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TOTAL ACCESS MX2800 CONTROLLER CARD

61205288L1-22C 0409

MX2800 CCU
CLEI: L1 M3C3FDWA_ _ L2 M3C3GDXA_ _

DESCRIPTION
The Total Access MX2800 Controller Card (CCU) is a plug-in unit for the MX2800 chassis that provides 1:1 redundancy for the T1 and T3 signals as well as the T3 connections. With two cards installed, the MX2800 can recover from circuit failure. Features of the MX2800 CCU include the following: 1:1 redundancy Hot-swappable Alarm cutoff (ACO) pushbutton Meets the requirements for NEBS Level 3 Integrated Modem (List 1)

Status LEDs for Active Cards


ACT

NET

TURN-UP STEPS
1. Unpack the MX2800 CCU and inspect it for damage. If damage is apparent, refer to your carrier or supplier for remedy. 2. Remove front panel and insert MX2800 CCU into one of the CCU slots. To insert, hold the unit by the front edge while supporting the sides. Align the card edges to the guide grooves in the designated CCU slot. Insert into chassis until the edge connector seats firmly into the backplane. Lock the unit in place by pushing in on the locking levers. 3. To configure the MX2800, use a 10Base-T Ethernet connection or a VT100 terminal. When using the 10Base-T Ethernet connection, the VT100 terminal must be used to initially set up the Ethernet port. Configure the VT100 terminal for 9600, 19200, or 38400 baud, 8-bit characters, no parity, and 1-stop bit. Press ENTER repeatedly until the username prompt appears. The factory default username and password is adtran.
ALM

! !/! ! ! !/! 4 ! 4 ! ! 4 !/! ! 4 ! ! 4

PRF

*61205288L1-22C*

LED DESCRIPTIONS
The MX2800 CCU has LED status indicators. The STATUS LEDs provided are ACT (active), DS3, ALM (alarm), and PRF (performance). Different conditions are indicated by the state of the LED (its color and whether it blinks, alternates color, or is on solid). The condition descriptions vary depending on whether the LED represents the active controller card or the controller card on standby. The DSX-1/E1 STATUS LEDs provided apply to each individual T1 or E1. Different conditions are indicated by the state of the LED (its color and whether it blinks, alternates color, or is on solid). The condition descriptions vary depending on whether the LED represents T1s or E1s of the active controller card or the controller card on standby. Active Card

! 4 4 !

Green (Solid) ..............................Normal (All OK) Green/Amber (Alternating) ........Normal and console open Red (Solid)..................................Self-test failed Amber (Solid) .............................Software update in progress Red/Amber (Alternating)............Self-test failed and console open Red (Flashing) ............................Card failure Green (Solid) ..............................Normal (All OK) Red (Flashing) ............................LOS Red (Solid)..................................AIS, LOF, RAI, Idle alarms Amber (Solid) .............................In test (local) Amber (Flashing)........................In test (remote) Red/Amber (Alternating)............In test and alarms Green (Solid) ..............................Normal (no alarms) Red (Flashing) ............................Critical alarm Red (Solid)..................................Noncritical alarm Amber (Solid) .............................Noncritical alarm suppressed (ACO button pushed) Amber (Flashing)........................Critical alarm suppressed (ACO button pushed) Green (Solid) ..............................Normal (All OK) Red (Flashing once per event) ....Single/Burst CV Red (Flashing) ............................Continuous code violations Red (Solid)..................................XCV threshold exceeded Green (Solid) ..............................Normal (All OK) Off...............................................Disabled Red (Flashing) ............................LOS Red (Flashing once per event) ....Single/Burst CV Red (Solid)..................................XCV threshold exceeded Amber (Solid) .............................In test (local) Amber (Flashing)........................In test (remote) Red/Amber (Alternating)............Self-test failed and console open Off...............................................Normal (All OK) or N/A (In case of E1 configuration) Red (Flashing) ............................T1/E1 failure

Status DSX-1/E1 LED Conditions


! " 4 4 ! ! 4 !/! Standby Card " 4

Status LEDs for Standby Cards


ACT

NET

C A U T I O N !
SUBJECT TO ELECTROSTATIC DAMAGE OR DECREASE IN RELIABILITY.

HANDLING PRECAUTIONS REQUIRED.

ALM PRF

4 4 4 " 4 " "

Green (Flashing).........................Normal (All OK) Amber (Solid).............................Software update in progress Red (Flashing) ............................Self-test failed Off ..............................................Normal (All OK) Red (Flashing) ............................DS3 failure Off ..............................................Normal (No alarm)) Off ..............................................Normal (All OK)

TOTAL ACCESS MX2800 CONTROLLER CARD


MANAGEMENT, SNMP, AND TL1 CAPABILITIES
Supported by ADVISION and Total Access Element Management System. Refer to www.adtran.com website product area for additional information.

PRICING AND AVAILABILITY 800.827.0807 TECH SUPPORT 800.726.8663 RETURN FOR REPAIR 256.963.8722 www.adtran.com 61205288L1-22C

MX2800 CCU CONFIGURATION MENU TREE


C-BIT* Framing DS3 Configuration Network Interface Protection Configuration Miscellaneous DS2 Configuration DS2 1-7 Auto Enable Delay State Line Coding Line Length T1/E1 Interface Loopback Detection Circuit Protection Line Identification XCV Threshold T1 # 1-28 Disabled* IE-3 IE-4 IE-5 IE-6 Local IP Address Mgmt Options Gateway IP Address Subnet Mask Controller Traps Modem Rmt IP Addr (List 1) Management Port SNMP State Forward IP to Remote DS3 DS3 Remote IP Address DS3 IP MTU System Management SNMP Mgmt Options Network Date/ Time Options Dialup Options (List 1) Trap IP Address Trap Generation Read Community Name Write Community Name Trap Community Name State Server IP Address Refresh Period DST Automatic Adjustment Local Time Zone User Account Management Terminal Timeout Date Time Miscellaneous Load Default settings OTHER THAN system management Load Default Settings Utilities Update FLASH Software Configuration Transfer System Reset Save Configuration & Alarm Log Load SYSTEM MANAGEMENT default settings Load ALL default settings Update via XMODEM Update via TFTP Server IP Security IP Hosts Radius Mgmt options Local User Accounts Radius State Server IP Address UDP Port Privilege Level Shared Secret Visibility Shared Secret Response Timeout Maximum Retries Alarm Relay Configuration Equipment Identification Syslog Setup Auto Save Craft baud rate Power Supply Alarm Traps DS3 Alarm Traps DS2 Alarm Traps T1/E1 Alarm Traps MIB II Standard Alarm Traps T1 # 1-28 T1 # 1-28 T1 # 1-28 T1 # 1-28 Timing Remote Loopbacks XCV Threshold A Active Controller Network Protection Max Switch Threshold (3)* Min Switch Period (10)* Loopback Time Out Shutdown Standby Disabled Enabled Auto Enable* AMI B8ZS* T1 # 1-28 Disabled* CSU NIU Disabled Enabled* 0-133 ft.* 133-266 ft. 266-399 ft. 399-533 ft. 533-655 ft. Disabled 1 min. 5 min.* 10 min. 15 min. 30 min. 45 min. 1 hour B Disabled* Enabled M13 Loop* Local Disabled FEAC/C-BIT* FEAC C-BIT Disabled* IE-3 IE-4 IE-5 IE-6

SNMP Capabilities
The MX2800 implements applicable sections of the MIBs from RFC 1213, 1406, 1407, and the ADTRAN Enterprise MIB for the MX2800. Applicable sections of the MIB from RFC 1213 include System, Interfaces, SNMP, ICMP, TCP, and UDP. In the case of the MIB from RFC 1406 (DS1 MIB), the MX2800 does not support near or far end DSX-1 Current, Interval, and Total counts nor is the Fractional Table supported. All applicable aspects of RFC 1407 (DS3 MIB) are supported. The MX2800 menu system is tightly connected to the SNMP interface so that all items accessible through the menus are also available from the SNMP manager. Status and performance monitoring parameters are read-only elements whereas configuration items are read-write. The only items that may not be changed through SNMP are network management elements that would interfere with proper operation of the Ethernet interface such as IP address, default router, etc. Alarm traps are sent for any change in alarm status, including cases when existing alarms are cleared. The MX2800 SNMP interface is designed to work with ADTRANs ADVISION SNMP manager. As such, the ADVISION graphical user interface will display the MX2800 front panel in real time showing which status indicator LEDs are lit and what color.

TL1 Capabilities
The MX2800 presently has the ability to handle TL1 alarm reporting and TL1 provisioning. As part of that, the user has the ability to initiate a TL1 session and enable or disable autonomous alarm reporting, query for current alarm status, or provision the unit using TL1 edit commands. Alarm information is provided for the individual cards, any of the 28 individual T1s, any of the seven individual T2s, as well as the T3.

ACO BUTTON
The ACO (alarm cutoff) button is used to turn off an active audible alarm. Once the ACO button has been used to deactivate an alarm, it remains disabled until the condition has cleared.

ALARM OUTPUTS
The MX2800 CCU determines alarm states and reports these results via onboard alarm interfaces. Each of the alarm contacts provide common and normally open functionality. The two alarm functions supported are as follows: Critical Noncritical

COMPLIANCE
Code Input Output This product is intended for installation in equipment providing a Type B or E enclosure, and in a Power Code C C Restricted Access location. Telecommunication Code (TC) This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC rules. Installation Code (IC) A Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. Changes or modifications not expressly approved by ADTRAN could void the users authority to operate this equipment.

System Security Date & Time

* = default settings

Warranty: ADTRAN will replace or repair this product within the warranty period if it does not meet its published specifications or fails while in service. Warranty information can be found online at www.adtran.com/warranty.

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