Dlp-B214 Change The Service State For A Port - Cisco ONS 15327 Procedure Manual

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NTP-B124 Provision a Point-to-Point Network

DLP-B214 Change the Service State for a Port

Purpose
Tools/Equipment
Prerequisite Procedures
Required/As Needed
Onsite/Remote
Security Level
To provision Ethernet ports, see the
Note
or the
On the node view shelf graphic, double-click the card with the port(s) you want to put in or out of service.
Step 1
The card view appears.
Click the Provisioning > Line tabs.
Step 2
Under State, choose one of the following:
Step 3
If you change the state to OOS-AINS, set the soak period time in the AINS Soak field. This is the amount
Step 4
of time that the state will stay in OOS-AINS state after the signal is continuously received before
changing to IS.
Note
Click Apply.
Step 5
As needed, repeat this task for each port.
Step 6
Step 7
Return to your originating procedure (NTP).
Cisco ONS 15327 Procedure Guide, R4.0
4-6
This task places a port in service or removes a port from service.
None
DLP-B60 Log into CTC, page 2-23
As needed
Onsite or remote
Provisioning or higher
"DLP-B222 Provision G-Series Ethernet Ports" task on page
IS—The port is in-service.
OOS—The port is out-of-service. Traffic is not passed on the port until the service state is changed
to IS, OOS_MT, or OOS_AINS.
OOS_MT—The port is in a maintenance state. The maintenance state does not interrupt traffic flow,
alarm reporting is suppressed, and loopbacks are allowed. Raised fault conditions, whether their
alarms are reported or not, can be retrieved on the CTC Conditions tab or by using the TL1
RTRV-COND command. Use OOS_MT for testing or to suppress alarms temporarily. Change the
state to IS, OOS, or OOS_AINS when testing is complete.
OOS_AINS—The port is in an auto-inservice state; alarm reporting is suppressed, but traffic is
carried and loopbacks are allowed. Raised fault conditions, whether their alarms are reported or not,
can be retrieved on the CTC Conditions tab or by using the TL1 RTRV-COND command.
A continuously valid signal must be received for the duration of the soak period before the state
makes a transition to the IS state. For example, if the soak timer is set for eight hours, and you
receive an error after two hours, the timer is reset for another eight-hour period. This cycle
continues until an error-free signal is received for an eight-hour period.
"DLP-B220 Provision E-Series Ethernet Ports" task on page 5-69
Chapter 4
Turn Up Network
5-77.
March 2003

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