Cisco Transport Manager User's Guide, 6.0
Chapter 1: Introduction

Table Of Contents

Introduction

1.1  Overview of CTM

1.2  Key Functionality

1.3  Key GUI Components

1.3.1  Dashboard

1.3.2  Domain Explorer

1.3.3  Subnetwork Explorer

1.3.4  Alarm Browser

1.3.5  Alarm Log

1.3.6  Physical View

1.3.7  Network Map

1.3.8  NE Explorer

1.3.9  Control Panel

1.4  What's New in CTM R6.0

1.5  What Are the MGX Modules Supported by CTM?

1.6  General Features of CTM

1.6.1  Window Views

1.6.2  Table Views

1.6.3  Tree Views

1.6.4  Launching Context-Sensitive Information

1.6.5  Finding Data

1.6.6  Filtering Data

1.6.7  Exporting Data

1.6.8  Exporting Alarms and Events

1.6.9  Refreshing Data

1.6.10  Pruning the Database

1.6.11  Using MGX Voice Gateway Popup Menus

1.6.12  Using Mnemonics

1.6.13  Using the Online Help

1.6.14  Using the Pin Tool

1.6.15  Action Buttons

1.7  Where to Find CTM Documentation

1.8  Related Documentation

1.8.1  CTM Documentation Set

1.8.2  Related Cisco NE Documentation


Introduction


Cisco Transport Manager (CTM) is an advanced management system that provides functionality at the element and network management levels for Cisco optical network elements (NEs). CTM supports fault, configuration, performance, and security management functional areas. CTM also serves as a foundation for integration into a larger overall Operations Support System (OSS) environment by providing northbound gateway interfaces to higher layer management systems.

In Release 6.0, CTM's expanded charter includes not only management of the Cisco Optical Networking System (ONS) family of optical NEs, but also additional routing and voice platforms. CTM R6.0 supports the Cisco Carrier Routing System 1 (CRS-1), which includes the Cisco Catalyst 6509; the Cisco XR 12000; the Cisco MGX 8880 Media Gateway and voice-enabled Cisco MGX 8850/8830 Multiservice Switch; and the Cisco MDS 9000 Multilayer Director and Fabric Switch.

For Cisco NE documentation, see Related Cisco NE Documentation.

This chapter contains the following sections:

Overview of CTM

Key Functionality

Key GUI Components

What's New in CTM R6.0

What Are the MGX Modules Supported by CTM?

General Features of CTM

Where to Find CTM Documentation

Related Documentation

1.1  Overview of CTM

This section provides a high-level overview of how CTM fits into the network.

CTM R6.0 provides advanced capabilities in fault, configuration, performance, and security management across the element and network management layers of the Telecommunication Management Network (TMN) reference architecture. With inherent support for SONET, SDH, DWDM, and Ethernet, along with open interfaces to OSSs, CTM provides a wide range of advanced optical systems, routers, and switches to network operators.

CTM R6.0 GateWay is an architectural component that provides northbound EMS-to-network management system (NMS) interface mediation. CTM R6.0 GateWay enables service providers to integrate CTM with their OSSs by using open, standard interfaces. CTM R6.0 offers Transaction Language One (TL1), Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP), and Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) interface options.

The CTM R6.0 High Availability (HA) solution provides automatic failover for specific software and single hardware failures without the need to reconfigure IP addresses on your switched/router network.


Note In CTM R6.0, the GateWay/CORBA and HA functionalities are sold separately.


CTM R6.0 provides a comprehensive management solution as illustrated in Figure 1-1 and Figure 1-2.

Figure 1-1 CTM Comprehensive Management Solution

Figure 1-2 CTM Comprehensive Management Solution for Voice

1.2  Key Functionality

CTM provides the following key functionality:

Integrated IP, SONET, SDH, Ethernet, and dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) management in a single scalable platform

An intuitive Java-based graphical user interface (GUI) that provides a native "look-and-feel" on both Microsoft Windows and Sun Solaris client platforms

User-defined domain explorer network views with "bubble-up" alarm severity propagation and drill-down capabilities to isolate fault conditions and service-delivery impact

Geographic network maps and explorer views that reflect the physical layout and configuration of the network

Alarm browser and alarm log views that provide a robust listing of all current and historical alarms and events

A desktop-resident dashboard that provides alarm status for the CTM user's entire span of control with quick access to the Domain Explorer and the Alarm Browser

Diagnostic capabilities using the Diagnostic Center (for the MGX Voice Gateway products)

Real-time network surveillance with configurable popup alarm and event notifications

Real-time shelf views with full alarm and operational status indicators

Automated configuration backup with manual restore capabilities, plus remote software download capability across the entire network domain

GUI-based NE configuration

Integrated A-to-Z circuit provisioning

Integrated Layer 2 (L2) topology and service provisioning

Extensive performance monitoring (PM) statistics collected across the SONET/SDH, DS-1/E1, DWDM, Ethernet, and Cisco IOS interfaces available for display or export

Custom profiles that can be used to grant separate permissions for each CTM operation

Comprehensive security management that provides flexible user access

1.3  Key GUI Components

This section describes the following key components in the CTM GUI:

Dashboard

Domain Explorer

Subnetwork Explorer

Alarm Browser

Alarm Log

Physical View

Network Map

NE Explorer

Control Panel

1.3.1  Dashboard

The CTM Dashboard shows useful alarm and NE information in one easily accessible location. See Figure 1-3.

Figure 1-3 CTM Dashboard

1

Layers the Domain Explorer window as the top active window. The Domain Explorer is the CTM home window.

2

Opens the Alarm Browser window; this highlights NE-specific critical, major, minor, and warning alarms.

3

Opens the Alarm Browser window, filtered to show all EMS alarms in the domain. This toolbar icon is enabled only if you have read/write permission for the Show CTM EMS Alarms/Events operation.

4

Lists the total number of NEs in the domain. Click the counter to open the Domain NE table, which provides an inventory of NEs within the selected management domain.

5

Displays the server name. If the server name string contains fewer than 16 characters, the entire name is displayed. If the server name is longer than 16 characters, the first 14 characters display, followed by an ellipsis (...). The tooltip displays the full server name, regardless of length, and the IP address.

6

Minimizes all CTM windows, except for the Dashboard window itself.

7

Restores all minimized CTM windows.

8

Closes the Dashboard.

9

Displays online help for the Dashboard.

10

Indicates a change in CTM status, including:

New alarms have occurred on NEs in the domain

New NEs have been added to the domain

Connectivity status has changed

When a change in CTM status occurs, a blue outline appears around the affected EMS alarms icon, NE count box, or alarm count box(es). Click the CTM Status has Changed tool to acknowledge the status change. The tooltip toggles to No Change in CTM Status and the blue outline disappears, which indicates that you acknowledged the status change.

11

If you click the pin icon, the Dashboard window is pinned down, meaning that it is not brought to the foreground by default. If you click the pin icon again, the Dashboard window is pinned up, meaning that it is brought to the foreground each time an update occurs (alarm counts change, NE count changes, and so on).

12

Lists the number of unacknowledged alarms in the domain. The alarm count includes unacknowledged alarms on NEs and on the EMS. Click the counter to open the Alarm Browser window, filtered to show all unacknowledged alarms.

13

Lists the number of warning alarms in the domain. The alarm count includes warning alarms on NEs and on the EMS. Click the counter to open the Alarm Browser window, filtered to show all warning alarms.

14

Lists the number of minor alarms in the domain. The alarm count includes minor alarms on NEs and on the EMS. Click the counter to open the Alarm Browser window, filtered to show all minor alarms.

15

Lists the number of major alarms in the domain. The alarm count includes major alarms on NEs and on the EMS. Click the counter to open the Alarm Browser window, filtered to show all major alarms.

16

Lists the number of critical alarms in the domain. The alarm count includes critical alarms on NEs and on the EMS. Click the counter to open the Alarm Browser window, filtered to show all critical alarms.



Note A single mouse click is all that is required for Dashboard operations. If you double-click an object, CTM launches two instances of the object. For example, if you double-click the Open Alarm Browser icon, CTM opens two Alarm Browser windows.


1.3.2  Domain Explorer

The Domain Explorer window (Figure 1-4) opens when you log into CTM. The Domain Explorer is the CTM home window and provides a logical view of the network plus alarm, connectivity, and operational status. To log out of CTM, choose File > Exit from the Domain Explorer window.

Figure 1-4 Domain Explorer

The Domain Explorer window is divided into two sections: the topology tree and the properties pane. The topology tree on the left side of the window consists of a management domain, groups, and NEs, which are displayed in a hierarchical format. You can drag and drop NEs to reposition them in the topology tree. The properties pane on the right side of the window shows detailed information about the object that is selected in the topology tree.


Tip See Appendix A, "Icons and Menus Displayed in CTM" for an explanation of the Domain Explorer legend and icons.


By default, the Domain Explorer contains the following groups that are visible to SuperUser and NetworkAdmin users only:

Discovered NEs—Contains NEs that have been automatically discovered by the CTM server. Autodiscovered NEs are added to the Discovered NEs group by default and CTM starts managing them automatically. See 3.8  How Do I Discover the Network for Optical and Routing Devices?, page 3-51 for more information on CTM's discovery process.

Deleted NEs—Contains NEs that have been deleted. An NE appears in this group only when the last instance of that NE has been deleted.

Lost and Found—The CTM client performs a minimal check at initialization to verify that the tree representation for the administrator's domain is valid. If there are any mismatches between the groups and NEs in the CTM domain and those in the administrator's domain, the mismatched NEs or groups are shown in the Lost and Found group in the Domain Explorer tree. If the administrator moves the NEs or groups in the Lost and Found group to another group and then clicks Refresh Data or restarts the CTM client, the Lost and Found group disappears.


Note The Discovered NEs, Deleted NEs, and Lost and Found groups cannot be deleted or renamed.



Note The server time is displayed on the lower right side of the Domain Explorer window. The server name is displayed in the Domain Explorer title bar.


For information about populating the Domain Explorer with new groups, gateway NEs (GNEs), or NEs, see Chapter 3, "Building the Network."


Tip The Domain Explorer only provides a high-level view of the network. To view the entire managed network, access the Physical View hierarchy tree from the Configuration Center, Chassis View, Statistics Report, or Diagnostic Center.


To check the connection status of a selected NE, run a diagnostic check at the node level in the Diagnostic Center. See 4.6.11.2  Running a Diagnostic Check at the Node Level.

The Domain Explorer has three properties panes: Management Domain Properties, Group Properties, and Network Element Properties.

1.3.2.1  Management Domain Properties

The Management Domain Properties pane displays information about the management domain that is currently selected in the Domain Explorer or Subnetwork Explorer tree. The CTM management domain consists of all the NEs managed by the CTM server where the CTM client connects.

The management domain can also contain groups or subnetworks that give you the flexibility to subdivide the domain you are monitoring. For example, a group or subnetwork can represent all NEs within a geographical location.

To display all of the first-level nodes under the management domain, click the expand icon (+) next to the management domain name in the topology tree. If any of the groups, subnetworks, or NEs have an alarm condition, an icon representing that condition is displayed next to the management domain name.

The Management Domain Properties pane has two tabs: Status and Identification.

1.3.2.1.1  Status Tab

Table 1-1 describes the Status tab fields.

Table 1-1 Field Descriptions for the Status Tab 

Field
Description

Domain Name

User-defined name of the management domain.

Description

User-defined description of the management domain.

Total NEs

Total number of NEs within the management domain.

Unavailable NEs

Number of NEs within the management domain that CTM cannot currently connect to.

NEs in Alarm

Total number of NEs within the management domain that have an active alarm.

Unmanaged NEs

Total number of unmanaged NEs within the management domain.

Alarm Status

Total number of NE and EMS alarms by severity. In addition, this field lists how many of the total NEs with active alarms are experiencing a critical, major, minor, or warning alarm.

Note If the same NE is experiencing more than one type of alarm simultaneously, that NE is counted for each severity level.

NE Count by Operational State

Total number of NEs within the management domain according to operational state:

In Service: The NE is currently deployed and requires monitoring.

Out of Service: The NE has been marked Out of Service and does not require monitoring.

NEs In Initialization: The NE is initializing, and you can perform the following actions:

Open the NE Explorer in read-only mode if the NE has been discovered at least once

Open the Alarm Browser and Alarm Log

Open the PM tables

You cannot provision circuits or links. The NE is not listed in the available NEs as source or destination of a circuit.

Under Maintenance: The NE is temporarily under maintenance but requires monitoring.

Preprovisioned: The NE has been added to the database for provisioning but is not yet in service.

NEs in Sync Configuration: The NE is in Sync Configuration state, and you can perform the following actions:

Provision circuits and links

Open the Alarm Browser and Alarm Log

Open the PM tables

You cannot open the NE Explorer, but the discovery process of the NE is prioritized over the other NEs.


1.3.2.1.2  Identification Tab

Table 1-2 describes the Identification tab fields.

Table 1-2 Field Descriptions for the Identification Tab 

Field
Description

Domain Name

Name of the management domain.

Description

Description of the management domain.

EMS ID

EMS ID (Cisco Transport Manager).

Server

Name or IP address of the CTM server to which the user is connected.

Vendor Name

Vendor name (Cisco Systems).

Software Version

CTM release that is running.



Note See Table 1-21 for the descriptions of the actions that can be performed using the buttons at the bottom of the window.


1.3.2.2  Group Properties and Network Partition Properties

The Group Properties pane or Network Partition Properties pane displays information about the group or network partition that is currently selected in the topology tree.

A group consists of other groups or NEs. Groups give you the flexibility of subdividing the management domain you are monitoring. For example, a group can represent all NEs within a geographical location.

A network partition is a group of subnetworks or a group of NEs that is managed by the same NE service. Different network partitions mean different NE services.

Click the expand icon (+) next to a group or network partition in the topology tree to view the objects that are assigned to that group or network partition. The same group or network partition can have multiple instances in the topology tree. The contents of all instances of a group or network partition are always the same. Any changes to one instance of a group or network partition will be reflected in all instances of that group or network partition.

You can add and delete groups or network partitions; however, the option to delete a group or network partition is not available until all objects are removed from the group or network partition. If the group or network partition has multiple instances in the topology tree, you can delete all but the last instance of the group or network partition.

The Group Properties or Network Partition Properties pane has two tabs: Status and Identification.

1.3.2.2.1  Status Tab

Table 1-3 describes the Status tab fields.

Table 1-3 Field Descriptions for the Status Tab 

Field
Description

Group ID/Network Partition ID

User-defined name of the selected group or network partition.

Description

User-defined description of the selected group or network partition.

Total NEs

Total number of NEs within the selected group or network partition.

Unavailable NEs

Number of NEs within the selected group or network partition that the CTM server cannot currently reach.

NEs in Alarm

Total number of NEs within the selected group or network partition that currently have an active alarm.

Unmanaged NEs

Number of NEs within the selected group or network partition that are currently unmanaged.

Alarm Status

Total number of alarms within the selected group or network partition, by severity. In addition, this field lists how many of the total NE alarms have a critical, major, minor, or warning status. If the same NE experiences more than one type of alarm simultaneously, that NE is included in the count for each severity level.

NE Count by Operational State

Total number of NEs within the selected group or network partition according to operational state. Values are Preprovisioned, In Service, Under Maintenance, and Out of Service. Also shows the number of NEs within the selected group or network partition that are initializing or synchronizing their configuration.


1.3.2.2.2  Identification Tab

Table 1-4 describes the Identification tab fields. Only users with the appropriate user access profile can edit these fields.

Table 1-4 Field Descriptions for the Identification Tab 

Field
Description

Group ID/Network Partition ID

Unique user-defined name of the selected group or network partition.

Description

User-defined description of the selected group or network partition.

Location Name (not applicable to network partitions)

User-defined geographic location of the selected group.



Note See Table 1-21 for the descriptions of the actions that can be performed using the buttons at the bottom of the window.


1.3.2.3  Network Element Properties

The Network Element Properties pane displays information about the NE that is currently selected in the tree. An NE represents a Cisco Catalyst 6509, Cisco CRS-1, Cisco XR 12000, Cisco MDS 9000, Cisco MGX 88xx, ONS 15216, ONS 15302, ONS 15305, ONS 15310, ONS 15327, ONS 15454 SONET, ONS 15454 SDH, ONS 15501, ONS 15530, ONS 15540, ONS 15600 SONET, ONS 15600 SDH, ONS 15800, ONS 15801, ONS 15808, or unmanaged/other vendor node.

The same NE can have multiple instances in the tree. The contents of all instances of the same NE are always the same. Any changes to one NE instance are reflected in all instances of that NE. Regardless of the number of instances an NE has in the tree, you can delete one or all instances of that NE. When the final instance of an NE is deleted, the deleted NE moves to the Deleted NEs group.

The Network Element Properties panes for most NEs have the following tabs: Status, Identification, Address, and NE Authentication. The NE Properties pane for passive NEs has only one tab: Identification.

1.3.2.3.1  Status Tab

Table 1-5 describes the Status tab fields.

Table 1-5 Field Descriptions for the Status Tab 

Field
Description

NE ID

Name of the selected NE.

Description

Information that a user entered to describe the NE.

NE Model

Model of the selected NE.

Alarm Status

Total number of critical, major, minor, and warning alarms currently existing on the selected NE.

Communication State

Current communication state of the selected NE (Available or Unavailable).

Operational State

Current operational state of the selected NE. You can change the operational state.

PM Collection (not applicable to the ONS 15216, Cisco MDS 9000, or Catalyst 6509)

15 Min/1 Day: Check the 15 Min check box to enable 15-minute PM data collection. Check the 1 Day check box to enable 1-day PM data collection. By default, PM data collection is disabled for both 15-minute and 1-day options.

Note The ONS 15501, MGX Voice Gateway, CRS-1, and XR 12000 do not support 1-day PM data collection.

15 Min Robust/1 Day Robust: If the 15 Min check box is checked and the NE supports robust PM collection, you can check the 15 Min Robust check box to enable robust PM collection. If the 1 Day check box is checked and the NE supports robust PM collection, you can check the 1 Day Robust check box to enable robust PM collection. Robust PM collection is performed according to the selected PM collection state when the NE or server is available.

Note You cannot collect robust PM data until at least one 15-minute or one 1-day interval has been collected in normal operation.

Note Robust PM data collection applies only to CTC-based NEs and to the ONS 15302, ONS 15305, ONS 15530, ONS 15540, ONS 15800, ONS 15801, and ONS 15808. Robust PM collection is not supported for the ONS 15216, ONS 15501, Catalyst 6509, CRS-1, XR 12000, MGX Voice Gateway, or MDS 9000.

Note You can collect up to 8 hours of 15-minute robust PM data for CTC-based NEs.

Note You can collect up to the previous day's 1-day robust PM data for CTC-based NEs.

Note For the ONS 15530 and ONS 15540 ESPx, you can collect up to 24 hours (96 previous missed intervals) of 15-minute robust PM data and up to the previous day's 1-day robust PM data.

Note For the ONS 15540 ESP, you can collect up to 24 hours (96 previous missed intervals) of 15-minute robust PM data.

Note For the ONS 1580x (TL1 Agent release after 2.x), you can collect up to 8 hours (32 previous missed intervals) of 15-minute robust PM data and up to 2 days of 1-day robust PM data.

Audit Trail State (applicable to CTC-based NEs)

Whether the audit trail is enabled or disabled. You can change the setting. Audit trail collection is disabled by default.

NE User Access Log State (applicable to ONS 1580x NEs)

Whether the NE user access log is enabled or disabled. You can change the setting.


1.3.2.3.2  Identification Tab

Table 1-6 describes the fields in the Identification tab. Read-only fields have a gray background. Fields displayed vary by NE type.

Table 1-6 Field Descriptions for the Identification Tab 

Field
Description

NE ID

Name of the selected NE.

Description

Information that a user entered to describe the NE.

NE Model

Model of the selected NE.

NE Type

Type of NE.

Vendor Name

Vendor name.

Software Version

Software version that is running on the NE.

Version Name

String name tag that identifies the NE and the associated software version.

Location Name

Geographic location of the selected NE.

Active IP Address (MGX Voice Gateway)

IP address of the selected MGX Voice Gateway device.


1.3.2.3.3  Address Tab

Table 1-7 describes the Address tab fields.

Table 1-7 Field Descriptions for the Address Tab 

Field
Description

NE ID

Name of the selected NE.

Description

Information a user entered to describe the NE.

NE Model

Model of the selected NE.

Active IP Address

IP address of the GNE.

NE IP Address

IP address of the end network element (ENE).

Note If the node is a GNE or an ENE, the NE IP address is the same as the active IP address.

Primary IP Address (for ONS 1580x NEs only)

Primary IP address.

Secondary IP Address (for ONS 1580x NEs only)

Backup IP address that the CTM server uses to reach the ONS 15800, ONS 15801, or ONS 15808 NE.

SNMP Community String (not available for all NEs)

Community string name used in SNMP messages. You must provide the community string name to give the user SNMP read access to the device.

Note This field is unavailable or not displayed if it does not apply to the selected NE. This field is not displayed for ONS 15501, ONS 15530, ONS 15540, ONS 15600 SONET, and ONS 15600 SDH NEs. For ONS 155xx NEs, you specify the community string in the SNMP Community String table (Administration > Community String Table).

Note This field is read-only for ENE devices.

Note The ONS 15216 EDFA2 uses the community string "private." Automatic addition of an entry in the SNMP Trap Destination table requires read-write access (RWA).

GNE ID

(Read-only) ID for the GNE.

Note The GNE/ENE association is determined automatically by the CTM server.

Note If an ENE references a GNE and that GNE is reconfigured to no longer proxy for the ENE, the GNE ID for that ENE is Unknown.

Subnetwork ID

Subnetwork ID for the selected NE.

Network Partition ID

Network partition ID for the selected NE.

Note SONET and SDH NEs cannot be added to the same network partition.


1.3.2.3.4  NE Authentication Tab

The NE Authentication tab allows you to specify usernames and passwords for CTM server, CTM GateWay/TL1, and command-line interface (CLI) connections to the selected NE. Table 1-8 describes the fields in the NE Authentication tab. Fields shown depend on the type of NE selected.

Table 1-8 Field Descriptions for the NE Authentication Tab 

Field
Subfield
Description

CTM Server - NE Connection1

Username

Username that the CTM server uses to connect to NEs.

Password

Password to use for CTM server-to-NE connections.

Confirm Password

Re-enter the password to confirm it.

CTM Server - NE Connection (MGX Voice Gateway)

NE Service Level Username

Username that the CTM server uses to connect to NEs.

NE Service Level Password

Password to use for CTM server-to-NE connections.

Confirm NE Service Level Password

Re-enter the password to confirm it.

SNMP Community String

Community string name used in SNMP Get messages. You must provide the community string name to give the user SNMP read access to the device.

SNMP Set Only Community String

Community string name used in SNMP Set messages. You must provide the community string name to give the user SNMP write access to the device.

GateWay/TL1 - NE Connection2

Username

Username that the CTM GateWay/TL1 service uses to connect to NEs.

Password

Password to use for CTM GateWay/TL1-to-NE connections.

Confirm Password

Re-enter the password to confirm it.

CLI Connection3

Username

Username to use for CLI-to-NE connections.

Password

Password to use for CLI-to-NE connections.

Confirm Password

Re-enter the password to confirm it.

1 This field applies to NEs that have a TL1 interface and are provisioned through TL1 (for example, the ONS 15216 EDFA2, EDFA3, and OADM).

2 The CTM GateWay/TL1 service is not available for the ONS 15600 SDH or for ONS 15454 SDH releases earlier than R5.0. This field does not apply to the ONS 15501 or Cisco MDS 9000.

3 This field applies to NEs that have a CLI and are provisioned through CLI (for example, the Cisco MDS 9000).



Note Regardless of the actual size of the password, the Password and Confirm Password fields display only a fixed-length string. The fixed-length string is 12 asterisks (*).



Note See Table 1-21 for the descriptions of the actions that can be performed using the buttons at the bottom of the window.


1.3.3  Subnetwork Explorer

The Subnetwork Explorer window (Figure 1-5) displays a hierarchical view of all the network partitions, subnetworks, and NEs currently being monitored by CTM. The alarm status is also indicated.

Figure 1-5 Subnetwork Explorer

The Subnetwork Explorer window is divided into two sections: the explorer tree and the properties pane. The explorer tree consists of a management domain, network partitions, subnetworks, and NEs, which are displayed in a hierarchical format. You can drag and drop NEs to reposition them in the tree. The properties pane on the right side of the window shows detailed information about the object that is selected in the tree.

The Subnetwork Explorer allows you to:

View the alarm, connectivity, and operational status of network partitions, subnetworks, and NEs

Add network partitions

Modify network partition properties

Delete empty network partitions

Add subnetworks and associate the new subnetwork to new or existing network partitions

Add NEs to a subnetwork and associate the new NEs with the network partitions of that subnetwork

The Subnetwork Explorer has two modes: automatic and manual. In automatic mode, all topologically connected NEs are grouped automatically into subnetworks. You cannot associate NEs to subnetworks in this mode. In manual mode, you can associate NEs to subnetworks. To change the subnetwork mode, choose Administration > Control Panel > UI Properties and check or uncheck the Automatically group NEs in subnetworks check box.

In the transition period during which this option is being changed, any current operations (such as dropping an NE in a subnetwork) are completed.

The server time is displayed on the lower right side of the Subnetwork Explorer window. The server name is displayed in the window's title bar.

The Subnetwork Explorer has four properties panes: Management Domain Properties, Network Partition Properties, Subnetwork Properties, and Network Element Properties.

1.3.3.1  Management Domain Properties

See Management Domain Properties.

1.3.3.2  Network Partition Properties

See Group Properties and Network Partition Properties.

1.3.3.3  Subnetwork Properties

The Subnetwork Properties pane displays information about the subnetwork that is currently selected in the explorer tree. Click the expand icon (+) beside a subnetwork in the tree to view the NEs that have been assigned to that subnetwork.

The Subnetwork Properties pane has two tabs: Status and Identification.

1.3.3.3.1  Status Tab

Table 1-9 describes the Status tab fields.

Table 1-9 Field Descriptions for the Status Tab 

Field
Description

Subnetwork ID

User-defined or default name of the selected subnetwork.

Description

User-defined description of the selected subnetwork.

Total NEs

Total number of NEs within the selected subnetwork.

Unavailable NEs

Number of NEs within the selected subnetwork that the CTM server cannot currently reach.

NEs in Alarm

Total number of NEs within the selected subnetwork that are currently experiencing an alarm.

Unmanaged NEs

Number of NEs within the selected subnetwork that are currently unmanaged.

Alarm Status

Total number of alarms within the selected subnetwork, by severity. In addition, this field lists the number of alarmed NEs that are experiencing a critical, major, minor, or warning alarm. If the same NE experiences more than one type of alarm simultaneously, that NE is included in the count for each severity level.

NE Count by Operational State

Total number of NEs within the selected subnetwork, according to operational state. There are four states:

Preprovisioned

In Service

Under Maintenance

Out of Service

Also shows the number of NEs within the selected subnetwork that are initializing or synchronizing their configuration.


1.3.3.3.2  Identification Tab

Table 1-10 describes the fields in the Identification tab.


Note Only users with the appropriate user access profile can edit these fields.


Table 1-10 Field Descriptions for the Identification Tab 

Field
Description

Subnetwork ID

Unique user-defined name of the selected subnetwork.

Description

User-defined description of the selected subnetwork.

Subnetwork Type

Subnetwork type (SONET, SDH, Other, or Unknown).

Subnetwork Topology

Type of topology to which the selected subnetwork belongs.

Network Partition ID

Network partition ID to which the subnetwork belongs.



Note See Table 1-21 for the descriptions of the actions that can be performed using the buttons at the bottom of the window.


1.3.3.4  Network Element Properties

See Network Element Properties.

1.3.4  Alarm Browser

The Alarm Browser displays standing alarms and conditions in the managed domain that are assigned a severity level of critical, major, minor, or warning. It also shows cleared alarms that are not acknowledged. See Figure 1-6.

Figure 1-6 Alarm Browser


Tip For detailed information about the Alarm Browser, see Chapter 9, "Managing Faults."



Note Refer to the appropriate NE documentation for a list of alarms supported on each NE. See Related Cisco NE Documentation.


1.3.5  Alarm Log

The Alarm Log window contains alarms that have transitioned from the Alarm Browser. Cleared alarms are transitioned when you acknowledge them or when automatic acknowledgment has been enabled (in the Control Panel > User Interface Properties pane). In addition, the Alarm Log shows a history of cleared and acknowledged alarms and all transient conditions (also known as events or autonomous nonalarmed messages). See Figure 1-7.

Figure 1-7 Alarm Log


Tip For detailed information about the Alarm Log, see Chapter 9, "Managing Faults."


1.3.6  Physical View

The Physical View (Figure 1-8) is a hierarchical tree that can be found in the Chassis View, Statistics Report, Configuration Center, and Diagnostic Center for MGX Voice Gateway nodes.

The Physical View shows the entire managed network. To expand or minimize the hierarchy, click the magnifying glass icon next to any node. Nodes are color-coded to represent the highest severity alarm on each node.

Figure 1-8 MGX Voice Gateway Physical View

1.3.7  Network Map

The Network Map window (Figure 1-9) allows you to graphically display how the network is partitioned.

Figure 1-9 Network Map

The Network Map is organized into a multilevel hierarchy that corresponds to the structure of the Domain Explorer and Subnetwork Explorer trees. The Network Map hierarchy consists of management domains, subnetworks, groups, and NEs, which are displayed graphically.

When you launch the Network Map from the CTM domain, it displays a map with individual groups, NEs, and link icons. Double-clicking a group expands that group to show its contents. Clicking Show Parent Network Map returns you to the parent map. When you launch the Network Map from a particular group in the Domain Explorer, the Network Map opens with the contents of the group displayed. After zooming in on a region on the map, scroll bars at the bottom and right side of the screen allow you to pan the view to a different region. You can also use the focus box in the top left panel to pan and zoom the view. All groups are shown on a single map, and it is the zoom level and pan position that determine what groups are visible at any time. Depending on the selected layer rate, certain NEs and links are shown. You can open multiple map windows to compare different views. Double-clicking a link group expands the group to show all the links it contains.

Use the layer rate pull-down menu in the toolbar to select the layer rate. The Network Map shows the links that belong to a particular layer rate and the NEs that participate in the selected layer rate.


Note When you customize the location of the NE icons, make sure you take into account the NEs that you cannot see due to the layer rate that you selected. If you customize the map in one layer rate and then change layer rates, NE icons and links might overlap because of the layer rate discrepancies.



Note Sometimes one node can overlap another in the maps. This occurs when a new node is added and other existing nodes have already been assigned a location. The solution is to change the layout to make sure that no two nodes are overlapping.


All groups, NEs, links, and labels are zoomed when you zoom in or zoom out. CTM allows you to save the zoom level and framing of the map. Also, you can specify a fixed pixel size for icons so that regardless of the zoom level, the map icon size does not change. By default, the icon size is variable based on the zoom level. The icon size setting is saved with the other map settings.

When you open the Network Map from an NE in the Domain Explorer or Subnetwork Explorer, the selected NE is centered on the map.


Note The Refresh Data icon on the Network Map flashes when updates are available.


The following scenarios describe the actions of the Refresh Data icon on the Network Map.

The Refresh Data icon flashes when:

The map background is changed

The topology structure changes (a node is added or deleted) in a group, subnetwork, area, or network partition

A link is added or deleted

A node is forced invalid

The Refresh Data icon does not flash when:

The alarm counts change on the node or link

The node connectivity state changes

The node admin state changes

The node name changes

The node data properties change

The discovery state changes

The data reference changes

The link is modified

1.3.8  NE Explorer

The NE Explorer window shows service and equipment provisioning information about the selected NE. The configuration information is retrieved through the CLI, CORBA, SNMP, and TL1. The actual protocol used depends on the NE type.

Use one of the following methods to open the NE Explorer:

Select an NE; then, choose Configuration > NE Explorer in the Domain Explorer or Subnetwork Explorer.

Double-click an NE icon in the Domain Explorer tree, Subnetwork Explorer tree, or Network Map.

In the Domain Explorer tree, Subnetwork Explorer tree, or Network Map, right-click an NE icon and select NE Explorer from the shortcut menu.

Click the NE Explorer button in the Domain Explorer, Subnetwork Explorer, or Network Map toolbar.

In the Alarm Browser or Alarm Log, choose Fault > Locate Alarm/Event (or click the Locate Alarm/Event Through NE Explorer tool).

Table 1-11 lists the NEs supported in CTM and describes the NE Explorer for each NE.


Note Not all NEs have an associated NE Explorer. See Table 1-11 for more information.


Table 1-11 NE Explorer and Node Property Information 

NE
Description
See

Unmanaged NE/Other Vendor Node

The node properties pane for the Unmanaged NE/Other Vendor Node displays information about unmanaged NEs or nodes from other vendors.

B.15  Unmanaged NE/Other Vendor Node Properties Pane, page B-215

Cisco Catalyst 6509

The NE Explorer is not available for the Cisco Catalyst 6509.

N/A

Cisco MDS 9000

The NE Explorer is not available for the MDS 9000. Equivalent functionality is provided by launching the Device Manager from CTM. The Device Manager is the local craft application used to manage MDS 9000 NEs. The Device Manager provides:

Device level status at a glance

Intuitive single-device configuration

Summary view of key port statistics

Drill-down for detailed information

Charting and printing

To launch the Device Manager, select an MDS 9000 node in the Domain Explorer tree and choose Configuration > Launch Device Manager. Alternatively, right-click an MDS 9000 node in the Domain Explorer tree and choose Launch Device Manager.

N/A

CRS-1

For the Cisco CRS-1, the NE Explorer consists of a tree on the left side of the window and a properties pane on the right. The tree displays all interfaces for the selected router, including entity name and slot number. The properties pane displays detailed information about the entity that is selected in the tree view. The NE Explorer data is ported from the craft web interface.

B.1  CRS-1 NE Explorer, page B-1

Cisco XR 12000

For the XR 12000, the NE Explorer consists of a tree on the left side of the window and a rack view graphic on the right. The tree provides a hierarchical view and alarm status of the device's racks, slots, ports, and line cards. Empty slots do not appear on the tree. The Rack View window displays the router processors, line cards, and chassis that the XR 12000 controls. Empty slots and unmanaged cards are visible in the Rack View window. The NE Explorer is ported from the XR 12000 craft web interface.

B.16  XR 12000 NE Explorer, page B-216

Cisco MGX Voice Gateway

The NE Explorer is not available for MGX Voice Gateway devices. Equivalent functionality is provided through the Chassis View and Configuration Center.

5.12  Configuring MGX Voice Gateway Devices, page 5-200

ONS 15216

For the ONS 15216, the NE Explorer consists of a properties pane that displays information about the NE. ONS 15216 NEs are grouped as active NEs or passive NEs.

B.3  ONS 15216 NE Explorer, page B-4

ONS 15302 and ONS 15305

The NE Explorer is not available for the ONS 15302 and ONS 15305. Equivalent functionality is provided by launching Cisco Edge Craft (CEC) from CTM. CEC is the local craft application used to manage ONS 15302 and ONS 15305 NEs. From the Domain Explorer, choose Configuration > ONS 15302 or ONS 15305 > Launch Cisco Edge Craft.

B.4  ONS 15302 and ONS 15305, page B-35

ONS 15310 CL

For the ONS 15310 CL, the NE Explorer consists of a tree on the left side of the window and a properties pane on the right. The tree displays all interfaces for the selected NE, including card name, slot number, and number of alarms present on the card. It also displays unprovisioned or unequipped slots. The properties pane displays detailed information about the entity that is selected in the tree view.

B.5  ONS 15310 CL NE Explorer, page B-36

ONS 15327

For the ONS 15327, the NE Explorer consists of a tree on the left side of the window and a properties pane on the right. The tree displays all interfaces for the selected NE, including card name, slot number, and number of alarms present on the card. It also displays unprovisioned or unequipped slots. The properties pane displays detailed information about the entity that is selected in the tree view.

B.6  ONS 15327 NE Explorer, page B-64

ONS 15454 SONET

For the ONS 15454 SONET and ONS 15454 SDH, the NE Explorer consists of a tree on the left side of the window and a properties pane on the right. The tree displays all interfaces for the selected NE, including card name, slot number, and number of alarms present on the card. It also displays unprovisioned or unequipped slots. The properties pane displays detailed information about the entity that is selected in the tree view.

B.7  ONS 15454 SONET NE Explorer, page B-91

ONS 15454 SDH

B.8  ONS 15454 SDH NE Explorer, page B-124

ONS 15501

For the ONS 15501, the NE Explorer consists of a properties pane that displays information about the NE.

B.9  ONS 15501 NE Explorer, page B-157

ONS 15530

For the ONS 15530 and ONS 15540, CTM launches CiscoView, a web-based configuration and monitoring tool. The real-time views provided by CiscoView deliver a continuously updated physical picture of device configuration and performance. CiscoView is embedded in flash memory in the ONS 15530 and ONS 15540 (but not in the ONS 15501) and available in a server-based version for all ONS 155xx NEs.

B.10  ONS 15530 and ONS 15540, page B-160

For more information about CiscoView, see Using CiscoView to Configure and Monitor ONS 15501, ONS 15530, and ONS 15540 NEs, page I-1

ONS 15540

ONS 15600 SONET

For the ONS 15600 SONET and ONS 15600 SDH, the NE Explorer consists of a tree on the left side of the window and a properties pane on the right. The tree displays all interfaces for the selected NE, including card name, slot number, and number of alarms present on the card. It also displays unprovisioned or unequipped slots. The properties pane displays detailed information about the entity that is selected in the tree view.

B.11  ONS 15600 SONET NE Explorer, page B-161

ONS 15600 SDH

B.12  ONS 15600 SDH NE Explorer, page B-188

ONS 15800/15801

For the ONS 15800, ONS 15801, and ONS 15808, the NE Explorer consists of a tree on the left side of the window and a properties pane on the right. The tree view displays information about the selected NE and the equipment it contains, such as card name, slot number, and number of alarms present on the card. It also displays unprovisioned or unequipped slots. The properties pane displays detailed information about the entity that is selected in the tree view.

B.13  ONS 15800 and ONS 15801 NE Explorer, page B-203

ONS 15808

B.14  ONS 15808 NE Explorer, page B-209



Note When you click the Create button in an NE Explorer tab and use the Create dialog box to add information, the information is committed directly on the NE. You do not have to click the Apply button at the bottom of the properties pane.

Also, if you use the Create button to commit information on the NE, any changes to the value governed by the Apply button will be lost if they have not already been applied. For example, if you check the Allow SNMP Set check box on the SNMP tab, then create a trap destination host before clicking the Apply button, the check box will revert back to unchecked after the create is completed and the screen refreshes with the new trap destination in the table.



Note You must click the Update button to retrieve the latest NE defaults, alarm profile, and VLAN list.



Note If nothing has been configured on the selected NE, the NE Explorer Properties pane appears blank and system defaults apply.


1.3.9  Control Panel

The Control Panel (Figure 1-10) allows you to view and modify certain client and server configuration parameters. Certain modifications take effect immediately and change the active server configuration. Other changes take effect when the server is restarted.

The left side of the window displays the tree, which contains the different CTM functions and services. The right side of the window displays the properties pane that corresponds to the selected client or server component.

Figure 1-10 Control Panel

Click the expand icon (+) next to the CTM functions and services in the tree structure to display the services contained within. For example, click NE Service to display the various ONS NE Services contained within the NE Service.

Table 1-12 describes the panes in the Control Panel.

Table 1-12 Panes in the Control Panel 

Pane
Description
For More Information, See

CTM Properties

View the current server and client configuration.

Table 4-33 on page 4-90

UI Properties

Configure application-specific parameters.

Table 4-17 on page 4-53

Security Properties

Configure CTM security parameters and specify usernames and passwords for NEs.

Table 8-15 on page 8-34

Recovery Properties

View a list of servers that clients will log into if access to the primary server is disrupted and view a list of critical services that the server monitors.

Table 9-12 on page 9-26

Database Properties

View database and backup configuration, pruning time periods, and information that the server uses to log into the Oracle database.

Table 4-1 on page 4-3

Alarm Configuration

View threshold and nonthreshold EMS alarm parameters.

Table 9-9 on page 9-17

Logging Properties

View configuration parameters about error information that the server records.

Table 9-19 on page 9-46

NE Service

Select an NE type and view and update server configuration, which includes port information, timing parameters, and NE backup parameters.

Table 4-21 on page 4-64

PM Service

Select an NE type and view and modify performance-related settings for that NE.

Table 10-2 on page 10-6

GateWay/TL1 Service

Stop, start, or configure parameters for the CTM GateWay/TL1 service.

Table 12-12 on page 12-14

GateWay/CORBA Service

Stop, start, or configure parameters for the CTM GateWay/CORBA service.

Table 12-34 on page 12-50

GateWay/SNMP Service

Stop, start, or configure parameters for the CTM GateWay/SNMP service.

Table 12-10 on page 12-9


1.4  What's New in CTM R6.0

Table 1-13 describes the new features in CTM R6.0.

Table 1-13 New Features in CTM R6.0 

New Feature
Description

Support for the Cisco XR 12000

Expands CTM's scope to include operations, administration, management, and provisioning (OAM&P) for the Cisco XR 12000 R3.2.

Support for the Cisco MDS 9000 Multilayer Director and Fabric Switch

CTM manages the Cisco MDS 9000 as a passive NE, with cross-launch of the Fabric Manager for inventory, fault, performance monitoring, and node provisioning.

Support for the Cisco MGX Voice Gateway

Expands CTM's scope to include OAM&P for the MGX 8880 Media Gateway and the voice-enabled MGX 8850/8830 Multiservice Switch:

MGX 8830 R5.0.20 and R5.2.0

MGX 8850 R5.0.20 and R5.2.0

MGX 8880 R5.0.20 and R5.2.0

Additional right-click menu options for CTC-based NEs

The following right-click menu options are now available in the Domain Explorer window for CTC-based NEs:

Launch CTC

Create Circuit

Create Link

Circuit Table

Ability for SuperUsers to change the user privileges of other users

SuperUsers can now modify the privileges of other users. When a SuperUser modifies another user's privileges, the Audit Log records the following information:

Username of the user who performed the operation

Username of the user whose privileges were changed

Previous profile and new profile

Timestamp

Success or failure indication

Ability for all CTM users to change their CTC passwords

All users can change their own CTC passwords in the Change Password dialog box and apply the new password to all NEs in their domain. Users with administrator privileges can enable or disable this functionality.

Ability to cancel queued jobs

In the Job Monitor table, you can cancel jobs that have a status of Queued.

Ability to exercise 4-fiber BLSR and MS-SPRings

The Exercise Ring functionality is extended to 4-fiber BLSR and MS-SPRings for all NEs that support 4-fiber ring configurations.

Ability to configure the default audit trail state

The Control Panel supports a new Default Audit Trail State option, with values of Enabled or Disabled. When an NE that supports audit trail is added or discovered, it adopts the default audit trail state setting.

CTM GateWay/CORBA enhancements

Enhancements to CTM GateWay/CORBA include:

Ability to set the port name through CTM GateWay/CORBA

Access to the lineCode and FrameFormat attributes for DS3 ports through CTM GateWay/CORBA

Access to the detectedLineType attribute for DS3E ports through CTM GateWay/CORBA

Ethernet and SAN PM data is available through CTM GateWay/CORBA

The Audit Log records an entry when a CTM GateWay/CORBA OSS profile is created, modified, or deleted

CTM GateWay/CORBA support for CRS-1, XR 12000, and MGX Voice Gateway devices (fault and inventory management)

A minimized icon is visible when the CTM client is locked

When the CTM client is locked, a minimized icon becomes available. Clicking the minimized icon brings the login dialog box to the foreground.

Ability to enable or disable CTM GateWay/TL1 echoing

CTM supports the echo of commands issued through the northbound TL1 gateway. With echoing, the application that issues the commands and logs messages has a record of each transaction.

A CTM user with the appropriate privileges can enable or disable echoing.

Ability to select NE software download defaults

In the Software Download wizard, the initial default selection in the Source area is the Server radio button. (If there are no files on the server, the Server drop-down list is blank.) When the Software Download wizard is closed and reopened, the Source value is set to the most recent selection. CTM remembers the setting for each user.

Improved prompts during client upgrade

When upgrading the CTM client, a server prompt indicates whether a newer version of the client is available, and the following message is displayed when the new installation is complete:

It is now safe to remove the old version of the client.

Ability to delete multiple links at once

In the Link table, you can now delete multiple links at once, rather than having to delete links one at a time.

Ability to find ONS 155xx circuits

The Edit > Find Circuit feature is extended to ONS 155xx NEs. The Find Circuit feature opens the Circuit table filtered to show all ONS 155xx circuits that match the search criteria.

Improved search capability in the Find dialog box

You can search for an NE, circuit, or IP address by entering partial information in the Find dialog box. For example, if you enter "123X" as the circuit name, the following circuits are reported in the Circuit table: 123XAAA, AA123XBB, AA123X.

Defaults in the Find dialog box

The Find dialog box uses Network Element/Group as the preselected default option, and remembers the last selection.

Logging of unknown user failed attempts

CTM allows you to monitor login attempts from unknown users and generates an alarm if the number of failed login attempts exceeds the maximum threshold. The Audit Log records an EMS server security alarm with the username of the unknown user and the message "Security violation: Unknown user <username> attempted to connect from <IP_address>." The IP address of the unknown user is locked, and can only be unlocked by a user with administrator-level privileges, or is unlocked automatically by CTM after the login disable period expires.

Ability to provision the maximum transmission unit (MTU) size in an L2 topology

The NE Explorer for ML cards allows read/write capabilities for the following parameters:

PoS Ports tab:

MTU

Enable/Disable Port

Ether Ports tab:

MTU

Speed

Duplex

Flow Control

Enable/Disable Port

For convenience, you can configure these parameters on a service. You do not have to configure the parameters individually on each card.

Support for jumbo frames for Cisco IOS-based cards

CTM supports the MTU size provisioning for each supported interface. This capability allows CTM to support jumbo frames of up to 9000 bytes.

Layer 3 representation for CRS-1 and XR 12000 NEs

The Network Map includes Layer 3 representation for the CRS-1 and XR 12000.

Physical links for MDS 9000 NEs

CTM allows you to manage physical links for MDS 9000 storage nodes.

CTM server name is displayed in the title bar

The CTM server name is shown next to the IP address in the title bar of the Domain Explorer, Subnetwork Explorer, and Dashboard windows.

Ability to perform software download, memory backup, memory restore, or software activation and revert for under-maintenance NEs

You can schedule software download, memory backup, memory restore, or software activation and revert for an under-maintenance NE whose communication state is Available. (The operation fails if the NE is out of service or the communication state is Unavailable.)

Real-time performance monitoring enhancements

Real-time PM data collection is extended to CRS-1 and XR 12000 NEs. Also, real-time graphs are introduced.

Fixed-length string for passwords

For added security, CTM hides the length of a password by showing a fixed-length string in every password field. The fixed-length string is 12 asterisks (*).

Support for the N/A option in the Affected Object tab of the alarm filter

When filtering alarms in the Alarm Browser or the Alarm Log, you can select N/A (Not Applicable) as an option in the Affected Object tab.

Ability to retrieve NE configuration files created during routine backups

A new Administration > Memory Backup Upload menu option allows you to view a list of backup files that have been saved on the server from the NEs. You can select one or more files from the list and save them to a local client workstation.

Ability to upload files from the server to the client for use in troubleshooting

If you have administrator-level privileges, you can use the Control Panel > Security Properties pane to collect log files from the server and save them to a local client workstation.

Alarm indication when an L2 topology is in wrap state

CTM introduces an alarm indication in the L2 Topology table if the PoS port is down or if the ring is in the Wrap state.

ONS 15216 EDFA2 enhancements

EDFA2 enhancements include:

In the EDFA2 Alarm Browser, the Description field displays any additional text reported in the alarm notification sent by the NE. If there is no description or additional text in the alarm notification sent by the NE, the Description field reports the node ID and physical location.

Ability to restrict the provisioning of values such as constant gain or constant power in the NE Explorer > Config tab, unless full provisioning privileges are granted.

Improved EDFA2 NE Explorer error messaging to explain the cause of an error. For example, if changes to values could not be saved, the error message lists which parameters were saved and which ones were not.

ONS 15216 EDFA3 enhancements

EDFA3 enhancements include:

Support for the following NE types in the ONS 15216 EDFA3 Equipment Inventory table (instead of Not Applicable):

Post Amplifier

Line Amplifier

Pre Amplifier

Other

Unknown

Note The NE type is reported as the equipment type in the Equipment Inventory table and reported as the NE type in the Domain Inventory table.

Ability to provision latitude and longitude for the ONS 15216 EDFA3. Changes are saved on the NE itself.

Ability to mark ML ports as Out of Service after the last assignment deletion

When you delete the last L2 assignment (port to bridge group) for an Ethernet port on an ML card, the port is automatically marked as Out of Service.


1.5  What Are the MGX Modules Supported by CTM?

Table 1-14 lists the MGX Voice Gateway modules that CTM manages.

Table 1-14 MGX Voice Gateway Modules and Cards 

Module
Front Card
Back Card

PXM45

PXM45/B

PXM-UI-S3

PXM-HD

PXM45/C

PXM-UI-S3/B

PXM-HD

PXM1-E

PXM1E-4-155

MGX-MMF-4-155/C

MGX-SMFIR-4-155/C

MGX-SMFLR-4-155/C

PXM1E-8-T3E3

SMB-8-T3

SMB-8-E3

PXM1E-8-155

SFP-8-155

MCC-8-155

PXM1E-16-T1E1

MCC-16-E1

RBBN-16-T1E1

PXM1E-COMBO

MGX-T3E3-155

RPM-PR

MGX-RPM-PR-256

MGX-RJ45-4E/B

MGX-RJ45-FE

MGX-MMF-FE

MGX-RPM-1FE-CP

RPM-XF

MGX-RPM-XF-512

MGX-1OC12POS-IR

MGX-1GE

MGX-2GE

MGX-2OC12POS

AXSM/B

AXSM-16-T3E3/B

SMB-8-T3

SMB-8-E3

AXSM-16-155/B

MMF-8-155-MT/B

SMFIR-8-155-LC/B

SMFLR-8-155-LC/B

SMB-4-155

AXSM-4-622/B

SMFIR-2-622/B

SMFLR-2-622/B

AXSM-1-2488/B

SMFSR-1-2488/B

SMFLR-1-2488/B

AXSME

AXSM-32-T1E1-E

MCC-16-E1

RBBN-16-T1E1

VXSM

MGX-VXSM-155

VXSM-BC-4-155

MGX-VXSM-T1E1

VXSM-BC-24T1E1

MGX-VXSM-6-T3

VXSM-BC-3T3

VXSM redundant backcard

VXSM-R-BC

RCON-1TO5-8850

VISM-PR

MGX-VISM-PR-8T1

AX-RJ48-8T1

AX-R-RJ48-8T1

MGX-VISM-PR-8E1

AX-RJ48-8E1

AX-R-RJ48-8E1

AX-SMB-8E1

AX-R-SMB-8E1

SRME/B

MGX-SRME/B

MGX-SMFIR-1-155

MGX-STM1-EL-1

MGX-BNC-3T3-M

SRME

MGX-SRME

MGX-SMFIR-1-155

MGX-STM1-EL-1

MPSM

MPSM-8-T1E1

AX-RJ48-8T1

AX-RJ48-8E1

MPSM-16-8T1E1

RBBN-16-T1E1-1N

MCC-16-E1-1N

MPSM-T3E3-155

BNC-3T3E3

SFP-2-155

MPSM redundant back card

RED-16-T1E1


1.6  General Features of CTM

This section describes some of the general CTM features.


Note CTM users are subject to user privileges. Depending on your user profile, you might not see certain windows or have access to certain functions. For more information about user privileges, see 8.3.3  User Privilege Profiles, page 8-5.


1.6.1  Window Views

All CTM window views have a menu bar, toolbar, and status bar as described in Table 1-15.

Table 1-15 CTM Window Views 

Item
Icon
Description

Menu Bar

Some of the window menus are context-sensitive. All windows have a Window menu and a Help menu.

Toolbar

Each window has a toolbar with context-sensitive tools. All windows have a Help tool and most have a Quick Help tool.

For a detailed description of a particular window, click the Help tool (or choose Help > Current Window) to launch the online help.

Status Bar

All windows have a status bar that reports the server time and contains the following icons:

Click the Return to Domain Explorer status bar icon to return to the Domain Explorer window. (The Domain Explorer window itself does not have this status bar icon.)

Click the Open Dashboard status bar icon to open the CTM Dashboard.

Click the Reset to Default Window Size status bar icon to reset the window to its default size.

This NE connectivity icon indicates that CTM is currently connected to all NEs.

This NE connectivity icon indicates that CTM has lost connectivity to one or more NEs.



Note When you switch to a different program and then return to CTM, the CTM dialog boxes might be hidden behind another CTM window or dialog box. The CTM client might appear frozen because the hidden dialog box requires user action. On a Windows workstation, press Alt-Tab to display all running processes. Continue to press Tab (while keeping Alt depressed) to select the icon for the Java process. This will position the CTM dialog box as the top active window. On a Solaris workstation, minimize the open windows until the CTM dialog box is visible.


1.6.2  Table Views

All CTM table views share common characteristics, as described in Table 1-16.

Table 1-16   CTM Table Views 

Item
Tool
Description

Page Back and Page Forward

Some CTM tables return large numbers of rows. To support large tables, CTM provides a paging feature. If more than 1,000 rows of data are returned, data is grouped in pages of up to 1,000 rows. You can page forward and page back to view the entire set of data.

Page Back—Moves the table backward by one page if there is more than one page of data.

Page Forward—Moves the table forward by one page if there is more than one page of data.

Split-Pane View

Table views have two panes: a top pane and a bottom pane. The top pane displays the rows in the table. The bottom pane displays a detailed description of the selected row in the top pane. The bottom pane improves the readability of row attributes that might be truncated in the top pane. You can resize these panes by dragging the splitter bar up or down.

Note The resized panes will return to their default sizes the next time you open the table.

Rearrange and Resize Columns

To rearrange columns in any table, select and drag the column title. To resize columns, drag the column separator line to the left or the right.

Note The rearranged or resized columns will return to their default positions and sizes the next time you open the table.

Sort

You can sort columns using the up or down arrows. The up arrow represents ascending order; the down arrow represents descending order. The orange-colored arrow identifies the column that is the primary key in the current sort. To sort the data, simply click the column title.

Filter

Click the Filter tool to filter the data according to criteria that you select, and then display the results in a table. Some tables have a time-based Filter tool that allows you to filter data for the past 4 hours, past 8 hours, past 12 hours, past day, or past week.

Note Clicking Refresh Data resets the time-based filter. The filter retrieves data for the specified interval, beginning when the Refresh Data tool is clicked. For example, if the specified interval is Past Hour and Refresh Data is clicked at 3:02 p.m., the filter retrieves data that occurred between 2:02 p.m. and 3:02 p.m. If the specified interval is From Now Onward at 8:00 p.m., data is retrieved beginning at 8:00 p.m. and the time is reset only after From Now Onward is clicked again.

Export

Click the Export Data to File tool to export the tabular data to a file.

Note You can export only data that the current table tool has cached (which might be larger than what is visible if there is a vertical scroll bar on the view), and not the entire data set available in the database.

HTML Report

Click the Generate HTML Report tool to generate an HTML report based on the data in the table. You can generate a report for selected rows or for all rows in the current page. A maximum of 1,000 rows per page can be exported. After making your selection, click OK; the browser window appears with the HTML report. The report is saved automatically on the client system. (The default directory is C:\Cisco\TransportManagerClient<version_number>\reports or /opt/CiscoTransportManagerClient<version_number>/reports.) Use your browser's Print option to print the report.


1.6.3  Tree Views

All CTM tree views share common characteristics, as described in Table 1-17.

Table 1-17   CTM Tree Views 

Item
Tool
Description

Split-Pane View

Tree views have two panes: a left pane and a right pane. The left pane represents the topology tree; the right pane shows the properties of the entity selected in the tree.

Expand

Click the Expand tool (or choose Edit > Expand) to expand the management domain or group, to display all groups or NEs within the selected management domain or group.

Collapse

Click the Collapse tool (or choose Edit > Collapse) to collapse the management domain or group, to hide all groups or NEs within the selected management domain or group.

Right-Click Options

Every selectable object has right-click options. Right-click a selectable object to view a brief menu that allows you to access more detailed information about the object.


1.6.4  Launching Context-Sensitive Information

Many CTM views have a specific selection context, meaning that the same window will have a different look depending on where it was launched.

For example, if you launch the Alarm Browser from the management domain node, the browser shows all NE and EMS alarms (if you have permission to see EMS alarms). If you launch the Alarm Browser from a subnetwork, group, or NE node, the browser shows only NE alarms. If you launch the Alarm Browser from the Dashboard, the browser shows all NE alarms for the CTM domain.

As another example, for circuit creation, the context of the launch point determines the choice of nodes that can be selected for source and destination nodes.

1.6.5  Finding Data

The Domain Explorer and NE Explorer windows have a Find feature that you can use to locate specific data.

1.6.5.1  Finding Data in the Domain Explorer

In the Domain Explorer, you use the Find dialog box to search for circuits, NEs, or groups.


Step 1 In the Domain Explorer window, choose Edit > Find. The Find dialog box opens.

Step 2 From the Object Type drop-down list, choose one of the following options:

SONET Circuits

SDH Circuits

Network Element/Group

Metro DWDM Circuits

Step 3 To search for SONET, SDH, or metro DWDM circuits, enter the following information in the Object Properties area, in any combination:

Circuit name

Description

Customer ID (not applicable to metro DWDM circuits)

Service ID (not applicable to metro DWDM circuits)

NE ID

Circuit type

Circuit size

Number of VLANs (not applicable to metro DWDM circuits)


Tip In the Circuit Name, Description, Customer ID, Service ID, and NE ID fields, you can enter a percentage character (%) as a wildcard. You can search for a partial string inserted between percentage characters, such as %CMP%.


Step 4 To search for a particular NE or group, enter the following information in the Object Properties area:

NE or group name

IP address

Description


Tip To make the search noncase-sensitive, check the Ignore Case check box. The search always starts from the root node and returns to the root node after reaching the last node.



Tip In the Name, IP Address, and Description fields, you can search for a partial string without entering a wildcard character (%). For example, in the IP Address field, you can enter 1.2 to search for all IP addresses that contain 1.2 as octets.


Step 5 Click OK.

Step 6 To search for the next instance of the specified search object, choose Edit > Find Next in the Domain Explorer window.


1.6.5.2  Finding Data in the NE Explorer

In the NE Explorer window, you use the Find dialog box to search for a particular node or card by specifying the node or card name.


Step 1 In the Domain Explorer window, select an NE node and choose Configuration > NE Explorer (or click the Open NE Explorer tool).

Step 2 In the NE Explorer window, choose Edit > Find (or click the Find tool). The Find dialog box opens.

Step 3 In the Find text field, enter the search text. The drop-down list displays a list of the search text you entered; your most recent entry appears at the top of the list.


Tip To make the search case-sensitive, check the Match Case check box. The search always starts from the root node and returns to the root node after reaching the last node.


Step 4 Click OK.


Note The Match Case check box setting is not saved. When you initiate a search, the case sensitivity of the search depends on the current setting in the Match Case check box. If you select a previously specified search string from the drop-down list, the search does not remember the Match Case check box setting that you specified in the previous search string.


Step 5 To search for the next instance of the specified search object, choose Edit > Find Next (or click the Find Next tool) in the NE Explorer window.


1.6.5.3  Finding Data in the Diagnostics Center, Statistics Report, Chassis View, and Configuration Center


Step 1 In the Diagnostics Center, Statistics Report, Chassis View, or Configuration Center, enter the object name or the IP address in the text box at the left side of the window above the hierarchy tree. You can enter the object name or IP address in full or partially.

Step 2 Click the Find tool. If found, the hierarchy tree displays the node or trunk that contains the search text.

Step 3 If there are multiple instances of the search text, click the Find Next or Find Previous tools to show the next or previous node or trunk.


1.6.6  Filtering Data

Filter dialog boxes filter user-specified data. Many CTM tables have Filter dialog boxes that enable you to filter data in different ways and display the results in a table. If the filter supports wildcards, you can enter a percentage character (%) as a wildcard character to support broader searches.

1.6.7  Exporting Data

Most CTM tables support an export function to export the table contents to a flat file. The Export dialog box allows you to export the data as comma-separated values (CSVs) or tab-separated values (TSVs), which are formats commonly used to import data into spreadsheet and database applications for further analysis and manipulation. You can also select a user-specified character as a separator.


Tip If you export data to Microsoft Excel, save the exported file with ".csv" as the filename extension.


To open the Export dialog box, click the Export Data to File tool (or choose File > Export) in a table. Table 1-18 describes the fields in the Export dialog box. After making your selections, click OK to export the data.

Table 1-18 Field Descriptions for the Export Dialog Box 

Field
Description
Field Separator

Comma Separated

If selected, the data is exported as comma-separated values.

Tab Separated

If selected, the data is exported as tab-separated values.

Other

If selected, the data is exported with the separator that you specify in the Other text field.

Note If you specify a character as a separator and your data contains the same character, the character in the data is automatically enclosed in double quotes. This allows the spreadsheet or database application to understand that the character is part of your data. Regardless of whether you select Comma Separated, Tab Separated, or Other, CTM automatically encloses text in double quotes if it has a separator.

Export

Selected row(s)

If selected, only the selected rows in the current page are exported.

All rows in current page

If selected, all rows in the current page are exported.

Export Data to File

Export Data to File

By default, exported data is stored in the C:\Cisco\TransportManagerClient<version_number>\exports or /opt/CiscoTransportManagerClient<version_number>/exports directory under the name that you provide in the Export Data to File text box. Click Browse to change the file location.


1.6.8  Exporting Alarms and Events

In addition to exporting directly from the Alarm Browser or the Alarm Log, CTM provides an Event Export Manager that allows you to export alarms and events as they occur to the file of your choice. You can also set various export parameters to refine the export. You can choose to export events continuously or to export a specific number of events.

To export events continuously, click the Start Export tool (see Figure 1-11).

Figure 1-11 Start Export Tool

The Event Export Manager will export events continuously until you click the Stop Export tool (see Figure 1-12), or until the current CTM session ends, whichever occurs first.

Figure 1-12 Stop Export Tool

To export a specific number of events, check the Stop export when check box, enter a number of records, and click the Start Export tool. The export will stop after the specified number of events are logged.

Table 1-19 describes the fields in the Event Export Manager window.

Table 1-19 Field Descriptions for the Event Export Manager 

Field
Description

Network Elements

Allows you to export alarms (NE alarms and CTM-specific EMS alarms) and events for selected NEs. Choose from the list of available NEs and add them to the Selected list. If you have the appropriate user permission and you want to export EMS alarms and events, check the Export CTM EMS Alarms/Events check box.

Severity

Allows you to export events that have a severity of Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Indeterminate, and/or Cleared.

Export To

Allows you to export the file to a given destination. Click Browse to browse for a particular destination. You can also overwrite or append the file.

Export Options

Allows you to specify the field separator type. Types include Comma, Tab, Semicolon, or Other, an option you use to specify a different separator. You can also check the Stop export when check box and enter a number of records to instruct the Event Export Manager to stop exporting after the user-specified number of records are logged.


1.6.9  Refreshing Data

Many CTM windows have a Refresh Data toolbar icon that refreshes all data being displayed by CTM. There are two versions of the Refresh Data icons, and both refresh data from either the server or the database:

The Refresh Data icon shown in Figure 1-13 flashes when updates are available. This icon has two modes: manual refresh and autorefresh.

Figure 1-13 Refresh Data Icon that Flashes when Updates Are Available

The Refresh Data icon shown in Figure 1-14 does not notify you that updates are available. You must click the icon to retrieve updated data.

Figure 1-14 Refresh Data Icon that Does Not Flash when Updates Are Available


Note Clicking Refresh Data in the Domain Explorer window refreshes all data for the entire CTM client and closes all open windows (except the Domain Explorer window). Depending on the number of NEs in your network, you might experience a delay while the data refreshes. After the Domain Explorer refreshes, the status bar shows "Refresh Data Complete."


If you click Refresh Data in the NE Explorer window, a dialog box opens with the following prompt: "How would you like to synchronize this NE's configuration?" Choose one of the following options:

From Server—The data in the NE Explorer is refreshed with the values in the database.

From Network Element—The database is refreshed with the current configuration on the NE and the NE Explorer is updated accordingly.


NoteIt takes longer to refresh data from the NE than from the server.

When a chassis contains cards that have many interfaces (such as the DS1_E1_56, DS3_EC3_48, or DS3XM_12 cards), it might take 4 minutes or longer for the NE Explorer to refresh data from the NE.


1.6.10  Pruning the Database

CTM automatically prunes various categories of CTM data that tend to accumulate over time and would otherwise exhaust the available disk space. You can configure the following categories of data for automatic pruning:

PM data

FM data

Audit log data

Error log data

NE audit trail data

Self-monitor data

Job monitor data

The following options are provided to control the pruning for each category of data:

Enable/disable

Retention period (1 to 1,000 days)

Time of day to perform the pruning

1.6.11  Using MGX Voice Gateway Popup Menus

MGX Voice Gateway popup menu options are enabled based on your security profile. To display the popup menus, you can right-click from the following options:

Away from the network in the graphical view.

A network from the hierarchical tree or graphical view.

A node from the hierarchical tree or graphical view.

A card, line, path, or port from the hierarchical tree or graphical view.

Table 1-20 describes the popup menu options available in the Configuration Center, Diagnostic Center, Chassis View, and Statistics Report applications.

Table 1-20 Popup Menu Options in Configuration Center, Diagnostic Center, Chassis View, and Statistics Report Applications 

Option
Description

Chassis View

Launches the Chassis View after you select a node from the hierarchical tree.

Configuration Center

Launches the Configuration Center with or without selecting an object.

Diagnostics Center

Launches the Diagnostics Center. You must select an object from the hierarchical tree.

Statistics Report

Launches the Statistics Report with or without selecting an object.

Administration

Audit Trail

Launches the Audit Trail Viewer window.

Telnet

Establishes a Telnet session with the switch.

SSH1

Connects to a node by using a secured shell.

View Management

Sort

Sorts the tree.

1 SSH = Secure Shell Protocol.


1.6.12  Using Mnemonics

All CTM menus and menu options have a uniquely assigned mnemonic to support keyboard access to menu items in addition to the mouse. The underlined letter within a menu item indicates the mnemonic keystroke. For example, to exit the CTM application, enter Alt+f (for the File menu); then, enter x (Exit).

1.6.13  Using the Online Help

The online help provides a detailed explanation of each CTM GUI window and dialog box.

To view the online help for any CTM window, you have two options:

Choose Help > Current Window

Click the Help icon (see Figure 1-15)

To view the online help for any CTM dialog box, click the Help icon within the dialog box.

Figure 1-15 Help Icon


Tip Use the print option in the browser that displays the online help to print the selected page.


1.6.14  Using the Pin Tool

The Dashboard, Configuration Center, Diagnostic Center, Chassis View, and Statistics Report applications have a pin tool. When the pin point is up, the tool is pinned up, and when it is down, the tool is pinned down. The function of the pin tool differs depending on where it is used:

If you click the pin tool in the Dashboard window, the window is pinned down, meaning that it is not brought to the foreground by default. If you click the pin tool again, the Dashboard window is pinned up, meaning that it is brought to the foreground each time an update occurs (alarm counts change, NE count changes, and so on).

If you click the pin tool in the Configuration Center, Diagnostic Center, Chassis View, or Statistics Report window, that instance of the application window is pinned down, and you can open another instance of the application (for example, from the Tools menu). If the pin tool is pinned up, then you cannot open another instance of the application.

If you click the pin tool in the Configuration pane of the Configuration Center, Diagnostic Center, Chassis View, or Statistics Report application, that pane is pinned down, and you can open an additional Configuration pane without overwriting the open pane.

1.6.15  Action Buttons

Table 1-21 describes the actions that can be performed using the buttons at the bottom of CTM windows and dialog boxes.

Table 1-21 Action Buttons 

Button
Description

Add >

Click to select one or more available options; then, click Add > to add the selected option(s) to the list of selected options.

Note Hold down the Shift key to select more than one option, or hold down the Ctrl key to select more than one option nonsequentially.

Apply

Commits any changes to user-defined fields to the CTM database and applies the changes to the NE.

Back

Returns to the previous screen. (In the first screen, Back is not available.)

Cancel

Replaces any changes to user-defined fields with the previous values. If the current window is a wizard, the wizard closes when you click the Cancel button.

Close

Closes the window.

Finish

Creates the service and closes the wizard.

Help

Launches the online help for the window.

Maximize

Click the Maximize button to expand the window. After you expand the window, the Maximize button changes to a Reset Size button.

Next

Temporarily saves the current information and displays the next screen. Notice that in the last screen, Next is replaced by Finish.

OK

Saves the selections made in the window.

< Remove

Click to select one or more options; then, click < Remove to remove the selected option(s) and return them to the Available list.

Note Hold down the Shift key to select more than one option sequentially, or hold down the Ctrl key to select more than one option nonsequentially.

Reset

Resets the values displayed in the window to the Cisco default values.

Reset Size

Click the Reset Size button to return the window to its original size.

Save

Commits any changes to user-defined fields to the CTM database and applies the changes to the NE.

Unlock

Unlocks the CTM session and displays the Domain Explorer.

Update

Retrieves all current configuration settings for the selected NE. The time stamp Last Update Time: <date> <time> indicates the last time the configuration settings were retrieved for the NE. Any changes to user-defined fields that have not been applied are not updated with the fields' current configuration settings for the selected NE.


1.7  Where to Find CTM Documentation

A Where to Find Cisco Transport Manager Documentation leaflet ships with your product. This leaflet contains information about how to locate CTM documentation online and on the documentation CD-ROM.

1.8  Related Documentation

This section describes the documentation related to CTM R6.0 that is available.

1.8.1  CTM Documentation Set

This guide is one part of the CTM R6.0 documentation set. Figure 1-16 shows the complete documentation set.


Note You can access the most current CTM R6.0 documentation online at http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/rtrmgmt/optnet/ctm/index.htm.


Figure 1-16 CTM Documentation Set

The CTM documentation set comprises the following guides:

1. Release Notes for Cisco Transport Manager Release 6.0—Describes the caveats for CTM R6.0.

2. Cisco Transport Manager Release 6.0 Installation Guide—Explains how to install CTM R6.0 and how to upgrade from previous releases.

3. Cisco Transport Manager Release 6.0 User Guide—This guide. Describes how to use the CTM software, which consists of user applications and tools for network discovery, network configuration, connection management, fault management, system administration, and security management.

4. Cisco Transport Manager Release 6.0 GateWay/CORBA User Guide and Programmer Manual—Describes the CTM GateWay/CORBA Northbound Interface product that is available for CTM R6.0. This document serves as a reference for developers of Operations Support System (OSS) applications that work with the CTM GateWay/CORBA interface.

5. Cisco Transport Manager Release 6.0 Database Schema—Describes the database schema that CTM uses to store information in a Structured Query Language (SQL) database such as the Oracle database. This document is designed for users who need to create their own reports without using CTM.

6. Cisco Transport Manager Release 6.0 High Availability Installation Guide—Explains how to install CTM in a high availability (HA) environment.

1.8.2  Related Cisco NE Documentation

The documents listed in Table 1-22 are available in print, on CD-ROM, and on Cisco.com.

Table 1-22 Related Cisco NE Documentation 

Cisco Product
Document Title

Cisco Catalyst 6509

Catalyst 6500 Series Configuration Notes

Catalyst 6500 Series Switch Installation Guide

Catalyst 6500 Series Switch Module Installation Guide

Release Notes for Catalyst 6500 Series Software

Cisco CRS-1

CRS-1 Series Carrier Routing System Getting Started Guide

Cisco Craft Works Interface User Guide

Cisco CRS-1 Series Carrier Routing System Interface Configuration Guide

Cisco CRS-1 Series Carrier Routing System Getting Started Guide

Cisco CRS-1 Series Carrier Routing System Regulatory Compliance and Safety Information

Cisco IOS XR XML API Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco CRS-1 Series Carrier Routing System

Cisco XR 12000

Regulatory Compliance and Safety Information for Cisco 12000 Series Routers

Cisco CRS-1 and IOS XR Software Documentation, Release 3.2

Note Documents listed for the Cisco CRS-1 also apply to the Cisco XR 12000.

Cisco MDS 9000 Multilayer Director and Fabric Switch

Cisco MDS 9000 Family Command Reference

Cisco MDS 9000 Family Configuration Guide

Cisco MDS 9xxx Series Hardware Installation Guide

Cisco MDS 9000 Family Fabric Manager Configuration Guide

Cisco MDS SAN-OS Release Compatibility Matrix for IBM SAN Volume Controller Software for Cisco MDS 9000

Cisco MDS 9xxx Family CIM Programming Reference Guide

Cisco MDS 9000 Family System Messages Guide

Cisco Security Advisory: OpenSSL Vulnerability in the Cisco MDS 9000 Family

Cisco MDS 9000 Family Software Upgrade and Downgrade Guide

Cisco MDS 9000 Family Fabric Manager User Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco MDS 9xxx Family

Cisco MGX 8880 Voice Gateway

Voice-enabled MGX 8850/8830 Multiservice Switch

Cisco MGX 8850 (PXM1E/PXM45), MGX 8950, MGX 8830, and MGX 8880 Command Reference, Release 5

Cisco MGX 8850 (PXM1E/PXM45), MGX 8950, MGX 8830, and MGX 8880 Configuration Guide, Release 5

Route Processor Module

Voice Switch Services Documentation

Voice Interworking Service Module, Release 3.2

MGX Error Messages, Release 5

Voice Interworking Service Module, Release 3.3

ONS 15216

Cisco ONS 15216 EDFA Operations Guide

Cisco ONS 15216 EDFA2 Operations Guide

Cisco ONS 15216 EDFA3 Operations Guide

Cisco ONS 15216 FlexLayer User Guide

Cisco ONS 15216 OSC-1510 User Guide

Cisco ONS 15216 System Dispersion Compensation Unit User Guide

Installing Cisco ONS 15216 100 GHz DWDM Filters

Installing Cisco ONS 15216 OADMs

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15216 EDFA

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15216 OADM

Upgrade Procedures for the Cisco ONS 15216 EDFA2

ONS 15302

Cisco ONS 15302 Installation and Operations Guide

Cisco ONS 15302 Quick Installation Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15302

ONS 15305

Cisco ONS 15305 Installation and Operations Guide

Cisco ONS 15305 Quick Installation Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15305

ONS 15310

Cisco ONS 15310 Network Defaults

Cisco ONS 15310 Procedure Guide

Cisco ONS 15310 Reference Manual

Cisco ONS 15310 Troubleshooting Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15310

ONS 15327

Cisco ONS 15327 Procedure Guide

Cisco ONS 15327 Reference Manual

Cisco ONS 15327 Software Upgrade Guide

Cisco ONS 15327 Troubleshooting Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 and Cisco ONS 15327 TL1 Command Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 and Cisco ONS 15327 TL1 Command Quick Reference Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15327

ONS 15454 SDH

Cisco ONS 15454 SDH Procedure Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 SDH Reference Manual

Cisco ONS 15454 SDH Software Upgrade Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 SDH Troubleshooting Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 SONET/SDH ML-Series Multilayer Ethernet Card Software Feature and Configuration Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15454 SDH

ONS 15454 SONET

Cisco ONS 15454 and Cisco ONS 15327 TL1 Command Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 and Cisco ONS 15327 TL1 Command Quick Reference Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 Procedure Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 Reference Manual

Cisco ONS 15454 Software Upgrade Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 SONET/SDH ML-Series Multilayer Ethernet Card Software Feature and Configuration Guide

Cisco ONS 15454 Troubleshooting Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15454

ONS 15501

Cisco ONS 15501 User Guide

Regulatory Compliance and Safety Information for the Cisco ONS 15500 Series

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15501

ONS 15530

Cisco ONS 15530 Configuration Guide and Command Reference

Cisco ONS 15530 Hardware Installation Guide

Cisco ONS 15530 MIB Quick Reference

Cisco ONS 15530 Optical Transport Turn-up and Test Guide

Cisco ONS 15530 Planning and Design Guide

Cisco ONS 15530 System Alarms and Error Messages

Network Management for the Cisco ONS 15530

Quick Reference for the Cisco ONS 15530 TL1 Commands

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15530

ONS 15540 ESP

Cisco ONS 15540 ESP Configuration Guide and Command Reference

Cisco ONS 15540 ESP Hardware Installation Guide

Cisco ONS 15540 ESP MIB Quick Reference

Cisco ONS 15540 ESP Planning and Design Guide

Cisco ONS 15540 ESP Troubleshooting Guide

Network Management for the Cisco ONS 15540 ESP

Optical Transport Turn-Up and Test Guide

Regulatory Compliance and Safety Information for the Cisco ONS 15500 Series

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15540 ESP

ROMMON and Functional Image Release Notes

ONS 15540 ESPx

Cisco ONS 15540 ESPx Cleaning Procedures for Fiber Optic Connections

Cisco ONS 15540 ESPx Configuration Guide and Command Reference

Cisco ONS 15540 ESPx Hardware Installation Guide

Cisco ONS 15540 ESPx MIB Quick Reference

Cisco ONS 15540 ESPx Planning and Design Guide

Cisco ONS 15540 ESPx System Alarms and Error Messages

Network Management for the Cisco ONS 15540 ESPx

Optical Transport Turn-Up and Test Guide

Quick Reference for the Cisco ONS 15540 ESP and Cisco ONS 15540 ESPx TL1 Commands

Regulatory Compliance and Safety Information for the Cisco ONS 15500 Series

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15540 ESPx

ROMMON and Functional Image Release Notes

ONS 15600 SDH

Cisco ONS 15600 SDH Procedure Guide

Cisco ONS 15600 SDH Reference Manual

Cisco ONS 15600 SDH TL1 Test Access

Cisco ONS 15600 SDH Troubleshooting Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15600 SDH

ONS 15600 SONET

Cisco ONS 15600 Procedure Guide

Cisco ONS 15600 Reference Manual

Cisco ONS 15600 TL1 Command Guide

Cisco ONS 15600 Troubleshooting Guide

Release Notes for the Cisco ONS 15600

ONS 15800

Cisco ONS 15800 DWDM System Common Platform Installation Manual

Cisco ONS 15800 DWDM System Description

Cisco ONS 15800 DWDM System Installation, Setup, and Test Manual

Cisco ONS 15800 DWDM system module handbooks

Cisco ONS 15800 DWDM System Technical Specifications Manual

Cisco Photonics Local Terminal Software Administrator Manual for the ONS 15800 System

Cisco Photonics Tool Kit Software Administrator Manual for the ONS 15800 System

TL1 Message Manual for the Cisco ONS 15800/15801 System

ONS 15801

Cisco ONS 15801 DWDM System Common Platform Installation Manual

Cisco ONS 15801 DWDM System Description Manual

Cisco ONS 15801 DWDM System Installation, Setup, and Test Manual

Cisco ONS 15801 DWDM system module handbooks

Cisco ONS 15801 DWDM System Technical Specifications Manual

Cisco Photonics Local Terminal Software Administrator Manual for the ONS 15801 System

Cisco Photonics Tool Kit Software Administrator Manual for the ONS 15801 System

TL1 Message Manual for the Cisco ONS 15800/15801 System

ONS 15808

Cisco ONS 15808 DWDM System Common Platform Installation Manual

Cisco ONS 15808 DWDM System Description Manual

Cisco ONS 15808 DWDM System Extended Long Haul Installation, Setup, and Test Manual

Cisco ONS 15808 DWDM System Long Haul Installation, Setup, and Test Manual

Cisco ONS 15808 DWDM System Module Technical Description Manual

Cisco Wavelength Director Software Installation Manual for the ONS 15808 System

TL1 Command Reference for the Cisco ONS 15808 DWDM System


The following related documentation can be used for reference:

ITU-T G.774: SDH—Management information for the network element view

ITU-T G.784: SDH management

ITU-T G.826: Error performance parameters and objectives for international, constant bit rate digital paths at or above the primary rate

ITU-T G.829: Error performance events for SDH multiplex and regenerator sections

ITU-T G.831: Management capabilities of transport networks based on SDH

ITU-T G.872: Architecture of optical transport networks

ITU-T G.7712: Architecture and specification of data communication networks

ITU-T M.3010: Principles of a telecommunications management network

ITU-T M.3100: Generic network information model

ITU-T M.3400: TMN management functions

ITU-T X.721: Information technology-Open systems interconnection-Structure of management information: Definition of management information

ITU-T X.731: Information technology-Open systems interconnection-Systems management: State management function

ITU-T X.733: Information technology-Open systems interconnection-Systems management: Alarm reporting function

ITU-T X.734: Information technology-Open systems interconnection-Systems management: Event report management function

ITU-T X.735: Information technology-Open systems interconnection-Systems management: Log control function

ITU-T X.736: Information technology-Open systems interconnection-Systems management: Security alarm reporting function

SQL*Plus User's Guide and Reference, Release 9.2

Telcordia GR-253-CORE: SONET transport systems: Common generic criteria

Telcordia GR-815-CORE: Generic requirements for Network Elements/Network Systems (NE/NS) security

Telcordia GR-820-CORE: Generic digital transmission surveillance

Telcordia GR-831-CORE: Operations applications messages

Telcordia GR-2998-CORE: Generic requirements for Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) element management systems

Telcordia GR-3000-CORE: Generic requirements for SONET element management systems

TMF 513: Multi-technology network management business agreement, version 2.0

TMF 608: Multi-technology network management information agreement, version 2.0

TMF 814: Multi-technology network management solution set, version 2.0

TMF 814A: Multi-technology network management solution set, TM forum implementation template guidelines, version 2.0