Maintenance strategy
Alarm and error reporting
Maintenance Procedures
27
December 2003
Alarm and error reporting
During normal operations, software, hardware, or firmware may detect error conditions related to specific
MOs. The system attempts to fix or circumvent these problems automatically. Errors are detected in two
ways:
•
For “in-line” errors, firmware on the component detects the occurrence of an error during ongoing
operations.
•
For other types of errors, a “periodic test” or a “scheduled test” started by the software detects the
error.
The technician can run periodic and scheduled tests on demand by using the maintenance
commands described in Maintenance Commands Reference (555-245-101), and the maintenance
objects in Maintenance Alarms Reference (555-245-102).
When an error is detected, the maintenance software puts the error in the Error Log and increments the
error counter for that error. When an error counter is “active” (greater than zero), there is a maintenance
record for the MO. If a hardware component incurs too many errors, an alarm is raised.
Alarm and error logs
The system keeps a record of every alarm that it detects. This record, the alarm log, and the error log can
be displayed locally on the management terminal. An alarm is classified as major, minor, or warning,
depending on its effect on system operation. Alarms are also classified as ON-BOARD or OFF-BOARD.
•
MAJOR alarms identify failures that cause critical degradation of service and require immediate
attention. Major alarms can occur on standby components without affecting service, since their
active counterparts continue to function.
•
MINOR alarms identify failures that cause some service degradation but do not render a crucial
portion of the system inoperable. The condition requires attention, but typically a minor alarm
affects only a few trunks or stations or a single feature.
•
WARNING alarms identify failures that cause no significant degradation of service or failures of
equipment external to the system. These are not reported to the Avaya alarm receiving system or
the attendant console.
•
ON-BOARD problems originate in circuitry on the alarmed circuit pack.
•
OFF-BOARD problems originate in a process or component external to the circuit pack.
Multiple alarms against a given MO can change the level of a given alarm as it appears in the alarm log.
Summary of Contents for CMC1
Page 1: ...Maintenance Procedures 555 245 103 Issue 1 1 December 2003 ...
Page 14: ...Contents 14 Maintenance Procedures December 2003 ...
Page 416: ...Additional maintenance procedures IP Telephones 416 Maintenance Procedures December 2003 ...
Page 426: ...Index X 426 Maintenance Procedures December 2003 ...