Chapter 2, “Displaying and Configuring Nodes,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring node information on the WAN CiscoView interface.. Chapter 3, “Configuring ASC Cards,”
Trang 1170 West Tasman Drive
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Trang 2INFORMATION PACKET THAT SHIPPED WITH THE PRODUCT AND ARE INCORPORATED HEREIN BY THIS REFERENCE IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO LOCATE THE SOFTWARE LICENSE OR LIMITED WARRANTY, CONTACT YOUR CISCO REPRESENTATIVE FOR A COPY.
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WAN CiscoView for the MGX 8220
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All rights reserved.
Trang 3Changing CiscoView Operating Characteristi c 1-3
Organizing Management Informat i 1-4o Categorizing Informati o 1-5
Displaying Configuration Informati o 1-5
Displaying Performance Informati o 1-5
Selecting a Car 1-5
Selecting a Line or P o 1-5r Using Online He l 1-6
Jumps and pop- u 1-6p Help Window Menu and Button Ba r 1-6
OverView and See Also Link 1-7
Exit Help 1-7
C H A P T E R 2 Displaying and Configuring N o d e2-1
Selecting a Devic 2-1
Node Dialo 2-1
Redundancy Info Dialo 2-3
LAN Interface Info Dialog 2-6
Serial Interface Info Dialog 2-8
Clock Source Info 2-10
Front Card Info 2-11
Trang 4C H A P T E R 3 Configuring ASC Card 3-1
Selecting the Card and Displaying Card Paramet e 3-1r ASC Card Configuration Dial o 3-1
ASC Features 3-3
Disk Diagnostic 3-3
C H A P T E R 4 Configuring 4-Port Cards 4-1
Selecting the Card and Displaying Card Paramet e 4-1r Card Configuration Dialo 4-1
Service Module Featur e 4-3
ATM Port RealTime Counters 4-3
Card/Channels (ATM) Dialo 4-18
C H A P T E R 5 Configuring CESM Cards 5-1
Selecting the Card and Displaying Card Paramet e 5-1r CESM Card Configurati o 5-1
CESM Service Module Feature 5-3
Lines 5-4
Ports 5-6
Channel 5-9
C H A P T E R 6 Configuring FRSM 2CT3 Cards 6-1
Displaying Card Paramete r 6-1
FRSM-2CT3 Card Configuration Dia l 6-1o Service Module Featur e 6-3
FR Port Realtime Counters 6-4
Trang 5Card/Channels (FR 6-10
Card/Channels State Info (FR 6-15
Lines Configuration 6-16
Physical Line Config(dsx3) 6-17
dsx3 Physical Line Alarm Configurat i 6-19o dsx3 Counte r 6-20
dsx3 Counters (1 o f 6-212 dsx3Counters (2 of 6-222 Channelized Line Configuration (ds x 6-241 Channelized Line Alarm Configuration (dsx1 6-25
Channelized Line RealTime Counters (dsx 16-29
Logical Port 6-30
Logical Port Config (FR Port s6-31
FR Port RTCs 6-34
FR Port RTCs (CLLM 6-37
FR Port Resource Partiti o 6-38
Logical Ports (Service Queue 6-39
C H A P T E R 7 Configuring FRSM-2T3/E3 Cards 7-1
Displaying Card Paramete r 7-1
FRSM-2T3/E3 Card Configuration Di a l7-1o FRSM-2T3/E3 Service Module Feat u r7-3e
FR Port Realtime Counters 7-4
Physical Line Configuration (dsx3 7-17
dsx3 Physical Line Alarm Configurat i 7-19o dsx3 Counte r 7-21
Configuring Logical Ports 7-24
FRSM Logical Ports Configuratio 7-25
FR Port RTCs 7-28
Trang 6FR Port RTCs (CLLM 7-31
FR Port Resource Partiti o 7-32
Logical Ports (Service Queue 7-33
C H A P T E R 8 Configuring FRSM 8-Port Cards 8-1
Selecting the Card and Displaying Card Paramet e 8-1r FRSM 8-Port Card Configuration Dialo 8-1
FRSM Service Module Feature 8-3
FR Port RealTime Counter 8-4
FR Port RealTime Counter 9-3
10-Service Module Featur e 10-4
FR Port Realtime Counters 10-4
LCN Partition Ty p
10-Card/Ports (X.21/V.3 5
10-Channel 10-9
Lines Configuration 10-13
Physical Line Config (X.21/V.3 510-1
Physical Line Alarm Config (X.21/V.35) 10-1
Logical Port 10-1
Trang 7FR Port Resource Partition Conf i 10-2
C H A P T E R 11 Configuring FRSM-HS2 Cards 11-1
Selecting the Card and Displaying Card Paramet e 11-1r FRSM-HS2 Card Configuration Dial o 11-1
FRSM-HS2 Service Module Feature
11-FR Port RealTime Counter 11-4
Lines 11-6
Ports 11-8
C H A P T E R 12 Configuring IMATM Cards 12-1
Selecting the Card and Displaying Card Paramet e 12-1r IMATM Card Configuration Dialo 12-1
IMATM Service Module Features
12-IMATM Clock Configuration
12-IMATM Port Configuration 12-5
C H A P T E R 13 Configuring AUSM Cards 13-1
Selecting the Card and Displaying Card Paramet e 13-1r AUSM Card Configuration Dialo 13-
AUSM Service Module Featu r 13-3e ATM Port RealTime Counters Configuration 13-4
C H A P T E R 14 Configuring BNM-T3/E3 Cards 14-1
Selecting the Card and Displaying Card Paramet e 14-1r BNM-T3/E3 Card Configuration Dia l 14-2o
Lines 14-3
Trang 8Physical Line Configuration (DSX1 17-2
DSX1 Physical Line Alarm Configuratio 17-4
DSX1 Line RealTime Counters
17-DSX1 PLCP Configuration 17-6
DSX3 Lines Configuratio 17-6
Physical Line Configuration (dsx3)
17-DSX3 Physical Line Alarm Configuratio 17-8
DSX3 Counters 17-1
DSX3 PLCP Alarm Configuration 17-12
Channelized Line Configurati o 17-1
Channelized Line Configuration (D S X17-11 Channelized Line Configuration (D S X17-13 X21 Lines Configuration Dial o 17-16g
X21 Line Config 17-17
X21 Physical Line Alarm Configurati o 17-1
Sonet Lines Configura t i17-1o Physical Line Config (Sonet) 17-1
Physical Line Alarm Config (Sonet 17-2
Sonet Counters 17-21
ATM Line 17-2
Trang 9Logical Port 17-2
CESM Ports Configuration 17-2
Logical Port Config (CESM 17-2
FR Port Monitor (RCV) Counter
18-FR Port Monitor (XMT) Counte r 18-8
FR Port Monitor (ILMI/CLLM) Count e 18-r ATM-ILMI Port RealTime Counters 18-1
ATM RealTime Counters 18-10
Channel Monitorin 18-1
FRSM Channel Counters (R C 18-1V FRSM Channel Counters (X M 18-1T Channel SAR Counte r 18-14
CESM Channel Counte r 18-1
Monitoring ILMI 18-1
Monitoring IMA Group Count e 18-1r Monitoring BNM Counter 18-17
Monitoring SRM Counter 18-17
Trang 11F I G U R E S
Trang 12Figure 6-12 Channelized Line Alarm Config (dsx1) Dialog 6-25
Trang 13Figure 10-5 Card/Ports (X.21/V.35) Dialog 10-8
Trang 15T A B L E S
Trang 16Tabl e6-6 Card/Channels State Info (FR) Dialog Paramete r 6-15
Tabl e6-17 FR Port Resource Partition Config Dialog Parame t e r 6-38
Tabl e7-15 FR Port Resource Partition Config Dialog Parame t e r 7-32
Trang 17Tabl e9-1 Card Configuration Dialog Parameters 9-1
Tabl e10-11 FR Port Resource Partition Config Dialog Parame t e r 10-2
Trang 1814-Tabl e15-1 BNM-155 Card Configuration Dialo 15-1
Tabl e17-11 DSX3 Channelized Line Configuration Param e t e r 17-1
Tabl e17-13 X21 Physical Line Alarm Configuration Dialog Parame t e r 17-18
Trang 19Tabl e18-8 FR Port Monitor (XMT) Counte r 18-8
Trang 21This section discusses the objectives, audience, organization, and conventions of the WAN CiscoVie
for the MGX 8220 User Guide
Cisco documentation and additional literature are available in a CD-ROM package, which ships with your product The Documentation CD-ROM, a member of the Cisco Connection Family, is updated monthly Therefore, it might be more up to date than printed documentation To order additional copies
of the Documentation CD-ROM, contact your local sales representative or call customer service The CD-ROM package is available as a single package or through an annual subscription You can also access Cisco documentation on the World Wide Web at http://www.cisco.com,
http://www-china.cisco.com, or http://www-europe.cisco.com
Document Objectives
This publication provides instructions for using WAN CiscoView for the MGX 8220 WAN CiscoView
is a GUI-based device management software application that allows you to:
• display a graphical representation of the network device
• display configuration and performance information
• perform minor configuration tasks
• perform minor troubleshooting tasks
Audience
This publication is intended for anyone who operates or manages a WAN and has a general understanding of data communications concepts, some knowledge of UNIX, and knowledge of the interfaces used by devices connected to their WAN
Trang 22Document Organization
This publication is organized as follows:
Chapter 1, “Product Overview” presents an overview of WAN CiscoView
Chapter 2, “Displaying and Configuring Nodes,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring node information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 3, “Configuring ASC Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring ASC information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 4, “Configuring 4-port Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring 4-port information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 5, “Configuring CESM Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring CESM information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 6, “Configuring FRSM-2CT3 Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring FRSM-2CT3 information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 7, “Configuring FRSM-2T3/E3 Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring FRSM-2T3/E3 information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 8, “Configuring FRSM 8-port Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring FRSM 8-port card information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 9, “Configuring FRSM-HS1 Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring FRSM-2CT3 information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 10, “Configuring FRSM-HS1/B Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring FRSM-HS1/B information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 11, “Configuring FRSM-HS2 Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring FRSM-HS2 information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 12, “Configuring IMATM Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring IMATM information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 13, “Configuring AUSM Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring AUSM card information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 14 “Configuring BNM T3/E3 Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring BNM T3/E3 information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 15 “Configuring BNM 155 Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring BNM
155 information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 16, “Configuring SRM 3T3 Cards,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring SRM 3T3 information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 17, “Displaying and Configuring Lines,” provides instructions for displaying and configuring line information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Chapter 18, “Monitoring Lines,” provides instructions for monitoring line information on the WAN CiscoView interface
Trang 23Document Conventions
Command descriptions use these conventions:
• Elements in square brackets ([ ]) are optional
Examples use the following conventions:
• Terminal sessions and information the system displays are printed in screen font
• Information you enter is in boldface screen font or boldface font
Note Means reader take note Notes contain helpful suggestions or references to material not
covered in the publication
Related Documentation
The following documentation may be useful if you are using WAN CiscoView for the MGX 8220:
• Release notes—Describe new features and special considerations (including known software bugs) and provide software upgrade procedures
• On-line help
Trang 25C H A P T E R 1
Product Overview
General Description
WAN CiscoView is a GUI-based device management software application that allows you to
• display a graphical representation of the network device
• display configuration and performance information
• perform minor configuration tasks
• perform minor troubleshooting tasks
Starting CiscoView and Displaying a Device
When you start the CiscoView application, the CiscoView—Main window opens (See Figur e1-1.)
Figur e1-1 CiscoView—Main Window
Step 1 Select File>Open Device (or type Ctrl+O) from the CiscoView—Main window The CiscoView—Open
Device window appears (See Figure 1-2.)
Figur e1-2 CiscoView—Open Device Window
Trang 26Step 2 In the Host Name section, type the IP address or name of the host and the read community name of the
device It you are going to perform configuration tasks on the device, you must also provide the write community name of the device
Step 3 Press Enter.
The CiscoView—Main window displays the front view of the MGX 8220 shelf
To display the rear view of the shelf, select View>Rear.
The ports, connectors, and LEDs are color-coded to display their status Tabl e1-1 describes the commonly used colors and their meaning:
Understanding the Display
The display you see when you first enter CiscoView is of the front panel of the device To change to the
rear view, select View>Rear Click on various parts of the graphic (the device itself, lines, cards, and
ports) to select them.You can also use the right mouse button to get to a pop-up menu that allows you
to configure or monitor a device, card, or port For example, if you are using an FRSM 8T1 card and need port information, select a port on the display and click the right mouse button A pop-up menu opens Within this menu, select one of the options to configure or monitor the port
Table 1-1 LED Colors
Trang 27Printing a Display
You can print the CiscoView—Main window and specify certain printing options To print the main
window, select File>Print
To specify printing options, take the following steps:
Step 1 Select File>Print Setup
The CiscoView—Print Setup window opens
Step 2 In the Printer Name field, select a printer from the scrolling list, or enter the name of a printer
Step 3 In the Copies field, enter the number of copies you want to print
Step 4 In the Orientation field, select the paper orientation for printing by clicking the radio button next to the
appropriate orientation format: portrait or landscape
Step 5 In the Format field, select your printer format type by clicking the radio button next to the appropriate
option:
Ljet or PostScript Ljet or LaserJet prints the CiscoView—Main window in PCL PostScript prints the window as a PostScript file For most low-end printers, use the Ljet option
Step 6 Click OK to close this window.
Step 7 Click File>Print to print the window display.
Changing CiscoView Operating Characteristics
You can change some CiscoView operating characteristics, such as the polling frequency or the number
of retries, from within the CiscoView application To change the operating characteristics, perform the following steps:
Step 1 In the CiscoView main window, select Options>Properties.
The CiscoView Properties window opens
Step 2 Enter a value in the Polling Frequency field to change the polling frequency The default value varies
by device
A typical value is every 60 seconds To disable polling frequency, set the value to zero If you set the polling frequency below 60 seconds for a number of devices, it may slow down your network It is advisable to use low polling frequencies in specific testing situations and increase them when you have finished testing Do not poll faster than every 5 seconds
Step 3 Enter a new value in the Retries field to change the number of retries The default value is 3
The retries value indicates how many times CiscoView retries an unresponsive device In busy networks, SNMP datagrams can be discarded The Retries value allows the application to continue operation during network problems A setting of 3 is considered a reasonable value; increase the value
if the network is slow
Step 4 Enter a new value in the Timeout field to change the timeout interval
Trang 28A timeout indicates the amount of time it takes to reach a device If it takes longer than the time specified, the device is considered to be either unreachable or down The interval value is specified in seconds; the default is 3 seconds
As a guideline, the timeout value should be set to twice the average end-to-end delay in your network
If you have a network with several slow links, you may need to set the timeout to a higher value If you have only LAN links in your network, a value of 20 seconds is reasonable to account for processing delays and timer accuracy In high traffic situations, you may experience timeouts You should not reduce the polling frequency because this may cause a general error Increase the timeout interval if you consistently experience timeouts
Step 5 Click the radio button next to MIB Label translation field to display MIB descriptors instead of text
labels
Text labels are the default MIB descriptors are actual variable names used to manage devices, for example locIfOutBitsSec is output bits per second MIB textual labels are user-friendly aliases of the MIB descriptor
Step 6 Enter the read or write community string in the appropriate field
This allows you to enter the write community string for a device after you display the device This is useful, for example, if you want to make changes to a device or port setting but did not specify the write community string when you first opened the device display You can enter the write community string
in the Write Community field without exiting and reopening the window
Step 7 Select the window where you want to launch CiscoView, from the same window or a separate window
The default is separate
workstation because this requires more RAM
This option allows you to keep the desktop from being cluttered by reusing the existing CiscoView window to display devices
Step 8 Click OK to have the changes you have made in the Properties window take effect.
Organizing Management Information
CiscoView displays two primary types of information Configuration information, which includes data such as information about a device chassis, and performance information, which includes data such as the number of Ethernet errors during a given period
1. Configuration information is displayed in CiscoView Configuration windows Performance information is displayed in CiscoView Monitor windows, which are sometimes referred to as dashboards
2. Configuration and performance information is displayed for devices, cards, and ports
Trang 29Categorizing Information
CiscoView displays different categories of information for each device, card, and port To see the categories of information that can be displayed for each component type, look at the CATEGORY pop-up menu on the Configuration or Monitor windows To display a particular type of information, select the category type
Displaying Configuration Informatio
Use the Configuration menu in the CiscoView—Main window to display configuration information, or select Configure from a component pop-up menu CiscoView displays configuration information in the Configuration windows The information is displayed as a list of fields for a single port, or as a table that includes fields for multiple ports
Displaying Performance Informatio
CiscoView displays performance information using the Monitor menu in the main window to display performance information To view performance information, select Monitor from a component pop-up menu Performance information is displayed in a dashboard
Selecting a Card
Select a card (on the rear or front view) to display the Card Configuration dialogs by doing one of the following:
• Double-click the card
• Select the card, then select Configure>Card.
• Select the card, right-click to display the CARD pop-up menu, then select Configure.
• Select the card, then click the Configure button on the toolbar
To display the configuration parameters for a particular card, select the name of the category from the Category pull-down menu at the top of the dialog
Selecting a Line or Port
There are five ways to select the line or port to display the appropriate line configuration dialog:
• Double-click the connector on the rear view of the card
• Double-click the Port LED on the front view of the card
• Select the connector, then select Configure>Line
• Select the connector, right-click to display the Line pop-up menu, then select Configure.
• Select the connector, then click the Configure button on the toolbar.
To display the configuration parameters for a particular line/port, select the name of the category from the Category pull-down menu at the top of the dialog
Trang 30Using Online Help
Context-sensitive online help provides you with step-by-step instructions on how to use WAN CiscoView The online help system also provides a glossary and keyword search capability
Table 1-2 provides a quick guideline to access help from different places
Jumps and pop-up
You can use jumps and pop-ups in the help system Click on a highlighted underlined topic to jump to
a help window specific to that topic When you jump to another topic, you have to click Back on the
menu bar to go back to the previous help topic Click on a dotted underlined term to open a pop-up help window, which provides a definition of that term When you go to a pop-up window, press Return to return to your previous help topic
Help Window Menu and Button Bars
Each help window has a menu bar and a button bar The menu bar provides standard help functions for printing help topics, copying and pasting text from help topics, making online notes about particular help topics, and placing bookmarks
The button bar provides the following buttons:
• Help Topics—Opens the current help table of contents Help topics are highlighted and underlined Select a help topic to open a help window specific to the underlined topic Some topics open pop-up windows that contain a list of subtopics Select a help subtopic to open a help window specific to the underlined subtopic
• Print—Prints the current help topic window
• Browse—Allows you to browse forward and backward through sets of related help screens, providing quick access to overviews of particular help topics
Table 1-2 CiscoView Quick Guidelines
Help system for specific products Select Help>Help Topics
How to use CiscoView features Select Help>Using CiscoView
Current device package version Select Help>About CiscoView
Trang 31OverView and See Also Link
Many help windows have Overview and See Also links in the help window topics You can select the Overview link to obtain background information for the procedure described in the current help window Select the See Also link to display a list of related topics and go directly to those topics from the current help window
Exit Help
Select File>Exit on the menu bar in the Help window to exit Help
Trang 33• Double-click the gray area surrounding the slots.
• Select the gray area surrounding the slots, then select Configure>Device.
• Select the gray area surrounding the slots, right-click to display the Device pop-up menu, then
select Configure.
• Select the gray area surrounding the slots, then click the Configure button on the toolbar
To display the configuration parameters for a particular device category, select the name of the category from the Category pop-up menu at the top of the dialog The categories of device configuration are:
• Statistics Configuration
• Serial Interface Info
• Front Card InfoThese dialogs are describes in the sections that follow
Node Dialog
Use the Node dialog to configure node properties (See Figure 2-1.)
Trang 34Figur e2-1 Node Dialog
The Node dialog parameters are described in Table 2-1
Table 2-1 Node Dialog Parameter
nodes in the network Whenever the name of the node is changed, AutoRoute has to propagate the information to the other nodes in the network It also specifies the name of a PAR Feeder node
• Node names must be unique within the network
• Node names must be 1-8 characters in length
• Node names must start with a letter
• Node names can include “_” or “.”
• Node names are case sensitive
• gmt (Greenwich mean time)
• est (Eastern standard time)
• cst (Central standard time)
• mst (Mountain standard time)
• pst (Pacific standard time)
To define a standard time not defined in here, use gmt and set the offset from the gmt in the Shelf Time Zone Offset parameter.Shelf Time Zone Offset (Hours): Contains the offset from greenwich mean time in hours If
Trang 35To modify an entry in the Node dialog:
Step 1 Select the table column entry that you want to modify
Step 2 Click in the entry to display possible values
Step 3 Select the appropriate value
Step 4 Click Modify
To make sure the information has been changed, reselect the Node dialog
Note Commands related to this dialog are cnfname, cnfdate, cnftime, cnftmzn, dspshelfalm.
Redundancy Info Dialog
Use this table to view and configure redundancy information (See Figur e2-2.)
Figur e2-2 Redundancy Info Dialog
The Redundancy Info table parameters are described in Table 2-2
Shelf Back Plane SerialNo Unique value for each shelf, entered in nvram by manufacturing
The serial number is on the nonvolatile RAM on the backplane
Trang 36Table 2-2 Redundancy Info Dialog Parameter
Note The mod option is NOT used, but it appears there for
consistency
will be 0 when no secondary card is covering the primary card The secondary slot number is from the same half of the shelf as the primary slot number
Trang 37To populate the Redundancy Info table with information:
Step 1 Click Create at the bottom of the table (See Figure 2-3.) The following pop-up dialog appears:
Figur e2-3 Create Dialog
Table 2-2 describes the Create pop-up dialog parameters
Step 2 Enter the appropriate information
Step 3 Click Apply.
Table 2-2 Redundancy Info Dialog Parameters (continued)
Table 2-3 Redundancy Info Create Window Parameters
SecondarySlot# Slot number of the slot containing the secondary card of the card pair
Trang 38To modify an entry in the Redundancy Info table:
Step 1 Select the table column entry that you want to modify
Step 2 Click in the entry to display possible values
Step 3 Select the appropriate value
Step 4 Click Modify
To make sure the information has been changed, reselect the Redundancy Info dialog
LAN Interface Info Dialog
Use this table to view LAN interface information (See Figur e2-4.)
Figur e2-4 LAN Interface Info Dialog
The LAN Interface Info dialog parameters are described in Tab le2-4
Trang 39Note This is not a configurable dialog.
Table 2-4 LAN Interface Info Dialog Parameters
and service
InterfaceLn Type Type of interface associated with the line
InterfaceLn Ports Number of physical ports of the line type
Interface Service Type
Services available on this interface type Can be
Trang 40Serial Interface Info Dialog
Use this table to view and configure serial interface information (See Figur e2-5.)
Figur e2-5 Serial Interface Info Dialog
The Serial Interface Info table parameters are described in Table 2-5
.
Table 2-5 Serial Interface Info Table Parameter
Port 2 on BSC can perform SLIP
• main: The IP stack is mounted on the manager port
• debug: The dumb terminal can be a connected function of the ports and cannot be changed, except for enabling and disabling