Cisco SCE8000 Installation and Configuration Guide, Rel 3.1.7
Connecting the Management Interfaces

Table Of Contents

Connecting the Management Interfaces

How to Set Up the Local Console

Initial Setup Parameters

Connecting the Management Interface

How to Cable the Management Port

How to Verify Management Interface Connectivity


Connecting the Management Interfaces


This chapter explains how to connect the SCE8000 Service Control Module (SCE8000-SCM-E) to a local console and perform the initial system configuration via the setup wizard that runs automatically.

Additionally, this chapter contains instructions for cabling the Gigabit Ethernet Management interfaces.

The Console interface (CON) as well as the Gigabit management interface (Port1) are located on the SCE8000-SCM-E located in slot# 1 of the Cisco SCE8000 chassis (see Service Control Module (SCE8000-SCM-E), page 2-2).

How to Set Up the Local Console

Initial Setup Parameters

Connecting the Management Interface

How to Set Up the Local Console

Even if you will be managing the Cisco SCE8000 from a remote location, you must first connect the unit to a local console and configure the initial settings for the Cisco SCE8000 to support remote management. When the initial connection is established, the setup utility will run automatically, prompting you to perform the initial system configuration.

This section provides instructions for setting up your local terminal at your workstation, to enable you to perform the initial system configuration of the Cisco SCE8000 system using the setup utility.

Make sure that the terminal configuration is as follows:

9600 baud

8 data bits

No Parity

1 stop bits

No flow control

The above Cisco SCE8000 port parameters are fixed and are not configurable.


Step 1 Plug the RS-232 serial cable provided with the Cisco SCE8000 into the CON port on the front panel of the SCE8000-SCM-E. (See item #2 in Figure 5-1 below.)

Figure 5-1 Connecting the Local Console to the SCE8000-SCM-E CON Port

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Make sure that you push on the RJ-45 connector (attached to the RS-232 serial cable) until you hear a "click", which indicates that the connector is fully inserted and secured in the receptacle. Gently pull on the plug to confirm whether the plug is locked into the socket.

Step 2 Connect the other end of the serial cable (with an attached DB-9 or DB-25 connector) to the VT100 compatible local (serial) terminal.

Step 3 Make sure the local terminal is configured as a VT-100 terminal, according to the fixed Cisco SCE8000 CON port parameters.

Step 4 Make sure that the Cisco SCE8000 is powered-on, and has been allowed to complete booting (this process may take several minutes).

Step 5 Press Enter several times until the Cisco logo appears on the local terminal.


Initial Setup Parameters

At this point there are several basic global parameters that must be correctly configured in order for the SCE platform to communicate properly with the outside world. The following is a very brief summary of the initial setup parameters and commands. For more information, refer to the Cisco SCE8000 Software Configuration Guide.

IP address and subnet mask of the Cisco SCE8000 platform itself. This is the IP address used by the GBE management interface.

IP address of the default gateway.

Hostname—The hostname is used to identify the SCE platform. It appears as part of the CLI prompt and is also returned as the value of the MIB-II object sysName.

The maximum length is 20 characters.

The default hostname is SCE8000.

Passwords for user, admin and root level access. These are authorization-level passwords, not individual passwords. These passwords may be encrypted.

Passwords must meet the following criteria:

Minimum length — 4 characters

Maximum length — 100 characters

Begin with an alpha character

May contain only printable characters

The default password for all levels is cisco.

System clock— Current date and time. The clock and the calendar must always be synchronized.

Time zone—The name or ID of the time zone along with the number of hours offset from UTC.

Domain name server—Default domain name, which is used to complete unqualified host names, as well as up to three domain name servers, which are used for DNS lookup.

You must also enable DNS lookup.

RDR formatter destination—The SCE platform generates Raw Data Records and sends them to the specified destinations (external collection systems) via the RDR formatter. You can configure up to eight RDR formatter destinations. Specify the IP address and port number for each destination.

The following table lists commands both for displaying the currently configured values and for configuring these parameters. It also lists the command mode for each configuration command. All show commands are executed from the User Exec command mode.

.

Figure 5-2 Initial Setup Configuration 

Parameter
show command
configuration command
configuration command mode

Management IP address and subnet mask

show interface GigabitEthernet 1/1 ip address

ip address x.x.x.x subnet-mask

GigabitEthernet Interface Configuration

Default gateway

show ip default-gateway

ip default-gateway x.x.x.x

Global Configuration

Hostname

show hostname

hostname host-name

Global Configuration

Authorization level passwords

N/A

enable password level level [encryption-type] password

Global Configuration

Clock

show clock

show calendar

calendar set hh:mm:ss day month year
clock read-calendar

OR

clock set hh:mm:ss day month year
clock update-calendar

Privileged EXEC

Time zone

show timezone

clock timezone zone-name offset-hours

Global Configuration

Domain name server

show hosts

ip domain-lookup

ip domain-name domain-name

ip name-server server-address1 [server-address2] [server-address3]

Global Configuration

RDR formatter destination

show rdr-formatter destination

rdr-formatter destination ip-address port port-number

Global Configuration


Connecting the Management Interface

The SCE8000-SCM-E is equipped with one active RJ-45 management port. This port provides access from a remote management console to the Cisco SCE8000 via a LAN.

The procedures for cabling the GBE management port and testing connectivity between the Cisco SCE8000 and the remote management host are explained in the following sections.

How to Cable the Management Port

How to Verify Management Interface Connectivity

How to Cable the Management Port

The SCE8000-SCM-E has one GBE port that is used as the management port, located in slot# 1 of the Cisco SCE8000 chassis, and labeled Port1.


Step 1 Plug the Ethernet cable provided (with attached RJ-45 connector) into Port 1on the front panel of the SCE8000-SCM-E. (See item #3 in Figure 5-3 below.)

Figure 5-3 Cabling the Management Port

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Step 2 Connect the other end of the Ethernet cable into your management network.

Make sure that you push on the RJ-45 connector attached to the cable until you hear a click, which indicates that the connector is fully inserted and secured in the receptacle. Gently pull on the plug to confirm whether the plug is locked into the socket.

If the Link LED on the port does not light, try removing the cable and reinserting it firmly into the module socket. To disconnect the plug from the socket, press down on the raised portion on top of the plug, releasing the latch. You should hear an audible click indicating the latch has released. Carefully pull the plug out of the socket.

If the Link LED still does not light, verify that the cable is connected correctly to the appropriate network element on its second end.


How to Verify Management Interface Connectivity

If the Cisco SCE8000 platform has been powered up, test now to verify that connectivity has been established between the Cisco SCE8000 and the remote management host. If the Cisco SCE8000 platform is not powered up, perform this step after starting the Cisco SCE8000 platform.


Step 1 After you connect the cable to the GBE management port and to your network, check the relevant Mng port LEDS.

There are two GBE LEDs — Link/Active, and 10/100/1000 (refer to Service Control Module (SCE8000-SCM-E), page 2-2).

At this point, check that the Link/Active LED is green.

The state of the 10/100/1000 LED will depend on the Ethernet network settings, as follows:

Off: 10 Mbps

Green: 100 Mbps

Orange: 1000 Mbps

Step 2 Test connectivity. From the host that you intend to use for remote management, ping to the Cisco SCE8000 by typing ping and the Cisco SCE8000 IP address, and pressing Enter (see the example, below).


Note Only this step (Step 2), is performed from the remote management host (connected by LAN to the Mng port).


This verifies that an active connection exists between the specified station and the management port.

The ping command sends an echo request packet to an IP address and then awaits a reply. Ping output can help you evaluate path-to-host reliability, delays over the path, and whether the host can be reached or is functioning.


EXAMPLE:

The following example displays a typical ping response where the target IP address is 10.10.10.20.

C:\>ping 10.10.10.20 
pinging 10.10.10.20 ... 
PING 10.10.10.20: 56 data bytes 
64 bytes from host (10.10.10.20): icmp_seq=0. time=0. ms 
64 bytes from host (10.10.10.20): icmp_seq=1. time=0. ms 
64 bytes from host (10.10.10.20): icmp_seq=2. time=0. ms 
64 bytes from host (10.10.10.20): icmp_seq=3. time=0. ms 
----10.10.10.20 PING Statistics---- 
4 packets transmitted, 4 packets received, 0% packet loss 
round-trip (ms) min/avg/max = 0/0/0