4 • Alarms
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34
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•
Clear Alarm—Clearing the alarm resets the alarm, resets Time Since Alarm to 0.00 seconds and resets
Alarm Count to 0 (zero).
Types of Alarms
•
Box Alarm Group
-
Box: Over Temperature—When the internal box temperature exceeds the temperature threshold under
4 %E
, an alarm will be generated.
-
Box: Power Supply I – II Fail—An alarm will be generated when a power supply fails.
•
WAN Alarm Group
-
WAN 1 – 4: Yellow Alarm—When a WAN port sees a yellow alarm, the specific WAN alarm will be sent.
-
WAN 1 – 4: Red Alarm—When a WAN port sends a red alarm, the specific WAN alarm will be sent.
•
iDSL Alarm Group
-
iDSL 1 – 24: Line Down—When an iDSL modem line is down, an alarm is generated.
-
iDSL 1 – 24: Bit Error—When the bit error for an iDSL modem connection exceeds a particular value,
an alarm is generated.
-
iDSL 1 – 24: Hardware Failure—When an internal iDSL modem has a hardware failure, an alarm is gen-
erated.
Modify Response—Configuring the alarm response system
The alarm response outputs refer to points of external notification. Note that the front panel Alarm LED and
the web administration pages will always indicate an occurrence of an active alarm. To configure each alarm
response output, click on
4 %
. The Alarm Response System page appears (see figure 11). Choose
the alarm response output that you want to configure with the pull down menu. After configuring a specific
alarm response output, remember to click on
before going to the next alarm response output;
otherwise the change will not occur.
Relay Response
The relay may be set to go active for minor alarms, major alarms, or both. It may also be disabled with the
parameter “none.”
Minor Alarm Syslog Priority & Major Alarm Syslog Priority
When a minor/major alarm occurs, a message of the selected priority is sent to the Syslog engine. The Priority
levels are priorityDisable(100), prioritySystem(80), priorityService(60), priorityOddity(40), priorityInfo(20),
priorityDebug(10), and priorityVerbose(5). For more information on Syslog messages, refer to Chapter 17,
“System Log”.
Minor Alarm SNMP Trap IP [address] (minSyslogPriority)
Upon the occurrence of a minor alarm, an SNMP Trap message is sent to a host system (or a management sta-
tion). This parameter is the IP address of the host running the SNMP Trap daemon. When the IP address is set
to 0.0.0.0 no SNMP Trap message will be sent.
Summary of Contents for 3092
Page 18: ...About this guide 16...
Page 22: ...1 Introduction 20 8 4 9...
Page 44: ...5 DS0 Mapping 42 C 4...
Page 48: ...6 Clocking 46...
Page 56: ...7 iDSL Port Configuration 54...
Page 66: ...9 Filter IP 64...
Page 89: ...2 3 87 12 TCP finWait1 6 finWait2 7 closeWait 8 lastAck 9 closing 10 timeWait 11 deleteTCB 12...
Page 90: ...12 TCP 88 2 3...
Page 94: ...13 UDP 92...
Page 100: ...14 RIP Version 2 98 7 2 3...
Page 106: ...15 SNMP 104...
Page 118: ...16 System 116 D 4 1...
Page 148: ...18 T1 E1 Link 146 D...
Page 152: ...19 T1 E1 Assignment 150 68 6...
Page 158: ...21 License 156...
Page 162: ...A RJ 21X Wiring Color Chart 160...