- Cisco ONS 15454 Manual
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- About This Manual
- Hardware Installation
- 1.1 Installation Overview
- 1.2 Installation Equipment
- 1.3 Rack Installation
- 1.4 Front Door Access
- 1.5 Backplane Access
- 1.6 EIA Installation
- 1.7 Fan-Tray Assembly Installation
- 1.8 Power and Ground Installation
- 1.9 Alarm, Timing, LAN, and Craft Pin Connections
- 1.10 Coaxial Cable Installation
- 1.11 DS-1 Cable Installation
- 1.12 Card Installation
- 1.13 Fiber-Optic Cable Installation
- 1.14 Cable Routing and Management
- 1.15 Ferrite Installation
- 1.16 ONS 15454 Assembly Specifications
- 1.16.1 Bandwidth
- 1.16.2 Slot Assignments
- 1.16.3 Cards
- 1.16.4 Configurations
- 1.16.5 Cisco Transport Controller
- 1.16.6 External LAN Interface
- 1.16.7 TL1 Craft Interface
- 1.16.8 Modem Interface
- 1.16.9 Alarm Interface
- 1.16.10 EIA Interface
- 1.16.11 Nonvolatile Memory
- 1.16.12 BITS Interface
- 1.16.13 System Timing
- 1.16.14 Power Specifications
- 1.16.15 Environmental Specifications
- 1.16.16 Dimensions
- 1.17 Installation Checklist
- 1.18 ONS 15454 Software and Hardware Compatibility Matrix
- Software Installation
- 2.1 Installation Overview
- 2.2 Computer Requirements
- 2.3 Running the CTC Setup Wizard
- 2.4 Connecting PCs to the ONS 15454
- 2.5 Logging into the ONS 15454
- 2.6 Working with the CTC Window
- 2.6.1 Node View
- 2.6.2 Network View
- 2.6.2.1 CTC Node Colors
- 2.6.2.2 Network View Tasks
- 2.6.2.3 Creating Domains
- 2.6.2.4 Changing the Network View Background Color
- Procedure: Modify the Network or Domain Background Color
- 2.6.2.5 Changing the Network View Background Image
- Procedure: Change the Network View Background Image
- Procedure: Add a Node to the Current Session
- 2.6.3 Card View
- 2.7 CTC Navigation
- 2.8 Viewing CTC Table Data
- 2.9 Printing and Exporting CTC Data
- 2.10 Displaying CTC Data in Other Applications
- Node Setup
- IP Networking
- 4.1 IP Networking Overview
- 4.2 ONS 15454 IP Addressing Scenarios
- 4.2.1 Scenario 1: CTC and ONS 15454s on Same Subnet
- 4.2.2 Scenario 2: CTC and ONS 15454s Connected to Router
- 4.2.3 Scenario 3: Using Proxy ARP to Enable an ONS 15454 Gateway
- 4.2.4 Scenario 4: Default Gateway on CTC Computer
- 4.2.5 Scenario 5: Using Static Routes to Connect to LANs
- 4.2.6 Scenario 6: Static Route for Multiple CTCs
- 4.2.7 Scenario 7: Using OSPF
- 4.3 Viewing the ONS 15454 Routing Table
- SONET Topologies
- 5.1 Before You Begin
- 5.2 Bidirectional Line Switched Rings
- 5.3 Unidirectional Path Switched Rings
- 5.4 Subtending Rings
- 5.5 Linear ADM Configurations
- 5.6 Path-Protected Mesh Networks
- Circuits and Tunnels
- Card Provisioning
- 7.1 Performance Monitoring Thresholds
- 7.2 Provisioning Electrical Cards
- 7.3 Provisioning Optical Cards
- 7.4 Provisioning IPPM
- 7.5 Provisioning the Alarm Interface Controller
- 7.6 Converting DS-1 and DS-3 Cards From 1:1 to 1:N Protection
- Performance Monitoring
- 8.1 Using the Performance Monitoring Screen
- 8.2 Changing Thresholds
- 8.3 Enabling Intermediate-Path Performance Monitoring
- 8.4 Pointer Justification Count Parameters
- 8.5 Performance Monitoring for Electrical Cards
- 8.6 Performance Monitoring for Optical Cards
- Ethernet Operation
- 9.1 Ethernet Cards
- 9.2 Multicard and Single-Card EtherSwitch
- 9.3 Ethernet Circuit Configurations
- 9.4 VLAN Support
- 9.5 Spanning Tree (IEEE 802.1D)
- 9.6 Ethernet Performance and Maintenance Screens
- 9.7 Remote Monitoring Specification Alarm Thresholds
- Alarm Monitoring and Management
- 10.1 Overview
- 10.2 Viewing ONS 15454 Alarms
- 10.3 Alarm Profiles
- 10.4 Suppressing Alarms
- SNMP
- Circuit Routing
- Regulatory and Compliance Requirements
- Regulatory Compliance
- Japan Approvals
- Installation Warnings
- DC Power Disconnection Warning
- DC Power Connection Warning
- Power Supply Disconnection Warning
- Outside Line Connection Warning
- Class 1 Laser Product Warning
- Class I and Class 1M Laser Warning
- Restricted Area Warning
- Ground Connection Warning
- Qualified Personnel Warning
- Invisible Laser Radiation Warning (other versions available)
- More Than One Power Supply
- Unterminated Fiber Warning
- Laser Activation Warning
- Acronyms
- Glossary
- index

9-2
Cisco ONS 15454 Installation and Operations Guide
November 2001
Chapter 9 Ethernet Operation
Ethernet Cards
9.1.1 E100T-12/E100T-G
E100T-12/E100T-G cards provide twelve switched, IEEE 802.3-compliant 10/100 Base-T Ethernet
ports. Ports detect the speed of an attached device by auto-negotiation and automatically connect at the
appropriate speed and duplex mode, either half or full duplex, and determine whether to enable or disable
flow control. An E100T-12/E100T-G card consumes 55 W, 1.46 AMPS, and 188 BTU/Hr.
9.1.2 E1000-2/E1000-2-G
E1000-2/E1000-2-G cards provides two switched, IEEE 802.3-compliant Gigabit Ethernet (1000 Mbps)
ports that support full duplex operation. An E100T-12/E100T-G card consumes 60 W, 1.25 AMPS, and
205 BTU/Hr.
Gigabit interface converters (GBICs) are hot-swappable input/output devices that plug into a Gigabit
Ethernet (E1000-2 or E1000-2-G) card to link the port with the fiber-optic network and determine the
maximum distance that the Ethernet traffic will travel from the E1000-2/E1000-2-G card to the next
network device.
E1000-2/E1000-2-G cards support two types of standard Cisco GBICs: the IEEE 1000Base-SX
compliant 850 nm “short reach” and the IEEE 1000Base-LX compliant 1300 nm “long reach.” The 850
nm SX optics are designed for multimode fiber and distances up to 220 meters on 62.5 micron fiber and
up to 550 meters on 50 micron fiber. The 1300 nm LX optics are designed for single-mode fiber and
distances up to 5 kilometers.
Figure 9-1 A gigabit interface converter
Table 9-3 shows the available GBICs.
Table 9-2 Port-level LEDs
LED State Description
Amber Transmitting and Receiving
Solid Green Idle and Link Integrity
Green Light Off Inactive Connection or Unidirectional Traffic
11825
Receiver Transmitter
Table 9-3 Available GBICs
GBIC Product Number
Short wavelength (1000BaseSX) 15454-GBIC-SX
Long wavelength/long haul (1000BaseLX) 15454-GBIC-LX