ADTRAN Network Router MX410 User Manual

®
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Document Number: 61189500L1-1B  
August 2005  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Revision History  
Revision  
Date  
Description of Changes  
A
B
June 2005  
August 2005  
Initial release  
PPP and MX412 information added  
Conventions  
The following typographical conventions are used in this document:  
This font indicates a cross-reference link. First-time references to tables and figures are  
shown in this font.  
This font indicates screen menus, fields, and parameters.  
THIS FONT indicates keyboard keys (ENTER, ESC, ALT). Keys that are to be pressed simultaneously  
are shown with a plus sign (ALT+X indicates that the ALT key and X key should be pressed at the  
same time).  
This font indicates references to other documentation and is also used for emphasis.  
Thisfontindicates on-screen messages and prompts.  
Thisfontindicates text to be typed exactly as shown.  
This font indicates silkscreen labels or other system label items.  
This font is used for strong emphasis.  
NOTE  
Notes inform the user of additional, but essential, information or  
features.  
CAUTION  
Cautions inform the user of potential damage, malfunction, or dis-  
ruption to equipment, software, or environment.  
WARNING  
Warnings inform the user of potential bodily pain, injury, or death.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Compliance  
The MX410 (P/N 1189500L1) and MX412 (P/N 1189512L1) comply with the requirements  
covered under UL 60950 and NEBS Level 3. The MX410 and MX412 are intended to be  
installed in a restricted access area only.  
The MX410 and MX412 devices comply with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to  
the following two conditions:  
1. The device may not cause harmful interference.  
2. The device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause  
undesired operation.  
Changes and modifications not expressly approved by ADTRAN could void the user’s authority  
to operate this equipment.  
WARNING  
The V.35, Ethernet, terminal server, craft port, and FXS port (if  
present) interfaces are not to be connected to outside plant (OSP)  
facilities.  
CAUTION  
Per GR-1089-CORE October 2002, Section 9, this system is  
designed and intended only for installation in a DC-C (common)  
Bonding and Grounding system. It is not intended or designed for  
installation in a DC-I (isolated) Bonding and Grounding system.  
The ground wire must be of equal or greater ampacity than the wire  
connected to the VDC return.  
The Compliance Codes for the MX410/MX412 units and the MX410 Power Supply Unit (PSU)  
are provided in the following tables.  
Table 1. MX410 and MX412 Compliance Codes  
Code  
Input  
Output  
Power Code (PC)  
F
X
A
C
X
Telecommunication Code (TC)  
Installation Code (IC)  
Table 2. MX410 Power Supply Unit Compliance Codes  
Code  
Input  
Output  
Power Code (PC)  
F
C
Telecommunication Code (TC)  
Installation Code (IC)  
A
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Training  
ADTRAN offers training courses on our products. These courses include overviews on product  
features and functions while covering applications of ADTRAN’s product lines. ADTRAN  
provides a variety of training options, including customized training and courses taught at our  
facilities or at customer sites.  
For inquiries concerning training, contact ADTRAN:  
Training Phone:  
Training Fax:  
800-615-1176, ext. 7500  
256-963-6700  
Training Email:  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Contents  
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Contents  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Figures  
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Contents  
Tables  
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Section 1  
Introduction  
PRODUCT OVERVIEW  
The MX410/MX412 delivers full DS0 control to service locations, allowing carriers full utili-  
zation of DS1 bandwidth. The MX410 interfaces to four long-haul outside plant protected  
DS1s via RJ-48 connectors, while the MX412 interfaces to 12 DS1s. Data and management on  
the DS1s can be cross connected on a non-blocking per-DS0 basis to any DS1, V.35 port, and  
four PPP ports. Data Ethernet connectivity is provided via four PPP connections used for  
Ethernet network extension throughout the network and Telnet-based terminal server ports.  
The MX410 houses up to two hot-swappable Power Supply Units (PSU) that provide power  
redundancy when two units are deployed. At least one MX410 PSU (P/N 1189501L1) must be  
inserted into the MX410 for the MX410 to function. The MX412 has an internal PSU.  
See Figure 1-1 and Figure 1-2 on page 1-3 for overview diagrams.  
Digital Radios Data  
Analog Radios Data  
Grooming of DS0S  
LAN Extension over PPP for Remote Management  
Star Configuration of Backhaul  
Backhaul  
Battery Backup  
HVAC  
Backhaul Radio Management  
4 x DS1  
(I/O)  
4 x RS-232  
V.35  
Redundant Power  
Capability  
DB-9 Craft Interface  
E911, etc.  
4 x 10/100 Ethernet  
Figure 1-1. MX410 Overview  
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Product Overview  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
The major features of the MX410/MX412 are as follows:  
• 19-inch wall mounting or rack mounting, one rack unit high  
• Front panel data connections  
• One V.35 port  
• Four RJ-45 long-haul DS1 connections (12 on the MX412) with outside plant protection  
• A four-port Ethernet switch  
• Non-Blocking DS0 cross connect between all DS1 interfaces and the V.35 port  
• RJ-45 10Base-T Ethernet connection  
• Terminal server functionality  
• FXS port (MX412 only)  
• DB-9 craft interface for access to Provisioning, Status, Test, and Alarm menus  
• Management via Telnet over Ethernet connection or VT100 through a local RS-232, DB-9,  
craft port  
• End-to-end Ethernet extension over multiple T1s  
• Robbed Bit Signaling (RBS) supported on a per DS0 basis  
• Hot-swappable PSUs with 1:1 redundancy (MX410 only)  
• Independent power feeds with separate returns  
• Accepts redundant ±60 to ±22 VDC inputs  
• Wire-wrap pins for alarms  
• Manual and remote initiated loopback modes  
• Meets NEBS Level 3  
• Comprehensive test features  
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Product Overview  
Digital Radios Data  
Analog Radios Data  
Grooming of DS0S  
LAN Extension over PPP for Remote Management  
Star Configuration of Backhaul  
Backhaul  
Battery Backup  
HVAC  
Backhaul Radio Management  
12 x T1  
(I/O)  
4 x RS-232  
V.35  
DB-9 Craft Interface  
FXS  
E911, etc.  
4 x 10/100 Ethernet  
Figure 1-2. MX412 Overview  
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Section 2  
Engineering Guidelines  
GENERAL  
This section provides engineering guidelines for network designers who are incorporating an  
MX410 or MX412 system into their network.  
POWER REQUIREMENTS  
Table 2-1 provides the current draw at –48 VDC (operating range of –42 VDC to –60 VDC) and  
±24 VDC (operating range of ±22 VDC to ±27 VDC) with redundant PSUs installed.  
Table 2-1. Current Draw at –48 VDC and ±24 VDC  
Part Number  
Equipment  
Maximum Current Draw  
at –48 VDC  
Maximum Current Draw  
at ±24 VDC  
1189500L1  
1189512L1  
MX410  
MX412  
0.23 amps  
0.36 amps  
0.41 amps  
0.76 amps  
Table 2-2 provides data for determining the recommended fuse for the fuse and alarm panel  
that services the MX410/MX412.  
Table 2-2. Fuse Recommendations  
System Voltage  
–48 VDC  
Recommended Fuse  
2 amps, slow-blow  
2 amps, slow-blow  
±24 VDC  
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Power Dissipation  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
POWER DISSIPATION  
Table 2-3 provides the heat dissipation data at –48 VDC (operating range of –42 VDC to  
–60 VDC) and ±24 VDC (operating range of ±22 VDC to ±27 VDC) with redundant PSUs  
installed (MX410 only).  
Table 2-3. Heat Dissipation at –48 VDC and ±24 VDC  
Part Number  
Equipment  
Heat Dissipation  
at –48 VDC  
Heat Dissipation  
at ±24 VDC  
1189500L1  
1189512L1  
MX410  
MX412  
11.8 watts  
17.3 watts  
10.5 watts  
18.2 watts  
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Section 3  
Application Guidelines  
INTRODUCTION  
This section describes several applications for the MX410/MX412 system. For each appli-  
cation there is a figure illustrating the application, a list of the equipment needed, and an  
explanation of the basic setup. The MX410 block diagram shows the data path of an MX410  
system that implements the following applications:  
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MX410 DATA PATH BLOCK DIAGRAM  
As shown in Figure 3-1, the MX410/MX412 contains a 1/0 cross connect that allows DS0s to  
be mapped between four DS1s (12 DS1s on the MX412), four PPP ports, and a V.35 port. Refer  
Any DS0 in DS1 1 can be mapped to any DS0 in DS1 1-4, or any PPP port, or the V.35 port.  
Any unmapped DS0 in a DS1 is filled with all ones. Therefore, if an entire T1 is unmapped,  
framed all ones are sent.  
The default mapping of the 1/0 cross connect is for all the DS1s to be unmapped and trans-  
mitting framed all ones. No DS0s are dropped to the PPP or V.35 ports.  
MX410  
DS1 1 DS0 # 1  
DS1 1 DS0 # 2  
PPP 1 DS0 # 1  
PPP 1 DS0 # 2  
DS1  
DS1 1  
DS1 2  
DS1 3  
DS1 4  
PPP 1  
Framer  
DS1 1 DS0 # 24  
PPP 1 DS0 # 24  
DS1 2 DS0 # 1  
DS1 2 DS0 # 2  
PPP 2 DS0 # 1  
PPP 2 DS0 # 2  
1/0 Cross Connect  
DS1  
Framer  
PPP 2  
PPP 3  
PPP 4  
DS1 2 DS0 # 24  
PPP 2 DS0 # 24  
DS1 3 DS0 # 1  
DS1 3 DS0 # 2  
PPP 3 DS0 # 1  
PPP 3 DS0 # 2  
DS1  
Framer  
DS1 3 DS0 # 24  
PPP 3 DS0 # 24  
DS1 4 DS0 # 1  
DS1 4 DS0 # 2  
PPP 4 DS0 # 1  
PPP 4 DS0 # 2  
DS1  
Framer  
DS1 4 DS0 # 24  
PPP 4 DS0 # 24  
MX410 IP  
V.35 Port  
TS 1 TS 2 TS 3 TS 4  
ETH 1 ETH 2 ETH 3 ETH 4  
Figure 3-1. MX410 Data Path Block Diagram  
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Drop and Continue Application  
Drop and Continue Application  
The following applies to Remote Site #1 shown in Figure 3-2. In the Drop and Continue Appli-  
cation, any combination of DS0s from one DS1 can be dropped out the other DS1 ports with  
the remaining DS0s continuing through to the other DS1 interface. This enables the  
bandwidth of one DS1 to deliver DS0s to several sites using one MX410 at each site.  
Remote  
Site #1  
Remote  
Site #2  
Central  
Site  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
24 DS0s  
from Central Site  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Unmapped DS0s  
Unmapped DS0s  
MX410  
MX410  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
µ Wave/  
µ Wave/  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
Leased  
DS1  
Leased  
DS1  
Leased  
DS1  
Switch  
Switch  
Drop DS0s  
Drop DS0s  
Drop DS0s  
to Local  
Drop DS0s  
to Local  
to PPP to  
Control  
to PPP to  
Control  
Equipment  
Equipment  
Local  
Local  
Equipment  
via Ethernet  
Equipment  
via Ethernet  
Figure 3-2. Drop and Continue Application Diagram  
The equipment needed for a Drop and Continue application is shown in Table 3-1.  
Table 3-1. Drop and Continue Application - Required Equipment  
Part Number  
Equipment  
Quantity  
1189500L1  
or  
MX410  
1
1189512L1  
MX412  
1
1189501L1  
MX410 PSU (MX410 only)  
1 (2 for redundancy)  
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Drop and Continue Application  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Setup  
Connect the incoming DS1 (the DS1 from which the DS0s are dropped) to the DS1 1 RJ.  
Connect the outgoing DS1 to the DS1 2 RJ. Connect the other DS1s using the RJ connector  
on the front panel. For more information, refer to “DS1 Ports” on page 4-6.  
Starting from the default blank mapping, the DS0s can be dropped using the Quick Setup  
menu to the PPP and V.35 ports (see Figure 3-3). Select each port (PPP1-4, V.35) to which a  
DS0 needs to be dropped from the incoming DS1. For each port, select the range of DS0s in  
DS1 1 to be dropped to that port. To drop DS0s to the other DS1 ports, use the Quick Setup  
menu to navigate to the Cross-Connect Mapping menu. Select the Map Multiple DS0’s option  
and then select the range of DS0 and DS1 1 to be dropped to DS1 2 and enable Robbed Bit  
Signaling if applicable.  
Any un-mapped DS0s from the incoming DS1 will transmit All Ones. The incoming DS1 does  
not have to be DS1 1, but is used only as an example.  
The following four figures show an example of setting up a drop and continue application.  
Figure 3-3 shows the Quick Setup menu before any DS0s have been dropped.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Quick Setup  
Ports  
1 - PPPs  
PPP 1 = DS1 4 DS0 #1  
2 - V.35 =  
System  
3 - System ID  
4 - IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
5 - Default Gateway  
6 - Date  
: 192.168.100.1  
: 255.255.0.0  
: 192.168.1.1  
7 - Time  
8 - Cross-Connect Mapping  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-3. Quick Setup Menu  
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Drop and Continue Application  
Figure 3-4 shows the Quick Setup menu after DS0s 21-22 have been dropped from DS1 1 to  
PPP1, DS0s 23-24 have been dropped from DS1 1 to the V.35 port.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Quick Setup  
Ports  
1 - PPPs  
PPP 1 = DS1 4 DS0 #1  
2 - V.35 =  
System  
3 - System ID  
4 - IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
5 - Default Gateway  
6 - Date  
: 192.168.100.1  
: 255.255.0.0  
: 192.168.1.1  
7 - Time  
8 - Cross-Connect Mapping  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-4. Drop and Continue Quick Setup Example  
Figure 3-5 shows the DS1 1 Cross-Connect Mapping menu after the PPP1 and V.35 interface  
have been mapped.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 1  
1 - DS0 #1 =  
2 - DS0 #2 =  
3 - DS0 #3 =  
4 - DS0 #4 =  
5 - DS0 #5 =  
6 - DS0 #6 =  
7 - DS0 #7 =  
8 - DS0 #8 =  
9 - DS0 #9 =  
10 - DS0 #10 =  
11 - DS0 #11 =  
12 - DS0 #12 =  
13 - DS0 #13 =  
14 - DS0 #14 =  
15 - DS0 #15 =  
16 - DS0 #16 =  
17 - DS0 #17 =  
18 - DS0 #18 =  
19 - DS0 #19 =  
20 - DS0 #20 =  
21 - DS0 #21 = PPP 1  
22 - DS0 #22 = PPP 1  
23 - DS0 #23 = V.35  
24 - DS0 #24 = V.35  
(T)oggle View (DS1 2, DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-5. Drop and Continue Cross-Connect Mapping Example 1  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Figure 3-6 shows the Cross-Connect Mapping menu after the remaining DS0s have been  
continued to DS1 2 as well as 4 DS0s (13-16) dropped to DS1 3 (1-4) and four other DS0s  
(17-20) dropped to DS1 4 (1-4).  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 1  
1 - DS0 #1 = DS1 2 DS0 #1  
2 - DS0 #2 = DS1 2 DS0 #2  
3 - DS0 #3 = DS1 2 DS0 #3  
4 - DS0 #4 = DS1 2 DS0 #4  
5 - DS0 #5 = DS1 2 DS0 #5  
6 - DS0 #6 = DS1 2 DS0 #6  
7 - DS0 #7 = DS1 2 DS0 #7  
8 - DS0 #8 = DS1 2 DS0 #8  
9 - DS0 #9 = DS1 2 DS0 #9  
10 - DS0 #10 = DS1 2 DS0 #10  
11 - DS0 #11 = DS1 2 DS0 #11  
12 - DS0 #12 = DS1 2 DS0 #12  
13 - DS0 #13 = DS1 3 DS0 #1  
14 - DS0 #14 = DS1 3 DS0 #2  
15 - DS0 #15 = DS1 3 DS0 #3  
16 - DS0 #16 = DS1 3 DS0 #4  
17 - DS0 #17 = DS1 4 DS0 #1  
18 - DS0 #18 = DS1 4 DS0 #2  
19 - DS0 #19 = DS1 4 DS0 #3  
20 - DS0 #20 = DS1 4 DS0 #4  
21 - DS0 #21 = PPP 1  
22 - DS0 #22 = PPP 1  
23 - DS0 #23 = V.35  
24 - DS0 #24 = V.35  
(T)oggle View (DS1 2, DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-6. Drop and Continue Cross-Connect Mapping Example 2  
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Drop and Insert Application  
Drop and Insert Application  
The following applies to Remote Site #1 shown in Figure 3-7. In the Drop and Insert Appli-  
cation DS0s from one DS1 can be dropped out to the other DS1 ports. Then, DS0s from the  
other DS1 ports can be inserted into the corresponding DS0s in the other DS1. In the example  
shown, any DS0 not dropped will be mapped to continue on from one DS1 to another. This  
allows a DS1 to be used to transport DS0s between several sites.  
Central  
Site  
Remote  
Site #1  
Remote  
Site #2  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
24 DS0s  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
from Central Site  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Unmapped DS0s  
Unmapped DS0s  
MX410  
MX410  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
Leased  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
µ Wave/  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
Leased  
DS1  
Leased  
DS1  
Switch  
Switch  
DS0s  
DS0s  
Drop DS0s  
Drop DS0s  
to PPP to  
Control  
to/from Local  
Equipment  
to/from Local  
Equipment  
to PPP to  
Control  
Local  
Local  
Equipment  
via Ethernet  
Equipment  
via Ethernet  
Insert DS0s  
Insert DS0s  
from  
from  
PPP to Continue  
Ethernet Path  
Conserving  
Bandwidth  
PPP to Continue  
Ethernet Path  
Conserving  
Bandwidth  
Figure 3-7. Drop and Insert Application Diagram  
The equipment needed for a Drop and Insert application is shown in Table 3-2.  
Table 3-2. Drop and Insert Application - Required Equipment  
Part #  
Equipment  
Quantity  
1189500L1  
or  
MX410  
1
1189512L1  
MX412  
1
1189501L1  
MX410 PSU (MX410 only)  
1 (2 for redundancy)  
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Drop and Insert Application  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Setup  
Connect the DS1 from which the DS0s will be dropped to the DS1 1 RJ. Connect the other  
DS1 to which the DS0s will be inserted to the DS1 2 RJ. Connect the other DS1s using the  
other RJ connectors on the front panel. For more information, refer to “DS1 Ports” on page 4-6  
Starting from the default mapping the DS0s can be dropped and inserted using the Quick  
Setup menu (see Figure 5-24 on page 5-38). Select each port (1-5) to which a DS0 needs to be  
dropped from the incoming DS1. For each port select the DS0(s) in DS1 1 to be dropped to  
that port. Then, select each port and DS0 that needs to be inserted into the other DS1. For  
each DS0 to be inserted select the DS0 in DS1 2 to insert that DS0. Using the Cross-Connect  
Mapping menu, select each DS0 that is to be dropped to other DS1 ports as well. Select the  
Map Multiple DS0’s option and then select the range of DS0 and DS1 1 to be dropped to DS1  
2 and enable Robbed Bit Signaling if applicable.  
For each DS0 dropped out of the incoming DS1 (DS1 1 in this example), that does not have a  
DS0 dropped or inserted into the corresponding DS0 in the other DS1 (DS1 2 in this example),  
map the remaining DS0s to continue the data downstream. Any unmapped DS0 will transmit  
all ones.  
The following six figures show an example of setting up a drop and insert application. Figure  
3-8 shows the Quick Setup menu before any DS0s have been dropped.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Quick Setup  
Ports  
1 - PPPs  
PPP 1 = DS1 4 DS0 #1  
2 - V.35 =  
System  
3 - System ID  
4 - IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
5 - Default Gateway  
6 - Date  
: 192.168.100.1  
: 255.255.0.0  
: 192.168.1.1  
7 - Time  
8 - Cross-Connect Mapping  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-8. Quick Setup Menu  
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Drop and Insert Application  
Figure 3-9 shows the Quick Setup menu after DS0s 23-24 have been dropped from DS1 1 to  
PPP1 and PPP 2 has been inserted into DS0s 23-24 in DS1 2.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Quick Setup  
Ports  
1 - PPPs  
PPP 1 = DS1 1 DS0 #23-24  
PPP 2 = DS1 2 DS0 #23-24  
2 - V.35 = DS1 1 DS0 #23-24  
System  
3 - System ID  
4 - IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
5 - Default Gateway  
6 - Date  
: 192.168.100.1  
: 255.255.0.0  
: 192.168.1.1  
7 - Time  
8 - Cross-Connect Mapping  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-9. Drop and Insert Quick Setup Example  
Figure 3-10 shows the Cross-Connect Mapping menu for DS1 1 after mapping the PPPs but  
prior to mapping the remaining DS0s to be dropped and continued.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 1  
1 - DS0 #1 =  
2 - DS0 #2 =  
3 - DS0 #3 =  
4 - DS0 #4 =  
5 - DS0 #5 =  
6 - DS0 #6 =  
7 - DS0 #7 =  
8 - DS0 #8 =  
9 - DS0 #9 =  
10 - DS0 #10 =  
11 - DS0 #11 =  
12 - DS0 #12 =  
13 - DS0 #13 =  
14 - DS0 #14 =  
15 - DS0 #15 =  
16 - DS0 #16 =  
17 - DS0 #17 =  
18 - DS0 #18 =  
19 - DS0 #19 =  
20 - DS0 #20 =  
21 - DS0 #21 =  
22 - DS0 #22 =  
23 - DS0 #23 = PPP 1  
24 - DS0 #24 = PPP 1  
(T)oggle View (DS1 2, DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-10. Drop and Insert Cross-Connect Mapping Example 1  
61189500L1-1B  
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Drop and Insert Application  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Figure 3-11 shows the Cross-Connect Mapping menu after DS0s 1-12 are continued through  
from DS1 1 to DS1 2 and DS0s 13-23 are dropped from DS1 1 to DS1 3.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 1  
1 - DS0 #1 = DS1 2 DS0 #1  
2 - DS0 #2 = DS1 2 DS0 #2  
3 - DS0 #3 = DS1 2 DS0 #3  
4 - DS0 #4 = DS1 2 DS0 #4  
5 - DS0 #5 = DS1 2 DS0 #5  
6 - DS0 #6 = DS1 2 DS0 #6  
7 - DS0 #7 = DS1 2 DS0 #7  
8 - DS0 #8 = DS1 2 DS0 #8  
9 - DS0 #9 = DS1 2 DS0 #9  
10 - DS0 #10 = DS1 2 DS0 #10  
11 - DS0 #11 = DS1 2 DS0 #11  
12 - DS0 #12 = DS1 2 DS0 #12  
13 - DS0 #13 = DS1 3 DS0 #1  
14 - DS0 #14 = DS1 3 DS0 #2  
15 - DS0 #15 = DS1 3 DS0 #3  
16 - DS0 #16 = DS1 3 DS0 #4  
17 - DS0 #17 = DS1 3 DS0 #5  
18 - DS0 #18 = DS1 3 DS0 #6  
19 - DS0 #19 = DS1 3 DS0 #7  
20 - DS0 #20 = DS1 3 DS0 #8  
21 - DS0 #21 = DS1 3 DS0 #9  
22 - DS0 #22 = DS1 3 DS0 #10  
23 - DS0 #23 = PPP 1  
24 - DS0 #24 = PPP 1  
(T)oggle View (DS1 2, DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-11. Drop and Insert Cross-Connect Mapping Example 2  
Figure 3-12 shows the Cross-Connect Mapping menu for DS1 2 after all ports are dropped  
and continued from DS1 1.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 2  
1 - DS0 #1 = DS1 1 DS0 #1  
2 - DS0 #2 = DS1 1 DS0 #2  
3 - DS0 #3 = DS1 1 DS0 #3  
4 - DS0 #4 = DS1 1 DS0 #4  
5 - DS0 #5 = DS1 1 DS0 #5  
6 - DS0 #6 = DS1 1 DS0 #6  
7 - DS0 #7 = DS1 1 DS0 #7  
8 - DS0 #8 = DS1 1 DS0 #8  
9 - DS0 #9 = DS1 1 DS0 #9  
10 - DS0 #10 = DS1 1 DS0 #10  
11 - DS0 #11 = DS1 1 DS0 #11  
12 - DS0 #12 = DS1 1 DS0 #12  
13 - DS0 #13 =  
14 - DS0 #14 =  
15 - DS0 #15 =  
16 - DS0 #16 =  
17 - DS0 #17 =  
18 - DS0 #18 =  
19 - DS0 #19 =  
20 - DS0 #20 =  
21 - DS0 #21 =  
22 - DS0 #22 =  
23 - DS0 #23 = PPP 2  
24 - DS0 #24 = PPP 2  
(T)oggle View (DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports, DS1 1)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-12. Drop and Insert Cross-Connect Mapping Example 3  
3-10 PRELIMINARY  
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Drop and Insert Application  
Figure 3-13 the Cross-Connect Mapping menu after DS0s 13-23 are inserted in DS1 2 from  
DS1 4. Any unmapped DS0s will be filled with all ones.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 2  
1 - DS0 #1 = DS1 1 DS0 #1  
2 - DS0 #2 = DS1 1 DS0 #2  
3 - DS0 #3 = DS1 1 DS0 #3  
4 - DS0 #4 = DS1 1 DS0 #4  
5 - DS0 #5 = DS1 1 DS0 #5  
6 - DS0 #6 = DS1 1 DS0 #6  
7 - DS0 #7 = DS1 1 DS0 #7  
8 - DS0 #8 = DS1 1 DS0 #8  
9 - DS0 #9 = DS1 1 DS0 #9  
10 - DS0 #10 = DS1 1 DS0 #10  
11 - DS0 #11 = DS1 1 DS0 #11  
12 - DS0 #12 = DS1 1 DS0 #12  
13 - DS0 #13 = DS1 4 DS0 #1  
14 - DS0 #14 = DS1 4 DS0 #2  
15 - DS0 #15 = DS1 4 DS0 #3  
16 - DS0 #16 = DS1 4 DS0 #4  
17 - DS0 #17 = DS1 4 DS0 #5  
18 - DS0 #18 = DS1 4 DS0 #6  
19 - DS0 #19 = DS1 4 DS0 #7  
20 - DS0 #20 = DS1 4 DS0 #8  
21 - DS0 #21 = DS1 4 DS0 #9  
22 - DS0 #22 = DS1 4 DS0 #10  
23 - DS0 #23 = PPP 2  
24 - DS0 #24 = PPP 2  
(T)oggle View (DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports, DS1 1)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-13. Drop and Insert Cross-Connect Mapping Example 4  
61189500L1-1B  
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Integrated Wireless Access Device or DS0 Grooming  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Integrated Wireless Access Device or DS0 Grooming  
The following applies to Remote Site #1 shown in Figure 3-14 and Figure 3-15. In the  
Integrated Wireless Access Device Application, bandwidth is conserved by using the MX410 to  
groom multiple fractional T1s into a single T1. This allows the MX410 to be used as an  
integrated wireless access device (see Figure 3-14) or to transport DS0s between several sites  
(see Figure 3-15). Refer to “PPP BCP/IPCP Menu” on page 5-32 for more information about  
using PPP. and refer to “Alarm Pass Thru” on page 5-19 for information about visibility  
through the cross connect.  
Central  
Site  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
Leased  
DS1  
24 DS0s  
from Central Site  
DS1 #1  
MX410  
DS1 #4  
E911  
Other systems  
currently managed by  
the MX410 through  
an Ethernet port  
to Ethernet port  
Remote Site #1  
V.35  
TSR1  
Battery  
ETH1  
ETH2  
Charger  
Switch  
connection  
DS1 #3  
DS1 #2  
Digital  
Digital  
Analog  
Base Station  
Transceiver  
Base Station  
Transceiver  
Base Station  
Transceiver  
Figure 3-14. Integrated Wireless Access Device Diagram  
3-12 PRELIMINARY  
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Integrated Wireless Access Device or DS0 Grooming  
Central  
Site  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
Leased  
DS1  
24 DS0s  
from Central Site  
Original DS0s  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
Original DS0s  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
MX410  
MX410  
MX410  
Continue  
Continue  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Remote Site #4  
Remote Site #1  
Remote Site #2  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Unmapped DS0s  
Unmapped DS0s  
Unmapped DS0s  
Unmapped DS0s  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
µ Wave/  
µ Wave/  
Leased  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
Switch  
Switch  
Leased  
DS1  
Leased  
DS1  
Switch  
Leased  
DS1  
Drop DS0s  
Drop DS0s  
Drop DS0s  
Drop DS0s  
to PPP to  
Control  
Drop DS0s  
to PPP to  
Control  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
to/from Local  
Equipment  
to/from Local  
Equipment  
to PPP to  
Control  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
Leased  
DS1  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Local  
Local  
Local  
Equipment  
via Ethernet  
Equipment  
via Ethernet.  
Equipment  
via Ethernet.  
Unmapped DS0s  
Insert DS0s from  
PPP to Continue  
Ethernet Path  
Conserving  
Insert DS0s from  
PPP to Continue  
Ethernet Path  
Conserving  
MX410  
Bandwidth  
Bandwidth  
Remote Site #3  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
Leased  
DS1  
DS1  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
Switch  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Unmapped DS0s  
Drop DS0s  
Drop DS0s  
to/from Local  
Equipment  
to PPP to  
Control  
Local  
Equipment  
via Ethernet.  
Insert DS0s from  
PPP to Continue  
Ethernet Path  
Conserving  
Bandwidth  
Figure 3-15. Bandwidth Efficiency with DS0 Grooming Diagram  
The equipment needed for an Integrated Wireless Access Device or Bandwidth Efficiency with  
DS0 Grooming application is shown in Table 3-3.  
Table 3-3. Integrated Wireless Access Device Application - Required Equipment  
Part Number  
Equipment  
Quantity  
1189500L1  
or  
MX410  
1
1189512L1  
MX412  
1
1189501L1  
MX410 PSU (MX410 only)  
1 (2 for redundancy)  
61189500L1-1B  
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Integrated Wireless Access Device or DS0 Grooming  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Setup  
Connect the DS1 from which the DS0s will be dropped to the DS1 1 RJ. Connect the other  
DS1s to DS1 2, 3 and 4 RJ. For more information, refer to “DS1 Ports” on page 4-6.  
Starting from the default mapping the DS0s can be mapped using the Quick Setup menu  
shown in Figure 3-16. Select each port to which a DS0 needs to be dropped from the  
incoming DS1. For each port select the DS0(s) in DS1 1 to be dropped to that port. Using the  
Cross-Connect Mapping menu, select each DS0 that are to be mapped from other DS1 ports  
as well. Select the Map Multiple DS0’s option and then select the range of DS0 and DS1 1 to  
be dropped to DS1 2 and enable Robbed Bit Signaling if applicable.  
For an integrated wireless access device application, map DS0s to the corresponding DS0 in  
the other DS1 (DS1 2, 3, and 4 in this example). For a grooming application, each DS0  
dropped out of the incoming DS1 (DS1 1 in this example), that does not have a DS0 dropped  
or inserted into the corresponding DS0 in the other DS1 (DS1 2,3 and 4 in this example), map  
the groomed DS0s to continue the data downstream. Any unmapped DS0 will transmit all  
ones.  
The following six figures show an example of setting up an integrated wireless access device or  
grooming application. Figure 3-16 shows the Quick Setup menu before any DS0s have been  
dropped.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Quick Setup  
Ports  
1 - PPPs  
2 - V.35 =  
System  
3 - System ID  
4 - IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
5 - Default Gateway  
6 - Date  
: 192.168.100.1  
: 255.255.0.0  
: 192.168.1.1  
7 - Time  
8 - Cross-Connect Mapping  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-16. Quick Setup Menu  
3-14 PRELIMINARY  
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Integrated Wireless Access Device or DS0 Grooming  
Figure 3-17 shows the Quick Setup menu after DS0s 23-24 have been dropped from DS1 1 to  
PPP1, and PPP 2, 3, and 4 have been inserted into DS0s 23-24 in DS1 2, 3 and 4 respectively.  
PPP 2, 3, and 4 are typically not used in this fashion for the integrated wireless access device  
application.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Quick Setup  
Ports  
1 - PPPs  
PPP 1 = DS1 1 DS0 #23-24  
PPP 2 = DS1 2 DS0 #23-24  
PPP 3 = DS1 3 DS0 #23-24  
PPP 4 = DS1 4 DS0 #23-24  
2 - V.35 =  
System  
3 - System ID  
4 - IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
5 - Default Gateway  
6 - Date  
: 192.168.100.1  
: 255.255.0.0  
: 192.168.1.1  
7 - Time  
8 - Cross-Connect Mapping  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-17. Integrated Wireless Access Device Quick Setup Example  
Figure 3-18 shows the Cross-Connect Mapping menu for DS1 1 after mapping the PPPs but  
prior to mapping the remaining DS0s to be mapped.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 1  
1 - DS0 #1 =  
2 - DS0 #2 =  
3 - DS0 #3 =  
4 - DS0 #4 =  
5 - DS0 #5 =  
6 - DS0 #6 =  
7 - DS0 #7 =  
8 - DS0 #8 =  
9 - DS0 #9 =  
10 - DS0 #10 =  
11 - DS0 #11 =  
12 - DS0 #12 =  
13 - DS0 #13 =  
14 - DS0 #14 =  
15 - DS0 #15 =  
16 - DS0 #16 =  
17 - DS0 #17 =  
18 - DS0 #18 =  
19 - DS0 #19 =  
20 - DS0 #20 =  
21 - DS0 #21 =  
22 - DS0 #22 =  
23 - DS0 #23 = PPP 1  
24 - DS0 #24 = PPP 1  
(T)oggle View (DS1 2, DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-18. Integrated Wireless Access Device Cross-Connect Map Example 1  
61189500L1-1B  
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Integrated Wireless Access Device or DS0 Grooming  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Figure 3-19 shows the Cross-Connect Mapping menu after DS0s 1-7 are mapped from DS1 1  
to DS1 2, DS0s 8-15 are mapped from DS1 1 to DS1 3, and DS0s 15-22 are mapped from DS1  
1 to DS1 4.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 1  
1 - DS0 #1 = DS1 2 DS0 #1  
2 - DS0 #2 = DS1 2 DS0 #2  
3 - DS0 #3 = DS1 2 DS0 #3  
4 - DS0 #4 = DS1 2 DS0 #4  
5 - DS0 #5 = DS1 2 DS0 #5  
6 - DS0 #6 = DS1 2 DS0 #6  
7 - DS0 #7 = DS1 2 DS0 #7  
8 - DS0 #8 = DS1 3 DS0 #1  
9 - DS0 #9 = DS1 3 DS0 #2  
10 - DS0 #10 = DS1 3 DS0 #3  
11 - DS0 #11 = DS1 3 DS0 #4  
12 - DS0 #12 = DS1 3 DS0 #5  
13 - DS0 #13 = DS1 3 DS0 #6  
14 - DS0 #14 = DS1 3 DS0 #7  
15 - DS0 #15 = DS1 4 DS0 #1  
16 - DS0 #16 = DS1 4 DS0 #2  
17 - DS0 #17 = DS1 4 DS0 #3  
18 - DS0 #18 = DS1 4 DS0 #4  
19 - DS0 #19 = DS1 4 DS0 #5  
20 - DS0 #20 = DS1 4 DS0 #6  
21 - DS0 #21 = DS1 4 DS0 #7  
22 -  
23 - DS0 #23 = PPP 1  
24 - DS0 #24 = PPP 1  
(T)oggle View (DS1 2, DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-19. Integrated Wireless Access Device Cross-Connect Map Example 2  
Figure 3-20 shows the Cross-Connect Mapping menu for DS1 2 after all ports are mapped  
from DS1 1.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 2  
1 - DS0 #1 = DS1 1 DS0 #1  
2 - DS0 #2 = DS1 1 DS0 #2  
3 - DS0 #3 = DS1 1 DS0 #3  
4 - DS0 #4 = DS1 1 DS0 #4  
5 - DS0 #5 = DS1 1 DS0 #5  
6 - DS0 #6 = DS1 1 DS0 #6  
7 - DS0 #7 = DS1 1 DS0 #7  
8 - DS0 #8 =  
13 - DS0 #13 =  
14 - DS0 #14 =  
15 - DS0 #15 =  
16 - DS0 #16 =  
17 - DS0 #17 =  
18 - DS0 #18 =  
19 - DS0 #19 =  
20 - DS0 #20 =  
21 - DS0 #21 =  
22 - DS0 #22 =  
9 - DS0 #9 =  
10 - DS0 #10 =  
11 - DS0 #11 =  
12 - DS0 #12 =  
23 - DS0 #23 = PPP 2  
24 - DS0 #24 = PPP 2  
(T)oggle View (DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports, DS1 1)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-20. Integrated Wireless Access Device Cross-Connect Map Example 3  
3-16 PRELIMINARY  
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Integrated Wireless Access Device or DS0 Grooming  
Figure 3-21 shows the Cross-Connect Mapping menu for DS1 3.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 3  
1 - DS0 #1 = DS1 1 DS0 #8  
2 - DS0 #2 = DS1 1 DS0 #9  
3 - DS0 #3 = DS1 1 DS0 #10  
4 - DS0 #4 = DS1 1 DS0 #11  
5 - DS0 #5 = DS1 1 DS0 #12  
6 - DS0 #6 = DS1 1 DS0 #13  
7 - DS0 #7 = DS1 1 DS0 #14  
8 - DS0 #8 =  
13 - DS0 #13 =  
14 - DS0 #14 =  
15 - DS0 #15 =  
16 - DS0 #16 =  
17 - DS0 #17 =  
18 - DS0 #18 =  
19 - DS0 #19 =  
20 - DS0 #20 =  
21 - DS0 #21 =  
22 - DS0 #22 =  
9 - DS0 #9 =  
10 - DS0 #10 =  
11 - DS0 #11 =  
12 - DS0 #12 =  
23 - DS0 #23 = PPP 3  
24 - DS0 #24 = PPP 3  
(T)oggle View (DS1 4, Ports, DS1 1, DS1 2)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-21. Integrated Wireless Access Device Cross-Connect Map Example 4  
Figure 3-22 shows the Cross-Connect Mapping menu for DS1 4. Any unmapped DS0s are  
filled with all ones.  
MX410  
MINOR  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 4  
1 - DS0 #1 = DS1 1 DS0 #15  
2 - DS0 #2 = DS1 1 DS0 #16  
3 - DS0 #3 = DS1 1 DS0 #17  
4 - DS0 #4 = DS1 1 DS0 #18  
5 - DS0 #5 = DS1 1 DS0 #19  
6 - DS0 #6 = DS1 1 DS0 #20  
7 - DS0 #7 = DS1 1 DS0 #21  
8 - DS0 #8 =  
13 - DS0 #13 =  
14 - DS0 #14 =  
15 - DS0 #15 =  
16 - DS0 #16 =  
17 - DS0 #17 =  
18 - DS0 #18 =  
19 - DS0 #19 =  
20 - DS0 #20 =  
21 - DS0 #21 =  
22 - DS0 #22 =  
9 - DS0 #9 =  
10 - DS0 #10 =  
11 - DS0 #11 =  
12 - DS0 #12 =  
23 - DS0 #23 = PPP 4  
24 - DS0 #24 = PPP 4  
(T)oggle View (Ports, DS1 1, DS1 2, DS1 3)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 3-22. Integrated Wireless Access Device Cross-Connect Map Example 5  
61189500L1-1B  
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Remote Management of Other Systems using Terminal Server Ports and Ethernet Connectivity MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Remote Management of Other Systems using Terminal Server  
Ports and Ethernet Connectivity  
In this application the Terminal Server ports on the MX410 are used to provide remote  
management of other non-Ethernet based equipment at the same site. This requires  
connecting the RS-232 craft ports of the other equipment to the Terminal Server ports of the  
MX410. Establishing a Telnet session to the MX410 Terminal Server ports establishes access  
to the other equipment. Up to four external devices can be accessed in this way.  
The Ethernet ports on the MX410 are used to provide remote management of the other  
Ethernet based equipment. This requires connecting the Ethernet ports of the other  
equipment to the Ethernet ports on the MX410 (see Figure 3-23). Refer to “PPP BCP/IPCP  
Menu” on page 5-32 for more information about PPP and IP.  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
Original DS0s  
Continue  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Downstream;  
All Ones in  
Unmapped DS0s  
Unmapped DS0s  
DS1  
DS1  
MX410  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
Leased  
DS1  
µ Wave/  
Leased  
DS1  
MX410  
IP  
Ethernet  
Switch  
Terminal Server Ports  
Ethernet Ports  
Technician  
Manages All  
Ethernet Ports  
MX410 Units  
and Other Systems  
from Any Cell Site  
RS-232 Ports  
Other Systems  
Other Systems  
Currently Managed  
by the MX410 via  
Ethernet Port to  
Ethernet Port  
Currently Managed  
by the MX410 via  
Terminal Server Port  
to RS-232 Craft Port  
Connections  
Connections  
Figure 3-23. MX410 Remote Management of Other Systems  
The equipment needed for a Remote Management application is shown in Table 3-4.  
Table 3-4. Remote Management Application - Required Equipment  
Part Number  
Equipment  
Quantity  
1189500L1  
or  
MX410  
1
1189512L1  
MX412  
1
1189501L1  
MX410 PSU (MX410 only)  
1 (2 for redundancy)  
3-18 PRELIMINARY  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual Remote Management of Other Systems using Terminal Server Ports and Ethernet Connectivity  
Setup  
First, connect the RS-232 craft port on the other equipment to the MX410 terminal server  
port. The pin assignments for each of the RS-232 interfaces are listed in the PORT 1-4  
Terminal Server port pin list in Table 4-5 on page 4-8.  
The default settings for the terminal server ports are 9600 bps 8 data bits with no parity.  
These settings must match the craft port settings of the other equipment for the application to  
work. Baud Rate can be changed in the MX410 Terminal Server menus under Provisioning.  
Refer to “Terminal Server Ports Menu” on page 5-25 for more information.  
Then, establish a Telnet session to the MX410 with the port number for the particular port to  
access the other equipment. The default IP address for the MX410 is 192.168.100.1 with a  
subnet mask of 255.255.0.0. The port numbers default to 2023, 2024, 2025, and 2026  
respectively, for each of the four ports. Once the session is established the default username  
for each port is “port #” (where # is the number of the port) and the default password is  
“password”.  
For Ethernet based devices, simply assign a static IP address to the other equipment (or  
enable the DHCP server to provide one) and connect its Ethernet port to one of the four switch  
ports (Ethernet 1 - 4) on the front panel for the MX410. Refer to “DHCP Server Menu” on  
page 5-34 for more information about DHCP servers.  
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Remote Management of Other Systems using Terminal Server Ports and Ethernet Connectivity MX410/MX412 System Manual  
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Section 4  
Installation  
GENERAL  
The first three tasks for installing and operating the MX410/MX412 are to unpack, inspect,  
and install. Those tasks are detailed in this section of the manual, as well as information for  
mounting the MX410/MX412 into an equipment rack or to a wall, making the proper connec-  
tions to the front and back panels, identifying the front panel indicators, and adding or  
removing a Power Supply Unit (PSU) (MX410 only).  
RECEIVING INSPECTION  
Inspect the MX410/MX412 for any damage that might have occurred in shipment. If damage  
is suspected, file a claim immediately with the carrier, keep the original packaging for damage  
verification and/or returning the unit, and contact ADTRAN Customer Service. For warranty  
information, refer to “Appendix A, Warranty”.  
ADTRAN SHIPPING CONTENTS  
After unpacking the MX410 or MX412 but before an initial power up, be sure that the  
following items are present:  
• MX410 and MX410 PSU  
or  
MX412  
• Mounting brackets and screws for 19-inch rack or wall installation  
– Ground lug with nut and lock washer  
– Wire-wrap post cover and screw  
– Power connector  
– Blank PSU cover (MX410 only)  
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Rackmount  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
RACKMOUNT  
For a rackmount installation, perform the following steps:  
1. Ensure the mounting brackets to the MX410/MX412 are attached using the two screws  
provided for each bracket.  
• For 19-inch rack applications, attach the brackets with the short flange parallel with the  
front of the chassis (see Figure 4-1).  
• For 23-inch rack applications, attach the brackets with the short flange parallel with the  
front of the chassis and obtain 23-inch adapter mounting hardware.  
2. Connect the frame ground from the frame ground lug on the upper right rear panel of the  
MX410/MX412 to the equipment rack grounding screw or other appropriate grounding  
connection before mounting.  
3. Use the appropriate rack type screws to mount the MX410/MX412 into the rack.  
CAUTION  
Care should be taken to not upset the stability of the equipment  
rack after installation is complete.  
NOTE  
The unit must be installed in accordance with the requirements of  
NEC NFPA 70. When mounting the MX410/MX412 in a rack,  
multiple chassis can be mounted in adjacent rack slots.  
WALLMOUNT  
For a wallmount installation, perform the following steps:  
1. Ensure the mounting brackets to the MX410/MX412 are attached using the two screws  
provided for each bracket. Attach the brackets with the short flange parallel with the  
bottom of the MX410/MX412 chassis (see Figure 4-1).  
2. Connect the frame ground from the frame ground lug on the upper right rear panel of the  
MX410/MX412 to an appropriate grounding connection.  
3. Mount the MX410/MX412 vertically with the front panel facing to the left or right side.  
Figure 4-1. Rackmount and Wallmount Orientation  
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Rear Panel  
REAR PANEL  
The MX410/MX412 rear panel is equipped with wire-wrap pins for external auxiliary inputs,  
wire-wrap pins for alarms (critical, major, and minor), a frame ground lug, and a single power  
connector for both DC power feeds (A and B). Figure 4-2 illustrates the rear panel.  
Figure 4-2. MX410/MX412 Rear View  
WARNING  
The Alarm interfaces and AUX inputs must not be metallically  
connected to interfaces which connect to the Outside Plant or its  
wiring. These interfaces are designed for use as intra-building  
interfaces only. The addition of Primary Protectors is not sufficient  
protection in order to connect these interfaces metallically to OSP  
wiring.  
Power Connection  
Figure 4-3 illustrates the DC power pins and power connector. Refer to “Power Up” on page 4-  
11 for more power information.  
Power Connector  
Figure 4-3. DC Power Connections  
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Alarm Contacts/AUX Inputs  
The alarm contacts and auxiliary (AUX) inputs are shown in Figure 4-4.  
Figure 4-4. Alarm Contacts and AUX Inputs  
The alarm interfaces connect to the nine Form C type relays on the MX410/MX412 labeled  
CRIT, MAJOR, and MINOR. Both NC (Normally Closed) and NO (Normally Open) contacts are  
provided. Connect the CRIT (Critical), MAJOR, and MINOR alarm leads from the fuse and alarm  
panel to the C (Common) and NO or NC wire-wrap terminals on the MX410/MX412 rear panel  
as required.  
Auxiliary alarms 1-4 connect to the MX410/MX412 AUX INPUTS labeled 1-9. These pins detect  
open and closed relay contacts and are not polarity sensitive. Table 4-1 shows the pin assign-  
ments for the AUX INPUTS.  
Table 4-1. AUX Inputs 1-9 Pin List  
AUX INPUT  
Function  
Alarm 1  
Default Severity Level  
1, 2  
3, 4  
5, 6  
7, 8  
9
Critical  
Major  
Minor  
Alert  
Alarm 2  
Alarm 3  
Alarm 4  
No Connect  
N/A  
The alarm severity level can be changed in the Environmental Alarms menu.  
After the alarm contact and AUX input connections have been made, install the protective  
cover over the wire-wrap headers.  
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Front Panel  
FRONT PANEL  
The front panels for the MX410 and MX412 are described below.  
MX410  
The MX410 front panel (see Figure 4-5) is equipped with the following:  
• One V.35 Port (refer to “V.35 Port” on page 4-6)  
• Four DS1 ports (refer to “DS1 Ports” on page 4-6)  
• Four Ethernet ports (refer to “Ethernet Ports” on page 4-7)  
• Four Terminal Server ports (refer to “Terminal Server Ports” on page 4-8)  
• One ACO switch (refer to “ACO Switch” on page 4-8)  
• One Craft port (refer to “Craft Port” on page 4-8)  
• Two PSU slots (refer to “PSU Slots” on page 4-9)  
• LED indicators (refer to “LED Indicators” on page 4-10)  
Figure 4-5. MX410 Front Panel  
MX412  
The MX412 front panel (see Figure 4-6) is equipped with the following:  
• One V.35 Port (refer to “V.35 Port” on page 4-6)  
• Twelve DS1 ports (refer to “DS1 Ports” on page 4-6)  
• Four Ethernet ports (refer to “Ethernet Ports” on page 4-7)  
• Four Terminal Server ports (refer to “Terminal Server Ports” on page 4-8)  
• One ACO switch (refer to “ACO Switch” on page 4-8)  
• One Craft port (refer to “Craft Port” on page 4-8)  
• One FXS port (refer to “FXS Port” on page 4-9)  
• LED indicators (refer to “LED Indicators” on page 4-10)  
Figure 4-6. MX412 Front Panel  
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V.35 Port  
The V.35 port is a Nx64k serial interface (up to 1.536 Mbps) with a CCITT V.35, 34-pin  
connector. The V.35 connector pin list is shown in Table 4-2.  
Table 4-2. V.35 Port Pin List  
Pin  
A
B
C
D
E
Function  
Pin  
R
Function  
Digital Ground  
Receive Data to DTE - A1  
Transmit Data from DTE - B1  
Receive Data to DTE - B1  
No Connect  
Digital Ground  
S
Request To Send (RTS)  
Clear To Send (CTS)  
Data Set Ready (DSR)  
Data Carrier Detect (DCD)  
Data Terminal Ready (DTR)  
Ring  
T
U
V
Receive Clock to DTE - A1  
No Connect  
F
W
X
H
J
Receive Clock to DTE - B1  
Transmit Clock to DTE - A1  
Transmit Clock to DTE - B1  
No Connect  
Y
K
L
No Connect  
AA  
BB  
NN  
No Connect  
N
P
No Connect  
No Connect  
Transmit Data from Data Terminal Equipment  
(DTE) - A1  
DS1 Ports  
The DS1 interfaces located on the front panel of the MX410/MX412 are RJ-48 connectors.  
The DS1 connector pin list is shown in Table 4-3.  
Table 4-3. RJ-48 Connector Pin List  
Pin  
1
Function  
RX Ring  
2
RX Tip  
3
No Connect  
TX Ring  
4
5
TX Tip  
6
No Connect  
No Connect  
No Connect  
7
8
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Front Panel  
Ethernet Ports  
The four Ethernet jacks labeled ETHERNET located on the MX410/MX412 front panel provide  
LAN access to the Network. From these ports, devices located on the local area network can be  
remotely managed. The Ethernet ports have automatic rate detection and perform MDI/MDI-X  
crossover detection eliminating the need for a crossover cable. The Ethernet ports can be  
accessed using standard CAT 5 cable with an RJ-45 connector. The pin assignments for the  
RJ-45 connector are listed in Table 4-4.  
WARNING  
The Ethernet and Terminal Server Port 1-4 interfaces must not be  
metallically connected to interfaces which connect to the OSP or its  
wiring. These interfaces are designed for use as intra-building  
interfaces only. The addition of Primary Protectors is not sufficient  
protection in order to connect these interfaces metallically to OSP  
wiring.  
Table 4-4. Ethernet Port Pin List  
Pin  
1
Function  
TX+  
2
TX–  
3
RX+  
4
No Connect  
No Connect  
RX–  
5
6
7
No Connect  
No Connect  
8
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Terminal Server Ports  
The four Terminal Server port RS-232 interfaces located on the front panel are used to  
remotely connect to RS-232 managed devices.  
CAUTION  
The 8-pin modular Terminal Server Port 1-4 jacks should never be  
connected to a telecommunications network and are intended for  
connection to RS-232 data interfaces only.  
The Terminal Server ports are accessed by establishing a Telnet session to the MX410/MX412  
with the TCP Port Number of the particular port. The pin assignments for each of the RS-232  
interfaces are listed in Table 4-5.  
Table 4-5. Terminal Server Port Pin List  
Pin  
1
Function  
GND  
2
No Connect  
TXD  
3
4
No Connect  
RXD  
5
6
No Connect  
No Connect  
No Connect  
7
8
ACO Switch  
The Alarm Cutoff (ACO) Switch turns off audible and visual alarms connected to the alarm  
relays. Pressing the ACO Switch acknowledges alarms.  
Craft Port  
The DB-9 (RS-232) CRAFT port is used to login and provision the MX410/MX412 through a  
VT100 terminal or VT100 terminal emulation software such as HyperTerminal or ProComm  
Plus.  
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Front Panel  
FXS Port  
The FXS port (MX412 only) provides a 2-wire analog interface between a Voice Frequency (VF)  
transmission and a signaling facility. The FXS interface provides for simultaneous signaling in  
each direction for use with 2-wire off-premises station lines, carrier extended PBX trunks, or  
subscriber line foreign exchanges using a loop start signaling system. FXS options are shown  
in Table 4-6.  
Table 4-6. FXS Options  
Mode  
Description  
Loop Start  
PLAR D4  
Selects ANSI T1.403 FXS Loop Start mode of operation  
Selects Private Line Automatic Ringdown where onhook = 00.  
Signaling must match the PLAR unit at the distant end.  
PLAR D3  
Selects Private Line Automatic Ringdown where onhook = 11.  
Signaling must match the PLAR unit at the distant end.  
FX Ringdown  
PLAR mode of operation that allows for an FXS Loop Start unit on the  
distant end.  
WARNING  
The FXS Port interface must not be metallically connected to inter-  
faces which connect to the OSP or its wiring. The FXS interface is  
designed for use as an intra-building interface only. The addition of  
Primary Protectors is not sufficient protection in order to connect  
the FXS interface metallically to OSP wiring.  
PSU Slots  
The MX410 houses up to two hot-swappable PSUs that can provide power redundancy. At  
least one MX410 PSU (P/N 1189501L1) must be inserted into the MX410 for the MX410 to  
function. To remove a PSU, remove the screws that hold it in place and carefully pull the PSU  
straight out of the MX410. A blank PSU cover (P/N 1189502L1) should be used to cover an  
unused PSU slot. Refer to “LED Indicators” on page 4-10 after power is applied and a PSU is  
inserted for the MX410 status.  
The MX412 contains an internal power supply.  
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LED Indicators  
The LEDs on the front panel of the MX410/MX412 indicate the status of the power, DS1,  
Ethernet, and alarm interfaces. See Table 4-7 for a listing of the LEDs and their indications.  
Table 4-7. LED Indication  
Label  
ACT  
Status Description  
Green Normal operation  
Green/Amber (Alternating) Normal operation and console session is open  
Amber Software transfer in progress  
Red/Amber (Alternating) Self-test failed and console session is open  
Red Self-test failed  
Flashing Red Unit failure  
ALM  
Green No critical, major, or minor alarms  
Amber Active acknowledged non-critical alarm  
Flashing Amber Active acknowledged critical alarm  
Red Major or minor alarm in progress  
Flashing Red Critical alarm in progress  
Green Normal operation  
PSU (A/B)  
(MX410 only)  
Red PSU failure  
DS1  
(1-4) MX410  
Off Port disabled  
Green Enabled and normal operation  
Amber Locally originated test in progress  
Flashing Amber Remotely originated test in progress  
Red Non-critical DS1 alarm in progress (for example, AIS)  
Flashing Red DS1 LOS (critical DS1 alarm; non-critical system alarm)  
(1-12) MX412  
1 Second Flashing Red Single code violation or burst of code violations just  
occurred  
ETHERNET  
Off Link not established  
Green Link established  
(1-4)  
Green/Amber (Alternating) Activity on the line  
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Turn-up  
TURN-UP  
The following sections provide turn-up steps for applying power and logging in to the MX410/  
MX412.  
Power Up  
To power up the MX410/MX412, perform the following steps:  
1. Connect the MX410/MX412 to a reliably grounded –48 VDC or ±24 VDC source, which is  
electrically isolated from the AC source.  
NOTE  
A readily accessible disconnect device, such as a rackmount fuse  
and alarm panel that is suitably approved and rated should be  
incorporated into the fixed wiring.  
The branch circuit overcurrent protection should be a slow-blow  
fuse or circuit breaker rated 2 amps or greater.  
a. Determine which fuse pairs are to supply power to the chassis.  
b. Remove the fuses from the A and B slots for the pair.  
c. Pull the power connector straight out from the back of the MX410/MX412.  
2. Apply power and check voltages.  
a. Install appropriate fuses (2 amp slow-blow) in the slots in the fuse and alarm panel that  
services the MX410/MX412.  
b. Using a voltmeter, verify that the operating voltage is within the specifications for A or  
B power feeds.  
The A and B input voltage power feeds specifications are as follows:  
• –48 VDC systems: –42 VDC to –60 VDC  
• –24 VDC systems: –22 VDC to –27 VDC  
• +24 VDC systems: +22 VDC to +27 VDC  
Place the common (normally black) lead of the voltmeter on the RET A post of the DC  
power terminal block and the DC volts (normally red) lead on the PWR A post of the DC  
power terminal block.  
c. Repeat step 2 for the RET B/PWR B connections.  
WARNING  
Installing the power connector at this stage provides power to the  
MX410/MX412. The pins and connectors on the rear panel and  
inside the chassis are powered. Exercise caution to avoid electrical  
shock.  
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Turn-up  
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3. Install the power connector for DC power feeds A and B by connecting RET A, PWR A, RET  
B, and PWR B to the power connector. PWR refers to respective –48 VDC or ±24 VDC power  
sources, while RET refers to respective returns.  
a. Insert the power wires into the power connector and tighten the hold-down screws on  
the top of the power connector.  
b. Insert the power connector into the MX410/MX412 and tighten the two screws on the  
front of the power connector.  
4. Install at least one PSU into the MX410 front panel PSU A or PSU B slot.  
a. Line up the PSU with the guide grooves and carefully insert the unit into the MX410  
until it seats all the way into the PSU slot of the MX410.  
b. Tighten the thumb screws to secure the PSU in place.  
To remove a PSU, remove the thumb screws that hold the PSU in place and carefully pull the  
PSU straight out of the MX410.  
Refer to “LED Indicators” on page 4-10 for LED indication of successful power turn-up.  
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Section 5  
User Interface  
INTRODUCTION  
This section provides detailed information on the following:  
SYSTEM MANAGEMENT  
MX410/MX412 management and provisioning is facilitated by a series of intuitive menus that  
are accessible on a computer screen. The MX410/MX412 provides two methods for  
management access:  
Craft Interface  
Connection to the MX410/MX412 menus can be made through the DB-9 connector, labeled  
CRAFT, on the front of the MX410/MX412. A DB-9 straight cable is required.  
Most personal computers or laptops can run communications software that will emulate a  
VT100 terminal. Windows programs such as Terminal or HyperTerminal are two such  
examples in the Windows format, but there are many other adequate, commercially available  
software packages, virtually all of which allow the PC or laptop to emulate a VT100 terminal.  
Certain configuration items must be set on a PC or laptop to act as a VT100 terminal for the  
MX410/MX412 as follows:  
1. Set the parameters of the communications software to the following settings:  
• Data Rate: 115200 bps  
• Asynchronous Data Format as follows:  
– Eight data bits  
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– no parity (none)  
– one stop bit  
– no flow control  
2. Set the PC for direct connect on the appropriate communications port (as opposed to dial  
up connection).  
3. Plug the male end of the data cable into the MX410/MX412. Make connection to the PC or  
laptop as appropriate for the equipment.  
Telnet Session  
To access the MX410/MX412, use an appropriate Telnet client to access the management  
interface of the MX410/MX412 at the configured IP address.  
LOGGING IN TO THE MX410/MX412  
To logon to the MX410/MX412, perform the following steps:  
1. Establish the physical connection to the MX410/MX412 using a craft port session or  
enter the default IP address “192.168.100.1” with a subnet mask of “255.255.0.0.” to  
establish a Telnet session.  
2. Enter the default username “ADMIN” in all capital letters, and press ENTER.  
3. Enter the default password “PASSWORD” in all capital letters, and press ENTER.  
NOTE  
Login username and password fields are case sensitive. The default  
values are all uppercase.  
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Menu Structure  
MENU STRUCTURE  
The menu structure for the MX410/MX412 is a layered menu tree. Each layer of the menu  
tree is displayed as a menu or a screen. This section defines the terminology used in  
conjunction with the MX410/MX412 menu system.  
NOTE  
To view the MX410/MX412 menu tree, refer to “Menu Tree” on  
Menu  
A menu is a display that provides numbered selections that are used to navigate to related  
menus, modify provisioning information, or display information screens. A menu can contain  
the following objects:  
• Menu Option: A menu option is indicated by a number, which when selected navigates the  
display to another menu layer or is used to change the option setting.  
• Read-only Field: A read-only field displays information that cannot be changed. The  
information displayed in a read-only field can be static or can be automatically updated by  
the MX410/MX412.  
• Read-write Field: A read-write field displays information that when selected can be  
modified.  
Screen  
A screen is a display that usually indicates the end of a menu tree path. A screen can contain  
the following objects:  
• Read-only Field: A read-only field displays information that cannot be changed. The  
information displayed in a read-only field can be static or can be automatically updated by  
the MX410/MX412.  
• Read-write Field: A read-write field displays information that when selected can be  
modified.  
• Keyboard Commands: A keyboard command is a key or combination of keys that are  
assigned to a function (see Table 5-1). Keyboard commands are indicated by the required  
key(s) and a brief description (i.e., CTRL+A - acknowledge all alarms).  
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MENU LAYOUT AND NAVIGATION  
Figure 5-1 illustrates the basic menu layout used in the MX410/MX412 menu system. The  
MX410/MX412 Menu Layout figure is general in nature, and not all menus contain all of the  
elements shown in the figure.  
1
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR MINOR ALERT  
04/10/05 01:25  
MX410  
ID:  
3
2
Menu Title  
1 - Option  
2 - Option  
3 - Option  
4 - Option  
5 - Option  
6 - Option  
: current selection  
4
(T)oggle  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
5
Figure 5-1. MX410/MX412 Menu Layout  
1. Current Date and Time: displays the factory set date and time. The date and time can be  
set from the Quick Setup menu or the General Provisioning menu.  
2. Alarm Banner: displays a summary of the currently active alarms. If there are any active  
Critical Alarms that have not been acknowledged, a flashing reverse video CRITICAL  
appears in the alarm banner. If there are no active unacknowledged Critical alarms but  
there are currently active acknowledged critical alarms, a solid reverse video CRITICAL  
appears in the alarm banner. If there are no active Critical Alarms, nothing will be  
displayed for CRITICAL in the alarm banner. Major, Minor, and Alert alarm severities are  
displayed in the same manner. Alarm severities are (in descending order): Critical, Major,  
Minor, Alert, and Info. Info alarms are not displayed in the menu alarm banner.  
3. System ID: A 20-character field that displays the system ID, which can be set from the  
Quick Setup menu or the General Provisioning menu.  
4. Toggle: pressing the T key toggles between interfaces or shows more information.  
5. Selection: An echo field that displays user input. Selection values are applied by pressing  
ENTER. Selection values are cleared by pressing the ESC or BACKSPACE key.  
Basic menu navigation is accomplished by selecting the desired option number and then  
pressing ENTER. To work backward through the menus press the ESC (escape) key. The System  
Help screen can be accessed from any MX410/MX412 screen or menu by pressing “?.  
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Menu Tree  
Table 5-1 shows the general keyboard commands for the MX410/MX412.  
Table 5-1. MX410/MX412 Keyboard Commands  
Keyboard Command  
Description  
BACKSPACE  
This keyboard command is used to delete the character to left of  
the cursor during keyboard input.  
ENTER (or Return)  
This keyboard command is used to terminate input.  
ESC  
This keyboard command is used to clear partial input data, or if  
none, return to previous menu.  
CTRL+A (Control and a)  
This keyboard command is used to acknowledge all alarms.  
This keyboard command is used to logout and disconnect.  
This keyboard command is used to refresh the display.  
CTRL+C or D (Control and c or d)  
CTRL+R (Control and r)  
MENU TREE  
Menu trees are maps that can be used to locate provisioning options with ease. This  
subsection provides a detailed set of menu trees for the MX410/MX412. Some of the menu  
trees span multiple pages, signified by the “(Continued)” at the end of the illustration title.  
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Menu Tree  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Unit Name  
CLEI Code  
1. 0 - 133 ft  
1. Line Legnth  
1. Configuration  
2. 133 - 266 ft  
3. 266 - 399 ft  
4. 399 - 533 ft  
5. 533 - 655 ft  
6. - 22.5 dB  
7. - 15 dB  
8. - 7.5 dB  
9. - 0 dB  
1. B8ZS  
2. AMI  
Part Number  
Serial Number  
Product Revision  
MAC Address  
Code Version  
Code Checksum  
Boot Version  
Boot Checksum  
Main Menu  
2. Line Coding  
1. DS1 Provisioning - Port #1  
2. DS1 Provisioning - Port #2  
3. DS1 Provisioning - Port #3  
4. DS1 Provisioning - Port #4  
1. DS1 Ports  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
3. Loopback Detection  
4. Framing  
1. ESF  
2. SF  
(MX412 Only)  
12. DS1 Provisioning - Port #12  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
5. SNMP Line Status Trap  
2. Provisioning  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
6. SNMP Link Status Trap  
7. Circuit ID  
User Input  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
8. Interface State  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
9. Alarm Pass Thru  
Execute (Y, N)  
5. Primary TX Timing  
6. Secondary TX Timing  
1. Internal  
2. DS1 1  
3. DS1 2  
4. DS1 3  
5. DS1 4  
(MX412 Only)  
13. DS1 12  
1. Forced On  
2. Normal  
1. CTS  
2. DCD  
3. DSR  
2. V.35 Port  
1. Forced On  
2. Normal  
1. Forced On  
2. Normal  
1. DS1 1  
2. DS1 2  
3. DS1 3  
4. DS1 4  
1. Choose TO Group  
DS1 1 (DS0 1 - 24)  
DS1 2 (DS0 1 - 24)  
DS1 3 (DS0 1 - 24)  
DS1 4 (DS0 1 - 24)  
(MX412 Only)  
3. Cross-Connect Mapping  
12. DS1 12  
2. Choose TO DS0  
Enter to DS0  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
3. Robbed Bit Signaling  
4. Apply Cross-Connect  
1. PPPs  
(MX412 Only)  
DS1 12 (DS0 1 - 24)  
1. Choose FROM PPP  
2. Choose TO Group  
Ports  
3. Choose TO DS0 Range  
4. Apply Cross-Connect  
1. Choose TO Group  
2. Choose TO DS0 Range  
3. Apply Cross-Connect  
2. V.35  
1. Choose TO Group  
2. Choose TO DS0  
3. Mode  
3. FXS (MX412 Only)  
1. Loop Start  
2. PLAR D4  
3. PLAR D3  
4. FX Ringdown  
4. Apply Cross Connect  
Bold text indicates default  
B
A
Figure 5-2. MX410/MX412 Menu Tree  
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Menu Tree  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
B
1. Terminal State  
2. Baud Rate  
1. Port 1  
2. Port 2  
3. Port 3  
4. Port 4  
4. Terminal Server  
1. 9600  
2. 19200  
3. 38400  
4. 57600  
5. 115200  
3. Telnet Port Number  
4. Security  
New Port Number  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
5. Username  
6. Password  
New Username  
New Password  
1. 9600  
1. Craft Port Baud Rate  
2. 19200  
3. 38400  
4. 57600  
5. 115200  
5. General  
2. Date  
Enter Date (MM/DD/YYYY)  
Enter Time (HH:MM:SS)  
Enter Name  
3. Time  
4. System ID  
1. 120 Minutes  
2. 90 Minutes  
3. 60 Minutes  
4. 30 Minutes  
5. 15 Minutes  
6. 10 Minutes  
7. 5 Minutes  
5. Auto-Logoff Inactivity Time  
8. Disabled  
6. Card Reset  
Execute <Y,N>  
1. Reset All DS1 Provisioning  
2. Reset All V.35 Provisioning  
3. Reset All 1/0 Mapping  
7. Reset to Factory Defaults  
4. Reset All Terminal Server Provisioning  
5. Reset All General Provisioning  
6. Reset All Network Management Provisioning  
7. Reset All SNMP Provisioning  
8. Reset ALL Factory Defaults  
1. Edit User Accounts  
8. Security Administration  
1. User ID  
2. Password  
3. Apply  
2. Create New User Account  
1. Yes  
2. No  
Challenge Key  
3. Restore to Default Accounts  
4. Access Tech Support Account  
C
Bold text indicates default  
Enter Response Key  
Figure 5-2. MX410/MX412 Menu Tree (Continued)  
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Menu Tree  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
C
1. IP Address  
New IP Address  
1. IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
1. Ethernet  
2. Subnet Mask  
3. Apply Settings  
6. Network Management  
New Subnet Mask  
2. Gateway  
MAC Address  
New Gateway  
Eth (1 - 4)  
3. Link Speed & Duplex  
1. Auto  
2. 10 Mbps, Half Duplex  
3. 10 Mbps, Full Duplex  
4. 100 Mbps, Half Duplex  
5. 100 Mbps, Full Duplex  
Functional Link Speed & Duplex  
Link Status  
1. BCP  
2. IPCP  
1. BCP/IPCP  
2. PPP BCP/IPCP  
PPP (1 - 4)  
1. IP Address  
2. IP Address  
New IP Address  
2. Subnet Mask  
3. Apply Settings  
Subnet Mask  
Far End IP Address  
New Subnet Mask  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
3. SNMP Link Status Trap  
LCP Status  
BCP/IPCP Status  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
1. State  
3. DHCP  
2. Network  
New Network / Mask  
New Default Router  
New DNS Router  
3. Default Router  
4. DNS Router  
5. Address Range  
6. Lease Time  
New Range (begin-end)  
New Lease Time (d:h:m)  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
1. SNMP State  
7. SNMP  
2. Trap Host 1 IP  
3. Trap Host 2 IP  
4. Trap Host 3 IP  
5. Trap Host 4 IP  
1. Trap Host IP  
2. Trap Host Method  
3. Trap Host Status  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
6. SNMP Traps  
7. System Name  
New System ID  
New Location  
8. System Location  
9. System Contact  
10. Read Community  
11. Write Community  
New Contact  
New Community  
New Community  
1. SCA TFTP Server  
2. Remote Filename  
Enter SCA TFTP Server  
8. System Configuration Archive (SCA)  
Enter Remote SCA Filename  
1. All  
2. Data Path Only  
3. All/Data Path Only  
4. Perform SCA Save  
5. Perform SCA Restore  
6. Auto Save Time  
9. Save Provisioning  
10. Auto Save  
Enter Auto Save Time (Day HH:MM)  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
7. Auto Save  
Bold text indicates default  
Figure 5-2. MX410/MX412 Menu Tree (Continued)  
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Menu Tree  
1. Choose FROM PPP  
2. Choose TO Group  
A
1. PPPs  
3. Choose TO DS0 Range  
4. Apply Cross-Connect  
3. Quick Setup  
1. Choose TO Group  
2. Choose TO DS0 Range  
3. Apply Cross-Connect  
2. V.35  
1. Choose TO Group  
2. Choose TO DS0  
3. Mode  
3. FXS (MX412 Only)  
1. Loop Start  
2. PLAR D4  
3. PLAR D3  
4. FX Ringdown  
4. Apply Cross Connect  
New System Name  
3. System ID  
1. IP Address  
New IP Address  
4. IP Address / Subnet Mask  
2. Subnet Mask  
3. Apply Settings  
New Subnet Mask  
1. DS1 1  
2. DS1 2  
3. DS1 3  
4. DS1 4  
5. Default Gateway  
6. Date  
New Gateway  
Enter Date (MM/DD/YYYY)  
7. Time  
Enter Time (HH:MM:SS)  
1. Choose TO Group  
2. Choose TO DS0  
(MX412 Only)  
DS1 1 (DS0 1 - 24)  
DS1 2 (DS0 1 - 24)  
DS1 3 (DS0 1 - 24)  
DS1 4 (DS0 1 - 24)  
12. DS1 12  
8. Cross-Connect Setup  
Enter to DS0  
1. Enabled  
2. Disabled  
3. Robbed Bit Signaling  
4. Apply Cross-Connect  
(MX412 Only)  
DS1 12 (DS0 1 - 24)  
1. Choose FROM PPP  
2. Choose TO Group  
1. PPPs  
4. Status  
3. Choose TO DS0 Range  
4. Apply Cross-Connect  
Ports  
1. Choose TO Group  
2. Choose TO DS0 Range  
3. Apply Cross-Connect  
2. V.35  
1. Choose TO Group  
2. Choose TO DS0  
3. Mode  
3. FXS (MX412 Only)  
1. Loop Start  
2. PLAR D4  
3. PLAR D3  
4. FX Ringdown  
4. Apply Cross Connect  
D
Bold text indicates default  
Figure 5-2. MX410/MX412 Menu Tree (Continued)  
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Menu Tree  
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D
DS1 Ports  
1. #1  
2. #2  
3. #3  
4. #4  
1. Data Mode  
2. Payload  
3. Line  
5. Test  
1. Loopback  
Pattern  
DS1 x Status  
Execute (Y, N)  
4. Inward  
5. Reset ALL Tests  
5. Dual  
6. Remote FDL Line  
7. Remote Inband Line (CSU)  
8. Remote FDL Payload  
1. 120 Minutes  
2. 90 Minutes  
3. 60 Minutes  
4. 30 Minutes  
5. 15 Minutes  
6. 10 Minutes  
7. 5 Minutes  
8. Disabled  
6. Loopback Timeout  
1. QRSS  
2. All Ones  
3. All Zeros  
4. 511  
Execute (Y, N)  
9. Pattern Test  
5. 2047  
6. 2^15-1  
7. 2^20-1  
1. Daily PM Table  
1. ES-L Threshold  
1. Value  
6. Performance Monitoring  
2. Quarter Hour PM Table  
3. Daily PM Thresholds  
4. Quarter Hour PM Thresholds  
5. Clear PM Data  
2. CV-P Threshold (ESF mode)  
3. CV-P Threshold (SF mode)  
4. ES-P Threshold  
2. Enable/Disable  
5. SES-P Threshold  
6. SES-P Threshold  
7. CSS-P Threshold  
8. UAS-P Threshold  
1. Master Log  
7. System Alarms  
1. Aux #1 Input  
2. Aux #2 Input  
1. Severity  
2. Environmental Alarms  
2. Description  
3. Aux #3 Input  
4. Aux #4 Input  
5. Power Feed A  
6. Power Feed B  
7. PSU A (MX410 Only)  
8. PSU B (MX410 Only)  
1. Ascending  
2. Descending  
3. Alarm Chronology  
1. X-MODEM  
2. TFTP  
1. Initiate Transfer  
2. Card Reset  
Execute <Y,N>  
8. Code Download  
1. TFTP Server  
Enter TFTP Server  
2. Remote Filename  
3. Initiate Transfer  
4. Card Reset  
Enter Remote Filename  
9. Logoff  
Execute <Y,N>  
Bold text indicates default  
Figure 5-3. MX410/MX412 Menu Tree (Continued)  
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Menu Descriptions  
MENU DESCRIPTIONS  
The MX410/MX412 Main Menu (see Figure 5-4) is the access point to all other operations.  
Each Main menu item has several functions and submenus that identify and provide access to  
specific operations and parameters.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR MINOR  
ID:  
Main Menu  
1 - Configuration  
2 - Provisioning  
3 - Quick Setup  
4 - Status  
5 - Test  
6 - Performance Monitoring  
7 - System Alarms  
8 - Code Download  
9 - Logoff  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-4. MX410/MX412 Main Menu  
The MX410/MX412 Main Menu options are shown in Table 5-2.  
Table 5-2. MX410/MX412 Main Menu Options  
Option  
Description  
Configuration  
Provisioning  
Quick Setup  
Status  
Function  
1
2
3
4
5
6
This option displays the “Status Screen” on page 5-40.  
This option displays the “Test Menu” on page 5-42.  
Test  
Performance Monitoring  
7
8
System Alarms  
Code Download  
This option displays the “System Alarms Menu” on page 5-53.  
This option displays the “Code Download Method Menu” on  
9
Logoff  
This option is used to end an MX410/MX412 menus session.  
No further menus, screens, or confirmation dialog boxes are  
presented.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Configuration Screen  
The Configuration Screen (see Figure 5-5) displays information about the MX410/MX412.  
Information such as Code Version changes as upgrades are performed. The CLEI Code and  
Part Number can be used to search for related information on the ADTRAN website or to order  
additional parts. Some information from this menu may be required when calling the ADTRAN  
Technical Support.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Configuration  
Unit Name  
CLEI Code  
: MX410  
: M3M1310BRA  
: 1189500L1  
: DVTUUTNXXX  
: B  
Part Number  
Serial Number  
Product Revision  
MAC Address  
Code Version  
Code Checksum  
Boot Version  
Boot Checksum  
: XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX  
: B01  
: ADCDEFGH  
: B03  
: 7C22  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-5. Configuration Screen  
The Configuration screen fields are shown in Table 5-3.  
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Menu Descriptions  
Table 5-3. MX410/MX412 Configuration Screen Fields  
Field  
Description  
Unit Name  
CLEI Code  
This field displays the MX410/MX412 unit name.  
This field displays the Common Language Equipment Identifier (CLEI) code of the  
MX410/MX412.  
Part Number  
This field displays the MX410/MX412 part number.  
Serial Number  
Product Revision  
This field displays the serial number of the MX410/MX412.  
This field displays the hardware product assembly revision of the MX410/  
MX412.  
MAC Address  
This field displays the factory programmed Media Access Control (MAC) or phys-  
ical layer address for the MX410/MX412.  
Code Version  
This field displays the current firmware revision level of the MX410/MX412.  
Code Checksum  
This field displays the checksum of the current firmware revision level of the  
MX410/MX412.  
Boot Version  
This field displays the Boot ROM software revision code of the MX410/MX412.  
Boot Checksum  
This field displays the checksum of the Boot ROM software revision code of the  
MX410/MX412.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Provisioning Menu  
The Provisioning Menu (see Figure 5-6) is used to make provisioning changes to various  
options.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR MINOR  
ID:  
Provisioning  
1 - DS1 Ports  
2 - V.35 Port  
3 - Cross-Connect Mapping  
4 - Terminal Server Ports  
5 - General  
6 - Network Management  
7 - SNMP  
8 - System Configuration Archive (SCA)  
9 - Save Provisioning  
10 - Auto Save  
: Enabled  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-6. Provisioning Menu  
The Provisioning menu options are shown in Table 5-4.  
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Menu Descriptions  
Table 5-4. Provisioning Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
DS1 Ports  
V.35 Port  
This option displays the “DS1 Ports Menu” on page 5-16.  
This option displays the “V.35 Port Menu” on page 5-22.  
Cross-Connect Mapping This option displays the “Cross-Connect Mapping Menu” on  
4
5
6
Terminal Server Ports  
General  
Network Management  
SNMP  
This option displays the “Network Management Menu” on  
7
8
This option displays the “SNMP Menu” on page 5-35.  
System Configuration  
Archive (SCA)  
This option displays the “SCA Update Menu” on page 5-37.  
9
Save Provisioning  
Auto Save  
This option is used to save current network settings.  
10  
This option is used to automatically save current network  
settings at timed intervals.  
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Menu Descriptions  
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DS1 Ports Menu  
The DS1 Ports Menu (see Figure 5-7) displays line length, line coding, loopback detection,  
framing, SNMP line status trap, SNMP link status trap, circuit ID, interface state, and alarm  
pass thru information for DS1 ports 1-4 (1-12 on the MX412), as well as timing information.  
Selection of an option invokes other menus to set the option variables. The Toggle command  
can be used to view more DS1 port information shown in Figure 5-8.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
DS1 Ports  
Line  
Length  
Line  
Coding  
B8ZS  
Loopback  
SNMP Line  
SNMP Link  
Detect  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Framing  
ESF  
ESF  
Status Trap  
Disabled  
Disabled  
Disabled  
Disabled  
Status Trap  
Enabled  
Enabled  
1 -  
2 -  
3 -  
4 -  
0 - 133 ft  
0 - 133 ft  
0 - 133 ft  
0 - 133 ft  
B8ZS  
B8ZS  
B8ZS  
ESF  
ESF  
Enabled  
Enabled  
5 - Primary TX Timing - Internal  
6 - Secondary TX Timing - Internal  
(T)oggle for more  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Selection :  
Figure 5-7. DS1 Ports Menu  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
DS1 Ports  
Circuit ID  
Interface State  
Alarm Pass Thru  
1 -  
2 -  
3 -  
4 -  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Disabled  
Disabled  
Disabled  
Disabled  
5 - Primary TX Timing - Internal  
6 - Secondary TX Timing - Internal  
(T)oggle for more  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Selection :  
Figure 5-8. DS1 Ports Menu - Toggled  
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Menu Descriptions  
The DS1 Ports menu options are shown in Table 5-5.  
Table 5-5. DS1 Ports Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
4
5
6
DS1 Port #1  
This option displays the “DS1 Provisioning Menu” on page 5-18.  
This option displays the “DS1 Provisioning Menu” on page 5-18.  
This option displays the “DS1 Provisioning Menu” on page 5-18.  
This option displays the “DS1 Provisioning Menu” on page 5-18.  
This option displays the “Primary Timing Mode Menu” on page 5-20.  
DS1 Port #2  
DS1 Port #3  
DS1 Port #4  
Primary TX Timing  
Secondary TX Timing This option displays the “Secondary Timing Mode Menu” on page 5-  
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DS1 Provisioning Menu  
The DS1 Provisioning menu (see Figure 5-9) is used to set the line length, line coding,  
loopback detection, framing, SNMP line status trap, SNMP link status trap, circuit ID,  
interface state, and alarm pass thru information for the selected DS1 port.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
DS1 Provisioning - Port #1  
1 - Line Length  
2 - Line Coding  
: 0 - 133 ft  
: B8ZS  
3 - Loopback Detection  
4 - Framing  
: Enabled  
: ESF  
5 - SNMP Line Status Trap  
6 - SNMP Link Status Trap  
7 - Circuit ID  
: Disabled  
: Enabled  
:
8 - Interface State  
9 - Alarm Pass Thru  
: Enabled  
: Disabled  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-9. DS1 Provisioning Menu  
The DS1 Provisioning menu options are shown in Table 5-6.  
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Menu Descriptions  
Table 5-6. DS1 Provisioning Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
Line Length  
This option sets the line length (line build out) for each port inter-  
face according to the distance from the MX410/MX412 to the other  
device.  
Options for line length are as follows:  
• 1 - Set line length from 0 to 133 feet  
• 2 - Set line length from 133 to 266 feet  
• 3 - Set line length from 266 to 399 feet  
• 4 - Set line length from 399 to 533 feet  
• 5 - Set line length from 533 to 655 feet  
• 6 - –22.5 dB  
• 7 - –15 dB  
• 8 - –7.5 dB  
• 9 - 0 dB  
2
Line Coding  
This option sets the line code for each individual port interface to  
match the connected device.  
Options for line coding are as follows:  
• 1 - AMI  
• 2 - B8ZS  
3
4
Loopback Detection  
Framing  
This option enables or disables whether a port responds to CSU  
and FDL loopback requests coming from the network.  
This option sets the framing. Options for framing are as follows:  
• 1 - ESF (Extended Super Frame)  
• 2 - SF (Super Frame).  
5
6
7
SNMP Line Status  
Trap  
This option enables or disables the SNMP line status trap state.  
SNMP Link Status  
Trap  
This option enables or disables the SNMP link status trap state.  
Circuit ID  
This option contains a user-configurable text string field to name  
the selected port. This field accepts up to 32 alphanumeric charac-  
ters, including spaces and special characters.  
8
9
Interface State  
This option is viewed using the Toggle command and sets the  
interface state to either enabled or disabled.  
Alarm Pass Thru  
This option enables or disables semi-transparency for visibility  
through the cross connect to remote devices. This option enables  
the selected DS1 to transmit RAI when any cross-connected DS1 is  
in alarm or receiving RAI.  
Alarm Pass Thru  
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Primary Timing Mode Menu  
The Primary Timing Mode menu (see Figure 5-10) is used to set the primary timing mode for  
the selected DS1 port (1-4 on the MX410 and 1-12 on the MX412).  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
Primary Timing Mode : Internal  
1 - Internal  
2 - DS1 1  
3 - DS1 2  
4 - DS1 3  
5 - DS1 4  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-10. Primary Timing Mode Menu  
The Primary Timing Mode menu options are shown in Table 5-7.  
Table 5-7. Primary Timing Mode Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
4
5
Internal  
DS1 1  
DS1 2  
DS1 3  
DS1 4  
This option sets the timing mode to internal.  
This option sets the timing mode to DS1 1.  
This option sets the timing mode to DS1 2.  
This option sets the timing mode to DS1 3.  
This option sets the timing mode to DS1 4.  
CAUTION  
The entire MX410/MX412 is timed from a single source and all  
transmitters are synchronized. Any device attached to the MX410/  
MX412 should be placed in loop or line timing mode, unless it is  
providing timing. If an attached device is providing timing, the  
MX410/MX412 must be configured to use this interface as its pri-  
mary timing source. If the MX410/MX412 is set for internal timing,  
all devices connected to it must be set to loop or line timing.  
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Menu Descriptions  
Secondary Timing Mode Menu  
The Secondary Timing Mode menu (see Figure 5-11) is used to set the secondary timing mode  
for the selected DS1 port (1-4 on the MX410 and 1-12 on the MX412).  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
Primary Timing Mode : Internal  
1 - Internal  
2 - DS1 1  
3 - DS1 2  
4 - DS1 3  
5 - DS1 4  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-11. Secondary Timing Mode Menu  
The Secondary Timing Mode menu options are shown in Table 5-8.  
Table 5-8. Secondary Timing Mode Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
4
5
Internal  
DS1 1  
DS1 2  
DS1 3  
DS1 4  
This option sets the timing mode to internal.  
This option sets the timing mode to DS1 1.  
This option sets the timing mode to DS1 2.  
This option sets the timing mode to DS1 3.  
This option sets the timing mode to DS1 4.  
CAUTION  
The entire MX410/MX412 is timed from a single source and all  
transmitters are synchronized. Any device attached to the MX410/  
MX412 should be placed in loop or line timing mode, unless it is  
providing timing. If an attached device is providing timing, the  
MX410/MX412 must be configured to use this interface as its pri-  
mary timing source. If the MX410/MX412 is set for internal timing,  
all devices connected to it must be set to loop or line timing.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
V.35 Port Menu  
The V.35 Port Menu (see Figure 5-12) is used to provision the V.35 Port.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
V.35 Port  
1 - CTS  
2 - DCD  
3 - DSR  
: Forced On  
: Forced On  
: Normal  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-12. V.35 Port Menu  
The V.35 Port menu options are shown in Table 5-9.  
Table 5-9. V.35 Port Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
CTS  
DCD  
DSR  
This option sets the CTS (Clear To Send) settings. Options are as  
follows:  
• Normal: The setting matches RTS settings.  
• Forced On: This setting forces CTS to be active.  
This option sets the DCD (Data Carrier Detect) settings. Options  
are as follows:  
• Normal: The setting matches the status of the connected DS1.  
• Forced On: This setting forces DCD to be active.  
This option sets the DSR (Data Set Ready) settings. Options are as  
follows:  
• Normal: The setting follows DTR settings.  
• Forced On: This setting forces DSR to be active.  
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Menu Descriptions  
Cross-Connect Mapping Menu  
The Cross-Connect Mapping menu is used to display DS0 information for the four DS1 ports  
(12 ports on the MX412), as well as FXS (MX412 only), PPP, and V.35 settings. The Cross-  
Connect Mapping menu is shown in Figure 5-13 displaying DS0 mapping for the DS1 1 port.  
The Toggle command is used to view DS1 2, DS1 3, DS1 4, PPP, and V.35 data. All of the DS1  
toggle menus have identical options, and all of the 24 DS0s have identical options for the  
selected DS1. The Cross-Connect Mapping - Ports toggle menu is shown in Figure 5-14.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
DS1 1 - Huntsville T1  
1 - DS0 #1 = DS1 1 DS0 #2  
2 - DS0 #2 = DS1 1 DS0 #1  
3 - DS0 #3 =  
13 - DS0 #13 =  
14 - DS0 #14 =  
15 - DS0 #15 =  
16 - DS0 #16 =  
17 - DS0 #17 =  
18 - DS0 #18 =  
19 - DS0 #19 =  
20 - DS0 #20 =  
21 - DS0 #21 =  
22 - DS0 #22 =  
23 - DS0 #23 =  
24 - DS0 #24 =  
4 - DS0 #4 =  
5 - DS0 #5 =  
6 - DS0 #6 =  
7 - DS0 #7 =  
8 - DS0 #8 =  
9 - DS0 #9 =  
10 - DS0 #10 =  
11 - DS0 #11 =  
12 - DS0 #12 =  
(T)oggle View (DS1 2, DS1 3, DS1 4, Ports)  
Selection :  
25 - Map Multiple DS0's  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-13. Cross-Connect Mapping Menu  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Cross-Connect Mapping  
Ports  
1 - PPPs  
PPP 1 = DS1 4 DS0 #1  
2 - V.35 =  
3 - FXS  
=
(T)oggle View (DS1 1, DS1 2, DS1 3, DS1 4)  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-14. Cross-Connect Mapping - Ports Menu  
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The Cross-Connect Mapping menu options are shown in Table 5-10.  
Table 5-10. Cross-Connect Mapping Menu Options  
Option Description  
1-24 DS0 1-24 connections  
Function  
These options invoke the Change Cross-Connect Mapping menu  
which is used to provision the cross-connect settings for the  
selected DS1 port. Options are as follows:  
• 1. Choose TO Group (for DS1 1 through DS1 4/DS1 12)  
• 2. Choose TO DS0: (enter a value)  
• 3. Robbed Bit Signaling: select Enabled or Disabled  
• 4. Apply Cross-Connect: applies the selections made from the  
Change Cross-Connect Mapping menu.  
25  
Map Multiple DS0's  
This option invokes the Change Cross-Connect Mapping menu  
which is used to provision the cross-connect settings for multiple  
DS0s at the same time. Options are as follows:  
• 1. Choose FROM DS0 Range: enter a range  
• 2. Choose TO Group (for DS1 1 through DS1 4/DS1 12)  
• 3. Choose TO DS0 Range: enter a range  
• 4. Robbed Bit Signaling: select Enabled or Disabled  
• 5. Apply Cross-Connect: applies the selections made from the  
Change Cross-Connect Mapping menu to all DS0s in the  
range entered.  
Cross-Connect Mapping - Ports  
1
PPPs  
This option invokes the Change Cross-Connect Mapping menu,  
which is used to provision the PPP ports. Options are as follows:  
• 1. Choose FROM PPP (for PPP 1 through PPP 4)  
• 2. Choose TO Group (for DS1 1 through DS1 4)  
• 3. Choose TO DS0 Range: enter a range  
• 4. Apply Cross-Connect  
2
3
V.35  
This option invokes the Change Cross-Connect Mapping menu,  
which is used to provision the V.35 port. Options are as follows:  
• 1. Choose TO Group (for DS1 1 through DS1 4/DS1 12)  
• 2. Choose TO DS0 Range: enter a range  
• 3. Apply Cross-Connect  
FXS (MX412 only)  
This option invokes the Change Cross-Connect Mapping menu  
which is used to provision the FXS port. Options are as follows:  
• 1. Choose TO Group (for DS1 1 through DS1 12)  
• 2. Choose TO DS0 Range: enter a range  
• 3. Mode: Select Loop Start, PLAR D4, PLAR D3, or FX  
Ringdown. Refer to Table 4-6 on page 4-9 for descriptions of  
these options.  
• 4. Apply Cross-Connect  
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Menu Descriptions  
Terminal Server Ports Menu  
The Terminal Server Ports Menu (see Figure 5-15) is used to select Terminal Port 1 through  
Port 4 for provisioning.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Terminal Server Ports  
1 - Port 1  
2 - Port 2  
3 - Port 3  
4 - Port 4  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-15. Terminal Server Ports Menu  
The Terminal Server Ports menu options are shown in Table 5-11.  
Table 5-11. Terminal Server Ports Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
4
Port 1  
Port 2  
Port 3  
Port 4  
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Terminal Server Port (1 - 4) Menu  
The Terminal Server Port Menu (see Figure 5-16) is used to provision the Terminal Sever Port  
selected on the (previous) Terminal Server Ports menu.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Terminal Server Port 1  
1 - Terminal State  
2 - Baud Rate  
: Enabled  
: 9600  
: 2023  
3 - Telnet Port Number  
4 - Security  
5 - Username  
: Enabled  
: port 1  
: password  
6 - Password  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-16. Terminal Server Port 1 Menu  
The Terminal Server Port (1-4) menu options are shown in Table 5-12.  
Table 5-12. Terminal Server Port Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
Terminal State  
Baud Rate  
This option enables or disables the terminal state.  
This option sets the terminal server baud rate. Options are as  
follows:  
• 9600  
• 19200  
• 38400  
• 57600  
• 115200  
3
4
5
Telnet Port Number  
Security  
This option is used to enter a new Telnet port number.  
This option is used to enable or disable terminal port security.  
Username  
This option is used to assign a username to the selected port  
number for use when security is enabled.  
6
Password  
This option is used to assign a password to the selected port  
number for use when security is enabled.  
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Menu Descriptions  
General Provisioning Menu  
The General Provisioning Menu (see Figure 5-17) is used to provision the craft port Baud rate,  
the date, time, system ID, auto-logoff inactivity time, to reset the MX410/MX412, and to  
handle security administration.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
General Provisioning  
1 - Craft Port Baud Rate  
2 - Date  
: 115200  
: 04/22/2005  
: 18:50:47  
: MX410  
3 - Time  
4 - System ID  
5 - Auto-Logoff Inactivity Time  
: 15 minutes  
6 - Card Reset  
7 - Reset To Factory Defaults  
8 - Security Administration  
Selection:  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-17. General Provisioning Menu  
The General Provisioning menu options are shown in Table 5-13.  
Table 5-13. General Provisioning Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
Craft Port Baud Rate  
This option sets the craft port baud rate. Options are as follows:  
• 9600  
• 19200  
• 38400  
• 57600  
• 115200.  
2
3
4
Date  
This option is used to enter the date.  
This option is used to enter the time.  
Time  
System ID  
This option defines the alphanumeric name assigned to the  
MX410/MX412.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Table 5-13. General Provisioning Menu Options (Continued)  
Option Description  
Function  
5
Auto-Logoff Inactivity  
Time  
This option defines when a menu session automatically termi-  
nates due to inactivity. The default setting is 15 Minutes. Options  
are as follows:  
• 120 Minutes  
• 90 Minutes  
• 60 Minutes  
• 30 Minutes  
• 15 Minutes  
• 10 Minutes  
• 5 Minutes  
• Disabled  
6
7
Card Reset  
This option forces the MX410/MX412 to reset.  
Reset to Factory  
Defaults  
This option is used to reset factory defaults by logical groups, or  
reset all factory defaults at once.  
8
Security  
Administration  
This option invokes the Security Administration menu, which is  
used to manage accounts. Options are as follows:  
• Users Currently Logged On: This option displays active  
usernames, access method and address, and the login time.  
• Edit User Accounts: This option is used to edit user accounts.  
• Create New User Account: This option is used to create new  
user accounts. Options are as follows:  
– User ID: This option is used to enter a new username.  
– Password: This option is used to enter a new password.  
– Access Rights: This option is used to select Read, Test,  
Read/Write, or Admin access privileges.  
– Apply: This option saves the new user account  
information.  
• Restore to Default Accounts: This option is used to restore the  
accounts default and deletes all previous information by  
selecting Yes or No.  
• Access Tech Support Account: This option is used to access  
the technical support account information by entering a  
Response Key.  
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Menu Descriptions  
Network Management Menu  
The Network Management menu (see Figure 5-18) is used to provision network information.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
Network Management  
1 - Ethernet  
2 - PPP BCP/IPCP  
3 - DHCP  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-18. Network Management Menu  
The Network Management menu options are shown in Table 5-14.  
Table 5-14. Network Management Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
Ethernet  
This option invokes the “Ethernet Menu” on page 5-30.  
This option invokes the “PPP BCP/IPCP Menu” on page 5-32.  
This option invokes the “DHCP Server Menu” on page 5-34.  
PPP BCP/IPCP  
DHCP  
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Ethernet Menu  
The Ethernet Menu (see Figure 5-19) is used to provision Ethernet information.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Ethernet  
1 - IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
2 - Gateway  
MAC Address  
: 192.168.100.1  
: 255.255.0.0  
: 192.168.1.1  
: XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX  
Eth 1  
3 - Link Speed & Duplex : Auto  
Functional Link Speed & Duplex : Unknown  
Link Status  
: Down  
(T)oggle Between Interfaces  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-19. Ethernet Menu  
The Ethernet menu options are shown in Table 5-15.  
Table 5-15. Ethernet Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
IP Address  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the IP  
Address and the Subnet Mask for the MX410/MX412. The IP  
Address is written in the format XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, where each 3-  
digit field has a value between 1 and 255.  
N/A  
Subnet Mask  
This field displays the Subnet Mask. A subnet mask is used to  
reduce the traffic on each subnetwork by confining traffic to only  
the subnetwork for which it was intended. A subnet mask makes  
the entire network more manageable. In effect, each subnet func-  
tions as though it were an independent network, keeping local traf-  
fic local and forwarding traffic to another subnet only if the address  
of the data is external to the subnet. The Subnet Mask is written in  
the format XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, where each 3-digit field has a value  
between 1 and 255.  
2
Gateway  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the  
address of the default gateway/router between the internal  
network and the external network. The Gateway address is written  
in the format XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, where each 3-digit field has a  
value between 1 and 255.  
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Menu Descriptions  
Table 5-15. Ethernet Menu Options (Continued)  
Option Description  
Function  
MAC Address  
This read-only field displays the Medium Access Control (MAC)  
Address. MAC Addresses are location-independent (programmed  
into the card at manufacture, they relocate when the card does).  
MAC Addresses are contained in the headers of packets and are  
used to filter and forward packets.  
Eth (1-4)  
3
Link Speed & Duplex This option invokes another menu which is used to select the data  
rate setting for Ethernet Port (1-4) on the front panel of the  
MX410/MX412. Options are as follows:  
• 1 - Auto  
• 2 - 10 Mbps, Half Duplex  
• 3 - 10 Mbps, Full Duplex  
• 4 - 100 Mbps, Half Duplex  
• 5 - 100 Mbps, Full Duplex  
N/A  
N/A  
Functional Link  
Speed & Duplex  
This read-only field displays the actual data rate of the port.  
Link Status  
This read-only field displays the status of the network as being  
either Up or Down.  
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PPP BCP/IPCP Menu  
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) is commonly used for LAN extension and Remote management  
connectivity. PPP can use one of two upper layer protocols:  
• BCP (Bridge Control Protocol): This protocol routes packets based on MAC addresses and  
allows broadcast traffic to be passed over the PPP link(s). This protocol enables true LAN  
Extension to be completed. Any device on the LAN can communicate with any other device  
with the least amount of configuration by the user.  
• IPCP (IP Control Protocol): This protocol is used to for the user to assign an IP address to  
each interface of the MX410/MX412. This enables dynamic routing of packets based on  
the IP address and prohibits broadcast traffic from being passed over the PPP link(s). This  
protocol requires more IP knowledge and configuration of each device on the network to  
ensure proper IP routing, Default gateway configuration, as well as avoiding conflicts of  
networks and DHCP configurations. When IPCP is enabled, RIP v2 is the routing protocol  
used by the MX410/MX412.  
If using PPP, the T1/FT1 carrying the PPP link should be configured to ESF and B8ZS.  
CAUTION  
Only one PPP link can be connected between two devices. If more  
than one PPP link is connected between two devices, it creates an  
Ethernet LOOP and causes a Packet Storm across the entire  
Ethernet network.  
The PPP BCP/IPCP menu shown in Figure 5-20 is used to provision the PPP ports.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR MINOR  
ID:  
PPP BCP/IPCP  
1 - BCP/IPCP  
: BCP  
PPP 1  
2 - IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
: unknown  
: unknown  
Far End IP Address  
: unknown  
: Enabled  
3 - SNMP Link Status Trap  
LCP Status  
BCP/IPCP Status  
: Down  
: Down  
(T)oggle Between Interfaces  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-20. PPP BCP/IPCP Menu  
The PPP BCP/IPCP menu options are shown in Table 5-16.  
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Menu Descriptions  
Table 5-16. PPP BCP/IPCP Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
BCP/IPCP  
This option is used to select either BCP (Bridge Control Protocol) or  
IPCP (IP Control Protocol for routing).  
PPP (1-4)  
2
IP Address  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the IP  
Address, the Subnet Mask for the PPP. The IP Address is written in  
the format XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, where each 3-digit field has a value  
between 1 and 255.  
N/A  
Subnet Mask  
This field displays the PPP Subnet Mask. The Subnet Mask is writ-  
ten in the format XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, where each 3-digit field has  
a value between 1 and 255.  
N/A  
3
Far End IP Address  
This read-only field displays the far-end device IP address.  
SNMP Link Status  
Trap  
This option invokes another menu which is used to either enable or  
disable the SNMP link status trap.  
N/A  
LCP Status  
This read-only field displays the Link Control Protocol (LCP) status  
as Up or Down.  
BCP/IPCP Status  
This read-only field displays the BCP/IPCP status as Up or Down.  
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DHCP Server Menu  
The DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) Server menu shown in Figure 5-21, is used  
to provision DHCP server connections.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
DHCP Server  
1 - State  
2 - Network  
: Disabled  
: Not Set/Not Set  
: Not Set  
: Not Set  
3 - Default Router  
4 - DNS Router  
5 - Address Range : 0.0.0.0-255.255.255.255  
6 - Lease Time (d:h:m) : 0:0:0  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-21. DHCP Server Menu  
The DHCP Server menu options are shown in Table 5-17.  
Table 5-17. DHCP Server Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
State  
This option is used to enable or disable the DHCP server.  
Network  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter a network  
address and mask (scope of DHCP server).  
3
4
5
6
Default Router  
DNS Router  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the new  
DHCP default router address.  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the new  
DHCP DNS router address.  
Address Range  
Lease Time (d:h:m)  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the range  
of leased addresses.  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the  
expiration of the lease assigned to the DHCP server time in days,  
hours, and minutes.  
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Menu Descriptions  
SNMP Menu  
The SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) menu (see Figure 5-22) is used to  
provision SNMP information.  
MX410  
SNMP  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR MINOR  
ID:  
1 - SNMP State  
: Disabled  
: 0.0.0.0  
: 0.0.0.0  
: 0.0.0.0  
: 0.0.0.0  
: Disabled  
: MX410  
2 - Trap Host 1 IP  
3 - Trap Host 2 IP  
4 - Trap Host 3 IP  
5 - Trap Host 4 IP  
6 - SNMP Traps  
7 - System Name  
8 - System Location :  
9 - System Contact  
10 - Read Community  
11 - Write Community : private  
:
: public  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-22. SNMP Menu  
The SNMP menu options are shown in Table 5-18.  
Table 5-18. SNMP Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
SNMP State  
This option sets the SNMP state to enabled or disabled. When  
disabled, the MX410/MX412 ignores all incoming SNMP packets,  
and does not transmit SNMP packets  
2
Trap Host 1 IP  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the Trap  
Host 1 IP address of an SNMP manager to which the MX410/  
MX412 sends traps, the method (version 1 traps or version 2 notifi-  
cations), and enable or disable the trap host.  
3
4
Trap Host 2 IP  
Trap Host 3 IP  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the Trap  
Host 2 IP address of an SNMP manager to which the MX410/  
MX412 sends traps, the method (version 1 traps or version 2 notifi-  
cations), and enable or disable the trap host.  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the Trap  
Host 3 IP address of an SNMP manager to which the MX410/  
MX412 sends traps, the method (version 1 traps or version 2 notifi-  
cations), and enable or disable the trap host.  
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Menu Descriptions  
MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Table 5-18. SNMP Menu Options (Continued)  
Option Description  
Function  
5
Trap Host 4 IP  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the Trap  
Host 4 IP address of an SNMP manager to which the MX410/  
MX412 sends traps, the method (version 1 traps or version 2 notifi-  
cations), and enable or disable the trap host.  
6
7
SNMP Traps  
This option displays the user-defined system name and invokes  
another menu which is used to input alphanumeric characters  
that identify the name of the MX410/MX412.  
System Name  
This option displays the user-defined system name and invokes  
another menu which is used to input alphanumeric characters  
that identify the name of the MX410/MX412.  
8
System Location  
System Contact  
Read Community  
This option displays the user-defined system location and invokes  
another menu which is used to input alphanumeric characters  
that identify the physical location of the MX410/MX412.  
9
This option displays the user-defined system contact and invokes  
another menu which is used to input the name of personnel to  
contact about the MX410/MX412.  
10  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the  
authentication strings used for SNMP management. Input a value  
that matches the MX410/MX412 to the SNMP manager for read  
privileges.  
11  
Write Community  
This option invokes another menu which is used to enter the  
authentication strings used for SNMP management. Input a value  
that matches the MX410/MX412 to the SNMP manager for write  
privileges.  
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Menu Descriptions  
SCA Update Menu  
The SCA (System Configuration Archive) Update Menu (see Figure 5-23) is used to update  
SCA information.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
SCA Update  
1 - SCA TFTP Server  
2 - Remote Filename  
: 0.0.0.0  
:
3 - All/Data Path Only : All Provisioning  
4 - Perform SCA Save  
5 - Perform SCA Restore  
6 - Auto Save Time  
7 - Auto Save  
: Wed 10:35  
: Disabled  
Awaiting download.  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-23. SCA Update Menu  
The SCA Update menu options are shown in Table 5-19.  
Table 5-19. SCA Update Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
SCA TFTP Server  
This option is used to enter the IP address where the SCA server  
resides.  
Remote Filename  
This option is used to enter the name of a file to save to or restore  
from the SCA server.  
All/Data Path Only  
This option is used to enter select amount of data to be save SCA  
server.  
4
5
6
Perform SCA Save  
Perform SCA Restore  
Auto Save Time  
This option is used to initiate an upload to save provisioning.  
This option is used to initiate a download to restore provisioning.  
This option is used to enter the date and time to automatically  
perform an auto save.  
7
Auto Save  
This option is used to automatically save SCA provisioning data at  
a user-specified date and time by selecting enabled or disabled.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Quick Setup Menu  
To simplify the installation process, all of the basic configuration options necessary to setup  
the MX410/MX412 are grouped together on the Quick Setup menu (see Figure 5-24). The  
Quick Setup menu allows configuration of such items as DS0 drop assignments, as well as  
system date, time, and IP Address information.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Unacknowledged Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Quick Setup  
Ports  
1 - PPPs  
PPP 1 =  
2 - V.35 =  
System  
3 - System ID  
4 - IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
5 - Default Gateway  
6 - Date  
: 192.168.100.1  
: 255.255.0.0  
: 192.168.1.1  
7 - Time  
8 - Cross-Connect Mapping  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-24. Quick Setup Menu  
The Quick Setup menu options are shown in Table 5-20.  
Table 5-20. Quick Setup Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
Ports  
1
PPPs  
This option is used to provision the PPP ports. Options are as  
follows:  
• Choose FROM PPP (for PPP 1 through PPP 4)  
• Choose TO Group (for DS1 1 through DS1 4)  
• Choose TO DS0 Range (enter a range of DS0s)  
• Apply Cross-Connect  
2
V.35  
This option is used to provision the V.35 port. Options are as  
follows:  
• Choose TO Group (for DS1 1 through DS1 4)  
• Choose TO DS0 Range (enter a range of DS0s)  
• Apply Cross-Connect  
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Menu Descriptions  
Table 5-20. Quick Setup Menu Options (Continued)  
Option Description  
Function  
3
FXS (MX412 only)  
This option is used to provision the FXS port. Options are as  
follows:  
• Choose TO Group (for DS1 1 through DS1 4)  
• Choose TO DS0 Range: enter a range  
• Mode: Select Loop Start, PLAR D4, PLAR D3, or FX Ringdown.  
Refer to Table 4-6 on page 4-9 for descriptions of these options.  
• Apply Cross-Connect  
System  
3
4
System ID  
IP Address  
This option is used to assign a new system ID.  
This option is used to enter the IP Address for the MX410/MX412.  
The IP Address is written in the format XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, where  
each 3-digit field has a value between 1 and 255.  
N/A  
5
Subnet Mask  
This option is used to enter the subnet mask, written in the format  
XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, where each 3-digit field has a value between 1  
and 255.  
Default Gateway  
This option is used to enter the default gateway. The Gateway  
address is written in the format XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, where each 3-  
digit field has a value between 1 and 255.  
6
7
8
Date  
Time  
This option is used to enter the date.  
This option is used to enter the time.  
Cross-Connect  
Mapping  
This is another path to the Cross-Connect Mapping Menu shown in  
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Menu Descriptions  
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Status Screen  
The Status screen (see Figure 5-25) provides detailed status information about the DS1 Ports,  
Ethernet Ports, PPP, Timing, and the Power Feed.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
DS1 Ports  
ID:  
Status  
PPP Interfaces  
State  
State  
Line Status  
LOS,TX RAI  
LOS,TX RAI  
LOS,TX RAI  
LOS,TX RAI  
Test  
LCP  
BCP  
IPCP  
1 - Enabled  
2 - Enabled  
3 - Enabled  
4 - Enabled  
Data mode  
Data mode  
Data mode  
Data mode  
1 - Disabled  
2 - Enabled  
3 - Disabled  
4 - Disabled  
DOWN  
DOWN  
DOWN  
DOWN  
DOWN DOWN  
DOWN DOWN  
DOWN DOWN  
DOWN DOWN  
Ethernet Ports  
Status  
1 - Up  
Auxiliary Alarms  
Speed  
Status  
1 - Cleared  
2 - Cleared  
3 - Cleared  
4 - Cleared  
Severity  
N/A  
N/A  
100 Mbps, Full Duplex  
100 Mbps, Full Duplex  
Unknown  
2 - Up  
3 - Down  
4 - Down  
N/A  
N/A  
Unknown  
Power Feed  
Status  
PSU  
Timing Source  
State  
Status  
Status  
- Normal  
Secondary - Normal  
Source  
Internal  
Internal  
A - Normal  
B - Normal  
A - Installed Normal  
B - Installed Normal  
Primary  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-25. Status Screen  
The Status menu options are shown in Table 5-21.  
Table 5-21. Status Screen Fields  
Option  
DS1 Ports  
1-4  
Description  
Function  
State  
This field displays the current state of the four DS1 Ports as either  
Enabled or Disabled.  
Line Status  
This field displays the current line status of the four DS1 ports (12 ports  
on the MX412). The possible states are as follows:  
• LOS: Loss of Signal  
• LOF: Loss of Frame (RX Red Alarm)  
• RX AIS: Receiving Alarm Indication Signal (RX Blue Alarm)  
• TX AIS: Transmitting Alarm Indication Signal (TX Blue Alarm)  
• RX RAI: Receiving Remote Alarm Indicator (RX Yellow Alarm)  
• TX RAI: Transmitting Remote Alarm Indicator (TX Yellow Alarm)  
• Normal: Indicates no alarms currently active  
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Table 5-21. Status Screen Fields (Continued)  
Option  
Description  
Function  
Test  
This field displays one of the following possible states:  
• Data Mode: Indicates no tests are active  
• Payload Loopback: Indicates that a payload loopback is in progress  
• Line Loopback: Indicates that a line loopback is in progress  
PPP Interfaces  
1-4 State  
This field displays the current state of the four PPP interfaces as either  
Enabled or Disabled.  
LCP  
BCP  
IPCP  
This field displays the active state of this control protocol as either Up or  
Down.  
This field Displays the active state of this control protocol as either Up or  
Down.  
This field Displays the active state of this control protocol as either Up or  
Down.  
Ethernet Ports  
1-4 Status  
Speed  
This field displays the current status as either Up or Down.  
This field Displays one of the following speeds as active:  
• 10 Mbps, Half Duplex  
• 10 Mbps, Full Duplex  
• 100 Mbps, Half Duplex  
• 100 Mbps, Full Duplex  
Auxiliary Alarms  
1-4  
Status  
This field displays the current alarm status as either Active or Cleared.  
Severity  
This field displays the current alarm severity. Severities are defined by the  
customer and displayed as Critical, Major, Minor, Alert, or Info.  
Power Feed  
A/B  
Status  
This field displays the power feed (which connects to the rear of the  
MX410/MX412) as either Normal or Failed.  
PSU (MX410 Only)  
A/B  
State  
This field displays the current status of the A/B PSUs as either Installed  
or Removed.  
Status  
This field displays the current status of the A/B PSUs as Normal, Failed  
(if the PSU is installed), or N/A (if the PSU is not installed).  
Timing Source  
Primary/  
Status  
This field displays the status as either Normal or Failed.  
Secondary  
Source  
This field Displays internal or DS1 (1-4 on MX410 or 1-12 on MX412).  
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Test Menu  
The Test menu (see Figure 5-26) provides options for testing the DS1 Ports.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
Test  
DS1 Ports  
1 - #1 : Pattern  
2 - #2 : Data mode  
3 - #3 : Data mode  
4 - #4 : Data mode  
5 - Reset ALL Tests  
6 - Loopback Timeout:  
120 Minutes  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-26. Test Menu  
The Test menu options are shown in Table 5-22.  
Table 5-22. Test Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
DS1 Ports (1-4 on MX410 and 1-12 on MX412)  
1-4  
#1 - #4  
This option is used to invokes the “DS1 (Port #) Menu” on page 5-  
43.  
5
Reset ALL Tests  
Loopback Timeout  
This option is used to stop all DS1 port testing and resets all DS1  
ports to Data Mode.  
6
This option is used to set the loopback timeout value. The default  
value is 120 Minutes and the possible values are as follows:  
• 120 Minutes  
90 Minutes  
60 Minutes  
30 Minutes  
15 Minutes  
10 Minutes  
5 Minutes  
Disabled  
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Menu Descriptions  
DS1 (Port #) Menu  
The DS1 (Port #) menu (see Figure 5-27) provides options for testing the DS1 Ports.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
DS1 1  
1 - Loopback  
: Pattern  
: Ones  
Pattern  
2 - Insert One Bit Error  
3 - Clear Bit Error Count  
Patt Sync  
Bit Errors  
: NO SYNC  
: 14  
DS1 1 Status  
: LOS,TX RAI  
Selection:  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-27. DS1 (Port #) Menu  
The DS1 (Port #) menu options are shown in Table 5-23.  
Table 5-23. DS1 (Port #) Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
Loopback  
This option is used to display the current loopback. Selecting this  
N/A  
2
Pattern  
This option is used to display the current pattern type.  
Insert One Bit Error  
This option is present only when a pattern has been selected and  
inserts one bit error count.  
3
Clear Bit Error Count This option is present only when a pattern has been selected and  
clears one bit error count.  
Patt Sync  
This read-only field displays the pattern synchronization status.  
This read-only field displays the current number of bit errors.  
This read-only field displays the current status of the selected port.  
Bit Errors  
DS1 (#) Status  
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Port (#) Test Menu  
The Port (#) Test menu (see Figure 5-28) provides options for testing the DS1 Ports.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
Port #1 : Pattern  
1 - Data Mode  
2 - Payload  
3 - Line  
4 - Inward  
5 - Dual  
6 - Remote FDL Line  
7 - Remote Inband Line (CSU)  
8 - Remote FDL Payload  
9 - Pattern Test  
Selection:  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-28. Port (#) Test Menu  
The Port (#1-#4 on MX410, and #1-#12 on MX412) Test menu options are shown in Table 5-  
24.  
Table 5-24. Port (#) Test Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
4
5
6
Data Mode  
Payload  
This option indicates that no tests are active.  
This option initiates a payload loopback test.  
This option initiates a line loopback test.  
This option initiates an inward loopback test.  
This option initiates both line and inward loopback tests.  
Line  
Inward  
Dual  
Remote FDL Line  
This option transmits a request via the FDL (Facility Data Link) for  
the remote unit to issue a line loopback (ESF only).  
7
8
9
Remote Inband Line  
(CSU)  
This option transmits an inband request for the remote unit to  
issue a line loopback.  
Remote FDL Payload  
This option transmits a request via the FDL for the remote unit to  
issue a payload loopback (ESF only).  
Pattern Test  
This option invokes the DS1 Test Pattern menu.  
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Menu Descriptions  
DS1 Test Pattern Menu  
The DS1 Test Pattern menu (see Figure 5-29) provides options for testing the DS1 ports using  
pattern data.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
DS1 1 Test Pattern  
1 - QRSS  
2 - All Ones  
3 - All Zeros  
4 - 511  
5 - 2047  
6 - 2^15-1  
7 - 2^20-1  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-29. DS1 Test Pattern Menu  
The DS1 Test Pattern menu options are all test pattern types. Selecting any of the options  
invokes a warning menu that test patterns are service affecting and requests execution  
verification.  
Pattern type options are as follows:  
• QRSS  
• All Ones  
• All Zeros  
• 511  
• 2047  
• 2^15-1  
• 2^20-1  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Performance Monitoring Menu  
The Performance Monitoring menu (see Figure 5-30) provides options for viewing performance  
data affecting the MX410/MX412 operations. Data is viewed in daily or 15-minute  
increments.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
Performance Monitoring  
1 - Daily PM Table  
2 - Quarter Hour PM Table  
3 - Daily PM Thresholds  
4 - Quarter Hour PM Thresholds  
5 - Clear PM Data  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-30. Performance Monitoring Menu  
The Performance Monitoring menu options are shown in Table 5-25.  
Table 5-25. Port (#) Test Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
4
5
Daily PM Table  
This option invokes the “Daily Performance Monitoring  
Quarter Hour PM Table  
Daily PM Thresholds  
This option invokes the “Quarter Hour Performance  
This option invokes the “Daily PM Thresholds Menu” on  
Quarter Hour PM Thresholds This option invokes the “Quarter Hour PM Thresholds  
Clear PM Data  
Performance Monitoring Definitions are listed in Table 5-26.  
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Table 5-26. Performance Monitoring Definitions  
T1 PM Parameter Definition  
Description  
CV-L  
Code Violation - Line  
This parameter indicates the number of Bipolar Viola-  
tions (BPVs) and Excessive Zeros (EXZs) that have  
occurred during the accumulation period.  
ES-L  
Errored Seconds - Line  
This parameter indicates the number of seconds for  
which one or more Line Coding Violations (CV-Ls), or  
one or more Loss of Signal (LOS) defects occurred.  
SES-L  
LOSS-L  
CV-P  
Severely Errored Seconds - Line  
Loss of Signal Second - Line  
Code Violation - Path  
This parameter indicates the number of seconds with  
1544 or more CV-Ls or one or more LOS defects.  
This parameter indicates the number of seconds for  
which one or more LOS defects occurred.  
SF Mode: This parameter indicates the number of  
frame synchronization bit errors that have occurred  
during the accumulation period.  
ESF Mode: This parameter indicates the number of  
CRC-6 errors that have occurred during the accumula-  
tion period.  
ES-P  
Errored Seconds - Path  
SF Mode: This parameter indicates the number of  
seconds containing any of the following:  
1
FE errors  
CS events  
2
3
SEF defects  
4
AIS defects  
ESF Mode: This parameter indicates the number of  
seconds containing any of the following:  
5
CRC-6 errors  
CS events  
SEF defects  
AIS defects  
SES-P  
SAS-P  
Severely Errored Seconds - Path  
SF Mode: This parameter indicates the number of  
seconds with 8 or more FE events or one or more SEF  
or AIS defects.  
ESF Mode: This parameter indicates the number of  
seconds with 320 or more CRC-6 errors or one or more  
SEF or AIS defects.  
Severely Errored Frame/AIS  
Second - Path  
This parameter indicates the number of seconds  
containing one or more SEF defects or one or more AIS  
defects.  
UAS-P  
CSS-P  
Unavailable Second - Path  
This parameter indicates the number of seconds for  
which the DS1 path contains 10 contiguous SESs.  
Controlled Slip Second - Path  
This parameter indicates the number of seconds  
containing one or more controlled frame slips.  
1. FE (Frame bit Error): This parameter indicates the occurrence of a frame bit error in the received frame bit pattern.  
2. CS (Controlled Slip): This parameter indicates the replication or deletion of the 192 payload bits of a DS1 frame by  
the receiving unit.  
3. SEF (Severely Errored Frame): This parameter indicates that two or more frame bit errors are detected in a window.  
4. AIS (Alarm Indication Signal): This parameter indicates the detection of an unframed signal with a 1s density of at  
least 99.9% for a time.  
5. CRC-6 (Cyclic Redundancy Check) error - used in ESF mode only: This parameter indicates the existence of a  
CRC-6 code that is not identical to the corresponding locally calculated code.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Daily Performance Monitoring Screen  
The Daily Performance Monitoring screen (see Figure 5-31) displays DS1 performance  
monitoring data in daily increments and in a tabular format.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
DS1 Port 1 Daily Performance Monitoring  
Current  
0
52549  
Total  
0
134621  
06/22  
0
86374  
06/21  
0
48247  
N/A  
0
N/A  
0
N/A  
0
N/A  
0
CV-L  
ES-L  
0
0
0
0
SES-L  
LOSS-L  
CV-P  
52549  
52549  
134621  
134621  
86374  
86374  
48247  
48247  
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
ES-P  
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
SES-P  
SAS-P  
UAS-P  
CSS-P  
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
52549  
0
0
134621  
0
0
86374  
0
0
48247  
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(N)Next DS1, (P)Prev DS1, (E)Enter DS1, (F)Forward, (B)Back, Selection:  
Figure 5-31. Daily Performance Monitoring Screen  
Quarter Hour Performance Monitoring Screen  
The Quarter Hour Performance Monitoring screen (see Figure 5-32) displays DS1  
performance monitoring data in 15-minute increments and in a tabular format.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
DS1 Port 1 Quarter Hour Performance Monitoring  
Current  
Total  
0
86366  
15:15  
0
15:00  
0
14:45  
0
14:30  
0
14:15  
0
14:00  
0
CV-L  
ES-L  
0
556  
556  
556  
0
899  
899  
899  
0
900  
900  
900  
0
900  
900  
900  
0
899  
899  
899  
0
900  
900  
900  
0
900  
900  
900  
0
SES-L  
LOSS-L  
CV-P  
86366  
86366  
0
ES-P  
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
SES-P  
SAS-P  
UAS-P  
CSS-P  
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
86366  
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
556  
0
899  
0
900  
0
900  
0
899  
0
900  
0
900  
0
(N)Next DS1, (P)Prev DS1, (E)Enter DS1, (F)Forward, (B)Back, Selection:  
Figure 5-32. Quarter Hour Performance Monitoring Screen  
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Daily PM Thresholds Menu  
The Daily PM Thresholds menu (see Figure 5-33) displays DS1 performance monitoring  
thresholds data in a tabular format. This menu is used to set the performance monitoring  
threshold levels and enable or disable an alarms if the threshold is exceeded.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
Daily PM Thresholds  
Threshold  
Alarm  
1 - ES-L  
:
648  
132960  
691  
648  
100  
17  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
2 - CV-P (ESF mode) :  
3 - CV-P (SF mode) :  
4 - ES-P  
5 - SES-P  
6 - SAS-P  
7 - CSS-P  
8 - UAS-P  
:
:
:
:
:
4
10  
9 - Restore ALL DS1 Threshold Defaults  
10 - Enable ALL DS1 Threshold Alarms  
11 - Disable ALL DS1 Threshold Alarms  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-33. Daily PM Thresholds Menu  
The Daily PM Thresholds menu options are shown in Table 5-27.  
Table 5-27. Daily PM Thresholds Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
ES-L  
This option sets the ES-L threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-65535). The default value is 648.  
2
CV-P (ESF mode)  
This option sets the CV-P ESF threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-1048575). The default value is  
132,960.  
3
4
5
6
7
CV-P (SF mode)  
ES-P  
This option sets the CV-P SF threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-1048575). The default value is 691.  
This option sets the ES-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-65535). The default value is 648.  
SES-P  
This option sets the SES-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-65535). The default value is 100.  
SAS-P  
This option sets the SAS-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-65535). The default value is 17.  
CSS-P  
This option sets the CSS-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-65535). The default value is 691.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Table 5-27. Daily PM Thresholds Menu Options (Continued)  
Option Description  
Function  
8
UAS-P  
This option sets the UAS-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-65535). The default value is 10.  
9
Restore ALL DS1 Threshold  
Defaults  
This option restores all threshold values to the defaults  
listed above.  
10  
11  
Enable ALL DS1 Threshold  
Alarms  
This option enables all daily threshold alarms.  
Disable ALL DS1 Threshold  
Alarms  
This option disables all daily threshold alarms.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Menu Descriptions  
Quarter Hour PM Thresholds Menu  
The Quarter Hour PM Thresholds menu (see Figure 5-34) displays DS1 performance  
monitoring thresholds data in a tabular format. This menu is used to set the performance  
monitoring threshold levels and enable or disable an alarms if the threshold is exceeded.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL MAJOR  
ID:  
Quarter Hour PM Thresholds  
Threshold  
Alarm  
1 - ES-L  
:
65  
13296  
72  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
Enabled  
2 - CV-P (ESF mode) :  
3 - CV-P (SF mode) :  
4 - ES-P  
5 - SES-P  
6 - SAS-P  
7 - CSS-P  
8 - UAS-P  
:
:
:
:
:
65  
10  
2
1
10  
9 - Restore ALL DS1 Threshold Defaults  
10 - Enable ALL DS1 Threshold Alarms  
11 - Disable ALL DS1 Threshold Alarms  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-34. Quarter Hour PM Thresholds Menu  
The Quarter Hour PM Thresholds menu options are shown in Table 5-28.  
Table 5-28. Quarter Hour PM Thresholds Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
ES-L  
This option sets the ES-L threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-900). The default value is 65.  
CV-P (ESF mode)  
CV-P (SF mode)  
ES-P  
This option sets the CV-P ESF threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-16383). The default value is 13,296.  
This option sets the CV-P SF threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-16383). The default value is 72.  
This option sets the ES-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-900). The default value is 65.  
SES-P  
This option sets the SES-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-900). The default value is 10.  
SAS-P  
This option sets the SAS-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-900). The default value is 2.  
CSS-P  
This option sets the CSS-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-900). The default value is 72.  
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Table 5-28. Quarter Hour PM Thresholds Menu Options (Continued)  
Option Description  
Function  
8
UAS-P  
This option sets the UAS-P threshold value. The available  
threshold range is (1-900). The default value is 10.  
9
Restore ALL DS1 Threshold  
Defaults  
This option restores all threshold values to the defaults  
listed above.  
10  
11  
Enable ALL DS1 Threshold  
Alarms  
This option enables all quarter hour threshold alarms.  
Disable ALL DS1 Threshold  
Alarms  
This option disables all quarter hour threshold alarms.  
Clear PM Data Menu  
This option invokes the Clear Performance Monitoring Data menu and requests verification  
before deleting all previously collected performance monitoring data.  
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MX410/MX412 System Manual  
Menu Descriptions  
System Alarms Menu  
The System Alarms Menu (see Figure 5-35) provides options for viewing all alarms affecting  
MX410/MX412 system operations. Alarms may be viewed within the Master Log menu  
(detailed in the next section). The Environmental Alarms menu contains provisionable  
options. The Alarm Chronology menu offers the viewing of alarms in either ascending or  
descending order.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
System Alarms  
1 - Master Log  
2 - Environmental Alarms  
3 - Alarm Chronology : Ascending  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-35. System Alarms Menu  
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Master Log Menu  
The Master Log Menu (see Figure 5-36) is used to review and acknowledge alarms.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
MINOR  
ID:  
Alarms  
1 to  
5 of  
5
Date  
Time  
Type  
T1  
Port  
Level  
Description  
Status  
Active  
Active  
Active  
Active  
*Active  
04/19/05 19:31:24  
04/19/05 19:31:24  
04/19/05 19:31:24  
04/19/05 19:31:24  
04/23/05 17:10:17  
1
2
3
4
CRITICAL DS1 LOS  
CRITICAL DS1 LOS  
CRITICAL DS1 LOS  
CRITICAL DS1 LOS  
T1  
T1  
T1  
SYSTIMING  
MINOR  
SRC A FAILED  
------------------------------>>> END OF ALARMS <<<-----------------------------  
Inverse = Active  
(N)ext (P)revious (F)irst (L)ast (C)lear (A)cknowledge  
* = Unacknowledged  
Chronology = Ascending  
Figure 5-36. Master Log Menu  
Terminology and options at the bottom of the menu are explained below:  
• Inverse = Active: Current active alarms are shown with reverse video text.  
• * = Unacknowledged: Unacknowledged alarms are shown with an asterisk (*) in the  
STATUS column.  
• Chronology = Ascending: Displays the current alarm chronology setting. The alarm  
chronological sequence can be set to display in ascending or descending order in the  
System Alarms menu.  
• (N)ext: Pressing the N key displays the next screen of alarms when all alarms cannot be  
displayed on one screen.  
• (P)revious: Pressing the P key displays the previous screen of alarms when all alarms  
cannot be displayed on one screen.  
• (F)irst: Pressing the F key displays the first alarms in the current chronological sequence.  
• (L)ast: Pressing the L key displays the last alarms in the current chronological sequence.  
• (C)lear: Pressing the C key clears all inactive alarms.  
• (A)cknowledge: Pressing the A key acknowledges all unacknowledged alarms (which  
removes asterisks from the menu).  
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Menu Descriptions  
Code Download Method Menu  
The Code Download Method menu (see Figure 5-37) provides options for upgrading the  
software of the MX410/MX412.  
MX410  
MM/DD/YY HH:MM  
MX410  
Active Alarms: CRITICAL  
ID:  
Code Download Method  
1 - X-MODEM  
2 - TFTP  
Selection :  
'?' - System Help Screen  
Figure 5-37. Code Download Method Menu  
The Code Download Method menu options are shown in Table 5-29.  
Table 5-29. Code Download Method Menu Options  
Option Description  
Function  
1
X-MODEM  
This option invokes another menu to initiate an X-Modem  
transfer. Options are as follows:  
• Initiate Transfer: This option initiates the transfer. Once  
initiated use the VT100 terminal or VT100 emulation  
software to send the file to the MX410/MX412.  
• Card Reset: This option applies newly downloaded  
software to the MX410/MX412.  
2
TFTP  
This option invokes another menu to initiate a TFTP  
transfer. Options are as follows:  
• TFTP Server: This option is used to enter the IP address  
where the TFTP server resides.  
• Remote Filename: This option is used to enter the  
filename stored on the TFTP server.  
• Initiate Transfer: This option is used to start the transfer  
process.  
• Card Reset: This option applies newly downloaded  
software to the MX410/MX412.  
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Appendix A  
Warranty  
WARRANTY AND CUSTOMER SERVICE  
ADTRAN will replace or repair this product within the warranty period if it does not meet its  
published specifications or fails while in service. Warranty information can be found at  
Refer to the following subsections for sales, support, Customer and Product Service (CAPS)  
requests, or further information.  
ADTRAN Sales  
Pricing/Availability:  
800-827-0807  
ADTRAN Technical Support  
Pre-Sales Applications/Post-Sales Technical Assistance:  
800-726-8663  
Standard hours: Monday - Friday, 7 a.m. - 7 p.m. CST  
Emergency hours: 7 days/week, 24 hours/day  
ADTRAN Repair/CAPS  
Return for Repair/Upgrade:  
(256) 963-8722  
Repair and Return Address  
Contact CAPS prior to returning equipment to ADTRAN.  
ADTRAN, Inc.  
CAPS Department  
901 Explorer Boulevard  
Huntsville, Alabama 35806-2807  
61189500L1-1B  
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®
Carrier Networks Division  
901 Explorer Blvd.  
Huntsville, AL 35806  
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