Handling e1/t1 alarms, Table 5.1, Alarms – Avaya X330WAN User Manual
Page 102

Chapter 5
Troubleshooting
80
Avaya X330WAN User’s Guide
Degraded Mins
6 Errored Secs, 1 Bursty Err Secs, 5 Severely Err
Secs, 0 Unavail Secs
E1 2 is administratively down.
For information on the fields in the
show controllers
command output, refer to
Chapter 6: X330WAN CLI Commands.
To monitor the state of the X330W-2USP ports, use the
show interface
command.
For the output from the
show interface
command, see Chapter 6: X330WAN CLI
Handling E1/T1 Alarms
Alarms are reported by the LEDs on the X330W-2DS1 and via the CLI. When an
alarm condition is detected by X330W-2DS1, it sends a signal to all E1/T1 devices
connected to it. Alarms can be categorized as one of the following:
•
Local Alarm Indication
- Generated by the X330W-2DS1 as a result of a line
status problem sensed by the X330W-2DS1.
•
Remote Alarm Request
- Received by the X330W-2DS1 from the remote
module.
The following table provides a list of alarms, the type of alarm, and the alarm
condition on the module from which the alarm originates.
More detailed information about alarms can be obtained using the
show controllers
CLI command. For more information, refer to "Monitoring
Traffic" on page 79.
The following sections discuss the different types of alarms, how each alarm type is
indicated, and possible corrective actions to end the alarm.
Table 5.1
Alarms
Alarm (E1/T1)
Alarm Type
Originating Alarm
LOS/LOS
Local Alarm Indicator
N/A
LOF/Red
Local Alarm Indicator
N/A
High BER/Major
Local Alarm Indicator
N/A
Low BER/Minor
Local Alarm Indicator
N/A
RAI/Yellow
Remote Alarm Request
LOS, LOF, BER, AIS
AIS/Blue
Remote Alarm Request
Maintenance request