Transition Networks Network Cables BFFG1XXX 1XX User Manual

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Transition Networks  
Table of contents  
Continued on next page  
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Table of contents, continued  
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Trademark, copyright information, and about this manual  
Trademark  
All trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.  
Copyright  
restrictions  
© 2008 Transition Networks: All rights reserved. No part of this work may be  
reproduced or used in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic, or  
mechanical—without written permission from Transition Networks.  
Printed in the U.S.A.  
About this  
manual  
This manual is designed to help you find the information you need quickly. It is  
structured as follows:  
Table of Contents (TOC)  
Section TOC: Shows all the major topics in the section  
Side Headings: Shows all the sub topics on each page  
Index  
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Caution and warnings  
Definitions  
Cautions indicate that there is the possibility of poor equipment performance or  
damage to the equipment. The symbol below identifies cautions  
Warnings indicate that there is the possibility of injury to person.  
Cautions and Warnings appear here and may appear throughout this manual where  
appropriate. Failure to read and understand the information identified by the symbol  
could result in poor equipment performance, damage to the equipment, or injury to  
persons.  
Cautions  
When handling chassis Devices observe electrostatic discharge precautions.  
This requires proper grounding; i.e., wear a wrist strap.  
Copper based media ports, e.g., Twisted Pair (TP) Ethernet, USB, RS232,  
RS422, RS485, DS1, DS3, Video Coax, etc., are intended to be connected to  
intra-building (inside plant) link segments that are not subject to lightening  
transients or power faults.  
Copper based media ports, e.g., Twisted Pair (TP) Ethernet, USB, RS232,  
RS422, RS485, DS1, DS3, Video Coax, etc., are NOT to be connected to  
inter-building (outside plant) link segments that are subject to lightening.  
DO NOT install the Devices in areas where strong electromagnetic fields  
(EMF) exist. Failure to observe this caution could result in poor Device  
performance.  
Warnings  
Use of controls, adjustments or the performance of procedures other than  
those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.  
Visible and invisible laser radiation when open. DO NOT stare into the beam  
or view the beam directly with optical instruments. Failure to observe this  
warning could result in an eye injury or blindness.  
iv  
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Section I:  
Product Description  
In this section  
These are the topics:  
Topic  
See Page  
General description  
Product features  
2
3
Management methods  
Hardware description  
4
5
FBRM/BFFG13xx-1xx fiber-to-fiber gigabit models  
Redundant SFBRM1040-140 models  
13  
15  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Transition Networks  
General description  
Design and  
configuration  
The FBRM and BFFG Devices are designed as standalone models, and also as slide-  
in Devices for the Point System chassis. These Devices can be managed through  
SNMP via the Focal Point software (free), Web-based management, Local SNMP,  
and USB interfaces.  
The CFBRM and CBFFG (chassis Devices), and SFBRM and SBFFG (standalone  
Devices) are designed to manage Devices remotely through the copper and fiber  
ports.  
The FBRM or BFFG Devices installed on a network should be configured one as the  
local peer and the other as a remote peer for management.  
Remote management is accomplished using OAM (Operation Administration and  
Maintenance) per the IEEE 802.3ah, 2004 standard. Standalone Devices can also be  
managed via IP (Web-based) or Telnet.  
What is OAM? These Devices implement the IEEE 802.3ah standard or (OAM) in the Ethernet first  
mile. OAM is a group of network management functions that provide network fault  
indications, performance information, data, and diagnosis. These Devices implement  
remote management via OAM as per the IEEE 802.3ah standard.  
In-band  
management  
These Devices implement complete Real-Time Multi-Threaded Operating System  
(RTOS) with a TCP/IP stack for in-band management.  
USB interface  
The USB (Universal Serial Bus) type “B” serial port is used mainly to configure  
Device-basic setup before installation and operation on a network.  
Point System  
Implements the current Point System management I2C interface. This allows  
mgmt interface managing the Device via SNMP, using the existing Point System method.  
2
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Product features  
Supported  
features  
The following is a list of the major FBRM and BFFG Device supported features:  
Remote Management via OAM (IEEE 802.3ah) and IP-based management  
AutoCross  
Transparent Link pass-through with automatic link restoration  
Far end fault detection on fiber ports  
OAM IEEE 802.3ah  
Auto-Negotiation (enable/disable)  
Force 10 Mbs or 100 Mbs speed (non-gigabit models only)  
Force half or full duplex  
Pause capability  
Automatic firmware upgrade via OAM  
Forwards all IEEE multicast frames including STP/LACP/LAMP  
Enable/disable USB port access  
Enable/disable SNMP queries  
Enable/disable system-level IP management or on a per port basis  
IEEE 802.1q VLAN (virtual local area network)  
Management VLAN for all management frames  
IEEE 802.1x port-based network access control  
Radius authentication for management  
Remote and local firmware upgrades via TFTP (Trivial File Transfer Protocol) or  
Xmodem  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Transition Networks  
Management methods  
Management  
The FBRM and BFFG Devices support the following management methods:  
USB CLI (Command Line Interface)  
Telnet  
MMU (Management Module Unit) chassis web-based  
IP-based (web-based directly to the Device)  
USB  
USB management requires a direct connection to the Device via a computer. This  
method is used to set up initially or to troubleshoot Devices in the field.  
Telnet  
Telnet management requires that the Device be connected to a network. Then from  
the CPU command line type Telnet and the Device IP address as shown as follows:  
Telnet nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn (represents Device IP address).  
MMU  
The MMU (Management Module Unit) is the heart of the Point System chassis’  
management capability. It has the ability to monitor and manage all its installed  
Devices. The MMU communicates through the CLI presented at the serial port, or  
through SNMP, Telnet CLI, and Web interface available via the Ethernet port.  
IP-based (web-  
based)  
The switch provides complete management through IP via an SNMP interface, web-  
browser, or Telnet. The Device provides an embedded web server for web-based  
management. It also offers advanced management features and enables Device  
management from anywhere on the network through a standard browser, such as  
Microsoft Internet Explorer or Netscape.  
4
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Hardware description  
Front panel  
CFBRM  
The front panel of the CFBRM10xx-1xx Devices has the following ports and LEDs:  
Ports  
Front Panel LEDs  
Power (one)  
One RJ-45 auto-sensing of 10Base or 10/100Base-TX UTP  
connections  
RJ-45 port (two)  
One 100Base-FX/LX/BX fiber either SC or ST connectors  
LACT (one)  
DPX (one)  
USB (one)  
One USB  
Figure 1: Chassis CFBRM10xx-1xx Device Front Panel  
Note: The LEDs and ports are the same on the SFBRM10xx-1xx standalone  
models.  
Continued on next page  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
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Hardware description, continued  
Front panel  
CFBRM  
The front panel of the CFBRM 1040-140 Devices has the following ports and LEDs:  
Ports  
Front Panel LEDs  
Power (one)  
Link/Active  
Speed  
100Base-FX SFP port  
10/100 Base-T copper port  
Duplex (one)  
USB (one)  
One USB  
Figure 2: CFBRM1040-100 Front Panel  
Note: The LEDs and ports are the same on the SFBRM1040-140 standalone  
models.  
Continued on next page  
6
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Hardware description, continued  
Front panel  
The front panel of the CFBRM13xx-1xx Devices has the following ports and LEDs:  
CFBRM Gbit  
Ports  
Front Panel LEDs  
Power (one)  
One 100 Base-T  
Fiber-Port Link (one)  
Fiber-Port Link (one)  
USB (one)  
One 1000Base-FX/LX/BX fiber either SC or ST connectors  
One USB  
SC Connector  
Fiber  
SC Connector  
Fiber  
USB Port  
100Base-T  
1000Base-X  
PWR  
LNK  
LNK  
USB  
Power  
LED  
USB LED  
Fiber Link  
LED  
Fiber Link  
LED  
Figure 3: Chassis CFBRM13xx-1xx Device Front Panel  
Note: The LEDs and ports are the same on the SFBRM13xx-1xx standalone  
models.  
Continued on next page  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Transition Networks  
Hardware description, continued  
Front panel  
The front panel of the CBFFG10xx-1xx Devices has the following ports and LEDs:  
CBFFG Gbit  
Ports  
Front Panel LEDs  
Power (one)  
Link/Active  
Speed  
1000Base-SX/LX/BX fiber SC port  
10/100/1000Base-T copper port  
Duplex (one)  
USB (one)  
One USB  
Figure 4: CBFFG10xx-1xx Device Front Panel  
Note: The LEDs and ports are the same on the SBFFG10xx-1xx standalone  
models.  
Continued on next page  
8
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Hardware description, continued  
Front panel  
The front panel of the CBFFG1040-1xx Devices has the following ports and LEDs:  
CBFFG Gbit  
Ports  
Front Panel LEDs  
Power (one)  
Link/Active  
Speed  
1000Base SFP port  
10/100/1000Base-T copper port  
Duplex (one)  
USB (one)  
One USB  
SFP Port  
Speed  
Duplex/Link  
USB Port  
Power  
USB  
1000Base-X  
10/100/1000  
Link Active  
USB LED  
RJ45 Port  
Figure 5: CBFFG1040-1xx Device Front Panel  
Note: The LEDs and ports are the same on the SBFFG1040-1xx standalone  
models.  
Continued on next page  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Transition Networks  
Hardware description, continued  
Front panel  
The front panel of the CBFFG13xx-1xx Devices has the following ports and LEDs:  
CBFFG Gbit  
Ports  
Front Panel LEDs  
Power (one)  
Two 1000Base-FX/LX/BX fiber either SC or ST connectors  
One USB  
Fiber-Port Link (two)  
Duplex (one)  
USB (one)  
Figure 6: Chassis CBFFG13xx-1xx Device Front Panel  
Note: The LEDs and ports are the same on the SBFFG13xx-1xx standalone  
models.  
Continued on next page  
10  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Hardware description, continued  
Front panel  
SFBRM  
The front panel of the SFBRM1040-140 redundant Devices has the following ports  
and LEDs:  
Ports  
Front Panel LEDs  
Power (one)  
Link/Active  
Duplex  
Speed  
Duplex (one)  
USB (one)  
1000Base SX/LX SFP ports (2 and 3)  
10/100/1000Base-T copper port (1)  
One USB  
Figure 7: CBFFG1040-140 Device Front Panel  
Continued on next page  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
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Hardware description, continued  
Rear panel  
(standalone)  
On the standalone SFBRM and SBFFG Devices only, the rear panel consists of a  
power-barrel connector for connecting power via a power adaptor. See Figure 8.  
Figure 8: SFBRM/SBFFG 1xxx-1xx Device Real Panel (Standalone Only)  
Note: The Point System chassis powers the CFBRM and CBFFG chassis Devices.  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
FBRM/BFFG13xx-1xx fiber-to-fiber gigabit models  
Gigabit (Gbit)  
models  
The FBRM100Base-FX-to-1000Base-X and the BFFG 1000Base-X-to-1000Base-X  
are the Gbit versions of the IEEE 802.3ah managed Devices. The BFFG models link  
Gbit fiber connections; the FBRM models convert 100Base-Fx 100 Mbit/s to Gbit.  
These Devices function generally in the same manner as copper-to-fiber FBRMs, the  
difference is the way the ports are configured. See Tables 1 and 2.  
Table 1: FBRM13xx-1xx 100Base-FX-to-1000Base-X Device  
Port  
Configuration  
Port 1: 100Base-FX  
Default setting: 100Mbs and full duplex.  
FEFI (Far-end fault indication) is configurable.  
Default:  
Port 2: 1000Base-X  
Auto-Negotiation enabled.  
OAM enabled and in Active Mode if chassis Device  
(passive if standalone).  
Table 2: BFFG13xx-1xx 1000Base-X-to-1000Base-X Device  
Port  
Configuration  
Port 1: 1000Base-X  
Default: Auto-Negotiation enabled.  
Port 2: 1000Base-X  
Default:  
Auto-Negotiation enabled.  
OAM is enabled and in Active Mode if chassis Device  
(passive if standalone).  
Continued on next page  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
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FBRM/BFFG13xx-1xx fiber-to-fiber gigabit models, continued  
Connectivity  
The different versions of the FBRM and BFFG can be connected and set up to  
manage a remote peer completely. In a mixed setup with other FBRM or BFFG  
Devices, consider the connectivity scenarios in Figure 9, and the explanation that  
follows:  
Figure 9: Connectivity Scenarios  
Connection  
scenario  
explanation  
In Figure 9, P2 of the active local peer in both scenarios is “OAM enabled” and  
“Active” by default. To manage the remote passive peer via OAM, configure P1 of  
the active local peer as follows:  
Enable OAM  
Select Active mode  
If the connection to the passive remote peer is made thru P2 of the active local peer,  
OAM occurs without human intervention.  
Note: Automatic firmware upgrades will not occur with different types of FBRM  
or BFFG Device configurations.  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
Redundant SFBRM1040-140 models  
Redundant  
models  
These SFBRM SFP Devices support fiber redundancy. They have two (2) fiber SFP  
ports and one (1) copper port. When you tag the fiber ports as primary and secondary  
with redundancy enabled, any fault on the primary port results in the secondary port  
becoming operational. There is an option for reverting back to the primary once it  
has been restored, or you can continue using the secondary port—these are user  
selectable features. See Figure 10.  
Figure 10: SFBRMs in Redundant Mode  
Explanation  
With Port 3 as the secondary port in Redundancy Mode and Port 2, the primary goes  
down, the following will happen:  
Stage  
Description  
A.  
All Physical layer and OAM configurations of Port 2 will be applied to  
Port 3.  
B.  
C.  
D.  
E.  
Port 2 is disabled, and Port 3 initialized to take over.  
An SNMP trap is sent indicating that the ports have switched.  
OAM reinitializes (resets all OAM counters and event logs).  
All the dynamic MAC entries in the ATU are flushed and the active port  
has to relearn the entries.  
Note: If the configuration option “revert” is set, when the primary port link is  
restored the session will revert back to the primary port. If the “revert’ option  
is NOT SET and the primary link is restored, the secondary port remains in  
operation until the user intervenes.  
Continued on next page  
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Section I: FBRM/BFFG Product Description  
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Redundant SFBRM1040-140 models, continued  
3-port switch  
mode  
In this mode, the Device acts as a 3-port switch with the fiber port connected to 2  
remote Devices. See Figure 11.  
Figure 11: 3-Port Switch Mode  
Note: In 3-port switch mode:  
Only one OAM session can be active at anytime.  
Transparent Link pass through is not applicable in this scenario. The port  
link status from the Devices is received only as SNMP traps.  
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Section II:  
Hardware Installation  
Introduction  
This section describes how to install the CFBRM and CBFFG Devices into a Point  
System chassis with a remotely managed SFBRM or CFBRM standalone Device.  
Also, shows how to install two SFBRM Devices or two SBFFG standalone Devices  
on a network, one as a local Device and the other as a remotely managed Device.  
Caution  
When handling chassis Devices observe electrostatic discharge precautions.  
This requires proper grounding; i.e., wear a wrist strap. Failure to observe this  
caution could result in damage to the chassis Device.  
In this section  
These are the topics:  
Topic  
See Page  
Installing CFBRM/CBFFG Devices into a point system chassis  
Installing SFBRM/SBFFG standalone models  
Installing copper and fiber cables  
18  
19  
20  
22  
Connecting power (standalone models)  
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Section ll: FBRM/BFFG Hardware Installation  
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Installing CFBRM/CBFFG Devices into point system chassis  
IMPORTANT  
The CFBRM/CBFFG Device product family IS NOT compatible with the CPSMM-  
200 and CPSMM-210 MGMT modules when used in a cascaded application. The  
CFBRM/CBFFG can be installed in the “master” chassis with the CPSMM-200  
MGMT module, but they can not be installed in a cascaded chassis using the  
CPSMM-210 MGMT module.  
Alternatively, the CFBRM/CBFFG can be used with the CPSMM120 MGMT  
module, which does not support chassis cascading.  
Caution  
Wear a grounding strap and observe electrostatic discharge precautions when  
installing the CFBRM/CBFFG Device into the Point System chassis. Failure  
to observe this caution could result in damage to the Device.  
Chassis Device  
installation  
To install the chassis Device into the Point System chassis, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
Locate an empty slot in the Point System chassis.  
Grasp the edges of the Device by its front panel.  
Align the Device with the slot guides and carefully insert the Device into  
the installation slot.  
2.  
3.  
4.  
5.  
Firmly seat the Device against the chassis back panel.  
Push IN and ROTATE clockwise the panel-fastener screw to secure the  
Device to the chassis. See Figure 12.  
Figure 12: CFBRM/CBFFG Device Chassis Installation  
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Section ll: FBRM/BFFG Hardware Installation  
Installing SFBRM/SBFFG standalone models  
Standalone  
installation  
Figure 13 shows a typical installation involving two (2) SFBRM/SBFFG standalone  
Devices on a network.  
Figure 13: Installation with Two SFBRM/SBFFG Standalone Devices  
Note: With the local active standalone Device connected to a remote standalone  
passive Device and with “Mode Control” set to “Auto,” the local (active)  
Device will manage the remote (passive) Device. This relationship is  
established automatically.  
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Section ll: FBRM/BFFG Hardware Installation  
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Installing fiber and copper cables  
Warning  
Use of controls, any adjustments, or the performance of procedures other than  
those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.  
Visible and invisible laser radiation when open: DO NOT stare into the laser-  
light beam or view the beam directly with optical instruments. Failure to  
observe this warning could result in an eye injury or blindness.  
Fiber cable  
To install the fiber cable, do the following:  
Step  
Action  
1.  
Locate a 100/1000Base-FX/SX/LX compliant fiber cable with male,  
two-stranded connectors installed at both ends. See Figure 14.  
Connect the fiber cables to the FBRM or BFFG Devices as shown in  
Figure 14.  
2.  
Figure 14: Fiber Cable Installation  
Continued on next page  
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Section ll: FBRM/BFFG Hardware Installation  
Installing fiber and copper cables, continued  
Caution  
Copper based media ports, e.g., Twisted Pair (TP) Ethernet, USB, RS232,  
RS422, RS485, DS1, DS3, Video Coax, etc. are intended to be connected to  
intra-building (inside building) link segments that are not subject to lightening  
transients or power faults. Failure to observe this caution could result in  
damage to equipment.  
Copper cable  
To install the copper cable, do the following:  
Step  
Action  
1.  
Locate a 10/100 or 10/100/1000Base-T compliant copper cable with  
male, RJ-45 connectors installed at both ends.  
Connect the RJ-45 connector at one end of the cable to the Device’s RJ-  
45 ports.  
Connect the RJ-45 connector at the other end of the cable to the 10/100  
or 10/100/1000Base-T RJ-45 port on the other Device (switch,  
workstation, etc.). See Figure 15.  
2.  
3.  
Figure 15: Copper Cable Installation  
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Section ll: FBRM/BFFG Hardware Installation  
Transition Networks  
Connecting power (standalone models)  
Chassis powers Transition Networks’ Point System chassis powers the CFBRM/CBFFG chassis  
slide-in Device Devices.  
Adapter powers Use an AC power adaptor to power the SFBRM/SBFFG standalone Device. To  
standalone  
connect power to the Device, do the following:  
Step  
Action  
1.  
Connect the barrel connector on the power adapter cord to the power  
connector on the Device (located on the rear of the Device).  
See Figure 16.  
Figure 16: Standalone Device Power Connector  
2.  
3.  
Connect the power adapter plug into AC power.  
Verify that the Device has powered UP—the power indicator LED will be  
lit.  
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Section ll: FBRM/BFFG Hardware Installation  
Intentionally Blank  
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Section III:  
USB Driver Installation & COM Port Setup  
Introduction  
This section shows how to install the USB driver and configure COM ports.  
In this section  
These are the topics:  
Topic  
See Page  
Installing USB driver  
Configuring COM ports  
25  
29  
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Section lll: FBRM/BFFG1 Driver Installation & COM Port Setup  
Installing USB driver  
USB driver  
The driver installation instructions are for Windows XP only. Installing the USB  
driver using Windows 2000 is similar, but not necessarily identical to the following  
Windows XP driver-installation procedure.  
Note: The following USB drivers are provided with the product on a CD, also  
available at www.ftdichip.com (click on drivers): WinXP64, Win Server  
2003, Win 2002, Win ME/98, Mac OS X, 9, 8, and Linux.  
Installing USB  
driver  
To install the USB driver on a computer with a Windows XP OS, do the following:  
Step  
Action  
1.  
Extract the driver (provided CD or from website) and place it in an  
accessible folder on the local drive.  
2.  
3.  
Plug the Device into the USB port on the PC to bring up the “found new  
hardware” wizard dialog box, shown in Figure 17.  
Select RADIO button, “No, not this time” as shown in Figure 17.  
Figure 17: Found New Hardware Wizard Dialog Box  
Continued on next page  
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Section lll: FBRM/BFFG USB Driver Installation & COM Port Setup  
Transition Networks  
Installing USB driver, continued  
Installing USB driver (continued)  
Step  
4.  
5.  
Action  
Click the NEXT button to launch the “installation options” dialog box.  
Select RADIO button “Install from a list or specific location  
(Advanced)” as shown in Figure 18.  
Figure 18: Installation Options Dialog Box  
6.  
Click the NEXT button to bring up the “driver search installation  
options” dialog boxes shown in Figure 19.  
Figure 19: Driver Search Installation Options Dialog Box  
Continued on next page  
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Section lll: FBRM/BFFG1 Driver Installation & COM Port Setup  
Installing USB driver, continued  
Step  
Action  
7.  
Use the BROWSE button to locate the USB driver, as shown in  
Figure 20.  
C:\FBRM/BFFG1xx  
Figure 20: Driver Location  
8. Click the NEXT button to start installing the driver and the driver-install  
screen will appear as XP copies the Device driver. See Figure 21.  
FBRM/BFFG1xx Driver  
Figure 21: Windows XP Installing Driver Box  
Continued on next page  
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Section lll: FBRM/BFFG USB Driver Installation & COM Port Setup  
Transition Networks  
Installing USB driver, continued  
Step  
Action  
9.  
After the driver installation is successful, the “finished installing” dialog  
box will appear, as shown in Figure 22.  
Figure 22: Finish Installing Driver Dialog Box  
10.  
Click the FINISH button and a “found new hardware” message will  
appear on the lower right side of the screen, as shown in Figure 23.  
Figure 23: New Hardware Installed and Ready to Use  
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Section lll: FBRM/BFFG1 Driver Installation & COM Port Setup  
Configuring COM port  
Getting COM  
port number  
You need the COM port number to configure the terminal emulator. To get the COM  
port number, do the following:  
Step  
Action  
1.  
On the desktop, right click on the “my computer” icon and select  
“Device manager” to open the “computer management” window.  
Click on “Device manager” to open the Device manager’s panel (screen  
right panel) shown in Figure 24.  
2.  
Figure 24: Computer Management Window  
Expand the Ports (COM & LPT) in the right column and write down the  
USB COM port number for configuring the terminal emulator software  
used for the USB Device.  
3.  
Continued on next page  
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Section lll: FBRM/BFFG USB Driver Installation & COM Port Setup  
Transition Networks  
Configuring COM port, continued  
Terminal  
To set up the terminal emulator software, e.g., HyperTerminal to use the USB COM  
emulator setup port, do the following:  
Step  
Action  
1.  
Activate the “HyperTerminal” software to bring up the “connection  
description” dialog box, shown in Figure 25.  
Figure 25: Connexion Description Diallo Box  
2.  
3.  
Type in a name and select an icon.  
Click the OK button to launch the “connect to” dialog box, shown in  
Figure 26.  
Figure 26: Connect To Dialog Box  
Continued on next page  
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Section lll: FBRM/BFFG1 Driver Installation & COM Port Setup  
Configuring COM port, continued  
Terminal emulator setup (continued)  
Step  
Action  
4.  
Select the COM port identified for the USB Device shown in the Device  
manager.  
5.  
Click the OK button to bring up the “port settings” dialog box, shown in  
Figure 27.  
Figure 27: COM Port Settings Dialog Box  
6.  
Set the COM port properties as follows:  
Baud:  
57600  
Data length:  
Parity:  
Stop bit:  
8
None  
1
Flow Control: None  
7.  
Click the OK button and the Device login prompt will appear.  
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Section live:  
Initial Device Setup  
Introduction  
There are four ways to set up the FBRM/BFFG 1xxx-1xx Devices before the Device  
can be operated and managed:  
USB CLI  
Telnet  
Chassis MMU (chassis model)  
IP-based (directly to FBRM/BFFG)  
The factory default IP configuration is the following:  
IP address:  
Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0  
Gateway: 192.168.1.2  
192.168.1.1  
In this section  
These are the topics:  
USB CLI access  
Topic  
See Page  
33  
35  
38  
41  
44  
Initial Device setup via USB CLI  
Initial Device setup via Telnet (directly to Device)  
Initial Device setup via chassis agent (MMU) web-based  
Initial Device setup via IP web-based (directly to Device)  
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Transition Networks  
Section lV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
USB CLI access  
Accessing the  
USB CLI  
To access the USB CLI, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
Connect the Device to a computer via the USB port.  
2.  
3.  
4.  
Activate the terminal emulator software to launch the emulator screen.  
Press the ENTER key to bring up the “password” prompt.  
Enter the password and then the login (default is “root” in both cases) to  
bring up the Device console> prompt, shown in Figure 28.  
Password :  
Login : root  
Password :  
Console:/>_  
Figure 28: Device Console Prompt  
To access the commands list, at the console> prompt type help or “?”  
Press the ENTER key to launch the “commands” screen, shown in  
Figure 29.  
5.  
6.  
Figure 29: Commands for FBRM/BFFGs Models  
Note: See Appendix C for a complete list of the configuration commands and  
definitions. All CLI commands are case sensitive.  
Continued on next page  
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Section IV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Transition Networks  
USB CLI access, continued  
Redundant  
The following is the screen of commands for the redundant SFP Devices.  
Figure 30: Commands for Redundant SFP Models  
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Section lV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Initial Device setup via USB CLI  
IP  
Use the ‘set’ commands to set the IP configuration through the USB port. Configure  
the Device with a network IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway. Set the IP  
address via USB CLI (Command Line Interface), or via DHCP (Dynamic Host  
Configuration Protocol), which is disabled by default.  
configuration  
Factory default The factory default IP configuration shipped with the Device is as follows:  
IP config  
IP address:  
Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0  
Gateway: 192.168.1.2  
192.168.1.1  
Note: Type “help set <command>” to display the format used to set the commands.  
Set IP config  
via USB CLI  
To set the IP via the USB CLI, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
At the console> prompt type set ip=nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn  
Press the ENTER key to set the IP address.  
At the console> prompt type set netmask=nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn  
Press the ENTER key to set the netmask.  
At the console> prompt type set gateway=nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn  
At the console> prompt type save  
2.  
3.  
4.  
5.  
6.  
7.  
Press the ENTER key to save the new IP configuration.  
Continued on next page  
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Section IV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Transition Networks  
Initial Device setup via USB CLI, continued  
DHCP method  
To set the IP configuration via the DHCP in console mode, do the following:  
Note: A DHCP server must be on the network and accessible before using this  
method.  
Step  
1.  
Action  
At the console> prompt type set dhcp=enable  
2.  
Press the ENTER key and the screen will appear as shown in Figure 31.  
Figure 31: Enable DHCP  
Type reboot  
3.  
4.  
Press the ENTER key to reboot the Device and start the DHCP process.  
Note: DHCP “successful” will appear on the screen when completed, or “failed” if  
not successful.  
Continued on next page  
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Section lV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Initial Device setup via USB CLI, continued  
Show system  
configuration  
To show the Device system configuration, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
At the console> prompt type show  
2.  
Press the ENTER key to bring up the Device system configuration screen,  
shown in Figure 32.  
Figure 32: Example System Configuration Screen  
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Section IV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Transition Networks  
Initial Device setup via telnet (directly to Device)  
To set up the Device initially via telnet directly to the Device, do the following:  
Initial setup via  
Telnet to  
Device  
Step  
Action  
1.  
At the command line type: Telnet nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn (IP address of the Device) to  
bring up the password prompt, shown in Figure 33.  
Figure 33: Password Prompt  
2.  
3.  
Type the case-sensitive username and password (default is ‘root’ for  
both).  
Press the ENTER key to launch the console prompt, shown in Figure 34.  
Figure 34: Console Prompt  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Section lV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Initial Device setup via telnet (directly to Device), continued  
Step  
4.  
Action  
At the console:/> prompt type show  
5.  
Press the ENTER key to display the system configuration, as shown in  
Figure 35.  
Figure 35: System Configuration Screen  
Continued on next page  
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Section IV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Transition Networks  
Initial Device setup via telnet (directly to Device), continued  
Step  
Action  
6.  
At the console prompt type: help  
7.  
Press the ENTER key to show the commands, shown in Figure 36.  
Figure 36: Device Command Screen  
Note: The CLI and Telnet interface commands are structured in the same manner.  
Terminating  
telnet  
To disconnect the Telnet client from the management module server, press the  
CTRL-D keys, or at the console prompt type: exit or logoff  
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Section lV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Initial Device setup via chassis agent MMU, web-based  
Setup via Web  
to MMU  
To set up the Device initially via the MMU web-based, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
Open a web browser.  
2.  
3.  
At the URL type the IP address of the chassis (MMU).  
Click the GO button to bring up the password screen, shown in Figure 37.  
Figure 37: Chassis Agent (MMU) Log In Screen  
4.  
5.  
Type the password (default is private).  
Press the ENTER key to launch the chassis agent’s main menu, shown in  
Figure 38.  
Figure 38: Chassis Agent (MMU) Main Menu  
6.  
Click the VIEW button to show the Devices in the chassis and the screen  
will appear, as shown in Figure 39.  
Figure 39: Point System Chassis Main Menu  
Continued on next page  
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Section IV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Transition Networks  
Initial Device setup via chassis agent MMU, web-based, continued  
Step  
Action  
7.  
Click the VIEW button of the CFBRM/CBFFG Device in slot 9 to show  
the local configuration screen for the Device. See Figure 40.  
Note: You can configure the IP along with other Device parameters on this screen.  
Figure 40: Local Switch FBRM/BFFG Configuration Screen  
Note: DO NOT use the browser BACK button to navigate the screens. This will  
cause the connection to drop.  
Continued on next page  
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Section lV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Initial Device setup via chassis agent MMU, web-based, continued  
IP config via  
DHCP  
To configure the IP via DHCP, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
2.  
3.  
4.  
Action  
A DHCP server must be on the network and accessible.  
On the local switch configuration screen, enable DHCP.  
On the local switch configuration screen set item Reset Switch to “Yes.”  
Click the SAVE/EXECUTE button to start the DHCP process.  
Note: To verify that the DHCP IP configuration was successful, check the IP  
configuration for the Device on the local switch screen and note the changes  
to the IP configuration.  
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Section IV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Transition Networks  
Initial Device setup IP web-based (directly to Device)  
Initial setup via To set up the Device initially via a IP web-based, do the following:  
IP to Device  
Step  
1.  
Action  
Open a web browser.  
2.  
At the URL type in the FBRM/BFFG default IP address.  
3.  
Click the GO button to launch the password screen shown in Figure 41.  
Figure 41: Login Screen  
4.  
5.  
Type the password (default is private).  
Press the ENTER key to launch the FBRM/BFFG main menu, as shown  
in Figure 42.  
Figure 42: FBRM/BFFG Main Menu  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Section lV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Initial Device setup IP web-based (directly to Device), continued  
Step  
Action  
6.  
Click the local system configuration VIEW button to show the local  
system configuration menu, shown in Figure 43.  
Note: You can configure the IP along with other Device parameters on this screen.  
Figure 43: FBRM/BFFG Local System Configuration Screen  
Note: DO NOT use the browser BACK button to navigate the screens. This will  
cause the connection to drop.  
Continued on next page  
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Section IV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Transition Networks  
Initial Device setup IP web-based (directly to Device), continued  
IP config via  
DHCP  
To set up the IP configuration via DHCP, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
A DHCP server must be on the network and accessible.  
2.  
On the local switch configuration screen, enable DHCP as shown in Figure  
44.  
Figure 44: IP-based Local System Configuration Screen  
3.  
Click the Local REBOOT button at the top of the screen to start the DHCP  
process.  
Note: To verify that the DHCP IP configuration was successful, check the IP  
configuration for the Device on the local system configuration screen and  
note the changes to the IP configuration.  
Continued on next page  
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Section lV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Initial Device setup IP web-based (directly to Device), continued  
Redundant  
Devices  
To set up the redundant feature for the stand-alone 3-port FBRM SFP Device via IP  
web-based, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
Open a web browser.  
2.  
3.  
At the URL type in the SFBRM default IP address.  
Click the GO button to launch the password screen shown in Figure 45.  
Figure 45: Login Screen  
4.  
5.  
Type the password (default is private).  
Press the ENTER key to launch the SFBRM main menu, as shown in  
Figure 46.  
Figure 46: Redundant Device Main Menu  
Continued on next page  
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Section IV: FBRM/BFFG Initial Device Setup  
Transition Networks  
Initial Device setup IP web-based (directly to Device), continued  
Step  
Action  
6.  
Click the advance system configuration VIEW button to show the  
redundancy configuration parameters, shown in Figure 47.  
Figure 47: Redundancy Configuration Screen  
Note: The redundancy features are specific to the 3-port SFBRM SFP Device  
only.  
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Sections V:  
Device Management  
In this section  
These are the topics:  
Topic  
See Page  
SNMP IP-based management  
Device management via chassis MMU web-based  
Device management via IP (directly to Device)  
50  
53  
56  
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Section V: FBRM/BFFG Device Management  
Transition Networks  
SNMP IP-based management  
SNMP  
The FBRM/BFFG Device provides complete management through the SNMP  
interface. It supports the following standard MIBs for management, using SNMPv1:  
RFC 1213 (MIB- II)  
RFC 2819 (RMON – statistics group)  
RFC 2863 (IF MIB counters)  
RFC 3635 (Ether-like MIB counters)  
RFC 1493 (Bridge MIB objects counters)  
RFC 2674 (Bridge extension counters)  
I-D: draft-ietf-hubmib-efm-mib (EFM OAM mib – the EFM hub mib is added to the  
TN private tree since it has not been added to the ISO tree.) Use the provide version  
shipped on the CD with your Device.  
See Figure 48.  
EFM-Hub MIBs  
Figure 48: EFM Hub MIBs Added to Private Tree  
Continued on next page  
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Section V: FBRM/BFFG Device Management  
SNMP IP-based management, continued  
The TN private MIBs for SNMP IP-based management feature extensive  
management options. Some of the features are the following:  
TN private  
MIBs  
Copper and fiber link status  
Copper and fiber port duplex  
Administratively enable/disable port  
Copper port speed  
Enable/disable Auto-Negotiation (copper)  
Enable/disable Pause  
Enable/disable capability advertisement for speed and duplex  
RMON statistics  
AutoCross on copper port  
Remote fault detect  
Enable/disable far-end fault on fiber  
Transparent link-pass through  
802.3ah OAM enable/disable on all ports  
OAM channel statistics  
OAM remote loopback  
Rate limiting/band width allocation using fixed rate sets  
IP traffic class priority  
802.1q VLAN support  
Virtual cable test  
The remote Device can be managed completely through OAM. Figure 49 shows an  
example of a private MIB objects tree.  
Continued on next page  
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Section V: FBRM/BFFG Device Management  
Transition Networks  
SNMP IP-based management, continued  
MIB objects  
Figure 49 shows the placement of the MIB objects on the private tree.  
Private MIB Objects  
Figure 49: Private MIB Objects  
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Section V: FBRM/BFFG Device Management  
Device management via chassis agent (MMU) web-based  
Management  
via MMU  
To set up the FBRM/BFFG initially via the MMU, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
Open a web browser.  
2.  
3.  
At the URL type the IP address of the chassis (MMU).  
Click the GO button to launch the password screen. See Figure 50.  
Figure 50: Chassis Agent (MMU) Login Screen  
4.  
5.  
Type the password (default is private).  
Press the ENTER key to launch the chassis agent’s main menu, as shown  
in Figure 51.  
Figure 51: Chassis Agent (MMU) Main Menu  
6.  
Click the VIEW button to show the Devices in the cabinet slots, as shown  
in Figure 52.  
Figure 52: Devices in Chassis Slots  
Continued on next page  
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Section V: FBRM/BFFG Device Management  
Transition Networks  
Device management via chassis agent (MMU) web-based, continued  
Step  
Action  
7.  
Click the VIEW button of the CFBRM/CBFFG Device to bring up the  
local switch management screen. See Figure 53.  
Figure 53: Local Switch Configuration Screen  
8. Scroll down to the LOCAL PORT buttons, shown in Figure 54.  
Figure 54: Local System Configuration Local Port Buttons  
Note: DO NOT use the browser BACK button to navigate the screens. This will  
cause the connection to drop.  
Continued on next page  
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Section V: FBRM/BFFG Device Management  
Device management via chassis agent (MMU) web-based, continued  
Step  
Action  
9.  
Click a PORT BUTTON to bring up the local port switch configuration  
screen, shown in Figure 55.  
10. Scroll down the screen to see the remaining parameters.  
Note: You can set OAM and other parameters on this screen.  
Figure 55: Port 1 Local Switch  
Note: DO NOT use the browser BACK button to navigate the screens. This will  
cause the connection to drop.  
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Section V: FBRM/BFFG Device Management  
Transition Networks  
Device management via IP web-base (directly to Device)  
Introduction  
The FBRM/BFFG Device supports complete Web-based management for viewing  
statistics and configuring the Device. See the help file on Transition Networks  
website for more details about different configuration variables.  
IP web-based  
management  
To manage the Device via the IP web-based, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
Open a web browser.  
2.  
3.  
4.  
At the URL type the IP address of the Device.  
Click the GO button to bring up the password screen, shown in Figure 56.  
Enter the password (default password is “private”).  
Figure 56: Device Password Screen  
Note: DO NOT use the browser BACK button to navigate the screens. This will  
cause the connection to drop.  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Section V: FBRM/BFFG Device Management  
Device management via IP web-base (directly to Device), continued  
IP web-based management (continued)  
Step  
5.  
Action  
Click the LOG IN button to bring up the main menu of the Device. See  
Figure 57.  
Note: Any Transition Networks FBRM/BFFG remote peer can be completely  
managed by an FBRM/BFFG local peer through OAM.  
Figure 57: FBRM/BFFG Main Menu  
Note: DO NOT use the browser BACK button to navigate the screens. This will  
cause the connection to drop.  
Continued on next page  
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Section V: FBRM/BFFG Device Management  
Transition Networks  
Device management via IP web-base (directly to Device), continued  
OAM  
The OAM configuration screen allows enabling or disabling OAM by setting the  
configuration  
mode to “active” or “passive.” If the remote Device is a Transition Networks  
FBRM/BFFG Device, the main menu (PORT button with the remote Device  
connected) will show the options for managing the remote OAM peer.  
The Devices are interoperable with other IEEE 802.3ah compliant Devices. Standard  
OAM discovery, loopback, dying gasp, link and other critical events are supported.  
The OAM configuration screen for that port will show the following:  
OAM state  
MAC address  
OUI (unique identifier)  
Note: On the SFBRM1040-1xx redundant models, there can be only one (1) OAM  
session at a time—the OAM enabled port is user selected. Port 2 fiber is the  
default port.  
OAM config  
screen  
To view the OAM configuration screen for non-transition networks IEEE 802.3ah  
compliant Devices, do the following:  
Step  
1.  
Action  
Click any port VIEW button on the CFBRM/CBFFG main menu to bring  
up configure screen of that port.  
2.  
3.  
Click the OAM Config button and the screen will appear, as shown in  
Figure 58.  
You can set up OAM parameters on this screen.  
Figure 58: OAM Configuration and Status Screen (OAM Config Button)  
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Transition Networks  
Section VI:  
Software Features  
Introduction  
In this section  
This section explains the operational status LEDs and what they indicate, along with  
product features, and the three (3) methods used to upgrade the software.  
These are the topics:  
Topic  
See Page  
Software feature descriptions  
Software security feature descriptions  
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Section Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Transition Networks  
Software feature descriptions  
Note: The FBRM/BFFG Devices does not have configuration switches.  
Firmware  
activated  
features  
The FBRM/BFFG series Devices features can be configured via USB, MMU, or IP.  
Table 3 explains the configurable parameters of the Devices.  
Table 3: Device Software Configurable Features  
Feature  
Description  
AutoCross  
(10/100Base-T or  
10/100/1000Base-T)  
When the AutoCross feature is active, it allows the use  
of a straight-through (MDI) or crossover (MDI-X)  
copper cable when connecting to 10/100Base-T or  
10/100/1000Base-T Devices. AutoCross determines the  
characteristics of the connection and configures the  
Devices to link up automatically. This occurs regardless  
of the cable configuration: MDI or MDI-X. (Transition  
networks recommends leaving AutoCross in default  
mode, “enabled.”)  
Automatic Firmware  
Upgrades  
The Device has an automatic firmware upgrade feature.  
This feature applies to a communication link between a  
local peer and its remote peer Devices connected via a  
fiber optic cable. If the remote passive peer Device is not  
in Active Mode and a local active peer Device detects a  
different firmware revision on its remote passive peer  
Device, the local active Device will force a bootload  
condition and download its firmware revision to its  
remote passive peer Device.  
Note The local Device could have a different firmware  
revision (newer or older) than its remote peer. In  
either case, the firmware revision on the local  
Device will replace that of its remote passive  
peer.  
Note: The firmware of the local active peer Device  
should be upgraded before the remote passive  
peer Device to ensure that the correct firmware  
version is on both Devices.  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks Section  
Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Software feature descriptions, continued  
Table 3: Device Software Configurable Features (continued)  
Feature  
Description  
Auto-Negotiation  
This feature allows the two Devices to configure  
themselves to achieve the best possible mode of  
operation over a link, automatically. The Device  
broadcasts its speed and duplex (full or half) capabilities  
to the other Device and negotiates the best mode of  
operation. Auto-Negotiation allows quick connections  
because the optimal link between the Devices is  
established automatically.  
In a scenario where the Device links to a non-  
negotiating Device, disable Auto-Negotiations. In this  
instance, the mode of operation will drop to the lowest  
common denominator between the two Devices; e.g., 10  
Mb/s at half-duplex.  
Disabling this feature allows forcing the connection to  
the desired speed and duplex mode of operation.  
The firmware uses TFTP to upload its present  
Backup Configuration  
configuration onto a TFTP server, and can also  
download the configuration from the TFTP server and  
update its settings. This is useful when you want to  
program more than one unit to the same configuration.  
One unit can be programmed and that configuration can  
be used to populate the other units. Care should be taken  
on some settings such as IP address and VLAN settings.  
Bandwidth Allocation by This feature can be used with ‘ingress/egress’ frames.  
priority (ingress/egress)  
It allows setting the bandwidth in varied increments,  
starting at 64kps to full bandwidth.  
Rate Limiting based on frame priorities can also be  
configured. Each higher priority frame can be  
configured to get twice the bandwidth of lower priority  
frames; e.g., priority “3” frame configurations can get  
twice the bandwidth of priority “2” frames.  
Egress bandwidth allocation in 64Kbits/sec increments:  
Rate limit all frames  
Ingress bandwidth allocation in 64Kbits/sec increments  
with four filter selections:  
Rate limit all frames  
Rate limit multicast, flooded unicast, and broadcast  
Rate limit multicast and broadcast  
Rate limit broadcast  
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Section Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Transition Networks  
Software feature descriptions, continued  
Table 3: Device Software Configurable Features (continued)  
Feature  
Description  
Congestion Reduction  
The FBRM and BFFG Devices do not forward collision  
signals or error packets between collision domains,  
which improves baseline network performance.  
In addition, the Devices filter packets destined for local  
Devices, which reduces network congestion.  
Far-End Fault (FEF)  
FEF is a troubleshooting feature. With FEF enabled, if  
the receiver on the fiber port goes “down” on one  
Device, a FEF idle pattern is sent to the other Device to  
terminate data transmission. Then an SNMP trap is sent  
to the administrator, identifying the fiber link loss.  
If FEF is disabled, a “down” Rx link on one Device  
does not transmit to its peer, the down link notification  
will not be passed on.  
For FEF enabled and disabled scenarios, see illustration  
below.  
Far-End Fault Detection If FEFD is enabled when the receiver on the fiber port  
(FEFD) Fiber Ports  
goes down on one Device, it sends a far-end-fault  
pattern to the other side to bring down the fiber port on  
both ends. An SNMP trap will be sent to the  
administrator, indicating the fiber link loss.  
If FEFD is disabled, a “down” Rx link on one Device is  
not transmitted to the other Device; the link down signal  
will not be passed over the link.  
Continued on next page  
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Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Software feature descriptions, continued  
Table 3: Device Software Configurable Feature (continued)  
Feature  
Description  
Full Duplex  
In a full-duplex network, maximum cable lengths are  
determined by the cable type. See the Cable  
Specifications section for the different FBRM and BFFG  
models.  
The 512-Bit Rule does not apply in a full-duplex  
network.  
Firmware upgrades  
Auto firmware upgrade enable/disable:  
(bootloader)  
In some cases, there may not be a requirement for  
automatic firmware upgrades. For example, one might  
connect a remote peer Device with the latest firmware  
version before upgrading the local peer Device.  
Typically, the local peer Device would detect a different  
firmware version and will downgrade the firmware on  
the remote peer Device. To prevent this, disable  
automatic upgrade on the remote peer Device. The  
remote peer Device will reject all upgrade requests from  
the local peer Device—you can then upgrade the local  
Device.  
Force upgrade:  
This is used to force a firmware upgrade on the remote  
peer Device when the auto-upgrade feature is disabled on  
the remote peer Device. This gives the local peer Device  
authority to override the auto-upgrade feature of its  
remote peer Device.  
Half Duplex  
In a half-duplex network, the maximum cable lengths are  
determined by the round trip delay limitations of each  
Fast Ethernet collision domain. (A collision domain is  
the longest path between any two terminal Devices, e.g.,  
terminal, switch, or router.)  
The 512-Bit Rule determines the maximum length of  
cable permitted by calculating the round-trip delay in bit-  
times (BT) of a particular collision domain. If the result  
is less than or equal to 512 BT, the path is good.  
For more information on the 512-Bit Rule, see the white  
paper titled “Collision Domains” on Transition  
Networks’ website at: www.transition.com  
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Section Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Transition Networks  
Software feature descriptions, continued  
Table 3: Device Software Configurable Features (continued)  
Feature  
Description  
Operation  
Note: On the SFBRM1040-1xx redundant models, there  
can be only one (1) OAM session at a time—the  
OAM enabled port is user selected. Port 2 fiber is  
the default port.  
The Device implements the IEEE OAM 802.3ah  
standard for troubleshooting and remote management.  
This product implements OAM on both the fiber and  
twisted pair interfaces. It implements the following  
OAM features:  
Administration and  
Maintenance (OAM,  
IEEE 802.3ah-2004  
standard)  
Discovery  
Remote Loop Back  
Exchange of configuration information and remote  
firmware upgrades with organization specific PDUs  
Link status failure indication  
The Device implements the draft-ietf-hubmib-efm-mib  
(EFM OAM MIB). Use the version provided on the CD.  
When the link on the other port fails, the Device sends an  
OAM critical event signal to its peer, indicating the fault  
condition.  
Critical Event (OAM,  
IEEE 802.3ah-2004  
standard)  
Discovery (OAM,  
IEEE 802.3ah-2004  
standard)  
An active-state Device initiates OAM communications  
by sending PDUs across the link connected to an OAM  
enabled port. The Device at the other end (if OAM  
capable) responds to the request from the active Device  
by establishing an OAM communications channel.  
Event Notification with  
Log In (OAM,  
IEEE 802.3ah-2004  
standard)  
An OAM link event notifies its OAM peer of any symbol  
or frame errors that occurred on its link. The window  
used for error monitoring, along with the threshold value  
are configurable. At the end of the window, if the errors  
are greater than or equal to the threshold value, an OAM  
event notification is sent to its peer. If the threshold is set  
to zero, then at the end of each window an event  
notification is sent—this acts more like an asynchronous  
update of the link statistics.  
Continued on next page  
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Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Software feature descriptions, continued  
Table 3: Device Software Configurable Features (continued)  
Feature  
Description  
Last Gasp/Dying  
Gasp(OAM, IEEE  
All FBRM/BFFG Devices come equipped with a Last  
Gasp/OAM Dying Gasp feature. This feature enables  
802.3ah-2004 standard) the Device to store a small amount of power to enable  
sending an SNMP trap to alert the management console  
of a power failure. Feature benefits are the following:  
Notification of an impending power loss before it  
happens  
Allows for quicker resolution of the power loss  
The default action for last gasp/OAM dying gasp is to  
send an SNMP Trap. If the desire is to send a dying  
gasp through OAM, it must be configured through the  
SNMP/Web interface. It requires choosing the port on  
which to send the Dying Gasp command since both  
ports are OAM capable. This feature helps  
communicate with OAM peers that are not TN Devices.  
Remote Loop Back  
(OAM, IEEE 802.3ah-  
2004 standard)  
OAM remote loop back can be used to test link health  
by sending a loop back request from the active peer  
Device to the remote passive peer Device. Once the  
remote passive peer enters loop back mode, all frames  
coming into that port are looped back, yet not forwarded  
to other ports.  
The OAM frames are still exchanged between the local  
and remote peer Devices—only OAM frames get  
through. The active peer Device discards the frames  
coming out of its remote peer Device to prevent  
flooding the network. See the illustration below.  
Alternate Loop back  
This feature can be used to verify end-to-end  
connectivity.  
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Section Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Transition Networks  
Software feature descriptions, continued  
Table 3: Device Software Configurable Feature (continued)  
Feature  
Description  
OAM Exchange of  
configuration  
information and remote  
upgrades with  
organizational specific  
PDUs ( IEEE 802.3ah-  
2004 standard)  
The remote peer Device (only if a TN  
FBRM/BFFGDevice) set to passive mode can be  
completely managed through the SNMP/Web  
management by its active peer Device when set to  
Active Mode. This is done using organizational specific  
PDUs. When the active peer upgrades to a new revision  
of firmware, it detects the firmware configuration of its  
remote peer Device and upgrades it automatically.  
If the active peer is in a chassis, the remote peer can be  
managed through Point System management by the  
management module unit (MMU).  
Link Status Failure  
Indications  
Link status failure indication with OAM PDU flags  
fielded and sent as an OAM critical event (refer to  
57.4.2.1 of the standard).  
Standard MIB Counters  
The Device provides complete management through the  
SNMP interface. It supports the following standard  
MIBs for management using SNMPv1:  
RFC 1213 (MIB-II)  
RFC 2819 (RMON – statistics group)  
RFC 2863 (IF MIB counters)  
RFC 3635 (Ether-like MIB counters)  
RFC 1493 (Bridge MIB object counters)  
RFC 2674 (Bridge extensions counters)  
Continued on next page  
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Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Software feature descriptions, continued  
Table 3: Device Software configurable Features (continued)  
Feature  
Description  
Pause (flow control) and  
Back Pressure  
Pause is used to suspend data transmission temporarily  
to relieve buffer congestion. If a Device needs sometime  
to clear network congestion, it will send a pause signal  
to the Device at the other end, then that Device will wait  
a predetermined amount of time before re-transmitting  
its data.  
This feature reduces data bottlenecks and allows  
efficient use of network Devices, preventing data losses.  
The pause feature is set in Firmware mode, using the  
SNMP interface. It can be set to one of four settings:  
Disable (no pause)  
Symmetrical pause  
Asymmetric TX (transmit) pause  
Asymmetric RX (receive) pause  
Note: Enable the “pause feature” if available on ALL  
network Devices attached to the media  
Device(s), otherwise disable this feature.  
Back pressure is used in half duplex mode. Back  
pressure ensures the retransmission of incoming packets  
when a port using half-duplex is temporarily not able to  
receive in coming frames.  
Point System  
Management  
The slide-in Device plugs into the chassis to provide  
management through the I2C interface. This provides  
SNMP and Web-based management through the MMU.  
Continued on next page  
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Section Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Transition Networks  
Software feature descriptions, continued  
Table 3: Device Software Configurable Features (continued)  
Description  
Feature  
With OAM enabled, TLPT with automatic link  
restoration is available for the copper ports on the local  
and remote peer Devices. When a copper port goes  
“down,” the information is passed to the other Device  
and the copper port on that Device will go “down.”  
When the link is restored, the link on the other port is  
also restored—the fiber ports remain UP. When TLPT is  
disabled, if the copper port link drops it does not affect  
its peer’s copper port links.  
Transparent Link-Pass  
Through (TLPT) and  
Auto Link Restoration  
Note: In the redundant  
models (SFBRM1040-  
1xx) this feature only  
works when the Device  
is in redundant mode.  
Auto Link Restoration will restore the broken link  
automatically upon correcting the fault condition.  
For TLPT disabled and enabled scenarios, see the  
illustrations below.  
The feature monitors the fiber Rx port for signal loss. If  
the fiber Rx goes “down,” the copper port stops  
transmitting. See illustration below.  
Selective Link Pass  
Through  
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Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Software security feature descriptions  
Table 4: Device Software Configurable Security Features  
Description  
Security Feature  
802.1x MAC filtering  
When enabled on a port, stops learning all MAC  
addresses. To allow any frame with a MAC address not  
in the Static MAC database access, the user needs to add  
the new address or it will be discarded. This allows  
filtering any unauthorized access to the network by  
unknown MAC addresses.  
CLI Timeout on Idle  
If the CLI session on USB/Telnet is idle for more than  
two (2) minutes, the session will time out requiring  
logging in to re-gain access to the CLI.  
IP access (system  
level/port level)  
Any management of the system via IP can be locked at  
the system level, or only on certain ports. For example  
management can occur via web/SNMP only on Port 1, so  
that access via other ports can be blocked.  
MAC addresses blocking The MAC address can be added to the static MAC  
address database with the ‘connected port’ as zero. This  
will cause any frames from that MAC address database  
to cause an ATU-member violation on that port,  
resulting in sending a trap. This could cause excessive  
traps (overload the CPU with interrupts) depending on  
the traffic generated by that MAC. The user can disable  
all traps by setting the Ignore SA Violation on the port  
that is receiving the MAC address under Advanced Port  
Configuration on the web page.  
Management VLAN  
SNMP access  
In a VLAN enabled network, the administrator can  
assign a VLAN as a management VLAN. This VLAN  
ID will be used in all management frames. This separates  
the management traffic from the data.  
The administrator can stop all SNMP access to the  
Device, if not used. This will prevent unauthorized  
access to the system configuration, but the SNMP traps  
will still be sent.  
Radius authentication  
The Device supports authentication using the RADIUS  
protocol. When enabled, RADIUS authentication is used  
for Web login, serial port, and Telnet authentication.  
The Radius server and the shared secret needs to be  
configured using CLI/Web/SNMP before enabling  
RADIUS authentication.  
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Section Vl: FBRM/BFFG Software Features  
Transition Networks  
Software security feature descriptions, continued  
Table 4: Device Software Configurable Security Features (continued)  
Description  
Security Feature  
Select Link-Pass  
Through (LTP)  
When enabled, a link change on Port 2 is passed on to  
Port 1 (twisted pair). For example on a 10/100BaseT-to-  
100Base FX Device, when the (monitored port) fiber  
goes DOWN, LPT forces the twisted pair DOWN. The  
LPT Port binding allows the user to choose which port to  
monitor for LPT.  
Note: In the redundant  
models (SFBRM1040-  
1xx) this feature only  
works when the Device  
is in redundant mode.  
USB access  
The USB port can be turned OFF to prevent  
unauthorized access to the system.  
Username/password for The username and password on the CLI (USB/Telnet) is  
CLI  
configurable and can be set by the administrator.  
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Transition Networks  
Section VIl:  
Operations  
Introduction  
In this section  
This section explains the operational status LEDs and what they indicate, along with  
product features, and the three methods use to upgrade the firmware.  
These are the topics:  
Topic  
See Page  
Status LEDs  
OAM Device management configuration options  
Firmware upgrades  
72  
75  
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Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
Transition Networks  
Status LEDs  
Status  
monitoring  
LEDS  
The FBRM series Devices are designed to operate without user intervention. Use the  
status LEDs to monitor Device operation, once it has been installed in the network.  
See Figure 59.  
Figure 59: FBRM Device LEDs  
LED status  
tables  
Tables 5, 6, and 7 explain the status of the power, USB, twisted pair (TP), and fiber  
LEDs.  
Table 5: Power and USB LEDs FBRM Devices  
LEDs  
Color  
Green  
Green  
Status  
Power  
USB  
ON has power/OFF no power  
Blinking activity/OFF no activity  
Table 6: TP Bi-Color LEDs FBRM Devices  
TP LEDs Color  
Yellow  
Status  
Half duplex TPLink/activity:  
ON link, BLINK activity  
Full duplex TPLink/activity:  
ON link, BLINK activity  
ON Link, blinking activity  
ON Link, blinking activity  
ON 10Mbs  
Duplex  
Green  
Half Duplex/Link/Active Yellow  
Full Duplex/Link/Active  
Speed  
Green  
Yellow  
Green  
ON 100Mbs  
Table 7: Fiber LEDs FBRM Devices  
Fiber LEDs Color  
Link Active Green  
Duplex Green  
Status  
ON link, blinking activity  
ON full, OFF half  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
Status LEDs, continued  
Status  
monitoring  
LEDS  
The BFFG copper-to-fiber Gbit series Devices are designed to operate without user  
intervention. Use the status LEDs to monitor Device operation, once it has been  
installed in the network. See Figure 60.  
Figure 60: BFFG Device LEDs  
LED status  
tables  
Tables 8, 9, and 10 explain the status of the power, USB, twisted pair (TP), and fiber  
LEDs.  
Table 8: Power and USB LEDs BFFG Devices  
LEDs  
Color  
Green  
Green  
Status  
Power  
USB  
ON has power/OFF no power  
Blinking activity/OFF no activity  
Table 9: Twisted Pair Bi-Color LEDs BFFG Devices  
TP LEDs  
Color  
Yellow  
Status  
Half duplex TPLink/activity:  
ON link, BLINK activity  
Full duplex TPLink/activity:  
ON link, BLINK activity  
ON Link, blinking activity  
ON Link, blinking activity  
10Mbs  
Duplex  
Green  
Half Duplex/Link/Active Yellow  
Full Duplex/Link/Active  
Speed  
Green  
OFF  
Yellow  
Green  
ON 100Mbs  
ON 1000 Mbs  
Table 10: Fiber LEDs BFFG Devices  
Fiber LEDs Color  
Link Active Green  
Duplex Green  
Status  
ON link, blinking activity  
ON full, OFF half  
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Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
Transition Networks  
Status LEDs, continued  
Status  
monitoring  
LEDs  
The FBRM Gbit and BFFG Gbit fiber series Devices are designed to operate without  
user intervention. Use the status LEDs to monitor media-Device operation once  
installed in the network. See Figure 61.  
100Base-X  
1000Base-X  
PWR  
LNK  
DPX  
LNK  
USB  
Power  
LED  
Duplex  
LED  
USB LED  
Fiber Link  
LED  
Fiber Link  
LED  
1000Base-X  
1000Base-X  
LNK  
PWR  
LNK  
USB  
Power  
LED  
USB LED  
Fiber Link  
LED  
Fiber Link  
LED  
Figure 61: CBFFG/CFBRM1xxx-xx Gbit Device LEDs  
LED status  
table (Gbit)  
Tables 11 and 12 explain the status of the power, USB, link, duplex LEDs for Gbit  
FBRM/BFFG Devices.  
Table 11: Power and USB LEDs  
LEDs  
Color  
Green  
Green  
Status  
Power  
USB  
ON has power, OFF no power  
Blinking activity, OFF no activity  
Table 12: Fiber LEDs  
Fiber-LEDs  
Link  
Duplex  
Color  
Green  
Green  
Status  
ON link; blinking activity  
ON full; OFF half (BFFG models only)  
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Transition Networks  
Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
OAM Device management configuration options  
OAM mgmt.  
configuration  
options  
OAM Mode control is a feature of the FBRM/BFFG Devices. It can be set to ‘Auto’  
(default) or set manually (Active/Passive/Disabled):  
In ‘Auto’ Mode, the Device decides the OAM operation  
In Manual Mode, the user decides the OAM Mode (Active/Passive/Disabled)  
Table 13 lists the default configuration.  
Table 13: OAM Device Configurations  
Chassis Device Standalone OAM Capability  
Active  
Active  
Passive  
Active  
The active Device manages the passive Device.  
The Devices exchange status information through  
OAM, but cannot be managed through OAM.  
The chassis Device needs to be in Active Mode since  
it is being managed by the point system agent.  
Management through ‘OAM and the chassis  
simultaneously will cause configuration errors.  
Passive  
Active  
Note: A chassis Device in a single slot chassis without the Point System agent  
functions as a standalone Device.  
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Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
Transition Networks  
Firmware upgrades  
Introduction  
The firmware image on the Device can be upgraded by these methods:  
TFTP protocol  
XModem  
OAM  
When enabled, OAM is done automatically when the active peer detects that its  
remotely managed peer is running a different version of the firmware. TFTP and  
XModem are initiated by the user. All firmware upgrades are done by the  
“bootloader.”  
Note: The bootloader recognizes incompatible FBRM/BFFG BIN files when  
upgrading. Since there are different FBRM/BFFG Device types, it is possible  
that the user could download the wrong BIN file; when it receives an  
incorrect file through TFTP or XMODEM, the following message will  
appear on the screen:  
Bootloader: Hardware and BIN file mismatch, upgrade  
aborted.  
XModem  
method  
To upgrade the firmware via XModem, do the following:  
Step  
Action  
1.  
At the console prompt> type xmodemupgrade  
2.  
Press the ENTER key and a decision prompt will appear as shown in  
Figure 62.  
Console:/>xmodemupgrade  
Do you wish to proceed to upgrading (y/n):_  
Figure 62: Decision Prompt for Firmware Upgrades  
Note: If you select “Y,” the firmware image on the targeted Device will be erased.  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
Firmware upgrades, continued  
XModem method (continued)  
Step  
3.  
Action  
Type “Y” at the prompt.  
4.  
Press the ENTER key to launch the firmware upgrade screen, shown in  
Figure 63.  
10/100BaseT to 100BaseFX IPBased 802.3ah Bridge  
Version A  
Copyright (c) 2006 Transition Networks  
Reading config from flash........done  
Erasing Application Memory  
Start sending file through XModem...  
Transfer completed  
Checking CRC. . . . . . . .  
Figure 63: Firmware Upgrade via Xmodem  
5.  
Choose the ‘send file’ option from Hyperterminal with ‘XModem’ as the  
protocol. After the download, the bootloader verifies the CRC of the file  
and resets itself to start the user application.  
Continued on next page  
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Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
Transition Networks  
Firmware upgrades, continued  
The Device can be upgraded remotely using TFTP. A valid IP address, subnet,  
TFTP method  
gateway, TFTP server IP address, and filename must be configured before starting  
the upgrade process.  
TFTP can be started in the following ways:  
‘tftpupgrade’ command at the CLI  
On the web using Æ “Local System Configuration” Æ ‘TFTP upgrade’  
[perform(1)]  
Using SNMP, set ‘sfbrm100SysTFTPCmd’ to ‘1’ (perform)  
After initiating the command, the system resets to start the bootloader, and then the  
tftp upgrade will start. A message will appear like the example shown Figure 64.  
10/100BaseT to 100BaseFX IPBased 802.3ah Bridge  
Version A  
Copyright (c) 2006 Transition Networks  
Reading config from flash........done  
Erasing Application Memory  
Set to TFTP Boot from Server nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn  
Getting File : FBRM.bin . . . . . . . . . . . done  
Checking CRC. . . . . . . .  
Figure 64: Firmware Upgrade via TFTP  
After a successful upgrade, the application will start up.  
Continued on next page  
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Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
Firmware upgrades, continued  
OAM firmware upgrades are done by the local active peer Device to its remote  
passive peer Device automatically. This occurs when the active peer Device finds that  
its remote peer has a firmware revision different from its own. The active peer Device  
sends a bootloader command to its remote peer. When the firmware upgrade on the  
remote peer Device is completed, it will perform a “reset” to activate the new  
firmware—no user intervention is required. (Active and passive peer relationships are  
established during configuration.)  
OAM method  
What happens  
when the  
upgrade fails?  
The FBRM/BFFG Devices can have a corrupted image for a variety of reasons. If the  
image is corrupt, the following will occur: The bootloader checks the CRC to make  
sure the image is good; if the check fails, it will re-initiate each method (XMODEM,  
TFTP, OAM) in an attempt to accomplish the upgrade. The sequences is a follows:  
Stage Description  
A.  
XMODEM will re-initiate if there is no input from the console; it will try  
the OAM method.  
B.  
OAM initiates to locate an active peer on the network to get the upgrade  
image; if an active peer is not available, it will try the TFTP method.  
C.  
D.  
TFTP initiates a request to the TFTP server to get the upgrade image for  
the Device.  
This process continuously loops through these upgrade methods until one  
of the methods successfully upgrades the firmware image.  
Admin  
intervention  
To do a firmware upgrade from the console, before the bootloader moves to the next  
method, it waits for ‘2’ seconds for user input displaying the following message:  
“Moving to XMODEM upgrade, Hit 'ESC’ to skip or ctrl-C  
for CLI.”  
Bootloader CLI The “bootloader” has a CLI to configure network setting, such as the TFTP server  
address, filename, and the boot method to use for upgrading the firmware.  
The CLI can be started by pressing any key within ‘2’ seconds before it starts the  
CRC validation, or by pressing the CTRL-C keys when it shows the following  
message:  
Transfer Failed  
Moving to OAM, XMODEM or TFTP upgrade, Hit 'ESC' to skip/  
<ctrl-c> for CLI.  
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Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
Transition Networks  
Firmware upgrades, continued  
Accessing the  
To access the bootloader CLI to upgrade the firmware, do the following:  
bootloader CLI  
Step  
Action  
1.  
When “Transfer Failed” appears on the screen, within ‘2’  
seconds, press the CTRL-C keys to bring up the bootloader CLI, as  
shown in Figure 65.  
10/100BaseT to 100BaseFX IP-Based 802.3ah Bridge  
Version A [Mar 2 2006 09:56:02]  
Copyright (c) 2006 Transition Networks  
Reading config from flash........done.  
BOOT LOADER CLI  
Type 'h' for help  
BOOT:>  
Figure 65: Bootloader CLI  
2.  
At the BOOT:> prompt type the letter “h” to bring up the help screen,  
shown in Figure 66.  
h
p
Display this help  
Ping a host  
z
Clear entire Application flash  
Set boot method as xmodem  
Set boot method as tftp  
Set boot method as OAM  
Show system information  
configure network information  
reset system  
x
t
o
s
n
r
q
Exit Boot CLI  
BOOT:>  
Figure 66: Bootloader Help Screen  
Note: When you press the LETTER key of any command it might not appear at  
the BOOT:> prompt, but the result will appear on the screen.  
Continued on next page  
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Section Vll: FBRM/BFFG Operation  
Firmware upgrades, continued  
Accessing the bootloader CLI (continued)  
Step  
Action  
At the BOOT:> prompt type the letter “t” to establish TFTP as the reboot  
3.  
method.  
At the BOOT:> prompt type the letter “s” to view system information, as  
4.  
shown in Figure 67.  
System configuration:  
IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
Default Gateway  
MAC Address  
TFTP Server address  
TFTP Filename  
BOOT:>  
: 192.251.144.150  
: 255.255.255.0  
: 192.251.144.2  
: 00:c0:f2:00:d1:bc  
: 0.0.0.0  
:
Figure 67: System Configuration Information  
5.  
6.  
If system configuration parameters are entered incorrectly or missing as  
shown above, at the BOOT:> prompt type the letter “n.”  
Press the ENTER key until the desired parameter appears on the screen  
(TFTP Filename []). See Figure 68.  
BOOT:>  
Enter the Network configuration -  
IP Address [192.251.144.150]:  
Subnet Mask [255.255.255.0]:  
Gateway [192.251.144.2]:  
TFTP Server IP [0.0.0.0]:  
TFTP Filename []:  
Figure 68: Network Configuration Screen  
7.  
8.  
Enter the necessary data.  
When done, press the letter “r” key to reboot the Device. The firmware  
image will be burned to flash memory of the Device. When completed,  
the Device will reboot and return to the Login> prompt.  
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Section Vlll:  
Troubleshooting  
Introduction  
This section provides basic troubleshooting information for the FBRM/BFFG Device  
via a problem and corrective action table. The problems are stated in the problem  
column and the action(s) to take for the problem is stated in the corrective action  
column. If the corrective measures listed do not correct the problem, contact our 24-  
Hour Technical Support department at 1-800-260-1312, International: 00-1-952-941-  
7600.  
In this section  
These are the topics:  
Topic  
See Page  
Troubleshooting problem and corrective action table  
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Section Vlll: FBRM/BFFG Troubleshooting  
Transition Networks  
Troubleshooting problem and corrective action table  
Problem  
Corrective Action  
Device does not power  
up  
Is the Device power LED ON?  
Is the power adapter’s barrel inserted fully into the Device?  
Is the power adapter plugged into an AC outlet?  
Is the AC outlet active; if not, check the outlet’s circuit breaker?  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
Cannot detect or  
communicate with the  
xFBRM/xBFFG  
If CFBRM/CBFFG is in a cascaded chassis move the CFBRM/CBFFG  
to the master chassis  
Upgrade to the latest version of firmware  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
Cannot access the Device  
via USB port  
Is the USB driver installed?  
Is the serial access disabled?  
Is the USB cable connected to the Device and to the host computer?  
Is the terminal emulator software configured properly for the USB port  
and launched? See Driver Installation and COM Port Setup: Terminal  
Emulator section.  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
The local Device LACT  
LED is ON but no data  
transfer is detected (LED  
flashing)  
Is the input source to the local Device active?  
Is the RJ-45 network cable fully inserted into the local Device, also into  
the network Device?  
Is the fiber cable properly inserted into the local Device and the end  
source Device?  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
Ports do not link up  
Check the cable type needed for the Device and make sure the right  
cable is used.  
Check Auto-Negotiation setting.  
Check if TPLT or remote fault-detect condition was triggered.  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
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Transition Networks  
Section Vlll: FBRM/BFFG Troubleshooting  
Troubleshooting problem and corrective action table, continued  
Problem  
Corrective Action  
The Trap Server does not  
record traps  
Ensure the Trap Server application is running.  
o
In the Windows environment, if the “TN” icon is displayed in the  
lower right corner of the monitor, then the Trap Server is running.  
SNMP traps may be blocked by a router or firewall. Consult your  
Network administrator to determine if this is the case.  
The SNMP trap manager may not be configured properly. The result is  
that the SNMP agent does not know the proper IP address. Use the “set”  
command to configure the trap manager. Enter the following command  
on a single line:  
CPSMM100> set=cpsmm100SNMPTrapMgr.<cabinet serial number>.<slot number of the  
MM>,ip,<new IP Address of NMS>  
Alternatively, use the “getnext” command to “get” much of this  
information and then use the “set=*” command to issue the set request.  
The following is an example. Enter “Super-User Mode”:  
CPSMM100> su=<private community name>  
[su] CPSMM>  
Enter the “getnext” command:  
[su] CPSMM100> getnext=cpsmm100snmptrapmgr  
The response is:  
SNMP: GETNEXT [192.251.144.229] id=D2EE6F3F ind=0 cpsmm100snmptrapmgr.1758208.1  
1P Address [4/0x4] 192.251.144.235  
Enter the set request:  
[su] CPSMM100> set=*,ip,172.16.45.105  
The response is:  
SNMP: SET [192.251.144.229] id=D2EE6F3F ind=0 cpsmm100SNMPTrapMgr.1758208.1  
IP Address [4/0x4] 172.16.45.105  
Save the changes:  
[su] CPSMM100> save  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Troubleshooting problem and corrective action table, continued  
Problem  
Corrective Action  
The Trap Server does not  
record traps,(continued)  
The response is:  
FLASH: Saving configuration, please wait up to one minute...  
Writing Flash (04004500,05E8,00FE0000,00FFFFFE)  
Erasing  
.
Done Erasing/Verifying  
Writing [000005E8]  
#[0000FFFF]  
Done Writing  
Verifying  
FLASH: Write complete.  
Cannot activate IP-based  
management  
Are the IP, Gateway, and subnet mask configured correctly?  
With DHCP enabled, DHCP could have failed leaving the system with  
the old static IP config. Verify the configuration via the USB port.  
Make sure IP-based access is not turned OFF in the system.  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
TLPT and SLDP are not  
working  
Are the TLPT and SLDP enabled on both systems? Refresh web pages  
to make sure they are set.  
Check if port binding for TLPT/RFD is set to the active OAM channel.  
With 100Base-Fx, make sure “far end fault” is enabled.  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
OAM session is not  
active  
If OAM is enabled, check the ports on the local and remote Devices.  
Make sure the local Device is in OAM “Active” Mode.  
OAM remote Device is  
detected on local, but  
cannot configure remote  
from local  
Make sure the remote peer Device is set to “Passive” Mode.  
Note: OAM session can be formed between Devices with both set to  
Active Mode, but this prevents remote management. The remote  
Device should be in “Passive” Mode for management.  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
Continued on next page  
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Section Vlll: FBRM/BFFG Troubleshooting  
Troubleshooting problem and corrective action table, continued  
Problem  
Corrective Action  
If the OAM session is active, the active local peer Device sends  
configuration information; if the user attempts to go directly to the  
remote passive peer Device, the configuration will be overwritten by the  
OAM update from the local active peer. It is advisable to always use the  
local active peer Device to manage its remote passive peer Device.  
Unable to do  
configuration directly  
using IP based  
management on Remote  
Device  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
Chassis FBRM/BFFG  
not recognized by the  
chassis agent  
Make sure the Point System agent has the latest firmware version for the  
CFBRM/CBFFG Device. Use the FEATSUPP command to see if the  
Devices are supported.  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
Chassis FBRM/BFFG is  
in a single-slot chassis,  
but the Port 2 comes up  
in OAM “Passive” Mode  
with OAM Mode control  
is set to ‘auto’  
The chassis Devices in single-slot chassis function as a standalone  
Device.  
Chassis Device needs a Point System management module in a chassis  
to switch to “Active” Mode, or to set OAM Mode manually.  
Contact Technical Support. US/Canada: 1-800-260-1312, International:  
00-1-952-941-7600.  
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Transition Networks  
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Section lX:  
Copper Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Introduction  
This section provides copper and fiber cable specifications.  
These are the topics:  
In this section  
Topic  
Copper cables  
Fiber optic cables and connectors  
See Page  
89  
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Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Transition Networks  
Copper cables  
Characteristics Cooper cable physical characteristics must meet or exceed IEEE 802.3™  
specifications.  
Copper cable  
specification  
Category 5:  
Gauge:  
minimum  
24 to 22 AWG  
Attenuation:  
22.0 dB/100m @ 100 MHz  
Maximum cable distance: 100 meter (328 ft.)  
Straight-through or crossover twisted-pair cable may be used. See Figure 69.  
Shielded twisted-pair (STP) or unshielded twisted-pair (UTP) may be used.  
Pins 1&2 and 3&6 are the two active pairs in an Ethernet network.  
RJ-45 pin-outs on MDI cable: Pin 1 = TD+, Pin 2 = TD-, Pin 3 = RD+, Pin 6 =  
RD-  
Use only dedicated wire pairs for the active pins.  
(e.g., blue/white & white/blue, orange/white & white/orange, etc.)  
DO NOT use flat or silver satin wire.  
Figure 69: MDI Straight Through and MDI-X Crossover Cables  
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Transition Networks  
Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications  
Fiber cable  
Cable physical characteristics must meet or exceed IEEE 802.3™ specifications.  
characteristics  
Parameter  
Specification  
Bit Error Rate:  
<10-9  
Single mode fiber:  
Multimode fiber:  
Multimode fiber:  
9 µm  
62.5/125 µm  
100/140, 85/140, 50/125 µm  
Copper-to-fiber The following are FBRM10xx-1xx copper-to-fiber connector specifications.  
connectors  
Fiber Optics  
Specifications  
CFBRM1011-100  
SFBRM1011-100  
1300 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
11 dB  
CFBRM1013-100  
SFBRM1013-100  
1300 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
11 dB  
CFBRM1014-100  
SFBRM1014-100  
1310 nm single mode  
min: -15.0 dBm max: -8.0 dBm  
min: -31.0 dBm max: -8.0 dBm  
16 dB  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
CFBRM1015-100 (long haul)  
SFBRM1015-100 (long haul)  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1310 nm single mode  
min: -8.0 dBm max: -2.0 dBm  
min: -34.0 dBm max: -7.0 dBm  
26 dB  
WARNING: Visible and invisible laser radiation when open. Do not stare into the  
beam or view the beam directly with optical instruments. Failure to observe this  
warning could result in an eye injury or blindness.  
WARNING: Use of controls, adjustments or the performance of procedures other  
than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.  
Continued on next page  
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Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Transition Networks  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications, continued  
Copper-to-fiber connectors (continued)  
Fiber Optics  
Specifications  
1310 nm single mode  
min: -5.0 dBm max: 0.0 dBm  
min: -34.0 dBm max: -7.0 dBm  
29 dB  
CFBRM1016-100 (extra long haul)  
SFBRM1016-100 (extra long haul)  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
CFBRM1017-100 (long wave length)  
SFBRM1017-100 (long wave length) 1550 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
min: -5.0 dBm max: 0.0 dBm  
min: -34.0 dBm max: -7.0 dBm  
29 dB  
CFBRM1035-100  
SFBRM1035-100  
1550 nm single mode  
min: -0.0 dBm max: 5.0 dBm  
min: -36.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
36 dB  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
CFBRM1029-100  
CFBRM1029-101  
SFBRM1029-100  
SFBRM1029-101  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1310 nm (TX)/1550 nm (RX) simplex  
1550 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX) simplex  
1310 nm (TX)/1550 nm (RX) simplex  
1550 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX) simplex  
min: -14.0 dBm max: -8.0 dBm  
min: -33.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
19 dB  
CFBRM1029-102  
CFBRM1029-103  
SFBRM1029-102  
SFBRM1029-103  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1310 nm (TX)/1550 nm (RX) simplex  
1550 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX) simplex  
1310 nm (TX)/1550 nm (RX) simplex  
1550 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX) simplex  
min: -8.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
min: -33.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
25 dB  
Note: The fiber optic transmitters on these Devices meet Class I Laser safety  
requirements per IEC-825/CDRH standards and comply with 21  
CFR1040.10 and 21CFR1040.11.  
WARNING: Visible and invisible laser radiation when open. Do not stare into the  
beam or view the beam directly with optical instruments. Failure to observe this  
warning could result in an eye injury or blindness.  
WARNING: Use of controls, adjustments or the performance of procedures other  
than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.  
Continued on next page  
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Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications, continued  
Copper-to-Copper-to-fiber connectors with DMI  
Fiber Optics  
Specifications  
CFBRM1011-110 DMI  
SFBRM1011-110 DMI  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1300 nm multimode  
min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
11 dB  
CFBRM1013-110 DMI  
SFBRM1013-110 DMI  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1300 nm multimode  
min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
11 dB  
CFBRM1014-110 DMI  
SFBRM1014-110 DMI  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1310 nm single mode  
min: -15.0 dBm max: -8.0 dBm  
min: -31.0 dBm max: -8.0 dBm  
16 dB  
CFBRM1015-110 DMI (long haul)  
SFBRM1015-110 DMI(long haul)  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1310 nm single mode  
min: -8.0 dBm max: -2.0 dBm  
min: -34.0 dBm max: -7.0 dBm  
26 dB  
CFBRM1016-110 DMI  
SFBRM1016-110 DMI  
(extra long haul)  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1310 nm single mode  
min: -5.0 dBm max: 0.0 dBm  
min: -34.0 dBm max: -7.0 dBm  
29 dB  
CFBRM1017-110 DMI  
SFBRM1017-110 DMI  
(long wave length)  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1550 nm single mode  
min: -5.0 dBm max: 0.0 dBm  
min: -34.0 dBm max: -7.0 dBm  
29 dB  
CFBRM1035-110 DMI  
SFBRM1035-110 DMI  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1550 nm single mode  
min: -0.0 dBm max: 5.0 dBm  
min: -36.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
36 dB  
Continued on next page  
92  
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Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Transition Networks  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications, continued  
Copper-to-fiber connectors with DMI (continued)  
Fiber Optics  
Specifications  
1310 nm (TX)/1550 nm (RX) simplex  
CFBRM1029-110 DMI  
CFBRM1029-111 DMI  
SFBRM1029-110 DMI  
SFBRM1029-111 DMI  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1550 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX) simplex  
1310 nm (TX)/1550 nm (RX) simplex  
1550 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX) simplex  
min: -14.0 dBm max: -8.0 dBm  
min: -33.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
19 dB  
CFBRM1029-112 DMI  
CFBRM1029-113 DMI  
SFBRM1029-112 DMI  
SFBRM1029-113 DMI  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
1310 nm (TX)/1550 nm (RX) simplex  
1550 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX) simplex  
1310 nm (TX)/1550 nm (RX) simplex  
1550 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX) simplex  
min: -8.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
min: -33.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
25 dB  
Note: The fiber optic transmitters on these Devices meet Class I Laser safety  
requirements per IEC-825/CDRH standards and comply with 21  
CFR1040.10 and 21CFR1040.11.  
WARNING: Visible and invisible laser radiation when open. Do not stare into the  
beam or view the beam directly with optical instruments. Failure to observe this  
warning could result in an eye injury or blindness.  
WARNING: Use of controls, adjustments or the performance of procedures other  
than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.  
Continued on next page  
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93  
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Transition Networks  
Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications, continued  
FBRM fiber-to-fiber Gbit connector  
Fiber Optics  
Port 1 Specification  
Port 2 Specification  
CFBRM1313-100  
SFBRM1313-100  
1310 nm multimode  
850 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -10.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -17.0 dBm max: 0.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
7 dB  
CFBRM1314-100  
SFBRM1314-100  
1310 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -13.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -20.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
7 dB  
CFBRM1315-100  
SFBRM1315-100  
1310 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -5.0 dBm max: 0.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -20.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
15 dB  
CFBRM1317-100  
SFBRM1317-100  
1310 nm multimode  
1550 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -3.0 dBm max: 2.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -24.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
21 dB  
CFBRM1329-100  
CFBRM1329-101  
SFBRM1329-100  
SFBRM1329-101  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -8.0 dBm max: 3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -22.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
14 dB  
CFBRM1329-102  
CFBRM1329-103  
SFBRM1329-102  
SFBRM1329-103  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -3.0 dBm max: 2.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -23.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
20 dB  
Note: The fiber optic transmitters on these Devices meet Class I Laser safety  
requirements per IEC-825/CDRH standards and comply with 21  
CFR1040.10 and 21CFR1040.11.  
Continued on next page  
94  
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Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Transition Networks  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications, continued  
FBRM fiber-to-fiber Gbit connectors(continued)  
Fiber Optics  
CFBRM1335-100  
SFBRM1335-100  
Port 1 Specification  
Port 2 Specification  
1550 nm single mode  
1310 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: 0.0 dBm max: 5.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -27.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
27 dB  
FBRM fiber-to-fiber Gbit with DMI connectors  
Fiber Optics  
Port 1 Specification  
Port 2 Specification  
CFBRM1313-110 DMI  
SFBRM1313-110 DMI  
1300 nm multimode  
850nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -9.5 dBm max: -4.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -18.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
8.5 dB  
CFBRM1314-110 DMI  
SFBRM1314-110 DMI  
1300 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -9.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -21.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
12 dB  
CFBRM1315-110 DMI  
SFBRM1315-110 DMI  
1300 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -5.0 dBm max: 0.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -24.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
19 dB  
CFBRM1329-110 DMI  
CFBRM1329-111 DMI  
SFBRM1329-110 DMI  
SFBRM1329-111 DMI  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1300 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -9.0 dBm max: 3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -20.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
11 dB  
CFBRM1329-112 DMI  
CFBRM1329-113 DMI  
SFBRM1329-112 DMI  
SFBRM1329-113 DMI  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1300 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -9.0 dBm max: 3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -20.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
11 dB  
Continued on next page  
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95  
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Transition Networks  
Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications, continued  
Copper-to-fiber The following are BFFG10x40-100 copper-to-fiber connector specifications.  
connectors  
Fiber Optics  
Specifications  
CBFFG1040-100  
SBFFG1040-100  
Empty Slot  
Fiber-optic transmitter power:  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity:  
Link budget:  
Note: The fiber optic transmitters on these Devices meet Class I Laser safety  
requirements per IEC-825/CDRH standards and comply with 21  
CFR1040.10 and 21CFR1040.11.  
WARNING: Visible and invisible laser radiation when open. Do not stare into the  
beam or view the beam directly with optical instruments. Failure to observe this  
warning could result in an eye injury or blindness.  
WARNING: Use of controls, adjustments or the performance of procedures other  
than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.  
Continued on next page  
96  
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Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications, continued  
BFFG fiber-to-fiber Gbit connectors  
Transition Networks  
Fiber Optics  
CBFFG1313-100  
SBFFG1313-100  
Port 1 Specification  
Port 2 Specification  
850 nm single mode  
1300 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -10.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -17.0 dBm max: 0.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
7 dB  
CBFFG1314-100  
SBFFG1314-100  
1300 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -13.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -20.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
7 dB  
CBFFG1315-100  
SBFFG1315-100  
1300 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -5.0 dBm max: 0.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -20.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
15 dB  
CBFFG1317-100  
SBFFG1317-100  
1300 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -3.0 dBm max: 2.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -24.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
21 dB  
CBFFG1329-100  
CBFFG1329-101  
SBFFG1329-100  
SBFFG1329-101  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1300 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -8.0 dBm max: 3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -22.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
14 dB  
CBFFG1329-102  
CBFFG1329-103  
SBFFG1329-102  
SBFFG1329-103  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1300 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -3.0 dBm max: 2.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -23.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
20 dB  
Note: The fiber optic transmitters on these Devices meet Class I Laser safety  
requirements per IEC-825/CDRH standards and comply with 21  
CFR1040.10 and 21CFR1040.11.  
Continued on next page  
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97  
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Transition Networks  
Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications, continued  
BFFG fiber-to-fiber Gbit connector (continued)  
Fiber Optics  
Port 1 Specification  
Port 2 Specification  
CBFFG1335-100  
SBFFG1335-100  
1300 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: 0.0 dBm max: 5.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -27.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
27 dB  
BFFG fiber-to-fiber Gbit with DMI connector  
Fiber Optics  
Port 1 Specification  
Port 2 Specification  
CBFFG1313-110 DMI  
SBFFG1313-110 DMI  
1300 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -9.5 dBm max: -4.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -18.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
8.5 dB  
CBFFG1314-110 DMI  
SBFFG1314-110 DMI  
1300 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -9 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -21.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
12 dB  
CBFFG1315-110 DMI  
SBFFG1315-110 DMI  
1300 nm multimode  
1310 nm single mode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -5 dBm max: 0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -24.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
19 dB  
CBFFG1329-110 DMI  
CBFFG1329-111 DMI  
SBFFG1329-110 DMI  
SBFFG1329-111 DMI  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1300 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -9.0 dBm max: 3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -20.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
11 dB  
Note: The fiber optic transmitters on these Devices meet Class I Laser safety  
requirements per IEC-825/CDRH standards and comply with 21  
CFR1040.10 and 21CFR1040.11.  
WARNING: Visible and invisible laser radiation when open. Do not stare into the  
beam or view the beam directly with optical instruments. Failure to observe this  
warning could result in an eye injury or blindness.  
WARNING: Use of controls, adjustments or the performance of procedures other  
than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.  
Continued on next page  
98  
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Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Transition Networks  
Fiber optic cable and connector specifications, continued  
BFFG fiber-to-fiber Gbit with DMI connector (continued)  
Fiber Optics  
Port 1 Specification  
Port 2 Specification  
CBFFG1329-112 DMI  
CBFFG1329-113 DMI  
SBFFG1329-112 DMI  
SBFFG1329-113 DMI  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1310 nm (TX)/1490 nm (RX)  
1490 nm (TX)/1310 nm (RX)  
1300 nm multimode  
Fiber-optic transmitter power: min: -19.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -9.0 dBm max: 3.0 dBm  
Fiber-optic receiver sensitivity: min: -30.0 dBm max: -14.0 dBm min: -20.0 dBm max: -3.0 dBm  
Link budget:  
11 dB  
11 dB  
Note: The fiber optic transmitters on these Devices meet Class I Laser safety  
requirements per IEC-825/CDRH standards and comply with 21  
CFR1040.10 and 21CFR1040.11.  
WARNING: Visible and invisible laser radiation when open. Do not stare into the  
beam or view the beam directly with optical instruments. Failure to observe this  
warning could result in an eye injury or blindness.  
WARNING: Use of controls, adjustments or the performance of procedures other  
than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.  
24-Hour Technical Support: 1-800-260-1312 International: 00-1-952-941-7600  
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Section lX: FBRM/BFFG Cable & Fiber Optic Specifications  
Intentionally Blank  
100  
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Section X:  
Contact Us, Warranty, & Conformity Information  
Introduction  
This section explains how to contact Transition Networks via Phone, fax, email, and  
direct mail. It also explains:  
What the warranty covers  
Who to contact to return product  
How and where to return the product  
In this section  
These are the topics:  
Topic  
See Page  
102  
Contact us  
Conformity declaration  
Warranty  
103  
105  
Compliance information  
107  
24-Hour Technical Support: 1-800-260-1312 International: 00-1-952-941-7600  
101  
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Transition Networks  
Section X: FBRM/BFFG Contact Us, Warranty, & Conformity Information  
Contact us  
Technical  
support  
Technical Support is available 24 hours a day.  
United States: 1-800-260-1312  
International: 00-1-952-941-7600  
Live Web chat  
Chat live via the Web with a Transition Networks Technical Support Specialist.  
Log onto www.transition.com and click the Transition Now link.  
Web-based  
training  
Transition Networks provides 12-16 seminars per month via live web-based training.  
Log onto www.transition.com and click the Learning Center link.  
E-Mail  
Ask a question anytime by sending an e-mail message to our technical support staff:  
Address  
Transition Networks  
10900 Red Circle Drive  
Minnetonka, MN 55343, U.S.A.  
Telephone:  
952-941-7600  
800-526-9267  
952-941-2322  
Toll free U.S.A & Canada:  
Fax:  
102  
24-Hour Technical Support: 1-800-260-1312 International: 00-1-952-941-7600  
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Section X: FBRM/BFFG Contact Us, Warranty, & Conformity Information  
Conformity declaration  
Transition Networks  
Declaration of Conformity  
Name of Mfg:  
Transitions Networks  
6427 City West Parkway, Minneapolis MN 55344 U.S.A.  
Model:  
xFBRM1xxx-1xx and xBFFG1xxx-1xx Media  
Part Numbers:  
CFBRM1011-100, CFBRM1013-100, CFBRM1014-100,  
CFBRM1015-100, CFBRM1016-100, CFBRM1017-100,  
CFBRM1035-100, CFBRM1040-100, CFBRM1029-100,  
CFBRM1029-101, CFBRM1029-102, CFBRM1029-103  
CFBRM1011-110, CFBRM1013-110, CFBRM1014-110,  
CFBRM1015-110, CFBRM1016-110, CFBRM1017-110,  
CFBRM1035-110, CFBRM1040-110, CFBRM1029-110,  
CFBRM1029-111, CFBRM1029-112, CFBRM1029-113,  
CFBRM1313-100, CFBRM1314-100, CFBRM1315-100,  
CFBRM1317-100, CFBRM1035-110, CFBRM1040-100,  
CFBRM1029-100, CFBRM1029-100, CFBRM1029-100,  
CFBRM1029-100  
CFBRM1313-110, CFBRM1314-110, CFBRM1315-110,  
CFBRM1317-110, CFBRM1035-110, CFBRM1040-110,  
CFBRM1029-110, CFBRM1029-111, CFBRM1029-112,  
CFBRM1029-113  
SFBRM1011-100, SFBRM1013-100, SFBRM1014-100,  
SFBRM1015-100, SFBRM1016-100, SFBRM1017-100,  
SFBRM1035-100, SFBRM1040-100, SFBRM1029-100,  
SFBRM1029-101, SFBRM1029-102, SFBRM1029-103  
SFBRM1011-110, SFBRM1013-110, SFBRM1014-110,  
SFBRM1015-110, SFBRM1016-110, SFBRM1017-110,  
SFBRM1035-110, SFBRM1040-110, SFBRM1029-110,  
SFBRM1029-111, SFBRM1029-112, SFBRM1029-113,  
SFBRM1313-100, SFBRM1314-100, SFBRM1315-100,  
SFBRM1317-100, SFBRM1335-110, SFBRM1340-100,  
SFBRM1329-100, SFBRM1029-100, SFBRM1329-100,  
SFBRM1329-100  
SFBRM1313-110, CFBRM1314-110, SFBRM1315-110,  
SFBRM1317-110, CFBRM1335-110, SFBRM1340-110,  
SFBRM1329-110, CFBRM1329-111, CFBRM1329-112,  
SFBRM1329-113  
CBFFG1013-100, CBFFG1014-100, CBFFG1015-100,  
CBFFG1017-100, CBFFG1024-100, CBFFG1035-100,  
CBFFG1040-100, CBFFG1029-100, CBFFG1029-101,  
CBFFG1029-102, CBFFG1029-103  
CBFFG1313-100, CBFFG1314-100, CBFFG1315-100,  
CBFFG1317-100, CBFFG1335-100, CBFFG1340-100,  
CBFFG1329-100, CBFFG1329-101, CBFFG1329-102,  
CBFFG1029-103  
CBFFG1313-110, CBFFG1314-110, CBFFG1315-110,  
CBFFG1317-110, CBFFG1335-110, CBFFG1340-110,  
CBFFG1329-100, CBFFG1329-111, CBFFG1329-112,  
CBFFG1029-113  
Continued on next page  
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Section X: FBRM/BFFG Contact Us, Warranty, & Conformity Information  
Conformity declaration, continued  
SBFFG1313-100, SBFFG1314-100, SBFFG1315-100,  
SBFFG1317-100, SBFFG1335-100, SBFFG1340-100,  
SBFFG1329-100, SBFFG1329-101, SBFFG1329-102,  
SBFFG1029-103  
SBFFG1313-110, SBFFG1314-110, SBFFG1315-110,  
SBFFG1317-110, SBFFG1335-110, SBFFG1340-110,  
SBFFG1329-110, SBFFG1329-111, CBFFG1329-112,  
SBFFG1029-113  
Regulations:  
EMC Directive 89/336/EEC  
Purpose:  
To declare that the CFBRM1xxx-1xx, SFBRM1xxx-1xx, CBFFG1xxx-1xx and  
SBFFG1xxx-1xx Devices to which this declaration refers is in conformance with  
the following standards:  
CISPR22:1993; EN55022:1994+A1:1995+A2:1997 Class A; FCC Part 15  
Subpart B; UL1950; 21 CFR Subpart J  
I, the undersigned, hereby declare that the equipment specified above conforms to the above  
Directive(s) and Standard(s).  
July, 2008  
Steven Anderson, Vice President of Engineering  
Date  
104  
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Section X: FBRM/BFFG Contact Us, Warranty, & Conformity Information  
Transition Networks  
Warranty  
Limited lifetime Effective for products shipped May 1, 1999 and after. Every Transition Networks’  
warranty  
labeled product purchased after May 1, 1999 will be free from defects in material  
and workmanship for its lifetime. This warranty covers the original user only and is  
not transferable.  
What the  
warranty does  
not cover  
This warranty does not cover damage from accident, acts of God, neglect,  
contamination, misuse or abnormal conditions of operation or handling, including  
over-voltage failures caused by use outside the product's specified rating, or normal  
wear and tear of mechanical components. If the user is unsure of the proper means of  
installing or using the equipment, contact Transition Networks' free technical support  
services.  
Establishing  
original  
ownership  
To establish original ownership and provide date of purchase, please complete and  
return the registration card accompanying the product or register the product on-line  
on our product registration page.  
Transition Networks will at its option:  
Repair the defective product to functional specifications at no charge  
Replace the product with an equivalent functional product  
Refund the purchase price of a defective product  
Who to contact To return a defective product for warranty coverage, contact Transition Networks'  
for returns  
technical support department for a return authorization number (RAN). Transition's  
technical support department can be reached through any of the following means:  
Technical Support is available 24 hours a day:  
Tel: 800-260-1312 x200 or 952-941-7600 x200  
Fax: 952-941-2322  
Email: [email protected]  
Live web chat: Transition Now  
Voicemail: 800-260-1312, x579 or 952-941-7600, x579  
All messages will be answered within one hour  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Section X: FBRM/BFFG Contact Us, Warranty, & Conformity Information  
Warranty, continued  
How and where Send the defective product postage and insurance prepaid to the following address:  
to send the  
returns  
CSI Material Management Center  
c/o Transition Networks  
6103 Blue Circle Drive  
Minnetonka, MN 55343, U.S.A.  
Attn: RETURNS DEPT: Credit Return Authorization (CRA)# or Return Material  
Authorization (RMA) # ___________  
Failure to protect the product during shipping may void this warranty. The return  
authorization number must be written on the outside of the carton to ensure its  
acceptance. We cannot accept delivery of any equipment sent to us without a CRA or  
RMA number.  
Customer pays The customer must pay the non-compliant product(s) return transportation cost to  
non-compliant  
return costs  
Transition Networks for evaluation of said product(s) for repair or replacement.  
Transition Networks will pay for shipping the repaired or replaced in-warranty  
product(s) back to the customer (any and all customs charges, tariffs, or/and taxes  
are the customer's responsibility).  
Non-warranty  
repair costs  
Before making any non-warranty repair, Transition Networks requires a $200  
charge, plus actual shipping costs to and from the customer. If the repair is greater  
than $200, an estimate is issued to the customer for authorization before making the  
repair. If no authorization is obtained, or the product is deemed not repairable,  
Transition Networks will retain the $200 service charge and return the product to the  
customer not repaired.  
Repaired non-  
warranty  
products  
Non-warranted products repaired by Transition Networks for a fee will carry a 180-  
day limited warranty. All warranty claims are subject to the restrictions and  
conventions set forth by this document.  
Transition Networks reserves the right to charge for all testing and shipping incurred,  
if after testing, a return is classified as "No Problem Found."  
This warranty  
is your only  
remedy  
This warranty is your only remedy. No other warranties, such as fitness for a  
particular purpose, are expressed or implied. Transition Networks is not liable for  
any special, indirect, incidental or consequential damages or losses, including loss of  
data, arising from any cause or theory. Authorized resellers are not authorized to  
extend any different warranty on transition networks' behalf.  
106  
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Transition Networks  
Compliance information  
Standards  
CISPR22/EN55022 Class A, CE Mark  
FCC  
Regulations  
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A  
digital Device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits are designed to  
provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is  
operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can  
radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the  
instruction manual, may cause harmful interference to radio communications.  
Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful  
interference, in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at the  
user's own expense.  
Canadian  
Regulations  
This digital apparatus does not exceed the Class A limits for radio noise from digital  
apparatus set out on the radio interference regulations of the Canadian Department of  
Communications.  
Le présent appareil numérique n'émet pas de bruits radioélectriques dépassant les  
limites applicables aux appareils numériques de la Class A prescrites dans le  
Règlement sur le brouillage radioélectrique édicté par le ministère des  
Communications du Canada.  
European  
WARNING:  
Regulations  
This is a Class A product. In a domestic environment, this product could cause radio  
interference in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures.  
Achtung !  
Dieses ist ein Gerät der Funkstörgrenzwertklasse A. In Wohnbereichen können bei  
Betrieb dieses Gerätes Rundfunkstörungen auftreten. In diesem Fäll ist der Benutzer  
für Gegenmaßnahmen verantwortlich.  
Attention !  
Ceci est un produit de Classe A. Dans un environment domestique, ce produit risque  
de créer des interférences radioélectriques, il appartiendra alors à l'utilsateur de  
prende les measures spécifiques appropriées.  
Continued on next page  
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Section X: FBRM/BFFG Contact Us, Warranty, & Conformity Information  
Compliance information, continued  
European  
In accordance with European Union Directive 2002/96/EC of the  
Regulations,  
(continued)  
European Parliament and of the Council of 27 January 2003, Transition  
Networks will accept post usage returns of this product for proper disposal.  
The contact information for this activity can be found in the 'Contact Us'  
portion of this document.  
CAUTION: RJ connectors are NOT INTENDED FOR CONNECTION TO  
THE PUBLIC TELEPHONE NETWORK. Failure to observe this caution  
could result in damage to the public telephone network.  
Der Anschluss dieses Gerätes an ein öffentlickes Telekommunikationsnetz in den  
EG-Mitgliedstaaten verstösst gegen die jeweligen einzelstaatlichen Gesetze zur  
Anwendung der Richtlinie 91/263/EWG zur Angleichung der Rechtsvorschriften der  
Mitgliedstaaten über Telekommunikationsendeinrichtungen einschliesslich der  
gegenseitigen Anerkennung ihrer Konformität.  
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Transition Networks  
Appendix A:  
FBRM/BFFG Part Numbers  
FBRM copper-to-fiber part numbers  
Standard  
models  
The models shown in Table 14 perform as described in this manual. The 110 in the  
model designation means DMI functionality.  
Table 14: FBRM10xx-1xx Model Numbers  
Port 1: Copper  
10/100Base-T  
RJ-45  
Port 2: Fiber  
100Base-FX  
ST, 100Base-FX 1300nm  
MM  
Part Number  
CFBRM1011-100  
CFBRM1011-110 DMI  
SFBRM1011-100  
100m (328ft)  
2 km (1.2 miles)  
SFBRM1011-110 DMI  
CFBRM1013-100  
CFBRM1013-110 DMI  
SFBRM1013-100  
RJ-45  
100m (328ft)  
SC, 100Base-FX 1300nm  
MM  
2 km (1.2 miles)  
SFBRM1013-110 DMI  
CFBRM1014-100  
CFBRM1014-110 DMI  
SFBRM1014-100  
RJ-45  
100m (328ft)  
SC, 100Base-LX10 1310nm  
SM  
10 km (6.2 miles)  
SFBRM1014-110 DMI  
CFBRM1015-100  
CFBRM1015-110 DMI  
SFBRM1015-100  
RJ-45  
100m (328ft)  
SC, 100Base-FX 1310nm  
SM  
40 km (24.9 miles)  
SFBRM1015-110 DMI  
(long haul)  
CFBRM1016-100  
CFBRM1016-110 DMI  
SFBRM1016-100  
RJ-45  
100m (328ft)  
SC, 100Base-FX 1310nm  
SM  
60 km (37.3 miles)  
SFBRM1016-110 DMI  
(extra long haul)  
CFBRM1017-100  
CFBRM1017-110 DMI  
SFBRM1017-100  
RJ-45  
100m (328ft)  
SC, 100Base-FX 1550nm  
SM  
80 km (49.7 miles)  
SFBRM1017-110 DMI  
(long wave)  
CFBRM1035-100  
CFBRM1035-110 DMI  
SFBRM1035-100  
RJ-45  
100m (328ft)  
SC, 100Base-FX 1550nm  
SM  
120km (74.6 miles)  
SFBRM1035-110 DMI  
(long wave length)  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Appendix A: FBRM/BFFG Part Numbers  
FBRM copper-to-fiber part numbers, continued  
Single-fiber  
model pairs  
The models shown in Table 15 are single-fiber and must be installed in pairs.  
Table 15: FBRM10xx-1xx Single-Fiber Model Pairs  
Port 1: Copper  
10/100Base-T  
RJ-45  
Port 2: Fiber  
100Base-FX  
SC, 100Base-FX BX-U 1310 nm  
TX/1550nm RX  
Part Number  
CFBRM1029-100**  
CFBRM1029-110** DMI  
SFBRM1029-100**  
100m (328ft)  
SM  
SFBRM1029-110** DMI  
CFBRM1029-101**  
CFBRM1029-111** DMI  
SFBRM1029-101**  
20 km (12.4 miles)  
SC, 100Base-FX BX-D 1550 nm  
TX/1310 nm RX  
SM  
RJ-45  
100m (328ft)  
SFBRM1029-111** DMI  
CFBRM1029-102***  
CFBRM1029-112*** DMI 100m (328ft)  
SFBRM1029-102***  
20 km (12.4 miles)  
SC, 100Base-FX BX-U 1310 nm  
TX/1550nm RX  
RJ-45  
SM  
SFBRM1029-112*** DIM  
CFBRM1029-103***  
CFBRM1029-113*** DMI 100m (328ft)  
SFBRM1029-103***  
40 km (24.9 miles)  
SC, 100Base-FX BX-D 1550 nm  
TX/1310nm RX  
RJ-45  
SM  
SFBRM1029-113*** DMI  
40 km (24.9 miles)  
BX-D (down stream) BX-U (up stream)  
Note: The distances for Port 1 listed in Table 15 are typical maximum distances; the  
physical characteristics of the network dictate actual distances.  
**FBRM-100 and -101, -110 and -111 Device pairs require installation in the same  
network, where one is the local Device and the other its remote peer.  
***FBRM-102 and -103, -112 and -113 Device pairs require installation in the same  
network, where one is the local Device and the other its remote peer.  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
FBRM copper-to-fiber part numbers, continued  
SFP models  
The models shown in Table 16 use SFP (small form factor pluggable) Devices sold  
separately from Transition networks.  
Table 16: FBRM1040-1xx (SFP Models)  
Part Number  
Port 1: Copper 10/100Base-T Port 2: Empty  
RJ-45 100m (328ft) Empty SFP slot*  
CFBRM1040-100  
CFBRM1040-110 DMI  
SFBRM1040-100  
SFBRM1040-110 DMI  
Note: The distances for Port 1 listed in Table 21 are typical maximum distances; the  
physical characteristics of the network dictate actual distances.  
*Compatible SFP transceiver Devices for the FBRM1040-1xx Devices are available  
from Transition Networks (sold separately). See the TN-SFP-xxx series SFP manual  
# 33308 at www.transiton.com for available options.  
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Appendix A: FBRM/BFFG Part Numbers  
FBRM fiber-to-fiber part numbers  
FBRM Gbit  
models  
The models shown in Table 17 are dual-fiber port models. The 11x in the model  
designation means DMI functionality.  
Table 17: FBRM13xx-1xx Gbit Models  
Port 1: Fiber  
100Base-FX  
Port 2: Fiber  
1000Base-SX/LX  
Part Number  
CFBRM1313-100  
100Base-FX 1300 nm  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm  
CFBRM1313-110 DMI  
SFBRM1313-100  
MM SC 2Km (1.2 miles) MM  
300/500 m (985/1,640 ft)  
SFBRM1313-110 DMI  
CFBRM1314-100  
CFBRM1314-110 DMI  
SFBRM1314-100  
100Base-FX 1300 nm  
MM SC 2Km (1.2 miles) SM  
10 Km (6.2 miles)  
SC, 1000Base-LX 1310 nm  
SFBRM1314-110 DMI  
CFBRM1315-100  
CFBRM1315-110 DMI  
SFBRM1315-100  
100Base-FX 1300 nm  
MM SC 2Km (1.2 miles) SM  
25 km (15.5 miles)  
SC, 1000Base-LX 1310 nm  
SFBRM1315-110 DMI  
CFBRM1317-100  
CFBRM1317-110 DMI  
SFBRM1317-100  
100Base-FX 1300 nm  
MM SC 2Km (1.2 miles) SM  
65 km (40.3 miles)  
SC, 1000Base-LX 1310 nm  
SFBRM1317-110 DMI  
CFBRM1335-100  
SFBRM1335-110 DMI  
CFBRM1335-100  
100Base-FX 1300 nm  
MM SC, 2 Km (1.2 miles) SM  
120 km (74.6 miles)  
SC, 1000Base-LX 1310 nm  
SFBRM1335-110 DMI  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix A: FBRM/BFFG Part Numbers  
Transition Networks  
FBRM fiber-to-fiber part numbers, continued  
Single-fiber  
models  
The models shown in Table 18 are single-fiber models and must be installed in pairs.  
Table 18: FBRM13xx-1xx Single Fiber Model Pairs  
Port 1: Fiber  
100Base-FX  
Port 2: Fiber  
1000Base-SX/LX  
Part Number  
CFBRM1329-100*  
100Base-FX 1300 nm  
SC, 1000Base-LX BX-U  
CFBRM1329-110* DMI MM SC, 2 Km (1.2 miles) 1310 nm TX/1490 nm RX  
SFBRM1329-100*  
SFBRM1329-110* DMI  
CFBRM1329-101*  
SM  
20km (12.4 miles)  
SC, 1000Base-LX BX-D  
100Base-FX 1300 nm  
CFBRM1329-111* DMI MM SC, 2 Km (1.2 miles) 1490nm TX/1310 nm RX  
SFBRM1329-101*  
SM  
SFBRM1329-111* DMI  
20 km (12.4 miles)  
CFBRM1329-102**  
R100Base-FX 1300 nm  
SC, 100Base-LX BX-U  
CFBRM1329-112** DMI MM SC, 2 Km (1.2 miles) 1310 nm TX/1490 nm RX  
SFBRM1329-102**  
SFBRM1329-112** DIM  
CFBRM1329-103**  
SM  
40 km (24.9 miles)  
SC, 100Base-LX BX-D  
100Base-FX 1300 nm  
CFBRM1329-113** DMI MM SC, 2 Km (1.2 miles) 1490 nm TX/1310 nm RX  
SFBRM1329-103**  
SM  
SFBRM1329-113** DMI  
40 km (24.9 miles)  
BX-D (down stream) BX-U (up stream)  
*FBRM-100 and -101, -110 and -111 Device pairs require installation in the same  
network, where one is the local Device and the other its remote peer.  
**FBRM-102 and -103, -112 and -113 Device pairs require installation in the same  
network, where one is the local Device and the other its remote peer.  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Appendix A: FBRM/BFFG Part Numbers  
FBRM fiber-to-fiber part numbers, continued  
SFP models  
The models shown in Table 19 use SFP (small form factor pluggable) Devices sold  
separately from Transition Networks.  
Table 19: FBRM1340-1xx (SFP Models)  
Part Number  
CFBRM1340-100  
SFBRM1340-100  
Port 1: Copper 10/100Base-T Port 2: Empty  
RJ-45 100m (328ft) Empty SFP slot  
Note: The distances for Port 1 listed in Table 19 are typical maximum distances;  
the physical characteristics of the network dictate actual distances.  
Note: Compatible SFP transceiver Devices for the FBRM1040-1xx Devices are  
available from Transition Networks (sold separately). See the TN-SFP-xxx  
series SFP manual # 33308 at www.transiton.com for available options.  
114  
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Appendix A: FBRM/BFFG Part Numbers  
Transition Networks  
BFFG copper-to-fiber part numbers  
Standard  
models  
The models shown in Table 20 perform as described in this manual.  
Table 20: xBFFGxx-1xx Model Numbers  
Port 1: Copper  
Part Number  
Port 2: Fiber  
1000Base-X  
Empty Slot  
10/100/1000Base-T  
CBFFG1040-100  
SBFFG1040-100  
RJ-45  
100m (328ft)  
Note: The distances for Port 1 listed in Table 20 are typical maximum distances;  
the physical characteristics of the network dictate actual distances.  
Note: Compatible SFP transceiver Devices for the FBRM1040-1xx Devices are  
available from Transition Networks (sold separately). See the TN-SFP-xxx  
series SFP manual # 33308 at www.transiton.com for available options.  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Appendix A: FBRM/BFFG Part Numbers  
BFFG fiber-to-fiber part numbers  
Gbit models  
The models shown in Table 21 perform as described in this manual.  
Table 21: BFFG13xx-1xx Gbit Models  
Part Number  
Port 1: Fiber  
1000Base-SX  
Port 2: Fiber  
1000Base-SX/LX  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm  
MM  
CBFFG1313-100  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm  
CBFFG1313-110 DMI MM  
SBFFG1313-100  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft)*  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft)  
SBFFG1313-110 DMI  
CBFFG1314-100  
CBFFG1314-110 DMI MM  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm  
SC, 1000Base-LX 1310 nm  
SM  
SBFFG1314-100  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft) *  
10 Km (6.2 miles)  
SBFFG1314-110 DMI  
CBFFG1315-100  
CBFFG1315-110 DMI MM  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm  
SC, 1000Base-LX 1310 nm  
SM  
SBFFG1315-100  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft) *  
25 km (15.5 miles)  
SBFFG1315-110 DMI  
CBFFG1317-100  
CBFFG1317-110 DMI MM  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm  
SC, 1000Base-LX 1310 nm  
SM  
SBFFG1317-100  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft) *  
65 km (40.3 miles)  
SBFFG1317-110 DMI  
CBFFG1335-100  
SBFFG1335-110 DMI MM  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm  
SC, 1000Base-LX 1310 nm  
SM  
CBFFG1335-100  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft) *  
120 km (74.6 miles)  
SBFFG1335-110 DMI  
*220 (722 ft):  
62.5/125µ fiber  
50/125µ fiber  
*550 m (1,804 ft):  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix A: FBRM/BFFG Part Numbers  
Transition Networks  
BFFG fiber-to-fiber part numbers, continued  
Single-fiber  
models  
The models shown in Table 22 are single-fiber models and must be installed in pairs.  
Table 22: BFFG13xx-1xx Single Fiber Model Pairs  
Port 1: Fiber  
1000Base-SX  
Port 2: Fiber  
1000Base-SX/LX  
Part Number  
CBFFG1329-100**  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm SC, 1000Base-LX BX-U  
CBFFG1329-110** DMI MM  
1310 nm TX/1490 nm RX  
SBFFG1329-100**  
SBFFG1329-110** DMI  
CBFFG1329-101**  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft)* SM  
20km (12.4 miles)  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm SC, 1000Base-LX BX-D  
CBFFG1329-111** DMI MM  
1490 nm TX/1310 nm RX  
SBFFG1329-101**  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft)* SM  
SBFFG1329-111** DMI  
20 km (12.4 miles)  
CBFFG1329-102***  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm SC, 100Base-LX BX-U  
CBFFG1329-112*** DMI MM  
1310 nmTX/1490 nm RX  
SBFFG1329-102***  
SBFFG1329-112*** DIM  
CBFFG1329-103***  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft)* SM  
40 km (24.9 miles)  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm SC, 100Base-LX BX-D  
CBFFG1329-113*** DMI MM  
1490 nm TX/1310 nm RX  
SBFFG1329-103***  
220/550 m (722/1,804 ft)* SM  
SBFFG1329-113*** DMI  
40 km (24.9 miles)  
BX-D (down stream) BX-U (up stream)  
*220 (722 ft):  
62.5/125µ fiber  
50/125µ fiber  
*550 m (1,804 ft):  
**BFFG-100 and -101, -110 and -111 Device pairs require installation in the same  
network, where one is the local Device and the other its remote peer.  
***BFFG-102 and -103, -112 and -113 Device pairs require installation in the same  
network, where one is the local Device and the other its remote peer.  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix A: FBRM/BFFG Part Numbers  
BFFG fiber-to-fiber part numbers, continued  
SFP models  
The models shown in Table 23 use SFP (small form factor pluggable) Devices sold  
separately from Transition Networks.  
Table 23: BFFG1340-1xx (SFP Models)  
Port 1: Fiber  
1000Base-SX  
Part Number  
Port 2: Empty  
CBFFG1340-100  
SBFFG1340-100  
SC, 1000Base-SX 850 nm MM Empty SFP slot*  
220/500 m (728/1,640 ft)  
*Compatible SFP transceiver Devices for the BFFG1340-1xx Devices are available  
from Transition Networks (sold separately). See the TN-SFP-xxx series SFP manual  
# 33308 at www.transiton.com for available options.  
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Transition Networks  
Intentionally Blank  
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Appendix B:  
FBRM/BFFG Technical Specification  
Specifications, notices, and warnings  
For use with Transition Networks’ Models FBRM and BFFG or equivalent.  
Parameter  
IEEE Standards  
Description  
IEEE 802.3-2000  
IEEE 802.3ah-2004 clause 57, 58  
IEEE 802.1q-2003  
IEEE 802.1x-2004  
IEEE 802.1D  
IEEE 802.1P  
RFC compliance  
See Appendix D  
Regulatory Compliance for Emission EN55022 Class A  
Regulatory Compliance for Immunity EN55024  
Safety Compliance  
Unit: CE Mark  
Wall-Mount Power Supply: UL Approved,  
UL60950, and CSA Certified  
4 watts  
Power Consumption  
MTBF* CFBRM & CBFFG models 141,526 MIL217F2 hours  
518,418 Bellcore hours  
SFBRM & SBFFG models 39,895 MIL217F2 hours  
106,056 Bellcore hours  
Power Source  
7.5 to 15.9 VDC – Wall-mount AC Adapter  
or Point System Backplane (provided)  
Max Frame Size  
Size (width x height x depth)  
Weight  
Operating Temperature  
Storage Temperature  
Altitude  
1628 bytes  
3.3 x 1 x 4.75 in (83.8 x 25.4 x 120.65 mm)  
Standalone: 4oz (113.4 grams)  
0 to 45º C (32 to 113º F)  
-25 to 65º C (-13 to 149ºF)  
0-10,000 feet  
Operating Humidity  
5% to 95% (non-condensing)  
MTBF criteria  
*MTBF is estimated using the predictability method. This method is based on MIL-  
104°F at 40°C ambient temperature, typical enclosure heat rise of 10°C, and nominal  
operating conditions and parameters. Installation and configuration specific MTBF  
estimates are available upon request: Contact Technical Support.  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix B: FBRM/BFFG Technical Specifications  
Transition Networks  
Specifications, notices, and warnings, continued  
Notices  
The information in this user’s guide is subject to change. For the most up-to-date  
information on the FBRM/BFFG Devices, see the user’s guide on-line at:  
Product is certified by the manufacturer to comply with DHHS Rule 21/CFR,  
Subchapter J applicable at the date of manufacture.  
IMPORTANT Copper based media ports: e.g., Twisted Pair (TP) Ethernet, USB,  
RS232, RS422, RS485, DS1, DS3, Video Coax, etc., are intended to be connected  
to intra-building (inside plant) link segments that are not subject to lightening  
transients or power faults.  
CAUTION: Copper-based media ports, e.g., Twisted Pair (TP) Ethernet, USB,  
RS232, RS422, RS485, DS1, DS3, Video Coax, etc., are NOT to be connected to  
inter-building (outside plant) link segments that are subject to lightening transients or  
power faults. Failure to observe this caution could result in damage to equipment.  
Warnings  
WARNING: Visible and invisible laser radiation when open: DO NOT stare into the  
beam or view the beam directly with optical instruments. Failure to observe this  
warning could result in an eye injury or blindness.  
WARNING: Use of controls, adjustments or the performance of procedures other  
than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure.  
WARNING: If the media Device is an IEEE802.3-2005 Powered Device (PD)  
capable of receiving power via the Medium Dependent Interface (MDI) leads, the  
power source, connector, and cabling attached to the barrel power connector must  
meet the isolation requirement specified in IEEE802.3-2005. Failure to observe this  
warning could result in an electrical shock.  
IMPORTANT  
The xFBRM/xBFFG Device product family is not compatible with the CPSMM-200  
and CPSMM-210 management modules when they are used in a cascaded  
application. The xFBRM/xBFFG can be installed in the “master” chassis with the  
CPSMM-200, but they can not be installed in a cascaded chassis using the CPSMM-  
210.  
Alternatively, the xFBRM/xBFFG can be used with the CPSMM-120 base  
management module, which does not support cascading of the chassis.  
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Appendix C:  
Device Commands & Descriptions  
Command  
arp  
Descriptions  
Displays the arp cache.  
clear counter  
Clears counters on all ports or on a specific port. Usage:  
clearcounter [port=<portno>]  
cls  
Clears the screen.  
exit  
Exits the CLI/Telnet session.  
factory defaults  
Resets the Device to factory default settings—all current  
configurations will be erased.  
help or ?  
Help or ?:  
Displays the available commands.  
help <cmd >: Displays the command usage in detail.  
Used to configure port parameters. The port number for  
the configured port must be specified. Valid port  
numbers start at “1.”  
ifconfig port=<portno>  
Usage: ifconfig port=<portno>  
[adminstate=<enable|disable]  
[autoneg=<enable|disable>]  
[duplex=<full|half>]  
[speed=<10|100|1000>]  
[portstring=<"value">(max=64)]  
[iptraffic=<enable|disable>]  
The configurable parameters are as follows:  
adminstate: The port can be disabled or enabled.  
autoneg:  
Enable/disable Auto-Negotiation on this  
port.  
duplex:  
When Auto-Negotiation is disabled,  
Duplex Mode of the port can be set to  
full/half duplex.  
speed:  
The port speed can be set to 10/100 Mbps  
when Auto-Negotiation is disabled.  
A unique name can be assigned to each  
port.  
The IP traffic can be enabled/disabled on  
each port individually.  
portstring:  
iptraffic:  
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Appendix C: Device Commands & Definitions  
Transition Networks  
Command  
Description  
ifoam port=<portno>  
OAM configuration for the specified port.  
Usage: ifoam port=<portno>  
[oam=enable|disable]  
[oammode=active|passive]  
[oamrmtloop=enable|disable]  
OAM:  
OAM can be enabled/disabled.  
Oammode:  
OAM Mode can be set to Passive/Active  
Mode.  
Oamrmtloop: OAM loopback can be enabled/disable  
on the remote Device peer.  
netstat  
ping  
Displays all active and passive sockets.  
Pings the host to check if it is reachable using ICMP  
requests.  
ps  
Displays the system processes.  
Saves the current configuration and reboots the system.  
Saves the current configuration to non-volatile memory.  
Sets network settings and system configuration.  
Usage: set  
reboot  
save  
set  
[dhcp=<enable|disable>]  
[ip=nn.nn.nn.nn]  
[netmask=nn.nn.nn.nn]  
[gateway=nn.nn.nn.nn]  
[trapmgr=nn.nn.nn.nn]  
[community=<"value">(max=64)]  
[groupstring=<"value">(max=64)]  
[radius=<enable|disable)]  
[radiusip=nn.nn.nn.nn]  
[radiussercret=<"value">(max=64)]  
[username=<"value">(max=64)]  
[password=<"value">(max=64)]  
[usb=<enable|disable>]  
[l3capability=<enable|disable)]  
[snmpaccess=<enable|disable)]  
[tftpserver=nn.nn.nn.nn]  
[tftpfile=<"value">(max=64)]  
[mgmtvlan=<vlanid>(2-4096)  
set autoupg  
Enable/disable auto upgrade.  
When enabled, automatically upgrades the firmware.  
Usage: set autoupg=<enable|disable>. This locks/unlocks  
firmware upgrades from an active OAM Device peer.  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix C: Device Commands & Definitions  
Command  
Description  
set community  
Sets SNMP community name.  
Usage: set community=<name>  
set dhcp  
Enables/disables DHCP at boot time. In case DHCP  
failed during initialization, retry using the “restart”  
option.  
Usage: set dhcp=<enable|disable|restart>  
set downloadcfg  
Download the system configuration from a TFTP  
Server.  
Usage: Usage: set downloadcfg=<"filename">  
[l3access=<enable|disable>] [ipsetting=<default|nochange>  
Note: The l3access’ and ‘ipsetting’ are options to turnOFF  
IP access once the upgrade is done, and to change  
the IP address, subnet and gateway to factory  
defaults.  
set forceupg  
Enable/disable forcing a firmware upgrade of the peer  
on specified port, automatically.  
Usage: set forceupg port=<portno>  
set gateway  
Sets gateway address.  
Usage: set gateway=nn.nn.nn.nn  
set groupstring  
set uploadcfg  
Sets group string for the system.  
Usage: set groupstring=<"name">(max=64)  
Sets uploading the system configuration to a TFTP  
Server.  
Usage: Usage: set uploadcfg=<"filename">  
set downloadcfg  
Sets Downloading the system configuration from a  
TFTP Server.  
Usage: Usage: set  
set ip  
Sets IP address.  
Usage: set ip=nn.nn.nn.nn  
set l3capability  
set mgmtvlan  
set niecho  
Enables/disables all layer-3 traffic.  
Usage: set l3capability=<enable|disable>  
Sets management VLAN ID for management traffic.  
Usage: set mgmtvlan=<vlanid>  
Sets the number of echo frames to be sent, and start the  
non-intrusive echo frame generation on the interface.  
Usage: set niecho port=<portno> count=<1-100>  
set autoupg  
set forceupg  
Enable/disable auto upgrade. When enabled, Auto  
firmware upgrade be done.  
Usage: set autoupg=<enable|disable>  
Enable/disable Forcing Auto firmware upgrade on Peer  
on specified port  
Usage: set forceupg port=<portno>  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Command  
Description  
set slpt  
Enable/disable Selective Link pass through.  
Usage: set slpt=<enable|disable>  
set tlpt  
Enable/disable Transparent Link pass through.  
Usage: set tlpt=<enable|disable>  
set 12cp  
Sets the L2CP protocol diposition per port if 'port' is  
given, else sets all ports forwarding rule for that  
protocol.  
Usage: set l2cp="<stp|slow|dot1x|elmi|lldp|bmgmt|garp|other>"  
port=<portno> act="<forward|discard>"  
set fiberredund  
Set fiberrevert  
set netmask  
Sets Enable/disable Fiber Redundancy.  
Usage: set fiberredund=<enable|disable>  
Enable/disable Fiber Redundancy revert.  
Usage: set fiberrevert=<enable|disable>  
Sets subnet mask.  
Usage: set netmask=nn.nn.nn.nn  
set orceupg  
Enable/disable forcing auto firmware upgrade on the  
peer of a specified port.  
Usage: set forceupg port=<portno>  
set password  
set radius  
Sets password for CLI access through serial port/telnet.  
This is used when RADIUS is disabled.  
Usage: set password=<"value">(max=64)  
Enables/disables RADIUS authentication. RADIUS is  
disabled by default.  
Usage: set radius=<enable|disable>  
Sets RADIUS server IP.  
set radiusip  
Usage: set radiusip=nn.nn.nn.nn  
set radiussecret  
set snmpaccess  
set tftpfile  
Sets RADIUS secret shared with the RADIUS server.  
Usage: set radiussecret=<"value">(max=64)  
Enables/disables all SNMP access.  
Usage: set snmpaccess=<enable|disable>  
Sets tftp filename to be downloaded using upgrade with  
TFTP.  
Usage: set tftpfile=<"value">(max=64)  
Sets TFTP server IP address to be used for upgrading  
via TFTP.  
set tftpserver  
Usage: set tftpserver=nn.nn.nn.nn  
Sets trap manager address.  
Usage: set trapmgr nn.nn.nn.nn  
Uploads the system configuration to a TFTP Server.  
Usage: set uploadcfg=<"filename">  
Disables the USB port. This disables access through the  
USB port. It can be enabled using IP-based or Point  
System management.  
set trapmgr  
set uploadcfg  
set usb  
Usage: set usb=disable  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix C: Device Commands & Definitions  
Command  
Description  
set username  
Sets username for CLI access through serial port/telnet.  
This username is used when RADIUS is disabled.  
Usage: set username=<"value">(max=64)  
show  
Displays all the current configurations at the system  
level, including installed firmware revisions, network  
configurations, system uptime, etc.  
Shows current version of the firmware build  
information.  
show version  
Show redundancy  
show ifcabletest  
Shows fiber redundancy settings.  
Performs cable tests and displays the cable status for all  
or a specified port.  
Usage: show ifcabletest port=<all | port no>  
show ifconfig  
show ifoam  
Displays port configurations, including speed, duplex,  
and IP access for a specified port, or all ports.  
Usage: show ifconfig [port=<all | port no>]  
Displays OAM configuration and status for all or a  
specified port.  
Usage: show ifoam [port=<all | port no>]  
show ifrmonstats  
show ifstats  
Displays RMON statistics for all or a specified port.  
Usage: show ifrmonstats [port=<all | port no>]  
Displays port statistics for all or a specified port.  
Usage: show ifstats [port=<all | port no>]  
show oamloopback  
Displays OAM Loopback status for all or a specified  
port.  
Usage: show oamloopback [port=<all | port no>]  
show niecho  
Displays Non-intrusive echo generation status for all or  
specified port  
Usage: show niecho [port=<all | port no>]  
show 12cp is (L2cp)  
show oampeer  
Displays L2CP disposition for all or specified port  
Usage: show l2cp [port=<all | port no>]  
Displays OAM peer information for all or a specified  
port.  
Usage: show oamloopback [port=<all | port no>]  
show oamstatistics  
Displays OAM PDU statistics for all or a specified port.  
Usage: show oamstatistics [port=<all | port no>]  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix C: Device Commands & Definitions  
Transition Networks  
Command  
Description  
snmpget  
SNMP GET on the OID is performed try "snmpget  
help" for more information.  
Usage: snmpget [oid=1.2.3.4 | variable=<leaf var | tableEntry.x.y>]  
If the ‘oid’ option is used, the indices should be  
present for table variables and '0' for leaf variables.  
If the 'variable' option is used, the leaf variables can  
be named as is, the table variables have the  
following format <tableentry>.index1.index2  
Ex: snmpget variable=sysUpTime  
snmpget variable=ifEntry.<col>.<ifNumber>  
snmpgetn  
SNMP get-next on the OID is performed if there is no  
OID specified. It uses OID from the last SNMP query,  
try "snmpgetn help" for more information.  
Usage: snmpgetn [oid=1.2.3.4 | variable=<leaf var|tableEntry.x.y>]  
If the 'oid' option is used, the indices should be  
present for table variables and '0' for leaf variables.  
If the 'variable' option is used, the leaf variables can  
be named as is, the table variables have the  
following format <tableentry>.index1.index2.  
Ex: snmpgetn variable=sysContact  
snmpgetn variable=ifEntry ifEntry.<col>.<ifNumber>  
snmpset  
SNMP SET on the OID is performed with the value, try  
"snmpset help" for more information.  
Usage: snmpset oid=<x.y.z> type=<STR | IP | INT>  
value=<value>  
Strings must be enclosed in quotes (“”). If the ‘oid’  
option is used, the indices should be present for  
table variables and ‘0’ for leaf variables.  
If the 'variable' option is used, the leaf variables can  
be named as is, the table variables have the  
following format <tableentry>.index1.index2  
Ex: snmpset variable=sysContact type=STR  
snmpset variable=ifEntry.2.<ifNumber>  
type=STR value="Interface 1."  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix C: Device Commands & Definitions  
Command  
Description  
snmpwalk  
SNMP walk of the entire MIB tree if no options are  
specified or from OID from the last query if 'continue' is  
specified.  
Usage: snmpwalk <continue>  
sys  
The system group variables of MIB-II can be configured  
using the ‘sys’ command. The system contact, name,  
and location can be set.  
Usage: sys  
[contact=<"value">(max=64)]  
[name=<"value">(max=64)]  
[location=<"value">(max=64)]  
tftpupgrade  
Upgrades the firmware running on the Device using  
TFTP protocol. The tftp server IP and tftp filename  
should be configured using the “set” command, or can  
be given as arguments to this command.  
Usage: tftpupgrade erver=nn.nn.nn.nn filename=<"filename">  
xmodemupgrade  
Upgrades the firmware running on the Device, using  
XModem protocol. The command invokes the  
bootloader and start an XModem transfer to upgrade the  
firmware.  
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Appendix D:  
IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
IP- and chassis- The chassis Device version of the Devices plugs into a Point System chassis to  
based  
management  
provide management through the I2C interface: SNMP and web-based management  
through the MMU. SNMP management is based on the Transition Networks  
enterprise MIBs. The chassis-based management (via the MMU) provides a subset of  
the IP-based management via ports. Tables 26, 27, and 28 present IP- and chassis-  
based configuration management parameters.  
Note: The 9 mark means available; a blank cell means not available.  
Table 24: System Configuration Parameters  
Parameter  
BootLoader  
Version  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
The currently installed version of the  
Bootloader.  
9
9
9
9
Config Match  
Default Gateway  
The gateway in a network that will be  
used to access another network if a  
gateway is not specified for use.  
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration  
Protocol) Enable/disable DHCP to obtain  
IP, subnet mask, and gateway data upon  
reboot.  
9
9
DHCP  
9
9
Firmware Version  
The currently installed version of the  
firmware.  
9
9
9
9
9
9
IP Address  
IP Traffic Access  
MAC Address  
IP address of the Device.  
Enable/disable IP Traffic to the Device.  
The MAC address is a unique identifier  
attached to most network adapter NICs. It  
is a number that acts like the name for a  
particular network adapter.  
9
9
Management  
VLAN ID  
Thru CLI  
only  
When 802.1q is enabled, the administrator  
can configure VLAN IDs used for all  
management traffic to and from the  
Device via the CLI or through the chassis  
management agent.  
9
9
Marketing  
Revision  
RADIUS  
Enable/disable RADIUS authentication.  
When enabled, the user is authenticated  
during login at the CLI or web interface.  
Authentication  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
Table 26: System Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
RADIUS Retry  
RADIUS Secret  
Retries after a network failure.  
The shared secret between this Device  
and the RADIUS server.  
9
9
RADIUS Server  
Address  
The IP address of the RADIUS server is  
used to get user information during  
authentication.  
Timeout for each attempt to contact the  
server.  
RADIUS timeout  
9
9
9
9
Serial Access  
Serial Number  
Enable/disable USB port access.  
Serial number of the chassis that the  
Device is installed.  
9
9
9
9
9
9
SNMP Access  
SNMP Trap Mgr  
Subnet Mask  
Enable/disable SNMP management.  
SNMP trap manager IP address.  
Determines where the network number in  
an IP address ends and the node number  
in an IP address begins.  
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
TFTP Filename  
The filename used to upgrade, using  
TFTP (local Device only).  
TFTP server IP address to use for  
firmware upgrades (local Device only).  
Initiates TFTP firmware upgrades (local  
Device only).  
Enable/disable TLPT. TLPT causes the  
loss of link on one side of a Device to be  
passed through to the other side so that  
the upstream Device can see fault  
conditions that would otherwise be  
hidden by Devices.  
TFTP Server  
Address  
TFTP upgrade  
Transparent Link  
Pass-Through  
Note: TLPT requires Auto-Negotiation  
to be enabled on the twisted pair  
interface.  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
Transition Networks  
Table 25: Media Device Parameters  
Parameter  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
Aging Time  
(Forwarding DB)  
Factory Defaults  
The aging time (in seconds) for entries in  
the forwarding database of the switch.  
This erases all configuration data and sets  
the Device to factory default settings.  
Flushes all forwarding database entries.  
Flushes all VLAN database entries.  
This determines what frame types are  
accounted for in the port counters. The  
choices are “count only RX frames” or  
TX frames or both.  
9
9
9
9
9
Flush FDB  
Flush VLAN DB  
Histogram Mode  
9
9
IEEE Priority class  
'n' [0-7]  
IEEE 802.1p priority mapping. The value  
in this field is used as the priority of the  
frame if it has the tag ‘n.’  
IP priority remapping. The value in this  
field is used as the priority of the frame if  
its IP TOS bits have a traffic class value  
between 0x00 and 0xE0, with 1 --> 0x00,  
2 --> 0x04,...64 --> 0xE0.  
IP Traffic class 'n'  
[1-64]  
9
9
Reset Counters  
Resets all port counters to zero.  
Table 26: Port Configuration Parameters  
Parameter  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
Admin Status  
The administrative status of the interface  
should be enabled for normal operation.  
When the admin state is disabled, the port  
goes into listening mode, the link will be  
UP, but the interface does not forward  
frames.  
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
Advt 10 Full  
Duplex  
Advt 10 Half  
Duplex  
Advt 100 Full  
Duplex  
Advt 100 Half  
Duplex  
Enable/disable advertising full duplex  
and 10Mbps capability on this port.  
Enable/disable advertising half duplex  
and 10Mbps capability on this port.  
Enable/disable advertising full duplex  
and 100Mbps capability on this port.  
Enable/disable advertising half duplex  
and 100Mbps capability on this port.  
Enable/disable advertising Pause  
capability on the interface.  
Advt Pause  
capability  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
Table 28: Port Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
Autocross  
When enabled, detects and configures the  
twisted pair port on the Device to the  
correct MDI or MDI-X configuration  
automatically.  
9
9
9
Auto-Negotiation  
Allows Devices to configure themselves  
automatically to achieve the best possible  
mode of operation over a link.  
9
9
Connector Type  
DA Priority  
Override  
When enabled, the DA (destination  
address) of the frame is used to get a hit  
on the address database with an entry  
matching the DA when priority override  
is enabled. The priority specified in the  
entry is the new priority of the frame. The  
DA override has a higher priority than the  
default priority of the frame, IP TOS,  
IEEE Priority tags, VTU override, and  
SA override. Normal frame priority  
processing occurs when disabled.  
When enabled, multicast frames with  
unknown destination addresses are  
allowed to ‘egress’ this port if VLAN is  
enabled. The VLAN setting also allows  
this port to ‘egress.’  
9
Default Forward  
9
9
Default Priority  
The default priority of the frames  
entering the port when no other priorities  
are assigned and enabled.  
When IEEE 802.1q is enabled, the default  
VID is used as the IEEE tagged VLAN  
ID to un-tag or priority tag frames when  
they ‘egress of this port.  
Default VLAN ID  
9
Description String  
Group string for this port with the  
maximum length of 64 characters.  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
Transition Networks  
Table 28: Port Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
9
Discard Tagged  
When enabled, all non-management  
frames processed as tagged are discarded.  
If double tagging is enabled, then this  
check is performed after Ingress double  
tag removal. Frames with priority and  
VLAN of “0” are considered tagged.  
When enabled, all non-management  
frames processed as untagged are  
discarded. If double tagging is enabled,  
then this check is performed after Ingress  
double tag removal. Frames with priority  
and VLAN of “0” are considered tagged.  
When enabled, all non-management  
frames processed as untagged are  
Discard Untagged  
Discard Untagged  
discarded. If double tagging is enabled,  
then this check is performed after  
‘ingress’ double tag removal. Frames  
with priority and VLAN of “0” are  
considered tagged.  
9
Double Tagging  
This enables ‘ingress’ double-tagging. It  
is a way to isolate one VLAN from  
another VLAN hierarchically. When  
enabled, also enables ‘egress’ double  
tagging. In this mode, the Ingress port  
removes the first IEEE 802.3ac tag that  
appears after the source address. If a  
frame is untagged, it is not modified. If it  
is single tagged it is removed; if it is  
double tagged, the first tag is removed.  
The Duplex Modeof the port (half/full).  
When enabled, all ‘egress’ frames that  
come from this port are sent to the  
‘egress’ monitor destination port  
9
9
9
Duplex  
Egress Monitor  
Port  
(sfbrm100SwEgressMonPort).  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
Table 28: Port Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
Egress Rate  
Controls the effective port transmission  
rates. The rate limit is provided as a list  
of pre-defined values:  
. noLimit(1)  
. rate64K(2)  
. rate96K(3)  
. rate128K(4)  
. rate160K(5)  
. rate192K(6)  
. rate224K(7)  
. rate256K(8)  
. rate320K(9)  
. rate384K(10)  
. rate512K(11)  
. rate768K(12)  
. rate1M(13)  
. rate1_2M(14)  
. rate1_5M(15)  
. rate2M(16)  
. rate3M(17)  
. rate4M(18)  
. rate5M(19)  
. rate8M(20)  
. rate10M(21)  
. rate20M(22)  
. rate30M(23)  
. rate40M(24)  
. rate60M(25)  
. rate80M(26)  
9
9
9
Far-End Fault  
Indication  
Force Def VLAN  
ID  
Far-End Fault (FEF) is a troubleshooting  
feature on the 100Base-TX port  
When enabled, forces all ‘ingress’ frames  
with IEEE 802.3ac tags to have  
replacement VLAN IDs in the frame with  
the port's default VID. This is valid only  
if IEEE 802.1q is enabled.  
Continued on next page  
134  
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Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
Transition Networks  
Table 28: Port Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
Forward Unknown  
When enabled, unicast frames with  
unknown destination addresses are  
allowed to ‘egress’ this port if VLAN is  
enabled. The VLAN setting also allows  
this port to ‘egress.’  
9
IEEE Priority class  
‘n’ [0-7]  
The priority remapping for frames that  
‘ingress’ this port. The IEEE tagged  
frames with priority ‘n’ get this new  
remapped priority inside the switch; also  
if it egresses this port as tagged, the  
priority is set in the tag.  
9
9
9
9
IGMP Snoop  
This enables IGMP frame forwarding to  
the CPU. IGMP is not supported in the  
present release.  
This corresponds to the EFM OAM MIB.  
It decides whether the OAM loopback on  
this port should be ignored.  
This is related to the Port Lock. Enabling  
this parameter will stop source-address  
violations caused by Port Lock.  
This determines what kinds of frames are  
limited and counted against ‘ingress’  
limiting. Frames not limited by this  
setting are not counted against the limit.  
When enabled, all ‘ingress’ frames are  
sent to the ‘ingress’ monitor destination  
port (sfbrm100SwIngressMonPort).  
When disabled, all IP traffic through this  
port to the CPU is restricted.  
9
9
Ignore Loopback  
Ignore Wrong Data  
Ingress Limit mode  
9
Ingress Monitor  
Port  
9
9
9
9
IP Traffic  
Link Partner  
Autoneg ability  
Link Partner Pause  
ability  
Speed and duplex capabilities of the Link  
Partner.  
Pause frame capabilities of the Link  
Partner.  
9
Link Status  
The link status of the port.  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
Table 28: Port Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
OAM Mode  
Control  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
This determines how the OAM Modefor  
ports is configured (manual/auto):  
In auto mode, the port defaults to active  
if in a chassis; passive if a standalone.  
In manual mode, the user can choose  
the OAM mode, using the EFM HUB  
MIB under the TN private MIB tree.  
9
9
9
9
OAM State  
Port Index  
Port Lock  
Enable/disable IEEE 802.1ah OAM  
management on this port.  
The index of the port in  
sfbrm100PortTable.  
IEEE 802.1x MAC authentication. All  
non-management frames received on this  
port are discarded if the source address is  
not in the learned-address database; this  
could cause continuous MAC address  
violation. To prevent this, an entry with  
all port vectors as ‘0’ can be added to the  
address database. This disables learning  
new source addresses.  
Continued on next page  
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Table 28: Port Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
Pri0 Ingress Rate  
Rate limit for Priority “0” frames. The  
rate limit is provided as a list of pre-  
defined values:  
. noLimit(1)  
. rate64K(2)  
. rate96K(3)  
. rate128K(4)  
. rate160K(5)  
. rate192K(6)  
. rate224K(7)  
. rate256K(8)  
. rate320K(9)  
. rate384K(10)  
. rate512K(11)  
. rate768K(12)  
. rate1M(13)  
. rate1_2M(14)  
. rate1_5M(15)  
. rate2M(16)  
. rate3M(17)  
. rate4M(18)  
. rate5M(19)  
. rate8M(20)  
. rate10M(21)  
. rate20M(22)  
. rate30M(23)  
. rate40M(24)  
. rate60M(25)  
. rate80M(26)  
9
9
9
9
Pri1 Ingress Rate  
Control  
Rate limit for Priority “1” frames to be  
the same or twice that of the Priority “0”  
frames.  
Rate limit for Priority “2” frames to be  
the same or twice that of the Priority “1”  
frames.  
Pri2 Ingress Rate  
Control  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
Table 28: Port Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
Pri3 Ingress Rate  
Control  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
Rate limit for Priority “3” frames to be  
the same or twice that of the Priority “2”  
frames.  
9
9
9
9
Remote Loopback  
Enable/disable OAM loopback on the  
remote.  
Resets the port counters.  
9
Reset Port  
Counters  
SA Priority  
Override  
When enabled, the source address of the  
frame is checked against the address  
database entry with the matching source  
address with priority override enabled.  
When there is a match, the fame priority  
is the one found in the entry. The source  
address priority override has a higher  
priority than the default frame priority, IP  
TC, IEEE priorities, and the VLAN  
priority override values. Normal frame  
priority processing occurs when disabled.  
The speed in Mbps for this interface. It is  
the resolved speed when Auto-  
9
9
9
Speed  
Negotiation is enabled or the manually  
set the value when Auto-Negotiation is  
disabled.  
Use Both Traffic  
class  
When a frame has an IEEE 802.ac tag  
and an IP TOS, then this depends on  
which priority is chosen, IP TOS or IEEE  
tag when both sfbrm100PortUseIPTC and  
sfbrm100PortUseTagTC are enabled.  
This enables the IP Traffic class priority  
if present. If disabled, the TOS bits are  
ignored.  
9
9
Use IP Traffic  
class  
Use Tag Traffic  
class  
This enables the IEEE 802.1p priority if  
the frame is IEEE 802.3ac tagged, or else  
it is ignored even if the tag is present.  
Continued on next page  
138  
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Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
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Table 28: Port Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
9
Virtual Cable Test  
The virtual cable test determines the  
quality of the cable, connectors, and  
terminations. Problems such as opens,  
shorts, and cable impendence mismatch  
can be diagnosed with this test.  
9
VLAN Status  
802.1q VLAN can be disabled or enabled  
along with setting the following options:  
Secure: The VLAN ID must be  
contained in the VLAN database (Db)  
and the ‘ingress’ port must be a member  
of the VLAN or else it will be discarded.  
Check: The VLAN ID must be contained  
in the VLAN Db or the frame will be  
discarded.  
Fallback: The frames are not discarded if  
their VLAN ID is not in the VLAN Db.  
In all the above cases, the frames are  
allowed to exit ports that are members of  
the frame's VLAN, including the source  
port's VLAN table  
(sfbrm100PortBasedVLANTbl).  
Also, frames that do not have a VLAN ID  
in the Db can exit only ports in the  
VLAN table.  
Disabled: 802.1q is disabled.  
9
9
VLAN Table  
This is a bitmap that restricts the output  
ports that this input port can send frames  
to. To send frames through port ‘2,’ bit  
‘2’ of this value must be set to ‘1.’  
When enabled, frames that have a source  
address in the forwarding database are  
allowed to bypass Port-based VLAN,  
IEEE 802.1q VLAN and trunk masking.  
VLAN Tunnel  
Continued on next page  
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Appendix D: IP-Based and Chassis Management Parameters  
Table 28: Port Configuration Parameters (continued)  
Parameter  
VTU Priority  
Override  
IP based Chassis Description  
9
When enabled, the port checks the frames  
for VLAN IDs that have the VTU Priority  
override bit set in the VLAN database. It  
then replaces the priority of the frames  
with the priority specified in the VLAN  
entry, which has a higher priority than the  
default of the frame and IP/IEEE  
priorities. Normal frame priority  
processing occurs when disabled.  
Static MAC  
and VLAN  
tables  
The static MAC and VLAN tables are supported only through IP-based management  
and not through chassis-based management. The chassis supports RMON MIB  
counters only on ports. The IP-based management supports public MIB counters  
such as RMON, IFmib. Ether-like MIB, EFM OAM HUB MIB, and port counters  
directly from the switch.  
Note: The MIBs used by the chassis agent for the FBRM/BFFG Device and the  
MIB used by IP-based management are different.  
The chassis agent does not support the EFM hub MIB. If the remote Device  
is OAM capable, but not a FBRM/BFFG Device from Transition Networks,  
the EFM hub MIB will be queried for OAM status.  
140  
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Appendix E:  
Request for Comment (RFC) Compliance  
RFC  
The following is a list of RFC compliances.  
compliance  
[IP] Postel, J. "Internet Protocol DARPA Internet Program Protocol Specification",  
RFC 791, USC Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.  
[ICMP] J. Postel “Internet Control Message Protocol. RFC 792, September 1981.  
[ARP] Plummer, David C., "An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol", RFC 826.  
Symbolics Inc., November 1982.  
[UDP] Postel, J., "Use Datagram Protocol", RFC 768. USC Information Sciences  
Institute, August 28, 1980.  
[TCP] Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol DARPA Internet Program Protocol  
Specification", RFC 793. USC Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.  
[950] Mogul, J. and Postel, J., "Internet Standard Subnetting Procedure", RFC 950.  
Network Working Group, August 1985.  
[1122] Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts - Communications Layers", RFC  
1122. Internet Engineering Task Force, October 1989.  
[1123] Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts - Application and Support", RFC  
1123. Internet Engineering Task Force, October 1989.  
[DHCP] Droms, R., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol", RFC 2131. Bucknell  
University, March 1997.  
[HTTP] Fielding, R. et al, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol - HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616.  
Network Working Group, June 1999.  
[2617]Franks, J. et al, "HTTP Authentication: Basic and Digest Access  
Authentication", RFC 2617. Network Working Group, June 1999.  
[2396]Berners-Lee, T. et al, "Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax",  
RFC 2396. MIT, August 1998.  
[Telnet] Postel, J. and Reynolds, J., "Telnet Protocol Specification", RFC 854. USC  
Information Sciences Institute, May 1983.  
Continued on next page  
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Transition Networks  
Appendix E: Request for Comment (RFC) Compliance  
RFC compliance (continued)  
[TFTP] Sollins, K., "The TFTP Protocol (Revision 2)", RFC 1350. MIT, July 1992.  
[SMTP] Klensin, J. ed., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", RFC 2821. AT&T  
Laboratories, April 2001.  
[SNMP] Case, J. et al, "A Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)", RFC  
1157.  
[1213] Management Information Base for Network Management of TCP/IP-based  
internets: MIB-II  
[1493] Definitions of Managed Objects for Bridges. RFC 1493  
[2674] Definitions of Managed Objects for Bridges with Traffic Classes, Multicast  
Filtering and Virtual LAN Extensions. RFC 2674  
[2819] Remote Network Monitoring Management Information Base. RFC 2819  
[2863] The Interfaces Group MIB. K. McCloghrie, F. Kastenholz. June 2000, RFC  
2863  
[3635] Definitions of Managed Objects for the Ethernet-like Interface Types. RFC  
3635  
142  
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Index  
product.................................................................62  
3-Port Switch..See Redundant SFBRM SFP, 3-Port  
Switch  
Fiber Optics  
characteristics ......................................................92  
xBFFG13xx Gbit.................................................99  
xFBRM Gbit DMI ...............................................97  
xFBRM10xx........................................................92  
xFBRM13xx........................................................96  
Auto Link Restore .................................................70  
AutoCross  
description ...........................................................62  
Auto-Negotiation  
description ...........................................................63  
Bandwith Allocation  
Firmware Upgrade  
adimin intervention..............................................81  
bootloader  
description ...........................................................63  
description .......................................................65  
bootloader CLI.....................................................81  
description ...........................................................62  
failures.................................................................81  
via OAM..............................................................81  
via TFTP..............................................................80  
via Xmodem ........................................................78  
Bootloader  
CLI access ...........................................................82  
firmware upgrade.................................................81  
help screen...........................................................82  
Chassis  
management module unit (MMU).........................4  
COM Port  
IEEE 802.3ah OAM  
configuration........................................................29  
properties.............................................................31  
selecting...............................................................30  
alternate loop back...............................................67  
last gasp/OAM (operation administration and  
maintenance) ...................................................66  
last gasp/OAM dying gasp...................................66  
organization specific PDUs .................................68  
remote loop back .................................................67  
Commands and Descriptions..............................124  
Congestion Reduction  
description ...........................................................64  
In-Band Management..............................................2  
Connecting  
copper cables .......................................................21  
power adapter (standalone model).......................22  
Installing  
chassis card..........................................................18  
copper cables .......................................................20  
standalone devices...............................................19  
USB driver...........................................................25  
Copper Cables  
characteristics ......................................................91  
Default  
IP Configuration  
factory IP config............................................32, 35  
IP-based (web) password.....................................43  
telnet password (directly to device).....................40  
USB password (CLI access) ................................33  
default............................................................32, 35  
DHCP ..................................................................36  
USB CLI..............................................................35  
web-based............................................................46  
Device Configurations Options  
LED  
chassis/standalone devices...................................77  
status..............................................................74, 75  
LEDs  
DHCP  
IP config ..............................................................36  
IP config (set up web-based) ...............................45  
setup (web-based)................................................48  
BFFG...................................................................75  
FBRM..................................................................74  
FBRM/BFFG gbit status......................................76  
Duplex  
Link Pass Thru  
full description.....................................................65  
half desctiption ....................................................65  
auto link restore ...................................................70  
selective...............................................................70  
transparent ...........................................................70  
Far-End Fault  
description ...........................................................64  
Link Status Failure Indication  
description ...........................................................68  
Login  
FBRM/BFFG  
connection scenario (gbit models).......................14  
supported features..................................................3  
telnet ....................................................................40  
Features  
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Index  
USB CLI..............................................................33  
web-based via MMU ...........................................43  
USB .............................................................5, 7, 10  
Power Port  
MAC and VLAN  
standalone only....................................................12  
Product Feature  
table explanation................................................142  
Management  
descriptions..........................................................62  
Radius Authentication  
IP-based (web).................................................4, 58  
MMU...............................................................4, 55  
SNMP ..................................................................52  
Telnet.....................................................................4  
TN private MIBs..................................................53  
USB .......................................................................4  
description ...........................................................69  
Redundant SFBRM SFP, 3-Port Switch  
3-port switch mode..............................................16  
accessing via IP ...................................................49  
config screen........................................................50  
redundant mode explanation................................15  
revert option explanation (see note).....................15  
MIB  
standard counters.................................................68  
MMU  
Security  
local switch settings.............................................44  
CLI time out/idle .................................................71  
IP Access .............................................................71  
mac address blocking...........................................71  
mac filtering.........................................................71  
NMP access .........................................................72  
radius authentication............................................71  
USB access..........................................................72  
username/passowrd..............................................72  
VLAN management.............................................71  
OAM  
alternate loop back...............................................67  
configuration........................................................60  
critical events.......................................................65  
device configuration management options ..........77  
discovery..............................................................65  
event notification with logging............................66  
firmware upgrade.................................................81  
last gasp/dying gasp.............................................67  
operation admin maintenance..............................66  
PDUs ...................................................................68  
redundant model note ....................................60, 66  
remote loop back .................................................67  
what is?..................................................................2  
Selective Link Pass Thru.......................................70  
Set Up  
CLI system config ...............................................37  
COM port.............................................................29  
COM port properties............................................31  
IP configuration (directly to device)....................46  
terminal emulator.................................................30  
USB IP configuration ..........................................35  
web-based to MMU.............................................43  
Panel Front  
BFFG gbit  
ports and LEDs ................................................10  
FBRM  
ports and LEDs ..................................................5  
FBRM gbit  
ports and LEDs ..................................................7  
SFBRM Redundant  
ports and LEDs ................................................11  
System Configuration  
parameters (IP-based vs. chassis)......................131  
Telnet  
commands (directly to device).............................42  
set up directly to standalone device.....................38  
system config (directly to device)........................41  
Panel Rear  
Terminal Emulator  
power connector ..................................................12  
standalone models only........................................12  
set up....................................................................30  
USB  
Pause  
access...................................................................72  
CLI access ...........................................................33  
CLI device commands.........................................33  
CLI system config ...............................................37  
driver installation.................................................25  
IP configuration...................................................35  
flow control and back pressure............................69  
Port Configuration  
BFFG Gbit...........................................................13  
FBRM Gbit..........................................................13  
Ports  
1000Base-FX/LX/BX......................................7, 10  
100Base-FX/LX/BX..............................................5  
144  
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