FibeAir IP-20C S E C8 2 User Manual Rev E
FibeAir IP-20C S E C8 2 User Manual Rev E
FibeAir IP-20C S E C8 2 User Manual Rev E
User Guide
DOC-00036523 Rev E
Release: C8.2
October 2015
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Notice
This document contains information that is proprietary to Ceragon Networks Ltd. No part of this
publication may be reproduced, modified, or distributed without prior written authorization of
Ceragon Networks Ltd. This document is provided as is, without warranty of any kind.
Trademarks
Ceragon Networks, FibeAir and CeraView are trademarks of Ceragon Networks Ltd.,
registered in the United States and other countries.
Ceragon is a trademark of Ceragon Networks Ltd., registered in various countries.
CeraMap, PolyView, EncryptAir, ConfigAir, CeraMon, EtherAir, CeraBuild, CeraWeb,
and QuickAir, are trademarks of Ceragon Networks Ltd.
Other names mentioned in this publication are owned by their respective holders.
Statement of Conditions
The information contained in this document is subject to change without notice. Ceragon
Networks Ltd. shall not be liable for errors contained herein or for incidental or consequential
damage in connection with the furnishing, performance, or use of this document or equipment
supplied with it.
ftp://ne-open-source.license-system.com
NMS site:
ftp://nms-open-source.license-system.com/
Information to User
Any changes or modifications of equipment not expressly approved by the manufacturer could
void the users authority to operate the equipment and the warranty for such equipment.
Page 2 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Table of Contents
Section I: Introduction ......................................................................................... 21
1. Introduction .................................................................................................... 22
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
2.5
2.6
2.7
2.7.1
2.7.2
2.7.3
2.7.4
2.7.5
2.8
2.9
Page 3 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3.4
3.4.1
3.4.2
3.4.3
3.5
3.5.1
3.5.2
3.5.3
3.5.4
3.6
3.6.1
3.6.2
3.6.3
3.6.4
3.6.5
3.6.6
3.6.7
3.6.8
3.6.9
3.7
3.7.1
3.7.2
3.7.3
3.7.4
3.7.5
3.7.6
3.7.7
3.7.8
3.8
4. Unit Management............................................................................................ 89
4.1
4.4
4.5
Page 4 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
4.8
4.9
5.2
5.3
6.2
Setting the MRU Size and the S-VLAN Ethertype ..................................................... 169
Page 5 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
6.3
6.4
6.5
6.5.1
6.5.2
6.5.3
7.2
7.2.1
7.2.2
7.2.3
7.2.4
7.2.5
7.2.6
7.3
7.3.1
7.3.2
7.3.3
7.3.4
7.4
7.4.1
7.4.2
7.4.3
7.4.4
7.5
7.5.1
7.5.2
7.5.3
7.6
7.6.1
7.6.2
7.6.3
7.6.4
7.6.5
7.7
7.7.1
7.7.2
7.7.3
7.7.4
7.7.5
Page 6 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
9. Synchronization............................................................................................ 248
9.1
Page 7 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 8 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 9 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 10 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 11 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 12 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 13 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 14 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
When working with a FibeAir IDU, note the following risk of electric
shock and energy hazard: Disconnecting one power supply disconnects
only one power supply module. To isolate the unit completely,
disconnect all power sources.
Page 15 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
ESD
This equipment contains components which are sensitive to ESD (Electro
Static Discharge). Therefore, ESD protection measures must be observed
when touching the IDU.
Anyone responsible for the installation or maintenance of the FibeAir IDU
must use an ESD Wrist Strap.
Additional precautions include personnel grounding, grounding of work
benches, grounding of tools and instruments, as well as transport and storage
in special antistatic bags and boxes.
Laser
Use of controls or adjustments or performance of procedures other than those
specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.
The optical interface must only be serviced by qualified personnel, who are
aware of the hazards involved to repair laser products.
When handling laser products the following precautions must be taken:
Never look directly into an open connector or optical cable.
Before disconnecting an optical cable from the optical transmitter, the
power should be switched off. If this is not possible, the cable must be
disconnected from the transmitter before it is disconnected from the
receiver.
When the cable is reconnected it must be connected to the receiver before
it is connected to the transmitter.
Page 16 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 17 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Beachten Sie beim Arbeiten mit FibeAir IDU das folgende Stromschlagund Gefahrenrisiko: Durch Abtrennen einer Stromquelle wird nur ein
Stromversorgungsmodul abgetrennt. Um die Einheit vollstndig zu
isolieren, trennen Sie alle Stromversorgungen ab.
Page 18 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Hazardous Substance
Component
Lead
(Pb)
Mercury
(Hg)
Cadmium
(Cd)
Hexavalent
Chromium
(Cr VI)
Polybrominated
Biphenyls
(PBB)
Polybrominated
Diphenyl
Ethers (PBDE)
PCB/Circuit
Modules
Comply
Comply
Comply
Comply
Comply
Comply
Mechanical
Parts
Comply
Comply
Comply
Comply
Comply
Comply
Cables
Comply
Comply
Comply
Comply
Comply
Comply
Page 19 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Target Audience
This manual is intended for use by individuals responsible for configuration
and administration of an IP-20 system or network.
Related Documents
Page 20 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Section I:
Introduction
Page 21 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
1.
User Guide
Introduction
This section includes:
This user manual provides instructions for configuring and operating the
following systems:
IP-20C
IP-20S
IP-20E
Each of these systems can be used with a PoE Injector.
Wherever applicable, the manual notes the specific distinctions between these
systems. The manual also notes when specific features are only applicable to
certain systems and not others.
1.1
1.2
Page 22 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
1.3
User Guide
1.4
Page 23 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
1.5
1.5.1
1.5.2
Page 24 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 25 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
When HSB radio protection is enabled, two tabs appear on the top of the main
section. These tabs are labeled Active and Standby and enable you to configure
the Active and Standby units separately if necessary. The title above the main
section indicates whether you are working with the Active or Standby TCC.
For details on configuring HSB radio protection, see Configuring HSB Radio
Protection.
Figure 3: Main Web EMS Page with Active and Standby Tabs
Certain pages include a Related Pages drop-down list on the upper right of
the main section of the page. You can navigate to a page related to the current
page by selecting the page from this list.
Figure 4: Related Pages Drop-Down List
1.6
Sub-Menus
Configuring NTP
Page 26 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Sub-Menus
Configuring SNMP
Configuring SNMP
Configuring Users
Configuring RADIUS
Page 27 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Sub-Menus
Current alarms
Event Log
Alarm Configuration
Radio Parameters
Radio Thresholds
ATPC
Configuring ATPC
ABC Mode
Page 28 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Sub-Menus
Configuring XPIC
General Configuration
Services
RMON Statistics
Port TX Statistics
Port RX Statistics
Configuring WRED
Page 29 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Sub-Menus
SyncE Regenerator
Sync Source
Outgoing Clock
1588-TC
Page 30 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Restart HTTP
ifIndex Calculator
Calculating an ifIndex
Page 31 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Section II:
Web EMS
Configuration
Page 32 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.
User Guide
Getting Started
This section includes:
2.1
Warning!
2.2
Establishing a Connection
Connect the IP-20 unit to a PC by means of a TP cable. The cable is connected
to the MGT port on the IP-20 and to the LAN port on the PC. Refer to the
Installation Guide for the type of unit you are connecting for cable connection
instructions.
2.2.1
PC Setup
To obtain contact between the PC and the IP-20 unit, it is necessary to
configure an IP address on the PC within the same subnet as the IP-20 unit.
The default IP-20 IP address is 192.168.1.1. Set the PC address to e.g.
192.168.1.10 and subnet mask to 255.255.255.0. Note the initial settings
before changing.
Page 33 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Note:
1
2
3
Page 34 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.3
User Guide
Logging on
1 Open an Internet browser (Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox).
2 Enter the default IP address 192.168.1.1 in the Address Bar. The Login
page opens.
Figure 6: Login Page
2.3.1
Page 35 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.4
User Guide
2 In the Old password field, enter the current password. For example, upon
initial login, enter the default password (admin).
3 In the New password field, enter a new password. If Enforce Password
Strength is activated (see Configuring the Password Security Parameters),
the password must meet the following criteria:
Password length must be at least eight characters.
Password must include characters of at least three of the following
character types: lower case letters, upper case letters, digits, and
special characters. For purposes of meeting this requirement, upper
case letters at the beginning of the password and digits at the end of
the password are not counted.
A password cannot be repeated within five changes of the password.
4 Click Apply.
In addition to the Admin password, there is an additional password protected
user account, root user, which is configured in the system. The root user
password and instructions for changing this password are available from
Ceragon Customer Support. It is strongly recommended to change this
password.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
Page 36 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.5
User Guide
2.6
Page 37 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 38 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.7
User Guide
2.7.1
Page 39 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.7.2
User Guide
Definition
Type
Validation number
Date code
Displays a date code used for validation of the current activation key
cipher.
Violation runtime counter (hours) In the event of an Activation Key Violation alarm, this field displays the
number of hours remaining in the 48-hour activation key violation grace
period.
Sanction state
Page 40 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.7.3
User Guide
2.7.4
2.7.5
Page 41 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Feature ID
Feature name
Feature Description
Indicates whether the feature is allowed under the activation key that is
currently installed in the unit.
2.8
Configuring NTP
IP-20 uses the Universal Time Coordinated (UTC) standard for time and date
configuration. UTC is a more updated and accurate method of date
coordination than the earlier date standard, Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
Every IP-20 unit holds the UTC offset and daylight savings time information
for the location of the unit. Each management unit presenting the information
uses its own UTC offset to present the information with the correct time.
To display and configure the UTC parameters:
1 Select Platform > Management > Time Services. The Time Services page
opens.
Page 42 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 43 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Month
Day
Day
Page 44 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.9
User Guide
Page 45 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 Click Apply.
Note:
Page 46 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.10
User Guide
2 For IP-20C units, select the carrier in the Radio table (see Figure 15) and
click Edit. A separate Radio Parameters page opens. The page is essentially
identical to the IP-20E and IP-20S page, except for the addition of a Radio
location parameter.
Page 47 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 48 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2.11
To display the MRMC scripts and their basic parameters and select a script:
1 Select one of the following, depending on the regulatory framework in
which you are operating:
To display ETSI scripts, select Radio > MRMC > Symmetrical Scripts
> ETSI.
To display ANSI (FCC) scripts, select Radio > MRMC > Symmetrical
Scripts > FCC.
The MRMC Symmetrical Scripts page opens. For a description of the
parameters displayed in the MRMC Symmetrical Scripts page, see Table 11:
MRMC Symmetrical Scripts Page Parameters.
Note:
Page 49 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Note:
User Guide
2 In the Select Radio Interface field, select the slot for which you want to
configure the script.
Note:
This step is only applicable for IP-20C units.
3 Select the script you want to assign to the radio. The currently-assigned
script is marked by a check mark (Script ID 1504 in the image above).
4 Click Configure Script. A separate MRMC Symmetrical Scripts page opens
similar to the page shown below.
Page 50 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 51 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Script ID
Modulation Script
Multi-Carrier
Adjacent Channel
Latency Level
Symmetry
Standard
The maximum profile for the script. For example, if you select a maximum
profile of 5, the system will not climb above profile 5, even if channel fading
conditions allow it.
Page 52 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2.12
Profile
Modulation
Profile 0
4 QPSK
Profile 1
8 PSK
Profile 2
16 QAM
Profile 3
32 QAM
Profile 4
64 QAM
Profile 5
128 QAM
Profile 6
256 QAM
Profile 7
512 QAM
Profile 8
Profile 9
Profile 10
2048 QAM
Page 53 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2.13
Page 54 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
2.14
User Guide
Page 55 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.
User Guide
Configuration Guide
This section includes:
3.1
System Configurations
Configuring a Link Using the Quick Configuration Wizard
Configuring Multi-Carrier ABC
Configuring Link Aggregation (LAG)
Configuring XPIC
Configuring HSB Radio Protection
Configuring MIMO and Space Diversity
Operating an IP-20C in Single Radio Carrier Mode
System Configurations
This section lists the basic system configurations and the IP-20 product types
that support them, as well as links to configuration instructions.
Table 13: System Configurations
IP-20C
Link
Aggregation
(LAG)
1+1 XPIC
IP-20C
HSB Radio
Protection
Configuring XPIC
MIMO and
IP-20C
Space Diversity
IP-20C in
Single Radio
Carrier Mode
IP-20C
Page 56 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.2
User Guide
Because the Quick Configuration wizard creates Pipe links, you cannot add an
interface to a link using the Quick Configuration wizard if any service points
are attached to the interface prior to configuring the link. See Deleting a
Service Point.
3.2.1
2 In the Radio Interface field, select a radio interface for the link.
3 In the Ethernet Interface field, select an Ethernet interface for the link.
4 In the Pipe Type field, select the Attached Interface type for the service
that will connect the radio and Ethernet interfaces. Options are:
s-tag A single S-VLAN is classified into the service points.
dot1q - A single C-VLAN is classified into the service points.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
Page 57 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Note:
11 In the Script ID field, select the MRMC script you want to assign to the
radio. For a full explanation of choosing an MRMC script, see Configuring
the Radio (MRMC) Script(s).
12 In the Operational Mode field, select the ACM mode: Fixed or Adaptive.
Fixed ACM mode applies constant TX and RX rates. However, unlike
regular scripts, with a Fixed ACM script you can specify a maximum
profile to inhibit inefficient transmission levels.
In Adaptive ACM mode, TX and RX rates are dynamic. An ACM-enabled
radio system automatically chooses which profile to use according to
the channel fading conditions.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
Page 58 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 59 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3.2.2
2 In the Radio #1 Interface field, select the first radio interface for the link.
3 Click Next. Page 2 of the 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration wizard opens.
Figure 27: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard Page 2
4 In the Radio #2 Interface field, select the second radio interface for the
link.
5 In the Pipe Type field, select the Attached Interface type for the service
that will connect the radios. Options are:
s-tag A single S-VLAN is classified into the service points.
dot1q - A single C-VLAN is classified into the service points.
Note:
Page 60 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
6 Click Next. Page 3 of the 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration wizard opens.
Figure 28: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard Page 3
7 In the TX Frequency (MHz) field, set the transmission radio frequency for
the first radio in MHz.
8 In the RX Frequency (MHz) field, set the received radio frequency for the
first radio in MHz.
9 In the TX Level (dBm) field, enter the desired TX signal level (TSL) for the
first radio. The range of values depends on the frequency and RFU type.
10 To mute the TX output of the RFU, select On in the TX mute field. To
unmute the TX output of the RFU, select Off.
11 Click Next. Page 4 of the 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration wizard opens.
Figure 29: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard Page 4
12 In the Script ID field, select the MRMC script you want to assign to the first
radio. For a full explanation of choosing an MRMC script, see Configuring
the Radio (MRMC) Script(s).
13 In the Operational Mode field, select the ACM mode for the first radio:
Fixed or Adaptive.
Fixed ACM mode applies constant TX and RX rates. However, unlike
regular scripts, with a Fixed ACM script you can specify a maximum
profile to inhibit inefficient transmission levels.
In Adaptive ACM mode, TX and RX rates are dynamic. An ACM-enabled
radio system automatically chooses which profile to use according to
the channel fading conditions.
Page 61 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
16 In the TX Frequency (MHz) field, set the transmission radio frequency for
the second radio in MHz.
17 In the RX Frequency (MHz) field, set the received radio frequency for the
second radio in MHz.
18 In the TX Level (dBm) field, enter the desired TX signal level (TSL) for the
second radio. The range of values depends on the frequency and RFU type.
19 To mute the TX output of the RFU, select On in the TX mute field. To
unmute the TX output of the RFU, select Off.
20 Click Next. Page 6 of the 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration wizard opens.
Figure 31: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard Page 6
21 In the Script ID field, select the MRMC script you want to assign to the
second radio. For a full explanation of choosing an MRMC script, see
Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s).
Page 62 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
22 In the Operational Mode field, select the ACM mode for the second radio:
Fixed or Adaptive.
Fixed ACM mode applies constant TX and RX rates. However, unlike
regular scripts, with a Fixed ACM script you can specify a maximum
profile to inhibit inefficient transmission levels.
In Adaptive ACM mode, TX and RX rates are dynamic. An ACM-enabled
radio system automatically chooses which profile to use according to
the channel fading conditions.
23 Do one of the following:
If you selected Fixed in the Operational Mode field, the next field is
Profile. Select the ACM profile for the radio in the Profile field.
If you selected Adaptive in the Operational Mode field, the next field
is Maximum Profile. Enter the maximum profile for the script in the
Maximum Profile field. See Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s).
24 Click Next. Page 7 of the 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration wizard opens.
Figure 32: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard Page 7
Page 63 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
27 Click Finish. Page 8 of the 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration wizard opens.
This page displays the parameters you have selected for the link.
Figure 33: 1+0 Repeater Quick Configuration Wizard Page 5 (Summary Page)
Page 64 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.3
User Guide
3.3.1
Page 65 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.3.2
User Guide
2 Click Create Group. The first page of the Create ABC Group wizard opens.
Figure 35: Create ABC Group Wizard First Page
3 Optionally, enter a descriptive name for the group in the Group Name
field.
Page 66 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
4 Click Next. The next page of the Create Group wizard opens.
Figure 36: Create ABC Group Wizard Second Page
Page 67 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.3.2.1
User Guide
3 Click Apply.
4 Repeat these steps to remove additional members from the group.
3.3.3
Page 68 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.4
User Guide
3.4.1
LAG Overview
LAG can be used to provide redundancy for Ethernet interfaces, both on the
same IP-20 unit (line protection) and on separate units (line protection and
equipment protection). LAGs can also be used to provide redundancy for radio
links.
LAG can also be used to aggregate several interfaces in order to create a wider
(aggregate) link. For example, LAG can be used to create a 4 Gbps channel.
You can create up to four LAG groups. The following restrictions exist with
respect to LAG groups:
Only physical interfaces (including radio interfaces), not logical interfaces,
can belong to a LAG group.
Page 69 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3.4.2
3.4.2.1
3 In the Group ID field, select a LAG Group ID. Only LAG IDs that are not
already assigned to a LAG group appear in the dropdown list.
4 In the LAG Member 1 field, select an interface to assign to the LAG group.
Only interfaces not already assigned to a LAG group appear in the
dropdown list.
5 Click Next. A new Create LAG Group page opens.
Figure 40: Create LAG Group Page 2
Page 70 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
9 Click Submit. If all the interfaces meet the criteria listed above, a message
appears that the LAG group has been successfully created. If not, a
message appears indicating that the LAG group was not created and giving
the reason.
3.4.2.2
Page 71 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3.4.3
3.5
Configuring XPIC
Note:
3.5.1
XPIC Overview
XPIC Overview
Cross Polarization Interference Canceller (XPIC) is a feature that enables two
radio carriers to use the same frequency with a polarity separation between
them. Since they will never be completely orthogonal, some signal cancelation
is required.
In addition, XPIC includes an automatic recovery mechanism that ensures that
if one carrier fails, or a false signal is received, the mate carrier will not be
affected. This mechanism also ensures that both carriers will be operational,
after the failure is cleared.
To configure and enable XPIC, first configure the antennas and then configure
the carriers, as described below.
Page 72 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.5.2
User Guide
In some cases, the XPI might not exceed the required 25dB
minimum due to adverse atmospheric conditions. If you
believe this to be the case, you can leave the configuration at
the lower values, but be sure to monitor the XPI to make
sure it subsequently exceeds 25dB. A normal XPI level in
clear sky conditions is between 25 and 30dB.
Page 73 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.5.3
User Guide
3.5.4
2 In the XPIC Configuration page, select Enable in the Admin state field and
click Apply.
To disable XPIC, select Disable in the Admin state field and click Apply.
Page 74 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.6
User Guide
3.6.1
3.6.2
Page 75 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 76 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
In additional, almost every Web EMS page will now include two tabs on
top of the main section of the page:
Active Enables you to configure the Active unit.
Standby In most cases, this tab is read-only and enables you to
display Standby unit parameters. Even when a switchover occurs, the
unit displayed in the Web EMS is always the currently Active unit.
Note:
To keep the Standby unit up-to-date, after any change to the configuration of
the Active unit click Copy to Mate to copy the configuration to the Standby
unit.
If you change the configuration of the Active unit but do not perform Copy to
Mate, a Configuration Mismatch alarm appears in the Faults > Current
Alarms page.
Page 77 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Note:
User Guide
3.6.3
3.6.4
Page 78 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.6.5
User Guide
3.6.6
Page 79 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3.6.7
3.6.8
Page 80 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.6.9
User Guide
3.7
This section describes how to configure MIMO and space diversity, and
include the following topics:
MIMO and Space Diversity Overview
MIMO Mate Management Access
Creating a MIMO or Space Diversity Group
Enabling/Disabling a MIMO or Space Diversity Group
Setting the Role of a MIMO or Space Diversity Group
Resetting MIMO
Viewing MMI and XPI Levels
Deleting a MIMO or Space Diversity Group
3.7.1
Page 81 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.7.1.1
User Guide
3.7.2
In-band management
External switch using LAG
Note:
3.7.3
Page 82 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the Group Type field, select one of the following according to your
desired system configuration:
MIMO 2x2
MIMO 4x4
1+0 Space Diversity
2+0 Space Diversity
Note
Page 83 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
7 For 4x4 MIMO configurations, 2+0 Space Diversity configurations and 2+2
Space Diversity configurations, you must set the role of the group
to Master or Slave. See Setting the Role of a MIMO or Space Diversity
Group.
3.7.4
3.7.5
Page 84 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3.7.6
Resetting MIMO
In hardware failure scenarios, MIMO 4x4 provides a resiliency mechanism
that enables the link to continue functioning as a 2+0 XPIC link.
To restore full MIMO operation, the faulty equipment must be replaced. The
replacement equipment must be pre-configured to the same configuration as
the equipment being replaced. Once the new equipment has been properly
installed and, if necessary, powered up, you must reset MIMO.
Note:
To reset MIMO:
1 Select Radio > Groups> MIMO. The MIMO page opens.
2 Select the MIMO group from the table.
3 Click Edit Group. The MIMO - Edit page opens.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
Page 85 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3.7.7
Page 86 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The MIMO - Edit Members page provides the following information for each
radio carrier in the MIMO group:
MMI MIMO Mate Interference. MMI represents the difference between
the RSL1 and the RSL2 of the remote Master and Slave transmitters with
the same polarization. The nominal range is 0. The range should be from -3
dB to +3 dB.
This parameter is not relevant for 1+0 and 2+0 Space Diversity (as
indicated by a value of -99).
XPI Cross Polarization Interference. This is only relevant in 2+0 Space
Diversity configurations and MIMO 4x4 configurations, where each unit
operates in dual polarization (XPIC) mode. The XPI value should be at least
25 dB. For further information, see Configuring XPIC.
3.7.8
Page 87 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
3.8
User Guide
Page 88 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.
User Guide
Unit Management
This section includes:
Related topics:
4.1
Page 89 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 In the IP address Family field, select the IP protocol the unit will use
when initiating communications. The options are IPv4 or IPv6.
4.2
Page 90 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 For IP-20C units, select the carrier in the Radio table (see Figure 55) and
click Edit. A separate Remote IP Configuration page opens. The page is
identical to the IP-20C and IP-20S page.
Page 91 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
4
5
6
7
8
9
4.2.1
In the Remote IP address field, enter an IP address for the remote unit.
You can enter the address in IPv4 format in this field, and/or in IPv6
format in the IPv6 Address field. The remote unit will receive
communications whether they are sent to its IPv4 address or its IPv6
address.
In the Remote Subnet mask field, enter the subnet mask of the remote
radio.
Optionally, in the Remote default gateway field, enter the default
gateway address for the remote radio.
Optionally, in the Remote IPv6 Address field, enter an IPv6 address for
the remote unit. You can enter the address in IPv6 format in this field,
and/or in IPv4 format in the IP Address field. The unit will receive
communications whether they are sent to its IPv4 address or its IPv6
address.
If you entered an IPv6 address, enter the IPv6 prefix length in the Remote
IPv6 Prefix-Length field.
Optionally, if you entered an IPv6 address, enter the default gateway in
IPv6 format in the Remote default Gateway IPv6 field.
Click Apply.
Page 92 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
4.3
Configuring SNMP
P-20C, IP-20S, and IP-20E support SNMP v1, V2c, and v3. You can set
community strings for access to IP-20 units.
IP-20C, IP-20S, and IP-20E support the following MIBs:
Proprietary MIB.
Access to the unit is provided by making use of the community and context
fields in SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c/SNMPv3, respectively.
To configure SNMP:
1 Select Platform > Management > SNMP > SNMP Parameters. The SNMP
Parameters page opens.
Page 93 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 94 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 95 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
User Name
Password
Authentication Algorithm
Access Mode
4.4
None
SHA
MD5
None
DES
AES
Page 96 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Select a trap manager and click Edit. The Trap Managers Edit page opens.
Figure 62: Trap Managers - Edit Page
Definition
IPv4 Address
IPv6 Address
Description
Admin
Community
Port
Enter the number of the port through which traps will be sent.
Heartbeat Period
CLLI
Enter a Common Language Location Identifier (CLLI). The CLLI is free text
that will be sent with the trap. You can enter up to 100 characters.
Page 97 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
V3 User Name
If the SNMP Trap version selected in SNMP Parameters page is V3, enter
the name of a V3 user defined in the system.
To view or define a V3 user, use the V3 Users page.
Note: Make sure that an identical V3 user is also defined on the manager's
side.
4.5
Page 98 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Page 99 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.6
User Guide
4.6.1
Definition
Package Name
Target Device
Running Version
Installed Version
The software version currently installed for the component. If the installed
version is not already the running version, it will become the running
version after the next reset takes place.
Downloaded Version
The version, if any, that has been downloaded from the server but not yet
installed. Upon installation, this version will become the Installed Version.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Reset Type
The level of reset required by the component in order for the Installed
Version to become the Active Version. A cold (hard) reset powers down
and powers back up the component. A warm (soft) reset simply reboots the
software or firmware in the component.
4.6.2
Software bundles can be downloaded via FTP or SFTP. After the software
download is complete, you can initiate the installation.
Note:
4.6.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 Unzip the new software package for IP-20 into your shared FTP or SFTP
folder.
4 In the IP-20s Web EMS, select Platform > Software > Download &
Install. The Download & Install page opens.
Figure 66: Download & Install Page
5 In the File Transfer Protocol field, select the file transfer protocol you
want to use (FTP or SFTP).
6 In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP
server.
7 In the Password field, enter the password you configured in the FTP
server. If you did not configure a password for your FTP/SFTP user, simply
leave this field blank.
8 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv4, enter the IPv4 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP/SFTP server in the Server IPv4
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
9 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv6, enter the IPv6 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP/SFTP server in the Server IPv6
Address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
10 In the Path field, enter the directory path from which you are downloading
the files. Enter the path relative to the FTP user's home directory, not the
absolute path. To leave the path blank, enter //.
11 To configure a timed installation, in the Timed installation field, select
Yes. Otherwise, select No. For more information on timed installations, see
Configuring a Timed Installation.
12 Click Apply to save your settings.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
13 Click Download. The download begins. You can view the status of the
download in the Download & Install - Status Parameters section of the
Download & Install page. See Table 17.
14 Once the download has been completed, verify that the version you want
to install has been downloaded. You can check the downloaded version for
each component by viewing the Downloaded Version column in the
Versions page. See Viewing Current Software Versions.
Important Note If upgrading from version 7.9 or earlier:
Before you proceed to install the software, repeat the download
process even if Download Success is displayed in the Download
status field, until the unit displays the message No new software
modules found.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Download status
Download Success
Download Failure
Install status
Installation Success
Installation Failure
incomplete-sw-version
4.6.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Select Platform > Software > Timer Parameters. The Timer Parameters
Software Installation page opens.
Figure 67: Timer Parameters - Software Installation Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
4.7
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.7.1
User Guide
4.7.2
Definition
File number
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
The type of unit from which the backup configuration file was created.
Software version
The software version of the unit from which the backup configuration file
was created.
Time of creation
The time and date on which the configuration file was created.
Original IP address
The IP address of the unit from which the configuration file was created.
System ID
The System ID, if any, of the unit from which the configuration file was
created. This is taken from the Name field in the Unit Parameters page.
See Configuring Unit Parameters.
Valid
4.7.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the IP-20 Web EMS, select Platform > Configuration > Configuration
Management. The Configuration Management page opens.
Figure 70: Configuration Management Page
4 In the File transfer protocol field, select the file transfer protocol you
want to use (FTP or SFTP).
5 In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP
server.
6 In the Password field, enter the password you configured in the FTP
server. If you did not configure a password for your FTP user, simply leave
this field blank.
7 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv4, enter the IPv4 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP server in the Server IP address
field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating Communications.
8 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv6, enter the IPv6 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP server in the IPv6 Server
Address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
9 In the Path field, enter the directory path to or from which you are
downloading or uploading the file. Enter the path relative to the FTP user's
home directory, not the absolute path. To leave the path blank, enter //.
10 In the File name field, enter the name of the file you are importing, or the
name you want to give the file you are exporting.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Note:
You must add the suffix .zip to the file name. Otherwise, the
file import may fail. You can export the file using any name,
then add the suffix .zip manually.
11 In the File number field, select from three system restore points:
When you import a configuration file, the file is saved to the selected
restore point, and overwrites whichever file was previously held in
that restore point.
When you export a configuration file, the file is exported from the
selected restore point.
When you back up the current configuration, the backup configuration
file is saved to the selected restore point, and overwrites whichever file
was previously held in that restore point.
When you restore a configuration, the configuration file in the selected
restore point is the file that is restored.
Note:
The Timed installation field is reserved for future use.
12 Click Apply to save your settings.
4.7.4
Succeeded
Failure
The next time the system is reset, the File Transfer status field returns to
Ready.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.7.5
User Guide
4.7.6
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.7.7
User Guide
Succeeded
Failure
The next time the system is reset, the Backup file creation status field
returns to Ready.
4.7.8
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.7.9
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.8
User Guide
2 Click Set to Factory Default. The unit is restored to its factory default
settings. This does not change the unit's IP address.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.9
User Guide
2 Click Reset.
3 A prompt appears asking if you want to proceed with the reset.
Click Yes to initiate the reset.
The unit is reset.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.10
User Guide
Definition
Name
A name for the unit (optional). This name appears at the top of every Web EMS page.
Description
Descriptive information about the unit. This information is used for debugging, and
should include information such as the chassis type.
System up time
Contact person
The name of the person to be contacted if and when a problem with the system occurs
(optional).
Location
Longitude
Latitude
Measurement format The type of measurement you want the system to use: Metric or Imperial.
Unit Temperature
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
4.11
User Guide
Configuring NTP
IP-20 supports Network Time Protocol (NTP). NTP distributes Coordinated
Universal Time (UTC) throughout the system, using a jitter buffer to neutralize
the effects of variable latency.
To view and configure the NTP Parameters:
1 Select Platform > Management > NTP Configuration. The NTP
Configuration page opens.
Figure 74: NTP Configuration Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Poll interval
Displays the interval used by the NTP client to maintain synchronization with the current
NTP server.
Displays the IP address of the remote NTP server on which the NTP client is currently
locked.
Indicates if the NTP client is locked on a remote NTP server. Possible values are:
4.12
LOCAL The NTP client is locked on the local system clock (free running clock).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
5.
User Guide
Radio Configuration
This section includes:
Related topics:
5.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 For IP-20C units, select the carrier in the Radio table (see Figure 76) and
click Edit. A separate Radio Parameters page opens. The page is essentially
identical to the IP-20E and IP-20S page, except for the addition of a Radio
location parameter.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Table 21 lists and describes the parameters in the Radio table of the IP-20C
Radio Parameters page and the Status parameters section of the Radio
Parameters configuration page.
Table 21: Radio Status Parameters
Parameter
Description
Type
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Description
XPIC Support
TX Frequency
RX Frequency
RX Level (dBm)
The actual measured RX signal level (RSL) of the carrier (in dBm).
Defective Blocks
TX Mute Status
Adaptive TX power operational status Indicates whether Adaptive TX power is currently operational.
5.2
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 For IP-20C units, select the carrier in the Remote Radio table (see
Figure 78) and click Edit. A separate Remote Radio Parameters page
opens. The page is identical to the IP-20E and IP-20S page.
Figure 81: Remote Radio Parameters Page Per Carrier IP-20C
Definition
Radio Location
Local Remote Channel Operational Read-only. The operational status of the active (in a protection
Status
configuration) remote channel.
Remote Receiver Signal Level
Read-only. The level of the most severe alarm currently active on the
remote unit.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Edit page only. Identifies the link, in order to distinguish it from other links.
Enter a unique identifier from 1 to 65535.
The remote unit's Tx output level, if the remote unit has been configured to
operate at a fixed Tx level (in dBm).
To mute the TX output of the remote radio, select On. To unmute the TX
output of the remote radio, select Off.
Remote IP Address
5.3
Configuring ATPC
ATPC is a closed-loop mechanism by which each RFU adjusts its transmitted
signal power according to the indication received across the link, in order to
achieve a desired RSL on the other side of the link. Without ATPC, if loss of
frame occurs the system automatically increases its transmit power to the
configured maximum. This may cause a higher level of interference with other
systems until the failure is corrected.
To enable and configure ATPC and display ATPC settings:
1 Select Radio > ATPC. The ATPC page opens.
For IP-20C units, the Radio Parameters page initially displays a table as
shown in Figure 82.
For IP-20S units and IP-20E units, a page appears, similar to Figure 83
(which shows an IP-20C page).
Figure 82: ATPC Page IP-20C
2 For IP-20C units, select the carrier you wish to configure in the ATPC table
(see Figure 82) and click Edit. A separate ATPC Edit page opens. The page
is essentially identical to the IP-20E and IP-20S page.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
5.4
Using the Frame Cut-Through feature, frames assigned to queues with 4th
priority pre-empt frames already in transmission over the radio from other
queues. Transmission of the pre-empted frames is resumed after the
cut -through with no capacity loss or re-transmission required.
To configure Header De-Duplication and Frame Cut-Through:
1 Select Radio > Ethernet Interface > Configuration. The Radio Ethernet
Interface Configuration page opens.
For IP-20C units, the Radio Ethernet Interface Configuration page
initially displays a table as shown in Figure 84.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
For IP-20S units and IP-20E units, a page appears, similar to Figure 85
(which shows an IP-20C page).
Figure 84: Radio Ethernet Interface Configuration Page IP-20C
2 For IP-20C units, select the carrier in the Radio Ethernet and Compression
table (see Figure 84) and click Edit. A separate Radio Ethernet Interface
Configuration page opens. The page is essentially identical to the IP-20E
and IP-20S page.
3 Click Edit. The Radio Ethernet Interface Configuration Edit page opens.
Figure 85: Radio Ethernet Interface Configuration Edit Page Per Carrier IP-20C
4 In the Cut through mode field, select Yes to enable Frame Cut-Through or
No to disable Frame Cut-Through.
5 In the Header Compression mode field, select from the following
options:
Disabled Header De-Duplication is disabled.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
5.4.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Figure 87: Radio Ethernet Interface Counters Page IP-20S and IP-20E
2 For IP-20C units, select the carrier in the Header Compression Counters
table (Figure 86) and click View. A separate Radio Ethernet Interface
Configuration page opens. The page is essentially identical to the IP-20E
and IP-20S page.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Figure 88: Radio Ethernet Interface Counters Page Per Carrier IP-20C
Table 23 lists and describes the fields in the Radio Ethernet Interface Counters
page.
Table 23: Radio Ethernet Interface Counters Fields
Parameter
Description
Interface Location
TX compressed bytes
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Description
TX learning frames
The number of frames that have been used to learn unique data
flows. Once a particular flow type has been learned, subsequent
frames with that flow type are compressed by Header
De-Duplication.
Frames on the TX side that were not compressed for reasons other
than the use of exclusion rules.
The number of good bytes received on the port since the last time
the Radio Ethernet Interface counters were cleared.
The number of good frames received on the port since the last time
the Radio Ethernet Interface counters were cleared.
The number of bytes transmitted since the last time the Radio
Ethernet Interface counters were cleared.
Port TX frames
The number of frames transmitted since the last time the Radio
Ethernet Interface counters were cleared.
The number of idle bytes transmitted since the last time the Radio
Ethernet Interface counters were cleared.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
5.5
User Guide
Note:
5.5.1
The Radio > PM & Statistics > Diversity and Radio > PM &
Statistics > Combined pages are reserved for future use.
2 In the Excessive BER admin field, select Enable to enable excessive BER
administration or Disable to disable excessive BER administration.
Excessive BER administration determines whether or not excessive BER is
propagated as a fault and considered a system event. For example, if
excessive BER administration is enabled, excessive BER can trigger a
protection switchover and can cause a synchronization source to go into a
failure status. Excessive BER administration is enabled or disabled for the
entire unit rather than for specific radios.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the Thresholds table, select the radio for which you want to configure
thresholds.
4 Click Edit. The Radio Thresholds Edit page opens.
Figure 90: Radio Thresholds Edit Page
Definition
Radio Location
Specify the threshold for counting exceeded seconds if the RSL is below
this level.
Specify the threshold for counting exceeded seconds if the TSL is below
this level.
Specify the modem MSE (Mean Square Error) threshold for calculating
MSE Exceed Threshold seconds.
Specify the modem XPI threshold for calculating XPI Exceed Threshold
seconds.
Select the level above which an excessive BER alarm is issued for errors
detected over the radio link.
Select the level above which a Signal Degrade alarm is issued for errors
detected over the radio link.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
5.5.2
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Radio Location
TX profile
TX QAM
TX bit-rate
RX profile
RX QAM
RX bit-rate
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
5.5.3
User Guide
2 For the IP-20C, In the Port field, select the port that holds the radio for
which you want to display PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports in 15-minute intervals, select 15 minutes.
To display reports in daily intervals, select 24 hours.
Table 26 describes the MRMC PMs.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interval
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute
intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval.
Min profile
Displays the minimum ACM profile that was measured during the interval.
Max profile
Displays the maximum ACM profile that was measured during the interval.
Min bitrate
Displays the minimum total radio throughput (Mbps) delivered during the
interval.
Max bitrate
Displays the maximum total radio throughput (Mbps) delivered during the
interval.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the
measured interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values
are not reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that
occurred at that time.
5.5.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 For IP-20C units, you can select the carrier in the Radio table (see
Figure 93) and click View to display a page for that carrier. A separate
Counters page opens.
Figure 95: Counters Page Per Carrier IP-20C
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
5.5.5
User Guide
2 For the IP-20C, in the Port field, select the port that holds the radio for
which you want to display PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports in 15-minute intervals, select 15 minutes.
To display reports in daily intervals, select 24 hours.
Table 27 describes the Signal Level PMs.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interval
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute
intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval.
The maximum TSL (Transmit Signal Level) that was measured during the
interval.
The minimum TSL (Transmit Signal Level) that was measured during the
interval.
The maximum RSL (Received Signal Level) that was measured during the
interval.
The minimum RSL (Received Signal Level) that was measured during the
interval.
The number of seconds the measured TSL exceeded the threshold during
the interval. TSL thresholds are configured in the Radio Thresholds page.
See Configuring Radio Thresholds.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured
interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not
reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that
time.
5.5.6
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 For the IP-20C, in the Port field, select the port that holds the radio for
which you want to display PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports in 15-minute intervals, select 15 minutes.
To display reports in daily intervals, select 24 hours.
Table 28 describes the Modem BER (Aggregate) PMs.
Note:
Parameter
Definition
Interval
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute
intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval.
ES
SES
UAS
Displays the Unavailable Seconds value of the measured interval. The value
can be between 0 and 900 seconds (15 minutes).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
BBE
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured
interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not
reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that
time.
5.5.7
2 For the IP-20C, in the Port field, select the port that holds the radio for
which you want to display PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports in 15-minute intervals, select 15 minutes.
To display reports in daily intervals, select 24 hours.
Table 29 describes the Modem MSE PMs.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interval
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute
intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval.
Displays the number of seconds the MSE exceeded the MSE PM threshold
during the interval. The MSE PM is configured in the Radio Thresholds
page. See Configuring Radio Thresholds.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured
interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not
reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that
time.
5.5.8
Configuring XPIC
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 For the IP-20C, in the Port field, select the port that holds the radio for
which you want to display PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports in 15-minute intervals, select 15 minutes.
To display reports in daily intervals, select 24 hours.
Table 30 describes the XPI PMs.
Note:
Parameter
Definition
Interval
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute
intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval.
The minimum XPI level that was measured during the interval.
The maximum XPI level that was measured during the interval.
The number of seconds the measured XPI level was below the threshold
during the interval. XPI thresholds are configured in the Radio Thresholds
page. See Configuring Radio Thresholds.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured
interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not
reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that
time.
5.5.9
5.5.9.1
The total Layer 1 bandwidth (payload plus overheads) sent through the
radio (Mbps).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 For the IP-20C, in the Port field, select the port that holds the radio for
which you want to display PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports in 15-minute intervals, select 15 minutes.
To display reports in daily intervals, select 24 hours.
Table 31 describes the capacity and throughput PMs.
Note:
Parameter
Definition
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute
intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval.
Displays the highest L1 bandwidth, in Mbps, sent through the selected radio
during the measured time interval.
Displays the number of seconds during the measured time interval during
which the L1 bandwidth exceeded 0.
Displays the highest throughput, in Mbps, that occurred for the selected
radio during the measured time interval.
Displays the average throughput, in Mbps, for the selected radio during the
measured time interval.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Displays the number of seconds during the measured time interval during
which the throughput exceeded 0.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured
interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not
reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that
time.
5.5.9.2
2 For the IP-20C, in the Port field, select the port that holds the radio for
which you want to display PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports in 15-minute intervals, select 15 minutes.
To display reports in daily intervals, select 24 hours.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute
intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval.
Displays the highest L1 bandwidth, in Mbps, sent through the selected radio
during the measured time interval.
Displays the number of seconds during the measured time interval during
which the L1 bandwidth exceeded 0.
Displays the highest throughput, in Mbps, that occurred for the selected
radio during the measured time interval.
Displays the average throughput, in Mbps, for the selected radio during the
measured time interval.
Displays the number of seconds during the measured time interval during
which the L1 bandwidth exceeded 0.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured
interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not
reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that
time.
5.5.9.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 For the IP-20C, in the Port field, select the port that holds the radio for
which you want to display PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports in 15-minute intervals, select 15 minutes.
To display reports in daily intervals, select 24 hours.
Table 33 describes the capacity and throughput PMs.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute
intervals, displays the date and ending time of the interval.
FER
Displays the frame error rate (%) during the measured time interval.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured
interval are reliable. An x in the column indicates that the values are not
reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that
time.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.
User Guide
Related topics:
6.1
6.1.1
Deleting a Service
Enabling, Disabling, or Deleting Multiple Services
Viewing Service Details
Configuring Service Points
Multipoint (MP)
Point-to-Point (P2P)
Management (MNG)
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
6.1.2
Use the same Service ID for all service fragments along the path of the
service.
Do not re-use the same Service ID within the same region. A region is
defined as consisting of all IP-20 devices having Ethernet connectivity
between them.
Use meaningful EVC IDs.
Give the same EVC ID (service name) to all service fragments along the
path of the service.
Do not reuse the same EVC ID within the same region.
6.1.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Services ID
Service Type
MP Multipoint
P2P Point-to-Point
MNG Management
EVC ID
The Ethernet Virtual Connection (EVC) ID. This parameter does not affect
the network elements behavior, but is used by the NMS for topology
management.
EVC description
The Ethernet Virtual Connection (EVC) description. This parameter does not
affect the network elements behavior, but is used by the NMS for topology
management.
Admin
6.1.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the Service ID field, select a unique ID for the service. You can choose
any unused value from 1 to 1024. Once you have added the service, you
cannot change the Service ID. Service ID 1025 is reserved for a pre-defined
management service.
4 In the Service Type field, select the service type:
MP Multipoint
MNG Management
P2P Point-to-Point
5 Optionally, in the EVC ID field, enter an Ethernet Virtual Connection (EVC)
ID (up to 20 characters). This parameter does not affect the network
elements behavior, but is used by the NMS for topology management.
6 Optionally, in the EVC Description field, enter a text description of the
service (up to 64 characters). This parameter does not affect the network
elements behavior, but is used by the NMS for topology management.
7 In the Admin field, select one of the following options:
Operational - The service is functional.
Reserved - The service is disabled until this parameter is changed to
Operational. In this mode, the service occupies system resources but
is unable to receive and transmit data.
8 In the MAC table size field, enter the maximum MAC address table size for
the service. The MAC address table is a source MAC address learning table
used to forward frames from one service point to another. You can select a
value from 16 to 131,072, in multiples of 16. This maximum only applies to
dynamic, not static, MAC address table entries.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
9 In the Default CoS field, enter a default Class of Service (CoS) value (0-7).
This value is assigned to frames at the service level if CoS Mode is set to
Default-CoS. Otherwise, this value is not used, and frames retain whatever
CoS value they were assigned at the service point or logical interface level.
10 In the CoS Mode field, select one of the following options. This parameter
determines whether or not frames passing through the service have their
CoS modified at the service level. The CoS determines the priority queue to
which frames are assigned.
Default CoS Frames passing through the service are assigned the
default CoS defined above. This CoS value overrides whatever CoS may
have been assigned at the service point or interface level.
Preserve-SP-COS-Decision The CoS of frames passing through the
service is not modified by the service's default CoS.
11 Click Apply, then Close to close the Ethernet Services - Add page.
12 Add service points. You must add service points to the service in order for
the service to carry traffic. See Configuring Service Points.
6.1.5
Editing a Service
To edit a service:
1 Select Ethernet > Services. The Ethernet Services page opens
(Figure 103).
2 Select the service in the Service Configuration Table.
3 In the Ethernet Services page, click Edit. The Ethernet Services - Edit page
opens.
This page is identical to the Ethernet Services - Add page (Figure 104). You can
edit any parameter that can be configured in the Add page, except the
Service ID.
6.1.6
Deleting a Service
Before deleting a service, you must first delete any service points attached to
the service.
To delete a service:
1 Delete all service points attached to the service you wish to delete, as
described in Deleting a Service Point.
2 Select Ethernet > Services. The Ethernet Services page opens
(Figure 103).
3 Select the service in the Ethernet Service Configuration Table.
4 Click Delete. The service is deleted.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.1.7
User Guide
6.1.8
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.1.9
User Guide
6.1.9.1
Attaching VLANs
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.1.9.2
User Guide
You can choose to display the following sets of attributes by selecting the
appropriate button above the SP Attributes table:
General See Ethernet Service Points General SP Attributes Table
To return to the Ethernet Services page at any time, click Back to Services
table at the top of the Ethernet Service Points page.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The General SP Attributes table is shown in Figure 106: Ethernet Service Points
Page. Table 35 describes the parameters displayed in the General SP
Attributes table.
Table 35: General Service Point Attributes
Parameter
Definition
Service point ID
This ID is unique within the service. For Point-to-Point and Multipoint services, the
range of values is 1-32. For Management services, the range of values is 1-30.
When adding a service point, you can select a service point ID from the available
options in the Service point ID drop-down list in the Ethernet Service Points Add
page. Once you have added the service point, you cannot change the service point
ID.
A descriptive name for the service point (optional). The Service Point Name can be
up to 20 characters.
The following rules apply to the mixing of different types of service points on a single
logical interface:
You cannot configure both SAPs and SNPs on the same logical interface.
You can configure both SAPs or SNPs on the same logical interface as a MNG
service point.
You cannot configure more than one MNG service point on a single logical
interface.
Once you have added the service point, you cannot change this parameter.
Interface location
The physical or logical interface on which the service point is located. Once you have
added the service point, you cannot change this parameter.
The encapsulation type (Ethertype) for frames entering the service point. Once you
have added the service point, you cannot change this parameter.
The Attached Interface Type determines which frames enter the service via this
service point, based on the frames VLAN tagging. Since more than one service point
may be associated with a single interface, frames are assigned to the earliest defined
service point in case of conflict.
For a list of available Attached Interface Types, the types of frames to which each
one applies, and the service point types for which each one is available, see
Table 36.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
C-Vlan encapsulation
The C-VLAN classified into the service point. Options are 1-4094, Untagged, or N.A.
(Not Applicable). Once you have added the service point, you cannot change this
parameter.
If you selected Bundle-C in the Attached Interface Type field, select Untagged or
N.A. You can then add multiple C-VLANs via the Attach VLAN option. See Attaching
VLANs.
S-Vlan encapsulation
The S-VLAN classified into the service point. Options are 1-4094, Untagged, or N.A.
(Not Applicable). Once you have added the service point, you cannot change this
parameter.
If you selected Bundle-S in the Attached Interface Type field, select the S-VLAN
value to classify into the service point (1-4094), or select Untagged. You can then
add multiple C-VLANs via the Attach VLAN option. See Attaching VLANs.
Types of Frames
dot1q
All
s-tag
Bundle-C
SAP
Bundle-S
SAP
All-to-One
SAP
Q-in-Q
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Select Ingress in the Ethernet Service Points page to display the Ethernet
Service Points Ingress Attributes table. Table 37 describes the parameters
displayed in the Ingress SP Attributes table.
Figure 107: Ethernet Service Points Page Ingress Attributes
Definition
Service point ID
This ID is unique within the service. For Point-to-Point and Multipoint services, the
range of values is 1-32. For Management services, the range of values is 1-30.
A descriptive name for the service point (optional). The Service Point Name can be
up to 20 characters.
Learning admin
Determines whether MAC address learning for incoming frames is enabled (Enable)
or disabled (Disable). When enabled, the service point learns the source MAC
addresses of incoming frames and adds them to a MAC address forwarding table.
Allow flooding
Determines whether incoming frames with unknown MAC addresses are forwarded
to other service points via flooding. Select Allow to allow flooding or Disable to
disable flooding.
Allow broadcast
Indicates whether frames with a broadcast destination MAC address are allowed to
ingress the service via this service point. Select Allow to allow broadcast or Disable
to disable broadcast.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
CoS Mode
Indicates how the service point handles the CoS of frames that pass through the
service point. Options are:
Default CoS
sp-def-cos The service point re-defines the CoS of frames that pass through
the service point, according to the Default CoS (below). This decision can be
overwritten on the service level.
Interface-Decision The service point preserves the CoS decision made at the
interface level. The decision can still be overwritten at the service level.
The default CoS. If the CoS Mode is sp-def-cos, this is the CoS assigned to frames
that pass through the service point. This decision can be overwritten at the service
level. Possible values are 0 to 7.
Select Egress in the Ethernet Service Points page to display the Ethernet
Service Points Egress Attributes table. Table 38 `describes the parameters
displayed in the General SP Attributes table.
Figure 108: Ethernet Service Points Page Egress Attributes
Definition
Service point ID
This ID is unique within the service. For Point-to-Point and Multipoint services, the
range of values is 1-32. For Management services, the range of values is 1-30.
A descriptive name for the service point (optional). The Service Point Name can be
up to 20 characters.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Parameter
User Guide
Definition
C-Vlan CoS preservation Determines whether the original C-VLAN CoS value is preserved or restored for
frames egressing from the service point.
C-Vlan preservation
S-Vlan CoS preservation Determines whether the original S-VLAN CoS value is preserved or restored for
frames egressing from the service point.
S-Vlan preservation
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Marking admin
Service Bundle ID
6.1.9.3
If Marking admin is set to Enable, and CoS preservation for the relevant outer
VLAN is set to Disable, the SAP re-marks the C-VLAN or S-VLAN 802.1p UP
bits of egress frames according to the calculated CoS and Color, and the
user-configurable 802.1Q and 802.1AD marking tables. You can configure these
tables by selecting Ethernet > QoS > Marking from the menu on the left side of
the Web EMS.
If Marking admin and CoS preservation for the relevant outer VLAN are both
set to Enable, re-marking is not performed.
If Marking admin and CoS preservation for the relevant outer VLAN are both
set to Disable, re-marking is applied, but only according to the values defined
for Green frames in the 802.1Q and 802.1AD marking tables.
This can be used to assign one of the available service bundles from the H-QoS
hierarchy queues to the service point. This enables you to personalize the QoS
egress path. Permitted values are 1-63.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
6 Configure the service point attributes, as described in Table 35, Table 37,
and Table 38.
Note:
6.1.9.5
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.1.9.6
User Guide
Attaching VLANs
When the Attached Interface Type for a service point is set to Bundle-C or
Bundle-S, you can add multiple C-VLANs to the service point.
To add multiple C-VLANs:
1 Select Ethernet > Services. The Ethernet Services page opens
(Figure 103).
2 Select the relevant service in the Ethernet Services Configuration table.
3 Click Service Points. The Ethernet Service Points page opens (Figure 106).
4 Select the relevant service point in the Ethernet Services Points General
SP Attributes table.
5 Click Attached VLAN. The Attached VLAN List page opens.
Figure 110: Attached VLAN List Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interface Location
Read-only. The physical or logical interface on which the service point is located.
Service ID
Service Point ID
C-Vlan Encapsulation
S-Vlan Encapsulation
Read-only.
If the Attached Interface Type for the service point is Bundle-S, this field displays
the S-VLAN encapsulation selected when the service point was created.
If the Attached Interface Type for the service point is Bundle-C, this field is
inactive.
If you want to assign a specific CoS and Color to frames with the C-VLAN or S-VLAN
defined in the C-VLAN Encapsulation field, select true. This CoS and Color values
defined below override the CoS and Color decisions made at the interface level.
However, if the service point or service are configured to apply their own CoS and
Color decisions, those decisions override the decision made here.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
CoS Value
If CoS Overwrite Valid is set to true, the CoS value defined in this field is applied to
frames with the C-VLAN defined in the C-VLAN Encapsulation field. This CoS
overrides the CoS decision made at the interface level. However, if the service point
or service are configured to apply their own CoS, that decision overrides the decision
made here.
If CoS Overwrite Valid is set to false, this parameter has no effect.
Color
If CoS Overwrite Valid is set to true, the Color value defined in this field is applied
to frames with the C-VLAN defined in the C-VLAN Encapsulation field. This Color
overrides the Color decision made at the interface level. However, if the service point
or service are configured to apply their own Color, that decision overrides the
decision made here.
If CoS Overwrite Valid is set to false, this parameter has no effect.
To edit a VLAN Classification table entry, select the entry in the VLAN
Classification table and click Edit. You can edit all the fields that can be
configured in the Attached VLAN List Add page, except the C-VLAN
Encapsulation field.
To delete a VLAN Classification table entry, select the entry in the VLAN
Classification table and click Delete.
6.2
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 In the MRU field, enter the global size (in bytes) of the Maximum Receive
Unit (MRU). Permitted values are 64 to 9612. The default value is 2000.
Frames that are larger than the global MRU will be discarded.
3 In the S VLAN Ether type field, select the S-VLAN Ethertype. This defines
the ethertype recognized by the system as the S-VLAN ethertype. Options
are: 0x8100, 0x88A8, 0x9100, and 0x9200. The default value is 0x88A8.
Note:
4 Click Apply.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.3
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Select the interface you want to configure and click Edit. The Physical
Interfaces - Edit page opens.
Figure 114: Physical Interfaces - Edit Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interface location
Operational Status
Admin Status
Indicates whether the interface is currently enabled (Up) or disabled (Down). You can
enable or disable an interface from the Interface Manager page. See Enabling the
Interfaces (Interface Manager).
Media Type
Displays the actual speed of the interface for the link as agreed by the two sides of the
link after the auto negotiation process.
Displays the actual duplex status of the interface for the link as agreed by the two sides
of the link after the auto negotiation process.
6.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the Controlled Ethernet interface field, select the interface that will be
disabled upon failure of the Monitored Radio Interface, defined below.
4 In the Monitored Radio interface field, select the Monitored Radio
Interface. The Controlled Ethernet Interface, defined above, is disabled
upon a failure indication on the Monitored Radio Interface.
5 In the Auto state propagation admin field, select Enable to enable
Automatic State Propagation on the interface pair, or Disable to disable
Automatic State Propagation on the pair.
6 Optionally, in the Auto state propagation trigger by remote fault field,
select Enable if you want to configure the system to disable the Controlled
Ethernet Interface upon a radio failure at the remote side of the link from
the Monitored Radio Interface.
7 Optionally, in the Auto state propagation CSF mode admin field, select
Enable or Disable to enable or disable Client Signal Failure (CSF) mode. In
CSF mode, the ASP mechanism does not physically shut down the
Controlled Interface when ASP is triggered. Instead, the ASP mechanism
sends a failure indication message (a CSF message). The CSF message is
used to propagate the failure indication to external equipment.
To edit an Automatic State Propagation interface pair:
1 Select the interface pair in the Automatic state propagation configuration
table.
2 Click Edit. The Automatic State Propagation Edit page opens. The Edit
page is similar to the Add page (Figure 116), but the Controlled Ethernet
Interface and Monitored Radio Interface parameters are read-only.
To delete an Automatic State Propagation interface pair:
1 Select the interface pair in the Automatic state propagation configuration
table.
2 Click Delete. The interface pair is removed from the Automatic state
propagation configuration table.
To delete multiple interface pairs:
1 Select the interface pairs in the Automatic state propagation configuration
table or select all the interfaces by selecting the check box in the top row.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Click Delete. The interface pairs are removed from the Automatic state
propagation configuration table.
6.5
6.5.1
RMON Statistics
Port TX Statistics
Port RX Statistics
RMON Statistics
To view and reset RMON statistics:
1 Select Ethernet > PM & Statistics > RMON. The RMON page opens.
Figure 117: RMON Page
To clear the statistics, click Clear All at the bottom of the page.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Each column in the RMON page displays RMON statistics for one of the units
interfaces. To hide or display columns:
1 In the header row, select the arrow next to any of the columns.
2 Select Columns.
3 Mark the interfaces you want to display and clear the interfaces you do not
want to display.
Figure 118: RMON Page Hiding and Displaying Columns
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.5.2
User Guide
Port TX Statistics
The Ethernet Port TX PM report page displays PMs that measure various peak
transmission rates (in seconds) and average transmission rates (in seconds),
both in bytes and in packets, for each measured time interval.
The page also displays the number of seconds in the interval during which
transmission rates exceeded the configured threshold.
6.5.2.1
2 In the Interface field, select the interface for which you want to display
PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports for the past 24 hours, in 15 minute intervals, select
15 minutes.
To display reports for the past month, in daily intervals, select 24
hours.
Table 41 describes the Ethernet TX port PMs.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interval
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute intervals,
displays the date and ending time of the interval.
Various peak transmission rates (in seconds) and average transmission rates (in
seconds), both in bytes and in packets, for each measured time interval.
The number of seconds the TX bytes exceeded the specified threshold during the
interval. For instructions on setting the threshold, see Setting the Ethernet Port TX
Threshold.
Indicates whether the values received during the measured interval are valid. An x
in the column indicates that the values are not valid (for example, because of a
power surge or power failure that occurred during the interval).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.5.2.3
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.5.3
User Guide
Port RX Statistics
The Ethernet Port RX PM report page displays PMs that measure various peak
transmission rates (in seconds) and average RX rates (in seconds), both in
bytes and in packets, for each measured time interval.
The page also displays the number of seconds in the interval during which RX
rates exceeded the configured threshold.
6.5.3.1
2 In the Interface field, select the interface for which you want to display
PMs.
3 In the Interval Type field:
To display reports for the past 24 hours, in 15 minute intervals, select
15 minutes.
To display reports for the past month, in daily intervals, select 24
hours.
Table 42 describes the Ethernet RX port PMs.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interval
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute intervals,
displays the date and ending time of the interval.
Various peak transmission rates (in seconds) and average RX rates (in seconds),
both in bytes and in packets, for each measured time interval.
The number of seconds the RX bytes exceeded the specified threshold during the
interval. For instructions on setting the threshold, see Setting the Ethernet Port RX
Threshold.
Indicates whether the values received during the measured interval are valid. An x
in the column indicates that the values are not valid (for example, because of a
power surge or power failure that occurred during the interval).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
6.5.3.3
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.
User Guide
QoS Overview
Configuring Classification
Configuring Policers (Rate Metering)
Configuring Marking
Configuring WRED
Configuring Egress Shaping
Configuring Scheduling
Note:
7.1
You can display QoS egress statistics, but only via CLI. For
information, see Displaying Egress Statistics (CLI).
QoS Overview
Quality of Service (QoS) deals with the way frames are handled within the
switching fabric. QoS is required in order to deal with many different network
scenarios, such as traffic congestion, packet availability, and delay restrictions.
IP-20s personalized QoS enables operators to handle a wide and diverse
range of scenarios. IP-20s smart QoS mechanism operates from the frames
ingress into the switching fabric until the moment the frame egresses via the
destination port.
QoS capability is very important due to the diverse topologies that exist in
todays network scenarios. These can include, for example, streams from two
different ports that egress via single port, or a port-to-port connection that
holds hundreds of services. In each topology, a customized approach to
handling QoS will provide the best results.
Figure 125 shows the basic flow of IP-20s QoS mechanism. Traffic ingresses
(left to right) via the Ethernet or radio interfaces, on the ingress path. Based
on the services model, the system determines how to route the traffic. Traffic
is then directed to the most appropriate output queue via the egress path.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Ingress
Marker
GE/Radio
(Optional)
Rate Limit
(Policing)
Classifier
Port
Queue
Manager
(Optional)
Scheduler/
Shaper
Port
GE/Radio
Egress
Ingress
GE/Radio
Rate Limit
(Policing)
Classifier
Port
Marker
(Optional)
Queue
Manager
(Optional)
Scheduler/
Shaper
Port
GE/Radio
Port
GE/Radio
Ingress
GE/Radio
Classifier
Port
Rate Limit
(Policing)
(Optional)
Egress
CET/Pipe
Services
Marker
(Optional)
Queue
Manager
Scheduler/
Shaper
Standard QoS/ H-QoS
For a more detailed description of QoS in the IP-20, refer to the Technical
Description for the IP-20 product type you are using.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.2
User Guide
Configuring Classification
The hierarchical classifier consists of the following levels:
Logical interface-level classification
Service point-level classification
Service level classification
This section explains how to configure classification at the logical interface
level.
For instructions how to configure classification at the service point level,
see Ethernet Service Points Ingress Attributes.
For instructions how to configure classification at the service level, see
Adding an Ethernet Service.
Classification Overview
Configuring Ingress Path Classification on a Logical Interface
Modifying the C-VLAN 802.1Q UP and CFI Bit Classification Table
Modifying the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI Bit Classification Table
Modifying the DSCP Classification Table
Modifying the MPLS EXP Bit Classification Table
7.2.1
Classification Overview
IP-20 supports a hierarchical classification mechanism. The classification
mechanism examines incoming frames and determines their CoS and Color.
The benefit of hierarchical classification is that it provides the ability to zoom
in or zoom out, enabling classification at higher or lower levels of the
hierarchy. The nature of each traffic stream defines which level of the
hierarchical classifier to apply, or whether to use several levels of the
classification hierarchy in parallel.
Classification takes place on the logical interface level according to the
following priorities:
VLAN ID (CLI-only see Configuring VLAN Classification and Override
(CLI))
802.1p bits
DSCP bits
MPLS EXP field
Default interface CoS
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
IP-20 performs the classification on each frame ingressing the system via the
logical interface. Classification is performed step by step from the highest
priority to the lowest priority classification method. Once a match is found, the
classifier determines the CoS and Color decision for the frame for the logical
interface-level.
For example, if the frame is an untagged IP Ethernet frame, a match will not be
found until the third priority level (DSCP). The CoS and Color values defined
for the frames DSCP value will be applied to the frame.
You can disable some of these classification methods by configuring them as
un-trusted. For example, if 802.1p classification is configured as un-trusted for
a specific interface, the classification mechanism does not perform
classification by UP bits. This is useful, for example, if classification is based on
DSCP priority bits.
If no match is found at the logical interface level, the default CoS is applied to
incoming frames at this level. In this case, the Color of the frame is assumed to
be Green.
7.2.2
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Select the interface you want to configure and click Edit. The Logical
Interfaces - Edit page opens.
Figure 127: Logical Interfaces - Edit Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Select the interface's trust mode for user priority (UP) bits:
Trust DSCP
Trust MPLS
Trust The interface performs QoS and color classification according to UP and
CFI/DEI bits according to user-configurable tables for 802.1q UP bits (C-VLAN
frames) or 802.1AD UP bits (S-VLAN frames). VLAN UP bit classification has
priority over DSCP and MPLS classification, so that if a match is found with the UP
bit of the ingressing frame, DSCP values and MPLS bits are not considered.
Un-Trust The interface does not consider 802.1 UP bits during classification.
Un-Trust The interface does not consider MPLS bits during classification.
Select the default CoS value for frames passing through the interface (0 to 7). This value
can be overwritten on the service point and service level.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.2.3
User Guide
2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The 802.1Q
Classification Edit page opens.
Figure 129: 802.1Q Classification - Edit Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
7.2.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The 802.1AD
Classification - Edit page opens.
Figure 131: 802.1Q Classification - Edit Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.2.5
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The DSCP Classification Edit page opens.
Figure 133: DSCP Classification - Edit Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.2.6
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The MPLS Classification Edit page opens.
Figure 135: MPLS Classification - Edit Page
7.3
7.3.1
Policing on the service point level, and the service point and
CoS level, is planned for future release.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.3.2
User Guide
7.3.2.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Profile ID
A unique ID for the policer profile. You can choose any unused value from 1 to 250.
Once you have added the profile, you cannot change the Profile ID.
Description
Policer type
CIR
Enter the Committed Information Rate (CIR) for the policer, in bits per second. Permitted
values are 0, or 64,000 through 1,000,000,000 bps. If the value is 0, all incoming CIR
traffic is dropped.
CBS
Enter the Committed Burst Rate (CBR) for the policer, in Kbytes. Permitted values are 2
through 128 Kbytes.
EIR
Enter the Excess Information Rate (EIR) for the policer, in bits per second. Permitted
values are 0, or 64,000 through 1,000,000,000 bps. If the value is 0, all incoming EIR
traffic is dropped.
EBS
Enter the Excess Burst Rate (EBR) for the policer, in Kbytes. Permitted values are 2
through 128 Kbytes.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Color mode
Select how the policer treats packets that ingress with a CFI or DEI field set to 1 (yellow).
Options are:
Coupling flag
7.3.2.2
Color Aware All packets that ingress with a CFI/DEI field set to 1 (yellow) are
treated as EIR packets, even if credits remain in the CIR bucket.
Color Blind All ingress packets are treated as green regardless of their CFI/DEI
value. A color-blind policer discards any former color decisions.
Select Enable or Disable. When enabled, frames that ingress as yellow may be
converted to green when there are no available yellow credits in the EIR bucket.
Coupling Flag is only relevant in Color Aware mode.
7.3.2.3
7.3.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
For a logical interface, you can assign policers to the following traffic flows:
Unicast Policer
Multicast Policer
Broadcast Policer
Ethertype Policers
7.3.3.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.3.3.2
User Guide
4 In the Policer profile field, select a profile from the policer profiles
defined in the system. The Policer profile drop-down list includes the ID
and description of all defined profiles.
5 In the Multicast admin field, select Enable to enable policing on multicast
traffic flows from the logical interface, or Disable to disable policing on
multicast traffic flows from the logical interface.
6 Click Apply.
7.3.3.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
4 In the Policer profile field, select a profile from the policer profiles
defined in the system. The Policer profile drop-down list includes the ID
and description of all defined profiles.
5 In the Broadcast admin field, select Enable to enable policing on
broadcast traffic flows from the logical interface, or Disable to disable
policing on broadcast traffic flows from the logical interface.
6 Click Apply.
7.3.3.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
4 In the Ethertype 1 profile field, select a profile from the policer profiles
defined in the system. The Ethertype 1 profile drop-down list includes
the ID and description of all defined profiles.
5 In the Ethertype 1 user value field, enter the Ethertype value to which
you want to apply this policer. The field length is 4 nibbles (for example,
0x0806 - ARP).
6 In the Ethertype 1 admin field, select Enable to enable policing on the
logical interface for the specified ethertype, or Disable to disable policing
on the logical interface for the specified ethertype.
7 Click Apply.
8 To assign policers to additional Ethertypes, select Ethertype type 2
Policer and Ethertype type 3 Policer and repeat the steps above.
7.3.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
7.4
Configuring Marking
This section includes:
7.4.1
Marking Overview
Enabling Marking
Modifying the 802.1Q Marking Table
Modifying the 802.1AD Marking Table
Marking Overview
When enabled, IP-20's marking mechanism modifies each frames 802.1p UP
bit and CFI/DEI bits according to the classifier decision. The CFI/DEI (color)
field is modified according to the classifier and policer decision. The color is
first determined by a classifier and may be later overwritten by a policer.
Green color is represented by a CFI/DEI value of 0, and Yellow color is
represented by a CFI/DEI value of 1. Marking is performed on egress frames
that are VLAN-tagged.
The marking is performed according to global mapping tables that describe
the 802.1p UP bits and the CFI bits (for C-VLAN tags) or DEI bits (for S VLAN
tags). The marking bit in the service point egress attributes determines
whether the frame is marked as green or according to the calculated color.
Note:
7.4.2
Enabling Marking
Marking is enabled and disabled on the service point level. See Ethernet
Service Points Egress Attributes.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.4.3
User Guide
2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The 802.1Q Marking Edit page opens.
Figure 143: 802.1Q Marking - Edit Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
7.4.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Select the row you want to modify and click Edit. The 802.1AD Marking Edit page opens.
Figure 145: 802.1AD Marking - Edit Page
7.5
Configuring WRED
This section includes:
7.5.1
WRED Overview
Configuring WRED Profiles
Assigning WRED Profiles to Queues
WRED Overview
Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) enables differentiation between
higher and lower priority traffic based on CoS. You can define up to 30 WRED
profiles. Each profile contains a green traffic curve and a yellow traffic curve.
This curve describes the probability of randomly dropping frames as a
function of queue occupancy.
The system also includes two pre-defined read-only profiles. These profiles
are assigned profile IDs 31 and 32.
A WRED profile can be assigned to each queue. The WRED profile assigned to
the queue determines whether or not to drop incoming packets according to
the occupancy of the queue. As the queue occupancy grows, the probability of
dropping each incoming frame increases as well. As a consequence,
statistically more TCP flows will be restrained before traffic congestion occurs.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.5.2
User Guide
7.5.2.1
2 Click ADD. The WRED Profile - Add page opens, with default values
displayed.
Figure 147: WRED Profile - Add Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
7.5.2.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.5.3
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
5 In the Profile ID field, select the WRED profile you want to assign to the
selected queue.
6 Click Apply, then Close.
7.6
7.6.1
7.6.2
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.6.2.1
User Guide
2 Click Add. The Queue Shaper Add page opens, with default values
displayed.
Figure 151: Queue Shaper Profile Add Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.6.2.2
User Guide
7.6.2.3
7.6.3
7.6.3.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Click Add. The Service Bundle Shaper Profile Add page opens, with
default values displayed.
Figure 153: Service Bundle Shaper Profile Add Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
7.6.3.3
7.6.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 Click Add. The Egress Queue Shaper Configuration Add page opens.
Figure 155: Logical Interfaces Egress Queue Shaper Configuration Add Page
Note:
4
5
6
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
7.6.5
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
4 Click Add. The Egress Service Bundle Shaper Configuration Add page
opens.
Figure 157: Logical Interfaces Egress Service Bundle Shaper Configuration Add
Page
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
7.7
Configuring Scheduling
This section includes:
7.7.1
Scheduling Overview
Configuring Priority Profiles
Configuring WFQ Profiles
Assigning a Priority Profile to an Interface
Assigning a WFQ Profile to an Interface
Scheduling Overview
Scheduling determines the priority among the queues. IP-20 provides a
unique hierarchical scheduling model that includes four priorities, with
Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ) within each priority, and shaping per port and
per queue.
The scheduler scans the queues and determines which queue is ready to
transmit. If more than one queue is ready to transmit, the scheduler
determines which queue transmits first based on:
Queue Priority A queue with higher priority is served before
lower-priority queues.
Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ) If two or more queues have the same
priority and are ready to transmit, the scheduler transmits frames from
the queues based on a WFQ algorithm that determines the ratio of frames
per queue based on a predefined weight assigned to each queue.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.7.2
User Guide
7.7.2.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Click Add. The Scheduler Priority Profile Add page opens, with default
values displayed.
Figure 159: Scheduler Priority Profile Add Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
7.7.2.2
7.7.2.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.7.3
User Guide
7.7.3.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Click Add. The Scheduler WFQ Profile Add page opens, with default
values displayed.
Figure 161: Scheduler WFQ Profile Add Page
7.7.3.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
7.7.4
User Guide
7.7.5
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 Select Egress Port Scheduling WFQ. The Egress Port Scheduling WFQ
Configuration Edit page opens.
Figure 163: Logical Interfaces Scheduler Egress Port Scheduling WFQ
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
8.
User Guide
Ethernet Protocols
This section includes:
Related Topics:
8.1
8.1.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
8.1.2
User Guide
2 Click Add underneath the ABN Configuration and Status table. The ABN
Configuration and Status Add page opens.
Figure 165: ABN Configuration and Status Add Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Nominal BW
Current BW
The weighted average of the bandwidth readings taken during the last Monitoring
Interval.
Version
8.1.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
8.1.4
8.1.5
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Name
Tx Messages
Counter
The number of bandwidth messages transmitted since the counter was last reset.
Holdoff State
Counting Holdoff time measurement has started but the timeout has not elapsed
yet.
On Holdoff measurement time has ended and the current bandwidth is still below
the nominal value.
Last Tx message
8.2
Configuring LLDP
This section includes:
8.2.1
LLDP Overview
Displaying Peer Status
Configuring the General LLDP Parameters
Configuring the LLDP Port Parameters
Displaying the Units Management Parameters
Displaying Peer Units Management Parameters
Displaying the Local Units Parameters
Displaying LLDP Statistics
LLDP Overview
Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) is a vendor-neutral layer 2 protocol that
can be used by a network element attached to a specific LAN segment to
advertise its identity and capabilities and to receive identity and capacity
information from physically adjacent layer 2 peers. LLDP is a part of the IEEE
802.1AB 2005 standard that enables automatic network connectivity
discovery by means of a port identity information exchange between each port
and its peer. Each port periodically sends and also expects to receive frames
called Link Layer Discovery Protocol Data Units (LLDPDU). LLDPDUs contain
information in TLV format about port identity, such as MAC address and
IP address.
LLDP is used to send notifications to the NMS, based on data of the local unit
and data gathered from peer systems. These notifications enable the NMS to
build an accurate network topology.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
8.2.2
User Guide
Definition
Management Address
The octet string used to identify the management address component associated
with the remote system.
Time Mark
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
8.2.3
User Guide
To display and configure the general LLDP parameters for the unit:
1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Configuration >
Parameters. The LLDP Configuration Parameters page opens.
Figure 168: LLDP Configuration Parameters Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Max TX Credit
Fast TX
The initial value used to initialize the variable which determines the number
of transmissions that are made during fast transmission periods. In this
release, the Fast TX No. is set at 4.
Defines the minimum time, in seconds, the system waits after the LLDP
Admin status becomes Disabled until it will process a request to reinitialize
LLDP. For instructions on disabling or enabling LLDP on a port, see
Configuring the LLDP Port Parameters.
In this release, the Reinit Delay is set at 2.
Definition
TX Interval (Seconds)
Defines the interval, in seconds, at which LLDP frames are transmitted. You
can select a value from 5 to 32768. The default value is 30.
Hold Multiplier
Defines the time-to-live (TTL) multiplier. The TTL determines the length of
time LLDP frames are retained by the receiving device. The TTL is
determined by multiplying the TX Interval by the Hold Multiplier.
You can select a value from 2 to 10. The default value is 4.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
8.2.4
User Guide
2 Select an interface and click Edit. The LLDP Port Configuration - Edit page
opens.
Figure 170: LLDP Port Configuration - Edit Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the Admin field, select from the following options to define how the
LLDP protocol operates for this port:
TX Only LLDP agent transmits LLDP frames on this port but does not
update information about its peer.
RX Only LLDP agent receives but does not transmit LLDP frames on
this port.
TX and RX LLDP agent transmits and receives LLDP frames on this
port (default value).
Disabled LLDP agent does not transmit or receive LLDP frames on
this port.
4 In the Notification Enable field, select from the following options to
define, on a per agent basis, whether or not notifications from the agent to
the NMS are enabled:
True The agent sends a Topology Change trap to the NMS whenever
the system information received from the peer changes.
False Notifications to the NMS are disabled (default value).
5 Click Apply, then Close.
Table 50 lists and describes the status parameters in the LLDP Port
Configuration page.
Table 50: LLDP Port Configuration Status Parameters
Parameter
Definition
Interface Location
Destination Address
The destination address of the LLDP agent associated with this port.
TLV TX
Indicates which of the unit's capabilities is transmitted by the LLDP agent for the
port:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
8.2.5
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To displays the MAC address associated with the unit for purposes of LLDP
transmissions:
1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Configuration >
Management TLV. The LLDP Management TLV Configuration page opens.
Figure 172: LLDP Management TLV Configuration Page
Table 51 lists and describes the status parameters in the LLDP Management
TLV Configuration page.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interface Location
Destination Address
Defines the MAC address associated with the port for purposes of LLDP
transmissions.
Management Address
Address Subtype
Defines the type of the management address identifier encoding used for
the Management Address.
Tx Enable
8.2.6
Definition
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Management Address
The octet string used to identify the management address component associated
with the remote system.
Destination Address
Remote ID
Time Mark
To display unit parameter information received via LLDP from the unit's
nearest neighbor (peer):
1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > LLDP > Advanced > Remote System >
Remote Table. The LLDP Remote System Table page opens.
Figure 174: LLDP Remote System Table Page
Table 53 describes the parameters in the LLDP Remote System Table page.
These parameters are read-only.
Table 53: LLDP Remote System Table Parameters
Parameter
Definition
Remote ID
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Remote Chassis ID
Chassis ID Subtype
Remote Port
An octet string used to identify the port component associated with the remote
system.
The type of port identifier encoding used in the peer's Port ID.
Time Mark
8.2.7
Table 54 describes the parameters in the LLDP Local System Parameters page.
These parameters are read-only.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
System Name
The system name included in TLVs transmitted by the LLDP agent, as defined in
the Name field of the Unit Parameters page. See Configuring Unit Parameters.
System Description
Chassis ID
Chassis ID SubType
The type of encoding used to identify the local unit's chassis. In this release, this
parameter is always set to MAC Address.
Capabilities Supported
A bitmap value used to identify which system capabilities are supported on the
local system, as included in TLVs transmitted by the LLDP agent.
The bitmap is defined by the following parameters:
0 other
1 repeater
2 bridge
3 wlanAccessPoint
4 router
5 telephone
6 docsisCableDevice
7 stationOnly
8 cVLANComponent
9 sVLANComponent
10 twoPortMACRelay
Capabilities Enabled
A bitmap value used to identify which system capabilities are enabled on the
local system, as included in TLVs transmitted by the LLDP agent.
The bitmap is defined by the following parameters:
0 other
1 repeater
2 bridge
3 wlanAccessPoint
4 router
5 telephone
6 docsisCableDevice
7 stationOnly
8 cVLANComponent
9 sVLANComponent
10 twoPortMACRelay
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Table 55 describes the parameters in the LLDP Local System Port page. These
parameters are read-only.
Table 55: LLDP Local System Port Parameters
Parameter
Definition
Interface Location
Port ID
The type of encoding used to identify the port in LLDP transmissions. In this
release, this parameter is always set to MAC Address.
Port Description
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Management Address
Address Length
Address Interface ID
Address OID
8.2.8
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
The time of the most recent change in the remote unit, as reported via LLDP.
Inserts
The number of times the information from the remote system has changed.
Deletes
The number of times the information from the remote system has been deleted.
Drops
Ageouts
The number of times the information from the remote system has been deleted
from the local unit's database because the information's TTL has expired.
The RX Ageouts counter in the Port RX page is similar to this counter, but is for
specific ports rather than the entire unit.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interface Location
Destination Address
Total Frames
The number of LLDP frames transmitted by the LLDP agent on this port to the
destination MAC address.
The number of LLDPDU Length Errors recorded for this port and destination
MAC address.
If the set of TLVs that is selected in the LLDP local system MIB by network
management would result in an LLDPDU that violates LLDPDU length
restrictions, then the No. of Length Error statistic is incremented by 1, and an
LLDPDU is sent containing the mandatory TLVs plus as many of the optional
TLVs in the set as will fit in the remaining LLDPDU length.
Definition
Interface Location
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Destination Address
Total Discarded
The number of LLDP frames received by the LLDP agent on this port, and then
discarded for any reason. This counter can provide an indication that LLDP
header formatting problems may exist with the local LLDP agent in the sending
system or that LLDPDU validation problems may exist with the local LLDP agent
in the receiving system.
Invalid Frames
The number of invalid LLDP frames received by the LLDP agent on this port
while the agent is enabled.
Valid Frames
The number of valid LLDP frames received by the LLDP agent on this port.
Discarded TLVs
The number of LLDP TLVs discarded for any reason by the LLDP agent on this
port.
Unrecognized TLVs
The number of LLDP TLVs received on the given port that are not recognized by
LLDP agent.
Ageouts
The number of age-outs that occurred on the port. An age-out is the number of
times the complete set of information advertised by the remote system has been
deleted from the unit's database because the information timeliness interval has
expired.
This counter is similar to the LLDP No. of Ageouts counter in the LLDP Statistic
page, except that it is per port rather than for the entire unit.
This counter is set to zero during agent initialization. This counter is incremented
only once when the complete set of information is invalidated (aged out) from all
related tables on a particular port. Partial ageing is not allowed.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
9.
User Guide
Synchronization
This section includes:
Note:
9.1
The Sync Source and Outgoing Clock pages are reserved for
future use.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
5 Click Apply.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
10.
User Guide
Related topics:
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
10.1
User Guide
2 In the Failure login attempts to block user field, select the number of
failed login attempts that will trigger blocking. If a user attempts to login
to the system with incorrect credentials this number of times
consecutively, the user will temporarily be prevented from logging into the
system for the time period defined in the Blocking period field. Valid
values are 1-10. The default value is 3.
3 In the Blocking period (Minutes) field, enter the length of time, in
minutes, that a user is prevented from logging into the system after the
defined number of failed login attempts. Valid values are 1-60. The default
value is 5.
4 In the Unused account period for blocking (Days) field, you can
configure a number of days after which a user is prevented from logging
into the system if the user has not logged in for the configured number of
days. Valid values are 0, or 30-90. If you enter 0, this feature is disabled.
The default value is 0.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
5 Click Apply.
Once a user is blocked, you can unblock the user from the User Accounts page.
To unblock a user:
1 Select Platform > Security > Access Control > User Accounts. The
Access Control User Accounts page opens (Figure 192).
2 Select the user and click Edit. The Access Control User Accounts - Edit page
opens.
Figure 187: Access Control User Accounts - Edit Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
10.2
User Guide
2 In the Enforce password strength field, select Yes or No. When Yes is
selected:
Password length must be at least eight characters.
Password must include characters of at least three of the following
character types: lower case letters, upper case letters, digits, and
special characters. For purposes of meeting this requirement, upper
case letters at the beginning of the password and digits at the end of
the password are not counted.
The last five passwords you used cannot be reused.
3 In the Password change for first login field, select Yes or No. When Yes
is selected, the system requires the user to change his or her password the
first time the user logs in.
4 In the Password aging (Days) field, select the number of days that user
passwords will remain valid from the first time the user logs into the
system. You can enter 20-90, or No Aging. If you select No Aging,
password aging is disabled and passwords remain valid indefinitely.
5 Click Apply.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
10.3
User Guide
10.4
Configuring Users
This section includes:
Configuring Users
Related topics:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Security
Management
Radio
TDM
Ethernet
Synchronization
A user profile defines the permitted access level per functionality group. For
each functionality group, the access level is defined separately for read and
write operations. The following access levels can be assigned:
None No access to this functional group.
Normal The user has access to parameters that require basic knowledge
about the functional group.
Advanced The user has access to parameters that require advanced
knowledge about the functional group, as well as parameters that have a
significant impact on the system as a whole, such as restoring the
configuration to factory default settings.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Click Add. The Access Control User Profiles - Add page opens.
Figure 191: Access Control User Profiles - Add Page
3 In the Profile field, enter a name for the profile. The profile name can
include up to 49 characters. Once you have created the user profile, you
cannot change its name.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Click Add. The Access Control User Profiles - Add page opens.
Figure 193: Access Control User Accounts - Add Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the User name field, enter a user name for the user. The user name can
be up to 32 characters.
4 In the Profile field, select a User Profile. The User Profile defines the users
access levels for functionality groups in the system. See Configuring User
Profiles.
5 In the Password field, enter a password for the user. If Enforce Password
Strength is activated (see Configuring the Password Security Parameters),
the password must meet the following criteria:
Password length must be at least eight characters.
Password must include characters of at least three of the following
character types: lower case letters, upper case letters, digits, and
special characters. For purposes of meeting this requirement, upper
case letters at the beginning of the password and digits at the end of
the password are not counted.
The last five passwords you used cannot be reused.
6 In the Blocked field, you can block or unblock the user. Selecting Yes
blocks the user. You can use this option to block a user temporarily,
without deleting the user from the system. If you set this option to Yes
while the user is logged into the system, the user will be automatically
logged out of the system within 30 seconds.
Note:
Last Logout The date and time the user most recently logged out of the
system.
To edit a users account details, select the user and click Edit. You can edit all
of the user account parameters except the User name and password.
To add a user, click Add.
To delete a user, select the user and click Delete.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
10.5
User Guide
Configuring RADIUS
This section includes:
RADIUS Overview
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
4 In the IPV4 address field, enter the IP address of the RADIUS server.
5 In the Port field, enter the port of the RADIUS server.
6 In the Retries field, enter the number of times the unit will try to
communicate with the RADIUS server before declaring the server to be
unreachable.
7 In the Timeout field, enter the timeout (in seconds) that the agent will
wait in each communication with the selected RADIUS server before
retrying if no response is received.
8 In the Secret field, enter the shared secret of the RADIUS server. The string
must be between 22-128 characters long.
9 Click Apply, then Close.
In addition to the configurable parameters described above, the Radius
Configuration page displays the following information for each RADIUS server:
Server Id The server ID of the Radius server:
1 The primary Radius server.
2 The secondary Radius server.
Connectivity Status The connectivity status of the Radius server in the
last attempted connection:
True The last connection attempt succeeded.
False The last connection attempt failed.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To view the users authorized access levels, click + next to the user name. The
page refreshes and displays the additional access level information.
Figure 197: Radius Users Page Expanded
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Create a network policy for each of the three groups you created:
Radius_Advanced, Radius_Normal, Radius_Viewer. That is, follow the
instructions in this section, for each of the three groups.
To create a network policy:
1 In the Server Manager, navigate to Roles > Network Policy and Access
Service > NPS (Local) > Policies > Network Policies.
2 Right-click Network Policies, and select New. The New Network Policy
wizard appears.
3 In the specify Network Policy Name and Connection Type, give the policy a
descriptive name, indicating whether it is a policy for the Advanced, the
Normal or the Viewer group.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Figure 201: Create Network Policy Specify Name and Connection Type
4 Click Next.
5 In the Specify Conditions window, click Add.
6 In the Select Condition window that appears, select the User Groups
condition and click Add.
Figure 202: Create Network Policy Select Condition
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
13 In the Specify Access Permission window that appears, select the Access
Granted option.
Figure 204: Create Network Policy Specifying Access Permission
14 Click Next.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
ii
Select the Vendor Specific checkbox and click Add under the
Attributes table.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
ii
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
sync-wo = regular,
access_channel = u2accesschannel,
fall-through = yes
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
none
###
serial
###
telnet
###
ssh
###
web
###
nms
16
###
snmp
32
###
snmpV3
64
For example:
The value 127 denotes permission to access the device from all channels:
Serial + Telnet + SSH + Web + NMS + SNMP +SNMPv3
The value 24 indicates permission to access the device only from the Web
+ NMS channels.
To define each users access channels:
1 In the usr/share/freeradius/dictionary.ceragon file, configure the
values of the access channels according to the following example:
###
access channel for u1
user:serial+telnet+ssh+web+nms+snmp+snmpV4
VALUE
ACCESS_CHANNEL
u1accesschannel
127
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
This step describes how to define a device as a RADIUS client. The RADIUS
server accepts attempts to connect to a device only if that is device is defined
as a RADIUS client.
To define a device as a RADIUS client:
1 In the /etc/raddb/clients.conf file, add the device according to the
following example.
The example shows how to add an IP-20G device with IP address
192.168.1.118:
# IP20-C
client 192.168.1.118 {
secret
= default_not_applicable
shortname
= ceragon-ip-20G
Keep in mind:
The secret must be between 22 and 128 characters long. Note down
the secret because you will need to enter the same value in the Secret
field of the Radius Configuration Edit page (Figure 195).
The shortname is not mandatory, but should be added, and should be
different for each RADIUS client.
2 Save the changes to the /etc/raddb/clients.conf file.
Step 4 Restarting the RADIUS client
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
10.6
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 In the Common Name field, enter the fullyqualified domain name for
your web server. You must enter the exact domain name.
3 In the Organization field, enter the exact legal name of your organization.
Do not abbreviate.
4 In the Organization Unit field, enter the division of the organization that
handles the certificate.
5 In the Locality field, enter the city in which the organization is legally
located.
6 In the State field, enter the state, province, or region in which the
organization is located. Do not abbreviate.
7 In the Country field, enter the two-letter ISO abbreviation for your
country (e.g., US).
8 In the Email field, enter an e-mail address that can be used to contact your
organization.
9 In the File Format field, select PEM or DER to determine the file format.
Note:
In this version, only PEM is supported.
10 In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the SFTP
server.
11 In the Password field, enter the password you configured in the SFTP
server. If you did not configure a password for your SFTP user, simply
leave this field blank.
12 In the Path field, enter the directory path to which you are uploading the
CSR. Enter the path relative to the SFTP user's home directory, not the
absolute path. To leave the path blank, enter //.
13 In the File Name field, enter the name you want to give to the exported
CSR.
14 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv4, enter the IPv4 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the SFTP server in the Server IPV4
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
15 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv6, enter the IPv6 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the SFTP server in the Server IPv6
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
16 Click Apply to save your settings.
17 Click Generate & Upload. The file is generated and uploaded.
The Creation/Upload status field displays the status of any pending CSR
generation and upload. Possible values are:
Ready The default value, which appears when CSR generation and
upload is in progress.
File-in-transfer The upload operation is in progress.
Success The file has been successfully uploaded.
Failure The file was not successfully uploaded.
The Creation/Upload progress field displays the progress of any current CSR
upload operation.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the SFTP
server.
3 In the Password field, enter the password you configured in the SFTP
server. If you did not configure a password for your SFTP user, simply
leave this field blank.
4 In the Path field, enter the directory path from which you are uploading
the certificate. Enter the path relative to the SFTP users home directory,
not the absolute path. To leave the path blank, enter //.
5 In the File Name field, enter the certificates file name in the SFTP server.
6 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv4, enter the IPv4 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the SFTP server in the Server IPV4
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
7 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv6, enter the IPv6 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the SFTP server in the Server IPv6
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
8 Click Apply to save your settings.
9 Click Download. The certificate is downloaded.
10 Click Install. The certificate is installed on the IP-20.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
10.7
User Guide
2 In the Telnet Admin field, select Disable to block telnet access. By default,
telnet access is enabled (Enable).
3 Click Apply.
10.8
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Select Platform > Security > General > Security Log Upload. The
Security Log Upload page opens.
Figure 218: Security Log Upload Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the Protocol Type field, select the file transfer protocol you want to use
(FTP or SFTP).
4 In the Server username field, enter the user name you configured in the
FTP server.
5 In the Server password field, enter the password you configured in the
FTP server. If you did not configure a password for your FTP user, simply
leave this field blank.
6 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv4, enter the IPv4 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP server in the Server IPV4
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
7 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv6, enter the IPv6 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP server in the Server IPv6
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
8 In the Path field, enter the directory path to which you are uploading the
files. Enter the path relative to the FTP user's home directory, not the
absolute path. To leave the path blank, enter //.
9 In the File Name field, enter the name you want to give to the exported
security log.
10 Click Apply to save your settings.
11 Click Upload. The upload begins.
The File transfer status field displays the status of any pending security log
upload. Possible values are:
Ready The default value, which appears when no file transfer is in
progress.
File-in-transfer The upload operation is in progress.
The File transfer progress field displays the progress of any current security
log upload operation.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
10.9
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the File transfer protocol field, select the file transfer protocol you
want to use (FTP or SFTP).
4 In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP
server.
5 In the Password field, enter the password you configured in the FTP
server. If you did not configure a password for your FTP user, simply leave
this field blank.
6 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv4, enter the IPv4 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP server in the Server IPV4
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
7 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv6, enter the IPv6 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP server in the Server IPv6
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
8 In the Path field, enter the directory path to which you are uploading the
files. Enter the path relative to the FTP user's home directory, not the
absolute path. To leave the path blank, enter //.
9 In the File Name field, enter the name you want to give to the exported
configuration log.
Note:
The directory path and fie name, together, cannot be more than:
The File transfer progress field displays the progress of any current
configuration log upload operation.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
11.
User Guide
Note:
11.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Time
Severity
The severity of the alarm. In the Current Alarms table, the severity is
indicated by a symbol. You can display a textual description of the severity
by holding the cursor over the symbol.
Note: You can edit the severity of alarm types in the Alarm Configuration
page. See Editing Alarm Text and Severity.
Description
User Text
Origin
Probable Cause
This field only appears in the Current Alarms - View page. One or more
possible causes of the alarm, to be used for troubleshooting.
Corrective Actions
This field only appears in the Current Alarms - View page. One or more
possible corrective actions to be taken in troubleshooting the alarm.
Alarm ID
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
11.2
User Guide
Definition
Time
Severity
The severity of the event. In the Event Log table, the severity is indicated
by a symbol. You can display a textual description of the severity by
holding the cursor over the symbol.
Note: You can edit the severity of event types in the Alarm Configuration
page. See Editing Alarm Text and Severity.
State
Description
User Text
Origin
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
11.3
User Guide
Viewing the Probable Cause and Corrective Actions for an Alarm Type
Editing an Alarm Type
Definition
Alarm ID
Severity
The severity assigned to the alarm type. You can edit the severity in the Alarm
Configuration Edit page. See Editing an Alarm Type.
Description
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Additional Text
Additional text that has been added to the system-defined description of the alarm by
users. You can edit the text in the Alarm Configuration Edit page. See Editing an
Alarm Type.
Service Affecting
11.3.2 Viewing the Probable Cause and Corrective Actions for an Alarm
Type
Most alarm types include a system-defined probable cause and suggested
corrective actions. To view an alarm type's probable cause and corrective
actions, click + on the left side of the alarm type's row in the Alarm
Configuration page. The Probable Cause and Corrective Actions appear
underneath the alarm type's row, as shown below. If there is no +, that means
no Probable Cause and Corrective Actions are defined for the alarm type.
Figure 224: Alarm Configuration Page Expanded
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
11.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
3 In the File transfer protocol field, select the file transfer protocol you
want to use (FTP or SFTP).
4 In the Username field, enter the user name you configured in the FTP
server.
5 In the Password field, enter the password you configured in the FTP
server. If you did not configure a password for your FTP user, simply leave
this field blank.
6 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv4, enter the IPv4 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP server in the Server IPv4
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
7 If the IP address family is configured to be IPv6, enter the IPv6 address of
the PC or laptop you are using as the FTP server in the Server IPv6
address field. See Defining the IP Protocol Version for Initiating
Communications.
8 In the Path field, enter the directory path to which you are uploading the
file. Enter the path relative to the FTP user's home directory, not the
absolute path. To leave the path blank, enter //.
9 In the File Name field, enter the name you want to give to the exported
Unit Information file.
10 Click Apply to save your settings.
11 Click Create to create the Unit Information file. The following fields
display the status of the file creation process:
File creation status Displays the file creation status. You must wait
until the status is Success to upload the file. Possible values are:
Ready The default value, which appears when no file is being
created.
Generating File The file is being generated.
Success The file has been successfully created. You may now
upload the file.
Failure The file was not successfully created.
File creation progress Displays the progress of the current Unit
Information file creation operation.
12 Click Export. The upload begins. The following fields display the status of
the upload process:
File transfer status Displays the status of any pending Unit
Information file upload. Possible values are:
Ready The default value, which appears when no file transfer is in
progress.
File-in-transfer The upload operation is in progress.
Success The file has been successfully uploaded.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
11.5
Performing Diagnostics
This section includes:
2 Select the slot on which you want to perform loopback and click Edit. The
Radio Loopbacks Edit page opens.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
SOAM Overview
Configuring MDs
Configuring MA/MEGs
Configuring MEPs
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Link trace
Loopback
Note:
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Note:
You can configure up to 1024 Slow MEPs and up to 256 Fast MEPs per
network element. You can configure up to 348 Slow Local MEPs (a local MEP
in a Slow MEG) and up to 64 Fast Local MEPs (a local MEP in a Fast MEG) per
network element.
To add a MEG:
1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > SOAM > MA/MEG. The SOAM MA/MEG
page opens.
Figure 232: SOAM MA/MEG Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
MD (ID, Name)
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
MEG Level
Select a MEG level (0-7). The MEG level must be the same for MEGs on both sides of
the link. Higher levels take priority over lower levels.
If MEGs are nested, the OAM flow of each MEG must be clearly identifiable and
separable from the OAM flows of the other MEGs. In cases where the OAM flows are
not distinguishable by the Ethernet layer encapsulation itself, the MEG level in the OAM
frame distinguishes between the OAM flows of nested MEGs.
Eight MEG levels are available to accommodate different network deployment
scenarios. When customer, provider, and operator data path flows are not
distinguishable based on means of the Ethernet layer encapsulations, the eight MEG
levels can be shared among them to distinguish between OAM frames belonging to
nested MEGs of customers, providers and operators. The default MEG level
assignment among customer, provider, and operator roles is:
The default MEG level assignment can be changed via a mutual agreement among
customer, provider, and/or operator roles.
The number of MEG levels used depends on the number of nested MEs for which the
OAM flows are not distinguishable based on the Ethernet layer encapsulation.
CCM Interval
The interval at which CCM messages are sent within the MEG. Options are:
1 second (default)
10 seconds
1 minute
10 minutes
It takes a MEP 3.5 times the CCM interval to determine a change in the status of its
peer MEP. For example, if the CCM interval is 1 second, a MEP will detect failure of the
peer 3.5 seconds after it receives the first CCM failure message. If the CCM interval is
10 minutes, the MEP will detect failure of the peer 35 minutes after it receives the first
CCM failure message.
Service ID
Select an Ethernet service to which the MEG belongs. You must define the service
before you configure the MEG.
Definition
MA/MEG ID
Reserved for future use. In the current release, this is Char String only.
MIP Creation
Reserved for future use. No Port Status TLV is transmitted in the CCM frame.
Reserved for future use. No Interface Status TLV is transmitted in the CCM frame.
MEP List
Lists all local and remote MEPs that have been defined for the MEG.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Once you have added local and remote MEPs, you must define the MEPs and
determine which are the local MEPs:
1 Select Ethernet > Protocols > SOAM > MEP. The SOAM MEP page opens.
Table 65 lists and describes the parameters displayed in the SOAM MEP
page.
Figure 236: SOAM MEP Page
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
6 In the MEP ID field, select a MEP ID from the list of MEPs you have added
to the selected MEG.
7 In the Service Point field, select the service point on which you want to
place the MEP.
8 Click Finish. The Add SOAM MEP wizard displays the parameters you have
selected.
Figure 239: Add SOAM MEP Wizard Summary Page
9 Verify that you want to submit the displayed parameters and click Submit.
Table 65: SOAM MEP Parameters
Parameter
Definition
MD ID
MA/MEG ID
MEP ID
Interface Location
The interface on which the service point associated with the MEP is
located.
SP ID
MEP Direction
MEP Active
MEP Defects
RMEP List
Once you have configured at least one local MEP, all other MEPs
that you have added but not configured as local MEPs are displayed
here.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Once you have added a MEP and defined it as a local MEP, you must enable the
MEP.
To enable a MEP:
1 In the SOAM MEP page (Figure 236), select the MEP you want to enable.
2 Click Edit. The SOAM MEP - Edit page opens.
Figure 240: SOAM MEP - Edit Page
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Table 66 lists and describes the parameters displayed in the SOAM MEP DB
table. To return to the SOAM MEP page, click Back to MEP.
Note:
Parameter
Definition
RMEP ID
The MAC Address of the interface on which the remote MEP is located.
The timestamp marked by the remote MEP indicated the most recent CCM OK
or failure it recorded. If none, this field indicates the amount of time since SOAM
was activated.
Displays the state of the RDI bit in the most recent CCM received by the remote
MEP:
The Port Status TLV in the most recent CCM received from the remote MEP.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The Last RX error CCM message field displays the frame of the last CCM that
contains an error received by the MEP.
The Last RX Xcon fault message field displays the frame of the last CCM that
contains a cross-connect error received by the MEP.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
12.
User Guide
12.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
12.2
User Guide
Calculating an ifIndex
The ifIndex calculator enables you to:
Calculate the ifIndex for any object in the system.
Determine the object represented by any valid ifIndex.
To use the ifIndex calculator:
1 Select Utilities > ifCalculator. The ifIndex Calculator page opens.
Figure 244: ifIndex Calculator Page
If you have an ifIndex and you want to determine which hardware item in
the unit it represents, enter the number in the ifIndex number field and
click Calculate Index to name. A description of the object appears in the
Result field.
To determine the ifIndex of a hardware item in the unit, such as an
interface, card, or slot, select the object type in the Functional Type field,
select the Slot and Port (if relevant), and click Calculate Name to Index.
The objects ifIndex appears in the Result field.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
12.3
User Guide
The MIB Reference Table is customized to the type of IP-20 product you are
using. There are three separate versions of the MIB Reference Table:
IP-20N/A/LH
IP-20G/GX
IP-20C/S/E
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Section III:
CLI
Configuration
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
13.
User Guide
13.1
General (CLI)
Establishing a Connection (CLI)
Logging On (CLI)
General CLI Commands
Changing Your Password (CLI)
Configuring In-Band Management (CLI)
Changing the Management IP Address (CLI)
Configuring the Activation Key (CLI)
Setting the Time and Date (Optional) (CLI)
Enabling the Interfaces (CLI)
Configuring the Radio Parameters (CLI)
Configuring the Radio (MRMC) Script(s) (CLI)
Enabling ACM with Adaptive Transmit Power (CLI)
Configuring Grouping (Optional) (CLI)
Creating Service(s) for Traffic (CLI)
General (CLI)
Before connection over the radio hop is established, it is of high importance
that you assign to the IP-20 unit a dedicated IP address, according to an IP
plan for the total network. See Changing the Management IP Address (CLI).
By default, a new IP-20 unit has the following IP settings:
IP address: 192.168.1.1
Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0
Warning!
13.2
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
13.3
Logging On (CLI)
Use a telnet connection to manage the IP-20 via CLI. You can use any standard
telnet client, such as PuTTy or ZOC Terminal. Alternatively, you can simply use
the telnet <ip address> command from the CMD window of your PC or
laptop.
The default IP address of the unit is 192.168.1.1. Establish a telnet connection
to the unit using the default IP address.
When you have connected to the unit, a login prompt appears. For example:
login:
13.4
quit
switch-to
ethernet
radio
exit
multi-carrier-abc
radio-groups
wait
Some of these are complete commands, such as quit and exit. Others
constitute the first word or phrase for a series of commands, such as ethernet
and radio.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Similarly, if you enter the word platform and press <TAB> twice, the first
word or phrase of every command that follows platform is displayed:
root> platform
activation-key
configuration
if-manager
security
software
status
sync
unit-info
unit-info-file
root> platform
management
13.5
The system will prompt you to enter your existing password. The system will
then prompt you to enter the new password.
If Enforce Password Strength is activated, the password must meet the
following criteria:
Password length must be at least eight characters.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
13.6
13.7
You can enter the unit's address in IPv4 format and/or in IPv6 format. The
unit will receive communications whether they were sent to its IPv4 address
or its IPv6 address.
To set the unit's IP address in IPv4 format, enter the following command in
root view to configure the IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway:
root> platform management ip set ipv4-address <ipv4-address>
subnet <subnet> gateway <gateway> name <name> description
<name>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
ipv4-address
subnet
gateway
name
Text String.
description
Text String.
Enter a description
(optional).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To set the unit's IP address in IPv6 format, enter the following command in
root view to configure the IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway:
root> platform management ip set ipv6-address <ipv6-address>
prefix-length <prefix-length> gateway <gateway>
Note:
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
ipv6-address
prefix-length
Number.
1-128
gateway
Examples
The command below sets the following parameters:
IPv4 Address - 192.168.1.160
Subnet Mask 255.255.0.0
Default Gateway 192.168.1.100
root> platform management ip set ipv4-address 192.168.1.160
subnet 255.255.0.0 gateway 192.168.1.100
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
13.8
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
If the activation key is not legal (e.g., a typing mistake or an invalid serial
number), an Activation Key Loading Failure event is sent to the Event Log.
When a legal activation key is entered, an Activation Key Loaded Successfully
event is sent to the Event Log.
To display the current status of demo mode, enter the following command in
root view:
root> platform activation-key show demo status
To display a list of the radio capacities that your current activation key
supports and their usage information, enter the following command in root
view:
root> platform activation-key show usage radio
13.9
IP-20 uses the Universal Time Coordinated (UTC) standard for time and date
configuration. UTC is a more updated and accurate method of date
coordination than the earlier date standard, Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
Every IP-20 unit holds the UTC offset and daylight savings time information
for the location of the unit. Each management unit presenting the information
uses its own UTC offset to present the information with the correct time.
To set the UTC time, enter the following command in root view:
root> platform management time-services utc set date-and-time
<date-and-time>
To set the local time offset relative to UTC, enter the following command in
root view:
root> platform management time-services utc set offset hoursoffset <hours-offset> minutes-offset <minutes-offset>
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the local time configurations, enter the following command in root
view:
root> platform management time-services show status
Description
date-and-time
Number
dd-mm-yyyy,hh:mm:ss
where:
dd = date
mm = month
yyyy= year
hh = hour
mm = minutes
ss = seconds
hours-offset
Number
-12 13
minutes-offset
Number
0 59
Examples
The following command sets the GMT date and time to January 30, 2014,
3:07 pm and 58 seconds:
root> platform management time-services utc set date-and-time
30-01-2014,15:07:58
The following command sets the GMT offset to 13 hours and 32 minutes:
root> platform management time-services utc set offset hoursoffset 13 minutes-offset 32
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
start-date-month Number
1 12
start-date-day
Number
1 31
end-date-month
Number
1 12
end-date-day
Number
1 31
offset
Number
0 23
Examples
The following command configures daylight savings time as starting on May
30 and ending on October 1, with an offset of 20 hours.
root> platform management time-services daylight-savings-time
set start-date-month 5 start-date-day 30 end-date-month 10 enddate-day 1 offset 20
Note:
To display the status of all the interfaces in the unit, enter the following
command in root view:
root> platform if-manager show interfaces
Description
interface-type
Variable
ethernet
radio
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Description
slot
Number
Ethernet: 1
Radio in IP-20C or IP-20S: 2
Radio in IP-20E: 16
port
Number
GbE 1: 1
GbE 2: 2
GbE 3: 3
Radio Carrier 1: 1
Radio Carrier 2 (IP-20C only): 2
admin
Variable
up
down
Examples
The following command enables Ethernet port 2:
root> platform if-manager set interface-type ethernet slot 1
port 2 admin up
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
slot
Number
Description
IP-20E units: 16
port
Number
Radio Carrier 1: 1
Radio Carrier 2 (IP-20C only): 2
Examples
The following command enters radio view for radio carrier 1:
root> radio slot 2 port 1
Note:
To display the mute status of a radio, enter the following command in radio
view:
radio[x/x]>rf mute show status
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
admin
Variable
on
off
Examples
The following command mutes radio carrier 1 in an IP-20C or IP-20S unit:
radio[2/1]>rf mute set admin on
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the maximum transmit (TX) level of a radio, enter the following
command in radio view:
radio[x/x]>rf show max-tx-level
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
tx-level
Number
IP-20E units: -1 to 12
Examples
The following command sets the TX level of radio carrier 1 in an IP-20C
or IP-20S unit to 10 dBm:
radio[2/1]>rf set tx-level 10
The following command sets the TX level of the radio in an IP-20E unit to
10 dBm:
radio[16/1]>rf set tx-level 10
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
tx-frequency
Number
local-remote
Variable
enable
disable
Examples
The following command sets the TX frequency of radio carrier 1 in an IP-20C
or IP-20S unit to 12900000 KHz, and sets the RX frequency of the remote unit
to the same value.
radio[2/1]>rf set tx-frequency 12900000 local-remote enable
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following command sets the TX frequency of the radio in an IP-20E unit to
71000000 KHz, and sets the RX frequency of the remote unit to the same
value.
radio[16/1]> rf set tx-frequency 71000000 local-remote enable
The following command sets the TX frequency of the radio in an IP-20E unit to
71000000 KHz, but does not set the RX frequency of the remote unit.
radio[16/1]> rf set rx-frequency 71000000 local-remote disable
Note:
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
script-type
Variable
normal
asymmetrical
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
acm-support
Boolean
yes
no
Examples
The following command displays available symmetrical (normal) scripts with
ACM support for radio carrier 2 in an IP-20C unit:
radio[2/2]>mrmc script show script-type normal acm-support yes
To assign a script with ACM enabled, enter the following command in radio
view:
radio[x/x]> mrmc set acm-support script-id <script-id>
modulation adaptive max-profile <profile>
To assign a script without ACM enabled, enter the following command in radio
view:
radio[x/x]> mrmc set acm-support script-id <script-id>
modulation fixed profile <profile>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
script-id
Number
modulation
Variable
Depends on available
scripts.
adaptive
fixed
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
profile
Number
Examples
The following command assigns MRMC script ID 1503, with ACM enabled and
a maximum profile of 9, to radio carrier 1 in an IP-20C and IP-20S unit:
radio[2/1]>mrmc set acm-support script-id 13 modulation
adaptive max-profile 9
The following command assigns MRMC script ID 1502, with ACM disabled and
a maximum profile of 5, to radio carrier 2 in an IP-20C unit:
radio[2/2]>mrmc set acm-support script-id 13 modulation fixed
profile 5
The following command assigns MRMC script ID 1700, with ACM disabled and
a maximum profile of 5, to radio carrier 2 in an IP-20E unit:
radio[16/1]>mrmc set acm-support script-id 1700 modulation
fixed profile 5
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
and fully functional for that radio link. Note that the feature is configured and
operates independently for each radio link.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
14.
14.1
Configuration
Supported
Products
IP-20C
IP-20C/S/E
XPIC
IP-20C
IP-20C/S/E
IP-20C
IP-20C
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
14.2
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
group group_id 1
attach-member slot 2 port 1
attach-member slot 2 port 2
exit
14.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
LAG can be used to provide interface redundancy, both on the same card (line
protection) and on separate cards (line protection and equipment protection).
LAG can also be used to aggregate several interfaces in order to create a wider
(aggregate) link. For example, LAG can be used to create a 4 Gbps channel.
You can create up to four LAG groups.
The following restrictions exist with respect to LAG groups:
2 Repeat this process for each interface you want to assign to the LAG.
To enter interface view for a LAG, enter the following command in root view:
root> ethernet interfaces group <lagid>
To display details about a LAG, go to interface view for the LAG and enter the
following command:
eth group [lagx]> summary show
To display a LAG's operational state, go to interface view for the LAG and enter
the following command:
eth group [lagx]> operational state show
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display a list of interfaces that belong to a LAG, go to interface view for the
LAG and enter the following command:
eth group [lagx]> port static-lag show members
To remove a member radio interface from a LAG, go to interface view for the
LAG and enter the following command:
eth group [lagx]> port static-lag remove member interface radio
slot <slot> port <port>
To delete a LAG, go to interface view for the LAG and simply remove all the
members, as described above.
Table 79: LAG Group CLI Parameters
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
lagid
Variable
lag1
lag2
lag3
lag4
slot
Number
Ethernet: 1
Radio in IP-20C or IP-20S: 2
Radio in IP-20E: 16
port
Number
GbE 1: 1
GbE 2: 2
GbE 3: 3
Radio Carrier 1: 1
Radio Carrier 2 (IP-20C only): 2
Examples
The following commands create a LAG with the ID lag2. The LAG includes the
Ethernet interfaces 1 and 2 and radio interface 1 (in a IP-20C or IP-20S unit):
root> platform if-manager set interface-type ethernet slot 1
port 1 admin down
root> platform if-manager set interface-type ethernet slot 1
port 2 admin down
root> ethernet interfaces eth slot 1 port 1
eth type eth [1/1]>
eth type eth [1/1]> static-lag add lagid lag2
eth type eth [1/1]> exit
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
root>
root> ethernet interfaces eth slot 1 port 2
eth type eth [1/2]>
eth type eth [1/2]> static-lag add lagid lag2
eth type eth [1/2]> exit
root>
root> ethernet interfaces radio slot 2 port 1
eth type radio[2/1]>
eth type radio[2/1]> static-lag add lagid lag2
eth type radio[2/1]> exit
root> platform if-manager set interface-type ethernet slot 1
port 1 admin up
root> platform if-manager set interface-type ethernet slot 1
port 2 admin up
The following command displays the name of the LAG to which Ethernet
port 1 belongs:
eth type eth [1/1]> static-lag show name
Static-lag group name: lag2
Value
enable
down
non-edge-port
1/1
1/2
2/1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
[lag2]>
14.4
This section explains how to configure XPIC and includes the following topics:
XPIC Overview (CLI)
Configuring the Antennas (CLI)
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Note:
User Guide
6 The XPI should be at least 25dB. If it is not, you should adjust the OMT
assembly on the back of the antenna at one side of the link until you
achieve the highest XPI, which should be no less than 25dB. Adjust the
OMT very slowly in a right-left direction. OMT adjustment requires very
fine movements and it may take several minutes to achieve the best
possible XPI. It is recommended to achieve XPI levels between 25dB and
30dB.
7 Enable all four radio carriers and check the XPI levels of both carriers at
both sides of the link by going to radio view and entering one of the
following commands:
radio [x/x]>modem pm-xpi show interval 15min
radio [x/x]>modem pm-xpi show interval 24hr
All four carriers should have approximately the same XPI value. Do not
adjust the XPI at the remote side of the link, as this may cause the XPI at
the local side of the link to deteriorate.
Note:
In some cases, the XPI might not exceed the required 25dB
minimum due to adverse atmospheric conditions. If you
believe this to be the case, you can leave the configuration at
the lower values, but be sure to monitor the XPI to make
sure it subsequently exceeds 25dB. A normal XPI level in
clear sky conditions is between 25 and 30dB.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
14.5
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Note:
To keep the Standby unit up-to-date, after any change to the configuration of
the Active unit enter the copy-to-mate command to copy the configuration to
the Standby unit.
If you are unsure whether the Standby units configuration matches that of the
Active unit, enter the following command in root view. The command output
displays the list of mismatched parameters.
root> platform management protection show mismatch details
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To configure these settings in the standby unit, first enter the mate/root
context, as described in Performing CLI operations on the Standby unit (CLI),
then run the relevant commands, and then switch back to the active unit.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
2 Enter the specific CLI command you want to run in mate/root context.
3 To switch back to the active unit, enter the following command:
mate/root> switch-back
root>
To view the status of the protection link to the mate, enter the following
command in root view:
root> platform management protection show link-status
To view the status of the last copy-to-mate operation, enter the following
command in root view:
root> platform management protection show copy-to-mate status
To view the current lockout status, enter the following command in root
view:
root> platform management protection show lockout status
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
14.6
This section describes how to configure MIMO and space diversity, and
include the following topics:
MIMO and Space Diversity Overview (CLI)
MIMO Mate Management Access (CLI)
Creating a MIMO or Space Diversity Group (CLI)
Enabling/Disabling a MIMO or Space Diversity Group (CLI)
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The same hardware configurations can also be used to implement BBS Space
Diversity. IP-20C supports 1+0, 2+0 and 2+2 Space Diversity.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
group type:
mimo-4x4.
group 1st member:
slot 2 port 1.
group 2nd member:
slot 2 port 2.
group admin status:
disable.
state:
MIMO-Disabled.
advanced state: disabled.
RFU role:
slave.
1st carrier MMI:
-0.0
2nd carrier MMI:
-0.0
1st carrier XPI:
99.0
2nd carrier XPI:
99.0
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
MIMO state
MIMO Mate Interference for the first group member. MMI represents the
difference between the RSL1 and the RSL2 of the remote Master and
Slave transmitters with the same polarization. The nominal range is 0.
The range should be from -3 dB to +3 dB.
MMI is not relevant for 1+0 and 2+0 Space Diversity.
Cross Polarization Interference for the first group member. This is only
relevant in 2+0 Space Diversity configurations and 4x4 MIMO
configurations, where each unit operates in dual polarization (XPIC)
mode. The XPI value should be at least 25 dB. For further information,
refer to Configuring XPIC (CLI).
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
14.7
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
15.
User Guide
Related topics:
15.1
To show the IP protocol version the unit will use when initiating
communications, enter the following command in root view:
root> platform management ip show ip-address-family
15.2
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To set the remote radios subnet mask, enter the following command in radio
view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit set subnet-mask IP <subnet-mask>
To display the remote radios subnet mask, enter the following command in
radio view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit show subnet-mask
To set the remote radios default gateway, enter the following command in
radio view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit set default-gateway IP <ipv4-address>
To display the remote radios default gateway, enter the following command
in radio view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit show default-gateway
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
ipv4-address Dotted
decimal
format.
subnet-mask Dotted
decimal
format.
Examples
The following command sets the default gateway of the remote radio as
192.168.1.20:
radio[2/1]>remote-unit set default-gateway IP 192.168.1.20
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To set the remote radios prefix length , enter the following command in radio
view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit set prefix-length <prefix-length >
To set the remote radios default gateway, enter the following command in
radio view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit set default-gateway-ipv6 IPv6 <ipv6address>
To display the remote radios default gateway, enter the following command
in radio view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit show default-gateway-ipv6
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
prefix-length
1-128
Number
Examples
The following command sets the default gateway of the remote radio as
FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329:
radio[2/1]>remote-unit set default-gateway-ipv6 IPv6
FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329
15.3
RMON MIB.
Proprietary MIB.
Access to the unit is provided by making use of the community and context
fields in SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c/SNMPv3, respectively.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To specify the SNMP version, enter the following command in root view:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp version set
<version>
To specify the SNMP read and write communities, enter the following
command in root view:
root> platform security protocols-control snmpv1v2 set readcommunity <read-community> write-community <write-community>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
admin
Variable
enable
disable
v1
version
Variable
v2
v3
readcommunity
Text String
writecommunity
Text String
Example
The following commands enable SNMP v2 on the unit, and set the read
community to public and the write community to private:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp admin set enable
root> platform security protocols-control snmp version set v2
root> platform security protocols-control snmpv1v2 set readcommunity public write-community private
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display all SNMP v3 users and their authentication parameters, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp v3authentication show
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
set-block
Variable
yes
no
Text String
v3-userpassword
Text String
v3-securitymode
Variable
authNoPriv
authPriv
noAuthNoPriv
v3-encryptionmode
Variable
None
DES
AES
v3-authalgorithm
Variable
None
SHA
MD5
v3-accessmode
Variable
readWrite
readOnly
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following commands enable SNMP v2 on the unit, and set the read
community to public and the write community to private:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp admin set enable
root> platform security protocols-control snmp version set v2
root> platform security protocols-control snmpv1v2 set readcommunity public write-community private
The following commands enable SNMP v3 on the unit, block SNMP v1 and
SNMP v2 access, and define an SNMPv3 user with User Name=Geno,
Password=abcdefgh, security mode authPriv, encryption mode DES,
authentication algorithm SHA, and read-write access:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp admin set enable
root> platform security protocols-control snmp version set v3
root> platform security protocols-control snmp v1v2-block set
yes
root> platform security protocols-control snmp v3authentication add v3-user-name geno v3-user-password abcdefgh
v3-security-mode authPriv v3-encryption-mode DES v3-authalgorithm SHA v3-access-mode readWrite
To display all SNMP v3 users and their authentication parameters, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp v3authentication show
To display the current MIB version used in the system, enter the following
command in root view:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp show-mib-version
To display details about the current MIB version used in the system, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp show-mibversion-table
To display the SNMP read and write communities, enter the following
command in root view:
root> platform security protocols-control snmpv1v2 show
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To modify the settings of an SNMP trap manger, enter the following command
in root view:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp trap-manager set
manager-id <manager-id> manager-admin <manager-admin> manageripv4 <manager-ipv4> manager-ipv6<manager-ipv6> manager-port
<manager-port> manager-community <manager-community> managerv3-user <manager-v3-user> manager-description <managerdescription>
To enable an SNMP trap manger without modifying its parameters, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform security protocols-control snmp trap-manager
admin manager-id <manager-id> manager-admin <manager-admin>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
manager-id
Number.
14
manageradmin
Variable.
enable
disable
manager-port Number.
70 65535
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
managercommunity
Text String.
manager-v3user
Text String.
managerdescription
Text String.
managerheartbeat
Number.
Examples
The following commands enable trap manager 2, and assign it IP address
192.168.1.250, port 164, and community private, with a heartbeat of
12 minutes.
root> platform security protocols-control snmp trap-manager set
manager-id 2 manager-admin enable manager-ip 192.168.1.250
manager-port 164 manager-community private manager-description
text
root> platform security protocols-control snmp trap-manager
heartbeat manager-id 2 manager-heartbeat 12
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
15.4
User Guide
Software bundles can be downloaded via FTP or SFTP. After the software
download is complete, you can initiate the installation.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
server-ipv4
server-ipv6
directory
Text String.
serverusername
Text String.
serverpassword
Text String.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Enter Yes at the prompt. When the prompt appears again, enter the following
command to check the download status:
root> platform software download status show
If the software version on the FTP or SFTP server has already been
downloaded to the unit, the following message appears:
DOWNLOAD VERSION status: all components exist, process
percentage: 0
If you wish to delay the start of installation, enter instead the following
command. The time you enter in HH:MM format is the amount of time to delay
until the start of the installation process:
root> platform software install version timer-countdown <hh:mm>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Important Notes:
DO NOT reboot the unit during software installation process. As soon
as the process is successfully completed, the unit will reboot itself.
Sometimes the installation process can take up to 30 minutes.
Only in the event that software installation was not successfully
finished and more than 30 minutes have passed can the unit be
rebooted.
If you configured delayed installation, you can do any of the following:
Show the time left until the installation process begins. To do so, enter the
following command:
root> platform software install time-to-install
15.5
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To set the FTP or SFTP parameters for configuration file import and export,
enter one of the following commands in root view:
If the IP protocol selected in platform management ip set ip-addressfamily is IPv4, enter the following command:
root> platform configuration channel server set ipaddress <server-ipv4> directory <directory> filename <filename>
username <username> password <password>
If the IP protocol selected in platform management ip set ip-addressfamily is IPv6, enter the following command:
root> platform configuration channel server-ipv6 set ipaddress <server-ipv6> directory <directory> filename <filename>
username <username> password <password>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To set the file transfer protocol you want to use (FTP or SFTP), enter the
following command:
root>platform configuration channel set protocol <ftp|sftp>
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
server-ipv4
Dotted decimal
format.
server-ipv6
directory
Text String.
filename
Text String.
username
Text String.
password
Text String.
Examples
The following command configures the FTP channel for configuration file
import and export to IP address 192.168.1.99, in the directory current, with
file name version_8_backup.zip, user name anonymous, and password
12345.
root> platform configuration channel server set server-ip
192.168.1.99 directory \current filename version_8_backup.zip
username anonymous password 12345
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted
Values
restore-point
Variable
restore-point-1
restore-point-2
Description
Identifies the restore point to or from which
to perform the backup operation.
restore-point-3
Examples
The following commands save the current configuration as a configuration at
Restore Point 1, and export the file to the external server location:
root> platform configuration configuration-file add restorepoint-1
root> platform configuration configuration-file export restorepoint-1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted
Values
restore-point
Variable
restore-point-1
restore-point-2
Description
Identifies the restore point to or from which
to perform the backup operation.
restore-point-3
Examples
The following commands import a configuration file from an external PC or
laptop to Restore Point 2 on the IP-20, and restore the file to be the system
configuration file for the IP-20:
root> platform configuration configuration-file import restorepoint-2
root> platform configuration configuration-file restore
restore-point-2
15.6
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
15.7
15.8
To define a location for the unit, enter the following command in root view:
root> platform management system-location set name <name>
To define a contact person for questions pertaining to the unit, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform management system-contact set name <name>
To define the unit's latitude coordinates, enter the following command in root
view:
root> platform management system-latitude set <latitude>
To define the type of measurement unit you want the system to use, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform management set unit_measure_format
<unit_measure_format>
To display the type of measurement unit used by the system, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform management show unit_measure_format
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Description
name
Text
Up to 64 characters.
latitude
Text
Up to 256 characters.
longitude
Text
Up to 256 characters.
metric
unit_measure_format Variable
imperial
Examples
The following commands configure a name, location, contact person, latitude
coordinates, longitude coordinates, and units of measurements for the IP-20:
root> platform management system-name set name "My-System-Name"
root> platform management system-location set name "My-SystemLocation"
root> platform management system-contact set name "John Doe"
root> platform management system-latitude set 40
root> platform management system-longitude set 73
root> platform management set unit_measure_format metric
15.9
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
admin
Variable.
enable
disable
ntp-version
Variable.
v3
v4
ntp-server-ip- Dotted decimal Any valid IP address. Enter the IP address of the NTP server.
address
format.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following command enables NTP, using NTP v4, and sets the IP address of
the NTP server as 62.90.139.210.
root> platform management ntp set admin enable ntp-version
ntpv4 ntp-server-ip-address-1
For example:
root> platform management inventory show info
System information:
card-name : IP-20
Subtype : 350
part number : 22-0001-0|
serial number : F493606212
company name : Ceragon Networks Ltd.
product name : AODU DC, All-outdoor, dual radio carriers in one
product
product description : AODU DC, All-outdoor, dual radio carriers
in one product
root>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
16.
User Guide
Related topics:
Entering Radio View (CLI)
Note that to view and configure radio parameters, you must first enter the
radios view level in the CLI. For details, refer to Entering Radio View (CLI).
Note:
16.1
Related topics
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the mute status of the remote radio, enter the following command
in radio view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit mute show status
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
admin
Variable
on
off
To display the transmit (TX) level of the remote radio, enter the following
command in radio view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit show tx-level
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
tx-level
Number
Depends on the
frequency and unit
type.
The following command sets the TX level of the remote radio to 10 dBm:
radio[2/1]>remote-unit set tx-level 10
To display the RX reference level for ATPC on the remote radio, enter the
following command in radio view:
radio[x/x]>remote-unit atpc show ref-level
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
ref-level
Number
-70 - -30
The following command sets the ATPC RX reference level of the remote radio
to -55:
radio[2/1]>remote-unit atpc set ref-level -55
16.2
To set the RX reference level for ATPC, enter the following command in radio
view
radio[x/x]>atpc set rx-level atpc_ref_rx_level <rx-level>
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the RX reference level for ATPC, enter the following command in
radio view:
radio[x/x]>atpc show rx-level
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
admin
Variable
enable
disable
rx-level
Number
-70 - -30
The following commands enable ATPC mode for radio carrier 1 in an IP-20C
or IP-20S unit and set the RX reference level to -55:
radio[2/1]>atpc set admin enable
radio[2/1]>atpc set rx-level atpc_ref_rx_level -55
The following commands enable ATPC mode for the radio in an IP-20E unit
and set the RX reference level to -55:
radio[16/1]> atpc set admin enable
radio[16/1]> atpc set rx-level atpc_ref_rx_level -55
16.3
Note:
You can define a specific flow type in order to measure the number of
instances of that flow type. To define a flow type, enter the following
command in radio view:
radio[2/1]> compression header-compression set flow-type <flowtype>
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
admin
Variable
Enable
disable
mode
Variable
Disabled
Layer2
MPLS
Layer3
Layer4
Tunnel
Tunnel-Layer3
Tunnel-Layer4
flow-type
Bit Mask
0x00 to 0xFF
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
TX out octet count - Bytes on the TX side that were compressed by Header
De-Duplication.
TX frame in count - Frames on the TX side before Header De-Duplication.
TX frame out compressed count - Frames on the TX side that were
compressed by Header De-Duplication.
TX frame uncompressed count - The number of frames on the TX side that
were not compressed due to exclusion rules.
Note:
16.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
16.5
User Guide
To clear all radio PMs in the system, enter the following command in root
view:
root> radio pm clear all
To clear defective blocks counters for a radio, enter the following command in
radio view:
radio[x/x]>modem clear counters
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display modem BER PMs in daily intervals, enter the following command in
radio view:
radio [x/x]>framer pm-aggregate show interval 24hr
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Description
Interval
The number of the interval: 1-30 for daily PM reports, and 1-96 for 15 minute PM
reports.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval
are reliable. "1" in the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a
possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that time.
ES
Indicates the number of seconds in the measuring interval during which errors
occurred.
SES
UAS
Indicates the Unavailable Seconds value of the measured interval. The value can be
between 0 and 900 seconds (15 minutes).
BBE
Indicates the number of background block errors during the measured interval.
To set the level above which an excessive BER alarm is issued for errors
detected over the radio link, enter the following command in radio view:
radio [x/x]>modem excessive-ber set threshold <threshold>
To display the excessive BER threshold, enter the following command in radio
view:
radio [x/x]>modem excessive-ber show threshold
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
admin
Variable
enable
disable
threshold
Variable
1e -3
1e -4
1e -5
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
threshold1
Number
-75 - -15
threshold2
Number
-75 - -15
The following command sets the RSL thresholds to -30 dBm and -60 dBm,
respectively.
radio [2/1]>rf pm-rsl set threshold1 -30 threshold2 -60
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
threshold
Number
-10 - 34
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display RSL and TSL PMs in daily intervals, enter the following command in
radio view:
radio [x/x]>rf pm-rsl-tsl show interval 24hr
Description
Interval
The number of the interval: 1-30 for daily PM reports, and 1-96 for 15 minute
PM reports.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured
interval are reliable. "1" in the column indicates that the values are not reliable
due to a possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that time.
The minimum RSL (Received Signal Level) that was measured during the
interval.
The maximum RSL (Received Signal Level) that was measured during the
interval.
The minimum TSL (Transmit Signal Level) that was measured during the
interval.
The maximum TSL (Transmit Signal Level) that was measured during the
interval.
TSL exceed
threshold seconds
The number of seconds the measured TSL exceeded the threshold during the
interval. See Configuring TSL Thresholds (CLI).
RSL exceed
The number of seconds the measured RSL exceeded RSL threshold 1 during
threshold1 seconds the interval. See Configuring RSL Thresholds (CLI).
RSL exceed
The number of seconds the measured RSL exceeded RSL threshold 2 during
threshold2 seconds the interval. See Configuring RSL Thresholds (CLI).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the Signal Degrade BER threshold, enter the following command in
radio view:
radio [x/x]>modem signal-degrade show threshold
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
threshold
Variable
1e -6
1e -7
1e -8
1e -9
1e -10
16.5.8 Configuring the MSE Thresholds and Displaying the MSE PMs
(CLI)
To configure the MSE (Mean Square Error) threshold, enter the following
command in radio view:
radio [x/x]>modem set mse-exceed threshold <threshold>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
threshold
Number
-99 - -1
To display MSE (Mean Square Error) PMs in 15-minute intervals, enter the
following command in radio view:
radio [x/x]>modem pm-mse show interval 15min
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following is a partial sample output of the modem pm-mse show interval
15min command:
radio [2/1]>modem pm-mse show interval 15min
Integrity
Exceed
threshold
seconds
===============================================================
0
1
0.00
0.00
708
1
1
0.00
0.00
900
2
1
0.00
0.00
900
3
1
0.00
0.00
900
4
1
0.00
0.00
900
5
1
0.00
0.00
900
6
1
0.00
0.00
900
7
1
0.00
0.00
900
8
1
0.00
0.00
900
9
1
0.00
0.00
900
10
1
0.00
0.00
900
radio [2/1]>
To display MSE (Mean Square Error) PMs in daily intervals, enter the
following command in radio view:
radio [x/x]>modem pm-mse show interval 24hr
Integrity
Exceed
threshold
seconds
===============================================================
0
1
0.00
0.00
63745
4
1
0.00
0.00
37062
5
1
0.00
0.00
3495
6
1
0.00
0.00
85976
8
1
0.00
0.00
46173
11
1
0.00
0.00
24185
15
1
0.00
0.00
85988
17
1
0.00
0.00
54981
radio [2/1]>modem
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Description
Interval
The number of the interval: 1-30 for daily PM reports, and 1-96 for 15 minute PM
reports.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval
are reliable. "1" in the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a
possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that time.
Max MSE (dB) Indicates the maximum MSE in dB, measured during the interval.
Exceed
Threshold
Seconds
Indicates the number of seconds the MSE exceeded the MSE PM threshold during
the interval.
16.5.9 Configuring the XPI Thresholds and Displaying the XPI PMs
(CLI)
To configure the modem XPI threshold for calculating XPI Exceed Threshold
seconds, enter the following command in radio view:
radio[x/x]>modem set threshold-xpi-exceed threshold <threshold>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
threshold
Number
0-99
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following is a partial sample output of the modem pm-xpi show interval
15min command:
radio [2/1]>modem pm-xpi show interval 15min
Modem XPI PM Table:
===================
Interval
Integrity
XPI below
threshold
seconds
===============================================================
1
1
55.00
0.00
0
2
1
55.00
0.00
0
3
1
55.00
0.00
0
4
1
55.00
0.00
0
5
1
55.00
0.00
0
6
1
55.00
0.00
0
7
1
55.00
0.00
0
8
1
55.00
0.00
0
9
1
55.00
0.00
0
10
1
55.00
0.00
0
11
1
55.00
0.00
0
12
1
55.00
0.00
0
13
1
55.00
0.00
0
14
1
55.00
0.00
0
15
1
55.00
0.00
0
16
1
55.00
0.00
0
17
1
55.00
0.00
0
18
1
55.00
0.00
0
19
1
55.00
0.00
0
20
1
55.00
0.00
0
radio [2/1]>
To display XPI PMs in daily intervals, enter the following command in radio
view:
radio[x/x]>modem pm-xpi show interval 24hr
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following is a partial sample output of the modem pm-xpi show interval
24hr command:
radio [2/1]>modem pm-xpi show interval 24hr
Modem XPI PM Table:
===================
Interval
Integrity
XPI below
threshold
seconds
===============================================================
1
1
55.00
0.00
0
2
1
55.00
0.00
0
3
1
55.00
0.00
0
4
1
55.00
0.00
0
5
1
55.00
0.00
0
6
1
55.00
0.00
0
7
1
55.00
0.00
0
8
1
55.00
0.00
0
9
1
55.00
0.00
0
10
1
55.00
0.00
0
11
1
55.00
0.00
0
12
1
55.00
0.00
0
13
1
55.00
0.00
0
14
1
55.00
0.00
0
15
1
55.00
0.00
0
16
1
55.00
0.00
0
17
1
55.00
0.00
0
18
1
55.00
0.00
0
19
1
55.00
0.00
0
20
1
55.00
0.00
0
radio [2/1]>
Description
Interval
The number of the interval: 1-30 for daily PM reports, and 1-96 for 15 minute PM
reports.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval
are reliable. "1" in the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a
possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that time.
Indicates the lowest XPI value in dB, measured during the interval.
Indicates the highest XPI value in dB, measured during the interval.
XPI Below
Threshold
Seconds
Indicates the number of seconds the XPI value was lower than the XPI threshold
during the interval.
The following command sets the XPI threshold for radio carrier 2 to 15:
radio[2/1]>modem set threshold-xpi-below threshold 15
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following is a partial sample output of the modem pm-acm show interval
15min command:
radio [2/1]>mrmc pm-acm show interval 15min
MRMC PM Table:
==============
Interval Integrity
Min profile
Max profile
Min bitrate
Max bitrate
============================================================================
0
1
0
0
43389
43389
1
1
0
0
43389
43389
2
1
0
0
43389
43389
3
1
0
0
43389
43389
4
1
0
0
43389
43389
5
1
0
0
43389
43389
6
1
0
0
43389
43389
7
1
0
0
43389
43389
8
1
0
0
43389
43389
9
1
0
0
43389
43389
10
1
0
0
43389
43389
radio [2/1]>
To display ACM PMs in daily intervals, enter the following command in radio
view:
radio [x/x]>mrmc pm-acm show interval 24hr
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Interval Integrity
Min profile
Max profile
Min bitrate
Max bitrate
===========================================================================
0
1
0
0
43389
43389
4
1
0
0
43389
43389
5
1
0
0
43389
43389
6
1
0
0
43389
43389
8
1
0
0
43389
43389
11
1
0
0
43389
43389
15
1
0
0
43389
43389
17
1
0
0
43389
43389
radio [2/1]>
Description
Interval
The number of the interval: 1-30 for daily PM reports, and 1-96 for 15 minute PM
reports.
Integrity
Indicates whether the values received at the time and date of the measured interval
are reliable. "1" in the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a
possible power surge or power failure that occurred at that time.
Min profile
Indicates the minimum ACM profile that was measured during the interval.
Max profile
Indicates the maximum ACM profile that was measured during the interval.
Min bitrate
Indicates the minimum total radio throughput (Mbps), delivered during the interval.
Max bitrate
Indicates the maximum total radio throughput (Mbps), delivered during the interval.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
17.
User Guide
Related topics:
17.1
Management (MNG)
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
service type
Variable
p2p
mp
p2p - Point-to-Point
mp - Multipoint
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
sid
Number
Operational
reserved
evc-id
Text String
Up to 20 characters.
evcdescription
Text String
Up to 64 characters.
Example
The following command adds a Multipoint service with Service ID 18:
root> ethernet service add type mp sid 18 admin operational
evc-id Ring_1 description east_west
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
sid
Number
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following command enters service view for the service with Service ID 10:
root> ethernet service sid 10
For example:
service[1]>service info show
service info:
service id: 1
service type: p2p
service admin: operational
Maximal MAC address learning entries: 131072
default cos: 0
cos mode: preserve-sp-cos-decision
EVC id: N.A.
EVC description: N.A.
split horizon group: disable
configured multicast grouping: no
service[1]>
To display the attributes of a service and its service points, go to service view
for the service and enter the following command:
service[SID]>service detailed-info show
For example:
To display a list of service points and their attributes, enter the following
command in root view:
root>ethernet service show info sid <sid>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Permitted
Values
Default
Description
sid
Any defined
Service ID.
None
Number
For example:
To display a services admin mode, go to service view for the service and enter
the following command:
Service[SID]> service admin show state
Permitted
Values
Description
service
admin mode
Operational
reserved
Variable
Example
The following command sets Service 10 to be operational:
service[10]>service admin set operational
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
If the CoS mode is set to default-cos, you must define the Default CoS. Use the
following command to define the Default CoS:
service[SID]>service default-cos set cos <cos>
Permitted
Values
Description
cos-mode
default-cos
Variable
preserve-spcos-decision
cos
Number
07
Examples
The following commands configure Service 10 to assign a CoS value of 7 to
frames traversing the service:
service[10]>service cos-mode set cos-mode default-cos
service[10]>service default-cos set cos 7
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display a services EVC ID, go to service view for the service and enter the
following command:
service[SID]>service evcid show
To add or change the EVC description of a service, go to service view for the
service and enter the following command:
service[SID]>service description set <evc description>
To display a services EVC description, go to service view for the service and
enter the following command:
service[SID]>service description show
Input
Type
Permitted
Values
evcid
Text String Up to 20
characters.
Description
Defines an Ethernet Virtual Connection (EVC) ID.
This parameter does not affect the network
elements behavior, but is used by the NMS for
topology management.
A text description of the service. This parameter
does not affect the network elements behavior, but
is used by the NMS for topology management.
Examples
The following commands add the EVC ID "East_West" and the EVC description
"Line_to_Radio" to Service 10:
service[10]>service evcid set East_West
service[10]>service description set Line_to_Radio
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Permitted
Values
Description
sid
Any defined
Service ID.
Number
Examples
The following command deletes Service 10:
root>ethernet service delete sid 10
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Table 116 summarizes the service point types available per service type.
Table 116: Service Points per Service Type
Service Point Type
MNG
Service Type
SAP
SNP
Pipe
Management Yes
No
No
No
Point-toPoint
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Multipoint
No
Yes
Yes
No
Table 117 shows which service point types can co-exist on the same interface.
Table 117: Service Point Types per Interface
MNG
SAP SNP
Pipe
MNG
Yes
Yes
Yes
SAP
Yes
Yes
No
No
SNP
Yes
No
Yes
No
PIPE
Yes
No
No
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Pipe service points can be used with the following Attached Interface Types:
Dot1q All C-VLANs and untagged frames that enter the interface are
classified to the same service point.
S-Tag All S-VLANs and untagged frames that enter the interface are
classified to the same service point.
MNG Service Point Classification (CLI)
Management service points can be used with the following Interface Types:
Dot1q A single C-VLAN is classified to the service point.
S-Tag A single S-VLAN is classified to the service point.
QinQ A single S-VLAN and C-VLAN combination is classified to the
service point.
Table 118 and Table 119 show which service point Interface Type
combinations can co-exist on the same interface.
Table 118: Legal Service Point Interface Type Combinations per Interface
SAP and SNP
SP Type
SAP
SNP
802.1q
Bundle-C
Q in Q 802.1q
S-Tag
SAP
802.1q
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
No
No
Bundle-C
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
No
No
Bundle-S
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
No
All to One
No
No
No
Only 1 All to
No
One SP Allowed
No
No
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
SNP
Pipe
MNG
User Guide
SP Type
SAP
SNP
Q in Q
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
No
802.1q
No
No
No
No
No
Yes
No
S-Tag
No
No
No
No
No
No
Yes
802.1q
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
S-Tag
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
802.1q
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
Yes
No
Q in Q
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
No
S-Tag
No
No
No
No
No
No
Yes
Table 119: Legal Service Point Interface Type Combinations per Interface
Pipe and MNG
SP Type
Pipe
MNG
802.1q
S-Tag
802.1q
Q in Q
S-Tag
SAP
802.1q
No
No
Yes
No
No
Bundle-C
No
No
Yes
No
No
Bundle-S
No
No
No
Yes
No
All to One
No
No
No
No
No
Q in Q
No
No
No
Yes
No
802.1q
No
No
Yes
No
No
S-Tag
No
No
No
No
Yes
802.1q
Yes
No
No
S-Tag
No
No
Yes
802.1q
Yes
No
Only 1 MNG No
SP Allowed
Q in Q
No
No
No
Only 1 MNG No
SP Allowed
S-Tag
No
Yes
No
No
SNP
Pipe
MNG
No
Only 1 MNG
SP Allowed
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To add a service point with a Dot1q interface type, go to service view for the
service and enter the following command:
service[SID]>sp add sp-type <sp-type> int-type dot1q spid <spid> [interface|group] <interface|group> slot <slot> port
<port> vlan <vlan> sp-name <sp-name>
To add a service point with an S-Tag interface type, go to service view for the
service and enter the following command:
service[SID]>sp add sp-type <sp-type> int-type s-tag spid <spid> [interface|group] <interface|group> slot <slot> port
<port> vlan <vlan> sp-name <sp-name>
To add a service point with a Bundle-C interface type, go to service view for
the service and enter the following command:
service[SID]>sp add sp-type <sp-type> int-type bundlec spid <sp-id> [interface|group] <interface|group> slot <slot>
port <port> sp-name <sp-name>
To add a service point with a Bundle-S interface type, go to service view for
the service and enter the following command:
service[SID]>sp add sp-type <sp-type> int-type bundles spid <sp-id> [interface|group] <interface|group> slot <slot>
port <port> [outer-vlan <outer-vlan>|vlan <vlan>] sp-name <spname>
Note:
To add a service point with a Q-in-Q interface type, go to service view for the
service and enter the following command:
service[SID]>sp add sp-type <sp-type> int-type qinq spid <spid> [interface|group] <interface|group> slot <slot> port <port>
outer-vlan <outer-vlan> inner-vlan <inner-vlan> sp-name <spname>
To add a Pipe service point, go to service view for the service and enter the
following command:
service[SID]>sp add sp-type pipe int-type <int-type> spid <spid> [interface|group] <interface|group> slot <slot> port <port>
sp-name <sp-name>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
sp-type
Variable
sap
snp
pipe
mng
all-to-one
bundle-s-tag
qinq
int-type
Variable
dot1q
s-tag
bundle-c-tag
sp-id
Number
Variable
eth
radio
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted
Values
group
Variable
rp1
rp2
rp3
rp4
lag1
lag2
lag3
Description
When you are defining the service point on an
HSB group (rp1 - rp-4), a LAG (lag1 - lag4), or a
Multi-Carrier ABC group (mc-abc1 - mc-abc4),
use this parameter instead of the interface
parameter to identify the group. The group must
be defined before you add the service point.
Note: Multi-Carrier ABC and HSP protection are
only relevant for IP-20C units.
lag4
mc-abc1
mc-abc2
mc-abc3
mc-abc4
slot
port
Number
Number
1-2, 16
For an Ethernet
interface: 1-3
For a radio
interface in IP20C units: 1-2
For a radio
interface in IP20S and IP-20E
units: 1
vlan
Number or
Variable
1-4094 (except
4092 which is
reserved for the
default
management
service), or
Untagged
outer-vlan
Number
1-4094 (except
4092, which is
reserved for the
default
management
service), or
Untagged
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
inner-vlan
Number
sp-name
Text string
Permitted
Values
Description
1-4094 (except
4092, which is
reserved for the
default
management
service), or
Untagged
Up to 20
characters.
Examples
The following command adds an SAP service point with Service Point ID 10 to
Service 37, with interface type dot1q. This service point is located on radio
carrier 1 in an IP-20C or IP-20S unit. VLAN ID 100 is classified to this service
point.
service[37]>sp add sp-type sap int-type dot1q spid 10 interface
radio slot 2 port 1 vlan 100 sp-name Radio
The following command adds an SAP service point with Service Point ID 10 to
Service 37, with interface type bundle-c-tag. This service point is located on
the radio in an IP-20E unit.
service[37]>sp add sp-type sap int-type bundle-c-tag spid 10
interface radio slot 16 port 1 sp-name Radio
The following command adds an SAP service point with Service Point ID 10 to
Service 37, with interface type bundle-s-tag. This service point is located on
radio carrier 2 in an IP-20C unit. S-VLAN 100 is classified to the service point.
service[37]>sp add sp-type sap int-type bundle-s-tag spid 10
interface radio slot 2 port 2 outer-vlan 100 sp-name Radio
The following command adds an SAP service point with Service Point ID 10 to
Service 37, with interface type qinq. This service point is located on radio
carrier 2 in an IP-20C unit. S-VLAN 100 and C-VLAN 200 are classified to the
service point.
service[37]>sp add sp-type sap int-type qinq spid 10 interface
radio slot 2 port 2 outer-vlan 100 inner-vlan 200 sp-name Radio
The following command adds an SAP service point with Service Point ID 10 to
Service 37, with interface type all-to-one. This service point is located on radio
carrier 1 in an IP-20C or IP-20S unit. All traffic entering the system from that
port is classified to the service point.
service[37]>sp add sp-type sap int-type all-to-one spid 10
interface radio slot 2 port 1 sp-name "all-to-one"
The following command adds an SNP service point with Service Point ID 10 to
Service 37, with interface type dot1q. This service point is located on the radio
in an IP-20E unit. VLAN ID 100 is classified to this service point.
service[37]>sp add sp-type snp int-type dot1q spid 10 interface
radio slot 16 port 1 vlan 100 sp-name Radio
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following command adds an SNP service point with Service Point ID 10 to
Service 37, with interface type s-tag. This service point is located on radio
carrier 1 in an IP-20C or IP-20S unit. S-VLAN 100 is classified to the service
point.
service[37]>sp add sp-type snp int-type s-tag spid 10 interface
radio slot 2 port 1 vlan 100 sp-name Radio
The following command adds an SAP service point with Service Point ID 7 to
Service 36, with interface type dot1q. This service point is connected to HSB
group 1 (rp1). VLAN ID 100 is classified to the service point.
service[36]>sp add sp-type sap int-type dot1q spid 7 group
rp1 vlan 100 sp-name test1
The following command adds a Pipe service point with Service Point ID 1 to
Service 1, with interface type dot1q. This service point is connected to Eth1.
service[1]>sp add sp-type pipe int-type dot1q spid 1 interface
eth slot 1 port 1 sp-name pipe_dot1q
The following command adds a Pipe service point with Service Point ID 2 to
Service 1, with interface type dot1q. This service point is located on the radio
in an IP-20E unit.
service[1]>sp add sp-type pipe int-type dot1q spid 2 interface
radio slot 16 port 1 sp-name pipe_dot1q_radio
The following commands create a Smart Pipe service between Eth1 and radio
carrier 1 in an IP-20C or IP-20S unit. This service carries S-VLANs and
untagged frames between the two interfaces:
root> ethernet service add type p2p sid 10 admin
operational evc-id test description east_west
root>
root> ethernet service sid 10
service[10]>
service[10]>sp add sp-type pipe int-type s-tag spid 1 interface
eth slot 1 port 1 sp-name test1
service[10]>
service[10]>sp add sp-type pipe int-type s-tag spid 2 interface
radio slot 2 port 1 sp-name test2
service[10]>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
sp-id
Number
Variable
Allow
disable
Examples
The following command allows frames with a broadcast destination MAC
address to ingress Service 37 via Service Point 1.
service[37]>sp broadcast set spid 1 state allow
The CoS of frames traversing a service can be modified on the logical interface,
service point, and service level. The service point can override the CoS
decision made at the interface level. The service, in turn, can modify the CoS
decision made at the service point level.
To determine whether the service point modifies CoS decisions made at the
interface level, go to service view for the service and enter the following
command:
service[SID]> sp cos-mode set spid <sp-id> mode <cos mode>
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
If you set cos-mode to sp-def-cos, you must then configure a default CoS. This
CoS is applied to frames that ingress the service point, but can be overwritten
at the service level.
To configure the default CoS, go to service view for the service and enter the
following command:
service[SID]>sp sp-def-cos set spid <sp-id> cos <cos>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
sp-id
Number
Variable
sp-def-cos
sp-def-cos - The service point redefines the CoS of frames that pass
through the service point, according
to the Default CoS (below). This
decision can be overwritten on the
service level.
interface-decision
cos
Number
07
Examples
The following commands configure Service Point 1 in Service 37 to apply a
CoS value of 5 to frames that ingress the service point:
service[37]>sp cos-mode set spid 1 mode sp-def-cos
service[37]>sp sp-def-cos set spid 1 cos 5
The ingress service point for a frame can forward the frame within the service
by means of flooding or dynamic MAC address learning in the service.
To enable or disable forwarding by means of flooding for a service point, go to
service view for the service and enter the following command:
service[SID]>sp flooding set spid <sp-id> state <flooding
state>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
sp-id
Number
Variable
Allow
disable
Examples
The following command configures Service Point 1 in Service 37 to flood
incoming frames with unknown MAC addresses to other service points:
service[37]>sp flooding set spid 1 state allow
CoS and VLAN preservation determines whether the CoS and/or VLAN IDs of
frames egressing the service via the service point are restored to the values
they had when the frame entered the service.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
sp-id
Number
Variable
enable
disable
Examples
The following command enables C-VLAN CoS preservation for Service Point 1
on Service 37:
service[37]>sp cvlan-cos-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode
enable
The following command disables C-VLAN CoS preservation for Service Point 1
on Service 37:
service[37]>sp cvlan-cos-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode
disable
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
sp-id
Number
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
c-vlan
preservation
mode
Variable
enable
disable
Examples
The following command enables C-VLAN preservation for Service Point 1 on
Service 37:
service[37]>sp cvlan-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode enable
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
sp-id
Number
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
s-vlan cos
preservation
mode
Variable
enable
disable
Examples
The following command enables S-VLAN CoS preservation for Service Point 1
on Service 37:
service[37]>sp svlan-cos-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode
enable
The following command disables S-VLAN CoS preservation for Service Point 1
on Service 37:
service[37]>sp svlan-cos-preservation-mode set spid 1 mode
disable
You can use service bundles to personalize common sets of egress queue
attributes that can be applied to multiple service points. In this version only
one service bundle is supported.
To assign a service point to a service bundle, go to service view for the service
and enter the following command:
service[SID]>sp egress-service-bundle set spid 1 servicebundle-id <service-bundle-id>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
sp-id
Number
Number
1 63
The service bundle assigned to the
service point.
Note: In the current
release, only
Service Bundle 1
is supported.
Page 412 of 576
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following command assigns Service Bundle 1 to Service Point 1 in Service
37.
service[37]>sp egress-service-bundle set spid 1 service-bundleid 1
Description
sp-id
Number
vlan
Number
to-vlan
Number
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following command classifies C-VLANs 100 through 200 to Service Point 1
in Service 37:
service[37]>sp bundle cvlan attach spid 1 vlan 100 to-vlan 200
The following command removes C-VLANs 100 through 200 from Service
Point 1 in Service 37:
service[37]>sp bundle cvlan remove spid 1 vlan 100 to-vlan 200
Description
sp-id
Number
Example
The following command displays the attributes of Service Point 1 in Service
37:
service[37]>sp service-point-info show spid 1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Description
sp-id
Number
Example
The following command deletes Service Point 10 from Service 37:
service[37]>sp delete spid 10
17.1.5 Defining the MAC Address Forwarding Table for a Service (CLI)
This section includes:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Table 131: MAC Address Forwarding Table Maximum Size CLI Parameters
Parameter
mac limit
Number
Description
Example
The following command limits the number of dynamic MAC address
forwarding table entries for Service 10 to 128:
service[10]>service mac-limit-value set 128
17.1.5.3 Setting the MAC Address Forwarding Table Aging Time (CLI)
You can configure a global aging time for dynamic entries in the MAC address
forwarding table. Once this aging time expires for a specific table entry, the
entry is erased from the table.
To set the global aging time for the MAC address forwarding table, enter the
following command:
root> ethernet service learning-ageing-time set time <time>
To display the global aging time for the MAC address forwarding table, enter
the following command:
root> ethernet service learning-ageing-time show
Table 132: MAC Address Forwarding Table Aging Time CLI Parameters
Parameter
Description
time
Number
15 - 3825
Example
The following command sets the global aging time to 2500 seconds:
root> ethernet service learning-ageing-time set time 2500
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To delete a static MAC address from the MAC address forwarding table, go to
service view for the service from which you want to delete the MAC address
and enter the following command:
service[SID]>service mac-learning-table del-staticmac <static mac> spid <sp-id>
Table 133: Adding Static Address to MAC Address Forwarding Table CLI
Parameters
Parameter
Input Type
static mac
sp-id
Number
Permitted
Values
Description
The MAC address.
1-32
Examples
The following command adds MAC address 00:11:22:33:44:55 to the MAC
address forwarding table for Service 10, and associates the MAC address with
Service Point ID 1 on Service 10:
service[10]>service mac-learning-table set-staticmac 00:11:22:33:44:55 spid 1
To display the MAC address forwarding table for the entire unit, enter the
following command:
root> ethernet generalcfg mac-learning-table show
Example
To display the MAC address forwarding table for GbE 1, enter the following
commands:
root> ethernet interfaces eth slot 1 port 1
eth type eth[1/1]>mac-learning-table show
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The ability to flush the MAC address forwarding table perservice and per-interface is planned for future release.
To perform a global flush of the MAC address forwarding table, enter the
following command:
root> ethernet service mac-learning-table set global-flush
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
sp-id
Number
1-32
learning
Variable
Enable
disable
Examples
The following command enables MAC address learning for Service Point 1 on
Service 37:
service[37]>sp learning-state set spid 1 learning enable
The following command disables MAC address learning for Service Point 1 on
Service 37:
service[37]>sp learning-state set spid 1 learning disable
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
17.2
User Guide
Note:
To display the system S-VLAN ethertype, enter the following command in root
view:
root> ethernet generalcfg ethertype show svlan
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
ethertype
Hexadecimal
0x8100
0x88a8
0x9100
0x9200
Example
For example, the following command sets the system S-VLAN ethertype to
0x88a8:
root> ethernet generalcfg ethertype set svlan-value 0x88a8
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the system MRU, enter the following command in root view:
root> ethernet generalcfg mru show
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
size
Number
64 to 9612
Example
For example, the following command sets the system MRU to 9612:
root> ethernet generalcfg mru set size 9612
17.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Use the following command to enter the radio interfaces view level:
root> ethernet interfaces radio slot <slot> port <port>
Use the following command to enter the view level of a group, such as a MultiCarrier ABC group, an HSB protection group, or a LAG:
root> ethernet interfaces group <group>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
size
Number
64 to 9612
slot
Number
Ethernet: 1
Radio in IP-20C
or IP-20S: 2
Radio in IP-20E : 16
port
Number
GbE 1: 1
GbE 2: 2
GbE 3: 3
Radio Carrier 1: 1
Radio Carrier 2 (IP20C only): 2
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
group
Variable
rp1
rp2
rp3
rp4
lag1
lag2
lag3
lag4
mc-abc1
mc-abc2
mc-abc3
mc-abc4
Example
The following command enters interface view for Ethernet port 3:
root> ethernet interfaces eth slot 1 port 3
The following command enters interface view for the radio interface in an
IP-20S unit:
root> ethernet interfaces radio slot 2 port 1
The following command enters interface view for the radio interface in an
IP-20E unit:
root> ethernet interfaces radio slot 16 port 1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Note:
User Guide
Examples
The following command shows the attributes of GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]>summary show
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
media type
Variable
rj45
sfp
Example
The following command sets GbE 1 to RJ-45 (electrical):
eth type eth [1/2]>media-type state set rj45
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
speed-andduplex state
Variable
'10hd'
'10fd'
'100hd'
'100fd'
'1000fd'
Note:
Examples
The following command sets GbE 1 to 100 Mbps, full duplex:
eth type eth [1/1]>speed-and-duplex state set '100fd'
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
On
off
Example
The following command enables auto negotiation for GbE 2:
eth type eth [1/2]>autoneg state set on
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
ifg
Number
6 - 15
Example
The following command sets the ifg for GbE 1 to 12:
eth type eth [1/1]>ifg set 12
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
preamble
Number
6 - 15
Example
The following command sets the preamble for GbE 1 to 8:
eth type eth [1/1]>preamble set 8
To delete a description, go to interface view for the interface and enter the
following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>description delete
Input Type
description
Text String
Permitted
Values
Description
Up to 40
characters
Example
The following command adds the description Line to GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]>description set Line
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
clear-on-read Boolean
Permitted
Values
Description
yes
no
layer-1
Boolean
yes
no
Example
The following commands enter interface view for GbE 1, and clear the
statistics after displaying them.
root> ethernet interfaces eth slot 1 port 1
eth type eth [1/1]>rmon statistics show clear-on-read yes
layer-1 yes
The following commands enter interface view for radio carrier 1 in an IP-20C
or IP-20S unit, and display statistics for the interface, without clearing the
statistics.
root> ethernet interfaces radio slot 2 port 1
eth type radio[2/1]>rmon statistics show clear-on-read no
layer-1 no
17.4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
eth-slot
Number
Always enter 1.
eth-port
Number
1-3
radio-slot
Number
radio-port
Number
Radio Carrier 1: 1
Number
1-4
protectiongroup
Number
1-4
Example
The following commands configure and enable automatic state propagation to
propagate faults from radio interface 1 to Ethernet port 1 on an IP-20C or IP20S unit.
root> auto-state-propagation add eth-port-to-radio eth-slot 1
eth-port 1 radio-slot 2 radio-port 1
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
lag-id
Number
1-4
radio-slot
Number
radio-port
Number
Radio Carrier 1: 1
Number
1-4
protectiongroup
Number
1-4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following commands configure and enable automatic state propagation to
propagate faults from the radio interface to LAG group 1 on an IP-20E unit.
root> auto-state-propagation add lag-to-radio lag-id 1 radioslot 16 radio-port 1
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
eth-slot
Number
Always enter 1.
eth-port
Number
1-3
asp-admin
Variable
enable
disable
remote-fault- Variable
trigger-admin
enable
disable
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted
Values
csf-modeadmin
Variable
enable
lag-id
Number
disable
1-4
Description
Enables or disables Client Signal Failure (CSF)
mode. In CSF mode, the ASP mechanism does not
physically shut down the Controlled Interface when
ASP is triggered. Instead, the ASP mechanism
sends a failure indication message (a CSF
message). The CSF message is used to propagate
the failure indication to external equipment.
The LAG group to which you want to propagate
faults from the selected radio or group.
Example
The following command enables automatic state propagation to Ethernet port
1 on an IP-20C or IP-20S unit, and specifies that faults on the remote carrier
are also propagated to Ethernet port 1. CSF mode is enabled.
root> auto-state-propagation configure eth-port eth-slot 1 ethport 1 asp-admin enable remote-fault-trigger-admin enable csfmode-admin enable
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
eth-slot
Number
Always enter 1.
eth-port
Number
1-3
lag-id
Number
1-4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted
Values
eth-slot
Number
Always enter 1.
eth-port
Number
1-3
lag-id
Number
1-4
Description
17.5
IP-20 stores and displays statistics in accordance with RMON and RMON2
standards. You can display various peak TX and RX rates (in seconds) and
average TX and RX rates (in seconds), both in bytes and in packets, for each
measured time interval. You can also display the number of seconds in the
interval during which TX and RX rates exceeded the configured threshold.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
clear-on-read Boolean
layer-1
Boolean
Yes
no
If you enter yes, the statistics are cleared once you display
them.
Yes
no
The following commands bring you to interface view for Ethernet port 1, and
clears the statistics after displaying them.
root> ethernet interfaces eth slot 1 port 1
eth type eth [1/1]>rmon statistics show clear-on-read yes
layer-1 yes
The following commands bring you to interface view for radio interface 2,
without clearing the statistics.
root> ethernet interfaces radio slot 2 port 1
eth type radio[2/2]>rmon statistics show clear-on-read no
layer-1 no
You can configure thresholds and display the number of seconds these
thresholds were exceeded during a specified interval.
To configure interface PM thresholds, go to interface view for the interface
and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]> pm set thresholds rx-layer1-rate-threshold
<0-4294967295> tx-layer1-rate-threshold <0-4294967295>
rx-layer1-rate- Number
thershold
0-4294967295
tx-layer1-rate- Number
thershold
0-4294967295
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following commands bring you to interface view for Ethernet port 1,
enable PM gathering, and set the thresholds for RX and TX PMs at 850,000,000
bytes per second:
root> ethernet interfaces eth slot 1 port 1
eth type eth [1/1]>pm set admin enable
eth type eth [1/1]>pm set thresholds rx-layer1-rate-threshold
850000000 tx-layer1-rate-threshold 850000000
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Definition
Interval
For 24-hour intervals, displays the date of the interval. For 15-minute intervals,
displays the date and ending time of the interval.
Indicates whether the values received during the measured interval are valid.
An x in the column indicates that the values are not valid (for example,
because of a power surge or power failure that occurred during the interval).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
Peak RX Packets
The peak rate of RX packets per second for the measured time interval.
Average RX Packets
The average rate of RX packets per second for the measured time interval.
The peak rate of RX broadcast packets per second for the measured time
interval.
Average RX Broadcast Packets The average rate of RX broadcast packets per second for the measured time
interval.
Peak RX Multicast Packets
The peak rate of RX multicast packets per second for the measured time
interval.
The average rate of RX multicast packets per second for the measured time
interval.
The peak RX rate, in bytes per second, for the measured time interval
(including preamble and IFG).
The average RX rate, in bytes per second, for the measured time interval
(including preamble and IFG).
The number of seconds during the measured time interval that the RX rate
exceeded the configured threshold.
The peak RX rate, in bytes per second, for the measured time interval
(excluding preamble and IFG).
The average RX rate, in bytes per second, for the measured time interval
(excluding preamble and IFG).
Peak TX Packets
The peak rate of TX packets per second for the measured time interval.
Average TX Packets
The average rate of TX packets per second for the measured time interval.
The peak rate of TX broadcast packets per second for the measured time
interval.
Average TX Broadcast Packets The average rate of TX broadcast packets per second for the measured time
interval.
Peak TX Multicast Packets
The peak rate of TX multicast packets per second for the measured time
interval.
The average rate of TX multicast packets per second for the measured time
interval.
The peak TX rate, in bytes per second, for the measured time interval
(including preamble and IFG).
The average TX rate, in bytes per second, for the measured time interval
(including preamble and IFG).
The number of seconds during the measured time interval that the TX rate
exceeded the configured threshold.
The peak TX rate, in bytes per second, for the measured time interval
(excluding preamble and IFG).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Definition
The average TX rate, in bytes per second, for the measured time interval
(excluding preamble and IFG).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
18.
User Guide
18.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The classifier at the logical interface level supports the following classification
methods, listed from highest to lowest priority. A higher level classification
method supersedes a lower level classification method:
VLAN ID
802.1p bits.
DSCP values.
MPLS EXP field.
Default CoS
IP-20 performs the classification on each frame ingressing the system via the
logical interface. Classification is performed step by step from the highest
priority to the lowest priority classification method. Once a match is found, the
classifier determines the CoS and Color decision for the frame for the logical
interface-level.
For example, if the frame is an untagged IP Ethernet frame, a match will not be
found until the third priority level (DSCP). The CoS and Color values defined
for the frames DSCP value will be applied to the frame.
You can disable some of these classification methods by configuring them as
un-trusted. For example, if 802.1p classification is configured as un-trusted for
a specific interface, the classification mechanism does not perform
classification by UP bits. This is useful, for example, if classification is based on
DSCP priority bits.
If no match is found at the logical interface level, the default CoS is applied to
incoming frames at this level. In this case, the Color of the frame is assumed to
be Green.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
outer-vlan-id
Number
1 4094 (except
4092, which is
reserved for the
default management
service)
inner-vlan-id
Number
1 4094 (except
4092, which is
reserved for the
default management
service)
use-cos
Number
07
use-color
Variable
green
yellow
Examples
The following command configures the classification mechanism on GbE 1 to
override the CoS and Color values of frames with S-VLAN ID 10 and C-VLAN ID
30 with a CoS value of 6 and a Color value of Green:
eth type eth [1/1]>vlan-cos-override set outer-vlan-id 10
inner-vlan-id 30 use-cos 6 use-color green
The following command displays the CoS and Color override values for frames
that ingress on GbE 1, with S-VLAN ID 10 and C-VLAN ID 20:
eth type eth [1/1]>vlan-cos-override show outer-vlan-id 10
inner-vlan-id 20
The following command displays all CoS and Color override values for frames
that ingress on GbE 2:
eth type eth [1/2]>vlan-cos-override show all
The following command deletes the VLAN to CoS and Color override mapping
for frames that ingress on GbE 1, with S-VLAN ID 10 and C-VLAN ID 20:
eth type eth [1/1]>vlan-cos-override delete outer-vlan-id 10
inner-vlan-id 20
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Modifying the C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI Bit Classification Table (CLI)
Modifying the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI Bit Classification Table (CLI)
To display the trust mode for 802.1p classification, go to interface view for the
interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>classification show 802.1p state
Variable
trust
Enter the interface's trust mode for user priority (UP) bits:
un-trust
Examples
The following command enables 802.1p trust mode for GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]>classification set 802.1p trust
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
18.1.4.2 Modifying the C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI Bit Classification Table (CLI)
The following table shows the default values for the C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI
bit classification table.
Table 155: C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI Bit Classification Table Default Values
802.1 UP
CFI
CoS (configurable)
Color (configurable)
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
To modify the C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI bit classification table, enter the
following command:
root> ethernet qos 802.1q-up-bits-mapping-tbl set 802.1p
<802.1p> cfi <cfi> cos <cos> color <color>
To display the C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI bit classification table, enter the
following command:
root> ethernet qos 802.1q-up-bits-mapping-tbl show
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Table 156: C-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI Bit Classification Table CLI Parameters
Parameter Input Type Permitted Values
Description
802.1p
Number
07
cfi
Number
01
cos
Number
07
color
Variable
green
yellow
Example
The following command maps frames with an 802.1p UP bit value of 1 and a
CFI bit value of 0 to CoS 1 and Green color:
root> ethernet qos 802.1q-up-bits-mapping-tbl set 802.1p
1 cfi 0 cos 1 color green
18.1.4.3 Modifying the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI Bit Classification Table (CLI)
The following table shows the default values for the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI
bit classification table.
Table 157: S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI Bit Classification Table Default Values
802.1 UP
DEI
CoS (Configurable)
Color (Configurable)
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To modify the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI bit classification table, enter the
following command:
root> ethernet qos 802.1ad-up-bits-mapping-tbl set 802.1p
<802.1p> dei <dei> cos <cos> color <color>
To display the S-VLAN 802.1 UP and CFI bit classification table, enter the
following command:
root> ethernet qos 802.1ad-up-bits-mapping-tbl show
Table 158: S-VLAN 802.1 UP and DEI Bit Classification Table CLI Parameters
Parameter Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
802.1p
Number
07
dei
Number
0-1
cos
Number
07
color
Variable
green
yellow
Example
The following command maps frames with an 802.1ad UP bit value of 7 and a
DEI bit value of 0 to CoS 7 and Green color:
root> ethernet qos 802.1ad-up-bits-mapping-tbl set 802.1p 7 dei
0 cos 7 color green
To display the trust mode for DSCP classification, go to interface view for the
interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>classification show 802.1p state
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Variable
trust
un-trust
during classification.
Examples
The following command enables DSCP trust mode for GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]>classification set ip-dscp trust
DSCP (bin)
Description
CoS (Configurable)
Color (Configurable)
0 (default)
000000
BE (CS0)
Green
10
001010
AF11
Green
12
001100
AF12
Yellow
14
001110
AF13
Yellow
18
010010
AF21
Green
20
010100
AF22
Yellow
22
010110
AF23
Yellow
26
011010
AF31
Green
28
011100
AF32
Yellow
30
011110
AF33
Yellow
34
100010
AF41
Green
36
100100
AF42
Yellow
38
100110
AF43
Yellow
46
101110
EF
Green
001000
CS1
Green
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
DSCP
DSCP (bin)
Description
CoS (Configurable)
Color (Configurable)
16
010000
CS2
Green
24
011000
CS3
Green
32
100000
CS4
Green
40
101000
CS5
Green
48
110000
CS6
Green
56
111000
CS7
Green
51
110011
DSCP_51
Green
52
110100
DSCP_52
Green
54
110110
DSCP_54
Green
56
111000
CS7
Green
Description
dscp
Number
cos
Number
07
color
Variable
green
yellow
Example
The following command maps frames with DSCP value of 10 to CoS 1 and
Green color:
root> ethernet qos dscp-mapping-tbl set dscp 10 cos 1 color
green
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the trust mode for MPLS classification, go to interface view for the
interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>classification show mpls state
Description
mpls
Trust
un-trust
Variable
Examples
The following command enables MPLS trust mode for GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]>classification set mpls trust
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
CoS (Configurable)
Color (Configurable)
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Green
Green
To modify the MPLS EXP bit classification table, enter the following command:
root> ethernet qos mpls-exp-bits-mapping-tbl set mpls-exp
<mpls-exp> cos <cos> color <color>
To display the MPLS EXP bit classification table, enter the following command:
root> ethernet qos mpls-mapping-tbl show
Table 164: MPLS EXP Bit Classification Table Modification CLI Parameters
Parameter Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
mpls-exp
Number
07
cos
Number
07
color
Variable
green
yellow
Example
The following command maps frames with MPLS EXP bit value of 4 to CoS 4
and Yellow color:
root> ethernet qos mpls-exp-bits-mapping-tbl set mpls-exp 4
cos 4 color yellow
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the default CoS value for an interface, go to interface view for the
interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>classification show default-cos
Description
default-cos Number
Enter the default CoS value for frames passing through the
interface. This value can be overwritten on the service point
and service level.
07
Example
The following command sets the default CoS for GbE 1 as 7:
eth type eth [1/1]>classification set default-cos 7
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
18.2
User Guide
Policing on the service point level, and the service point and
CoS level, is planned for future release.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To edit an existing rate meter (policer) profile, enter the following command:
root> ethernet qos rate-meter edit profile-id <profile-id> cir
<cir> cbs <cbs> eir <eir> ebs <ebs> color-mode <color-mode>
coupling-flag <coupling-flag> rate-meter-profile-name <ratemeter-profile-name>
profile-id
Number
1 250
cir
Number
0, or 64,000 1,000,000,000
The Committed Information Rate (CIR) defined for the rate meter
(policer), in bits per second.
If the value is 0, all incoming CIR traffic is dropped.
cbs
Number
0 - 128
The Committed Burst Rate (CBR) for the rate meter (policer), in
Kbytes.
eir
Number
0, or 64,000 1,000,000,000
The Excess Information Rate (EIR) for the rate meter (policer), in
bits per second.
If the value is 0, all incoming EIR traffic is dropped.
ebs
Number
0 - 128
The Excess Burst Rate (EBR) for the rate meter (policer), in
Kbytes.
color-mode
Variable
color-blind
Determines how the rate meter (policer) treats frames that ingress
with a CFI or DEI field set to 1 (yellow). Options are:
color-aware
enable
disable
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following command creates a rate meter (policer) profile with Profile ID
50, named 64k.
root> ethernet qos rate-meter add profile-id 50 cir 64000 cbs 5
eir 64000 ebs 5 color-mode color-blind coupling-flag disable
rate-meter-profile-name 64k
CBS 5 Kbytes
The following command edits the rate meter (policer) profile with Profile
ID 50, and changes its name to 256 kBytes.
root> ethernet qos rate-meter edit profile-id 50 cir 128000 cbs
5 eir 128000 ebs 5 color-mode color-aware coupling-flag enable
rate-meter-profile-name 256 kBytes
Example
The following command displays the parameters of Rate Meter Profile 50:
root> ethernet qos rate-meter show profile-id 50
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following command deletes Rate Meter Profile 50:
root> ethernet qos rate-meter delete profile-id 50
To change the rate meter (policer) profile for unicast traffic, go to interface
view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter unicast edit admin-state <adminstate> profile-id <profile-id>
To display the current unicast rate meter (policer) profile for an interface, go
to interface view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter unicast show configuration
To delete the rate meter (policer) profile for unicast traffic, go to interface
view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter unicast delete
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Table 167: Assigning Rate Meter for Unicast Traffic CLI Parameters
Parameter Input Type Permitted Values
Description
admin-state
disable
1 250
profile-id
Variable
Number
enable
Examples
The following command assigns Rate Meter Profile 1 to unicast traffic on
GbE 1, and enables rate metering on the port:
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter unicast add capability adminstate enable profile-id 1
The following command changes the rate meter (policer) profile for unicast
traffic on GbE 1 to 4:
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter unicast edit admin-state enable
profile-id 4
To change the rate meter (policer) profile for multicast traffic, go to interface
view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter multicast edit admin-state
<admin-state> profile-id <profile-id>
To display the current multicast rate meter (policer) profile for an interface,
go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter multicast show configuration
To delete the rate meter (policer) profile for multicast traffic, go to interface
view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter multicast delete
Table 168: Assigning Rate Meter for Multicast Traffic CLI Parameters
Parameter Input Type Permitted Values
Description
admin-state
disable
1 250
profile-id
Variable
Number
enable
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following command assigns Rate Meter Profile 1 to multicast traffic on
GbE 1, and enables rate metering on the port.
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter multicast add capability adminstate enable profile-id 1
The following command changes the rate meter (policer) profile for multicast
traffic on GbE 1 to 4:
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter multicast edit admin-state enable
profile-id 4
To change the rate meter (policer) profile for broadcast traffic, go to interface
view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter broadcast edit admin-state
<admin-state> profile-id <profile-id>
To display the current broadcast rate meter (policer) settings for an interface,
go to interface view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter broadcast show configuration
To delete the rate meter (policer) profile for broadcast traffic, go to interface
view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter broadcast delete
Table 169: Assigning Rate Meter for Broadcast Traffic CLI Parameters
Parameter Input Type Permitted Values Description
admin-state
profile-id
Variable
Number
enable
disable
1 250
Examples
The following command assigns Profile 1 to broadcast traffic on GbE 1, and
enables rate metering on the port.
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter broadcast add capability adminstate enable profile-id 1
The following command changes the rate meter (policer) profile for broadcast
traffic on GbE 1 to 4:
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter broadcast edit admin-state enable
profile-id 4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the current Ethertype rate meter (policer) settings for an interface,
go to interface view for the interface and enter the following commands:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter ethertype1 show configuration
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter ethertype2 show configuration
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter ethertype3 show configuration
To delete the rate meter (policer) profile for an Ethertype, go to interface view
for the interface and enter one or more of the following commands:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter ethertype1 delete
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter ethertype2 delete
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter ethertype3 delete
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
ethertype#
Variable
ethertype1
ethertype2
ethertype3 I
ethertype-value Hexadecimal
1-65535
admin-state
enable
Variable
disable
profile-id
Number
1 250
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following commands assign Rate Meter Profiles 1, 2, and 3 to Ethertypes
0x8000, 0x8100, and 0x9100, respectively, on GbE 1, and enable rate metering
on the port.
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype1 add capability
ethertype-value 0x8000 admin-state enable profile-id 1
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype2 add capability
ethertype-value 0x8100 admin-state enable profile-id 2
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype3 add capability
ethertype-value 0x9100 admin-state enable profile-id 3
The following commands change the rate meter (policer) profiles assigned in
the examples above to 4, 5, and 6, respectively.
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype1 edit ethertype-value
0x8000 admin-state enable profile-id 4
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype2 edit ethertype-value
0x8100 admin-state enable profile-id 5
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype3 edit ethertype-value
0x9100 admin-state enable profile-id 6
To display the rate meter (policer) line compensation value for an interface, go
to interface view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter-compensation-value get
Table 171: Assigning Line Compensation Value for Rate Meter CLI Parameters
Parameter Input Type Permitted Values
Description
value
Number
0 32
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following command sets the line compensation value for policers attached
to GbE 1 to 20:
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter-compensation-value set 20
Green Frames
Green Bytes
Yellow Frames
Yellow Bytes
Red Frames
Red Bytes
Note:
The following commands display rate meter counters for the available frame
types and Ethertypes:
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter unicast show statistics clear-onread <clear-on-read> layer-1 <layer-1>
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter multicast show statistics clearon-read <clear-on-read> layer-1 <layer-1>
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter broadcast show statistics clearon-read <clear-on-read> layer-1 <layer-1>
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter ethertype1 show statistics clearon-read <clear-on-read> layer-1 <layer-1>
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter ethertype2 show statistics clearon-read <clear-on-read> layer-1 <layer-1>
eth type eth [x/x]>rate-meter ethertype3 show statistics clearon-read <clear-on-read> layer-1 <layer-1>
Input Type
clear-on-read Boolean
layer 1
Boolean
Permitted Values
Description
yes
no
yes
no
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following commands display rate meter counters for GbE 1, for each of the
available frame types and Ethertypes. These commands clear the counters
after displaying them.
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter unicast show statistics clear-onread yes layer-1 no
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter multicast show statistics clearon-read yes layer-1 no
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter broadcast show statistics clearon-read yes layer-1 no
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype1 show statistics clearon-read yes layer-1 no
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype2 show statistics clearon-read yes layer-1 no
eth type eth [1/1]>rate-meter ethertype3 show statistics clearon-read yes layer-1 no
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
18.3
User Guide
If marking and CoS preservation for the relevant outer VLAN are both
disabled, special marking is applied. Special marking means that marking is
performed, but only according to the values defined for Green frames in the
802.1Q and 802.1AD marking tables.
When marking is performed, the C-VLAN or S-VLAN 802.1p UP bits are remarked according to the calculated CoS and Color.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Description
sp-id
Number
mode
Variable
enable
disable
Examples
The following command enables marking mode on Service Point 3 on
Service 2:
service[2]>sp marking set spid 3 mode enable
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Color
802.1q (Configurable)
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
To modify the 802.1q CoS and Color to UP and CFI bit mapping table, enter the
following command in root view:
root> ethernet qos 802.1q-up-bits-marking-tbl set cos <cos>
color <color> 802.1p <802.1p> cfi <cfi>
To display the 802.1q CoS and Color to UP and CFI bit mapping table, enter the
following command in root view:
root> ethernet qos 802.1q-up-bits-marking-tbl show
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Table 175: 802.1q CoS and Color to UP and CFI Bit Mapping Table CLI
Parameters
Parameter Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
cos
Number
07
color
Variable
green
yellow
802.1p
Number
07
cfi
Number
01
Example
The following command maps CoS 0, Green, to 802.1p UP bit 0, and CFI bit 0:
root> ethernet qos 802.1q-up-bits-marking-tbl set cos 0 color
green 802.1p 0 cfi 0
Color
802.1ad UP (Configurable)
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
Green
Yellow
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To modify the 802.1ad CoS and Color to UP and DEI bit mapping table, enter
the following command in root view:
root> ethernet qos 802.1ad-up-bits-marking-tbl set cos <cos>
color <color> 802.1p <802.1p> dei <dei>
To display the 802.1q CoS and Color to UP and CFI bit mapping table, enter the
following command in root view:
root> ethernet qos 802.1ad-up-bits-marking-tbl show
Description
cos
Number
07
color
Variable
green
yellow
802.1p
Number
07
dei
Number
01
Example
The following command marks CoS 5, Yellow, to 802.1p UP bit 5, and DEI bit 1:
root> ethernet qos 802.1ad-up-bits-marking-tbl set cos 5 color
yellow 802.1p 5 dei 1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
18.4
User Guide
To edit an existing WRED profile, enter the following command in root view:
root> ethernet qos wred-profile-tbl edit profile-id <profileid> green-min-threshold <green-min-threshold> green-maxthreshold <green-max-threshold> green-max-drop <green-max-drop>
yellow-min-threshold <yellow-min-threshold> yellow-maxthreshold <yellow-max-threshold> yellow-max-drop <yellow-maxdrop>
You cannot delete an WRED profile that is assigned to a queue. You must first
remove the WRED profile from the queue by replacing it with a different
WRED profile. You can then delete the WRED profile.
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Note:
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
profile-id
Number
1 - 30
green-min-threshold
Number
0 - 8192
green-max-threshold
Number
0 - 8192
green-max-drop
Number
1 - 100
yellow-min-threshold
Number
0 - 8192
yellow-max-threshold
Number
0 - 8192
yellow-max-drop
Number
1 - 100
Examples
The following command adds a WRED profile.
root> ethernet qos wred-profile-tbl add profile-id 2 green-minthreshold 8000 green-max-threshold 8000 green-max-drop 100
yellow-min-threshold 8000 yellow-max-threshold 8000 yellow-maxdrop 100
profile-id 2
green-min-threshold 8000 Kbytes
yellow-max-drop 100%
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following command edits the WRED profile created by the previous
command:
root> ethernet qos wred-profile-tbl edit profile-id 2 greenmin-threshold 8000 green-max-threshold 8000 green-max-drop 100
yellow-min-threshold 4000 yellow-max-threshold 4000 yellow-maxdrop 100
To display the WRED profile assigned to a queue, go to interface view for the
interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]> wred show profile-id service-bundle-id
<service-bundle-id> cos <cos>
Description
service-bundle-id Number
1 63
Assigns the WRED profile to a Service
Bundle. Service Bundles are bundles of
Note: In the current release, only
Service Bundle 1 is supported. queues, grouped together in order to
configure common egress characteristics for
specific services.
cos
Number
07
profile-id
Number
1 32
Examples
The following command assigns WRED Profile 2 to the CoS 0 queue in Service
Bundle 1, on GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]> wred set service-bundle-id 1 cos 0 profileid 2
The following command displays the WRED profile assigned to the CoS
0 queue in Service Bundle 1, on GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]> wred show profile-id service-bundle-id
1 cos 0
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
18.5
User Guide
Note:
You can enter any value within the permitted range. Based
on the value you enter, the software automatically rounds
off the setting according to the granularity. If you enter a
value below the lowest granular value (except 0), the
software adjusts the setting to the minimum.
You can attach one of the configured queue shaper profiles to each priority
queue. If no profile is attached to the queue, no egress shaping is performed
on that queue.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To edit the parameters of an existing queue shaper profile, enter the following
command in root view:
root> ethernet qos queue-shaper-profile-tbl edit profile-id
<profile-id> cir <cir> shaper-profile-name <shaper-profilename> burst-type short
Note:
To delete a queue shaper profile, enter the following command in root view:
root> ethernet qos queue-shaper-profile-tbl delete profile-id
<profile id>
You cannot delete a queue shaper profile if it is attached to a queue. You must
first remove the profile from the queue. You can then delete the profile.
Table 180: Queue Shaper Profiles CLI Parameters
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
profile-id
Number
1 - 32
cir
Number
16000 131008000
Up to 20 characters.
Examples
The following command creates Queue Shaper 1, named p1, with a CIR value
of 16000 bps:
root> ethernet qos queue-shaper-profile-tbl add profile-id 1
cir 16000 shaper-profile-name p1
The following command changes the CIR value of the profile created above
from 16000 to 32000, and changes the profile name to p3:
root> ethernet qos queue-shaper-profile-tbl edit profile-id 1
cir 32000 shaper-profile-name p3 burst-type short
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To remove a queue shaper profile from a queue, go to interface view for the
interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]> queue-shaper delete service-bundle-id
<service-bundle-id> cos <cos>
Description
service-bundle-id Number
1 63
Note: In the current release, only
Service Bundle 1 is
supported.
cos
Number
07
admin-state
Variable
enable
disable
profile-id
Number
1 32
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following command adds Queue Shaper Profile 5 to queues with CoS 0, on
Service Bundle 1, on GbE 1, and enables shaping on these queues:
eth type eth [1/1]> queue-shaper add capability service-bundleid 1 cos 0 admin-state enable profile-id 5
The following command changes the Queue Shaper Profile assigned in the
previous command to Queue Shaper Profile 2:
eth type eth [1/1]> queue-shaper edit service-bundle-id 1 cos 0
admin-state enable profile-id 2
You can enter any value within the permitted range. Based
on the value you enter, the software automatically rounds
off the setting according to the granularity. If you enter a
value below the lowest granular value (except 0), the
software adjusts the setting to the minimum.
You can attach one of the configured service bundle shaper profiles to each
service bundle. If no profile is attached to the service bundle, no egress
shaping is performed on that service bundle.
To edit the parameters of an existing service bundle shaper profile, enter the
following command in root view:
root> ethernet qos service-bundle-shaper-profile-tbl edit
profile-id <profile-id> cir <cir> pir <pir> shaper-profile-name
<shaper-profile-name>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To delete a service bundle shaper profile, enter the following command in root
view:
root> ethernet qos service-bundle-shaper-profile-tbl delete
profile-id <profile-id>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
profile-id
Number
1 - 256
cir
Number
1 - 1000000000
pir
Number
16000 - 1000000000
Up to 20 characters.
The following command creates Service Bundle Shaper 1, named p1, with a
CIR value of 100000000 bps and a PIR value of 200000000 bps:
root> ethernet qos service-bundle-shaper-profile-tbl add
profile-id 1 cir 100000000 pir 200000000 shaper-profile-name p1
The following command changes the CIR value in the Service Bundle Shaper
created above from 100000000 bps to 110000000 bps:
root> ethernet qos service-bundle-shaper-profile-tbl edit
profile-id 1 cir 110000000 pir 200000000 shaper-profile-name p1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Description
service-bundle-id Number
1 63
The service bundle to which you are attaching the
Note: In the current release, only queue shaper profile.
Service Bundle 1 is
supported.
admin-state
enable
Variable
disable
profile-id
Number
1 256
Examples
The following command adds Service Bundle Shaper Profile 5 to Service
Bundle 1, on GbE 1, and enables shaping on this service bundle:
eth type eth [1/1]> service-bundle-shaper add capability
service-bundle-id 1 admin-state enable profile-id 5
The following command changes the Service Bundle Shaper Profile assigned in
the previous command to Service Bundle 1, from 5 to 4:
eth type eth [1/1]> service-bundle-shaper edit service-bundleid 1 admin-state enable profile-id 4
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To display the egress line compensation value, go to interface view for the
interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]>shaping-compensation-value get
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
value
Number
0 26 (even numbers only) Shapers attached to the interface use this value to
compensate for Layer 1 non-effective traffic bytes on
egress.
Example
The following command sets the egress line compensation value to 0 on
GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]>shaping-compensation-value set 0
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
18.6
User Guide
Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ) If two or more queues have the same
priority and are ready to transmit, the scheduler transmits frames from
the queues based on a WFQ algorithm that determines the ratio of frames
per queue based on a predefined weight assigned to each queue.
Green State refers to any time when the service bundle rate is below the userdefined CIR. Yellow State refers to any time when the service bundle is above
the user-defined CIR but below the PIR.
You can define up to four Green priority profiles, from 4 (highest) to 1
(lowest). An additional four Yellow priority profiles are defined automatically
and cannot be changed or edited.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Green Priority
(user defined)
Yellow Priority
(read only)
Description
Best Effort
Data Service 4
Data Service 3
Data Service 2
Data Service 1
When the service bundle state is Green (committed state), the service bundle
priorities are as defined in the Green Priority column. When the service
bundle state is Yellow (best effort state), the service bundle priorities are
system-defined priorities shown in the Yellow Priority column.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
You can only delete an interface priority profile if the profile is not attached to
any interface.
Table 186: Interface Priority Profile CLI Parameters
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
profile-id
Number
18
cos0-priority
Number
14
description
Text String
Up to 20 characters.
cos1-priority
Number
14
cos2-priority
Number
14
cos3-priority
Number
14
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
cos4-priority
Number
14
cos5-priority
Number
14
cos6-priority
Number
14
cos7-priority
Number
14
Example
The following command configures a priority profile with Profile ID 1:
root> ethernet qos port-priority-profile-tbl add profile-id 1
cos0-priority 1 description c0_p1 cos1-priority 1 description
c1_p1 cos2-priority 1 description c2_p1 cos3-priority 2
description c3_p2 cos4-priority 2 description c4_p2 cos5priority 3 description c5_p3 cos6-priority 4 description c6_p4
cos7-priority 4 description c7_p4
Green Priority
(user defined)
Yellow Priority
(read only)
Description
c0_p1
c1_p1
c2_p1
c3_p2
c4_p2
c5_p3
c6_p4
c7_p4
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following command edits the profile you created in the previous
command so that CoS 6 queues have a Green priority of 3 instead of 4, and a
description of c6_p3.
root> ethernet qos port-priority-profile-tbl edit profile-id 1
cos0-priority 1 description c0_p1 cos1-priority 1 description
c1_p1 cos2-priority 1 description c2_p1 cos3-priority 2
description c3_p2 cos4-priority 2 description c4_p2 cos5priority 3 description c5_p3 cos6-priority 3 description c6_p3
cos7-priority 4 description c7_p4
Description
profile-id
Number
19
Examples
The following command attaches Interface Priority Profile 3 to GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]> priority set profile-id 3
Priority
(When queue is green)
Priority
Description
(When queue is yellow)
best effort
data service
data service
data service
data service
real time
real time
management
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
You can attach one of the configured interface WFQ profiles to each interface.
By default, the interface is assigned Profile ID 1, the pre-defined system
profile.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To edit an existing WFQ profile, enter the following command in root view:
root> ethernet qos wfq-weight-profile-tbl edit profile-id
<profile.id> cos0-weight <cos0-weight> cos1-weight <cos1weight> cos2-weight <cos2-weight> cos3-weight <cos3-weight>
cos4-weight <cos4-weight> cos5-weight <cos5-weight> cos6-weight
<cos6-weight> cos7-weight <cos7-weight>
You can only delete a WFQ profile if the profile is not attached to any interface.
Table 190: WFQ Profile CLI Parameters
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
profile-id
Number
26
cos0-weight
Number
1 - 20
cos1- weight
Number
1 - 20
cos2- weight
Number
1 - 20
cos3- weight
Number
1 - 20
cos4- weight
Number
1 - 20
cos5- weight
Number
1 - 20
cos6- weight
Number
1 - 20
cos7- weight
Number
1 - 20
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following command configures a WFQ profile with Profile ID 2:
root> ethernet qos wfq-weight-profile-tbl add profile-id 2
cos0-weight 15 cos1-weight 15 cos2-weight 15 cos3-weight 15
cos4-weight 15 cos5-weight 15 cos6-weight 15 cos7-weight 20
This profile has the parameters listed in the following table. Note that the
yellow queue weight is constant and cannot be changed. This means that all
best effort traffic (yellow) will always have the same weight, regardless of CoS.
Table 191: WFQ Sample Profile Parameters
CoS
15
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
The following command edits the profile you created in the previous
command so that CoS 6 queues have a weight of 20 instead of 15:
root> ethernet qos wfq-weight-profile-tbl edit profile-id 2
cos0-weight 15 cos1-weight 15 cos2-weight 15 cos3-weight 15
cos4-weight 15 cos5-weight 15 cos6-weight 20 cos7-weight 20
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
profile-id
Number
16
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following command assigns WFQ Profile 3 to GbE 1:
eth type eth [1/1]> port-wfq set profile-id 3
Queue Weight
(Green)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
18.7
User Guide
To display queue-level PMs, enter interface view for the interface and enter
the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]> tm-queue show statistics service-bundle-id
<service-bundle-id> cos <cos> clear-on-read <clear-on-read>
layer-1 <layer-1>
To clear queue-level PMs for a specific service bundle, enter interface view for
the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]> tm-queue clear statistics service-bundle-id
<service-bundle-id>
Input Type
service-bundle-id Number
1 63
The service bundle for which you want to display PMs.
Note: In the current
release, only
Service Bundle
1 is supported.
cos
Number
0-7
clear-on-read
Boolean
yes
no
yes
layer-1
Boolean
no
statistics.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following command displays PMs for the CoS 0 queue in Service Bundle 1,
on GbE 2. The PMs are cleared after they are displayed:
eth type eth [1/2]> tm-queue show statistics service-bundle-id
1 cos 0 clear-on-read yes layer-1 yes
The following command clears PMs for all queues in Service Bundle 1, on
GbE 2:
eth type eth [1/2]> tm-queue clear statistics service-bundle-id
1
To display service bundle-level PMs, enter interface view for the interface and
enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]> tm-service-bundle show statistics servicebundle-id <service-bundle-id> clear-on-read <clear-on-read>
layer-1 <layer-1>
To clear service bundle-level PMs for all service bundles on an interface, enter
interface view for the interface and enter the following command:
eth type eth [x/x]> tm-service-bundle clear statistics
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
service-bundle-id Number
1 63
The service bundle for which you want to
Note: In the current release, only display PMs.
Service Bundle 1 is
supported.
clear-on-read
yes
Boolean
no
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
layer-1
Boolean
yes
no
2 statistics.
Example
The following command displays service bundle PMs for Service Bundle 1, on
GbE 1. The PMs are cleared after they are displayed.
eth type eth [1/1]> tm-service-bundle show statistics servicebundle-id 1 clear-on-read yes layer-1 yes
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
19.
User Guide
Related Topics:
19.1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To set the Admin status of an ABN entity, enter the following command in root
view:
root> ethernet abn abn-admin-set abn-name <abn-name> admin
<admin-state>
To show a summary of all ABN entities defined, enter the following command
in root view:
root> ethernet abn abn-entities-summary-show
To set the monitoring interval for which a weighted average of the bandwidth
readings is calculated, enter the following command in root view:
root> ethernet abn abn-monitoring-interval-set abn-name <abnname> period <monitoring-interval>
To set how often messages are transmitted when bandwidth is below the
nominal value, enter the following command in root view:
root> ethernet abn abn-period-set abn-name <abn-name> period
<message-frequency>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To set the holdoff time, enter the following command in root view. Holdoff
time is the amount of time the system waits when bandwidth degradation
occurs, before transmitting a message. If the bandwidth is below the nominal
value when the holdoff period ends, the system starts transmitting messages:
root> ethernet abn abn-holdoff-set abn-name <abn-name> holdoff
<holdoff-time>
To clear the messages counter, enter the following command in root view:
root> ethernet abn abn-entity-counter-reset abn-name <abn-name>
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
pipe-id
Number
abn-name
Text String
monitoredinterface
Variable
radio
monitored-slot
Number
Radio in IP-20E: 16
monitored-port
Number
Radio Carrier 1: 1
Radio Carrier 2 (IP-20C only): 2
monitored-group Variable
rp1
rp2
rp3
rp4
lag1
lag2
lag3
lag4
mc-abc1
mc-abc2
mc-abc3
mc-abc4
control-interface
Variable
eth
control-slot
Number
control-port
Number
1-3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
control-group
Variable
rp1
rp2
rp3
rp4
lag1
lag2
lag3
lag4
mc-abc1
mc-abc2
mc-abc3
mc-abc4
vlan
Variable
untag
1 - 4094, except 4092
(reserved for the default
management service)
admin-state
Variable
isUp
isDown
monitoringinterval
Number
1 - 20
messagefrequency
Variable
Number
10 - 29
Examples
The following command creates an ABN entity in an IP-20C or IP-20S unit
with radio interface 1 as the monitored interface and Ethernet port 1 as the
control interface. It also specifies to transmit bandwidth messages on VLAN 1:
root> ethernet abn abn-entity-create abn-name ABN-1 monitoredinterface radio monitored-slot 1 monitored-port 1 controlinterface ethernet control-slot 1 control-port 1 vlan 1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following command creates an ABN entity in an IP-20E unit with the radio
interface as the monitored interface and Ethernet port 1 as the control
interface. It also specifies to transmit bandwidth messages on VLAN 100:
root> ethernet abn abn-entity-create abn-name ABN-2 monitoredinterface radio monitored-slot 16 monitored-port 1 controlinterface ethernet control-slot 1 control-port 1 vlan 100
The following command creates an ABN entity in an IP-20C unit with radio
interface 2 as the monitored interface and LAG group lag1 as the control
interface. It also specifies to transmit bandwidth messages on VLAN 55:
root> ethernet abn abn-entity-create abn-name ABN-3 monitoredinterface radio monitored-slot 1 monitored-port 2 control-group
lag1 vlan 55
The following command creates an ABN entity in an IP-20C unit with HSB
protection group rp1 as the monitored interface and Ethernet port 2 as the
control interface. It also specifies to transmit bandwidth messages on VLAN
200:
root> ethernet abn abn-entity-create abn-name ABN-4 monitoredgroup rp1 control-interface ethernet control-slot 1 controlport 2 vlan 200
The following command creates an ABN entity in an IP-20C unit with HSB
protection group rp1 as the monitored interface and LAG group lag1 as the
control interface. It also specifies to transmit bandwidth messages on
VLAN 300:
root> ethernet abn abn-entity-create abn-name ABN-5 monitoredgroup rp1 control-group lag1 vlan 300
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
19.2
User Guide
The time-to-live (TTL) determines the length of time LLDP frames are
retained by the receiving device. The TTL is determined by multiplying the
Transmit Interval by the TTL Multiplier.
To define the TTL Multiplier, enter the following command in root view:
root> ethernet lldp tx-hold-multiplier-set hold-multiplier
<hold-multiplier>
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted
Values
tx-interval
Number
5-3600
holdmultiplier
Number
2-10
notif-interval
Number
5-3600
Description
Examples
The following commands set the Transmit Interval to 50 seconds with a TTL
Multiplier of 5. This produces a TTL of 4 minutes and 10 seconds.
root> ethernet lldp tx-interval-set tx-interval 50
root> ethernet lldp tx-hold-multiplier-set hold-multiplier 50
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
19.2.3
User Guide
Message Fast Init - The initial value used to initialize the variable which
determines the number of transmissions that are made during fast
transmission periods. In this release, this parameter is set at 4.
To enable or disable LLDP notifications to the NMS on a specific port, enter the
following command in root view:
root> ethernet lldp agent-notif-enable interface eth slot
<slot> port <port> agent-notif-enable <agent-notif-enable>
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
slot
Number
port
Number
1-3
agent-admin
Variable
txOnly
rxOnly
txAndRx
disabled
Variable
true
false
(default value).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following commands configure Ethernet port 2 to transmit and receive
LLDP frames and to send a Topology Change trap to the NMS whenever the
system information of its peer changes:
root> ethernet lldp agent-admin-set interface eth slot 1 port 2
agent-admin txAndRx
root> ethernet lldp agent-notif-enable interface eth slot 1
port 2 agent-notif-enable true
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Interface type/slot/port - The port type, slot number, and port number.
Port ID Subtype - The type of encoding used to identify the port in LLDP
transmissions. In this release, this parameter is always set to MAC
Address.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Note:
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
slot
Number
port
Number
1-3
agent-start-time
Date
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Rem Port ID subType The type of port identifier encoding used in the
peer's Port ID.
Rem Port ID An octet string used to identify the port component
associated with the peer.
Rem Port Description A description of the peer's port.
Rem System Name The peer's system name.
Rem System Description The peer's system description.
Note:
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Remote Changes - Indicates whether there are changes in the peer's MIB,
as determined by the variable remoteChanges. Possible values are:
True - Changes have taken place in the peer's MIB since the
defined agent-start-time.
False - No changes have taken place in the peer's MIB since the
defined agent-start-time.
19.2.6.2 Displaying the LLDP Remote Management Data per Port (CLI)
To display remote LLDP management data from a specific port, starting from a
specific time, enter the following command in root view. If no time is specified,
all data is displayed.
root> ethernet lldp agent-remote-mng-show agent-start-time
<agent-start-time> interface eth slot <slot> port <port>
Table 199: LLDP Remote Management Data Per Port CLI Parameters
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
slot
Number
port
Number
1-3
agent-start-time
Date
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Agent Rem OID - The OID value used to identify the type of hardware
component or protocol entity associated with the management address
advertised by the remote system agent.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
RX Discarded TLVs - The number of LLDP TLVs discarded for any reason
by the LLDP agent on this port.
RX Unrecognized TLVs - The number of LLDP TLVs received on the given
port that are not recognized by LLDP agent.
RX Ageouts - The number of age-outs that occurred on the port. An ageout is the number of times the complete set of information advertised by
the remote system has been deleted from the unit's database because the
information timeliness interval has expired. This counter is similar to
the LLDP No. of Ageouts counter, except that it is per port rather than for
the entire unit. This counter is set to zero during agent initialization. This
counter is incremented only once when the complete set of information is
invalidated (aged out) from all related tables on a particular port. Partial
ageing is not allowed.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
20.
User Guide
Synchronization (CLI)
This section includes:
20.1
To change the first interface in a SyncE pipe, enter the following command in
root view:
root> platform sync pipe edit interface-1 pipe-id <pipe-id>
interface-1-type <interface-1-type> slot <slot> port <port>
To change the second interface in a SyncE pipe, enter the following command
in root view:
root> platform sync pipe edit interface-1 pipe-id <pipe-id>
interface-2-type <interface-2-type> slot <slot> port <port>
To view the configured SyncE pipes, enter the following command in root
view:
root> platform sync pipe show
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
pipe-id
Number
interface-1-type
Variable
ethernet
radio
slot
Number
Ethernet: 1
Radio in IP-20C or IP-20S: 2
Radio in IP-20E: 16
port
Number
GbE 1: 1
GbE 2: 2
GbE 3: 3
Radio Carrier 1: 1
Radio Carrier 2 (IP-20C only): 2
interface-2-type
Variable
ethernet
radio
Examples
The following command configures a SyncE pipe between Ethernet port 1 and
radio interface 1 in an IP-20C or IP-20S unit:
root> platform sync pipe add pipe-id 1 interface-1-type
ethernet slot 1 port 1 interface-2-type radio slot 2 port 1
The following command changes the first interface in the pipe from ethernet
port 1 to Ethernet port 2:
root> platform sync pipe edit interface-1 pipe-id 1 interface1-type ethernet slot 1 port 2
The following command changes the second interface in the pipe from radio
interface 1 to radio interface 2:
root> platform sync pipe edit interface-2 pipe-id 1 interface2-type radio slot 2 port 2
The following command configures a SyncE pipe between Ethernet port 1 and
the radio interface in an IP-20E unit:
root> platform sync pipe add pipe-id 1 interface-1-type
ethernet slot 1 port 1 interface-2-type radio slot 16 port 1
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
21.
User Guide
Related Topics:
21.1
Logging On (CLI)
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
inactivity-timeout Number
Permitted Values
Description
1 - 60
Example
The following command sets the session inactivity timeout period to 30
minutes:
root> platform security protocols-control session inactivitytimeout set 30
To define the period (in minutes) for which a user is blocked after the
configured number of failed login attempts, enter the following command in
root view:
root> platform security access-control block-failure-login
period set <period>
To display the current failed login attempt blocking parameters, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform security access-control block-failure-login show
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
attempt
Number
1 - 10
period
Number
1 - 60
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following commands configure a blocking period of 45 minutes for users
that perform 5 consecutive failed login attempts:
root> platform security access-control block-failure-login
attempt set 5
root> platform security access-control block-failure-login
period set 45
Once the user is blocked, you can use the following command to unblock the
user:
root> platform security access-control user-account block username <user-name> block no
To manually block a specific user, enter the following command in root view:
root> platform security access-control user-account block username <user-name> block yes
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
period
Number
0, 30 - 90
user-name
Text String
Any valid user name. The name of the user being blocked or
unblocked.
Examples
The following command configures the system to block any user that does not
log into the system for 50 days:
root> platform security access-control block-unused-account
period set 50
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
The following commands block, then unblock, a user with the user name
John_Smith:
root> platform security access-control user-account block username John_Smith block yes
root> platform security access-control user-account block username John_Smith block no
21.2
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
password
aging
Number
0, 20 - 90
Example
The following command sets the password aging time to 60 days:
root> platform security access-control password aging set 60
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted
Values
password
aging
Number
0, 20 - 90
enforcestrength
Boolean
Yes
no
Description
Example
The following command enables password strength enforcement:
root> platform security access-control password enforcestrength set yes
To require users to change their password the first time they log in, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform security access-control password first-login set
yes
Table 207: Force Password Change on First Time Login CLI Parameters
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted
Values
first-login
Boolean
Yes
no
Description
When yes is selected, the system requires users to
change their password the first time they log in.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
21.3
User Guide
Related topics:
Logging On (CLI)
Ethernet
Synchronization
A user profile defines the permitted access level per functionality group. For
each functionality group, the access level is defined separately for read and
write operations. The following access levels can be assigned:
None No access to this functional group.
Normal The user has access to parameters that require basic knowledge
about the functional group.
Advanced The user has access to parameters that require advanced
knowledge about the functional group, as well as parameters that have a
significant impact on the system as a whole, such as restoring the
configuration to factory default settings.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
profile--name
Text String
Up to 49 characters
group
Variable
security
management
radio
ethernet
sync
write-lvl
Variable
none
normal
advanced
read-lvl
Variable
none
normal
advanced
Example
The following commands create a user profile called operator and give users
to whom this profile is assigned normal write privileges for all system
functionality and advanced read privileges for all functionality except security
features.
root> platform security access-control profile add name
operator
root> platform security access-control profile edit group name
operator group security write-lvl normal read-lvl normal group
management write-lvl normal read-lvl advanced group radio
write-lvl normal read-lvl advanced group ethernet writelvl normal read-lvl advanced group sync write-lvl normal readlvl advanced
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
profile--name
Text String
Up to 49 characters
profile-name
Text String
Up to 49 characters
channel-type
Variable
Serial
Web
NMS
Telnet
SSH
allowed
Boolean
yes
no
Example
The following command prevents users with the user profile operator from
accessing the system via NMS:
root> platform security access-control profile edit mng-channel
name operator channel-type NMS allowed no
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
When you create a new user account, the system will prompt you to enter a
default password. If Enforce Password Strength is activated (refer to
Configuring Password Strength Enforcement (CLI)), the password must meet
the following criteria:
To display all user accounts configured on the unit and their settings,
including whether the user is currently logged in and the time of the user's last
logout, enter the following command:
root> platform security access-control user-account show
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
user-name
Text String
Up to 32 characters
profile name
Text String
Up to 49 characters
expired-date
Date
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Parameter
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
block
Variable
yes
no
Example
The following command creates a user account named Tom_Jones, with user
profile operator. This users account expires on February 1, 2014.
root> platform security access-control user-account add username Tom_Jones profile-name operator expired-date 2014-02-01
21.4
Note:
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
admin
Variable
enable
disable
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
server-id
Number
ip-address
Dotted
decimal
format
radius-port
Number
0-65535
retries
Number
3-30
timeout
Number
1-10
shared-secret
String
Between 22-128
characters
Example
The following command configures Radius server attributes for the primary
Radius server:
root> platform security radius-server-communication-ipv4 set
server-id 1 ip-address 192.168.1.99 port 1812 retries 5 timeout
10 secret U8glp3KJ6FKGksdgase4IQ9FMm
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Security Func Group Read level The Read access level in the Security
functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
Security Func Group Write level The Write access level in the Security
functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
Management Func Group Read level The Read access level in the
Management functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
Management Func Group Write level The Write access level in the
Management functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
Radio Func Group Read level The Read access level in the Radio
functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
Radio Func Group Write level The Write access level in the Radio
functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
TDM Func Group Read level The Read access level in the TDM
functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
TDM Func Group Write level The Write access level in the TDM
functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
Eth Func Group Read level The Read access level in the Eth functional
group: None, Regular or Advanced.
Eth Func Group Write level The Write access level in the Eth functional
group: None, Regular or Advanced.
Sync Func Group Read level The Read access level in the Sync
functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
Sync Func Group Write level The Write access level in the Sync
functional group: None, Regular or Advanced.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
21.5
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To generate and upload a CSR, enter the following command in root view:
root> platform security csr-generate-and-upload
To display the status of a pending CSR generation and upload operation, enter
the following command in root view:
root> platform security csr-generate-and-upload-show-status
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
country
String
state
String
locality
String
organization
String
org-unit
String
String
file-format
Variable
PEM
DER
server-ipv4
Dotted decimal
format.
server-ipv6
server-path
Text String
filename
Text String
username
Text String
password
Text String
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
server-ipv4
Dotted decimal
format.
server-ipv6
server-path
Text String
filename
Text String
username
Text String
password
Text String
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Note:
To change the protocol back to HTTP, enter the following command in root
view:
root> platform security url-protocol-set url-protocol http
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
21.6
User Guide
Note:
21.7
To display the FTP channel parameters for uploading the security log, enter
the following command in root view:
root> platform security file-transfer show configuration
To upload the security log to your FTP server, enter the following command in
root view:
root> platform security file-transfer operation set uploadsecurity-log
To display the progress of a current security log upload operation, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform security file-transfer show operation
To display the result of the most recent current security log upload operation,
enter the following command in root view:
root> platform security file-transfer show status
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
server-path
Text String
file-name
Text String
ip-address
protocol
Variable
ftp
sftp
username
Text String
password
Text String
Example
The following commands configure an FTP channel for security log upload to
IP address 192.168.1.80, in the directory current, with file name
security_log_Oct8.zip, user name anonymous, and password 12345, and
initiate the upload:
root> platform security file-transfer set server-path \current
file-name security_log_Oct8.zip ip-address 192.168.1.80
protocol ftp username anonymous password 12345
root> platform security file-transfer operation set uploadsecurity-log
21.8
To display the FTP or SFTP parameters for configuration log export, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform security configuration-log-upload-params show
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
To export the configuration log, enter the following command in root view:
root> platform security configuration-log upload
Permitted
Values
Description
path
Text String
file-name
Text String
The name you want to give the file you are exporting.
Note: You must add the suffix .zip to the file name. Otherwise,
the file import may fail. You can export the file using any
name, then add the suffix .zip manually. For example:
UnitInfo.zip
If the Unit Information file is exported several times
consecutively, the file itself will not be replaced. Instead, the
filename will be updated by time stamp. For example:
UnitInfo.zip.11-05-14 03-31-04
ip-address
protocol
Variable
ftp
sftp
username
Text String
password
Text String
Note:
Examples
The following commands configure an FTP channel for configuration log
export to IP address 192.168.1.99, in the directory current, with file name
cfg_log, user name anonymous, and password 12345.
root> platform security configuration-log-upload-params set
path \file-name cfg_log ip-address 192.168.1.99 protocol ftp
username anonymous password 12345
root> platform unit-info channel set protocol frp
The following command exports the configuration log to the external server
location:
root> platform security configuration-log upload
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
22.
User Guide
22.1
To display the most severe alarm currently raised in the unit, enter the
following command in root view:
root> platform status current-alarm show most-severe-alarm
module unit
22.2
To clear the event log, enter the following command in root view:
root> platform status event-log clear module unit
22.3
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
alarm-id
Number
severity-level
Variable
indeterminate
critical
major
minor
warning
additional-text
Text String
255 characters
Example
The following command changes the severity level of alarm type 401 (Loss of
Carrier) to minor:
root> platform status alarm-management set alarm-id 401
severity-level minor
To restore the severity levels and descriptions of all alarm types to their
default values, enter the following command in root view:
root> platform status alarm-management set all default
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
alarm-id
Number
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following command restores alarm type 401 (Loss of Carrier) to its
default severity level:
root> platform status alarm-management set alarm-id 401 restore
default
22.4
To set the protocol for unit information file export, enter the following
command in root view.
root> platform unit-info channel set protocol <protocol>
To display the FTP or SFTP parameters for unit information file export, enter
one of the following commands in root view:
root> platform unit-info-file channel show
root> platform unit-info-file channel-ipv6 show
To create a unit information file based on the current state of the system,
enter the following command in root view:
root> platform unit-info-file create
To export the unit information file you just created, enter the following
command in root view:
root> platform unit-info-file export
To display the status of a unit information file export operation, enter the
following command in root view
root> platform unit-info-file status show
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Input Type
Permitted Values
Description
server-ipv4
server-ipv6
directory
Text String
filename
Text String
username
Text String
password
Text String
protocol
Variable
ftp
sftp
The following commands create a unit information file and export the file to
the external server location:
root> platform unit-info-file create
root> platform unit-info-file export
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Example
The following commands configures an FTP channel for unit information file
export to IP address 192.168.1.99, in the directory current, with file name
version_8_backup.zip, user name anonymous, and password 12345.
root> platform unit-info channel server set ip-address
192.168.1.99 directory \current filename version_8_backup.zip
username anonymous password 12345
root> platform unit-info channel set protocol ftp
The following commands create a unit information file and export the file to
the external server location:
root> platform unit-info-file create
root> platform unit-info-file export
22.5
To display the radio loopback timeout, enter the following command in radio
view:
radio[x/x]>radio loopbacks-timeout show
Input Type
Permitted
Values
duration
Number
0 1440
admin
Variable
on
Description
off
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following commands initiate an RF loopback on radio carrier 1 in an IP20C or IP-20S unit with a timeout of two minutes:
radio[2/1]> radio loopbacks-timeout set duration 2
radio[2/1]>rf loopback-rf set admin on
To configure the loopback duration time, go to interface view for the interface
and enter the following command:
eth type eth[x/x]> loopback set duration <loopback-duration>
You can select whether to swap DA and SA MAC addresses during the
loopback. Swapping addresses prevents Ethernet loops from occurring. It is
recommended to enable MAC address swapping if LLDP is enabled.
To configure MAC address swapping, go to interface view for the interface and
enter the following command:
eth type eth[x/x]> loopback swap-mac-address admin <MAC_swapadmin-state>
To view loopback status, go to interface view for the interface and enter the
following command:
eth type eth[x/x]> loopback status show
Input Type
Permitted
Values
loopbackadmin-state
Variable
enable
loopbackduration
MAC_swapadmin-state
Description
disable
Number
1 - 900
Variable
enable
disable
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Examples
The following command enables Ethernet loopback on Ethernet interface 2:
eth type eth [1/2]> loopback admin enable
The following command sets the loopback duration time to 900 seconds:
eth type eth [1/2]> loopback set duration 900
The following command enables MAC address swapping during the loopback:
eth type eth [1/2]> loopback swap-mac-address admin enable
22.6
Once you are in CW mode, you can choose to transmit in a single tone or two
tones.
To transmit in a single tone, enter the following command in radio view:
radio[x/x] modem tx-source set mode one-tone freq-shift <freqshift>
Input Type
Permitted
Values
Description
freq-shift
Number
0-7000
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
slot 16 port 1
modem tx-source set admin enable
radio[x/x] modem tx-source set mode one-tone freqmodem tx-source set admin disable
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Section IV
Maintenance
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
23.
User Guide
Maintenance
This section includes:
23.1
Description
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Pin no.
Description
Description
Description
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Description
TX+
TX-
RX+
RX-
TX+
TX-
RX+
RX-
23.1.5 DC
The DC port is UL-60950 compliant, with a 2-pin connector.
Figure 247: IP-20C DC Port Connector
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
23.2
User Guide
IP-20C LEDs
The IP-20C provides the following LEDs to indicate the status of the unit's
interfaces, and the unit as a whole:
Electrical GbE Interface (RJ-45) LEDs
Optical GbE Interface (SFP) LEDs
Management FE Interface (RJ-45) LEDs
Radio LED
Status LED
Protection LED
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
If the MGT interface is being used for protection, the Orange LED indicates the
status of the mate unit.:
Off The interface is not in an operational state (down).
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
23.3
User Guide
Description
Description
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Pin no.
Description
Description
Description
TX+
TX-
RX+
RX-
TX+
TX-
RX+
RX-
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
23.3.5 DC
The DC port is UL-60950 compliant, with a 2-pin connector.
Figure 249: IP-20S DC Connector
23.4
IP-20S LEDs
The IP-20S provides the following LEDs to indicate the status of the unit's
interfaces, and the unit as a whole:
Electrical GbE Interface (RJ-45) LEDs
Protection LED
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
23.5
Description
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Description
Description
Description
TX+
TX-
RX+
RX-
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Pin no.
Description
TX+
TX-
RX+
RX-
23.5.5 DC
The DC port is UL-60950 compliant, with a 2-pin connector.
Figure 251: IP-20E DC Connector
23.6
IP-20E LEDs
The IP-20E provides the following LEDs to indicate the status of the unit's
interfaces, and the unit as a whole:
Electrical GbE Interface (RJ-45) LEDs
Radio LED
Status LED
Protection LED
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Green - The power is on, and all carriers are operational (up).
Yellow - A signal degrade condition exists in at least one carrier.
Red - A loss of frame (LOF) or excessive BER condition exists in at least
one carrier.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
23.7
Description
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Pin no.
Description
Description
23.7.3 DC
One or two DC ports, depending on the PoE Injector model:
Two models of the PoE Injector are available:
23.8
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Section V:
Appendices
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
24.
User Guide
Alarms List
The following table lists all alarms used in the IP-20C/S/E products.
Type
Description
Severity
Probable Cause
Alarm ID
Name
10
radio-digital-loopback
Alarm
Warning
25
main-board-extremetemperature-alarm
Alarm
Warning
26
main-board-low-voltageAlarm
alarm
Warning
27
main-board-highvoltage-alarm
Warning
28
main-board-warm-reset Event
Indeterminate
29
main-board-cold-reset
Event
Unit reset.
Warning
30
main-board-poe-lowvoltage-alarm
Alarm
Warning
31
Event
Major
(1)
32
Event
Major
(1)
Alarm
33
protection-mimomisconfiguration-alarm
Alarm
100
lag-degraded
Alarm
Major
101
lag-down
Alarm
Critical
Major
Corrective Action
Notes
(2)
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
Description
Severity
Probable Cause
Corrective Action
102
ethernet-loopbackactive-alarm
Alarm
Loopback is active
Major
103
port-mirroring-is-active
Alarm
Minor
Disable mirroring.
Major
150
200
auto-state-propagationAlarm
interface-down-alarm
protectioncommunication-downalarm
Alarm
Major
201
protection-lockout-alarm Alarm
Major
202
protection-switchcommand
Event
Major
203
protection-mate-notpresent-alarm
Alarm
Major
401
TrafficPhyLocAlarm
Alarm
Loss of Carrier
Major
407
ethernet-link-up
Event
Ethernet interface is up
Warning
408
ethernet-link-down
Event
Warning
1.
2.
3.
Unit failure.
Notes
1.
2.
3.
4.
Cable disconnected.
1.
2.
Defective cable.
2.
Replace cable.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
601
602
603
604
Name
radio-excessive-ber
User Guide
Type
Alarm
remote-link-id-mismatch Alarm
radio-lof
radio-signal-degrade
Alarm
Alarm
Description
Link ID mismatch
Severity
Major
Major
Critical
Minor
605
radio-link-up
Event
Radio interface is up
Warning
606
radio-link-down
Event
Warning
Probable Cause
1.
2.
Defective IF cable.
3.
Fault in RFU.
4.
Corrective Action
Notes
1.
2.
3.
Replace RFU.
4.
Link ID is not the same at both sides of Configure same Link ID for both sides of
link
link
1.
2.
Defective IF cable.
3.
Fault in RFU.
4.
5.
1.
2.
Defective IF cable.
3.
Fault in RFU.
4.
1.
2.
3.
Replace RFU.
4.
5.
1.
2.
3.
Replace RFU.
4.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
Description
Severity
Probable Cause
801
corrupted-file
Alarm
Warning
802
file-not-found
Alarm
Warning
901
demo-license-alarm
Alarm
Warning
902
license-demo-expired
Event
Warning
903
license-demo-start-byuser
Event
Warning
904
license-demo-stop-byuser
Event
Warning
905
license-load-fail
Event
Major
906
license-load-successful Event
Warning
The current configuration does not
match the activation-key-enabled
feature set.
907
908
license-violation-alarm
demo-license-about-toexpire-alarm
Alarm
Alarm
Critical
Major
Corrective Action
1.
2.
1.
2.
Notes
1.
2.
Demo mode allowed period is about to Disable demo mode and install a new
end within 10 days
valid activation key.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
Name
910
User Guide
Type
Description
Severity
Probable Cause
license-signature-failedAlarm
alarm
Major
911
license-violationEvent
runtime-counter-expired
Major
913
license-bad-xml-filealarm
Alarm
Major
1102
software-installationstatus
Event
Warning
1105
software-new-versioninstalled
Event
Warning
1111
software-userEvent
confirmation-for-version
Warning
1112
software-downloadstatus
Event
Warning
1113
software-downloadmissing-components
Event
Missing components:
Warning
1114
software-managementincomplete-bundle
Event
Warning
1150
backup-started
Event
Warning
User command
1151
backup-succeeded
Event
Warning
1152
backup-failure
Event
Warning
Corrective Action
Notes
Reinstall software
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
Description
Severity
Probable Cause
1153
restore-succeeded
Event
Warning
Event
1154
restore-failure
1155
restore-canceled
Event
Warning
1156
file-transfer-issued
Event
Warning
User command
1157
file-transfer-succeeded
Event
Warning
1158
file-transfer-failure
Event
Warning
1.
Communications failure.
2.
1159
file-transfer-in-progress Event
1163
cli-script-activationstarted
Event
Warning
User command
1164
cli-script-activationsucceeded
Event
Warning
Corrective Action
Notes
1.
2.
Try again
1.
2.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
1165
cli-script-activationfailure
Event
Warning
1166
unit-info-file-transferstatus-changed
Event
Warning
1167
unit-info-file-creationstatus-changed
Event
Warning
1169
restore-started
Event
Warning
1201
file-missed
Alarm
Critical
1202
load-failed
Alarm
Critical
1203
modem-wd-reset
Event
Warning
1312
script-loading-failed
Alarm
Major
1401
incompatible-rfu-txcalibration
Alarm
Major
Upgrade IDU SW
1501
remote-communicationAlarm
failure
Critical
1601
if-loopback
IF loopback
Warning
Disable IF loopback
Alarm
Description
Severity
Probable Cause
Corrective Action
Notes
1.
Syntax Error.
2.
1.
2.
1.
2.
System failure.
2.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
1602
1701
1702
Name
lock-detect
cable-open
cable-short
User Guide
Type
Alarm
Alarm
Alarm
Description
IF synthesizer is unlocked.
Cable open
Cable short
Severity
Critical
Major
Major
Probable Cause
1.
2.
HW failure.
Corrective Action
1.
Check installation.
2.
3.
1.
2.
Notes
4.
Replace RFU.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Replace RFU.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
1703
1704
1705
1706
1708
Name
communication-failure
User Guide
Type
Alarm
Description
delay-calibration-failureAlarm
1
delay-calibration-failureAlarm
2
extreme-temp-cond
freq-set-automatically
Alarm
Event
Severity
Probable Cause
Warning
Warning
1.
2.
Defective IF cable.
4.
5.
3.
6.
Defective RFU.
4.
Replace RFU.
7.
2.
1.
2.
Replace RFU.
Defective RFU
Installation conditions.
2.
Defective RFU.
1.
2.
3.
Replace RFU.
1.
2.
Replace RFU.
Defective RFU
1709
hardware-failure-1
Alarm
Critical
Defective RFU.
Replace RFU.
1710
hardware-failure-2
Alarm
Critical
Defective RFU.
Replace RFU.
Notes
3.
Warning
Warning
Corrective Action
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
1711
1712
Name
low-if-signal-to-rfu
no-signal-from-rfu
User Guide
Type
Alarm
Alarm
Description
Severity
Major
Warning
1713
pa-extreme-temp-cond
Alarm
Warning
1721
reset-occurred
Event
RFU reset
Major
1722
rfu-loopback-active
Alarm
Major
1723
rfu-mode-changed-tocombined
Event
Indeterminate
1724
rfu-mode-changed-todiversity
Event
Indeterminate
1725
rfu-mode-changed-tomain
Event
Indeterminate
1726
rfu-power-supply-failure Alarm
Major
Probable Cause
1.
IF cable connection.
2.
Defective RFU.
3.
Corrective Action
Notes
1.
2.
3.
4.
Replace RFU.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Replace RFU.
1.
Installation conditions.
1.
2.
Defective RFU.
2.
Replace RFU.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
1727
1728
1729
1733
Name
rx-level-out-of-range
rx-level-path1-out-ofrange
rx-level-path2-out-ofrange
synthesizer-unlocked
User Guide
Type
Alarm
Alarm
Alarm
Alarm
Description
Severity
Warning
Warning
Warning
Major
Probable Cause
1.
Improper installation.
2.
Fading event.
3.
Defective RFU.
1.
Improper installation.
2.
Fading event.
3.
Defective RFU.
Corrective Action
Notes
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
1.
At least one of the RFU synthesizers is
2.
unlocked
Replace RFU.
In XPIC mode, replace mate RFU
as well.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
Description
Severity
Probable Cause
1734
tx-level-out-of-range
Alarm
Minor
1735
tx-mute
Alarm
RFU TX Mute
Warning
1736
unknown-rfu-type
Alarm
Upgrade IDC SW
1769
unit-cold-reset-event
Event
Warning
1770
cable-lof-rfu
Event
Major
1771
1772
cable-error-rfu
xpic-data-los
Alarm
Alarm
Major
Major
Corrective Action
1.
Replace RFU.
2.
1.
2.
3.
Replace RMC.
4.
Replace XCVR.
1.
2.
3.
Replace RMC/s.
4.
Replace chassis.
Notes
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
1773
Name
early-warning
User Guide
Type
Alarm
Description
Severity
Warning
Probable Cause
Corrective Action
5.
6.
7.
Replace XCVR.
8.
Replace RMC.
1.
1774
sw-downloadincompatible-rfu
Alarm
Critical
1775
hw-incompatible-rfu
Alarm
Critical
1776
pll-rmc
Alarm
Major
Warning
1780
mrmc-running-scriptdeleted
Event
1781
mrmc-running-scriptupdated
Event
1790
np-hw-failure
Alarm
Hardware failure
Notes
1.
2.
Warning
Critical
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
2100
2101
2102
2103
2104
2105
2106
Name
STM-1-OC-3-IN-LOS
STM-1-OC-3-IN-LOF
User Guide
Type
Description
Alarm
Alarm
Severity
Critical
Major
Minor
STM-1-OC-3-IN-MSRDI Alarm
Minor
STM-1-OC-3-RX-LOS
STM-1-OC-3-IN-MSAIS Alarm
Alarm
STM-1-OC-3-RXMSAIS
Alarm
STM-1-OC-3-RX-RDI
Alarm
Minor
Minor
Probable Cause
1.
2.
1.
2.
1.
2.
Corrective Action
Notes
1.
Reconnect line.
2.
3.
1.
Reconnect line.
2.
3.
1.
Reconnect line.
2.
3.
1.
1.
2.
2.
3.
Check configuration.
1.
2.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
Description
Severity
Probable Cause
Corrective Action
2107
STM-1-OC-3LOOPBACK
Alarm
Loopback
Warning
Looping.
Remove looping.
2108
STM-1/OC-3CHANNEL-1REMOVED
Alarm
1.
Reduced capacity.
1.
2.
Fading
2.
2109
STM-1-OC-3-PBRSINSERTION
Alarm
PBRS insertion.
Warning
2110
STM-1-OC-3-SFP-NOTAlarm
DETECTED
Critical
1.
1.
2.
SFP is faulty.
2.
Alarm
1.
2111
STM-1-OC-3-SFP-TXFAILURE
1.
2.
2112
STM-1-OC-3-SFP-TXMUTED
Alarm
Remove muting.
2113
STM-1/OC-3CHANNEL-2REMOVED
Alarm
1.
Reduced capacity.
1.
2.
Fading.
2.
2114
STM-1/OC-3CHANNEL-3REMOVED
Alarm
1.
Reduced capacity.
1.
2.
Fading.
2.
2115
STM-1/OC-3CHANNEL-4REMOVED
Alarm
1.
Reduced capacity.
1.
2.
Fading.
2.
Warning
SFP is faulty.
Notes
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
Description
2116
STM-1/OC-3CHANNEL-5REMOVED
Alarm
2117
STM-1/OC-3CHANNEL-6REMOVED
2118
2119
2200
2203
2204
Probable Cause
Corrective Action
1.
Reduced capacity.
1.
2.
Fading.
2.
Alarm
1.
Reduced capacity.
1.
2.
Fading.
2.
STM-1/OC-3CHANNEL-7REMOVED
Alarm
1.
Reduced capacity.
1.
2.
Fading.
2.
STM-1/OC-3CHANNEL-8REMOVED
Alarm
1.
Reduced capacity.
1.
2.
Fading.
2.
1.
MC-ABC-Local-LOF
Alarm
MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl2 Alarm
MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl3 Alarm
Severity
Critical
Major
Major
Notes
3.
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
2205
2206
2207
2208
2209
2210
2211
Name
User Guide
Type
MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl4 Alarm
MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl5 Alarm
MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl6 Alarm
MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl7 Alarm
MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl8 Alarm
MC-ABC-Lvds-Error-Sl9 Alarm
MC-ABC-Lvds-ErrorSl10
Alarm
Description
LVDS RX Error Slot 4.
Severity
Probable Cause
Major
Major
Major
Major
Major
Major
Major
Corrective Action
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
Notes
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
2212
MC-ABC-Lvds-ErrorSl12
Alarm
2219
MC-ABC-Ch-IdMismatch-Ch1
Alarm
Warning
Configuration failure.
2220
MC-ABC-Ch-IdMismatch-Ch2
Alarm
Warning
Configuration failure.
2221
MC-ABC-Ch-IdMismatch-Ch3
Alarm
Warning
Configuration failure.
2222
MC-ABC-Ch-IdMismatch-Ch4
Alarm
Warning
Configuration failure.
2223
MC-ABC-Ch-IdMismatch-Ch5
Alarm
Warning
Configuration failure.
2224
MC-ABC-Ch-IdMismatch-Ch6
Alarm
Warning
Configuration failure.
2225
MC-ABC-Ch-IdMismatch-Ch7
Alarm
Warning
Configuration failure.
2226
MC-ABC-Ch-IdMismatch-Ch8
Alarm
Warning
Configuration failure.
2235
MC-ABC-Ch-IdDisabled-Ch1
Alarm
2236
MC-ABC-Ch-IdDisabled-Ch2
Alarm
Description
LVDS RX Error Slot 12.
Severity
Probable Cause
Major
Corrective Action
1.
Replace RMC.
2.
Replace TCC.
3.
Replace chassis.
Notes
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
Description
2237
MC-ABC-Ch-IdDisabled-Ch3
Alarm
2238
MC-ABC-Ch-IdDisabled-Ch4
2239
Probable Cause
Corrective Action
Alarm
MC-ABC-Ch-IdDisabled-Ch5
Alarm
2240
MC-ABC-Ch-IdDisabled-Ch6
Alarm
2241
MC-ABC-Ch-IdDisabled-Ch7
Alarm
2242
MC-ABC-Ch-IdDisabled-Ch8
Alarm
2300
protection-configurationAlarm
mismatc
Major
All
2301
protection-copytomatestarted
Event
Indeterminate
This is a notification
All
2302
protection-copytomatecompleted
Event
Indeterminate
This is a notification
All
5000
failure-login-event
Event
Indeterminate
5001
g8032-protectionswitching-alarm
Alarm
Minor
Either user "force switch" command or Either clear force command or recover
one of the ring links has failed
the link
Severity
Notes
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
Description
5002
g8032-failure-ofprotocol-pm-alarm
Alarm
5003
lldp-topology-change
5004
Probable Cause
Corrective Action
User configuration
Event
Warning
New neighbor
None
security-log-uploadstarted-event
Event
5005
security-log-uploadfailed-event
Event
5006
security-log-uploadsucceeded-event
Event
5010
force-mode-alarm
Alarm
Warning
5011
sync-quality-changeevent
Event
Major
5012
system-clock-inholdover-mode
Alarm
5013
sync-T0-quality-changeEvent
event
Major
5014
sync-pipe-invalidinterface-clock-source
Major
5015
sync-pipe-missing-edge Alarm
5016
sync-pipe-interface-opstate-down
Alarm
Alarm
Severity
Major
Notes
User command
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Alarm ID
Name
Type
Description
Severity
Probable Cause
Corrective Action
5017
sync-pipe-invalid-pipe
Alarm
Pipe is invalid
Major
5030
soam-connectivityfailure
Alarm
Minor
30007
31000
31003
Clock-source-sharingfailure-event
Insufficient-conditionsfor-MIMO-alarm
Unsuitable-hardwarefor-MIMO-alarm
Event
Alarm
Alarm
Critical
Critical
Critical
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
1.
1.
2.
Hardware failure.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Notes
2.
(2)
(2)
(2)
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
Alarm ID
31004
31005
Name
User Guide
Type
Unsuitable-softwareconfiguration-for-MIMO- Alarm
alarm
Clock-source-sharingfailure-alarm
Alarm
Description
Severity
Critical
Probable Cause
1.
2.
3.
1.
Critical
2.
Corrective Action
Notes
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
(2)
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
25.
User Guide
Abbreviations
The following table lists the abbreviations used in this guide.
A
ABC
ABN
AC
Alternating Current
ACAP
ACCP
ACM
ACR
AES
AGC
AIS
ALC
ANSI
ASIC
ATPC
AUX
Auxiliary Unit
B
BB
Baseband
BBS
Baseband Switching
BER
BLSR
BPDU
BWA
C
CBS
CCDP
CCITT
CET
Carrier-Ethernet Transport
CFM
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
CIR
CLI
Clk
Clock
CODEC
Coder/Decoder
CoS
Class of Service
D
DA
Destination Address
DC
Direct Current
DCB
DCC
DXC
DSCP
E
EBS
EIR
EMC
Electromagnetic Compatibility
EOW
EPROM
ESD
Electrostatic Discharge
ETSI
F
FCC
FCS
FTP
G
GbE
Gigabit Ethernet
GFP
GND
Ground
GRE
GTP
H
HBER
HDLC
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
HF
HSB
Hot-Standby
HTTP
HTTPS
I
IDC
Indoor Controller
IF
Intermediate Frequency
IFC
IF Combining
ISO
ITU
ITU-R
ITU-T
IVM
Inventory Module
L
LACP
LAG
LAN
LBER
LCAS
LED
LIU
LLDP
LLF
LMS
LO
Local Oscillator
LOC
Loss of Carrier
LOF
Loss of Frame
LOS
Loss of Signal
LSI
LTE
Long-Term Evolution
M
MAID
MPLS
MSP
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
MUX
User Guide
Multiplexer
N
NE
Network Element
NMS
NTP
O
OAM
OCB
OHC
OverHead Connections
OMT
OOF
Out of Frame
OPEX
Operational Expenditure
P
PBB-TE
PBS
PC
Personal Computer
PCB
PDV
PIR
PLL
PM
Performance Monitoring
PN
Provider Network
PROM
PSN
PTP
PWR
Power
Q
QoE
Quality of Experience
QoS
Quality of Service
R
RBAC
RCVR
Receiver
RDI
RF
Radio Frequency
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
RIP
RMON
Ethernet Statistics
RPS
RSL
RSSI
RSTP
S
SAP
SDH
SDWRR
SETS
SFTP
Secure FTP
SLA
SNCP
SNMP
SNP
SNR
SNTP
SOH
SONET
SP
Service Point
SSH
SSM
STP
SyncE
Synchronous Ethernet
SVCE
T
TC
Traffic Class
TIM
TOH
TOS
Type Of Service
V
VC
Virtual Container
VCO
FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
VCXO
VLSI
W
WAN
Web EMS
WFQ
WG
Waveguide
WRED
WRR
X
XCVR
Transceiver (Transmitter/Receiver)
XMTR
Transmitter
XO
Crystal Oscillator
XPD
XPIC