Chapter 7 appendices, Appendix a: red-lion-ram.mib contents, Chapter 7 – Red Lion IndustrialPr 6000 Router User Manual
Page 184: Appendix a: red‐lion‐ram.mib contents
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Software User Guide
184
Chapter 7 Appendices
Appendix A: RED‐LION‐RAM.MIB Contents
Refers to: 3.5.10 SNMP Agent: RED‐LION‐RAM.MIB Contents
Please note that the RAM‐6021 Wired Router will not return any values for Wireless specific fields.
The following MIBs are cellular specific. It is to be noted that all of the following can be retrieved on the SN
firmware version of Red Lion's routers, the A, M, and R Series routers are dependent on the cellular module/
aircard installed/inserted into the router. Some manufacturers allow for more information to be retrieved
from the module/aircard than others.
unitDescription
STRING
Router Model Name
unitSerialNumber
STRING
Serial Number of Router
unitFirmwareVer‐
sion
STRING
Firmware Version Number of Router
mdn
STRING
Mobile Directory Number, the actual phone number of the device.
minIMEI
STRING
Mobile Identification Number, the number given to a service plan pro‐
vided by the carrier.
International Mobile Equipment Ind entity, number used by the GSM
network to identify valid devices.
nai
STRING
Network Access Identifier, a standard way of identifying users who
request access to a network.
sipUser
INTEGER
Session Initiation Protocol, used to establish sessions between multiple
parties in a location‐independent manner. Typically voice sessions.
sid
INTEGER
System ID, a unique 5‐digit number assigned to each carrier by the FCC.
nid
INTEGER
Network ID, used to divide SIDs into smaller areas.
prl
INTEGER
Preferred Roaming List, a list of information that resides in the memory
of the module/aircard. It lists the radio frequencies the module/aircard
can use in various geographic areas.
The part of the list for each area is ordered by the bands the module/air‐
card should try to use first. Therefore it's a kind of priority list for which
towers the module/aircard should use.
The PRL helps determine which home‐network towers to use, and also
which towers belonging to other networks to use in roaming situations
(areas where the home network has no coverage.) When roaming, the
PRL may instruct the module/aircard to use the network with the best
roaming rate for the carrier, rather than the one with the strongest signal
at the moment.
Since a PRL tells the module/aircard “where” to search for a signal, as
carrier networks change over time, an updated PRL may be required for a
module/aircard to “see” all of the coverage that it should, both with the
home network and for roaming.
activated
INTEGER
Determines if the module/aircard is authorized onto the carrier's net‐
work. Values are Unknown(‐1), No(0), Yes(1).