User guide

ADSL24A, ADSL24B, and ADSL24E Card Card Management
5-107
AlliedView NMS Administration Guide (Controlling and Provisioning Network Devices)
5.5.16 ADSL24A, ADSL24B, and ADSL24E Card
The ADSL24A can be deployed for Annex-A and Annex-B. The ADSL24AE card is available in iMAP release 14.0. Refer
to the iMAP Component Specification for details on the card, and the Allied Telesis Feature Guide for details on provision-
ing. Otherwise the provisioning GUIs are similar.
5.5.17 PAC24A Card
The PAC24A card has the functionality of the ADSL24A card and the POTS24 card onto one card. (For the POTS function,
splitters are included.) However, from the provisioning viewpoint, these are still treated as separate cards and so the provi-
sioning GUIs do not change.
Note: The one are where provisioning is combined on the two cards is when the card is provisioned on the
Customer Triple Play form; if the user configures the ADSL part, the POTS part is automatically filled in
where applicable. Refer to 6.15.2.
5.5.18 EPON2 Card
The AlliedView NMS can be used to configure the Gigabit Ethernet EPON2 card and its connected iMG646 ONU.
Note: Refer to Section 7 for details on this type of iMG and how it contains the ONU. Refer to Section 6 about
the ONU-to-iMAP EPON interface and how QoS policies (called Service Level Agreements or SLAs) are
set in both the transmit and receive direction.
Each EPON2 card has 2 epon interfaces (epon:s.0 and epon:s.1, where s is the card slot number), that can connect with up to
32 ONUs, for a total of 64 ONUs per card. The ONU interfaces are identified as onu:<slot>.<port>.<onuId>, and are thought
of as residing on the iMAP, even though they are physically on the ONU device.
Note: Refer to Section 5.2 on how ONUs are displayed in the Chassis View and 5.6.24 for how provisioning the
ONU is incorporated into EPON2 provisioning.
Provisioning an EPON2 card is similar to provisioning other cards. Select a 9000 iMAP device, and bring up the Card Man-
agement window. Select an unprovisioned card slot and click on Create.
5.5.19 VDSL24 Card
Very high data rate digital subscriber line (VDSL) is a next-generation of high-speed DSL technology that allows faster data
rates than the iMAP 9000 ADSL SMs.
The two cards that support VSDL are the VDSL24-A and VDSL24-B, with the following attributes:
The cards have the same software load but support ADSL annex A and annex B by card type.
Each port can operate in VDSL mode or ADSL annex-A/annex-B mode.
5.5.20 ADSL48A/B Card
The ADSL is a double-width card and so there are restrictions on where it can be installed (refer to the iMAP Component
specification for details). The form for creating the card is standard, and when the card is created the Card Management table
shows which two slots the card occupies.
5.5.21 Viewing Card Details for the iMAP 9100
The card details form is the same as for other iMAP devices with the following exceptions:
The CFC12 card is always in simplex mode and therefore cannot be enabled, disabled, or destroyed, unless the user wishes
to drop service, usually during an upgrade.
Note: For more information on provisioning the iMAP 9100, refer to the iMAP User Guide.