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IP10 Web Management
IP10 Web Management
IP10 Web Management
Web Based
Management
User Guide
Registered TradeMarks
Ceragon Networks is a registered trademark of Ceragon Networks Ltd.
FibeAir is a registered trademark of Ceragon Networks Ltd.
CeraView is a registered trademark of Ceragon Networks Ltd.
Other names mentioned in this publication are owned by their respective holders.
TradeMarks
CeraMapTM, PolyViewTM, EncryptAirTM, ConfigAirTM, CeraMonTM, EtherAirTM, and MicroWave
FiberTM, are trademarks of Ceragon Networks Ltd.
Other names mentioned in this publication are owned by their respective holders.
Statement of Conditions
The information contained in this document is subject to change without notice.
Ceragon Networks Ltd. shall not be liable for errors contained herein or for incidental or
consequential damage in connection with the furnishing, performance, or use of this
document or equipment supplied with it.
Information to User
Any changes or modifications of equipment not expressly approved by the manufacturer
could void the users authority to operate the equipment and the warranty for such equipment.
Copyright 2009 by Ceragon Networks Ltd. All rights reserved.
General .......................................................................................................... 1
Menus ............................................................................................................ 2
Faults ...................................................................................................................... 2
Configuration........................................................................................................ 18
Diagnostics........................................................................................................... 62
Security ................................................................................................................. 72
General
This guide explains how to work with the FibeAir IP-10 Web Based Management.
IP-10 management is used to perform configuration operations and obtain statistical and performance
information related to the system.
Getting Started
To start the management application:
2. In the URL address field at the top, type http://yourIP, and press Enter, whereby yourIP is the IP
address of your FibeAir unit.
3. In the Login page that appears, enter your user name and password, and click Login.
Configuration and other operations are performed by clicking the menus on the left side of the page.
Faults
Current Alarms
Select the Current Alarms item to view a list of alarms that are active in the system.
Click an alarm in the list to view probable cause and corrective action information.
The date and time the alarm was triggered appear in the Date & Time column.
The Event Log displays the last 200 alarms that occurred. If the number of alarms exceeds 200, the first
alarms will be removed.
Date & Time - The date and time the alarm was triggered.
To scroll through additional alarms, click the page number in the Page field.
The RMON counters display values relating to the bridge performance. The counters are designed to
support:
RFC 2819, RMON MIB
RFC 2665, Ethernet-like MIB
RFC 2233, MIB II
RFC 1493, Bridge MIB
The statistic counters are divided into ingress statistics and egress statistics.
The RSL Performance Report page displays received signal level values measured over the past 24 hours, in
15 min intervals, or the past month, daily intervals.
In the Thresholds Configuration area at the bottom of the value table, specify the value you want
for the thresholds. The range of values appears at the end of the threshold line.
Min RSL values are the minimum received level measured during the interval.
Max RSL values are the maximum received level measured during the interval.
RSL Exceed #1 displays the number of seconds thethe #1 RSL threshold #1value was exceeded during the
current interval.
RSL Exceed #2 displays the number of seconds thethe #2 RSL threshold #2 value was exceeded during the
current interval.
Min TSL values are the minimum transmitted level measured during the interval.
TSL Exceed displays the number of seconds the TSL threshold value was exceeded during the current
interval.
The Integrity column indicates whether or not the values received at that time and date are reliable. An x in
the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that
occurred at that time.
The Radio Aggregate Performance Report page displays tributary values measured over the last 24 hours, in
15 min intervals, or the past month, daily intervals.
UAS is the Unavailable Seconds value of the current interval. The value can be between 0 and 900 seconds
(15 minutes).
The Integrity column indicates whether or not the values received at that time and date are reliable. An x in
the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that
occurred at that time.
The Tributaries Performance Report page displays values measured for the E1/T1 interfaces.
You can configure if the displayed performance covers the last 24 hours, for the E1/T1 interfacein 15 min
intervals, or covers a month, with daily intervals.
UAS is the Unavailable Seconds value of the current interval. The value can be between 0 and 900 seconds
(15 minutes).
The Integrity column indicates whether or not the values received at that time and date are reliable. An x in
the column indicates that the values are not reliable due to a possible power surge or power failure that
occurred at that time.
The MRMC Performance Report page displays 15-minute or daily values of Multi-Rate Multi-Constellation
performance.
Min Profile is the minimum radio profile during the last interval.
Max Profile is the maximum radio profile during the last interval.
Min BitRate (Mbps) is the minimum total radio throughput (Mbps), delivered during the last interval.
Max BitRate (Mbps) is the maximum total radio throughput (Mbps), delivered during the last interval.
Min Number of TDM interfaces is the minimum number of TDM channels (E1/T1) delivered over the
radio during the last interval.
Max Number of TDM interfaces is the maximum number of TDM channels (E1/T1) delivered over the
radio during the last interval.
The MSE Performance Report page displays the modems Minimum Square Error performance statistics.
The values are for every 15 minutes or daily.
Min MSE is the minimum MSE in dB, measured during the last interval.
Max MSE is the maximum MSE in dB, measured during the last interval.
MSE Exceed is the number of seconds the MSE exceeded the threshold (configured in the field below the
table) during the last interval.
MSE Threshold (dB) is the value that will be compared with the current MSE value, to calculate if the limit
was exceeded.
The Frame Error Rate Performance Report page displays statistics of the Ethernet frame error rate (%)
measured on the radio Ethernet port.
Frame Error Rate (%) is the number of received error frames measured by the radio Ethernet port, relative
to all frames received by the radio Ethernet port.
The Throughput Performance Report page displays radio Ethernet throughput statistics (excluding TDM
traffic), measured on the radio port.
Peak Throughput (bps) is the maximum throughput measured during the last interval.
Average Throughput (bps) is the average throughput measured during the last interval.
Throughput Exceed (Seconds) is the number of seconds the throughput exceeded the threshold (configured
in the field below the table) during the last interval.
Throughput Threshold (Mbps) is the throughput value that will be compared with the current value, to
calculate if the limit was exceeded.
The Capacity Performance Report page displays statistics of the Ethernet capacity (including Ethernet data
and overhead bytes) measured on the radio port.
Peak Capacity (bps) is the maximum capacity measured during the last interval.
Average Capacity (bps) is the average capacity measured during the last interval.
Capacity Exceed (Seconds) is the number of seconds the throughput exceeded the threshold (configured in
the field below the table) during the last interval.
Capacity Threshold (bps) is the capacity value that will be compared with the current value, to calculate if
the limit was exceeded.
The Utilization Performance Report page displays statistics of Ethernet utilization (%) measured on the radio
port.
Ethernet utilization is a measurement of actual Ethernet throughput, relative to the potential Ethernet
throughput of the radio (excluding TDM channels). Ethernet utilization during the last interval is displayed
as one of five bins:
1. 0-20%
2. 20-40%
3. 40-60%
4. 60-80%
5. 80-100%
Peak Utilization (%) is the maximum utilization measured during the last interval.
Average Utilization (%) is the average utilization measured during the last interval.
Utilization Exceed (Seconds) is the number of seconds the value exceeded the threshold (configured in the
field below the table) during the last interval.
Utilization threshold (%) is utilization threshold value, which must be configured in the bin resolution
listed above.
Unit Parameters
This page allows you to view and define information for the IP-10 system.
In the Date & Time Configuration field, click the calendar to set the date, and click the time area to set the
time.
(Optional) In the System name field, enter a name for the link. By convention, this is the nodes fully-
qualified domain name.
The read-only System Description field provides information about the FibeAir system.
(Optional) In the Contact person field, enter the name of the person to be contacted when a problem with
the system occurs.
(Optional) In the System location field, enter the actual physical location of the node or agent.
The read-only Voltage input field displays the current input voltage.
In the Measurement system field, select the type of measurement you want the system to use.
The read-only IDU/RFU temperature fields display the current temperatures of the IDU and RFU.
The read-only IDU serial/part number fields display the serial and part numbers of the IDU.
The read-only RFU serial/part number fields display the serial and part numbers of the RFU.
The Versions page summarizes all installed and running versions of the IDU and RFU
IDU Versions
Running Version is the version that is currently running on the IDU.
Installed Version are IDU software files that were successfully installed.
Upgrade Package are IDU software files that were successfully downloaded to the IDU, and are ready to be
installed when IDU upgrade is executed.
Downgrade Package are IDU software files that were successfully downloaded to the IDU, and are ready to
be installed when IDU downgrade is executed.
The External Alarms page enables you to set up the external alarm system.
Text is free text for the alarm description. When an alarm input is raised, this text will appear as the alarm
description text.
Severity is used to configure the alarm's severity. When an alarm input is raised, the severity will be added
to it.
Alarm Output Configuration (single output)
Admin sets the alarm input to active (enable) or inactive (disable), disregarding current raised alarms. This
operation can be used to test the output alarm.
Group is used to configure the group of alarms that will trigger an Alarm Output:
Communication - alarms related to traffic: radio, Ethernet line, TDM line
Quality of Service
Processing - alarms related to software: configuration, resets, corrupted files
The Management page enables you to define local and remote IP addresses and parameters.
In the Local IP Configuration area, enter the IP address of the local unit, its subnet mask, and the default
gateway.
In the Remote IP Configuration area, enter the IP address of the remote unit and its subnet mask.
In the Management Ports area, for Number of ports, specify the number of ports that will be used for
management data.
For Type, select the management mode of operation - Inband or Out of band.
For Management VLAN ID, specify the VLAN ID of the VLAN the unit belongs tothat will be used to
manage the unit, when the In-band management type is used.
For Capacity, select the bandwidth that will be alloted allocated to the port(s).
For Auto negotiation, select On to activate the feature, or Off to disable it.
For Rate, select the bit rate you want for the port.
This page is used to configure traps sent from a Network Element to the NMS system.
Each line in the Trap Managers list displays the setup for a manager defined in the system.
To change the setup for a manager, click the plus box at the beginning of the line.
For Trap manager, specify the IP address to which traps will be sent.
For Trap port, enter the number of the port through which traps will be sent.
For Community, specfiy specify the community name for trap forwarding.
For Heartbeat period (minutes) specify the period of the heartbeat trap.
For Trap CLLI, you can enter free text that will be sent with the trap.
For Filter by severity, select the severity level(s) to determine which types of alarms will be forwarded.
To select/deselect all levels, choose Select All.
This page allows you to view and set IP-10 licensing information.
Switch Configuration
The Managed Switch method allows QoS configuration, and all Ethernet ports are allowed for traffic.
In theSwitch Configuration page, you can choose the Ethernet switching method.
Single pipe - Ethernet switching is disabled, whereby only a single Ethernet interface is used for traffic and
the unit operates as a point-to-point microwave Ethernet radio.
In the Unit allowed VIDs area, you can define VLANs for the managed switch, as follows:
In the Operation field, select the operation you want to perform for the VLANs:
Set - to add the VLANs to the database.
Remove - to remove the VLANs from the database.
Change name - to change the VLAN name you specified previously.
Disable - to suspend usage of the VLAN you specified.
Enable - to activate the VLAN you specified.
In the Start/End VID fields, enter the VLAN start and end IDs.
5 Policers
Shaper
Calssifier (Ingress Queue
Marker Scheduler (Egress rate
(4 Queues) Rate Controller
limiting)
Limiting)
The QoS & Rate Limiting page lets you configure Quality of Service parameters for each Ethernet port.
Ingress Classifier
A frame ingressed to a port will be classified according to the following criteria:
1. First Criteria: MAC DA (Destination Address) overwrite. A frame ingressed to a port, carrying a
MAC DA that appears in the Static MAC table (see details below), will be classified, its VLAN Pbits
will be overwritten (assuming the frame egress is tagged) according to the following options:
Disable - No MAC DA classification or VLAN Pbits will be overwritten (no marking).
Queue Decision - There will only be classification to queue. No marking.
Policer List
Click Policer List in the Advanced options area at the bottom of the QoS & Rate Limiting page.
Click Static MAC in the Advanced options area at the bottom of the QoS & Rate Limiting page.
This table is used to load static MAC addresses to the forwarding table of the switch.
VLAN ID is the ID of the frame. Each frame is attached with a VLAN ID. Frames are learned and filed in
the static MAC table under their VLAN ID.
Priority sets the classification and/or VLAN Pbits overwrite (marking), according to the QoS configurations
(see QoS & Rate Limiting page above).
The Radio menu includes the Radio Parameters and Radio Thresholds items.
Radio Parameters
RFU type - The RFU used in the system (1500HP, RFU-C, other).
MSE - Mean Square Error value, which quantifies the performance of the receiver.
Defective blocks - Amount of blocks in which errors were detected. The larger the amount, the poorer
the radio link quality.
ATPC reference RSL - The RSL reference value for the ATPC mechanism.
Link ID - The identification number of the link. When working with an IDU that has the Link ID feature
on one end and an IDU that does not have this feature on the other end, set the Link ID to 1.
In this page, you can configure how the remote radio operates.
Remote force max Tx level - Used to force the remote unit maximum transmit level.
For Radio excessive BER threshold, click the drop-down list and select the level above which an excessive
BER alarm is issued for errors detected over the radio link.
For Radio signal degrade threshold, select the level above which a Signal Degrade alarm is issued for
errors detected over the radio link.
The Radio BER field is read-only and shows the value above which a BER alarm is issued for errors
detected over the radio link.
Configuration
Occupied bandwidth (MHz) displays the actual bandwidth occupied by the radio signal. This should not be
confused with Channel Spacing, which indicates the allocated bandwidth for the RF channel.
Operational mode can be ACM Adaptive, ACM Fixed, Regular (non ACM radio script).
Max adaptive ACM profile is the maximum configured profile that will never be exceeded when ACM is
active.
Current TX
ACM adaptive profile indicates the current ACM profile used for transmission.
ACM adaptive profile indicates the current ACM profile used by the receiver.
MRMC Table
Select the desired script and mode (ACM/Non-ACM). ACM scripts can be distinguished from regular scripts
by their ACM prefix.
When youn expand the line of the selected script (by clicking the +) all available options for the selected
script will appear.
For regular scripts (non-ACM), expand the line (by clicking the +), and then click Apply.
For ACM scripts, expand the line (by clicking the +).
Ethernet Ports
In the list of ports, click the plus box at the beginning of a line to configure parameters for that port.
Automatic state propagation - This feature enables propagation of radio failures back to the line, to
improve the recovery performance of resiliency protocols (such as xSTP).
You can configure the following options:
None - Automatic state propagation is not activated.
On local LOF and LOC - Any local radio LOF (Loss of Frame), or radio profile degradation below the
threshold (described below) or LOC raised on Optical GBE, will trigger one of the following:
- For a single pipe application, the Optical GBE port is muted, or the copper GBE port is shut down.
On Local LOF, LOC and ExcBER - Same list as for On local LOF and LOC above, with the addition of
Local radio excessive BER.
On Local LOF, LOC and Remote Fault - Same list as for On local LOF and LOC above, with the
addition of remote radio fault.
Eth Shutdown threshold profile - A GBE or radio mute or shutdown (depending on the current application
and GBE interface) will be forced if the radio profile degrades below this value.
In the Managed Switch, Metro Switch, or Single Pipe Ethernet Ports area, you can configure the following:
Actual rate (read only) - The rate the port is actually converged to.
Auto negotiation - Select On if you want the system to control the flow of data.
Actual duplex (read only) - The duplex type the port is actually converged to.
In the All Ports area at the top of the page, the parameters you can configure include the following:
Line code - Click the drop-down list and select the line coding you want for the port.
Excessive BER threshold - Click the drop-down list and select the level above which an excessive BER
alarm is issued for errors detected over the radio link.
SD threshold - Click the drop-down list and select the level above which a Signal Degrade alarm is
issued for errors detected over the link.
Click the plus sign at the beginning of an E1/T1 line to configure parameters for that specific port.
Cable length - Select the length of the cable used to connect to the interface.
ACM riority - Specify the priority of the interface to determine when it will be dropped, if the radio
capacity decreases.
Auto negotiation - select On if you want the system to control the data flow between the wayside
channel and other ports activated in the system.
Asynchronous RS-232
Asynchronous V.11
1+1 Protection
Protection Configuration
Mate Parameters
External alarm #1 admin (enable/disable) - initiate a switchover when external alarm #1 is raised.
Radio excessive BER admin (enable/disable) - initiate a switchover when a radio excessive BER
alarm is raised. This option is valid only when the MRMC script is regular or ACM running in Fixed
mode.
Protection Commands
Protection force switch - force a protection switchover and then freeze the protection state.
Manual Switch - issue a switchover, which will take affect when no other protection related alarms
are raised.
Copy to mate - copy all configurations to the mate unit (configuration synchronization between
local and mate).
MAID (Maintenance Association Identifier) is an identifier for a Maintenance Association, unique over the
domain that CFM is to protect against the accidental concatenation of service instances. The MAID has two
parts: the Maintenance Domain Name and the Short MA Name.
Status is the status of the current domain, which can be one of the following:
No Meps - only MAID configured, no MEPs. This state is used for empty domains, before defining
MEPs, or for a domain that contains only MIPs.
Disable - no continuity (CCM) frames are sent from the local MEP to remote MEPs.
Enable - continuity (CCM) frames are sent from the local MEP to remote MEPs.
CCM interval is the (periodic) time interval during which CCM messages are sent. Valid values include
1Sec, 10Sec, 1Min, and 10Min.
In the Add Maid window, for Domain name specify the maintenance domain name.
To delete a MAID, mark the checkbox at the end of its line, and click Delete selected.
Local MEP
LDI - Local Defect Indication. If the value Yes, a + in the right corner of the table describes the
reasons for this bug.
CCM Configuration
Send CCM - Select Disable if you don't want continuity messages (CCM) sent over the specific MAID.
Select Enable if you want continuity messages (CCM) sent over the MAID.
CCM Interval - Set the MAID time interval, which can be 1 second, 10 seconds, 1 Minute, or 10 Minutes.
Remote MEP
Actual MAC address - the MAC address of the remote MEP, which the local MEP recognizes.
Configured MAC address - used when you decide to specify a selected MAC address for the remote
MEP.
Cross Check - indicates if the current remote MEP was cross checked (pre-configured) or learned from
incoming CCMs.
Ping - run ping (loopback) from the local MEP to a specific remote MEP ID by clicking the ping icon.
The upper part of the window provides a short summary of the MAID and the remote MEP
being pinged.
The lower part shows the ping success rate percentage (LBM packet transmission over the
received LBR packets).
Checkbox - used to delete the selection or issue a linktrace (ETH-LT) command from the local MEP to
the current remote MEP.
Mark a remote MEP checkbox (only one) and click Linktrace, to trace the link.
The upper part of the window provides a short summary of the MAID and the Remote MEP being traced.
This page shows in which Ethernet port the user defined an MEP or MIP.
Table Columns:
MEP or MIP defined is marked with a check when you define an MEP or MIP on this port.
Click the + beside a line for additional MEP/MIP configuration on the current port.
Add MEP
Click the Add button to add new local MEPs on the port.
Ethernet port is the port you will be adding (appears automatically to prevent errors).
For Priority, select the Pbit priority that the CCM message carries.
Add MIP
Under Service OAM in menu list on the left side of the window, click Advanced for additional MEP/MIP
operations.
Manual Ping
Click the Manual Ping item to send a ping to the remote MEP/MIP.
Priority is the Pbit priority bit for the outgoing ETH-LBM packets.
Click the Manual Linktrace item to send a linktrace command to the remote MEP/MIP.
Priority is the Pbit priority bit for the outgoing ETH-LTM packets.
In this page, you can set the parameters for a radio loopback test.
To apply any change you made and start the test, click Apply.
In this page, you can set the parameters for a line loopback test.
# loopback - for each line interface, select On if you want to perform a loopback test, Off if you don't to
perform a test for that line, or Loopback towards radio to test the radio data flow.
To apply any change you made and start the test, click Apply.
Uploading
Uploading a configuration involves the following steps:
1. Create archive - This command creates a default archive in the target (IDU). The IDU configuration will
first be copied to this location.
2. Upload Archive - Uploading the IDU configuration to the host PC.
Config creation status - indicates whether or not the configuration file was created successfully.
Config upload status - indicates whether or not the configuration file was uploaded successfully from
target to host.
Configuration:
Click Create Archive to create the requested archive file on the target.
Unit Information:
Click Create Archive to create the requested archive file on the target.
Downloading
This option allows you to download uploaded files from a host (such as a PC) to the target (IDU).
Downloading a configuration involves three steps:
1. Download archive - This command copies the configuration file from the host to the target.
2. Install archive - This command installs the configuration file, which will be operational only after a
hardware reset.
3. HW reset - When the system is up and running, the new downloaded configuration will be valid.
Config download status - indicates indicates whether or not the configuration file was downloaded
successfully from host to target.
Config install status - indicates whether or not the configuration file was installed successfully on the
target.
Click Download Archive to download the archive file from the host to the target.
Click Install Archive to install the requested archive file on the target.
Host path - path in the host (FTP directory) where the archive is to be stored. For the default FTP
path use set // for Windows, or set / for Linux.
User password - password for the FTP session. If you use the default user name (anonymous), use the
host login for the password.
New Version:
Click Download to download newer packages from the remote server (without installation).
Click Rollback to undo the recent IDU application upgrade operation (one step back).
CAUTION!
Packages are still upgraded after a rollback is applied to the IDU!
Note:
Rollback does not reverse a "downgrade" operation. To do so, use the "upgrade" command instead.
Click Downgrade to install all downloaded files (for downgrade). The downgraded version will be
activated only after a cold reset.
Remote SW update server URL - remote software update server URL, where the software updates
reside.
RFU software download status - shows the current state of RFU software download.
RFU receiver errors - monitors IDU-RFU interface errors detected by the RFU.
IDU receiver errors - monitors IDU-RFU interface errors detected by the IDU
This page displays the users and groups defined in the system.