Specifications

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Cisco ONS 15454 Installation and Operations Guide, R3.2
March 2002
Chapter 9 Ethernet Operation
Remote Monitoring Specification Alarm Thresholds
Step 7 From Alarm Type, indicate whether the event will be triggered by the rising threshold, falling threshold,
or both the rising and falling thresholds.
Step 8 From the Sample Type pull-down menu, choose either Relative or Absolute. Relative restricts the
threshold to use the number of occurrences in the user-set sample period. Absolute sets the threshold to
use the total number of occurrences, regardless of any time period.
Step 9 Type in an appropriate number of seconds for the Sample Period.
Step 10 Type in the appropriate number of occurrences for the Rising Threshold.
Note For a rising type of alarm to fire, the measured value must shoot from below the falling threshold
to above the rising threshold. For example, if a network is running below a falling threshold of
400 collisions every 15 seconds and a problem causes 1001 collisions in 15 seconds, these
occurrences fire an alarm.
Step 11 Type in the appropriate number of occurrences for the Falling Threshold. In most cases a falling
threshold is set lower than the rising threshold.
A falling threshold is the counterpart to a rising threshold. When the number of occurrences is above the
rising threshold and then drops below a falling threshold, it resets the rising threshold. For example,
when the network problem that caused 1001 collisions in 15 minutes subsides and creates only 799
collisions in 15 minutes, occurrences fall below a falling threshold of 800 collisions. This resets the
rising threshold so that if network collisions again spike over a 1000 per 15 minute period, an event again
triggers when the rising threshold is crossed. An event is triggered only the first time a rising threshold
is exceeded (otherwise a single network problem might cause a rising threshold to be exceeded multiple
times and cause a flood of events).
Step 12 Click the OK button to complete the procedure.