section includes: • Configuring VLAN and CoS Preservation (CLI) • Configuring Service Bundles (CLI) • Attaching a VLAN Bundle to a Service Point (CLI) Page 670 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 671 This section includes: • Configuring C-VLAN CoS Preservation (CLI) • Configuring C-VLAN Preservation (CLI) • Configuring S-VLAN CoS Preservation (CLI) Page 671 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 672: Table 145: C-Vlan Cos Preservation Mode Cli Parameters

    The following command enables C-VLAN CoS preservation for Service Point 1 on Service 37: service[37]>sp cvlan-cos-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode enable The following command disables C-VLAN CoS preservation for Service Point 1 on Service 37: service[37]>sp cvlan-cos-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode disable Page 672 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 673 Configuring C-VLAN Preservation (CLI) To configure VLAN preservation for C-VLAN-tagged frames, go to service view for the service and enter the following command: service[SID]>sp cvlan-preservation-mode set spid <sp-id> mode <c-vlan preservation mode> Page 673 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 674: Table 146: C-Vlan Preservation Cli Parameters

    The following command enables C-VLAN preservation for Service Point 1 on Service 37: service[37]>sp cvlan-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode enable The following command disables C-VLAN preservation for Service Point 1 on Service 37: service[37]>sp cvlan-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode disable Page 674 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 675: Table 147: S-Vlan Cos Preservation Cli Parameters

    The following command enables S-VLAN CoS preservation for Service Point 1 on Service 37: service[37]>sp svlan-cos-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode enable The following command disables S-VLAN CoS preservation for Service Point 1 on Service 37: service[37]>sp svlan-cos-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode disable Page 675 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 676: Table 148: Service Bundle Cli Parameters

    Note: In the current point. release, only Service Bundle 1 is supported. The following command assigns Service Bundle 1 to Service Point 1 in Service 37. service[37]>sp egress-service-bundle set spid 1 service-bundle- id 1 Page 676 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 677: Table 149: Vlan Bundle To Service Point Cli Parameters

    The following command classifies untagged frames to Service Point 1 in Service service[37]>sp bundle attach untagged spid 1 The following command removes C-VLANs 100 through 200 from Service Point 1 in Service 37: service[37]>sp bundle cvlan remove spid 1 vlan 100 to-vlan 200 Page 677 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 678 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 The following command removes untagged frames to Service Point 1 in Service service[37]>sp bundle remove untagged spid 1 Page 678 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 679: Table 150: Display Service Point Attributes Cli Parameters

    1-32 for P2P and MP The Service Point ID. services. 1-30 for MNG services. The following command displays the attributes of Service Point 1 in Service 37: service[37]>sp service-point-info show spid 1 Page 679 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 680: Defining The Mac Address Forwarding Table For A Service (Cli)

    Adding a Static MAC Address to the Forwarding Table (CLI) • • Displaying the MAC Address Forwarding Table (CLI) • Flushing the MAC Address Forwarding Table (CLI) • Enabling MAC Address Learning on a Service Point (CLI) Page 680 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 681 MAC forwarding table for the frame’s MAC address. If a match is found, the frame is forwarded to the service point associated with the MAC address. If not, the frame is flooded to all service points in the service. Page 681 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 682: Table 152: Mac Address Forwarding Table Maximum Size Cli Parameters

    MAC address table entries. The following command limits the number of dynamic MAC address forwarding table entries for Service 10 to 128: service[10]>service mac-limit-value set 128 Page 682 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 683: Table 153: Mac Address Forwarding Table Aging Time Cli Parameters

    15 - 3825 The global aging time for the MAC address forwarding table, in seconds. The following command sets the global aging time to 2500 seconds: root> ethernet service learning-ageing-time set time 2500 Page 683 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 684: Table 154: Adding Static Address To Mac Address Forwarding Table Cli Parameters

    00:11:22:33:44:55 spid 1 The following command deletes MAC address 00:11:22:33:44:55, associated with Service Point 1, from the MAC address forwarding table for Service 10: service[10]>service mac-learning-table del-static- mac 00:11:22:33:44:55 spid 1 Page 684 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 685 To display the MAC address forwarding table for GbE 1, enter the following commands: root> ethernet interfaces eth slot 1 port 1 eth type eth[1/1]>mac-learning-table show Page 685 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 686 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> ethernet service mac-learning-table set global-flush Page 686 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 687: Setting The Mru Size And The S-Vlan Ethertype (Cli)

    The MTU is determined by the receiving frame and editing operation on the frame. This section includes: • Configuring the S-VLAN Ethertype (CLI) • Configuring the C-VLAN Ethertype (CLI) Configuring the MRU (CLI) • Page 687 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 688: Configuring The S-Vlan Ethertype (Cli)

    Maximum Receive Unit (MRU). Frames that are larger than the global MRU will be discarded. For example, the following command sets the system MRU to 9612: root> ethernet generalcfg mru set size 9612 Page 688 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 689: Configuring Ethernet Interfaces (Cli)

    <slot> port <port> Use the following command to enter the view level of a group, such as a Multi- Carrier ABC group, an HSB protection group, or a LAG: root> ethernet interfaces group <group> Page 689 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 690: Table 158: Entering Interface View Cli Parameters

    2 port 2 The following prompt appears: radio [2/2]> The following command enters interface view for radio interface 1: root> ethernet interfaces radio slot 2 port 1 Page 690 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 691: Displaying The Operational State Of The Interfaces In The Unit (Cli)

    To configure an Ethernet interface’s Media Type, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]>media-type state set <media type> Table 159: Interface Media Type CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description Page 691 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 692: Configuring An Interface's Speed And Duplex State (Cli)

    Before performing this command, you must verify that the media-type attribute is set to rj45. The following command sets GbE 1 to 1000 Mbps, full duplex: eth type eth [1/1]>speed-and-duplex state set '1000fd' Page 692 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 693: Configuring An Interface's Auto Negotiation State (Cli)

    [x/x]>preamble set <preamble> Table 163: Interface Preamble CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description preamble Number 6 - 15 Sets the interface’s preamble (in bytes). Page 693 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 694: Adding A Description For The Interface (Cli)

    – Statistics are represented as Layer 1 statistics, including preamble and IFG. no – Statistics are represented as Layer 2 statistics. The following commands enter interface view for GbE 1, and clear the statistics after displaying them. Page 694 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 695 The following commands enter interface view for radio carrier 1 in an IP-20C, IP-20C-HP, or IP-20S unit, and display statistics for the interface, without clearing the statistics. root> ethernet interfaces radio slot 2 port 1 eth type radio[2/1]>rmon statistics show clear-on-read no layer-1 no Page 695 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 696: Configuring Automatic State Propagation And Link Loss Forwarding (Cli)

    Even when no triggering event has taken place, the ASP mechanism sends periodic update messages indicating that no triggering event has taken place. Page 696 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 697 To display all automatic state propagation configurations on the unit, use the following command: root> auto-state-propagation show-config all To display the automatic state propagation configuration for a specific Ethernet port, use the following command: root> auto-state-propagation show-config eth-port eth-slot <eth-slot> eth-port <eth-port> Page 697 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 698: Table 166: Automatic State Propagation To An Ethernet Port Cli Parameters

    Enables or disables automatic state disable propagation on the Ethernet interface. remote-fault- Variable enable Determines whether faults on the remote trigger-admin disable radio interface or group are propagated to the local Ethernet interface. Page 698 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 699 5000 root> auto-state-propagation add eth-port-to-radio eth-slot 1 eth-port 3 radio-slot 1 radio-port 2 llf-id 1 root> auto-state-propagation configure eth-port eth-slot 1 eth- port 3 asp-admin enable remote-fault-trigger-admin enable csf- mode-admin disable Page 699 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 700 1 eth-port 2 protection-group 1 llf-id 1 root> auto-state-propagation configure eth-port eth-slot 1 eth- port 2 asp-admin enable remote-fault-trigger-admin disable csf- mode-admin disable Page 700 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 701: Viewing Ethernet Pms And Statistics (Cli)

    The following commands bring you to interface view for radio interface 2, without clearing the statistics. root> ethernet interfaces radio slot 2 port 1 eth type radio[2/2]>rmon statistics show clear-on-read no layer-1 no Page 701 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 702: Configuring Ethernet Port Pms And Pm Thresholds (Cli)

    To end the list and return to the most recent prompt, press the letter To display RX packet PMs in 15-minute intervals, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: Page 702 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 703 [x/x]> pm show tx-bcast-packets interval 15min To display TX broadcast packet PMs in 24-hour intervals, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]> pm show tx-bcast-packets interval 24hr Page 703 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 704: Table 169: Ethernet Port Pms

    The peak rate of RX multicast packets per second for the measured time interval. Average RX Multicast Packets The average rate of RX multicast packets per second for the measured time interval. Page 704 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 705: Clearing Ethernet Port Pms (Cli)

    17.5.4 Clearing Ethernet Port PMs (CLI) To clear all PMs for an Ethernet interface, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]> pm clear-all Page 705 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 706: Quality Of Service (Qos) (Cli)

    The hierarchical classifier consists of the following levels: Logical interface-level classification • • Service point-level classification • Service level classification Page 706 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 707: Configuring Ingress Path Classification On A Logical Interface (Cli)

    To configure CoS and Color override based on VLAN ID, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]>vlan-cos-override set outer-vlan-id <outer- vlan-id> inner-vlan-id <inner-vlan-id> use-cos <use-cos> use- color <use-color> Page 707 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 708: Table 170: Vlan Classification And Override Cli Parameters

    CoS and Color values of frames with VLAN ID 20 with a CoS value of 5 and a Color value of Green: eth type eth [1/2]>vlan-cos-override set outer-vlan-id 20 use- cos 5 use-color green Page 708 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 709: Configuring 802.1P Classification (Cli)

    Configuring Trust Mode for 802.1p Classification (CLI) • Modifying the C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI Bit Classification Table (CLI) • • Modifying the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI Bit Classification Table (CLI) Page 709 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 710: Table 171: 802.1P Trust Mode Cli Parameters

    The following command enables 802.1p trust mode for GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]>classification set 802.1p trust The following command disables 802.1p trust mode for GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]>classification set 802.1p un-trust Page 710 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 711: Table 172: C-Vlan 802.1 Up And Cfi Bit Classification Table Default Values

    The CFI bit to be mapped. Number 0 – 7 The CoS assigned to frames with the designated UP and CFI. color Variable green The Color assigned to frames with the designated UP and CFI. yellow Page 711 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 712 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 Page 712 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 713: Table 174: S-Vlan 802.1 Up And Dei Bit Classification Table Default Values

    The DEI bit to be mapped. Number 0 – 7 The CoS assigned to frames with the designated UP and CFI. color Variable green The Color assigned to frames with the designated UP and CFI. yellow Page 713 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 714: Configuring Dscp Classification (Cli)

    802.1p level, DSCP is not considered. This section includes: • Configuring Trust Mode for DSCP Classification (CLI) • Modifying the DSCP Classification Table (CLI) Page 714 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 715: Table 176: Trust Mode For Dscp Cli Parameters

    The following command enables DSCP trust mode for GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]>classification set ip-dscp trust The following command disables DSCP trust mode for GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]>classification set ip-dscp un-trust Page 715 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 716: Table 177: Dscp Classification Table Default Values

    To modify the DSCP classification table, enter the following command: root> ethernet qos dscp-mapping-tbl set dscp <dscp> cos <cos> color <color> To display the DSCP classification table, enter the following command: root> ethernet qos dscp-mapping-tbl show Page 716 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 717: Configuring Mpls Classification (Cli)

    Trust Mode, so that if a match is found on either the 802.1p or DSCP levels, MPLS bits are not considered. This section includes: • Configuring Trust Mode for MPLS Classification (CLI) Modifying the MPLS EXP Bit Classification Table (CLI) • Page 717 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 718 [x/x]>classification set mpls <mpls> To display the trust mode for MPLS classification, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]>classification show mpls state Page 718 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 719: Table 179: Trust Mode For Mpls Cli Parameters

    The following command enables MPLS trust mode for GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]>classification set mpls trust The following command disables MPLS trust mode for GbE 1: eth type eth [1/1]>classification set mpls un-trust Page 719 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 720: Table 180: Mpls Exp Bit Classification Table Default Values

    To modify the MPLS EXP bit classification table, enter the following command: root> ethernet qos mpls-exp-bits-mapping-tbl set mpls-exp <mpls-exp> cos <cos> color <color> To display the MPLS EXP bit classification table, enter the following command: root> ethernet qos mpls-mapping-tbl show Page 720 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 721: Configuring Mac Da Classification (Cli)

    The following command changes the CoS assigned to this MAC address to 6. root>ethernet generalcfg mac-da edit mac 00:11:22:33:44:55 cos 6 color green The following command deletes this MAC address. root>ethernet generalcfg mac-da delete mac 00:11:22:33:44:55 Page 721 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 722: Configuring A Default Cos (Cli)

    Displaying Rate Meter Statistics for an Interface (CLI) 18.2.1 Overview of Rate Metering (Policing) (CLI) The IP-20 switching fabric supports hierarchical policing on the logical interface level. You can define up to 250 rate meter (policer) profiles. Page 722 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 723: Configuring Rate Meter (Policer) Profiles (Cli)

    The Excess Burst Rate (EBR) for the rate meter (policer), in Kbytes. color-mode Variable color-blind Determines how the rate meter (policer) treats frames that ingress with a CFI or color-aware DEI field set to 1 (yellow). Options are: Page 723 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 724 This edited profile includes the following parameters: • CIR – 128,000 bps • CBS – 5 Kbytes EIR – 128,000 bps • • EBS – 5 Kbytes • Color Aware mode Coupling Flag enabled • Page 724 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 725: Displaying Rate Meter Profiles (Cli)

    To delete a rate meter (policer) profile, use the following command: root> ethernet qos rate-meter delete profile-id <profile-id> The following command deletes Rate Meter Profile 50: root> ethernet qos rate-meter delete profile-id 50 Page 725 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 726: Attaching A Rate Meter (Policer) To An Interface (Cli)

    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) • Assigning a Rate Meter (Policer) per Ethertype (CLI) Page 726 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 727: Table 184: Assigning Rate Meter For Unicast Traffic Cli Parameters

    [1/1]>rate-meter unicast add capability admin- state enable profile-id 1 The following command changes the rate meter (policer) profile for unicast traffic on GbE 1 to 4: eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter unicast edit admin-state enable profile-id 4 Page 727 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 728: Table 185: Assigning Rate Meter For Multicast Traffic Cli Parameters

    [1/1]>rate-meter multicast add capability admin- state enable profile-id 1 The following command changes the rate meter (policer) profile for multicast traffic on GbE 1 to 4: eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter multicast edit admin-state enable profile-id 4 Page 728 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 729: Table 186: Assigning Rate Meter For Broadcast Traffic Cli Parameters

    [1/1]>rate-meter broadcast add capability admin- state enable profile-id 1 The following command changes the rate meter (policer) profile for broadcast traffic on GbE 1 to 4: eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter broadcast edit admin-state enable profile-id 4 Page 729 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 730: Table 187: Assigning Rate Meter Per Ethertype Cli Parameters

    (policer) profiles, refer to Configuring Rate Meter (Policer) Profiles (CLI). The following commands assign Rate Meter Profiles 1, 2, and 3 to Ethertypes 0x8000, 0x8100, and 0x9100, respectively, on GbE 1, and enable rate metering on the port. Page 730 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 731: Configuring The Line Compensation Value For A Rate Meter (Policer) (Cli)

    [1/1]>rate-meter-compensation-value set 20 18.2.7 Displaying Rate Meter Statistics for an Interface (CLI) For the rate meter (policer) at the logical interface level, you can display the following statistics counters: Page 731 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 732: Table 189: Displaying Rate Meter Statistics Cli Parameters

    [1/1]>rate-meter multicast show statistics clear- on-read yes layer-1 no eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter broadcast show statistics clear- on-read yes layer-1 no eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype1 show statistics clear- on-read yes layer-1 no Page 732 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 733: Configuring Marking (Cli)

    CoS and Color. 18.3.2 Configuring Marking Mode on a Service Point (CLI) To enable or disable marking mode on a service point, go to service view for the service and enter the following command: Page 733 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 734: Marking Table For C-Vlan Up Bits (Cli)

    Marking Table for C-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 C-VLAN-tagged frames. Page 734 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 735: Table 191: Marking Table For C-Vlan Up Bits

    The CFI bit value assigned to matching frames. 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 Page 735 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 736: Marking Table For S-Vlan Up Bits (Cli)

    Number 0 – 7 The CoS value to be mapped. color Variable green The Color to be mapped. yellow 802.1p Number 0 – 7 The UP bit value assigned to matching frames. Page 736 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 737: Configuring Wred (Cli)

    <profile-id> green-min-threshold <green-min-threshold> green-max-threshold <green-max-threshold> green-max-drop <green-max-drop> yellow- min-threshold <yellow-min-threshold> yellow-max-threshold <yellow-max-threshold> yellow-max-drop <yellow-max-drop> To edit an existing WRED profile, enter the following command in root view: Page 737 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 738: Table 195: Wred Profile Cli Parameters

    Number 0 - 8192 The maximum throughput of yellow frames for queues with this profile, in Kbytes. After this value is reached, all yellow frames in the queue are dropped. Page 738 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 739: Assigning A Wred Profile To A Queue (Cli)

    To display the WRED profile assigned to a queue, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth [x/x]> wred show profile-id service-bundle-id <service-bundle-id> cos <cos> Page 739 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 740: Table 196: Assigning Wred Profile To Queue Cli Parameters

    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]> wred show profile-id service-bundle-id 1 cos 0 Page 740 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 741: Configuring Shapers (Cli)

    If no profile is attached to the queue, no egress shaping is performed on that queue. This section includes: • Configuring Queue Shaper Profiles (CLI) • Attaching a Shaper Profile to a Queue (CLI) Page 741 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 742: Table 197: Queue Shaper Profiles Cli Parameters

    The following command changes the CIR value of the profile created above from 16000 to 32000, and changes the profile name to p3: root> ethernet qos queue-shaper-profile-tbl edit profile-id 1 cir 32000 shaper-profile-name p3 burst-type short Page 742 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 743: Table 198: Attaching Shaper Profile To Queue Cli Parameters

    If you set shaping to , the disable shaper profile remains attached to the queue, but does not affect traffic. profile-id Number 1 – 32 Enter the ID of one of the configured queue shaper profiles. Page 743 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 744: Configuring Service Bundle Shapers (Cli)

    If no profile is attached to the service bundle, no egress shaping is performed on that service bundle. This section includes: • Configuring Service Bundle Shaper Profiles (CLI) Attaching a Shaper Profile to a Service Bundle (CLI) • Page 744 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 745: Table 199: Service Bundle Shaper Profiles Cli Parameters

    1 cir 100000000 pir 200000000 shaper-profile-name p1 The following command changes the CIR value in the Service Bundle Shaper created above from 100000000 bps to 110000000 bps: Page 745 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 746 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 root> ethernet qos service-bundle-shaper-profile-tbl edit profile-id 1 cir 110000000 pir 200000000 shaper-profile-name p1 Page 746 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 747: Table 200: Attaching Shaper Profile To Service Bundle Cli Parameters

    The following command changes the Service Bundle Shaper Profile assigned in the previous command to Service Bundle 1, from 5 to 4: eth type eth [1/1]> service-bundle-shaper edit service-bundle- id 1 admin-state enable profile-id 4 Page 747 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 748: Configuring Egress Line Compensation For Shaping (Cli)

    WFQ algorithm that determines the ratio of frames per queue based on a predefined weight assigned to each queue. Page 748 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 749: Configuring Queue Priority (Cli)

    9 is the pre-defined read-only default interface priority profile. 18.6.3 Configuring Interface Priority Profiles (CLI) To define an interface priority profile, enter the following command in root view: Page 749 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 750: Table 203: Interface Priority Profile Cli Parameters

    The Green priority for the CoS 1 queue, from 4 (highest) to 1 (lowest). This priority is applied to Green frames with CoS 1 egressing the service bundle to which the profile is assigned. Page 750 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 751: Table 204: Interface Priority Sample Profile Parameters

    4 description c7_p4 This profile has the parameters listed in the following table. Table 204: Interface Priority Sample Profile Parameters Green Priority (user defined) Yellow Priority (read only) Description c0_p1 c1_p1 c2_p1 Page 751 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 752: Attaching A Priority Profile To An Interface (Cli)

    [1/1]>port-priority show profile-id Profile ID: 9 Priority Priority Description (When queue is green) (When queue is yellow) best effort data service data service data service data service Page 752 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 753: Configuring Weighted Fair Queuing (Wfq) (Cli)

    [1/1]> 18.6.5 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) • Page 753 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 754: Table 206: Wfq Profile Example

    (Yellow – not visible to users, and cannot be edited) You can attach one of the configured interface WFQ profiles to each interface. By default, the interface is assigned Profile ID 1, the pre-defined system profile. Page 754 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 755: Table 207: Wfq Profile Cli Parameters

    This profile has the parameters listed in the following table. Note that the yellow queue weight is constant and cannot be changed. This means that all best effort traffic (yellow) will always have the same weight, regardless of CoS. Page 755 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 756: Table 208: Wfq Sample Profile Parameters

    CoS 6 queues have a weight of 20 instead of 15: root> ethernet qos wfq-weight-profile-tbl edit profile-id 2 cos0-weight 15 cos1-weight 15 cos2-weight 15 cos3-weight 15 cos4-weight 15 cos5-weight 15 cos6-weight 20 cos7-weight 20 Page 756 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 757: Table 209: Attaching Wfq Profile To Interface Cli Parameters

    [1/1]> port-wfq set profile-id 3 The following is a sample display for the command: port-wfq show profile-id eth type eth [1/1]>port-wfq show profile-id Profile ID: 1 Queue Weight (Green) eth type eth [1/1]> Page 757 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 758: Displaying Egress Pms And Statistics (Cli)

    The queue for which you want to display PMs. clear-on-read Boolean If you enter yes, the statistics are cleared once you display them. • layer-1 Boolean – Statistics are represented as Layer 1 statistics, including preamble and IFG. Page 758 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 759: Configuring And Displaying Queue-Level Pms (Cli)

    It is important to note that they are not persistent, which means they are not saved in the event of unit reset. To configure and display queue-level PMs, you must first enter interface view. See Entering Interface View (CLI). Page 759 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 760 Are you sure? (yes/no):yes eth type eth [1/1]> To display the threshold settings for a service bundle, enter the following command in interface view: eth type eth [x/x]> pm tm-queue show configuration service-bundle-id <1-6> Page 760 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 761 1 cos <0-7> interval <15min|24hr> For example: To display PMs for green packets passed, enter the following command in interface view: eth type eth [x/x]> pm tm-queue show counter green_packets_passed service-bundle-id 1 cos <0-7> interval <15min|24hr> Page 761 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 762 1 cos <0-7> interval <15min|24hr> For example: To display PMs for yellow bytes passed, enter the following command in interface view: eth type eth [x/x]> pm tm-queue show counter yellow_bytes_passed service-bundle-id 1 cos <0-7> interval <15min|24hr> Page 762 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 763 1 cos <0-7> interval <15min|24hr> For example: To display PMs for yellow packets dropped, enter the following command in interface view: eth type eth [x/x]> pm tm-queue show counter yellow_packets_dropped service-bundle-id 1 cos <0-7> interval <15min|24hr> Page 763 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 764: Displaying Service Bundle-Level Statistics (Cli)

    [x/x]> tm-service-bundle clear statistics Table 211: Egress Service Bundle Level PMs CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description service-bundle-id Number 1 – 63 The service bundle for which you want to display PMs. Page 764 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 765 The following command displays service bundle PMs for Service Bundle 1, on GbE 1. The PMs are cleared after they are displayed. eth type eth [1/1]> tm-service-bundle show statistics service- bundle-id 1 clear-on-read yes layer-1 yes Page 765 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 766: Ethernet Protocols (Cli)

    <control-port> vlan <vlan> To create an ABN entity consisting of a physical radio interface as the monitored interface and an interface group as the control interface, enter the following command in root view: Page 766 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 767 If the bandwidth is below the nominal value when the holdoff period ends, the system starts transmitting messages: root> ethernet abn abn-holdoff-set abn-name <abn-name> holdoff <holdoff-time> To clear the messages counter, enter the following command in root view: Page 767 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 768: Table 212: Abn Entity Cli Parameters

    Number This parameter is always set to 1. control-port Number The specific Ethernet interface to which messages are transmitted when bandwidth in the monitored interface degrades below the nominal value. Page 768 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 769 The following command creates an ABN entity with radio interface 1 as the monitored interface and Ethernet port 1 as the control interface. It also specifies to transmit bandwidth messages on VLAN 1: Page 769 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 770 The following command sets the Holdoff time of ABN-1 to 15 seconds: root> ethernet abn abn-holdoff-set abn-name ABN-1 holdoff 15 The following command clears the messages counter for ABN-1: root> ethernet abn abn-entity-counter-reset abn-name ABN-1 Page 770 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 771: Configuring Lldp (Cli)

    <hold-multiplier> To define the interval between transmission of LLDP notifications during normal transmission periods, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet lldp notif-interval-set notif-interval <notif- interval> Page 771 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 772: Displaying The General Lldp Parameters (Cli)

    Message Fast Tx - The interval, in seconds, at which LLDP frames are transmitted during fast transmission periods, such as when the unit detects a new neighbor. In this release, this parameter is set at 1. Page 772 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 773: Configuring Lldp Port Parameters (Cli)

    (default value). The following commands configure Ethernet port 2 to transmit and receive LLDP frames and to send a Topology Change trap to the NMS whenever the system information of its peer changes: Page 773 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 774: Displaying Lldp Port Parameters (Cli)

    Displaying Local Unit Parameters (CLI) Displaying Local Port Parameters (CLI) • Displaying Local Unit Management Information (CLI) • • Displaying Local Unit Management Information per Port (CLI) • Displaying Unit’s Destination MAC Addresses (CLI) Page 774 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 775 ◦ 3 - wlanAccessPoint ◦ 4 - router ◦ 5 - telephone ◦ 6 - docsisCableDevice ◦ 7 - stationOnly ◦ 8 - cVLANComponent ◦ 9 - sVLANComponent ◦ 10 - twoPortMACRelay Page 775 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 776 In this release, this parameter is always set to MAC Address. • Port ID - The port's MAC address. Description - A text string that describes the port. In this release, this • parameter is always set to ethPort. Page 776 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 777 Mng Addr Length - Reserved for future use. Mng Addr IF SubType - Reserved for future use. • • Mng Addr IF - Reserved for future use. • Mng Addr OID - Reserved for future use. Page 777 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 778 Management Address - The unit's IP address. • Mng Address Tx Enable - Indicates whether the unit's Management Address is transmitted with LLDPDUs. In this release, the Management Address is always sent. Page 778 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 779: Displaying The Lldp Remote System Parameters (Cli)

    • Displaying the LLDP Remote Unit Parameters (CLI) • Displaying the LLDP Remote Management Data per Port (CLI) Note: Remote information is not displayed for ports that belong to a LAG group. Page 779 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 780: Table 215: Lldp Remote Unit Cli Parameters

    The bitmap is defined by the following parameters: ◦ 0 - other ◦ 1 - repeater ◦ 2 - bridge ◦ 3 - wlanAccessPoint ◦ 4 - router Page 780 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 781 ◦ True - Changes have taken place in the peer's MIB since the defined agent- start-time. ◦ False - No changes have taken place in the peer's MIB since the defined agent-start-time. Page 781 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 782: Displaying Lldp Statistics (Cli)

    19.2.7 Displaying LLDP Statistics (CLI) This section includes: • Displaying Statistics Regarding Changes in Peer Unit (CLI) • Displaying LLDP Transmission Statistics (CLI) • Displaying LLDP Received Frames Statistics (CLI) Page 782 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 783 TTL has expired. The counter is similar to this RX Ageouts counter, but is for specific ports rather than the entire unit. Page 783 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 784 Error statistic is incremented by 1, and an LLDPDU is sent containing the mandatory TLVs plus as many of the optional TLVs in the set as will fit in the remaining LLDPDU length. Page 784 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 785 This counter is set to zero during agent initialization. This counter is incremented only once when the complete set of information is invalidated (aged out) from all related tables on a particular port. Partial ageing is not allowed. Page 785 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 786: Synchronization (Cli)

    <pipe-id> interface-2-type <interface-2-type> slot <slot> port <port> To remove a SyncE pipe, enter the following command in root view: root> platform sync pipe remove pipe-id <pipe-id> Page 786 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 787: Table 217: Synce Regenerator Cli Parameters

    1 to radio interface 2: root> platform sync pipe edit interface-2 pipe-id 1 interface- 2-type radio slot 2 port 2 The following command removes SyncE pipe 1: root> platform sync pipe remove pipe-id 1 Page 787 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 788: Changing The Etsi/Ansi Mode (Cli)

    When configuring the Sync source, the Sync mode must be set to its default setting of automatic. To display the current Sync mode, enter the following CLI command in root view: root> platform sync mode show Page 788 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 789: Configuring An Ethernet Interface As A Synchronization Source (Cli)

    1-3 (IP-20E only) 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. Page 789 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 790: Configuring A Radio Interface As A Synchronization Source (Cli)

    <port> radio-channel <radio-channel> priority <priority> quality <quality> To remove a radio interface as a synchronization source, enter the following command in root view: root> platform sync source remove radio-interface slot <slot> port <port> radio-channel <radio-channel> Page 790 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 791: Clearing All Sync Sources (Cli)

    0 20.3.3 Clearing All Sync Sources (CLI) To clear all synchronization sources that have been configured in the system, enter the following command in root view: root> platform sync source remove all Page 791 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 792: Configuring The Outgoing Clock (Cli)

    The radio-channel configured for the synchronization source. source Variable system-clock – The interface uses the system-clock local-clock system clock as its synchronization source. local-clock – The interface uses its internal clock as its synchronization source. Page 792 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 793: Configuring Ssm Messages (Cli)

    To enable SSM on a radio interface, enter the following command in root view: root> platform sync ssm admin radio-interface slot <slot> port <port> admin on Page 793 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 794: Displaying Synchronization Status And Parameters (Cli)

    | 2 | 2 | Radio | | 6 | automatic | |------------------------------------------------------------| To display the synchronization source status, enter the following command in root view: root> platform sync source status show Page 794 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 795 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 Page 795 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 796: Configuring 1588 Transparent Clock (Cli)

    7 Enter one of the following commands in root view to assign the radio or Multi- Carrier ABC group that will carry the PTP packets and determine the direction of the PTP packet flow. Page 796 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 797: Table 222: 1588 Transparent Clock Cli Parameters

    If necessary, you can use the ethernet generalcfg ptp-tc cos- command to map a different CoS value (0-7) to preserve cos value 1588 packets, but it is recommended to map 1588 packets to CoS 7. Page 797 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 798: Access Management And Security (Cli)

    To display the currently configured session timeout period, enter the following command in root view: root> platform security protocols-control session inactivity- timeout show Table 222: Inactivity Timeout Period CLI Parameters Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description Page 798 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 799: Configuring Blocking Upon Login Failure (Cli)

    You can configure a 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. You can also manually block a specific user. Page 799 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 800 The following commands block, then unblock, a user with the user name John_Smith: root> platform security access-control user-account block user- name John_Smith block yes root> platform security access-control user-account block user- name John_Smith block no Page 800 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 801: Configuring The Password Security Parameters (Cli)

    Input Type Permitted Values Description password aging Number 0, 20 - 90 The number of days that user passwords will remain valid from the first time the user logs into the system. Page 801 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 802: Forcing Password Change Upon First Login (Cli)

    21.2.4 Displaying the System Password Settings (CLI) Use the following command to display the system password settings: root> platform security access-control password show-all Page 802 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 803: Configuring Users (Cli)

    The system includes a number of pre-defined user profiles. You can edit these profiles, and add user profiles. Together, the system supports up to 50 user profiles. Page 803 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 804 Page 804 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 805: Configuring User Accounts (Cli)

    <user-name> profile-name <profile-name> expired-date <expired-date> When you create a new user account, the system will prompt you to enter a default password. If Enforce Password Strength is activated (refer to Configuring Page 805 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 806 Use the format: Optional. The date on which the user YYYY-MM-DD account will expire. On this date, the user automatically becomes inactive. block Variable yes - blocks the account. no - unblocks the account. Page 806 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 807: Configuring Radius (Cli)

    Configuring the RADIUS Server Attributes (CLI) To configure Radius server attributes, enter the following command: root> platform security radius-server-communication-ipv4 set server-id <server-id> ip-address <ip-address> port <radius- port> retries <retries> timeout <timeout> secret <shared- secret> Page 807 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 808: Viewing Radius Access Control And Server Attributes (Cli)

    Security Func Group Read level – The Read access level in the Security • functional group: None, Regular or Advanced. • Security Func Group Write level – The Write access level in the Security functional group: None, Regular or Advanced. Page 808 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 809: Configuring X.509 Csr Certificates And Https (Cli)

    For these operations, SFTP must be used. This section includes: Generating a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) File (CLI) • Downloading a Certificate (CLI) • • Enabling HTTPS (CLI) • Generating a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) File (CLI) Page 809 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 810 The city in which the organization is legally located. organization String The exact legal name of your organization. Do not abbreviate. org-unit String The division of the organization that handles the certificate. Page 810 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 811: Downloading A Certificate (Cli)

    < server-ipv6> server-path <server-path> filename <filename> server-username <username> server-password <password> To display the currently-configured SFTP parameters for downloading a certificate, enter the following command in root view: Page 811 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 812: Enabling Https (Cli)

    Note: Make sure you have installed a valid certificate in the IP-20 before changing the web interface protocol to HTTPS. Failure to do this may prevent users from accessing the Web EMS. Page 812 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 813 To change the protocol back to HTTP, enter the following command in root view: 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 Page 813 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 814: Configuring Https Cipher Hardening (Cli)

    To set HTTPS normal mode, enter the following command: root> platform security https-ciphers-hardening-level-set level normal Note: The default HTTP cipher mode is normal. To display the current HTTPS cipher mode, enter the following command: root> platform security https-ciphers-hardening-level-show Page 814 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 815: Blocking Telnet Access (Cli)

    To display the result of the most recent current security log upload operation, enter the following command in root view: root> platform security file-transfer show status Page 815 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 816 “security_log_Oct8.zip”, user name “anonymous”, and password “12345”, and initiate the upload: root> platform security file-transfer set server-path \current file-name security_log_Oct8.zip ip-address 192.168.1.80 protocol ftp username anonymous password 12345 root> platform security file-transfer operation set upload- security-log Page 816 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 817: Uploading The Configuration Log (Cli)

    You can export the file using any name, then add the suffix .zip manually. For example: UnitInfo.zip If the Unit Information file is exported several times consecutively, the file itself will not be replaced. Instead, the filename will be Page 817 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 818 \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 command exports the configuration log to the external server location: root> platform security configuration-log upload Page 818 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 819: Alarm Management And Troubleshooting (Cli)

    This section includes: • Displaying Alarm Information (CLI) • Editing an Alarm Type (CLI) • Setting Alarms to their Default Values (CLI) Page 819 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 820: Displaying Alarm Information (Cli)

    <alarm-id> restore default To restore the severity levels and descriptions of all alarm types to their default values, enter the following command in root view: root> platform status alarm-management set all default Page 820 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 821: Configuring A Timeout For Trap Generation (Cli)

    To display the current trap generation timeout, enter the following command in root view: root> platform status alarm-management alarm-stabilization-show The following command sets a trap generation timeout of 60 seconds: root> platform status alarm-management alarm-stabilization-set time 60 Page 821 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 822: Disabling Alarms And Events (Cli)

    <alarm-id> display alarms, even if they are disabled. The Alarm Admin column in attributes the output displays whether the alarm or event is enabled or disabled. Page 822 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 823: Configuring Voltage Alarm Thresholds And Displaying Voltage Pms (Cli)

    The lowest voltage during the measured period. • The highest voltage during the measured period. To display voltage PMs, enter the following command in root view: root> platform management voltage pm show pm-interval-type <all|15min|24hr> Page 823 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 824 The IDF 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. Page 824 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 825: Uploading Unit Info (Cli)

    To export the unit information file you just created, enter the following command in root view: root> platform unit-info-file export To display the status of a unit information file export operation, enter the following command in root view root> platform unit-info-file status show Page 825 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 826 IP address 192.168.1.99, in the directory “current”, with file name “cfg_log”, user name “anonymous”, and password “12345.” 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 Page 826 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 827 The following commands create a unit information file and export the file to the external server location: root> platform unit-info-file create root> platform unit-info-file export Page 827 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 828: Activating The Radio Logger (Cli)

    By default, the Radio Logger is inactive. It should only be activated by technical support personnel, or by the customer upon request of Ceragon’s Customer Support team. Data gathered by the Radio Logger is added to the Unit Info file, which can be exported from the unit and sent to Customer Support upon their request.
  • Page 829: Performing Diagnostics (Cli)

    To configure loopback on an Ethernet interface, go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command: eth type eth[x/x]> loopback admin <loopback-admin-state> Page 829 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 830 The following command enables MAC address swapping during the loopback: eth type eth [1/2]> loopback swap-mac-address admin enable The following command displays Ethernet port loopback status: eth type eth [1/2]> loopback status show Page 830 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 831: Configuring Service Oam (Soam) Fault Management (Fm) (Cli)

    SOAM Overview (CLI) • Configuring MDs (CLI) Configuring MA/MEGs (CLI) • • Configuring MEPs (CLI) • Displaying MEP and Remote MEP Attributes (CLI) Displaying Detailed MEP Error Information (CLI) • • Performing Loopback (CLI) Page 831 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 832 CCM (Continuity Check Message) – MEPs in the network exchange CCMs with • their peers at defined intervals. This enables each MEP to detect loss of connectivity or failure in the remote MEP. Page 832 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 833 CFM frames that relate to that domain. The maintenance level must be the same on both sides of the link. Note: In the current release, the maintenance level is not relevant to the SOAM functionality. Page 833 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 834 To display MEG attributes, including the number of MEPS, local MEPS, and MIPs attached to the MEG, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet soam meg attributes show meg-id <meg-id> Page 834 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 835 MEs for which the OAM flows are not distinguishable based on the Ethernet layer encapsulation. service-id Number 0-4095 Assign the MEG to an Ethernet service. You must define the service before you configure the MEG. Page 835 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 836 MEG when a lower-level MEP exists on the service point. This option is usually used when the operator’s domain is encompassed by another domain. defMHFdefer – No MIPs are created. Page 836 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 837 MEPs. The system automatically defines the other MEPs you configured in the previous step as remote MEPs. See Configuring the Local MEPs (CLI). 3 Enable the Local MEPs. See Enabling Local MEPs (CLI). Page 837 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 838 2 mep-id 25 To display a list of all MEPs that belong to a specific MEG, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet soam meg mep show meg-id <meg-id> Page 838 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 839 2 mep-id 35 To display a list of local MEPs for a specific MEG, enter the following command in root view: root> ethernet soam meg local-mep show meg-id <meg-id> For example: Page 839 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 840 – CCM messages are disabled on the MEP. ccm-ltm- Number The p-bit included in CCMs sent by this MEP. priority mep-active Variable true true – The MEP is Active. false false – The MEP is Inactive. Page 840 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 841 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> rmep-id <rmep-id> For example: Page 841 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 842 MEP Direction Up or Down. MEP Active Indicates whether the MEP is enabled (true) or disabled (false). MEP CCM TX Enable Indicates whether the MEP is configured to send CCMs (true or false). Page 842 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 843 MAC Address). Chassis ID Displays the MAC Address of the remote chassis. Mng Addr Domain Displays the BASE MAC address of the remote unit (the unit on which the remote MEP resides). Page 843 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 844 The Last RX Xcon fault message field displays the frame of the last CCM that contains a cross-connect error received by the MEP. Note: A cross-connect error occurs when a CCM is received from a remote MEP that has not been defined locally. Page 844 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 845 <meg-id> mep-id <mep- id> dest-mep-id <dest-mac-addr> tx-num <tx-num> tx-interval <interval> Page 845 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 846 Variable zeroPattern The type of data pattern to be sent in an OAM onesPattern PDU Data TLV. Page 846 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 847: Working In Cw Mode (Single Or Dual Tone) (Cli)

    To transmit two tones, enter the following command in radio view: radio[x/x] modem tx-source set mode two-tone freq-shift <freq- shift> freq-shift2 <freq-shift> To exit CW mode, enter the following command in radio view: Page 847 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 848 1, then exit CW mode and return the interface to normal operation: root> radio slot 2 port 1 radio[2/1] modem tx-source set admin enable radio[2/1] radio[x/x] modem tx-source set mode one-tone freq- shift 5050 radio[2/1] modem tx-source set admin disable Page 848 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 849: Section Iv Maintenance

    User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Section IV Maintenance Page 849 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 850: Maintenance

    75°C or below -36°C. The alarm is cleared when the temperature goes below 73°C or above -34°C. To display the current unit temperature, see Configuring Unit Parameters. The permissible IDU humidity range is 5%RH to 100%RH. Page 850 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 851: Troubleshooting Tips

    Web EMS page (F5) after completion of the upgrade. If pressing F5 does not help, clear the browser’s cache by pressing Ctrl+Shift+Delete. Page 851 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 852: Ip-20C Connector Pin-Outs

    Two labelling formats are available for the IP-20C ESS and IP-20C ESX hardware models, as shown in the following figures. Figure 389: IP-20C Interfaces – Descriptive Labels Figure 390: IP-20C Interfaces – Letter Labels Page 852 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 853: Ethernet Traffic Ports - Rj-45/Sfp Pinouts

    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) BI_DD- (Bi-directional pair -D) Page 853 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 854: Mgt/Prot - Management (Fe-Standard) And Protection (Fe-Non-Standard)

    RSL interface is not accurate and should be used only as an aid). 23.3.5 Source Sharing IP-20C uses a TNC connector for source sharing. This connector is marked EXT/REF. Page 854 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 855: Ip-20C Leds

    Orange LED to the right of the interface. The Green LED indicates the port’s Admin state: • Off – Admin is Disabled. • Green – Admin is Enabled. Page 855 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 856: Radio Led

    Orange -Protection is enabled, and the unit is in standby mode. • Green - Protection is enabled, the unit is in active mode, and no protection alarms are present. • Off – Protection is not enabled. Page 856 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 857: Ip-20C-Hp Connector Pin-Outs

    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) BI_DD- (Bi-directional pair -D) Page 857 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 858: Management Port (Fe-Standard) And Protection (Fe-Non-Standard)

    BNC port is not accurate and should be used only as an aid). 23.5.5 Source Sharing IP-20C-HP uses a TNC connector for source sharing. This connector is marked EXT/REF. Page 858 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 859: Ip-20C-Hp Leds

    Blinking Green – Management traffic is passing through the interface. If the MGT interface is being used for protection, the Orange LED indicates the status of the mate unit: • Off – The interface is not in an operational state (down). Page 859 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 860: Radio Led

    Orange -Protection is enabled, and the unit is in standby mode. • Green - Protection is enabled, the unit is in active mode, and no protection • alarms are present. • Off – Protection is not enabled. Page 860 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 861: Ip-20S Connector Pin-Outs

    Two labelling formats are available for the IP-20S ESS hardware model, as shown in the following figures. Except for the interface labelling, these versions are identical. Figure 395: IP-20S Interfaces – Descriptive Labels Figure 396: IP-20S Interfaces – Letter Labels Page 861 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 862: Eth1/Poe - Gbe Electrical+Poe/Optical

    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) BI_DD- (Bi-directional pair -D) Page 862 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 863: Eth2 - Gbe Electrical/Optical

    23.7.4 MGT/PROT - Management (FE-Standard) and Protection (FE-Non- Standard) Table 255: IP-20S MGT/PROT Interface - RJ-45 Pinouts Pin no. Description Management - Standard 100Base-T 4 Wire Protection - Non-Standard 100Base-T 4 Wire Page 863 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 864: Rsl Interface

    There are two LEDs next to each electrical (RJ-45) interface, a Green LED to the left of the interface and an Orange LED to the right of the interface. The Green LED indicates the port’s Admin state: Page 864 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 865: Optical Gbe Interface (Sfp) Leds

    The Status LED indicates the status of the main board: • Off – The power is off. Green - The power is on, and no alarms are raised on the motherboard. • Page 865 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 866: Protection Led

    Orange -Protection is enabled, and the unit is in standby mode. Green - Protection is enabled, the unit is in active mode, and no protection • alarms are present. • Off – Protection is not enabled. Page 866 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 867: Ip-20E Connector Pin-Outs

    1Gb/s Ethernet Traffic (Eth1) 1Gb/s Ethernet Traffic (Eth2 + Eth3) RJ45: 10/100/1000BaseT SFP cage: SFP, CSFP SFP cage: SFP/SFP+ Local management + PoE 1Gb/s Ethernet Traffic (Eth2 + Eth3) 1/10Gb/s Ethernet Traffic (Eth1) Page 867 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 868: Ip-20E Interfaces - Ese

    Management port (no traffic) • Extension Port: ◦ XPIC and HSB source sharing (planned for future release) ◦ Direct connection to CPU by technician – see Logging in Without Knowing the IP Address Page 868 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 869: Ip-20E Interfaces - Ess

    CSFP (Dual BiDir SFP) provides Eth2 and Eth3 • Extension Port: ◦ XPIC and HSB (planned for future release) ◦ Direct connection to CPU by technician – see Logging in Without Knowing the IP Address Page 869 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 870: Ip-20E Interfaces - Esp

    If the port is configured for 1G, a regular SFP module (rather than SFP+) can be used. • Extension Port: ◦ XPIC and HSB (planned for future release) ◦ Direct connection to CPU by technician – see Logging in Without Knowing the IP Address Page 870 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 871: Eth1/Poe Gbe Interface (Rj-45) (Ese Only)

    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) BI_DD- (Bi-directional pair -D) 23.9.9 EXT Port This port is reserved for future use. Page 871 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 872: 23.9.10 Power Adaptor

    GbE interface is available (MGT). Figure 402: Two-Wire to PoE Port Power Adaptor 23.9.11 RSL Interface IP-20E uses a two-pin connection to measure the RSL level using standard voltmeter test leads: Figure 403: RSL Pins Page 872 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 873: 23.10 Ip-20E Leds

    There is one Green LED to the left of the interface. The LED is for Eth1 and indicates the interface's Admin and cable connection status, and whether there is traffic on the interface: • Off - Admin is Disabled or no cable is connected to the interface. Page 873 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 874: 23.10.4 Eth2/Eth3 Gbe Optical Interface (Sfp/Csfp) Leds

    Green - The power is on, and the carrier is operational (up). Orange – A signal degrade condition exists on the carrier. • • Red - A loss of frame (LOF) or excessive BER condition exists on the carrier. Page 874 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 875: 23.10.7 Status Led

    Orange - The power is on, and one or more minor alarms or warnings are raised on the motherboard. • Red - The power is on, and one or more major or critical alarms are raised on the motherboard. 23.10.8 Protection LED Reserved for future use. Page 875 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 876: 23.11 Ip-20V Connector Pin-Outs

    Eth2/Eth3 is an SFP cage that supports regular and CSFP standards. 23.11.2 Eth1 10G Optical Interface (SFP+) Eth1 is an SFP cage that supports the SFP+ standard. Eth1 can be configured by the user for 1G or 10G Ethernet traffic. Page 876 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 877: Mgt Gbe Electrical Interface (Rj-45)

    GbE interface is available (MGT). Figure 405: Two-Wire to PoE Port Power Adaptor 23.11.5 RSL Interface IP-20V uses a two-pin connection to measure the RSL level using standard voltmeter test leads: Page 877 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 878 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Figure 406: RSL Pins Page 878 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 879: 23.12 Ip-20V Leds

    Green - Admin is Enabled and a cable is connected to the interface. Blinking Green - Admin is Enabled and a cable is connected to the interface, • and there is traffic on the interface. Page 879 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 880: 23.12.3 Mgt Gbe Electrical Interface (Rj-45) Leds

    Orange - The power is on, and one or more minor alarms or warnings are raised on the motherboard. • Red - The power is on, and one or more major or critical alarms are raised on the motherboard. Page 880 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 881: 23.13 Poe Injector Pin-Outs

    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) BI_DD- (Bi-directional pair -D) Page 881 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 882: 23.14 Poe Injector Leds

    • 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. Page 882 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 883 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Section V: Appendices Page 883 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 884 Warning 1. Power Supply output is 1. Make sure the power high. too high. supply voltage is within the specification range. 2) 2. Threshold value not set Adjust the threshold value. correctly. Page 884 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 885 LAG. lag-down Alarm Equipment LAG operational state is Critical The LAG group is not 1. Check the physical down operational. connections and administrative status on both sides of the link of all Page 885 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 886 Alarm Equipment Protection Major 1. Mate unit is 1. Verify that the mate unit is down-alarm communication is down absent/failure. up and running. 2. Check the state of the protection cable Page 886 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 887 1. Cable disconnected. At both ends of the cable: 2. Defective cable. 1. Check the cable connection. 3. External equipment failure. 2. Check the Admin state of the port. 3. Replace the cable. Page 887 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 888 Modem Card). 2. Check IF cable and replace 5. Interference on the if required. link. 3. Replace RFU. 4. Replace RMC (Radio Modem Card). 5. Remove source of interference or change link frequency. Page 888 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 889 4. Fault in RMC (Radio Modem Card). 4. Replace RMC (Radio Modem Card). radio-link-up Event Equipment Radio interface is up Warning The radio interface is back No action is required. to being operational. Page 889 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 890 2. Fiber length is too long 2. Check fiber type and or fiber type doesn't fit length fit the installed SFP. the installed SFP. If not, replace it with an appropriate one. Page 890 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 891 Activation key violation Critical The current configuration Go to the "Activation Key does not match the Overview" page in the activation-key-enabled Web EMS to display a list feature set. of features and their Page 891 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 892 Radio protection Major The configuration between Apply a copy-to-mate mismatch configuration mismatch the radio protection command to copy the members is not aligned configuration from the active radio to the standby radio. Page 892 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 893 Major Interface protection 1. Insert the interface mate: mate interface is function is missing an module. missing or disabled interface module, module is 2. Replace a defective defective or disabled. existing interface. Page 893 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 894 Event Processing Configuration file Warning Backup file creation finished backup created successfully 1152 backup-failure Event Processing Failure in configuration Warning System failed in attempt to file backup generation create backup configuration file Page 894 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 895 2. File not found in server 2. Make sure file exists. 1159 file-transfer-in-progress Event Processing Configuration file Warning File transfer started transfer in progress 1163 cli-script-activation-started Event Processing CLI configuration script Warning User command activation started Page 895 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 896 LUT file MRMC script LUT file 1302 fpga-file-not-found-alarm Alarm Equipment Radio MRMC script LUT Critical Missing radio MRMC script Download the specific radio file is not found LUT file MRMC script LUT file Page 896 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 897 Alarm Equipment Radio Receive Signal Warning RSL is very low due to: 1. Check for obstruction in of-range Level is below the link path. 1. Weather conditions, configured threshold obstruction in antenna Page 897 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 898 Equipment Radio unit input voltage Warning 1. Power supply output is 1. Check/replace the power is too low too low. supply connected to the RFU. 2. Power cable to RFU is defective. Page 898 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 899 2. IF cable not connected properly. 2. Check IF cable and connector. 3. Defective RMC (Radio Modem Card). 3. Verify that N-Type connector inner pin is not 4. Defective RFU. spliced. Page 899 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 900 Carrier ABC the user has configured Multi-Carrier ABC configured. type. 1708 freq-set-automatically Event Equipment RFU frequency was set Warning Defective RFU 1. Check if problem repeats automatically and if errors/alarms reported. Page 900 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 901 2. Defective RFU. 2. Replace RFU. 1721 reset-occurred Event Equipment RFU reset Major 1722 rfu-loopback-active Alarm Equipment RFU loopback is active Major User has activated RFU Disable RFU loopback. loopback. Page 901 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 902 2. Fading event. fading or lack of LOS. 3. Defective RFU. 2. Check link settings (TX power, TX frequency). 3. Check antenna alignment. 4. Check antenna connections. 5. Replace local/remote RFU. Page 902 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 903 1732 power-supply-radio-unit-cable- Alarm Equipment Power supply cable Major 1. Power is enabled but 1. Check RFU cable and short short consumption reached connectors. the threshold. Page 903 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 904 2. Check if slot was disabled. 1739 card-fpga-fw-not-found Alarm Equipment FPGA Firmware file not Critical There is no FPGA file found found on the Main Board for the card on the slot Page 904 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 905 Card operational state is Indetermina Card state was change to Up state 1747 card-state-is-up-with-alarms Event Equipment Card operational state is Indetermina Card state was change to Up Up with Alarms state but with Alarms indication Page 905 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 906 2. Defective unit. been superseded by 2. Verify that the product is 3. Defective fan. Alarm 32002. operating according to specifications. 3. Replace the fan card. 4. Replace the unit. Page 906 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 907 Alarm Equipment The Main board Warning firmware is not found 1764 TCC-fw-load-fail Alarm Equipment Download Main Board Major Firmware download was 1. Reset board. firmware has failed unsuccessful. 2. Download software package. Page 907 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 908 Errors in signal from IDU to 1. Check the IF cable and XCVR. connectors. 2. Verify that the N- Type/TNC connector inner pin is not spliced. 3. Replace RMC. 4. Replace XCVR. Page 908 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 909 RMC hardware failure of the Replace the RMC. clock distributor. 1777 rfu-mute-with-timeout Event Equipment RFU TX Mute with Warning RFU Transmitter muted by Unmute the RFU transmitter or timeout user. wait for expiration of the timeout. Page 909 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 910 Changes were made to Reset chassis reset operational until chassis platform due to user reset configuration 1800 t3-loc-alarm Alarm Equipment T3 sync interface Loss of Major 1. Cable disconnected. 1. Check the cable Carrier connection. Page 910 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 911 System malfunction 1. Reset the TDM-LIC. disrupt TDM-LIC is disrupted in 2. Replace card. Host-Card direction 2005 pwe3-pwc-s-hw-failure Alarm Equipment TDM-LIC hardware Major System malfunction 1. Reset the TDM-LIC. failure 2. Replace card. Page 911 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 912 2012 pwe3-tdm-port-s-ais Alarm Equipment Alarm Indication Signal Major 1. Cable is not properly 1. Check the cable (AIS) on TDM-LIC TDM connected. connectivity at both local port and peer interfaces. Page 912 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 913 1. Cable is not properly 1. Check the cable TDM-LIC TDM port connected. connectivity at both local and peer interfaces. 2. Cable is faulty; 2. Check external equipment. 3. External equipment is faulty; 4. Defective TDM-LIC. Page 913 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 914 Equipment Loss Of Signal (LOS) on Critical 1. Cable is not properly 1. Reconnect cable. TDM-LIC STM1/OC3 connected. 2. Check line cables. port 2. External equipment is 3. Check external equipment. faulty. Page 914 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 915 1. Make sure expected and Mismatch on TDM-LIC received J0 identifiers 2. Line is not properly STM1/OC3 port match. connected. 2. Connect line cables 3. SFP is not properly properly. installed. 3. Install SFP properly. Page 915 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 916 1. Alarm exists along the 1. Fix the problem along the Indication (RDI) received Trail. trail. on TDM-LIC VC12/VT1.5 2. Cable is not properly 2. Check the cable connected. connectivity at both local and peer interfaces. Page 916 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 917 2043 pwe3-card-group-s-no-mate Alarm Equipment A member of TDM-LIC Minor TDM-LIC card is not installed Install the missing TDM-LIC card protection group is in the shelf card missing Page 917 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 918 2. User command. 2. Check local service configuration. 2047 pwe3-tunnel-groups-s- Event Equipment Path protection Minor Primary path has been revertive-switch revertive switch on TDM operational for the duration service of the defined WTR time Page 918 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 919 2. Incorrect configuration 3. Check configuration. on remote side. 2105 STM-1-OC-3-RX-MSAIS Alarm Equipment MS-AIS/AIS-L on Radio Minor 1. Remote STM-1/OC-3 Check remote equipment. Interface detected. signal is missing (LOS/LOF/MS-AIS/AIS-L on remote STM-1/OC-3 interface). Page 919 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 920 1/OC-3 port. configuration. 2113 STM-1/OC-3-CHANNEL-2- Alarm Equipment STM-1/OC-3 Channel Warning 1. Reduced capacity. 1. Check link performance. REMOVED Removed alarm (due to 2. Fading. 2. Check radio alarms for reduced radio capacity). channel. Page 920 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 921 1. LOS alarm on an STM- 1. Check line cables. CHANGED protection switchover 1/OC-3 interface. 2. Check external equipment. 2. STM1-OC3 Group protection group member was disabled or pulled out of the shelf. Page 921 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 922 1. Replace RMC. RMC and TCC cards. 2. Replace TCC. 3. Replace chassis. 2205 MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl4 Alarm Equipment LVDS RX Error Slot 4. Major Hardware failure between 1. Replace RMC. RMC and TCC cards. Page 922 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 923 2. Replace TCC. 3. Replace chassis. 2212 MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl12 Alarm Equipment LVDS RX Error Slot 12. Major Hardware failure between 1. Replace RMC. RMC and TCC cards. 2. Replace TCC. 3. Replace chassis. Page 923 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 924 Compare Channel ID Channel Id Mismatch configuration with remote side. Ch7. 2226 MC-ABC-Ch-Id-Mismatch-Ch8 Alarm Equipment Multi Carrier ABC Warning Configuration failure. Compare Channel ID Channel Id Mismatch configuration with remote side. Ch8. Page 924 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 925 Enable admin state for Channel Id Manual down. channel. Disabled Ch7. 2242 MC-ABC-Ch-Id-Disabled-Ch8 Alarm Equipment Multi Carrier ABC Warning Admin state for channel is Enable admin state for Channel Id Manual down. channel. Disabled Ch8. Page 925 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 926 Alarm Equipment Front panel Ethernet Warning Front panel Ethernet port Configure the relevant capacity not-functional port cannot function in cannot work in a mode mode to 1 Gbps mode. other than 1Gbps. Page 926 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 927 5002 g8032-failure-of-protocol-pm- Alarm Processing More than a single RPL Warning RPL configuration is wrong. Reconfigure the RPL alarm is configured in a ring configuration. Page 927 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 928 CLI. 5015 sync-pipe-missing-edge Alarm Equipment The pipe is missing an Major Pipe Regenerator contains Configure a second interface edge interface less than 2 interfaces. for the Pipe Regenerator. Page 928 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 929 T3 Interface is configured in If required, disable the mode loopback. loopback. 5021 sync-T4-analog-loopback Alarm Equipment T4 interface at loopback Warning T4 Interface is configured in If required, disable the mode loopback. loopback. Page 929 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 930 1. Check all the remote not received receiving CCMs from at SOAM configurations. least one of the remote 2. Check that all remote MEPs MEPs are configured correctly and enabled. 3. Check the service connectivity. Page 930 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 931 5044 ptp-message-rate-sync Alarm Processing 1588-BC sync message Major Misconfiguration of the Check the message rate rate is below expected. peer system. configuration of the peer system. Page 931 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 932 5104 kep-initiated Event Equipment Key Exchange Protocol Indetermina in progress, Traffic has been blocked 5105 kep-remote-initiated Event Equipment Key Exchange Protocol Indetermina initiated by remote side Page 932 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 933 31000 Insufficient-conditions-for- Alarm Equipment Insufficient conditions Critical 1. Insufficient conditions 1. Make sure all cables MIMO-alarm for MIMO for MIMO. between master and slave are connected (MIMO 4x4 2. Hardware failure. only). Page 933 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 934 MIMO frequency is not carriers. identical on all MIMO 3. Disable XPIC, Multi radio carriers. and ATPC on all MIMO 3. XPIC or Multi radio or carriers. ATPC features are enabled. Page 934 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 935 2. Align same frequency on supported 2. Different TX/RX all radio members. frequency. 3. Disable ATPC. 3. ATPC enabled. 4. Disable XPIC. 4. XPIC enabled. 5. Align ACM mode. Page 935 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 936 2. Replace Mate communication cable. 31110 AMCC-Source-Sharing-cable- Alarm Equipment MIMO insufficient Critical Source sharing cable failure. 1. Verify Source sharing cable disconnected-alarm condition – Source connected. sharing cable failure. 2. Replace Source sharing cable. Page 936 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 937 5. Set ACM mode to adaptive 5. ACM mode is not on all radio members. adaptive on any radio 6. Disable Unit Redundancy. member. 7. Replace platform. 6. Unit Redundancy enabled. 7. Platform not supported. Page 937 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 938 Major System Power Voltage lower than allowed. 32001 unit-mgr-overvoltage-alarm Alarm Equipment Over voltage Major System Power Voltage higher than allowed. 32002 unit-mgr-extremeTemperature- Alarm Management System Temperature Major alarm not in allowed range. Page 938 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 939 Application Specified Integrated Circuit Automatic State Propagation ATPC Automatic Transmit Power Control Auxiliary Unit Baseband Baseband Switching Bit Error Rate BLSR Bidirectional Line Switch Ring BPDU Bridge Protocol Data Units Broadband Wireless Access Page 939 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 940 Excess Burst Size Excess Information Rate Electromagnetic Compatibility Engineering Order Wire EPROM Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory Electrostatic Discharge Electrical SFP Electrical Electrical SFP SFP+ 10G Electrical SFP SFP ETSI European Telecommunications Standards Institute Page 940 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 941 International Organization for Standardization International Telecom. Union ITU-R International Telecom. Union (former CCIR) ITU-T International Telecom. Union (former CCITT) Inventory Module LACP Link Aggregation Control Protocol Link Aggregation Group Local Area Network Page 941 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 942 Management Safe Automatic State Propagation Multiplex Section Protection Multiplexer Network Element Network Management System Network Time Protocol Operation Administration & Maintenance (Protocols) Outdoor Circulator Box OverHead Connections Orthogonal Mode Transducer Out of Frame OPEX Operational Expenditure Page 942 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 943 Reverse Defect Indication Radio Frequency Routing Information Protocol RMON Ethernet Statistics Radio Protection Switching Received Signal Level RSSI Received Signal Strength Indicator RSTP Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Service Access Point Synchronous Digital Hierarchy Page 943 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 944 Transport OverHead (ANSI) Type Of Service Virtual Container Voltage Controlled Oscillator VCXO Voltage Controlled crystal Oscillator VLSI Very Large Scale of Integration Wide Area Network Web EMS Web-Based Element Management System Weighted Fair Queue Page 944 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...
  • Page 945 User Guide for FibeAir® IP-20 All-Outdoor Products, CeraOS 10.9 Waveguide WRED Weighted Random Early Detection Weighted Round Robin XCVR Transceiver (Transmitter/Receiver) XMTR Transmitter Crystal Oscillator Cross Polar Differentiation XPIC Cross Polarization Interference Cancellation Page 945 of 945 Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential...

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