4RF XE20001300 Aprisa XE 2G0-500-vv User Manual Part 90
4RF Limited Aprisa XE 2G0-500-vv Part 90
4RF >
User Manual Revised
Rhein Tech Laboratories, Inc. 360 Herndon Parkway Suite 1400 Herndon, VA 20170 http://www.rheintech.com Client: 4RF Limited Model: XE 2000-500-AC FCC ID: UIPXE20001300 Standard: FCC Part 101 Report Number: 2013045 Appendix J: Manual Please refer to the following pages. 36 of 71 April 2012 Version 8.6.77 | 1 Copyright Copyright © 2012 4RF Limited. All rights reserved. This document is protected by copyright belonging to 4RF Limited and may not be reproduced or republished in whole or part in any form without the prior written permission of 4RF Limited. Trademarks Aprisa and the 4RF logo are trademarks of 4RF Limited. Windows is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and other countries. Java and all Java-related trademarks are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. GoAhead WebServer. Copyright © 2000 GoAhead Software, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer Although every precaution has been taken preparing this information, 4RF Limited assumes no liability for errors and omissions, or any damages resulting from use of this information. This document or the equipment may change, without notice, in the interests of improving the product. RoHS and WEEE Compliance The Aprisa XE is fully compliant with the European Commission’s RoHS (Restriction of Certain Hazardous Substances in Electrical and Electronic Equipment) and WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) environmental directives. Restriction of hazardous substances (RoHS) The RoHS Directive prohibits the sale in the European Union of electronic equipment containing these hazardous substances: lead*, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium, polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs), and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs). 4RF Limited has worked with its component suppliers to ensure compliance with the RoHS Directive which came into effect on the 1st July 2006. *The European Commission Technical Adaptation Committee (TAC) has exempted lead in solder for highreliability applications for which viable lead-free alternatives have not yet been identified. The exemption covers communications network infrastructure equipment, which includes 4RF Limited Aprisa XE microwave radios. End-of-life recycling programme (WEEE) The WEEE Directive concerns the recovery, reuse, and recycling of electronic and electrical equipment. Under the Directive, used equipment must be marked, collected separately, and disposed of properly. 4RF Limited has instigated a programme to manage the reuse, recycling, and recovery of waste in an environmentally safe manner using processes that comply with the WEEE Directive (EU Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment 2002/96/EC). 4RF Limited invites questions from customers and partners on its environmental programmes and compliance with the European Commission’s Directives (sales@4RF.com). Aprisa XE User Manual 2 | Compliance General The Aprisa XE digital radio predominantly operates within frequency bands that require a site license be issued by the radio regulatory authority with jurisdiction over the territory in which the equipment is being operated. It is the responsibility of the user, before operating the equipment, to ensure that where required the appropriate license has been granted and all conditions attendant to that license have been met. Changes or modifications not approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user’s authority to operate the equipment. Equipment authorizations sought by 4RF Limited are based on the Aprisa XE radio equipment being installed at a fixed location and operated in a continuous point-to-point mode within the environmental profile defined by EN 300 019, Class 3.2. Operation outside these criteria may invalidate the authorizations and / or license conditions. The term ‘Terminal’ with reference to the Aprisa XE User Manual, is a generic term for one end of a fixed point-to-point Aprisa XE link and does not confer any rights to connect to any public network or to operate the equipment within any territory. Compliance ETSI The Aprisa XE radio terminal is designed to comply with the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) specifications as follows: Radio performance EN 302 217 Parts 1, 2.1, and 2.2 EMC EN 301 489 Parts 1 & 4 Environmental EN 300 019, Class 3.2 Safety EN 60950 An Aprisa XE radio terminal operating in the following frequency bands / channel sizes has been tested and is compliant to the ETSI radio specifications and suitably displays the CE logo. Other bands are compliant to the same radio performance specifications as adapted by 4RF Limited and therefore may be used in regions where compliance requirements demand CE performance at other frequencies. Frequency band Channel size Power input Notified body 300 MHz 400 MHz 25 kHz, 50 kHz, 75 kHz, 125 kHz, 150 kHz, 250 kHz, 500 kHz, 1.0 MHz, 1.75 MHz, 3.50 MHz 12 VDC, 24 VDC, 48 VDC, 115/230 VAC Notified Body 0678 600 700 800 900 500 kHz 12 VDC, 24 VDC, 48 VDC, 115/230 VAC Notified Body 0678 1400 MHz 75 kHz, 150 kHz, 250 kHz, 500 kHz, 1.0 MHz, 1.75 MHz, 3.50 MHz, 7 MHz 12 VDC, 12 VDC LP, 24 VDC, 48 VDC, 115/230 VAC 1800 MHz 2000 MHz 2500 MHz 250 kHz, 500 kHz, 1.0 MHz, 1.75 MHz, 3.50 MHz, 7 MHz, 14 MHz 12 VDC, 24 VDC, 48 VDC, 115/230 VAC MHz MHz MHz MHz Aprisa XE User Manual | 3 Informal Declaration of Conformity Dansk Undertegnede 4RF Limited erklærer herved, at følgende udstyr Aprisa Radio overholder de væsentlige krav og øvrige relevante krav i direktiv 1999/5/EF. Deutsch Hiermit erklärt 4RF Limited, dass sich dieses Aprisa Radio in Übereinstimmung mit den grundlegenden Anforderungen und den anderen relevanten Vorschriften der Richtlinie 1999/5/EG befindet. (BMWi) Dutch Hierbij verklaart 4RF Limited dat het toestel Aprisa Radio in overeenstemming is met de essentiële eisen en de andere relevante bepalingen van richtlijn 1999/5/EG. English Hereby, 4RF Limited, declares that this Aprisa Radio equipment is in compliance with the essential requirements and other relevant provisions of Directive 1999/5/EC. Español Por medio de la presente 4RF Limited declara que el Aprisa Radio cumple con los requisitos esenciales y cualesquiera otras disposiciones aplicables o exigibles de la Directiva 1999/5/CE. λληνας ΜΕ ΣΗΝ ΠΑΡΟΤΑ 4RF Limited ΔΗΛΩΝΕΙ ΟΣΙ Aprisa Radio ΤΜΜΟΡΥΩΝΣΑΙ ΠΡΟ ΣΙ ΟΤΙΩΔΕΙ ΑΠΑΙΣΗΕΙ ΚΑΙ ΣΙ ΔΟΙΠΕ ΦΕΣΙΚΕ ΔΙΑΣΑΞΕΙ ΣΗ ΟΣΗΓΙΑ 1995/5/ΚΕ. Français Par la présente 4RF Limited déclare que l'appareil Aprisa Radio est conformé aux exigences essentielles et aux autres dispositions pertinentes de la directive 1999/5/CE. Italiano Con la presente 4RF Limited dichiara che questo Aprisa Radio è conforme ai requisiti essenziali ed alle altre disposizioni pertinenti stabilite dalla direttiva 1999/5/CE. Português 4RF Limited declara que este Aprisa Radio está conforme com os requisitos essenciais e outras provisões da Directiva 1999/5/CE. Suomalainen 4RF Limited vakuuttaa täten että Aprisa Radio tyyppinen laite on direktiivin 1999/5/EY oleellisten vaatimusten ja sitä koskevien direktiivin muiden ehtojen mukainen. Svensk Härmed intygar 4RF Limited att denna Aprisa Radio står I överensstämmelse med de väsentliga egenskapskrav och övriga relevanta bestämmelser som framgår av direktiv 1999/5/EG. A formal Declaration of Conformity document is shipped with each Aprisa XE terminal. Aprisa XE User Manual 4 | Compliance Federal Communications Commission The Aprisa XE radio terminal is designed to comply with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) specifications as follows: Radio performance / EMC (dependant on variant) 47CFR part 90 Private Land Mobile Radio Services 47CFR part 101 Fixed Microwave Services 47CFR part 27 Misc Wireless Communication Services 47CFR part 15 Radio Frequency Devices Safety EN 60950 Frequency band limits Channel size Power input Authorization FCC ID 421 MHz to 512 MHz 25 kHz 48 VDC Part 90 Certification UIPN0400025A0200A 932.5 MHz to 944 MHz 100 kHz, 200 kHz 24 VDC, 48 VDC, 110 VAC Part 101 Verification 2314.5 2317.5 2346.5 2349.5 250 kHz, 500 kHz 24 VDC, 48 VDC, 110 VAC Part 27 Certification UIPN2500AAAA0200A 500 kHz 110 VAC Part 101 Certification UIPXE20001300 MHz to MHz MHz to MHz 2180 MHz to 2290 MHz NOTE: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his own expense. Aprisa XE User Manual | 5 RF Exposure Warning WARNING: The installer and / or user of Aprisa XE radio terminals shall ensure that a separation distance as given in the following table is maintained between the main axis of the terminal’s antenna and the body of the user or nearby persons. Minimum separation distances given are based on the maximum values of the following methodologies: 1. Maximum Permissible Exposure non-occupational limit (B or general public) of 47 CFR 1.1310 and the methodology of FCC’s OST/OET Bulletin number 65. 2. Reference levels as given in Annex III, European Directive on the limitation of exposure of the general public to electromagnetic fields (0 Hz to 300 GHz) (1999/519/EC). These distances will ensure indirect compliance with the requirements of EN 50385:2002. Frequency (MHz) Maximum power (dBm) Maximum antenna gain (dBi) Maximum power density (mW/cm2) Minimum separation distance (m) 400 + 35 15 0.20 2.0 512 + 35 15 0.26 1.8 715 + 34 15 0.36 1.3 806 + 34 28 0.40 5.6 890 + 34 28 0.45 5.3 960 + 34 28 0.48 5.1 1550 + 34 33 0.78 7.2 2300 + 34 37 1.00 10.0 2700 + 34 38 1.00 11.2 Aprisa XE User Manual Contents | 7 Contents 1. Getting Started .......................................................................... 15 2. Introduction .............................................................................. 19 About This Manual ............................................................................... 19 What It Covers ............................................................................ 19 Who Should Read It ...................................................................... 19 Contact Us ................................................................................. 19 What's in the Box ................................................................................ 19 Aprisa XE CD Contents ................................................................... 20 Accessory Kit .............................................................................. 21 3. Preparation............................................................................... 23 Path Planning .................................................................................... 23 Antenna Selection and Siting ........................................................... 23 Coaxial Feeder Cables ................................................................... 26 Link Budget................................................................................ 26 Site Requirements ............................................................................... 27 Power Supply.............................................................................. 27 Equipment Cooling ....................................................................... 27 Earthing and Lightning Protection ..................................................... 28 4. About the Terminal..................................................................... 29 Introduction ...................................................................................... 29 Modules ........................................................................................... 30 Front Panel Connections and Indicators ..................................................... 31 Interface Card Types............................................................................ 32 5. Mounting and Installing the Terminal .............................................. 33 Required Tools ................................................................................... 33 Installing the Terminal ......................................................................... 33 Installing the Antenna and Feeder Cable .................................................... 34 External Alarms .................................................................................. 35 Alarm Circuit Setup ...................................................................... 35 Interface Cabling ................................................................................ 36 Power Supplies................................................................................... 37 DC Power Supply.......................................................................... 37 AC Power Supply.......................................................................... 40 Safety Earth ............................................................................... 42 Bench Setup ...................................................................................... 43 Aprisa XE User Manual 8 | Contents 6. Connecting to the Terminal .......................................................... 45 Connecting to the Terminal's Setup Port .................................................... 45 Connecting to the Terminal's Ethernet Interface ........................................... 48 PC Requirements for SuperVisor ....................................................... 49 PC Settings for SuperVisor .............................................................. 50 IP Addressing of Terminals ..................................................................... 53 Network IP Addressing .......................................................................... 54 Same Subnet as the Local PC ........................................................... 54 Different Subnet as the Local PC ...................................................... 55 7. Managing the Terminal ................................................................ 57 The Setup Menu ................................................................................. 57 SuperVisor ........................................................................................ 59 SuperVisor Logging In .................................................................... 60 SuperVisor Logging Out .................................................................. 61 SuperVisor Main Screen ......................................................................... 62 Changing the Terminal’s IP Address .......................................................... 64 Setting Up Users ................................................................................. 65 User groups ................................................................................ 65 Adding a User ............................................................................. 65 Disabling a User........................................................................... 66 Deleting a User ........................................................................... 66 Saving User Information ................................................................. 66 Changing Passwords ...................................................................... 67 Viewing User Session Details ............................................................ 67 8. Configuring the Terminal ............................................................. 69 Configuring the RF Settings .................................................................... 69 Modem Performance Settings........................................................... 72 Entering Basic Terminal Information ......................................................... 74 Configuring the IP Settings ..................................................................... 75 Setting the Terminal Clocking ................................................................. 76 Setting the Duplexer Parameters ............................................................. 79 Setting the RSSI Alarm Threshold ............................................................. 80 Configuring the External Alarms .............................................................. 81 Configuring the External Alarm Inputs ................................................ 81 Configuring the External Alarm Outputs .............................................. 83 Configuring SNMP Settings ..................................................................... 85 SNMP Access Controls .................................................................... 86 SNMP Trap Destinations ................................................................. 87 Viewing the SNMP Traps ................................................................. 88 Viewing the SNMP MIB Details .......................................................... 88 Saving the Terminal's Configuration .......................................................... 89 Aprisa XE User Manual Contents | 9 9. Configuring the Traffic Interfaces .................................................. 91 Viewing a Summary of the Interfaces ........................................................ 91 Configuring the Traffic Interfaces ............................................................ 92 Ethernet Switch ................................................................................. 93 VLAN tagging .............................................................................. 93 Quality of Service ........................................................................ 96 Viewing the Status of the Ethernet Ports ........................................... 100 Resetting the Ethernet Settings ...................................................... 100 Ethernet Port Startup .................................................................. 101 QJET Port Settings ............................................................................ 102 Q4EM Port Settings ............................................................................ 104 Loop Interface Circuits ....................................................................... 107 DFXO / DFXS Loop Interface Circuits ................................................ 107 E1 CAS to DFXS Circuits................................................................ 110 DFXS to DFXS Hotline Circuits ........................................................ 110 DFXS Port Settings ...................................................................... 112 DFXO Port Settings ..................................................................... 120 QV24 Serial Interface Card ................................................................... 128 QV24 Port Settings ..................................................................... 129 QV24S Port Settings .................................................................... 130 HSS Port Settings .............................................................................. 133 HSS Handshaking and Clocking Modes ...................................................... 135 HSS Handshaking and Control Line Function ....................................... 135 HSS Synchronous Clock Selection Modes ............................................ 138 Aprisa XE User Manual 10 | Contents 10. Cross Connections ..................................................................... 145 Embedded Cross Connect Switch............................................................ Link Capacity Utilization .............................................................. The Cross Connections Application ......................................................... The Cross Connections System Requirements ...................................... Installing the Cross Connections Application ....................................... Opening the Cross Connections Application ........................................ The Cross Connections Page .......................................................... Setting the Terminal's IP Address .................................................... Management and User Ethernet Capacity........................................... Setting Card Types ..................................................................... Getting Cross Connection Configuration from the Terminals .................... Creating Cross Connections ........................................................... Sending Cross Connection Configuration to the Terminals ....................... Saving Cross Connection Configurations ............................................ Using Existing Cross Connection Configurations ................................... Printing the Cross Connection Configuration ....................................... Deleting Cross Connections ........................................................... Configuring the Traffic Cross Connections................................................. Compatible Interfaces ................................................................. QJET Cross Connections ............................................................... Selecting and Mapping Bits and Timeslots .......................................... Q4EM Cross Connections............................................................... DFXS and DFXO Cross Connections ................................................... QV24 Cross Connections ............................................................... QV24S Cross Connections .............................................................. HSS Cross Connections ................................................................. Cross Connection Example ................................................................... Symmetrical Connection Wizard ............................................................ Starting the Cross Connections Wizard .............................................. Cross Connections Wizard Navigation ............................................... Setting the Cross Connections IP Address ........................................... Setting the Cross Connections Bandwidth .......................................... Cross Connections Card Selection .................................................... Cross Connections Interface Configurations ........................................ Symmetrical Connection Summary................................................... Send Symmetrical Connection Configuration ....................................... 145 145 145 145 146 146 147 149 150 151 151 152 155 155 155 156 157 158 158 159 166 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 176 176 177 177 178 179 180 180 11. Protected Terminals .................................................................. 181 Monitored Hot Stand By (MHSB) ............................................................. Tributary Switch Front Panel ......................................................... RF Switch Front Panel ................................................................. MHSB Cabling............................................................................ MHSB Power Supply .................................................................... Configuring the Radios for Protected Mode ........................................ Hitless Space Diversity (HSD) ................................................................ HSD Terminal Cabling .................................................................. HSD Terminal IP Addresses ............................................................ Aprisa XE User Manual 181 182 183 185 185 186 190 191 192 Contents | 11 12. In-Service Commissioning ............................................................ 197 Before You Start ............................................................................... What You Will Need .................................................................... Applying Power to the Terminals ........................................................... Review the Link Configurations Using SuperVisor ........................................ Antenna Alignment ............................................................................ Checking the Antenna Polarization .................................................. Visually Aligning Antennas ............................................................ Accurately Aligning the Antennas .................................................... Checking Performance ................................................................. Checking the Receive Input Level.................................................... Checking the Fade Margin ............................................................. Checking the Long-Term BER ......................................................... Bit Error Rate Tests .................................................................... Additional Tests ........................................................................ Checking the Link Performance ...................................................... Viewing a Summary of the Link Performance ...................................... Saving the History of the Link Performance ........................................ 197 197 198 198 199 199 200 201 203 203 204 205 205 206 207 208 209 13. Maintenance ............................................................................ 213 Routine Maintenance ......................................................................... Terminal Upgrades ............................................................................ Software Upgrade Process ............................................................ Uploading the Root File System ...................................................... Uploading the Motherboard Images .................................................. Identifying the Correct TFTP Upgrade Type ........................................ TFTP Upgrade Process Types ......................................................... Uploading System Files ................................................................ Viewing the Image Table .............................................................. Changing the Status of an Image File................................................ Rebooting the Terminal ...................................................................... Support Summary.............................................................................. Installing Interface Cards .................................................................... Preparing the Terminal for New Interface Cards .................................. Installing an Interface Card ........................................................... Configuring a Slot ...................................................................... 213 214 215 216 216 217 220 226 231 232 233 234 235 236 238 240 14. Troubleshooting ........................................................................ 241 Loopbacks ...................................................................................... RF Radio Loopback ..................................................................... Interface Loopbacks ................................................................... Timeslot Loopbacks .................................................................... Alarms........................................................................................... Diagnosing Alarms ...................................................................... Viewing the Alarm History ............................................................ Saving the Alarm History .............................................................. Viewing Interface Alarms.............................................................. Clearing Alarms ......................................................................... Identifying Causes of Alarms.......................................................... E1 / T1 Alarm Conditions.............................................................. System Log ..................................................................................... Checking the Syslog .................................................................... Setting up for Remote Logging ....................................................... Aprisa XE User Manual 241 241 242 243 244 244 246 247 248 249 250 252 253 253 255 12 | Contents 15. Interface Connections ................................................................ 257 RJ-45 Connector Pin Assignments ........................................................... Interface Traffic Direction ................................................................... QJET Interface Connections ................................................................. Ethernet Interface Connections ............................................................. Q4EM Interface Connections ................................................................. E&M Signalling Types .................................................................. DFXS Interface Connections.................................................................. DFXO Interface Connections ................................................................. HSS Interface Connections ................................................................... Synchronous cable assemblies ........................................................ Cable WAN Connectors ................................................................ QV24 Interface connections ................................................................. QV24S Interface connections ................................................................ 257 257 258 259 260 261 263 264 265 266 272 273 273 16. Alarm Types and Sources ............................................................ 275 Alarm Types .................................................................................... Transmitter Alarms..................................................................... Receiver Alarms ........................................................................ MUX Alarms.............................................................................. Modem Alarms .......................................................................... Motherboard Alarms ................................................................... QJET Alarms ............................................................................. DFXO Alarms ............................................................................ DFXS Alarms ............................................................................. HSS Alarms .............................................................................. QV24 Alarms............................................................................. External Alarm Inputs .................................................................. Remote Terminal Alarms .............................................................. Cross Connect Alarms .................................................................. MHSB Alarms ............................................................................ HSD Alarms .............................................................................. Software Alarms ........................................................................ 275 275 277 280 280 280 281 281 281 282 282 282 282 283 283 283 284 17. Country Specific Settings ............................................................ 285 Aprisa XE User Manual Contents | 13 18. Specifications ........................................................................... 287 RF Specifications .............................................................................. ETSI ....................................................................................... FCC ....................................................................................... Industry Canada ........................................................................ Receiver Performance ................................................................. Duplexers ................................................................................ Interface Specifications ...................................................................... Ethernet Interface ..................................................................... QJET Quad E1 / T1 Interface ......................................................... Q4EM Quad 4 Wire E&M Interface.................................................... DFXO Dual Foreign Exchange Office Interface ..................................... DFXS Dual Foreign Exchange Subscriber Interface ................................. QV24 Quad V.24 Serial Data Interface .............................................. QV24S Quad V.24 Serial Data Interface ............................................. HSS Single High Speed Synchronous Data Interface ............................... External Alarm Interfaces ............................................................. Auxiliary Interfaces .................................................................... Power Specifications .......................................................................... AC Power Supply........................................................................ DC Power Supply........................................................................ Power Consumption .................................................................... Protection System Specifications ........................................................... MHSB Protection ........................................................................ HSD Protection.......................................................................... General Specifications ........................................................................ Environmental .......................................................................... Mechanical .............................................................................. ETSI Compliance ........................................................................ 287 287 294 297 301 301 302 302 303 304 305 307 309 309 310 310 310 311 311 311 312 314 314 314 315 315 315 315 19. Product End Of Life ................................................................... 317 End-of-Life Recycling Programme (WEEE) ................................................. The WEEE Symbol Explained .......................................................... WEEE Must Be Collected Separately ................................................. YOUR ROLE in the Recovery of WEEE ................................................ EEE Waste Impacts the Environment and Health .................................. 317 317 317 317 317 20. Abbreviations ........................................................................... 319 21. Acknowledgments and Licensing ................................................... 321 22. Commissioning Form .................................................................. 327 23. Index ...................................................................................... 329 Aprisa XE User Manual Getting Started | 15 1. Getting Started This section is an overview of the steps required to commission a link in the field. Phase 1: Pre-installation 1. Confirm path planning. Page 23 2. Ensure that the site preparation is complete: Page 26 Power requirements Tower requirements Environmental considerations, for example, temperature control Rack space 3. Confirm the interface card configuration. Phase 2: Installing the terminals 1. Before installing the terminal into the rack, check that all the required interface cards are fitted. Position and mount the terminal in the rack. Page 33 2. Connect earthing to the terminal. Page 28 3. Confirm that the: Antenna is mounted and visually aligned. Feeder cable is connected to the antenna. Feeder connections are tightened to recommended level. Tower earthing is complete. 4. Install lightning protection. Page 28 5. Connect the coaxial jumper cable between the lightning protection and the terminal duplexer. 6. Connect the power supply to the terminal and apply power. Aprisa XE User Manual Page 35 16 | Getting Started Phase 3: Establishing the link 1. If you don't know the terminal's IP address : Page 58 Connect the setup cable between the terminal's Setup port and the PC using accessory kit adaptor. Use HyperTerminal to confirm the IP settings for the terminal: Local IP address Local subnet mask Remote terminal IP address Reboot the terminal 2. Connect the Ethernet cable between the terminal's 4-port Ethernet switch and the PC. 3. Confirm that the PC IP settings are correct for the 4-port Ethernet switch: Page 50 IP address subnet mask 4. Confirm that Java is installed on the PC. Page 49 5. Start the web browser, and log into the terminal. Page 60 6. Set or confirm the RF characteristics: Page 69 TX and RX frequencies Modulation type TX output power 7. Compare the actual RSSI to the expected RSSI value (from your path planning). 8. Fine-align the antennas. 9. Confirm that the terminal clock sources are set correctly. 10. Confirm that the TX and RX LEDs are green. Disregard the OK LED status for now. Page 201 Aprisa XE User Manual Page 73 Getting Started | 17 Phase 4: Configuring the traffic 1. Confirm that the interface hardware and software slot configurations match. 2. Confirm the interface card settings. 3. Open the Cross Connections application and configure the cross connections: Page 92 Page 146 Download the configuration. Confirm or modify the traffic cross connections. Save the configuration to the terminal. Activate the configuration. 4. Save the configuration to disk and close the Cross Connections application. 5. Connect the connection of interface cables. 6. Confirm or adjust the terminal clocking for network synchronization, if required. 7. Test that the traffic is passing over the link as configured. 8. Confirm or configure the external alarm settings in SuperVisor. 9. Setup an external alarm connection cable, if required. 10. Reset any alarms and error counters. 11. Perform traffic pre-commissioning tests (optional) 12. Complete the commissioning form (at the back of the manual) and file. Aprisa XE User Manual Page 155 Page 81 Page 244 Page 327 Introduction | 19 2. Introduction About This Manual What It Covers This user manual describes how to install and configure Aprisa XE fixed point-to-point digital radio links. It specifically documents an Aprisa XE terminal running system software version 8.6.77. It is recommended that you read the relevant sections of this manual before installing or operating the terminal. Who Should Read It This manual has been written for professional field technicians and engineers who have an appropriate level of education and experience. Contact Us If you experience any difficulty installing or using Aprisa XE after reading this manual, please contact Customer Support or your local 4RF representative. Our area representative contact details are available from our website: 4RF Limited 26 Glover Street, Ngauranga PO Box 13-506 Wellington 6032 New Zealand E-mail support@4rf.com Web site www.4rf.com Telephone +64 4 499 6000 Facsimile +64 4 473 4447 Attention Customer Services What's in the Box Inside the box you will find: Aprisa XE terminal Accessory kit Aprisa CD Aprisa XE Quick Start Guide Commissioning Form Configuration sheet Aprisa XE User Manual 20 | Introduction Aprisa XE CD Contents The Aprisa XE CD contains the following: Software The latest version of the terminal software (see ‘Terminal Upgrades’ on page 214) The Cross Connections application - required if you want to use the Cross Connections application offline (see ‘Installing Cross Connections application’ on page 146). Java VM - Java plug-in needed to run the Supervisor software. Web browsers - Mozilla Firefox and Internet Explorer are included for your convenience. Adobe™ Acrobat® Reader® which you need to view the PDF files on the Aprisa CD. Documentation User manual — an electronic (PDF) version for you to view online or print. Product collateral — application overviews, product description, quick start guide, case studies, software release notes and white papers. Tools Surveyor - a path propagation calculator developed by 4RF (see ‘Path planning’ on page 23). XEpower – a power consumption model program. Aprisa XE User Manual Introduction | 21 Accessory Kit The accessory kit contains the following items: Two mounting brackets and screws Two interface slot blanking plates Setup cable (RJ-45 to RJ-45) 2 m and RS-232 DB9 female adaptor Hardware kit (includes Allen key for fascia screws) Aprisa XE User Manual 22 | Introduction Alarm cable (RJ-45 to RJ-45) 5 m Ground cable 5 m DC power cable 3 m (for use with the ±48 VDC, ±24 and 12 VDC low power power supplies) AC power cable 2 m (for use with the 110 / 230 VAC power supply) Aprisa XE User Manual Preparation | 23 3. Preparation Path Planning Proper path planning is essential. When considering the components of your radio system, think about: antenna selection and siting coaxial cable selection link budget You can also use Surveyor to help you with path feasibility planning. Surveyor is a path propagation calculator developed by 4RF to assist path planners quickly and efficiently verify the viability of point-to-point transmission links deploying the Aprisa microwave radio systems. The software program calculates the anticipated link performance for the transmission system elements you have selected. However, it is not a substitute for in-depth path planning. You will find Surveyor a valuable addition to your planning toolbox. A copy of Surveyor is provided on the Aprisa CD supplied with this manual. You can download updates from www.4rf.com. Antenna Selection and Siting Selecting and siting antennas are important considerations in your system design. There are three main types of directional antenna that are commonly used with the radios parabolic grid, Yagi and corner reflector antennas. The antenna that should be used for a particular situation is determined primarily by the frequency of operation and the gain required to establish a reliable link. Parabolic Grid Antennas Factor Explanation Frequency Often used in 1350-2700 MHz bands Gain Varies with size (17 dBi to 30 dBi typical) Wind loading Can be significant Tower aperture required Can be significant Size Range from 0.6 m to 3 m diameter Front to back ratio Good Cost High Aprisa XE User Manual 24 | Preparation Yagi Antennas Factor Explanation Frequency Often used in 330-960 MHz bands Gain Varies with size (typically 11 dBi to 16 dBi) Stackable gain increase 2 Yagi antennas (+ 2.8 dB) 4 Yagi antennas (+ 5.6 dB) Wind loading Less than a parabolic grid antenna Tower aperture required Unstacked: Less than a parabolic grid antenna Stacked: about the same as a parabolic grid antenna Size Range from 0.6 m to 3 m in length Front to back ratio Low Cost Low It is possible to increase the gain of a Yagi antenna installation by placing two or more of them in a stack. The relative position of the antennas is critical. Example of stacked antennas Aprisa XE User Manual Preparation | 25 Corner Reflector Antennas Factor Explanation Frequency Often used in 330-960 MHz bands Gain Typically 10 dBd Wind loading Less than a parabolic grid antenna Tower aperture required About the same as a parabolic grid antenna Size Range from 0.36 m to 0.75 m in length Front to back ratio High (typically 30 dB) Beamwidth Broad (up to 60°) Cost Medium Antenna Siting When siting antennas, consider the following points: A site with a clear line of sight to the remote terminal is needed. Pay particular attention to trees, buildings, and other obstructions close to the antenna site. Example of a clear line-of-sight path Any large flat areas that reflect RF energy along the link path, for instance, water, could cause multipath fading. If the link path crosses a feature that is likely to cause RF reflections, shield the antenna from the reflected signals by positioning it on the far side of the roof of the equipment shelter or other structure. Example of a mid-path reflection path The antenna site should be as far as possible from other potential sources of RF interference such as electrical equipment, power lines and roads. The antenna site should be as close as possible to the equipment shelter. Note: Wide angle and zoom photographs taken at the proposed antenna location (looking down the proposed path), can be useful when considering the best mounting positions. Aprisa XE User Manual 26 | Preparation Coaxial Feeder Cables To ensure maximum performance, it is recommended that you use good quality low-loss coaxial cable for all feeder runs. For installations requiring long antenna cable runs, use Andrew Heliax™ or equivalent. When using large diameter feeders, use a short flexible jumper cable between the feeder and the terminal to reduce stress on the antenna port connector. All coaxial cable has loss, that is, the RF energy traveling through it is attenuated. Generally speaking, the larger the diameter of the cable, the less the loss. When selecting a coaxial cable consider the following: Factor Effect Attenuation Short cables and larger diameter cables have less attenuation Cost Smaller diameter cables are cheaper Ease of installation Easier with smaller diameter cables or short cables When running cables: Run coaxial cable from the installation to the antenna, ensuring you leave enough extra cable at each end to allow drip loops to be formed. For 19-inch rack mount installations, cables may be run from the front of the rack directly onto the antenna port. They may also be run through the back of the rack to the front. Terminate and earth or ground the cables in accordance with the manufacturers' instructions. Bond the outer conductor of the coaxial feeder cables to the base of the tower mast. Link Budget All of the above factors (and many others not mentioned) combine in any proposed installation to create a link budget. The link budget predicts how well the radio link will perform after it is installed. Use the outputs of the link budget during commissioning testing to confirm the link has been installed correctly, and that it will provide reliable service. Aprisa XE User Manual Preparation | 27 Site Requirements Power Supply Ensure that the correct power supply is available for powering the terminal. The nominal input voltage for a terminal is 12, 24 or 48 volts DC or 115 / 230 volts AC rms. The DC supply voltage is factory preset at time of order and cannot be adjusted in the field. The terminal voltage is indicated on the chassis label by the DC input connector and on the specification label fitted to the terminal. WARNING: Before connecting power, ground the chassis using the safety earth terminal on the front panel. Equipment Cooling Mount the terminal so that air can flow through it. Do not obstruct the free flow of air around the terminal. The two internal, speed-controlled fans fitted into the chassis provide sufficient cooling. The operation of the fans is monitored and an alarm is raised under failure conditions. The environmental operating conditions are as follows: Operating temperature -10°C to +50°C Storage temperature -20°C to +70°C Humidity Maximum 95% non-condensing Aprisa XE User Manual 28 | Preparation Earthing and Lightning Protection WARNING: Lightning can easily damage electronic equipment. To avoid this risk, install primary lightning protection devices on any interfaces that are reticulated in the local cable network. You should also install a coaxial surge suppressor on the antenna port of the duplexer. Earth the antenna tower, feeders and lightning protection devices in accordance with the appropriate local and national standards. The diagram below shows the minimum requirements. Use grounding kits as specified or supplied by the coaxial cable manufacturer to properly ground or bond the cable outer. Aprisa XE User Manual About the Terminal | 29 4. About the Terminal Introduction The terminals operate in a number of frequency bands from 300 MHz up to 2.7 GHz carrying ethernet, voice and data traffic over distances up to 100 kilometres. They are designed to meet the demands of a wide range of low to medium capacity access and backhaul applications. The digital access terminal is a compact, powerful point-to-point linking solution with up to 64 Mbit/s of radio link capacity, and customer-configurable interface options integrated within the radio platform. Aprisa XE User Manual 30 | About the Terminal Modules The terminal is modular in design, which helps reduce mean time to repair (MTTR). It is designed for 19inch rack mounting and is only 2U high for standard configurations. The five main modules housed inside the chassis are the transceiver, modem, motherboard, power supply, and duplexer. Interface cards are fitted into the eight interface slots on the motherboard. Modules are interconnected via several buses on the motherboard. A duplexer can be mounted inside or outside the chassis. The interrelationships between the components are shown below: Aprisa XE User Manual About the Terminal | 31 Front Panel Connections and Indicators All connections to the terminal are made on the front panel of the terminal. No. Label Description AC or DC power input DC and AC power supplies are available (AC is shown) Safety earth stud An M5 stud for connection to an external protection ground for protection against electric shock in case of a fault. Antenna connector N-type 50Ω female connector for connection of antenna feeder cable. Interface slots A to H Eight interface slots on the motherboard to fit interface cards. ETHERNET Integrated four-port layer 2 switch. SETUP RJ-45 serial connection to PC for initial configuration. ALARM RJ-45 connector for two external alarm input and four external alarm output connections. LED indicators OK Indicates normal operation and minor and major alarm conditions. RX Indicates status of receive path including normal operation and alarms such as BER, RSSI and loss of synchronization. TX Indicates status of transmit path including normal operation and alarms such as forward / reverse power and temperature. ON Blue LED indicates that there is power to the terminal. RSSI RSSI test point suitable for 2 mm diameter multimeter test lead pin. Aprisa XE User Manual 32 | About the Terminal Interface Card Types Each terminal has eight interface slots labeled A to H. Each slot can be fitted with any interface card type. Typically, the terminal is delivered pre-configured with the requested interface cards. The following interface card types are currently available: Name Interface card type Function QJET Quad E1/T1 interface card Four E1 / T1 interfaces (Framed or Unframed). Q4EM Quad 4 wire E&M interface card Four 4 wire E&M voice channels DFXS Dual 2 wire FXS interface card Two 2 wire loop signalling foreign exchange subscriber (POTS) channels DFXO Dual 2 wire FXO interface card Two 2 wire loop signalling foreign exchange office channels HSS High-Speed Synchronous interface card A single high speed serial data channel configured as synchronous V.24, V.35, X.21, V.36 / RS-449, or RS-530. QV24 Quad V.24 serial interface card Four V.24 / RS-232 serial data channels Synchronous and asynchronous Aprisa XE User Manual Mounting and Installing the Terminal | 33 5. Mounting and Installing the Terminal This section covers installing the hardware associated with the terminal. Before you begin a terminal installation, read this section thoroughly. CAUTION: You must comply with the safety precautions in this manual or on the product itself. 4RF Limited does not assume any liability for failure to comply with these precautions. Required Tools No special tools are needed to install the terminal other than those required to physically mount the terminal into the rack. Installing the Terminal The terminal is designed for 19-inch rack mounting and is supplied with rack mounting brackets. The rack brackets can be front, mid, or rear mounted (as shown below) to suit individual installation requirements. Once the rack brackets are attached, carefully lift the terminal into position in the rack, and fasten with screws and washers. Aprisa XE User Manual 34 | Mounting and Installing the Terminal Installing the Antenna and Feeder Cable Carefully mount the antenna following the antenna manufacturers' instructions. Run feeder cable from the antenna to the terminal mounting location. Lightning protection must be incorporated into the antenna system. For more information, please contact Customer Support. WARNING: When the link is operating, there is RF energy radiated from the antenna. Do not stand in front of or touch the antenna while the terminal is operating. 1. Fit the appropriate male or female N-type connector to the antenna feeder at the antenna end. Carefully follow the connector manufacturers' instructions. 2. Securely attach the feeder cable to the mast and cable trays using cable ties or cable hangers. Follow the cable manufacturer's recommendations about the use of feeder clips, and their recommended spacing. 3. Connect the antenna and feeder cable. Ensure the N-type connector is tight. Weatherproof the connection with a boot, tape, or other approved method. 4. Fit the appropriate N-type male connector to the antenna feeder at the terminal end (the terminal is N-type female). Carefully follow the connector manufacturer's instructions. 5. Connect the feeder cable to the antenna port on the terminal. Use a jumper cable, if needed. Ensure the N-type connector is tight. 6. Connect a coaxial surge suppressor or similar lightning protector between the feeder and jumper cables (or at the point where the cable enters the equipment shelter). Earth the case of the lightning protector to the site Lightning Protection Earth. Also earth the terminal M5 earth stud to a protection earth. Aprisa XE User Manual Mounting and Installing the Terminal | 35 External Alarms Two external alarm inputs and four external alarm outputs are provided on the RJ-45 ALARM connector on the front panel. These enable an internal alarm to provide an external alarm to the network operator's existing network management system via contact closure or opening, or for an external alarm to be transported via the radio link. The latency for an alarm presented on an external alarm input to the alarm being output on an external alarm output is < 2 seconds. Alarm outputs are isolated semiconductor relay type contacts rated 0 to 60 VDC or AC rms with a maximum current of 100 mA. Alarm inputs are isolated current detectors with an operating voltage range of 9 to 60 VDC or AC rms (effective current threshold of 5.0 to 6.5 mA constant current). The common reference potential for the two external alarm inputs must be applied to pin 3 and the common reference potential for the four external alarm outputs must be applied to pin 4. Alarm Circuit Setup A typical alarm circuit setup is: An external battery applied to the ‘common alarm inputs reference’ and a normally open relay contact connected to the alarm input. Closing the contact applies the source to the alarm input detector which turns the alarm on (setup for ‘alarm on when source on’). See ‘Configuring the External Alarm Inputs’ on page 81 for the setup options. An external earth applied to the ‘common alarm outputs reference’ and a ground contact detector connected to the alarm output. When the alarm is on (active), the external alarm output relay contact closes (setup for ‘relay closed when alarm on’). See ‘Configuring the External Alarm Outputs’ on page 83 for the setup options. The terminal front panel RJ-45 ALARM connections are: RJ-45 pin Connection description TIA-568A wire colour External alarm input 1 green / white External alarm input 2 green Common reference for alarm inputs 1 to 2 orange / white Common reference for alarm outputs 1 to 4 blue External alarm output 1 blue / white External alarm output 2 orange External alarm output 3 brown / white External alarm output 4 brown Aprisa XE User Manual 36 | Mounting and Installing the Terminal Interface Cabling All interface cabling connections are made with RJ-45 male connectors which plug into the front of the interface cards (see ‘Interface Connections’ on page 257). QJET Q4EM DFXO and DFXS The cabling to the QJET, Q4EM, DFXO and DFXS interface cards must have a minimum conductor size of 0.4 mm2 (26 AWG). Ethernet Standard Ethernet network cables are used for all Ethernet port cabling. Aprisa XE User Manual Mounting and Installing the Terminal | 37 Power Supplies US and Canada: Installations should be in accordance with US National Electrical Code ANSI / NFPA 70, and Canadian Electrical Code, Part 1 C22.1. WARNING: Do not apply power to the terminal until you have completed installing the interface cards and connecting the antenna. Before disconnecting the safety earth during maintenance, remove AC or DC power supply connections, antenna cable and all interface cables from the terminal. DC Power Supply There are four DC power supply options for the terminal; 12 VDC, 12 VDC Low Power, 24 VDC and 48 VDC. The DC inputs are polarity critical so the DC voltage must be applied with the correct polarity. Nominal voltage Input voltage range Maximum Power input Maximum input current Recommended DC breaker rating +12 VDC LP 10.5 to 18 VDC 53 W 5A 8A ±12 VDC 10.5 to 18 VDC 180 W 18 A 25 A ±24 VDC 20.5 to 30 VDC 180 W 8A 10 A ±48 VDC 40 to 60 VDC 180 W 4A 5A CAUTION: An all-pole switch or DC circuit breaker of the rating shown in the table above must be fitted between the terminal DC input and the DC power source. Each terminal or MHSB terminal should have its own separate fuse or DC circuit breaker. 12 VDC / 24 VDC / 48 VDC Power Supply The power supply DC input is isolated from ground, so the DC power input can be either positive grounded or negative grounded. The positive or negative terminal should be connected to ground. 12 VDC LP Power Supply The 12 VDC Low Power is a high efficiency power supply for low power consumption applications up to a maximum of 53 watts input power (see ‘Power Consumption’ on page 312). The DC input on this power supply is not isolated from ground as the negative input is internally connected to ground via the Aprisa XE chassis. The DC power input for this power supply must be a positive 12 V supply with the negative grounded. Aprisa XE User Manual 38 | Mounting and Installing the Terminal DC Power Input Cabling The DC power input is terminated on the front panel of the terminal with two high-current M3 screw clamps for the positive and negative DC input and a M5 stud for the earth connection. The DC power cables have pre-terminated lugs to fit into the power input M3 screw clamps on one end and bare wire at the other end. The appropriate power cable for the power supply ordered is included in the accessory kit. 12 VDC LP / 24 VDC / 48 VDC Cable The 12 VDC LP, 24 VDC and 48 VDC power supplies are supplied with a 3 metre red / black cable of 2.0 mm2 (23 strands of 0.32 mm2). Terminal Power input Cable colour +V Positive DC input Red -V Negative DC input Black Aprisa XE User Manual Mounting and Installing the Terminal | 39 12 VDC Cable The 12 VDC power supply is supplied with a 3 metre red/black cable of two pairs of 2.3 mm2 (72 strands of 0.2 mm2) making a total of 4.6 mm2 per connection. This increase in wire size is to carry the increased current consumption of the 12 VDC supply (max 18 Amps per terminal). This 3 metre cable is engineered to power a fully loaded terminal from a 12 VDC supply. A longer cable should not be used as the additional voltage drop could cause the power supply to fail. If longer cable runs are required between the 12 VDC power supply and the terminal, it is suggested that high current distribution bus bars are used to feed the rack and the supplied power cable used between the bus bars and the terminals. Terminal Power input Cable colour +V Positive DC input Red -V Negative DC input Black 1. Fit both pairs of lugs into the terminal screw clamps. 2. Twist the other ends together when fitting to the source. Aprisa XE User Manual 40 | Mounting and Installing the Terminal AC Power Supply There is one AC power supply for the terminal. This AC power supply is auto-sensing to operate with a nominal input voltage of 115 Vrms or 230 Vrms. The power input is terminated on the front panel of the terminal using a standard IEC plug. This power supply has a power on/off switch. A power cable is included in the accessory kit and is pre-fitted with an IEC socket connector and the country-specific plug that was specified when the order was placed. Nominal voltage Input voltage range Maximum Power input Max VA Frequency 115 VAC 103 - 127 Vrms 180 W 400 VA 47 - 63 Hz 230 VAC 207 - 254 Vrms 180 W 400 VA 47 - 63 Hz Terminal Power input Cable colour Earth Green/yellow Neutral Blue Line / Phase Brown Important: Please check with your local power authority about correct colour usage and pinouts. AC power cords used must be in accordance with national requirements. Norway and Sweden: PLUGGABLE CLASS I EQUIPMENT intended for connection to a telephone network or similar communications system requires a label stating that the equipment must be connected to an earthed mains socket outlet. Aprisa XE User Manual Mounting and Installing the Terminal | 41 Brownout Recovery Module A Brownout Recovery Module (BRM) is factory fitted to the Aprisa XE motherboard power connector when the radio is fitted with an AC power supply. The AC power supply has a safety mechanism that trips the power if it detects a power input brownout. The BRM restarts the power supply after 3 seconds. Aprisa XE User Manual 42 | Mounting and Installing the Terminal Safety Earth The terminal chassis must have a protection / safety earth connected between the terminal earth stud and a common protection earth in the rack. The DC power input can be either positive grounded or negative grounded depending on the power supply system available. Ground the terminal chassis using the terminal earth stud on the front panel as shown: Aprisa XE User Manual Mounting and Installing the Terminal | 43 Bench Setup Before installing the link in the field, it is recommended that you bench-test the link. A suggested setup for basic bench testing is shown below: When setting up the equipment for bench testing, note the following: Earthing—the terminal should be earthed at all times. The terminal earth stud must be connected to a protection earth. Attenuators— In a bench setup, there must be 60 - 80 dB at up to 3 GHz of 50 ohm coaxial attenuation (capable of handling the transmit power of +35dBm) between the terminals’ N type antenna connectors. This can be achieved with two fixed attenuators fitted to the antennas 'N' connectors and a variable attenuator with a ≥ 60 dB range. You can use other attenuator values as long as you consider the transmit power output level (max +33 dBm) and the receiver signal input (max -20 dBm). Cables—use double-screened coaxial cable that is suitable for use up to 3 GHz at ≈ 1 metre. CAUTION: Do not apply signals greater than -20 dBm to the antenna connection as they can damage the receiver. Aprisa XE User Manual Connecting to the Terminal | 45 6. Connecting to the Terminal Connecting to the Terminal's Setup Port You can configure basic terminal settings by connecting to the terminal using the Setup cable. This can be useful if you need to confirm the terminal's IP address, for example. You can password-protect the setup menu to prevent unauthorized users from modifying terminal settings. A straight RJ-45 connection cable and a RJ-45 to DB-9 adapter is provided with each terminal. 1. Plug the DB-9 into serial port of the PC. 2. Plug the RJ-45 connection cable into the adaptor as shown below: 3. Plug the other end of the RJ-45 connection cable into the SETUP port of the terminal. Note: Connecting the PC serial port to the Interface Cards or ALARM connectors may result in damage to the PC or terminal. Ensure that the RJ-45 connection cable is connected to the RJ-45 connector marked 'SETUP'. Cable pinouts (RJ-45 to DB-9) If you need a conversion connector or cable, refer to the following table: Console port (DCE, RJ-45) Signal RJ-45 to RJ-45 cable RJ-45 to DB-9 adaptor PC port (DTE, DB-9) RJ-45 pin RJ-45 pin RJ-45 pin DB-9 pin Signal RTS RTS DTR DTR TXD TXD GND GND GND NC NC RXD RXD DSR DSR CTS CTS Aprisa XE User Manual 46 | Connecting to the Terminal Configure the PC COM Port Settings Terminal emulation software e.g. HyperTerminal is used to setup the basic configuration of a terminal. The PC's COM port settings must be setup as follows: Bits per second 115200 Data bits Parity None Stop bits Flow Control None Start a HyperTerminal Session 1. On the PC, select Start > Programs > Accessories > Communications > HyperTerminal. 2. Enter a name for the connection and click OK. 3. Select the designated COM Port from the Connect Using drop-down box. Ensure it is the same COM port that you configured earlier on your PC. Click OK. Note: The Country/region, Area code, and Phone number information will appear automatically. Aprisa XE User Manual Connecting to the Terminal | 47 4. Set the COM Port settings as follows: 5. When you have completed the settings, click OK, which will open the HyperTerminal window. 6. Apply power to the terminal. Note: If power was applied to the terminal before launching HyperTerminal, hit the Enter key to initiate the link. When the terminal has completed startup, you will be presented with the Setup menu: Aprisa XE User Manual 48 | Connecting to the Terminal Connecting to the Terminal's Ethernet Interface The main access to a terminal for management is with the ethernet interface using standard IP networking. There should be only one ethernet connection from the terminal to the management network. The terminals are pre-configured to use IP addressing in one of the common 'non-routable' IP address ranges. This means the terminals are usually recognized by your operating system without any reconfiguration. However, you should change these default addresses (see ‘Changing the Terminal’s IP Address’ on page 64) to comply with your IP addressing scheme. In the example below, the active management PC must only have one connection to the link as shown by path . There should not be any alternate path that the active management PC can use via an alternate router or alternate LAN that would allow the management traffic to be looped as shown by path . Aprisa XE User Manual Connecting to the Terminal | 49 PC Requirements for SuperVisor SuperVisor requires the following minimum PC requirements: Microsoft Windows 2000, NT, XP, Vista or Windows 7 Personal computer with 1.6 GHz Pentium IV 512 MB of RAM 200 MB of free hard disk space Ethernet interface (Local Area Network) COM port Web browser with a Java plug-in such as Mozilla FireFox (recommended), Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.0, or Netscape Navigator 6.0, but SuperVisor also supports other major web browsers. Java JRE 1.6. Note: Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer and the Java JRE are provided on the Aprisa CD (see ‘Aprisa XE CD Contents’ on page 20). Aprisa XE User Manual 50 | Connecting to the Terminal PC Settings for SuperVisor To change the PC IP address: If your PC has previously been used for other applications, you may need to change the IP address and the subnet mask settings. You will require Administrator rights on your PC to change these. Windows XP example: Configure IP settings 1. Open the 'Control Panel'. 2. Open 'Network Connections' and right click on the 'Local Area Connection' and select 'Properties'. 3. Click on the 'General' tab. 4. Click on 'Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)' and click on properties. 5. Enter the IP address and the subnet mask (example as shown). 6. Click 'OK' then close the Control Panel. If the terminal is on a different subnet from the network the PC is on, set the PC default gateway address to the network gateway address which is the address of the router used to connect the subnets (for details, consult your network administrator). Aprisa XE User Manual Connecting to the Terminal | 51 To change the PC connection type: If your PC has previously been used with Dial-up connections, you may need to change your PC Internet Connection setting to 'Never dial a connection'. Windows XP example: Configure Windows to Never Dial a Connection 1. Open the 'Control Panel'. 2. Open 'Internet Options' and click on the 'Connections' tab. 3. Click the 'Never dial a connection' option. 4. Click 'OK' then close the Control Panel. Aprisa XE User Manual 52 | Connecting to the Terminal To change the PC pop-up status: Some functions within SuperVisor require Pop-ups enabled e.g. saving a MIB Windows XP example: Configure explorer to enable Pop-ups 1. Open the 'Control Panel'. 2. Open 'Internet Options' and click on the 'Privacy' tab. 3. Click on 'Settings'. 4. Set the 'Address of Web site to allow' to the terminal address or set the 'Filter Level' to 'Low: Allow Pop-ups from secure sites' and close the window. 5. Click 'OK' then close the Control Panel. Aprisa XE User Manual Connecting to the Terminal | 53 IP Addressing of Terminals When logging into a link, it is important to understand the relationship between the Local / Remote and the Near end / Far end terminals. The Near end terminal is the terminal that has its ethernet port physically connected to your IP network. The Far end terminal is the terminal that is at the other end of the link from the Near end terminal and communicates through the management connection over the radio link to the Near end terminal. The Local terminal is the terminal that SuperVisor is logged into and is displayed on the left hand side of the SuperVisor screen. The Local terminal can be the Near end or Far end terminal. The Remote terminal is the terminal that is at the other end of the link from the Local terminal and is displayed on the right hand side of the SuperVisor screen. To prevent confusion when operating SuperVisor, determine the IP address of the Near end terminal and log into that terminal. This is now the Local terminal. The distinction is important as: Some functions can only be carried out on the Local terminal. Having different configurations at each end of the link will disrupt communications between the terminals. In these circumstances it is important to make changes to the Far end terminal of the link first. The link is then lost only until the near end configuration is completed and communication restored. If the Near end terminal is modified first, the link is lost for much longer as staff will have to either physically visit the Far end terminal to restore the link, or restore the near end to match the far end, re-establish the link, then start the process again, this time with the Far end terminal first. Aprisa XE User Manual 54 | Connecting to the Terminal Network IP Addressing Same Subnet as the Local PC The following diagram shows a link interconnected on the same subnet as the local PC terminal used for configuration. In this example, the local PC, as well as the local and remote terminals, are on the same subnet and therefore have the same subnet mask 255.255.255.0. This will allow the PC and the terminals to communicate with each other. Aprisa XE User Manual Connecting to the Terminal | 55 Different Subnet as the Local PC The following diagram shows a link interconnected on a different subnet as the local PC used for configuration, and communicating through a network. This can be achieved on the condition that network router(s) 1 and 2 are programmed to recognize each other and the various subnets on the overall network. Aprisa XE User Manual Managing the Terminal | 57 7. Managing the Terminal The command line setup menu can be used to: Provide basic access to the terminal to set IP addresses Check or set basic settings of the terminal 4RF SuperVisor is an embedded element manager for the Aprisa XE terminal which is used to: Configure radio and interface parameters Setup cross connections between traffic interfaces Monitor performance, terminal status and alarm details The Setup Menu 1. Initiate the link by either applying power to the terminals or, if the terminals are already powered up, pressing the Enter key. 2. At the prompt, enter your selection: Selection Explanation 1) Dump terminal configuration This shows basic terminal data such as Terminal ID, IP data and radio parameters of TX and RX frequency, TX power, modulation type and channel size. 2) Not used 3) Configure IP addresses Use this if you want to set the IP address, subnet mask or gateway address of the local terminal. 4) Configure SNMP Use to display SNMP settings, setup the SNMP Access Controls and Trap Destinations and reset SNMP settings to defaults. 5) Set hostname Use this to set a name that can be used in conjunction with DNS. 6) Configure remote terminal address Use this to set the IP address of the remote terminal. 7) Reset web server users Deletes all existing usernames and passwords in the ‘User Table’ and restores default usernames and passwords. 8) Not used 9) Reboot Reboots the terminal. 10) Configure Ethernet Use this to display the Ethernet configuration and reset the Ethernet settings to the defaults. 11) Password Protect Menu Use this to password-protect the menu to prevent unauthorized users from modifying terminal settings. The password is setupxe. Aprisa XE User Manual 58 | Managing the Terminal To Get or Set the IP Address of a Terminal Using Setup To get the IP address of a terminal using setup: 1. At the prompt, type 1 and enter. The following information appears: the IP addresses of the local and remote terminals the subnet mask and gateway of the local terminal the TFTP of the remote terminal To set the IP address of a terminal using setup: 1. At the prompt, enter 1. 2. Enter 3 to configure the local terminal IP address. Set the following for the terminal using the standard format xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx: 1) IP address 2) Subnet mask 3) Gateway address 3. Enter 4 (Quit) to return to the main menu. 4. Enter 6 to configure the remote terminal IP address. Important: You must ensure that the IP addresses of the local and remote terminals are on the same subnet as the PC being used to configure the terminals. 5. Enter 4 (Quit) to return to the main menu. 6. Enter 9 (Are you sure y/n) to reboot the terminal. Aprisa XE User Manual Managing the Terminal | 59 SuperVisor The SuperVisor management software is pre-loaded into an integrated web-server within the terminal. SuperVisor runs on any Java-enabled web browser. You can use SuperVisor to: display and configure terminal parameters view the terminal alarms monitor the performance and status of the link upgrade the terminal software save and load configuration files save performance and error information to a log file Aprisa XE User Manual 60 | Managing the Terminal SuperVisor Logging In The maximum number of concurrent users that can be logged into a terminal is 5. If SuperVisor is inactive for a period of 30 minutes, the terminal will automatically log out the user. To log in to SuperVisor: 1. Open your web browser and enter the IP address of the terminal. Note: If you haven't yet assigned IP addresses to the terminals, use the factory-configured IP addresses (see ‘Changing the Terminal’s IP Address’ on page 64). If you don't know the IP address of the terminal, you can determine it using terminal emulation software (see ‘To Get or Set the IP Address of a Terminal Using Setup’ on page 58). 2. Login with the user name and password assigned to you. Note: If unique user names and passwords have not yet been configured, use the default user names and passwords (see ‘Setting up users’ on page 65). Important: After you login for the very first time, it is recommended that you change the default admin password for security reasons (see ‘Changing passwords’ on page 67). 3. Tick the ‘Use Popup Window’ tick box if you want a separate browser window to launch after you have logged in. The login page remains open in one window allowing you to view or configure settings in another page. This is useful if you have more than one link to configure, for example, protected terminals. 4. When you have logged in, the Summary page shows a summary of both the Local and Remote terminals’ parameters. Aprisa XE User Manual Managing the Terminal | 61 SuperVisor Logging Out As the maximum number of concurrent users that can be logged into a terminal is 5, not logging out correctly can restrict access to the terminal until the after the timeout period (30 minutes). Logging out from a terminal will logout all users logged in with the same user name. If the SuperVisor window is closed without logging out, the terminal will automatically log the user out after a timeout period of 30 minutes. To log out of SuperVisor: 1. Click on the ‘Logout’ button on the Summary Bar. Aprisa XE User Manual 62 | Managing the Terminal SuperVisor Main Screen The SuperVisor Main Screen presents a summary of both the local and remote terminals and the status of the terminal front panel LED indicators: Aprisa XE User Manual Managing the Terminal | 63 SuperVisor Menu Bar The SuperVisor Menu Bar at the top of the screen shows the names of the terminals, the top level menus and three status indicators for both the local and remote terminals. These indicators reflect the status LED indicators on the front panel of terminal. There are four menus available: Link - menu options for both terminals in a link Local - menu options for the local terminal in a link Remote - menu options for the remote terminal in a link Help - provides details about the terminal SuperVisor Summary Bar The SuperVisor Summary Bar at the bottom of the screen shows: The login name of the person currently logged in together with the name of the local terminal and its IP address. A login alarm that indicating that someone else has logged into and could be working on the same link. The LED is green for 1 user and yellow for more than 1 user. The number of users logged in to the link A SuperVisor logout button Aprisa XE User Manual 64 | Managing the Terminal Changing the Terminal’s IP Address You can use SuperVisor to change the IP address of the terminal from the default. Alternatively, you can assign the IP address using the SETUP port (see ‘To Get or Set the IP Address of a Terminal Using Setup’ on page 58). To change the IP address of the terminals using SuperVisor: 1. Launch your web browser and connect to the terminal using the one of the factory-configured default IP addresses shown below: Unprotected terminals Protected terminals Terminal IP address Terminal 1 (local) 169.254.50.10 Terminal 2 (remote) 169.254.50.20 Terminal 1, terminal A (local) 169.254.50.10 Terminal 1, terminal B (local) 169.254.50.11 Terminal 2, terminal A (remote) 169.254.50.20 Terminal 2, terminal B (remote) 169.254.50.21 Note: The factory default settings for the subnets is 255.255.0.0; the gateway is 0.0.0.0. 2. Log into the terminal as the administrator with the user name 'admin' and the password 'admin'. Note: For security reasons, change the admin password (see ‘Changing passwords’ on page 67) as soon as possible. 3. Select Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Advanced and make the necessary changes. Note: If this IP address change is being made over the RF link, it is important to change the far end of the link first. 4. Once you have changed the IP address of a terminal, you must perform a hard reboot of the terminal and then reconnect to it using the new IP address. Aprisa XE User Manual Managing the Terminal | 65 Setting Up Users Note: You must login with 'admin' privileges to add, disable, delete a user or change a password. User groups There are three pre-defined user groups to allocate access rights to users. These user groups have associated default user names and passwords of the same name. User Group Default User Name Default Password Access Rights View view view Users in this group can only view terminal parameters. Modify modify modify Users in this group can view and edit terminal parameters. Admin admin admin Users in this group have full access to all terminal parameters including the ability to add and change users. Adding a User 1. Select Local or Remote > Maintenance > User Admin > User Table. 2. Select an empty line (that isn't allocated to an existing user) and then click Edit. 3. Enter the user name. A user name can be up to 32 characters but cannot contain back slashes, forward slashes, spaces, tabs, single or double quotes. 4. Enter the Password and the Confirm Password. A password can be up to 32 characters but cannot contain back slashes, forward slashes, spaces, tabs, single or double quotes. 5. Select the group that they will belong to (View, Modify, or Admin). 6. If the user requires immediate access, enable the user by clicking on Yes. 7. Click Apply. Note 1: The new user must be setup on both the Local and Remote terminals. Note 2: For the changes to take effect, you must reboot the terminal (Local > Maintenance > Reboot). Aprisa XE User Manual 66 | Managing the Terminal Disabling a User 1. Select Local or Remote > Maintenance > User Admin > User Table. 2. Select the user who you want to disable. 3. Click Edit to display the User details and set Enabled to 'No'. 4. When you have made your changes, click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Note: For the changes to take effect, you must reboot the terminal (Local > Maintenance > Reboot). Deleting a User 1. Select Local or Remote > Maintenance > User Admin > User Table. 2. Select the user you want to delete. 3. Click Edit to display the user details and delete the User Name and Password. 4. Reset the Group to 'View' and set Enabled to 'no'. 5. When you have made your changes, click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Note: For the changes to take effect, you must reboot the terminal (Local > Maintenance > Reboot). Saving User Information You can save the list of users to your PC and then load this file to another terminal. This is useful if you have multiple terminals to configure. To save the user table to file: 1. Select Local > Maintenance > User Admin > Save User List. 2. Select the 'Save to disk' option in the dialog box that appears. 3. In the next dialog box that appears, navigate to the directory where you want to save the file, enter a suitable filename, and then click Save (The default name for this file is 'downloadUsers'). Note: If this dialog box does not appear, change your Internet security settings to allow downloads. You may also need to check your file download location setting. To save the file to another terminal: 1. Select Local > Maintenance > User Admin > Load User List. 2. On the Upload Users page, select Browse and navigate to the file on your PC. 3. Click Apply. The User Table appears and you can edit users, as required. Aprisa XE User Manual Managing the Terminal | 67 Changing Passwords 1. Select Local or Remote > Maintenance > User Admin > User Table. 2. Select the user whose password you want to change and click Edit. 3. Enter the new Password and the new Confirm Password. A password can be up to 32 characters but cannot contain back slashes, forward slashes, spaces, tabs, single or double quotes. 4. When you have made your changes, click Apply. Viewing User Session Details Administrators can check who is currently logged in, the computer they are logging in from, and how long they have been logged in for. Note: A 'session' is the period of time that begins when someone logs into the terminal and ends when they logout. To view user session details: 1. Select Local > Maintenance > User Admin > Session Details. The 'Session Details' shows a list of the current users: User Name: the User Name logged into the terminal. Time: the number of minutes the user has been logged in. Last Access: the number of minutes the user last accessed the terminal in this session. Address: the address of the computer or proxy server address logged into the terminal. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 69 8. Configuring the Terminal Configuring the RF Settings The RF settings are factory-configured before dispatch to the customer requirements. However, you can change the RF settings, if required. If two fundamental radio parameters (RX and TX frequency or modulation) are changed on the remote terminal in the same apply action (simultaneously), the first parameter change could break the communications link to the remote terminal and prevent the other commands from being actioned. There is a two second delay between receiving the command and actioning it to allow for subsequent commands to be received before the communications link is lost. To configure RF settings: Select Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Basic: Note: Transmit frequency, transmit power, channel size, modulation and antenna polarization would normally be defined by a local regulatory body and licensed to a particular user. Refer to your site license details when setting these fields. Aprisa XE User Manual 70 | Configuring the Terminal RX and TX Frequency The local terminal transmit frequency must match the receive frequency of the remote terminal and the remote terminal transmit frequency must match the receive frequency of the local terminal. When setting the RX and TX frequency with SuperVisor, the frequency entered is automatically resolved to the synthesizer step size for the terminal frequency band e.g. an ETSI 1400 MHz band frequency entry of 1474,010,000 Hz will be changed to 1474,012,500 Hz (see synthesizer step size in the table ‘Frequency Bands’ on page 287). The RX and TX frequency entered must be: Within the frequency band limits of the chosen RF frequency band of the terminal as specified in ‘Frequency Bands’ on page 287. e.g. for an ETSI frequency band of 1400 MHz, the frequency band limits are 1350 to 1550 MHz. Within the TX / RX passband of the duplexer fitted in the terminal e.g. for a frequency band of 1400 MHz, the standard duplexer passband is 7 MHz and the TX / RX split is 48 MHz (see Duplexer (bandpass) ‘Duplexers’ on page 301). The duplexer passband and center frequencies are written on the duplexer label. The TX and RX frequencies are validated against the duplexer parameters entered on SuperVisor Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Duplexer (see ‘Setting the Duplexer Parameters’ on page 79). If the TX or RX frequency entered is not valid i.e. outside the operating range of the duplexer, a warning message will popup. OK accepts the frequency entered and cancel rejects the frequency entered. Important: Changing the remote terminal RX or TX frequency will disable all management communication to the remote terminal but by changing the local terminal to match the remote terminal, the radio link will be restored as will the management communication BUT if the remote terminal RX or TX frequency is changed to be outside the operating range of the terminal, changing the local terminal to match the remote terminal will not restore the radio link and all management communication will be lost. The remote terminal TX and RX frequencies cannot be changed simultaneously i.e. change one direction and ‘Apply’ the change and then change the other direction and ‘Apply’ the change. To change both TX and RX frequencies: 1. Change the remote terminal RX frequency and ‘Apply’ the change. The radio link will fail. 2. Change the local terminal TX frequency to that of the remote RX frequency and ‘Apply’ the change. The radio link will restore. 3. Change the remote terminal TX frequency and ‘Apply’ the change. The radio link will fail. 4. Change the local terminal RX frequency to that of the remote TX frequency and ‘Apply’ the change. The radio link will restore. Transmit power The transmitter power is the power measured at the duplexer output port. The transmitter power adjustment range varies depending on the Modulation type and frequency band of the terminal. For ETSI transmitter power range see ‘Transmitter Power ETSI’ on page 290. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 71 Channel size The RF channel size is a factory-configured setting determined by the Aprisa XE hardware option. Modulation Both terminals must be set to the same modulation type. When you change the modulation type in an operational terminal, traffic across the link will be interrupted and you may need to change the cross connections capacity, as the Total Capacity of the radio link may be exceeded. Interleaver state This Interleaver State displays the current state of the modem interleaver. Interleaver State Modem Interleaver Operation Default The modem interleaver is on for channel sizes of 250 kHz and greater and off for channel sizes of 200 kHz and less. Enabled The modem interleaver is on. Disabled The modem interleaver is off. Aprisa XE User Manual 72 | Configuring the Terminal Modem Performance Settings To view or change the modem performance settings: Select Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Modem Modem QPSK Coding When the Modulation type is set to QPSK, the default QPSK Coding setting is ‘Non-Gray Coded’ but the QPSK Coding can use ‘Gray Coded’ for interoperability with older hardware. Modem Interleaver Mode The Modem Interleaver improves modem bit error rate but increases the end to end link delay so the Modem Interleaver should be enabled where a low bit error rate is required and disabled where a low end to end link delay is required. The ‘Default’ Modem Interleaver Mode setting is on for channel sizes of 250 kHz and greater and off for channel sizes of 200 kHz and less. The specification of end to end link delay for both interleaver on and off is given in the relevant RF Specification section. For ETSI Link Delays, see ‘Link Delays ETSI’ on page 292. When you change the Modem Interleaver Mode in an operational terminal, traffic across the link will be interrupted. Both terminals must be set to the same Modem Interleaver Mode. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 73 Modem Mute Mode The Aprisa XE radio always mutes its interface ports when the modem loses lock. The Modem Mute feature mutes its interface ports when the modem Reed Solomon forward error correction capability can no longer correct errors. This can occur when the signal strength of the RF link reduces to within about 2 dB of the theoretical sensitivity of the radio or when the radio is operating well above the sensitivity threshold but is in an environment subject to impulse noise interference on the RF path. When the mute activates; On the analog cards, Q4EM, DFXS and DFXO, the audio path mutes and the signalling states go idle. On the digital cards, QV24 and HSS, it causes an all ones data pattern to be driven on the RXD output line and handshake lines such as RTS / CTS to their off states while on the QJET card it forces the ports to an AIS state. The Modem Mute feature effectively reduces the radio receiver sensitivity by 2 to 3 dB from its published values but will prevent errors from corrupting the tributary audio circuits. Modem Mute Time The Modem Mute Time determines the time the mute will persist after the last uncorrectable block is received. This can be set from 0 to 10 seconds in 0.1 second steps. Note: The Modem Mute feature is only available if the radio modem is Rev D or later. If the radio has a Rev A, Rev B or Rev C modem, the modem mute functionality is not displayed in SuperVisor. Aprisa XE User Manual 74 | Configuring the Terminal Entering Basic Terminal Information To enter basic terminal information: Select Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Basic Terminal Information The data entry in these four fields can be up to 40 characters but cannot contain back slashes or double quotes. 1. Enter the terminal Name. This appears in the Terminal status and menu bar at the top of every page. 2. Enter a unique Terminal ID. 3. Enter the Location of the terminal. 4. Enter a contact name or an email address in Contact Details. The default value is ‘support@4RF.com’. 5. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 75 Configuring the IP Settings Select Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Advanced. Advanced Terminal Settings 1. Enter the static IP Address for the terminal assigned by your site network administrator using the standard format xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx. The default IP address is in the range 169.254.50.xx. 2. Enter the Subnet Mask for the terminal using the standard format xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx. The default subnet mask is 255.255.0.0. 3. Enter the Default Gateway for the terminal, if required, using the standard format xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (there is no default gateway set by default.) 4. Enter the IP address of the remote terminal using the standard format xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (the default IP address is in the range 169.254.50.xx.) 5. If you are setting up for remote logging (see ‘Setting up for Remote Logging’ on page 255), enter the Syslog Address and the Syslog Port for the remote terminal. 6. In Time Zone Offset from GMT, select the time zone from the list (optional) . 7. To set the Time to the PC real-time clock, click Now. 8. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 76 | Configuring the Terminal Setting the Terminal Clocking To view the terminal clock status: Select Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Clocking The current selected clock source and the current status of the primary and secondary external clocks are shown: Clock Status Clock Status Description Inactive This clock source is either not configured at all, or is not in current use Active This clock source is providing the clocking for the terminal Holdover This clock source is nominated as Primary or Secondary but is currently unavailable. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 77 To select the terminal clock source: The Clock Source selected for the terminal will be used to clock all interface ports requiring clocking and send a clocking signal over the RF link. Select Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Clocking > Clock Source and select one of the following: Clock Source Terminal Clocking External The terminal is clocked from the nominated interface port selected as the primary external clock or the secondary external clock. Internal The terminal is clocked from the terminal's internal clock. Link The terminal is clocked from the RF link. If the terminal Clock Source is set to External, the terminal will automatically clock from the nominated primary external clock source if that clock source is available. If the nominated primary external clock source is not available, the terminal will clock from the nominated secondary external clock source if that clock source is available. If the nominated secondary external clock source is not available, the terminal will clock from the internal clock source. When a nominated external clock source becomes available (primary or secondary), the terminal will then clock from that clock source. The terminal at one end of the link must have its clock source set to Internal or External and the terminal at the other end of the link must have its clock source set to Link. Aprisa XE User Manual 78 | Configuring the Terminal To select the interface port for the external clock source (external clock source only): Select the traffic interface ports nominated as Primary External Clock or Secondary External Clock sources. The failure of both External Clock sources results in a major alarm. To manually override the automatic clock source selection (external clock source only): Select either Switch to Primary or Switch to Secondary from the drop-down list, and click Apply. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 79 Setting the Duplexer Parameters To set the duplexer parameters: Select Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Duplexer Duplexer Parameters The terminal TX and RX frequencies entered are validated against the duplexer parameters entered on this page. A valid high port frequency must be: (duplexer high port centre frequency + pass band/2 - channel size/2) and (duplexer high port centre frequency – pass band/2 + channel size/2) A valid low port frequency must be: (duplexer low port centre frequency + pass band/2 - channel size/2) and (duplexer low port centre frequency – pass band/2 + channel size/2) The duplexer parameters are entered in the factory but can be re-entered if the duplexer is changed in the field. The parameters required are shown on the duplexer label. 1. Enter the duplexer High port centre frequency and Low port centre frequency in MHz. 2. Enter the duplexer Pass band in MHz (the total passband e.g. if the duplexer passband is show as ± 3.5 MHz, the value entered is 7 MHz). 3. Select Transmit High or Transmit Low Transmit High - the Transmitter is connected to the High Port of the duplexer. Transmit Low - the Transmitter is connected to the Low Port of the duplexer. 4. Enter the duplexer Serial Number (used for record keeping only). 5. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 80 | Configuring the Terminal Setting the RSSI Alarm Threshold The threshold (in dB) at which the RSSI alarm activates can be set for each of the modulation types over the adjustment range of -40 dBm to -110 dBm and the default values are as per the following screen shot. The alarm threshold has a +1 dB hysteresis for the inactive state. To set the RSSI alarm threshold: Select Link or Local or Remote > Alarms > RSSI Thresholds 1. Enter the alarm threshold required for each of the modulation types. 2. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 81 Configuring the External Alarms Each terminal has two external alarm inputs and four external alarm outputs, terminated on the ALARM RJ-45 connector on the terminal front panel. Each external alarm input can activate the Major / Minor terminal alarm or be mapped to a remote terminal external alarm output. The ‘Alarm On When’ (active alarm state) for both inputs can be configured for 'External Source On' or 'External Source Off' (default is External Source On). Each external alarm output can be triggered by a local terminal Major / Minor alarm or a remote terminal Major / Minor alarm or either of the remote external alarm inputs. The ‘Relay Closed When’ for the four outputs can be configured for 'Alarm On' or 'Alarm Off' (default is Alarm Off). Configuring the External Alarm Inputs To configure the External Alarm Inputs: Select Link or Local or Remote > Alarms > Ext Alarm Inputs Note: When the MHSB mode is enabled on the terminal, the external alarm input 2 is used for protection switch control so is not available for user alarms. The state of the local terminal external alarm input is always sent to the remote terminal and the external alarm input can be mapped to a remote terminal external alarm output. Alarms present on a local terminal external alarm input will only be displayed in the remote terminal Alarm Table / Alarm History if it has been mapped to one of the remote terminal external alarm outputs. Aprisa XE User Manual 82 | Configuring the Terminal 1. Select the Display Locally setting for each alarm input. Display Locally External Alarm Input Function No The external alarm input does not generate an alarm on the local terminal, does not appear in the ‘Alarm Table’ or ‘Alarm History’, and shows as grayed out on the ‘Alarm Summary’. Yes The external alarm input generates an alarm on the local terminal, displays in the ‘Alarm Table’ and ‘Alarm History’ and the ‘Alarm Summary’. Default 2. Select the Severity setting for each alarm input. This option is only relevant when the ‘Display Locally’ option is set to ‘Yes’. Severity External Alarm Input Severity Minor The external alarm input generates a minor alarm on the local terminal. Major The external alarm input generates a major alarm on the local terminal. Default 3. Enter a Description for each alarm input. The default is ‘External Input 1’ / ‘External Input 2’. 4. Select the Alarm On When setting for each alarm input. Alarm On When External Alarm Input State External Source On The alarm is on (alarm active) when a source of voltage is applied to the external alarm input and current is flowing. External Source Off The alarm is on (alarm active) when no source of voltage is applied to the external alarm input and hence no current is flowing. Default 5. When you have made your changes, click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 83 Configuring the External Alarm Outputs To configure the External Alarm Outputs: Select Link or Local or Remote > Alarms > Ext Alarm Outputs Note: When the MHSB mode is enabled on the terminal, the external alarm output 4 is used for protection switch control so is not available for user alarms. 1. Select the Mapping required for each alarm output. Mapping External Alarm Output Function None No external alarm output. Local Major The external alarm is present when the local terminal has a major alarm. Local Minor The external alarm is present when the local terminal has a minor alarm. Remote Major The external alarm is present when the remote terminal has a major alarm. Remote Minor The external alarm is present when the remote terminal has a minor alarm. Remote Input 1 The external alarm is present when the remote terminal external alarm input 1 is present. Remote Input 2 The external alarm is present when the remote terminal external alarm input 2 is present. Test Major External alarm test function – major alarm This setting will output an alarm on the selected output but it will not show in the alarm table or on the OK LED of the radio (it is not a 'real' alarm). This alarm test will clear if radio reboots. Test Minor External alarm test function – minor alarm This setting will output an alarm on the selected output but it will not show in the alarm table or on the OK LED of the radio (it is not a 'real' alarm). This alarm test will clear if radio reboots. Aprisa XE User Manual Default 84 | Configuring the Terminal 2. Select the Relay closed when setting for the four alarm outputs. Relay closed when External Alarm Output State Alarm on When the external alarm output relay contact is closed, the alarm is on (alarm active). Alarm off When the external alarm output relay contact is closed, the alarm is off (alarm inactive). Default 3. When you have made your changes, click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 85 Configuring SNMP Settings In addition to web-based management (SuperVisor), the terminal can also be managed using the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP). MIB files are supplied, and these can be used by a dedicated SNMP Manager, such as Castle Rock's SNMPc (www.castlerock.com), to access most of the terminal's configurable parameters. However, it is recommended that SNMP is only used for status and alarm monitoring of your entire network. SuperVisor is the best means to configure individual terminals. For communication between the SNMP manager and the terminal, Access Controls, Trap Destinations, and Community strings must be set up as described in the following sections. A SNMP Access Control is the IP address of the terminal used by an SNMP manager or any other SNMP device to access the terminal. Entering an IP address of ‘Any’ (not case sensitive) or will allow any IP address access to the terminal. A community string is sent with the IP address for security. Commands are sent from the SNMP manager to the terminal to read or configure parameters of the terminal e.g. setting of interface parameters. A SNMP Trap Destination is the IP address of a station running an SNMP manager. A community string is sent with the IP address for security. Events are sent from the terminal to the SNMP manager e.g. alarm events. A SNMP Community String is used to protect against unauthorized access (similar to a password). The SNMP agent (terminal or SNMP manager) will check the community string before performing the task requested in the SNMP message . Trap Destinations and Access Controls both use community strings for protection. To configure Trap Destinations and Access Controls: Select Local > Maintenance > SNMP > SNMP Settings Note: SNMP Settings can only be setup on the local terminal. Aprisa XE User Manual 86 | Configuring the Terminal SNMP Access Controls To add an access control: 1. Click on the ‘Add Read Only’ button to enter a Read Only access control or click on the ‘Add Read/Write’ button to enter a Read/Write access control. 2. Enter the IP address of each SNMP manager allowed access to the terminal (read/write access control shown). The IP address entered must be a valid dot delimited IP address. Entering an IP address of ‘Any’ or * will allow any IP address access to the terminal. 3. Enter the community string for the access control. The Community string is usually different for Read Only and Read/Write operations. There is no default 'public' community string for an access control, but a 'public' community string can be entered which will have full MIB access, including the 4RF MIB. 4. Click Add. To delete an access control: 1. Select the access control you want to delete and click Delete. 2. Click OK to delete the access control or Cancel to abort the delete. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 87 SNMP Trap Destinations To add a trap destination: 1. Click on the ‘Add SNMPv1’ button to enter a SNMPv1 trap destination or click on the ‘Add SNMPv2c’ button to enter a SNMPv2c trap destination. The differences between SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c are concerned with the protocol operations that can be performed. Selection of SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c must match the setup of the SNMP manager. 2. Enter the IP address of the server to which you want SNMP traps sent (SNMPv1 trap destination shown). The IP address entered must be a valid dot delimited IP address. 3. Enter the community string for the trap destination. There is no default 'public' community string for a trap destination, but a 'public' community string can be entered. 4. Click Add. To delete a trap destination: 1. Select the trap destination you want to delete and click Delete. 2. Click OK to delete the trap destination or Cancel to abort the delete. Aprisa XE User Manual 88 | Configuring the Terminal Viewing the SNMP Traps Any event or alarm in the SNMP objects list can be easily viewed. This also enables you to verify, if required, that SNMP traps are being sent. Select Local > Maintenance > SNMP > View Traps. Viewing the SNMP MIB Details This is useful to see what MIB (Management Information Base) objects the terminal supports. Select Link or Local or Remote > Maintenance > SNMP > View MIB Details. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Terminal | 89 Saving the Terminal's Configuration Note: To save cross connection configurations, see page 155. To save a configuration: 1. Ensure you are logged in with either 'modify' or 'admin' privileges. 2. Select Local > Maintenance > Config Files > Save MIB. 3. Select the 'Save to disk' option in the dialog box that appears. 4. In the next dialog box that appears, navigate to the directory where you want to save the file, enter a suitable filename, and then click Save (The default name for this file is backupForm). Note 1: If this dialog box does not appear, change your Internet security settings to allow downloads. You may also need to check your default download location. Note 2: Pop-ups must be enabled on you PC for this function to work (see ‘PC Settings for SuperVisor’ on page 50). To load a configuration into a terminal: Important: Only load a saved configuration file to another terminal that has exactly the same configuration (RF variant and interface cards). 1. Ensure you are logged in with either 'modify' or 'admin' privileges. 2. Select Local or Remote > Maintenance > Config Files > Load MIB. 3. Click Browse and then navigate to the file and select it. 4. Click Upload to load the configuration file into the terminal. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 91 9. Configuring the Traffic Interfaces Important: When configuring a link, it is important that you configure the remote terminal first as the new configuration may break the management connection to the remote terminal. Once the remote terminal has been configured, the local terminal should be configured to match the remote terminal. Viewing a Summary of the Interfaces To view a summary of the interfaces fitted: Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary. The Interface Summary page shows: The interface type for each slot that has been configured with the capacity used by each port. Total Capacity. The total capacity of the radio link. Ethernet Capacity. The capacity allocated to the Ethernet traffic over the radio link. This includes the user and management capacity assigned. Management Capacity. The capacity allocated to the management conduit over ethernet. Radio Capacity. The percentage of the total capacity of the radio link that has been allocated to traffic interfaces. Drop and insert capacity. The percentage of the total drop and insert capacity used for local drop and insert cross connections. The total drop and insert capacity is 65536 kbit/s minus the assigned radio link capacity. Some interfaces also require extra bandwidth to be allocated to transport signalling, such as CTS / DTR handshaking or E&M signals. The cross connections application automatically allocates capacity for signalling when it is needed. Aprisa XE User Manual 92 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces Configuring the Traffic Interfaces Important: Before you can configure the traffic interfaces, the interface cards must be already installed (see ‘Installing Interface Cards’ on page 235). Configuring each traffic interface involves the following steps (specific instructions for each interface card follow this page). First, specify the port settings for the Remote terminal: 1. Select Remote > Interface > Interface Summary, select the interface card and click Configure Interface. 2. Select the port you want to configure and modify the settings, as necessary. 3. Click Apply to save the changes you have made. Now specify the port settings for the Local terminal: 1. Select Local > Interface > Interface Summary, select the interface card and click Configure Interface. 2. Select the port you want to configure and modify the settings, as necessary. 3. Click Apply to save the changes you have made. Once you have done this, you will need to configure the traffic cross-connects (see ‘Configuring the traffic cross connections’ on page 145) for each interface card. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 93 Ethernet Switch In the default mode, the Ethernet switch passes IP packets (up to 1522 bytes) as it receives them. However, using SuperVisor you can configure VLAN, QoS and port speed settings to improve how IP traffic is managed. This is useful for operators who use virtual networks to segment different groups of users or different types of traffic in their network. These groups can be maintained across the radio link thus ensuring users in one virtual network cannot access data in other virtual networks. The switch also has a high-speed address lookup engine, supporting up to 2048 preferential MAC addresses as well as automatic learning and aging. Traffic is filtered through this table and only traffic destined for the remote end is sent across the link improving bandwidth efficiency. Note: You need ‘modify’ or ‘admin’ privileges to configure the Ethernet for VLAN and Quality of Service (QoS). VLAN tagging By default, all user and management traffic is allocated the same VLAN across the link. Alternatively, you can assign each of the four Ethernet ports to a VLAN. Each VLAN can be configured to carry user traffic, or user traffic and radio management traffic. The VLAN tagging conforms to IEEE 802.1Q standard. Aprisa XE User Manual 94 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces Configuring the Ethernet switch for VLAN tagging 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Ethernet Settings. Note: Always configure the remote terminal before the local terminal 2. In the Quick Links box at the bottom of the page, click Ethernet General Settings. 3. From Ethernet Grouping drop-down list select 'Enabled' ('Disabled' is the default setting; Ethernet traffic is not segregated). Important: Changing this setting will disrupt Ethernet traffic. 4. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. You now need to select the VLAN groups for each of the four Ethernet ports. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 95 Specifying the VLAN ID for the Ethernet Ports Each Ethernet port can be configured with one of five VLAN IDs. You can configure each of the physical ports, numbered 1 to 4 with a VLAN ID (numbered User1 to User4 and User+Mgmt). These VLAN IDs are applied at the ingress port and only used internally across the link. The VLAN ID is removed when traffic exits the switch at the egress port. Data entering the Ethernet switch on ports 1 to 4 or the internal management port can only exit on ports that are associated with the same VLAN ID as the ingress port. For example, the physical RJ-45 port 1 may be on VLAN 3 at the local end, but at the remote end, the physical RJ-45 port 4 may be associated with VLAN 3. Traffic entering the local end on port 1 will exit the remote end on port 4. To allow the radio link to transport traffic using existing VLAN ID information, the radio adds an extra VLAN ID over the top of an existing VLAN ID (double-tagging). This extra VLAN ID is added at the ingress port and removed at the egress port. This adds 4 bytes to the packet and the maximum packet size supported by the radio is 1526 bytes. Note 1: Tagged flows can only have one port per VLAN ID on each terminal. Note 2: The ethernet switch only supports packets up to 1522 bytes in size at the ingress port. 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Ethernet Settings. Note: Always configure the remote terminal before the local terminal 2. In the Quick Links box at the bottom of the page, select the port you want to configure: 3. The Ethernet Port Settings page appears for the port you selected: 4. From the Ethernet Group drop-down list, select the VLAN group to which you want this port to belong. Important: To access radio management traffic, you need to allocate one of the VLANs to ‘User and Management’. It is strongly recommended that you indicate which port or group of ports is associated to the management traffic first. 5. Click Apply. 6. Repeat steps 1-4 for the Ethernet switch in the other terminal in the link. Aprisa XE User Manual 96 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces Quality of Service Quality of Service (QoS) enables network operators to classify traffic passing through the Ethernet switch into prioritized flows. Each port can have a priority tag set at the ingress port, or it can be read directly from the Ethernet traffic. When read directly from the Ethernet traffic, the following fields are used to determine the traffic’s QoS priority. The IEEE 802.1p Priority information in the IEEE 802.3ac Tag. The IPv4 Type of Service field. The IPv6 Traffic Class field. You can select one of two queuing methods: IEEE 802.1p standard method Cisco-proprietary method The queuing method determines how the traffic is prioritized. Each port has four egress queues (queues 0-3) of differing priorities. Queue 0 is the lowest priority and Queue 3 is the highest priority. Configuring the Ethernet Switch for QoS 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Ethernet Settings. 2. In the Quick Links box at the bottom of the page, click Ethernet General Settings. The Ethernet General Settings page: 3. Leave Ethernet Grouping set to 'Disabled' (unless you want to enable VLAN tagging). Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 97 4. Select the Priority Queue Scheduling. There are two methods for transmitting the Ethernet traffic queues across the link: Strict: the queue is transmitted based on the priority. The first queue transmitted is the highest priority queue and the terminal will not transmit any other traffic from any other queue until the highest priority queue is empty. Then the next highest priority queue is transmitted, and so on. Weighted (default): each of the queues will transmit a number of packets based on a weighting. The following table shows how the weighting is applied to each queue. Queue Priority Number of packets transmitted Queue 3 Highest Priority 8 packets Queue 2 4 packets Queue 1 2 packets Queue 0 Lowest Priority 1 packets 5. Select the IEEE 802.1 Priority Queue Mapping. This determines the standard (or scheme) used for prioritizing traffic into one of four queues numbered 0 to 3 (3 being the highest priority queue). There are two possible methods for queuing the ethernet traffic. One is based on the IEEE 802.1D standard (which is the default setting), and the other is based on the Cisco-proprietary method. The following table shows how traffic is queued using the two methods: Output Queue Priority Traffic Type Cisco Priority Queuing IEEE 802.1D Priority Queuing 0 (default) Best Effort Background Spare Excellent Effort Controlled Load ‘Video’ < 100ms latency and jitter ‘Video’ < 10ms latency and jitter Network Control Aprisa XE User Manual 98 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces Configuring the Ethernet Ports for QoS Each Ethernet port can be configured for Ingress Rates and Priority queues. To configure the Ethernet ports for QoS: 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Ethernet Settings. 2. Select the port you want to configure and click Port Configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 99 3. Select the required Ingress Rate for this port. The ingress rate (input data rate) limits the rate that traffic is passed into the port. Operators can protect the terminal’s traffic buffers against flooding by rate-limiting each port. Ingress Rate Unlimited Default 128 kbit/s 256 kbit/s 512 kbit/s 1 Mbit/s 2 Mbit/s 4 Mbit/s 8 Mbit/s 4. Select the Priority for all Ethernet data entering this port. The priority specifies where the priority control information is sourced from. From Frames Traffic is prioritized into one of the following traffic types (numbered 0 to 7) by the originating device or application. Generally, the higher the priority, the higher the priority rating. However, in the IEEE standard queuing scheme, the ordering of the priority is 1, 2, 0, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. In this case 0 has a higher priority than 1 and 2. If priority control information is present in the Ethernet header, this information is used to priorities the traffic but if there is no priority control information in the Ethernet header, the IP header is used to priorities the traffic. Low, Medium, High, Very High The priority rating you select is applied to all traffic on the port and is applied to all traffic irrespective of traffic type and the priority control information in the traffic. 5. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 100 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces Viewing the Status of the Ethernet Ports Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Switch Summary. For each port the following is shown: Speed — the data rate (in Mbit/s) of the port. Duplex — whether half or full duplex. Status — whether there is a cable plugged into the port (active) or not (inactive). Note: The Ethernet ports on the terminal are set to auto-configure the speed and duplex for the best performance. Resetting the Ethernet Settings You can easily reset the VLAN and QoS settings to the default values, if required. This is useful if you want the Ethernet switch to operate in the default mode, that is, IP packets are passed across the link as received. Note: You can also do this using the Setup menu (see page 57.). 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Default Ethernet Settings. Set Ethernet Groupings To Default Values. This resets the Ethernet Grouping setting to 'Disabled', which means that the Ethernet switch no longer operates as a VLAN. In addition, all the Ethernet ports will default to the 'User and Management' Ethernet Group. Set Ethernet QoS To Default Values. This resets the ingress rate for all the ports to 'Unlimited' and the priority to 'From Frames'. In addition, the Ethernet QoS settings are reset to the defaults: Priority Queue Scheduling reverts to 'Weighted' and IEEE 802.1 Priority Queue Mapping reverts to 'IEEE Standard'. 2. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 101 Ethernet Port Startup In previous Aprisa XE software versions, the Ethernet switch ports where enabled when the radio powered up. In software version 8.6.53, the mode of operation was changed to disable the Ethernet switch ports until the radio software has completed booting. This enhancement has been implemented to meet customer requirements. A hardware modification is required to the Aprisa XE motherboard to enable this enhancement (0 ohm resistor fitted). If the Aprisa XE motherboard hardware modification has been done, the Aprisa XE software version 8.6.53 or greater will be required to operate the radio. If Aprisa XE software prior to this version is used, the Ethernet ports will not enable. For this reason, an Aprisa XE running software version 8.6.53 cannot be downgraded to an earlier software version. Aprisa XE User Manual 102 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces QJET Port Settings 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary, then select the QJET interface and click Configure Interface. 2. Select the QJET port to be configured and click Edit. 3. Set the QJET Line Encoding: For an E1 port, set the E1 Line Encoding as required to either HDB3 or AMI. The default is HDB3. For a T1 port, set the T1 Line Encoding as required to either B8ZS or AMI. The default is B8ZS. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 103 4. Set the QJET T1 Tx Waveform Shaper (T1 only). The Tx Waveform Shaper applies 1/√f pre-emphasis to the transmit waveform to ensure the waveform meets the G.703 pulse mask at the interconnect point. Waveform shaping assumes the use of 22 gauge (0.32 mm2) twisted-pair cable. The default is 0 ~ 133 f t . Cable Length Range 0 ~ 133 f t Def au lt 133 ~ 266 f t 266 ~ 399 f t 399 ~ 533 f t 533 ~ 655 f t 5. Loopback controls the port loopbacks (see ‘Interface Loopbacks’ on page 242). Setting Function Off No port loopback Line Facing Port traffic from the customer is transmitted over the RF link but is also looped back to the customer Radio Facing Traffic received from the RF link is passed to the customer port but is also looped back to be transmitted over the RF link Note: The QJET E1 / T1 port green LED flashes when the loopback is active. 6. AIS Hysteresis sets the number of seconds after a Modem LOS that AIS is sent. 7. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 104 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces Q4EM Port Settings 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary, select the Q4EM interface, and click Configure Interface. 2. Select the Q4EM port to be configured, and click Edit. 'Slot' shows the slot the Q4EM interface card is plugged into in the terminal (A – H). 'Port' shows the interface port number (1-4). ‘PCM Mode’ shows the current mode assigned to the port by the cross connect. ‘E&M’ shows if the E&M signalling on the port has been activated by the cross connect. ‘Loopback’ controls the 4 wire analogue port loopbacks. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 105 3. Set the Q4EM Output level and the Input level required. Signal Direction Level adjustment range Default setting Input level (Li) -14.0 dBr to +4.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps +0.0 dBr Output level (Lo) -14.0 dBr to +4.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps +0.0 dBr It is important that analogue signals presented from the Q4EM interface be normalized to fit within the ± 127 quantizing steps of the encoder. This is done by adjusting the circuit levels relative to the 0 dBm (± 118 peak code) for example: If a nominal input level of -6.0 dBm is applied to the Q4EM interface input port, the Q4EM Input Level must be set to -6.0 dBr. This will effectively amplify the sent signal by 6.0 dB to produce a digital signal with a ± 118 peak code (0 dBm). If a nominal output level of -6.0 dBm is required from the Q4EM interface output port, the Q4EM Output Level must be set to -6.0 dBr. This will effectively attenuate the received decoded signal by 6 dB. 4. Set the Q4EM E wire interface to either Normal or Inverted. This determines the state of the CAS bit relative to the state of the E wire: E wire output CAS bit Normal (default) CAS bit Inverted Output Active Output Inactive 5. Set the Q4EM M wire interface to either Normal or Inverted. This determines the state of the CAS bit relative to the state of the M wire: M wire input CAS bit Normal (default) CAS bit Inverted Input Active Input Inactive 6. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. 7. Select Q4EM PCM Law Control from the Quick Links box. This option sets the companding law used by the four ports on the Q4EM card. A-Law is used internationally (default). µ-Law is used in North America and Japan. Note: The PCM Law Control controls all four ports on the Q4EM card. To run a mixture of µ-Law and ALaw interfaces, multiple Q4EM cards are necessary. Aprisa XE User Manual 106 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces 8. Loopback controls the port loopbacks (see ‘Interface Loopbacks’ on page 242). Setting Function Off No port loopback Line Facing Port traffic from the customer is transmitted over the RF link but is also looped back to the customer Radio Facing Traffic received from the RF link is passed to the customer port but is also looped back to be transmitted over the RF link Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 107 Loop Interface Circuits DFXO / DFXS Loop Interface Circuits Function The function of DFXO / DFXS 2 wire loop interface circuits is to transparently extend the 2 wire interface from the exchange line card to the telephone / PBX, ideally without loss or distortion. The DFXO interface simulates the function of a telephone and a DFXS interface simulates the function of an exchange line card. These circuits are known as ‘ring out, dial in’ 2 wire loop interface circuits. Network Performance The overall Network Performance is dependant on the number of D-A and A-D conversions and 2 wire to 4 wire / 4 wire to 2 wire conversions in the end to end circuit (telephone to telephone). To achieve the best overall Network Performance, the number of D-A and A-D conversions and 2 wire to 4 wire / 4 wire to 2 wire conversions should be minimized. Circuit Performance The circuit quality achieved with a 2 wire voice circuit is very dependant on the external interface parameters and the interconnecting copper line. Short interconnecting copper lines (< 100 meters), have little effect on the circuit performance so the interface parameters have the dominant affect on circuit performance. As the length of the interconnecting copper line is increased, the attenuation of the analogue signal degrades circuit performance but also the impedance of the copper line also has a greater effect on the circuit performance. For this reason, complex line impedance networks (e.g. TBR21, TN12) were created which model the average impedance of the copper network. The factors that affect the quality of the circuit achieved are; DFXO interface The degree of match between the DFXO line termination impedance, the impedance of the interconnecting copper line and the exchange line card line termination impedance. This affects the return loss. The degree of match between the DFXO line termination impedance, the impedance of the interconnecting copper line and the exchange line card hybrid balance impedance. This affects the exchange line card transhybrid balance. The degree of match between the DFXO hybrid balance impedance, the impedance of the interconnecting copper line and the exchange line card line termination impedance. This affects the DFXO transhybrid balance. The circuit levels of both the DFXO and the exchange line card. DFXS interface The degree of match between the DFXS line termination impedance, the impedance of the interconnecting copper line and the telephone line termination impedance. This affects the return loss. The degree of match between the DFXS line termination impedance, the impedance of the interconnecting copper line and the telephone hybrid balance impedance. This affects the telephone transhybrid balance. The degree of match between the DFXS hybrid balance impedance, the impedance of the interconnecting copper line and the telephone line termination impedance. This affects the DFXS transhybrid balance. The circuit levels of both the DFXS and the telephone. Aprisa XE User Manual 108 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces Line Termination Impedance The line termination impedance (Zt) is the impedance seen looking into the DFXO or DFXS interface. The line termination impedance is not the same as the hybrid balance impedance network (Zb) but can be set to the same value. Changing the DFXO / DFXS impedance setting on the Aprisa XE changes both the line termination impedance and the hybrid balance impedance to the same value. Hybrid Balance Impedance The hybrid balance impedance (Zb) is the impedance network on the opposite side of the hybrid from the DFXO / DFXS line interface. The purpose of this network is to balance the hybrid to the impedance presented to the DFXO / DFXS line interface. Changing the DFXO / DFXS impedance setting on the Aprisa XE changes both the line termination impedance and the hybrid balance impedance to the same value. Transhybrid loss Transhybrid loss is a measure of how much analogue signal received from the remote terminal is passed across the hybrid and sent to the remote terminal. The transhybrid loss is maximized when the hybrid balance impedance matches the impedance presented to the DFXO / DFXS line interface. An optimized hybrid minimizes circuit echo. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 109 Circuit Levels The 8 bit digital word for each analogue sample encoded (A law), has a maximum of 255 quantizing code steps, a maximum of + 127 for positive signals and a minimum of - 127 for negative signals. No signal is represented by the code step 0. A nominal level of 0 dBm generates a peak code of ± 118 which allows up to + 3.14 dBm0 of headroom before the maximum step of 127 is obtained. Any level greater than + 3.14 dBm0 will be distorted (clipped) which will cause severe problems with analogue data transmission. It is therefore important that analogue signals presented from the DFXO / DFXS line interface be normalized to fit within the ± 127 quantizing steps of the encoder. This is done by adjusting the circuit levels relative to the 0 dBm (± 118 peak code) for example: If a nominal input level of +1 dBm is applied to the DFXS line interface, the DFXS Input Level must be set to +1.0 dBr. This will effectively attenuate the sent signal by 1 dB to produce a digital signal with a 118 peak code (0 dBm). If a nominal output level of -6 dBm is required from the DFXS line interface, the DFXS Output Level must be set to -6.0 dBr. This will effectively attenuate the received signal by 6 dB. The circuit levels and the transhybrid loss of both ends of the circuit, also determine the stability of the circuit. If the circuit levels are too high and the transhybrid loss figures achieved are too low, the circuit can have a positive loop gain and can recirculate (sometimes called singing). Typically, an end to end 2 wire voice circuit is engineered to have a 2-3 dB loss in both directions of transmission. Derived System Level Plan Overall Loss = 8.0 dB Aprisa XE Exchange Line Card DFXO Interface 0.0 dBm DFXS Interface -6.0 dBm -2.0 dBm 4WR 0 dBr -8.0 dBm 4WS -6.0 dBr 4WR -4.0 dBr 0 dBr -6.0 dBr Transmission Reference Point ZB 0 dBr 2WR 2WS 2WS 2WR +1.0 dBr Overall Loss = 3.0 dB ZB -1.0 dBr 4WS -2.0 dBm 2WR output 2WS input ZB 0 dBr 4WR -1.0 dBm +1.0 dBr 4WS 0.0 dBm +1.0 dBm Note 1: The derived system loss is 2 dB in both directions due to the deliberate 2 dB level mismatch between the exchange line card and the DFXO interface unit Aprisa XE User Manual 110 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces E1 CAS to DFXS Circuits Function E1 CAS to DFXS circuits can be provisioned over an Aprisa XE link by using a DFXS interface card at the customer end of the link and a QJET at the exchange end of the link. The QJET E1 interface connects to an exchange or PBX Digital Trunk Interface (DTI) to provide FXS foreign exchange circuits. The Aprisa XE can interconnect at E1 to an exchange / PBX DTI if the DTI is capable of providing standard 1 bit channel associated signalling (CAS). Forward Af Backward Ab Idle Idle Ringing Loop (Off hook) The signalling functions provided with a 1 bit CAS protocol are: Ring cadence transmission Ring trip Off hook Switch hook flash Decadic dialling The speech path functions as normal and provides: Transmission of tones (e.g. dial tone, ring tone) Caller ID DTMF dialling Speech Setup Cross connect the voice channel between the QJET and the DFXS card. Cross connect the signalling (A bit only) using ‘4 wire compatible’ mode between the QJET and the DFXS card. Configure the E1 spare CAS bits to be compatible with the DTI (see ‘QJET Spare CAS Bit Control’ on page 165). The standard spare bit states are B = 1, C = 0, D = 1. DFXS to DFXS Hotline Circuits Function A ‘Hotline’ circuit can be provisioned over an Aprisa XE link by using a DFXS interface card at both ends of the link. When one phone goes off hook, the other phone rings and vice versa. A 1 bit CAS protocol is used to signal between the DFXS interfaces: Forward Af Backward Ab Idle Idle Ringing Loop (Off hook) Setup Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 111 Cross connect the voice channel on both DFXS cards. Cross connect the signalling (A bit only) using ‘4 wire compatible’ mode on both DFXS cards. Aprisa XE User Manual 112 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces DFXS Port Settings 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary, then select the DFXS interface and click Configure Interface. 2. Select the DFXS port to configure, and click Edit. 'Slot' shows the slot the DFXS interface card is plugged into in the terminal (A – H). 'Port' shows the interface port number (1-2). ‘PCM Mode’ shows the current mode assigned to the port by the cross connect. ‘Loopback’ loops back the port digital paths to return the port analogue signal back to the customer. ‘Path Mute’ mutes the TX or RX digital path. This function is used to mute the return direction of transmission during A-A intrinsic performance testing as recommended in ITU G.712 para 1.2 Port definitions. Path Mute Description No Mute Normal signal transmission in both directions Mute TX Mutes the transmit digital path i.e. the signal from the DFXS to the DFXO is muted Mute RX Mutes the receive digital path i.e. the signal from the DFXO to the DFXS is muted Aprisa XE User Manual Default Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 113 3. Set the DFXS Input Level and the Output Level required: Signal Direction Level adjustment range Default setting Input Level (Li) -9.0 dBr to +3.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps +1.0 dBr Output Level (Lo) -9.5 dBr to +2.5 dBr in 0.5 dB steps -6.0 dBr In the example shown below, the Customer Premises Equipment is a telephone connected to a DFXS card. The levels are set based on the system using a 0 dBr transmission reference point. DFXS Input Level setting The telephone has a nominal output level of +1 dBr. To achieve a transmission reference point transmit level of 0 dBr, the DFXS Input Level is set to +1 dBr (effective T pad loss of 1 dB). DFXS Output Level setting The telephone has a nominal input level of -6 dBr. With a transmission reference point received level of 0 dBr, the DFXS Output level is set to -6 dBr (effective R pad loss of 6 dB). 4. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 114 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces 5. Select the DFXS Control. The DFXS Control page sets values for both ports on the DFXS card. The cards are shipped with the default values shown in the illustration below: 'Slot' shows the slot the DFXS interface card is plugged into in the terminal (A – H). 6. Select the DFXS PCM Law. This option sets the companding law used by both ports on the DFXS card. A-Law is used internationally (default) µ-Law is used in North America and Japan. Note: To run a mixture of µ-Law and A-Law interfaces, multiple DFXS cards are necessary. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 115 7. Select the DFXS Line Impedance This option sets the DFXS line termination impedance and the hybrid balance impedance to the same value. Selection Description 600 Ω Standard equipment impedance 600 Ω + 2.16 uF Standard equipment impedance with low frequency roll-off 900 Ω Typically used on loaded cable pairs 900 Ω + 2.16 uF Typically used on loaded cable pairs with low frequency roll-off TN12 Standard complex impedance for Australia TBR21 Widely deployed complex impedance BT3 Standard complex impedance for New Zealand Default On a short line (< 100 meters), the selected impedance should match the impedance of the phone (off-hook). On a long line (> 1000 meters), the selected impedance should match the impedance of the phone (off-hook) as seen through the line. If you are not sure what the expected impedance value should be, check with the CPE equipment supplier. 8. Set the DFXS Transhybrid Balance (usually not required to change). The default Transhybrid Balance value (0 dB), provides the best circuit performance where the balance impedance (set by the Line Impedance setting) matches the impedance of the line. You should only adjust the transhybrid balance when the balance impedance does not match the actual line impedance. You can achieve small circuit improvements using this option. 9. Set the DFXS Ringer Frequency. This option sets the DFXS Ringing Frequency. Selection Description 17 Hz Used in older networks 25 Hz Standard ringing frequency 50 Hz Used by some telephone exchanges Aprisa XE User Manual Default 116 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces 10. Set the DFXS Ringer Output Voltage. This option sets the DFXS open circuit Ringing Output Voltage which is sourced via an internal ringing resistance of 178 per port. The DC offset on the AC ringing signal enables ring trip to occur with a DC loop either during ringing cycles. The normal DC line feed voltage enables ring trip to occur with a DC loop in the silent period between the ringing cycles. Selection Description 60 Vrms + 0 VDC Outputs 60 VRMS ringing with no DC offset Maximum ringing voltage for high ringing load applications but no DC ring trip 55 Vrms + 10 VDC Outputs 55 VRMS ringing with a 10 VDC offset Medium ringing load applications 50 Vrms + 18 VDC Outputs 50 VRMS ringing with a 18 VDC offset Above average ringing load applications 45 Vrms + 22 VDC Outputs 45 VRMS ringing with a 22 VDC offset Typical application 40 Vrms + 24 VDC Outputs 40 VRMS ringing with a 24 VDC offset Lowest terminal power consumption Default 11. Select the DFXS Billing Tone Frequency. This option sets the frequency of billing tone generation. If you are not sure what the expected frequency of the billing tone should be, check with the exchange equipment supplier. Selection Description 12 kHz Use if the CPE requires a 12 kHz billing tone signal 16 kHz Use if the CPE requires a 16 kHz billing tone signal Aprisa XE User Manual Default Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 117 12. Select the DFXS Billing Tone Level. This option sets the DFXS billing tone output level which is defined as the voltage into 200 Ω with a source impedance equal to the Line Impedance setting. The billing tone voltage into 200 Ω is limited by the maximum open circuit voltage of 1 Vrms. The drop down list reflects the maximum allowable billing tone output voltage for the Line Impedance setting selected. Selection Description 400 mV rms Billing tone voltage setting available for line impedances of TN12, BT3 and TBR21. 300 mV rms Billing tone voltage setting available for line impedances of TN12, BT3, TBR21 and 600 Ω. 200 mV rms Billing tone voltage setting available for line impedances of TN12, BT3, TBR21, 600 Ω and 900 Ω. 100 mV rms Billing tone voltage setting available for all line impedance settings. Default 13. The DFXS billing tone Attack Ramp time can be adjusted to reduce the interference which can be produced when a signal turns on quickly. The attack ramp time is how long the billing tone generator takes to ramp up to full level when it is turned. The default ramp time is 1 ms. Aprisa XE User Manual 118 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces 14. The DFXS Signalling Advanced options are used to control the four CAS bits ABCD in the DFXO to DFXS direction of transmission and one CAS bit A in the DFXS to DFXO direction of transmission. This option sets the signalling for both DFXS card ports. Transparent Normal mode is used for normal traffic and Transparent Inverted mode can be used for special signalling requirements when a function needs to be reversed e.g. to change the idle polarity of the DFXS line feed voltage. Forced modes are used to disable particular functions e.g. when polarity reversals are not required. They can also be used for system testing e.g. to apply DFXS continuous ringing output Selection Description Transparent Normal Normal transparent transmission of the CAS bit Transparent Inverted Transparent transmission of the CAS bit but inverts the polarity. Forced Normal Sets the CAS bit to 1 (inactive). Forced Inverted Sets the CAS bit to 0 (active). Default DFXO to DFXS CAS Bit Forced Normal Forced Inverted A bit (fault) Sets the CAS A bit to 1 continuous fault state Sets the CAS A bit to 0 no fault state B bit (ring) Sets the CAS B bit to 1 no DFXS ringing output. Sets the CAS B bit to 0 continuous DFXS ringing output. C bit (billing) Sets the CAS C bit to 1 no DFXS billing tone output. Sets the CAS C bit to 0 continuous DFXS billing tone output. D bit (reversal) Sets the CAS D bit to 1 no DFXS polarity reversal Sets the CAS D bit to 0 continuous DFXS polarity reversal CAS Bit Forced Normal Forced Inverted A bit (off hook) Sets the CAS A bit to 1 no DFXO off hook Sets the CAS A bit to 0 continuous DFXO off hook From DFXS to DFXO Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 119 QJET to DFXS CAS Bit Forced Normal Forced Inverted A bit (ring) Sets the CAS A bit to 1 no DFXS ringing output. Sets the CAS A bit to 0 continuous DFXS ringing output. B bit (na) Not Applicable Not Applicable C bit (na) Not Applicable Not Applicable D bit (na) Not Applicable Not Applicable CAS Bit Forced Normal Forced Inverted A bit (off hook) Sets the CAS A bit to 1 Idle state to E1 port Sets the CAS A bit to 0 Off hook state to E1 port From DFXS to QJET 15. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 120 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces DFXO Port Settings 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary, then select the DFXO interface and click Configure Interface. 2. Select the DFXO port to configure, and click Edit. 'Slot' shows the slot the DFXO interface card is plugged into in the terminal (A – H). 'Port' shows the interface port number (1-2). ‘PCM Mode’ shows the current mode assigned to the port by the cross connect. ‘Loopback’ loops back the port digital paths to return the port analogue signal back to the customer. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 121 3. Set the DFXO Input Level and the Output Level required: Signal Direction Level adjustment range Default setting Input Level (Li) -10.0 dBr to +1.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps -4.0 dBr Output Level (Lo) -10.0 dBr to +1.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps -1.0 dBr In the example shown below, the PSTN exchange line card is connected to a DFXO card. The levels are set based on the system using a 0 dBr transmission reference point. DFXO Input Level setting The exchange line card has a nominal output level of -6 dBr. To achieve a digital reference point transmit level of -2.0 dBm0, the DFXO input level is set to -4.0 dBr (effective T pad gain of 4.0 dB). The deliberate 2 dB of loss between the exchange line card and the DFXO provides a 2 dB of overall circuit loss between the DFXO and the DFXS. DFXO Output Level setting The exchange line card has a nominal input level of +1.0 dBr. With a transmission reference point received level of -2.0 dBm0, the DFXO output level is set to -1.0 dBr (effective R pad loss of 1.0 dB). The deliberate 2 dB of loss between the exchange line card and the DFXO provides a 2 dB of overall circuit loss between the DFXS and the DFXO. 4. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 122 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces 5. Select the DFXO Control. The DFXO Control page sets values for both ports on the DFXO card. The cards are shipped with the default values shown in the illustration below: 'Slot' shows the slot the DFXO interface card is plugged into in the terminal (A – H). 6. Select the DFXO PCM Law. This option sets the companding law used by both ports on the DFXO card. A-Law is used internationally (default) µ-Law is used in North America and Japan. Note: To run a mixture of µ-Law and A-Law interfaces, multiple DFXO cards are necessary. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 123 7. Select the DFXO Impedance This option sets the DFXO line termination impedance and the hybrid balance impedance to the same value. Selection Description 600 Ω Standard equipment impedance 600 Ω + 2.16 uF Standard equipment impedance with low frequency roll-off 900 Ω Typically used on loaded cable pairs 900 Ω + 2.16 uF Typically used on loaded cable pairs with low frequency roll-off TN12 Standard complex impedance for Australia TBR21 Widely deployed complex impedance BT3 Standard complex impedance for New Zealand BT Network Standard complex impedance for UK China Standard complex impedance for China Default On a short line (< 100 metres), the selected impedance should match the impedance of the exchange line card. On a long line (> 1000 metres), the selected impedance should match the impedance of the exchange line card as seen through the line. If you are not sure what the expected impedance value should be, check with the exchange equipment supplier. 8. Enable the DFXO Echo Canceller if required. The DFXO Echo Canceller provides up to 64 ms of echo cancellation. This feature is only available on Rev D (and later) DFXO cards. Analogue data devices e.g. modems send a disable signal to disable any echo canceller in circuit while it trains its own echo canceller. There are two possible disable signals. ITU G.164 specifies a disable signal of a single 2100 Hz tone and ITU G.165 specifies a disable signal of 2100 Hz tone with phase reversals every 450 ms. Selection Description Off No echo canceller operation. On Echo canceller operational but without disabling. Auto Disable G.164 Echo canceller operational with automatic disabling using ITU G.164 2100 Hz tone. Auto Disable G.165 Echo canceller operational with automatic disabling using ITU G.165 2100 Hz tone with phase reversals every 450 ms. Aprisa XE User Manual Default 124 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces 9. Set the DFXO Loop Current Limiter. This option turns on a current limiter which limits the maximum current that can be drawn from the exchange line card by the DFXO interface. As a general rule, only one interface should current limit so if the exchange interface current limits, the DFXO interface should be set to current limit off. Selection Description Off Use if the exchange line interface uses current limiting. On (60 mA) Use if the exchange line interface does not use current limiting. The DFXO limits the line loop current to 60 mA. Default Note: The DFXO provides an early warning over current alarm ‘fxoCurrentOvld’ if the loop current exceeds 100 mA for 2 seconds. This alarm clears when the loop current is less than 90 mA. The DFXO also provides an over current safety shut down limit which removes its line loop if the loop current exceeds 160 mA. 10. Select the DFXO Billing Tone Frequency. This option sets the frequency of billing tone detection. If you are not sure what the expected frequency of the billing tone should be, check with the exchange equipment supplier. Selection Description 12 kHz Use if the exchange outputs 12 kHz billing tone 16 kHz Use if the exchange outputs 16 kHz billing tone Default 11. The DFXO Billing Tone Advanced sets the billing tone Bandwidth and the billing tone Level Sensitivity. The DFXO billing tone Bandwidth determines the bandwidth of the band pass filter that is used by the billing tone detector in terms of +/- % of the billing tone frequency. The adjustment range is +/- 1.5% to +/- 7.5% and the default value is +/- 5.0%. The DFXO billing tone Level Sensitivity determines the DFXO detection sensitivity. The adjustment range is 0 dB (metering detection threshold of -17 dBm measured across 200 ) to 27 dB (metering detection threshold of -40 dBm measured across 200 ) in 1 dB steps and the default value is 0 dB. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 125 12. Select the DFXO On Hook Speed. This option sets the slope of the transition between off-hook and on-hook. Selection Description < 500 μs Off-hook to on-hook slope of < 500 μs 3 ms Off-hook to on-hook slope of 3 ms ± 10% that meets ETSI standard 25 ms Off-hook to on-hook slope of 25 ms± 10% used to reduce transient interference in copper cable Default 13. Select the DFXO ringer Impedance. This option sets the DFXO ringing input impedance as seen by a sine wave ringing signal applied to the DFXO 2 wire port at the frequency of ringing. Selection Description >1M DFXO input impedance to ringing of > 1 M > 12 kΩ DFXO input impedance to ringing of > 12 kΩ Default 14. Select the DFXO ringer Detection Threshold. This option sets the DFXO ringing detect threshold. Selection Description 16 Vrms DFXO detects ringing voltages of 16 Vrms or greater (does not detect ringing below 13 Vrms) 26 Vrms DFXO detects ringing voltages of 26 Vrms or greater (does not detect ringing below 19 Vrms) 49 Vrms DFXO detects ringing voltages of 49 Vrms or greater (does not detect ringing below 40 Vrms) Default It is recommended that the ringer Detection Threshold be set to 49 Vrms if a DFXO ringer impedance of > 12 kΩ is selected. Note: The Signalling Mode is set in the Cross Connections application (see page 171). Aprisa XE User Manual 126 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces 15. The DFXO Signalling Advanced options are used to control the four CAS bits ABCD in the DFXO to DFXS direction of transmission and one CAS bit A in the DFXS to DFXO direction of transmission. This option sets the signalling for both DFXO card ports. Transparent Normal mode is used for normal traffic and Transparent Inverted mode can be used for special signalling requirements when a function needs to be reversed e.g. to change the idle polarity of the DFXS line feed voltage. Forced modes are used to disable particular functions e.g. when polarity reversals are not required. They can also be used for system testing e.g. to apply DFXO continuous off hook Selection Description Transparent Normal Normal transparent transmission of the CAS bit Transparent Inverted Transparent transmission of the CAS bit but inverts the polarity. Forced Normal Sets the CAS bit to 1. Forced Inverted Sets the CAS bit to 0. Default From DFXO to DFXS CAS Bit Forced Normal Forced Inverted A bit (fault) Sets the CAS A bit to 1 continuous fault state Sets the CAS A bit to 0 no fault state B bit (ring) Sets the CAS B bit to 1 no DFXS ringing output. Sets the CAS B bit to 0 continuous DFXS ringing output. C bit (billing) Sets the CAS C bit to 1 no DFXS billing tone output. Sets the CAS C bit to 0 continuous DFXS billing tone output. D bit (reversal) Sets the CAS D bit to 1 no DFXS polarity reversal Sets the CAS D bit to 0 continuous DFXS polarity reversal CAS Bit Forced Normal Forced Inverted A bit (off hook) Sets the CAS A bit to 1 no DFXO off hook Sets the CAS A bit to 0 continuous DFXO off hook DFXS to DFXO Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 127 QJET to DFXS CAS Bit Forced Normal Forced Inverted A bit (ring) Sets the CAS A bit to 1 no DFXS ringing output. Sets the CAS A bit to 0 continuous DFXS ringing output. B bit (na) Not Applicable Not Applicable C bit (na) Not Applicable Not Applicable D bit (na) Not Applicable Not Applicable CAS Bit Forced Normal Forced Inverted A bit (off hook) Sets the CAS A bit to 1 Idle state to E1 port Sets the CAS A bit to 0 Off hook state to E1 port From DFXS to QJET 16. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 128 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces QV24 Serial Interface Card There are two modes of operation of the QV24 Serial Interface Card; QV24 asynchronous and QV24S synchronous. The mode is changed with the Slot Summary. Changing the QV24 mode changes all four ports on the interface card. To change the QV24 mode: 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Slot Summary, then select the QV24 interface slot and click Configure Slot. 2. Select the QV24 mode required with Expected. 3. Select the QV24 mode required with Change Type To and click Apply. 4. Reboot the terminal with a Hard Reboot (see ‘Rebooting the Terminal’ on page 233). Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 129 QV24 Port Settings A QV24 interface is always configured as a DCE. 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary, then select the QV24 interface and click Configure Interface. 2. Select the QV24 port to configure, and click Edit. 'Slot' shows the slot the QV24 interface card is plugged into in the terminal. 'Port' shows the interface port number (1-4). ‘Baud Rate’ shows the current baud rate assigned to the port by the cross connect. ‘Loopback’ loops back the port data to the customer (default is no loopback). 3. Set the number of Data Bits (default is 8 bits). 4. Set the number of Stop Bits (default is 1 bit). 5. Set the number of Parity Bits (default is 0 bits). 6. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Tip: The Quick Links box provides links to other related pages. Aprisa XE User Manual 130 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces QV24S Port Settings There are two modes of operation of the QV24S synchronous, synchronous and over sampling modes. A QV24S interface is always configured as a DCE. Synchronous Mode In synchronous mode, interface data is synchronously mapped to radio capacity using proprietary subrate multiplexing. QV24S interfaces are required at both ends of the circuit. 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary, then select the QV24S interface and click Configure Interface. 2. Select the QV24S port to configure, and click Edit. 'Slot' shows the slot the QV24S interface card is plugged into in the terminal. 'Port' shows the interface port number (1-4). ‘Baud Rate’ shows the current baud rate assigned to the port by the cross connect. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 131 3. The CTS Source defines the mode in which the CTS signal responds to the remote DTE. Three options are available: CTS Source Function Remote RTS The local CTS follows the remote RTS signal. In the case of radio link failure (when cross connected over the link) the signal goes to OFF. Local RTS The local CTS signal follows the local RTS. The status of the link does not impact on the CTS signal. On Permanent The local CTS is in a permanent ON (+ve) state. This does not go to OFF if the link fails. Note that the CTS behaviour is not impacted by the operation of the card loopbacks. 4. The Sample Data On defines the received clock edge on which the received data is clocked into the port. Two options are available: Sample Data On Function Falling Clock Edge The falling edge of the XTXC is used to clock data into the port. Rising Clock Edge The rising edge of the XTXC is used to clock data into the port. 5. ‘Loopback’ loops back the port data to the customer (default is no loopback). 6. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Over Sampling Mode In over sampling mode, 64 kbit/s of radio capacity is allocated to the circuit and the incoming interface data is sampled at a fixed 64 kHz. This timeslot can be cross connected to an E1 or T1. This over sampling mode can be operated up to 19.2 kbit/s. There will be some unavoidable distortion in mark space ratios (jitter) of the transported V.24 circuit. This effect will become progressively more significant as the baud rate of the V.24 circuit increases or the number of data conversions increases. In over sampling mode, the DTE clock input is not used and there is no DCE output clock available. 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary, then select the QV24S interface and click Configure Interface. Aprisa XE User Manual 132 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces 2. Select the QV24S port to configure, and click Edit. 'Slot' shows the slot the QV24S interface card is plugged into in the terminal. 'Port' shows the interface port number (1-4). A Baud Rate of ‘OVRSAMP’ indicates that the QV24S has been configured for synchronous over sampling mode in the Cross Connections application. 3. The CTS Source defines the mode in which the CTS signal responds to the remote DTE. Two options are available: CTS Source Function Local RTS The local CTS signal follows the local RTS. The status of the link does not impact on the CTS signal. On Permanent The local CTS is in a permanent ON (+ve) state. This does not go to OFF if the link fails. Note that the CTS behaviour is not impacted by the operation of the card loopbacks. 4. The Sample Data On defines the received clock edge on which the received data is clocked into the port. Two options are available: 5. Sample Data On Function Falling Clock Edge The falling edge of the XTXC is used to clock data into the port. Rising Clock Edge The rising edge of the XTXC is used to clock data into the port. ‘Loopback’ loops back the port data to the customer (default is no loopback). 6. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 133 HSS Port Settings 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary, then select HSS (High-speed Synchronous Serial) interface and click Configure Interface. 'Slot' shows the slot the HSS interface card is plugged into in the terminal (A – H). 'Mode' shows the interface mode provided by the HSS interface (either DTE or DCE). If there is no interface cable plugged into the HSS port, the ‘Mode’ will show ‘No Cable’. 'Serial Mode' shows interface type provided by the HSS interface (X.21, V.35 etc). If there is no interface cable plugged into the HSS port, the ‘Serial Mode’ will show ‘None’. ‘Baud Rate (kbit/s)’ shows the current baud rate assigned to the port by the cross connect. ‘Loopback’ loops back the port data to the customer (default is no loopback). ‘Synchronous Clock Selection’ shows the current clocking mode assigned to the port by the cross connect. 2. Set the HSS RTS CTS Mode as required. The RTS CTS mode controls the state of the outgoing interface RTS CTS control line. When the HSS interface is DCE, the outgoing control line is CTS. When the HSS interface is DTE, the outgoing control line is RTS. Note: Refer to ‘HSS Handshaking and Clocking’ on page 135 for additional information on setting the recommended handshaking mode for each application. 3. Set the HSS DSR DTR Mode as required. The DSR DTR mode controls the state of the outgoing interface DSR DTR control line. When the HSS interface is DCE, the outgoing control line is DSR. When the HSS interface is DTE, the outgoing control line is DTR. Aprisa XE User Manual 134 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces 4. Set the HSS DCD Mode as required. The DCD mode controls the state of the outgoing interface DCD control line. This setting is only relevant if the HSS interface is DCE. 5. Enable or disable the HSS XTxC control, as required. Depending on the clocking mode (see ‘HSS Handshaking and Clocking’ on page 135) selected, altering this setting will allow the terminal clock to be substituted for the external XTxC signal. 6. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 135 HSS Handshaking and Clocking Modes This section provides detailed information on selecting the recommended HSS handshaking and clocking modes for the HSS interface card (see ‘HSS port settings’ on page 133). HSS Handshaking and Control Line Function HSS X.21 Compatibility In general X.21 usage, the C and I wires function as handshaking lines analogous to RTS/CTS handshakes. For switched carrier applications, the I wire is used to emulate carrier indications (DCD) function. HSS RTS / CTS Mode Set the RTS CTS Mode as required according to the table below. This field controls the state of the outgoing interface control line. When the HSS interface is DCE, the outgoing control line is CTS. When the HSS interface is DTE, the outgoing control line is RTS. RTS CTS Mode HSS as a DCE HSS as a DTE Comment Always Off CTS driven to off state RTS driven to off state Always On CTS driven to on state RTS driven to on state Follows Carrier CTS follows the state of the RF link RTS follows the state of the RF link To follow carrier is to indicate the state of synchronization of the RF link Follows Carrier + Remote RTS/CTS CTS follows the state of the RF link and the remote terminal RTS input control line if the remote is a DCE. If the remote HSS is a DTE, then CTS follows the state of the RF link and the remote HSS CTS input. RTS follows the state of the RF link and the remote terminal RTS input control line. The remote HSS can only be a DCE. Control line pass-through mode where RTS and CTS are carried over the link from end to end. The carrier (as above) plus the remote terminal input control line must be present to output the local control line signal. The HSS Control bit in the Cross Connections application must be set for the remote signalling to operate. Follows Carrier + Remote DCD CTS follows the state of the RF link if the remote HSS is a DCE. If the remote HSS is a DTE, then CTS follows the state of the RF link and the remote HSS DCD input control line. Aprisa XE User Manual This setting is only applicable when the local HSS card in the local terminal is a DCE. The HSS Control bit in the Cross Connections application must be set for the remote signalling to operate. 136 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces HSS DSR / DTR Mode Set the DSR DTR Mode as required according to the table below. This field controls the state of the outgoing interface control line. When the HSS interface is DCE, the outgoing control line is DSR When the HSS interface is DTE, the outgoing control line is DTR DSR DTR Mode HSS as a DCE HSS as a DTE Comment Always Off DSR driven to off state DTR driven to off state Always On DSR driven to on state DTR driven to on state Follows Carrier DSR follows the state of the RF link DTR follows the state of the RF link To follow carrier is to indicate the state of synchronization of the RF link. Follows Carrier + Remote DSR/DTR DSR follows the state of the RF link and the remote terminal DSR control line if the remote terminal is a DTE, or the remote DTR if the remote terminal is a DCE. DTR follows the state of the RF link and the remote terminal DTR control line if the remote terminal is a DCE. The remote HSS can only be a DCE. Control line pass-through mode where DSR and DTR are carried over the link from end to end. The carrier (as above) plus the remote terminal input control line must be present to output the local control line signal. The HSS Control bit in the Cross Connections application must be set for the remote signalling to operate. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 137 HSS DCD Mode Set the DCD Mode as required according to the table below. This setting is only relevant in DCE mode. DCD Mode HSS as a DCE HSS as a DTE Comment Always Off DCD driven to off state NOT applicable Always On DCD driven to on state Follows Carrier + Remote DCD DCD follows the state of the RF link and the remote terminal DCD input control line if the remote HSS is a DTE. If the remote terminal is a DCE, then DCD only follows the state of the RF link. Control line pass-through mode where DCD is carried over the link from end to end. The carrier (as above) plus the remote terminal input control line must be present to output the local control line signal. The HSS Control bit in the Cross Connections application must be set for the remote signalling to operate. Follows Carrier + Remote RTS DCD follows the state of the RF link and the remote terminal RTS input control line when the remote HSS is a DCE. For switched carrier applications this provides RTS-DCD pass through (DCE to DCE configuration) and DCDDCD pass-through (DTE to DCE configuration). Set the XTxC Enabled control as required. Depending on the synchronous clock selection mode selected, disabling XTxC will allow the terminal clock to be substituted for the external XTxC signal. Aprisa XE User Manual 138 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces HSS Synchronous Clock Selection Modes The following section describes in detail each of the recommended HSS Synchronous Clock Selection modes for both DTE to DCE and DCE to DCE modes of operation. The HSS clocking can be configured for clocking types of Internal clocking, pass-through clocking, and primary / secondary master clocking. The topology of the client network determines the clock mode that is used. Note: Modes 3 and 4 provide only physical layer support, not X.21 protocol support. Terminal 1 HSS as a DTE and terminal 2 HSS as a DCE - ‘Pipe Mode’ Mode Synchronous Clock Selection mode Clocking Type Internal Clocks – No overhead Not supported RxC + XTxC – 40 kbit/s overhead Not supported RxC + TxC – 56 kbit/s overhead Pass-through clocking RxC (X.21) – 40 kbit/s overhead Pass-through clocking (X.21 only) RxC (X.21) – No overhead Not supported XTxC Not supported RxC RxC – No overhead RxC RxC - 40 kbit/s overhead RxC – 40 kbit/s overhead Primary/ Secondary Master clocking Pass-through clocking Terminal 1 HSS as a DCE and terminal 2 HSS as a DCE - ‘Cloud Mode’ Mode Synchronous Clock Selection mode Clocking Type Internal Clocks – No overhead Internal clocking RxC + XTxC– 40 kbit/s overhead Not supported RxC + TxC– 56 kbit/s overhead Not supported RxC (X.21) – 40 kbit/s overhead Not supported RxC (X.21) – No overhead XTxC RxC RxC – No overhead Not supported RxC RxC - 40 kbit/s overhead Not supported Internal clocking (X.21 only) RxC – 40 kbit/s overhead Aprisa XE User Manual Pass-through clocking Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 139 HSS Clocking Types HSS internal clocking Internal clocking relies on the (highly accurate) terminal system clock, that is, it does not allow for any independent clocks coming in from client equipment. For this mode, all incoming clocks must be slaved to a clock emanating from the HSS card. HSS pass-through clocking The HSS card is capable in hardware of passing two clocks from one side of a link to the other. Passing a clock means that the difference between the client clock(s) and the terminal clock is transferred across the link continuously. Passing a single clock in each direction requires 40 kbit/s additional link overhead, passing two clocks from DTE to DCE requires 56 kbit/s overhead, whereas relying on internal clocking requires no overhead. Network topology determines if passing a clock makes sense. Passing a clock is used where a client's incoming clock must be kept independent of the clock sourced by the HSS card. The only time it makes sense to pass two clocks is when a client DCE in one of the HSS modes provides two independent clocks, that is, the HSS is set to Clock Mode 2. Pass-through clocking does not require using the HSS incoming clock as a Primary or Secondary master clock for the link, but does not preclude it either. HSS primary / secondary master clocking When implementing an external clock master, all other interfaces in the terminal and internal system timings are slaved to this external clock. The remote terminal is also slaved to this master clock. This master clock must be within 100 ppm of the accuracy of the terminal system clock, otherwise the terminal will revert to using its internal clock. Ideally, the external clock should be much better than 100 ppm. Mode 6 is offered for those network topologies that require RxC and TxC to be locked. For example, this is useful when interworking with an Aprisa SE HSS interface. Aprisa XE User Manual 140 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces HSS Clocking DTE to DCE ‘Pipe Mode’ DTE to DCE Mode 2: RxC + TxC - 56 kbit/s overhead (Pass-through clocking) DTE clocks used DCE clocks used RxC and TxC RxC and TxC Clock passing Comment 56 kbit/s of overhead is used to transport RxC and TxC from HSS DTE to HSS DCE. This is the preferred dual external clock system. Both clocks travel in the same direction from DTE to DCE. This mode is used when it is important that the externally supplied RxC and TxC are maintained independently. This is almost only required in cascaded (that is, multi-link) networks. This mode cannot be used in conjunction with any interface conversion to / from X.21. Aprisa XE User Manual Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 141 DTE to DCE Mode 3: RxC (X.21) - 40 kbit/s overhead (Pass-through clocking) DTE clocks used DCE clocks used RxC RxC DTE to DCE Mode 6: RxC DTE clocks used DCE clocks used RxC and TxC RxC and TxC Clock passing 40 kbit/s of overhead used to transport RxC from the DTE to DCE. Comment Preferred option for X.21. RxC - No overhead (Primary/ Secondary Master clocking) Clock passing The DTE XTxC is derived from the RxC and is used to generate the terminal external clock. The DCE generates RxC and TxC from the terminal clock. Aprisa XE User Manual Comment HSS becomes the External master clock, avoiding explicit clock passing, but foregoing the use of passing a clock in either direction (Modes 1, 5). The DTE HSS card must be set as the External clock for the terminal. 142 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces DTE to DCE Mode 7: RxC DTE clocks used DCE clocks used RxC and TxC RxC and TxC RxC - 40 kbit/s overhead (Pass-through clocking) Clock passing 40 kbit/s of overhead used to transfer RxC from the DTE to the DCE RxC and TxC. Aprisa XE User Manual Comment Receiver derived clock system. Configuring the Traffic Interfaces | 143 HSS Clocking DCE to DCE ‘Cloud Mode’ DCE to DCE Mode 0: Internal clocks – No overhead (internal clocking) DCE clocks used RxC, TxC, XTxC Clock passing Both RxC and TxC are derived from the terminal clock. Comment Default setting. All clocks sourced internally. XTxC will be used if it is detected. Aprisa XE User Manual 144 | Configuring the Traffic Interfaces DCE to DCE Mode 4: RxC (X.21) - No overhead (internal clocking) DCE clocks used RxC Clock passing RxC is derived from the terminal clock. DCE to DCE Mode 5: XTxC DCE clocks used RxC, TxC, XTxC Comment Suggested for X.21 Cloud Configuration. Single clock X.21 system. RxC - 40 kbit/s overhead (Pass-through clocking) Clock passing Comment XTxC is transported to RxC and TxC in both directions Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 145 10. Cross Connections Embedded Cross Connect Switch The embedded cross-connect switch distributes capacity to each of the interfaces. Traffic can be distributed to any of the possible 32 interface ports as well as the integrated Ethernet interface. This provides the flexibility to reconfigure traffic as the network demand changes, or groom user traffic onto E1 / T1 bearers between equipment. The maximum number of simultaneous cross connections per terminal is 256. During cross connection activation, a progress bar shows the number of ports that have activated. Link Capacity Utilization Cross connections are able to utilize all of the available capacity of the link on lower capacity radio links (< 2048 kbit/s gross capacity, i.e. up to 500 kHz, 16 QAM). However, as higher capacity radio links allocate bandwidth for E1 / T1 timeslot connections on 64 kbit/s boundaries, some capacity may be unusable (< 64 kbit/s). The Cross Connections Application The Cross Connections application is a software application that is used to: manage the cross connections switches within the terminals create cross connections between the traffic interface ports within one terminal or between the near end and far end terminals via the radio bearer create cross connections between symmetrical traffic interface ports with the symmetrical connection wizard get the current cross connection configuration from the terminal send and activate the cross connection configuration save and load configuration files The Cross Connections System Requirements The Cross Connections application requires the following minimum PC requirements: 1024 x 768 screen resolution Ethernet interface Java Virtual Machine 146 | Cross Connections Installing the Cross Connections Application The Cross Connections application is usually started directly from SuperVisor without the need for installation. However, if you want to use the Cross Connections application offline (without any connection to the terminals), you can install it on your PC. Working offline enables you to simulate new cards or terminal capacities. The cross connections can then be configured and the resulting configuration file saved for later deployment. To install the Cross Connections application on your PC, navigate to the Cross Connect directory on the supplied CD and copy the application (ccapp_exe_x_x_x.jar where x is the version) to a suitable place on your PC hard disk. Your PC 'File Types' must associate a *.jar file with the Executable Jar File so that when the *.jar file is clicked on (or double clicked on), it will be executed with Javaw.exe. If clicking on (or double clicking on) the jar file does not bring up the Cross Connections application, the 'File Types' needs to be setup in your PC. Go to 'My Computer / Tools / Folder Options / File Types’ and click 'New'. Type 'Jar' in the 'File Extension' box and click OK. Click 'Change' and 'Select a program from a list' Select 'Javaw.exe' and click OK. Opening the Cross Connections Application To open the Cross Connections application from within SuperVisor: Select Link > Interface > Cross Connections To open the Cross Connections application without SuperVisor: Navigate to the installed cross connections application file C-capp_exe_8_6_7.jar and double click on it. Note: This assumes that you have copied the cross connections application to your PC so you can work offline (without any connection to the terminals). Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 147 The Cross Connections Page The Cross Connections page is split into two panes with each pane displaying one terminal. The local terminal is displayed in the left pane and the remote terminal is displayed in the right pane. The local terminal is defined as the terminal that SuperVisor is logged into (not necessarily the near end terminal). The cards displayed depend on the type of cards and where they are inserted in the chassis. To view all the ports for each interface card, click on the expand all ports button Tool Tips are available by holding the mouse pointer over objects on the screen. Total Assigned Link Capacity The current total assigned capacity (radio link and drop and insert) is shown (in kbit/s) beside the terminal name and IP address: 148 | Cross Connections Radio Link and Local Drop And Insert Capacity At the bottom of the Cross Connections page, the capacity pane displays the Radio and Local drop and insert capacities for both the local and remote terminals. The Radio Capacity field shows the available radio link capacity (6032 kbit/s shown) and the shaded bar graph shows the capacity used for cross connections over the radio link (2600 kbit/s) between the terminals as a percentage of the total capacity of the radio link (30 % used). The total capacity of the radio link is determined by the channel size and the modulation type of the radio link. The Local Capacity field shows the available capacity for local or drop and insert cross connections (52392 kbit/s shown) and the shaded bar graph shows the capacity used for local cross connections (4512 kbit/s) as a percentage of the total local capacity (7 % used). The total local capacity is 65536 kbit/s minus the used radio capacity. Tool tip messages show the breakdown of the radio and local capacity usage: The following is an example of the messages shown: Radio Capacity Radio Bandwidth Usage (over the air) 8632 kbit/s total 2600 kbit/s used (30%) of total radio capacity 6032 kbit/s free Local Capacity Local capacity usage (for connecting ports on the same terminal) 65536 kbit/s total 8632 kbit/s reserved for radio (13%) of total local capacity 4512 kbit/s used for local (7%) of total local capacity 52392 kbit/s free Tip: On a screen set to 1024 by 768 resolution, this capacity information may be obscured by the task bar if the Windows task bar is docked at the bottom of the screen. To view the capacity pane clearly, either shift the task bar to another screen edge, make it auto-hide, or increase the screen resolution. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 149 Cross Connections Toolbar The cross connections toolbar has buttons for commonly-used functions. Button Explanation Saves the cross connection configuration file to disk. The button turns amber when you have made changes that have not yet been saved. Gets the cross connection configuration from the local and remote terminals. Saves the cross connection configuration to the local and remote terminals. The button turns amber when you have made changes that have not yet been sent to the terminal. Activates the cross connections on the local and remote terminals. Turns amber when there are cross connections that have been sent but not yet activated. Expands all the ports for all the interface cards. Collapses all the ports for all the interface cards. Opens the symmetrical connections wizard. Setting the Terminal's IP Address If the Cross Connections application is launched from SuperVisor, the terminal IP addresses are set automatically by SuperVisor, but if the application is launched from your PC independent of SuperVisor, you will need to set the application Local and Remote IP addresses to the addresses of the Local and Remote terminals you wish to connect to. To set the application local or remote IP address: 1. Right-click over the terminal name or IP address and select Set Address. 2. Select Local or Remote > Set Address 3. Enter the IP address of the terminal in the dialog box and click OK. 150 | Cross Connections Management and User Ethernet Capacity The maximum ethernet capacity of an Aprisa XE terminal is dependant on the motherboard version: Motherboard Version Maximum Ethernet Capacity Rev C 32768 kbit/s Rev D 49152 kbit/s The maximum ethernet capacity available is the lesser of the maximum ethernet capacity or the available radio link capacity. The management ethernet capacity and user ethernet capacity must be identical on both terminals for the ethernet link to work correctly. Management Ethernet Capacity A management ethernet cross connection between the local and remote terminals is created automatically using the default capacity of 64 kbit/s (connection number = 1). This connection is essential for remote terminal management communication. The minimum management ethernet capacity requirement for correct management operation over the radio link is 8 kbit/s but if the terminal in on a network with large numbers of broadcast packets, the management may not be able to function. The management capacity must be set in multiples of 8 kbit/s and the maximum assignable is 64 kbit/s. User Ethernet Capacity A user ethernet cross connection between the local and remote terminals is created automatically using the default capacity of 0 kbit/s (connection number = 2). The user ethernet capacity must be set in multiples of 8 kbit/s. The maximum user ethernet capacity available is the maximum ethernet capacity available minus the management ethernet capacity setting. To set the management ethernet or the user ethernet capacity: Enter the required kbit/s in the local terminal capacity field. The associated remote terminal capacity field will update automatically. The red numbers, in the mapping connection boxes, are known as connection numbers and are allocated automatically by the Cross Connections application. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 151 Setting Card Types Note: You only need to do this when creating configurations offline (that is, there is no connection to the terminal). When you are connected to the terminal, the Cross Connections application automatically detects the card types fitted in the terminal slots. You can specify the card type for any of the slots (A-H). 1. Right-click a slot. 2. Select Card Type and then select the interface card. Getting Cross Connection Configuration from the Terminals You can get the entire existing cross connection configuration from the terminals. 1. Download the existing cross connections (if any) from the local and remote terminals by clicking ‘Get cross connection configuration from terminal’. 152 | Cross Connections Creating Cross Connections Point to point cross connections Three examples of point to point cross connections are shown below: Example 1 One 2 wire DFXO interface on the near end terminal slot E port 1 is cross connected via the radio link to a 2 wire DFXS on the far end terminal slot E port 1. This cross connection includes the four bits of signalling (ABCD bits) but as the DFXO / DFXS signalling is configured for 'multiplexed', the four bits are multiplexed into one bit over the radio link. This cross connection uses 72 kbit/s of radio link capacity, 64 kbit/s for the voice and 8 kbit/s for the signalling bit. The port 2s of the same DFXO / DFXS cards are cross connected using the same method. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 153 Example 2 One 2 wire DFXS interface on the near end terminal slot E port 1 is cross connected via the radio link to a framed E1 on the far end terminal slot D port 1 in timeslot 1. This cross connection includes four bits of signalling as the DFXS signalling is configured as 'non-multiplexed signalling' (ABCD bits). This cross connection uses 96 kbit/s of radio link capacity, 64 kbit/s for the voice and 32 kbit/s for the signalling bits. Another 2 wire DFXS interface on the near end terminal slot F port 1 is cross connected via the radio link to a framed E1 on the far end terminal slot D port 1 in timeslot 2. This cross connection includes one bit of signalling as the DFXS signalling is configured in '4 wire compatible' mode (A bit only). This cross connection uses 40 kbit/s of radio link capacity, 32 kbit/s for the ADPCM voice and 8 kbit/s for the signalling bit. Example 3 One 2 wire DFXS interface on the near end terminal slot E port 1 is cross connected via the radio link to a framed E1 on the far end terminal slot D port 1 in timeslot 1. This cross connection includes one bit of signalling as the DFXS signalling is configured as 'multiplexed' signalling. This cross connection uses 72 kbit/s of radio link capacity, 64 kbit/s for the voice and 8 kbit/s for the signalling bit. 154 | Cross Connections Local Drop and Insert Cross Connections An example of a local drop and insert cross connection is shown below: Two 4 wire E&M interfaces on the near end terminal slot C ports 3 & 4 are dropped out of a framed E1 on the near end terminal slot D port 1 in timeslots 1 & 2. This cross connection includes one bit of signalling (A bit). Another two 4 wire E&M interfaces on the near end terminal slot C ports 1 & 2 are inserted into the radio link to a framed E1 on the far end terminal slot D port 1 in timeslots 1 & 2. This cross connection includes one bit of signalling (A bit). The remaining framed E1 on the near end terminal slot D port 1 timeslots are transported over the radio link to the framed E1 on the far end terminal slot D port 1. This cross connection includes four bits of signalling (ABCD bits). Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 155 Sending Cross Connection Configuration to the Terminals You can send the entire cross connection configuration to the terminals. 1. To send the new cross connection configuration into the terminals, click ‘Send cross connection configuration to terminal’. 2. When the transfer is successfully complete, a message appears asking if you want to activate the configuration now. If you click Yes, a message appears showing the activation progress. If you click No, you can activate the new cross connection configuration later by clicking ‘Activate cross connection configuration’. Saving Cross Connection Configurations You can save the entire cross connection configuration to file so that you can restore it to the same link (if this is ever required), or transfer it to another link if you want them to be identical. 1. Click on ‘Save cross connection configuration file to disk’ or select File > Save. 2. Navigate to the directory where you want to save the file, enter the filename in the dialog box and then click Save. 3. Once you have specified a filename and a directory save any further changes by clicking Save. Using Existing Cross Connection Configurations To load a previously-saved cross connection configuration from an existing file: 1. Select File > Open. 2. Navigate to the file and select it, and then click Open. 156 | Cross Connections Printing the Cross Connection Configuration You can print out a summary of the cross connection configuration so that you can file it for future reference. Using the printout, you can recreate the cross connection configuration. If you don't have the configuration saved to disk see ‘Saving cross connection configurations’ on page 155, or use it to review the cross connections without connecting to the terminal. The cross connection configuration summary shows information for the local and remote terminals such as: The IP address and terminal name The interface card fitted in each slot How the ports are configured To preview the cross connection configuration summary: Select File > Preview Configuration Summary. In this dialog box you can: Save the summary to disk (as an HTML file) by clicking Save Summary As. Print the summary by clicking Print. Copy and paste the information into another application (for example, spreadsheet, email, and word processor) by right-clicking over the summary and selecting Select All. Then right-click over the summary again and select Copy. To print the cross connection configuration summary: Select File > Print Configuration Summary. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 157 Deleting Cross Connections Note: It is not possible to delete the management and user Ethernet cross connections. These are made automatically and are required for correct terminal operation. To delete cross connections for an interface card: 1. Right-click over an interface card. 2. Select Delete All Connections on this Card. To delete the cross connections associated with a particular port: 1. Right-click over a port. 2. Select Delete All Connections on this Port. To delete all the cross connections for a terminal: 1. Right-click over the terminal name and IP address. 2. Select Delete All Connections on this Terminal. 158 | Cross Connections Configuring the Traffic Cross Connections Once you have configured the interface cards (see ‘Configuring the traffic interfaces’ on page 91), you can configure the traffic cross connections between compatible interfaces. Compatible Interfaces Q4EM voice only Q4EM with E&M QV24 with signalling DFXO DFXS HSS data HSS signalling QJET T1 ESF - DMS QJET T1 ESF - PTS QJET T1 SF - DMS QJET T1 Unframed QJET T1 SF - PTS QJET E1 Framed PCM 30 QJET E1 Unframed QJET T1 Unframed Ethernet (user) QJET E1 Unframed QJET E1 Framed PCM 30 Ethernet (management) Ethernet (user) QJET E1 Framed PCM 31 Ethernet (management) QJET E1 Framed PCM 31 Cross connections can be made between any compatible interfaces of equal data rates. Compatible interfaces are shown in the table below: QJET T1 SF - PTS QJET T1 SF - DMS QJET T1 ESF - PTS QJET T1 ESF - DMS Q4EM voice only Q4EM with E&M QV24 with signalling DFXO DFXS HSS data HSS signalling Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 159 QJET Cross Connections Expand the E1 / T1 display by clicking on the relevant icons. The QJET card can operate in several modes allowing you greater flexibility in tailoring or grooming traffic. The Data type selection are Off, E1, or T1 rates. Note: An unframed E1 / T1 port requires 5 bits (or 40 kbit/s) of overhead traffic per port for synchronization. An unframed E1 port with 2048 kbit/s of traffic requires 2088 kbit/s of link capacity. An unframed T1 port with 1544 kbit/s of traffic requires 1584 kbit/s of link capacity. 160 | Cross Connections For each port that you want to put into service, choose the required mode (either Unframed or Framed): Unframed Mode Leave the Framed checkbox unticked. Select the required Data type from the drop-down list E1 or T1. Local drop and insert connections are not possible between Unframed E1 / T1 ports. Framed Mode Tick the Framed checkbox. Select the required framed mode from the drop-down list: Local drop and insert connections are possible between framed E1 ports on the same interface card or E1 ports on different interface cards. Local drop and insert connections are possible between framed T1 ports on the same interface card or T1 ports on different interface cards. Local drop and insert connections are not possible between framed E1 ports and framed T1 ports. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 161 E1 Framed Modes Framed Mode Description E1 – PCM 30 Provides 30 timeslots to transport traffic. Timeslot 16 carries channel associated signalling data (CAS). E1 – PCM 31 Provides 31 timeslots to transport traffic. Timeslot 16 can be used for common channel signalling or to transport traffic. E1 – PCM 30C Same as E1 – PCM 30 mode but supports CRC-4. E1 – PCM 31C Same as E1 – PCM 31 mode but supports CRC-4. E1 CRC-4 (cyclic redundancy check) is used to ensure correct frame alignment and also used to gather E1 performance statistics e.g. Errored Seconds (ES), Severely Errored Seconds (SES). The first three bits of timeslot 0 NFAS (bits 0,1 & 2) and all of timeslot 0 FAS are not transported across the link, but rather terminated and regenerated at each terminal. The last five bits of timeslot 0 NFAS (bits 3 – 7) are the National Use Bits (NUBs) which can be cross connected locally or over the link. E1 - PCM 30 mode E1 - PCM 30 modes are used when access to the signalling bits (ABCD) is required, for example: Splitting a PCM 30 E1 into two separate PCM 30 E1s Cross connecting signalling from DFXS, DFXO or Q4EM interfaces into an PCM 30 E1 Drop and Insert connections between PCM 30 E1s In PCM 30 / PCM 30C mode, the timeslot table left column is used to map timeslot bits and the timeslot table right column is used to map CAS bits (ABCD) for signalling. Timeslot 16 is reserved to transport the CAS multi frame. One use of this mode is to connect the 4 wire E&M interfaces to third-party multiplexer equipment over the E1 interface using CAS in TS16 to transport the E&M signalling. To configure this mode correctly, you must have a detailed knowledge of the CAS signalling modes for the third-party equipment to ensure the signalling bits are compatible and configured to interoperate. E1 - PCM 31 mode E1 - PCM 31 modes are used to cross connect timeslots bits without the signalling bits (ABCD). TS16 can be cross connected between E1 ports (to transport the entire CAS multi frame) or used for common channel signalling or to transport traffic. The timeslot table left column is used to map timeslot bits but the timeslot table right column for CAS bits (ABCD) is not used. 162 | Cross Connections T1 Framed Modes Framed Mode Description T1 SF - PTS Provides 24 timeslots to transport traffic using the G.704 12 frame Super Frame with Pass Thru Signalling (PTS). There is no CRC capability with the SF. T1 SF - DMS Provides 24 timeslots to transport traffic using the G.704 12 frame Super Frame with DeMultiplexed Signalling (CAS AB bits). There is no CRC capability with the SF. T1 ESF - PTS Provides 24 timeslots to transport traffic using the G.704 24 frame Extended Super Frame with Pass Thru Signalling (PTS) and CRC. T1 ESF - DMS Provides 24 timeslots to transport traffic using the G.704 24 frame Extended Super Frame with DeMultiplexed Signalling (CAS ABCD bits) and CRC. T1 SF - PTS mode T1 SF - PTS mode provides 24 timeslots to transport traffic using the G.704 12 frame Super Frame without demultiplexing the signalling. Pass Thru Signalling provides cross connection of the entire framed T1 timeslot between T1 ports (including the inherent robbed bit signalling). This is the most efficient method of transporting a framed T1 over the radio link as no additional radio link capacity is required to transport the signalling because the CAS is not demultiplexed. To maintain multi frame alignment between two framed T1 ports, a FPS (Frame Pattern Sync) bit is required to be cross connected between the two framed T1 ports. This FPS bit requires an additional 8 kbit/s of radio link capacity. The timeslot table left column is used to map timeslot bits but the timeslot table right column for CAS bits (ABCD) is not used. T1 SF - PTS mode is used when access to the signalling bits is not required but are transported between T1s, for example: Drop and Insert connections between Super Frame T1s or data interfaces T1 SF – DMS mode T1 SF – DMS mode provides 24 timeslots to transport traffic using the G.704 12 frame Super Frame with four state demultiplexed signalling using the AB bits each with a bit rate of 333 bit/s. DeMultiplexed Signalling allows the cross connection of framed T1 ports to other interface ports e.g. to a Q4EM or HSS. An additional 8 kbit/s of radio link capacity is required to transport each CAS bit over the radio link. The mapping left column is used to map timeslot bits and the timeslot table right column is used to map the CAS A&B bits for signalling (C&D bits are not used). T1 SF – DMS mode is used when access to the signalling bits is required, for example: Cross connecting signalling from a Q4EM interfaces into a 12 frame Super Framed T1. Drop and Insert connections between Super Framed T1s or data interfaces Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 163 T1 ESF - PTS mode T1 ESF - PTS mode provides 24 timeslots to transport traffic using the G.704 24 frame Extended Super Frame without demultiplexing the signalling. Pass Thru Signalling provides cross connection of the entire framed T1 timeslot between T1 ports (including the inherent robbed bit signalling). This is the most efficient method of transporting a framed T1 over the radio link as no additional radio link capacity is required to transport the signalling because the CAS is not demultiplexed. To maintain multi frame alignment between two framed T1 ports, a FPS (Frame Pattern Sync) bit is required to be cross connected between the two framed T1 ports. This FPS bit requires an additional 8 kbit/s of radio link capacity. The FDL (Facility Data Link) can be cross connected between the two framed T1 ports if required. This FDL bit requires an additional 8 kbit/s of radio link capacity. The timeslot table left column is used to map timeslot bits but the timeslot table right column for CAS bits (ABCD) is not used. T1 ESF - PTS mode is used when access to the signalling bits is not required but are transported between T1s, for example: Drop and Insert connections between 24 frame Extended Super Framed T1s or data interfaces 164 | Cross Connections T1 ESF - DMS T1 ESF - DMS mode provides 24 timeslots to transport traffic using the G.704 24 frame Extended Super Frame with sixteen state demultiplexed signalling using the ABCD bits each with a bit rate of 333 bit/s. DeMultiplexed Signalling allows the cross connection of framed T1 ports to other interface ports e.g. to a Q4EM or HSS. An additional 8 kbit/s of radio link capacity is required to transport each CAS bit over the radio link. The FDL (Facility Data Link) can be cross connected between the two framed T1 ports if required. This FDL bit requires an additional 8 kbit/s of radio link capacity. The mapping left column is used to map timeslot bits and the timeslot table right column is used to map the CAS ABCD bits for signalling. T1 ESF - DMS mode is used when access to the signalling bits is required, for example: Cross connecting signalling from DFXS, DFXO or Q4EM interfaces into a 24 frame Extended Super Framed T1 using ‘non-multiplexed’ signalling from the interface. Drop and Insert connections between 24 frame Extended Super Framed T1s or data interfaces Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 165 QJET Spare CAS Bit Control The Aprisa XE can currently provide E1 CAS to DFXS circuits using the 1 bit '4 wire compatible' signalling mode (uses the CAS A bit) but to enable some exchange DTIs to operate, the state of the spare CAS bits sent to the exchange must be preset. The available CAS bits can be preset to High (1) or Low (0) for the QJET framed modes of E1 - PCM30, E1 - PCM30C, T1 SF - DMS and T1 ESF – DMS for all timeslots of the port. To preset the spare CAS bits: Right click on the CAS bit required to be set. Select ‘Set High CAS Bit x’ or ‘Set Low CAS Bit x’. The screen shot shows the standard configuration where the DFXS signalling using 1 bit '4 wire compatible' signalling mode is mapped to the QJET CAS A bit and the ‘spare’ CAS bits are preset to the standard 1 bit protocol spare bit pattern of BCD = 101. 166 | Cross Connections Selecting and Mapping Bits and Timeslots This section describes how to select and map: a single bit multiple bits a 64 kbit/s timeslot multiple timeslots Selecting a Single Bit Each timeslot is represented by 8 rectangles (each representing a single bit). Each bit can carry 8 kbit/s. One or more consecutive bits can be selected in a timeslot if a rate of greater than 8 kbit/s is required. 1. Click on the rectangle that represents the bit you require. It will turn red. 2. Click and drag this bit to the rectangle representing the bit on the interface you want it to be connected to, and release the mouse button. The red rectangle will be replaced by the allocated connection number at each interface. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 167 Selecting Multiple Bits It is possible to select multiple consecutive bits if circuit capacity of greater than 8 kbit/s is required. 1. Click the first bit, and then hold down the Ctrl key while selecting the remaining bits. 2. Click and drag the whole block by clicking the bit on the left hand side of your selection, and drag to the required interface. Release the mouse button. Tip: It is also possible to select multiple bits by holding down the Shift key, and dragging across the required rectangles. Differing numbers of bits display in different colors when the cross-connect is completed: 168 | Cross Connections Selecting a 64 kbit/s Timeslot 1. Click on the TSX timeslot number (where X is the desired timeslot from 1 to 31). Alternatively, right-click over any of the bits in the timeslot, and click on Select Timeslot. 2. Drag and drop in the normal way to complete the cross connection. Selecting Multiple Non Consecutive Timeslots 1. Click on one TSn timeslot number (where n is the desired timeslot 1 to 31). 2. Hold down the Ctrl key while clicking on each of the required timeslot numbers. 3. Drag and drop in the normal way to complete the cross connection. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 169 Selecting Multiple Consecutive Timeslots 1. Click on the first TSn timeslot number (where n is the desired timeslot 1 to 31). 2. Hold down the Shift key while clicking on the last required timeslot number. 3. Drag and drop in the normal way to complete the cross connection. Selecting All Timeslots in a Port 1. Right-click over any of the rectangles. 2. Click Select All. 170 | Cross Connections Q4EM Cross Connections 1. Expand the Q4EM display by clicking the relevant icon. 2. Set the Voice capacity by selecting 16, 24, 32, or 64 kbit/s rates. 3. Drag and drop from the Voice mapping connection box to the required partner interface to create the voice cross connection. 4. If E&M signalling is required, drag and drop from the Signalling mapping connection box to the required partner interface to create the E&M cross connection. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 171 DFXS and DFXO Cross Connections 1. On one side of the link, expand the DFXS display, as required, by clicking 2. On the other side of the link, expand the corresponding DFXO display, as required, by clicking 3. For the DFXS card and corresponding DFXO card, select the Signalling type as required, according to the table below. The CAS signalling between DFXO / DFXS interfaces uses 4RF proprietary allocation of control bits. The Signalling type affects both ports of the DFXO / DFXS interface. If a mixture of signalling types is required, then multiple DFXO / DFXS cards are needed. Signalling Application Overhead Multiplexed (default) Multiplexers the four ABCD bits from the interface into a single 8 kbit/s channel. Use when interworking DFXO to DFXS, between an XE and a SE radio or when limited bandwidth is available. This signalling type cannot be used for interworking between framed E1 / T1 and voice interfaces. 8 kbit/s Non-multiplexed Transports each of the four ABCD bits in separate 8 kbit/s channels. Use when interworking DFXO to DFXS, or when signalling bits are mapped into an E1 / T1 timeslot. 32 kbit/s 4 wire compatible 1 bit CAS using only the A bit in both directions of transmission. 8 kbit/s Use when interworking the DFXS to Q4EM, DFXO to Q4EM, DFXS to DFXS or DFXS to QJET for DTI circuits. 4. Set the Voice capacity and create the Voice connection by dragging and dropping between the mapping connection boxes of the DFXO and DFXS corresponding ports. 5. Link the Port Signalling connection by dragging and dropping between the mapping connection boxes of the DFXO and DFXS corresponding ports. The DFXO / DFXS control signals (off hook, ring, etc) will not function without this connection. 172 | Cross Connections QV24 Cross Connections 1. Expand the QV24 displays, as required, by clicking the relevant icons. 2. Select the Port Baud Rate as required (default is 9600). 3. Drag and drop to the required partner interface to create the V.24 Data connection. If the partner interface is a QJET: If the V.24 Baud Rate selected is 38400 is less, drag from the QV24 mapping connection box to the QJET timeslot. The correct QJET capacity for the baud rate selected will automatically be assigned. If the V.24 Baud Rate selected is greater than 38400, select the QJET capacity required, as per the following table, and drag from the QJET to the QV24 mapping connection box. Baud Rate Bits Required Bit Rate 300 - 7200 16 kbit/s 9600 - 14400 24 kbit/s 19200 - 23040 32 kbit/s 28800 40 kbit/s 38400 48 kbit/s 57600 72 kbit/s 115200 16 128 kbit/s Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 173 QV24S Cross Connections Synchronous Mode 1. Expand the QV24S displays, as required, by clicking the relevant icons. 2. Select the Port Baud Rate as required (default is 9600). 3. Drag and drop to the required partner interface to create the V.24 Data connection. If the partner interface is a QJET, drag from the QV24S mapping connection box to the QJET timeslot. The correct QJET capacity for the baud rate selected will automatically be assigned. Baud Rate Bits Required Bit Rate 300 - 4800 8 kbit/s 9600 16 kbit/s 19200 32 kbit/s Over Sampling Mode 1. Expand the QV24S displays, as required, by clicking the relevant icons. 2. Set the Port Baud Rate to OVR Sample. 3. Drag and drop to the required E1 / T1 partner interface to create the data connection. 174 | Cross Connections HSS Cross Connections 1. Expand the HSS displays, as required, by clicking the relevant icons. 2. Select the Synchronous Clock Selection mode (see ‘HSS Synchronous Clock Selection Modes’ on page 138). 3. Set the Data rate to a value between 8 and 2048 (in multiples of 8 kbit/s). The net data rate available to the user is defined by Data Rate – overhead e.g. a date rate set to 2048 kbit/s with an overhead of 40 kbit/s provides a user data rate of 2008 kbit/s. 4. Drag and drop to the required partner interface to create the HSS Data connection. If the partner interface is a QJET, select the capacity on the QJET and drag it to the HSS Data mapping connection box. The QJET capacity selected must be the sum of the data rate required plus the overhead rate selected. 5. Drag and drop to the required partner interface to create the HSS Signalling cross connection. A minimum of 8 kbit/s of capacity is required and must be set symmetrically at both ends of the link. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 175 Cross Connection Example This is an example of cross connection mapping: Circuit Local port Remote port Radio management User Ethernet Capacity (kbit/s) Connection numbers 64 1024 4 wire E&M circuit Q4EM port 1 (slot C) Q4EM port 1 (slot C) 72 7/15 Unframed E1 data QJET port 1 (slot D) QJET port 1 (slot D) 2088 65 Unframed T1 data QJET port 2 (slot D) QJET port 2 (slot D) 1584 66 2 wire loop Interface DFXO port 1 (slot E) DFXS port 1 (slot E) 72 8/32 V.24 data circuit 9600 QV24 port 1 (slot G) QV24 port 1 (slot G) 24 14 HSS data circuit 1024 kbit/s HSS port 1 (slot H) HSS port 1 (slot H) 1088 31/16 176 | Cross Connections Symmetrical Connection Wizard The Cross Connections application has a Symmetrical Connection Wizard which simplifies the cross connection configuration when the terminals are fitted with symmetrical / matching interface types. A symmetrical connection is a connection between the local and the remote terminal where the local slot, card type, port and connection details are identical to those of the remote terminal. The only exception is DFXO / DFXS connections where DFXO cards are considered to match DFXS cards (as they normally interwork). Framed E1 / T1 CAS connections, drop-and-insert connections, and connections that do not involve entire timeslots, are considered to be asymmetrical. Starting the Cross Connections Wizard When starting the connection wizard with unsaved changes, the following popup dialog should appear Click on 'Save' if you wish to save the current configuration to a file. Clicking on 'Continue' will continue with the wizard and overwrite any changes made when the wizard finishes. The wizard can be cancelled at any time by clicking on the 'Cancel' button or by closing the window. Cross Connections Wizard Navigation Click on the Next button to progress through the connection wizard. The current stage is indicated in the navigation bar on the left. You can jump directly to a stage by clicking on the stage required. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 177 Setting the Cross Connections IP Address If the local or remote terminal IP addresses have been setup, they will be displayed in the Local and Remote fields. If the IP addresses are not displayed, enter the IP addresses of the local and remote terminals. Click on 'Get Configuration' to upload the existing cross connections configuration from the local terminal. The Radio bandwidth bar will show the available bandwidth and will be updated as bandwidth is assigned to cards. Setting the Cross Connections Bandwidth If the Cross Connections Application is opened from SuperVisor, the Total Capacity of the radio link will be shown in the Bandwidth field. If the Cross Connections Application is opened as a stand alone application, the Total Capacity of the radio link will be need to be entered in the Bandwidth field. The 'Remove asymmetrical connections' button will be active if there are existing asymmetrical cross connections. If you want to remove existing asymmetrical cross connections, click on this button. The Radio bandwidth bar will update accordingly. 178 | Cross Connections Cross Connections Card Selection If the Cross Connections Application is opened from SuperVisor, existing cards installed in the local terminal that match cards installed in the remote terminal will be displayed. Mismatched cards will be shown as 'Empty Slot'. If the Cross Connections Application is opened as a stand alone application, select the card types that will be fitted in the terminal. To copy the card type selected in Slot A to all the other slots (B – H), click on the Copy Card button. This assumes that the same interface card types are fitted in all the card slots. Aprisa XE User Manual Cross Connections | 179 Cross Connections Interface Configurations Setup the interface configurations as per the wizard instructions. Existing asymmetrical connections will be replaced with symmetrical connections if an interface parameter is changed. Q4EM QJET DFXO / DFXS QV24 HSS Ethernet To copy the port configuration selected in Port 1 to all the other ports on the card, click on the Copy Port button. To copy the card configuration to all other cards of the same type fitted in the terminal, click on the Copy Card button. This can save time when setting up multiple cards of the same type. 180 | Cross Connections Symmetrical Connection Summary Click Finish. Send Symmetrical Connection Configuration Click OK to send the configuration to the terminals. The process is completed. Note: The wizard may change the connection numbers of existing connections. Aprisa XE User Manual Protected Terminals | 181 11. Protected Terminals Monitored Hot Stand By (MHSB) This section describes configuring the protected terminal in MHSB mode. A protected terminal in MHSB mode comprises two radios interconnected using a MHSB switch. This MHSB switch comprises one RF switch and up to four tributary switches depending on the number of tributaries requiring switching: The MHSB switch protect terminals against any single failure in one radio. It also monitors the alarm output of each radio and switches between radios if major radio link alarms occur. The MHSB switch will not allow a switch to a faulty radio. The MHSB switch uses a CPU to monitor the alarm status received from both the connected radios' alarm ports. When a relevant major radio link alarm is detected on the active radio (that is, transmitter, receiver, power supply or modem), the CPU switches a bank of relays that switches all the interfaces and the transmit port from the main radio to a functioning stand-by radio. The stand-by radio now becomes the active radio. The MHSB switch has a hysteresis of 30 seconds to prevent switching on short alarm transients. The tributary switch and the RF switch are both a 19-inch rack-mount 1U high chassis. The MHSB switch option is available for all Aprisa XE frequency bands. Aprisa XE User Manual 182 | Protected Terminals Tributary Switch Front Panel No. Description Explanation Power supply input Input for DC power or AC power Protective earth M5 terminal intended for connection to an external protective conductor for protection against electric shock in case of a fault Interface ports Port for connecting to customer interface equipment Radio A interfaces These connect to the interface ports on radio A Radio B interfaces These connect to the interface ports on radio B Console For factory use only Ethernet Port for connecting to customer Ethernet network. This port is also used to set up and manage the radios remotely over an IP network Radio A Ethernet Connects to an Ethernet port on radio A Radio B Ethernet Connects to an Ethernet port on radio B 10 Alarms Alarm input/output connections for customer equipment 11 Radio A alarms Connects to the alarm port on radio A 12 Radio B alarms Connects to the alarm port on radio B 13 RF SW Provides power and signalling to the RF switch 14 Mode switch Three-position locking toggle switch to set the MHSB switch into automatic mode or radio A / radio B test mode 15 LEDs Mode and status LEDs Aprisa XE User Manual Protected Terminals | 183 Tributary Protection Switch LEDs LED Colour Appearance Explanation Green Solid The radio is active and is OK Green Flashing The radio is in standby mode and is OK Red Solid The radio is active and there is a fault No colour (off) The tributary switch is in 'slave' mode and the switching is controlled by the master tributary switch Red Flashing The radio is in standby mode, and there is a fault Green Solid The radio is active and is OK Green Flashing The radio is in standby mode and is OK Red Solid The radio is active and there is a fault No colour (off) The tributary switch is in 'slave' mode and the switching is controlled by the master tributary switch Red Flashing The radio is in standby mode, and there is a fault Green Solid The tributary protection switch is in 'auto' mode Green Flashing The tributary protection switch is in 'slave' mode Red Solid The tributary protection switch is in 'manual' mode (A or B) Blue Solid Indicates that there is power to the tributary protection switch On RF Switch Front Panel No. Description Explanation Radio QMA QMA connectors for connecting the protected radios Protective earth M5 terminal intended for connection to an external protective conductor for protection against electric shock in case of a fault Antenna port N-type female connector for connection to the antenna feeder cable. This view shows an internally mounted duplexer. If an external duplexer is fitted, the antenna port will be on the external duplexer Slave tributary switch outputs Connects to secondary tributary switch for control of additional interfaces Tributary switch Connects the RF switch to the tributary switch (the master if more than one tributary switch is required) LEDs Status LEDs Aprisa XE User Manual 184 | Protected Terminals RF Protection Switch LEDs LED Colour Appearance Explanation Tx A Green Solid RF is being received from radio A Tx B Green Solid RF is being received from radio B On Blue Solid Indicates that there is power to the RF protection switch Slave Tributary Switches Each tributary switch protects up to eight ports. Up to three slave tributary switches may be added to a MHSB terminal to protect up to 32 ports. Each slave tributary switch is interconnected by means of the slave tributary switch ports on the RF switch, as shown below. Note: A tributary switch that is operating as a slave (rather than a master) has a RJ-45 V.24 loopback connector plugged into the console port. If the connector is missing, contact Customer Support. Alternatively, you can make this connector. Follow the standard pinouts for a V.24 RJ-45 connection (see ‘QV24 Interface connections’ on page 273). Aprisa XE User Manual Protected Terminals | 185 MHSB Cabling The two radios are interconnected as follows: CAUTION: Do not connect Transmit to Receive or Receive to Transmit as this may damage the radio or the MHSB switch. Cables supplied with MHSB The following cables are supplied with a MHSB terminal: Ethernet interface: RJ-45 ports standard TIA-568A patch cables . Alarm interface: RJ-45 ports standard TIA-568A patch cables. RF ports: two QMA male patch cables are supplied. MHSB Power Supply See ‘DC Power Supply’ on page 37 and ‘AC Power Supply’ on page 40. Aprisa XE User Manual 186 | Protected Terminals Configuring the Radios for Protected Mode The MHSB switch does not require any special software. However, the radios connected to the MHSB switch must be configured to work with the MHSB switch. This sets the alarm outputs and inputs to function in MHSB mode. You must configure the interfaces of both radios connected to the MHSB switch identically. To perform this, you can either connect directly to the radio or use the test mode of the MHSB switch. MHSB Terminal IP Addresses Before configuring the link, you must ensure that the two independent links have correctly configured IP address details. All four radios in the protected link must be on the same subnet. Example of MHSB IP addressing Aprisa XE User Manual Protected Terminals | 187 Mounting the MHSB Radios and Switches Once the IP addresses are correctly configured, it is important to connect the A and B radios' Ethernet and Alarm ports correctly. In general, mount radio A above the MHSB switch and radio B below the MHSB switch: There is an Ethernet connection between any of the four Ethernet ports on each radio and the Ethernet port on the Tributary switch. There is also a connection between radio A and radio B, which ensures Ethernet traffic is maintained if a radio loses power. The Ethernet port on the protection switch can be connected to an Ethernet hub or switch to allow multiple connections. Important: The management Ethernet capacity on each of the four radios in the protected terminal must be identical for remote communications to work and there should only be one IP connection to the management network (via the tributary switch Ethernet port). Aprisa XE User Manual 188 | Protected Terminals Configuring the Terminals for MHSB It is recommended that you configure the local and remote A side first, then the local and remote B side. Both the local A and B radios must be configured identically, and both the remote A and B radios must be configured identically. Tip: As illustrated below, you may find it helpful to have two browser sessions running simultaneously. You can then easily see both the A and B sides of the protected link. To configure MHSB operation: 1. Select Link > Maintenance > MHSB. 2. Enable MHSB mode. 3. Select whether the radio is A or B. Ensure that the radio connected to the A side of the protection switch (normally above the MHSB switch) is set to Radio A and the radio connected to the B side of the protection switch (normally below the MHSB switch) is set to Radio B. In the event of a power outage, the radios will switch over to the A side of the protection switch when the power is restored. The A side is also the default active side. 4. When you have made your changes, click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. 5. Repeat steps 2 to 4 for the other side of the protected link. Aprisa XE User Manual Protected Terminals | 189 Clearing MHSB Alarms If a switchover event occurs, the OK LED on the front panel and on the Terminal status and menu bar in SuperVisor changes to amber. 1. Select Clear Switched Alarm from the MHSB Command drop-down list. 2. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to reset the page. Note: When MHSB mode is enabled, external alarm input 2 is used by the protection system to carry alarms from the protection switch to the radio. In MHSB mode, therefore, only external alarm input 1 is available for user alarms. Aprisa XE User Manual 190 | Protected Terminals Hitless Space Diversity (HSD) HSD provides hitless RF receive path protection and hot standby transmitter redundancy. It is typically deployed for paths where high path availability is required. An Aprisa XE hitless space diversity terminal comprises two radio terminals, radio A and radio B. Radio A is the primary radio which is fitted with the interface cards and connects to antenna A. Antenna A always carries the transmitted signal and the received signal for Radio A. Radio B is the secondary radio the receiver of which connects to antenna B. The transmitter in this radio is the standby transmitter. In the event of a radio A active transmitter failure, radio B transmitter becomes active. Antenna B only carries the received signal for Radio B. This antenna is physically separated on the tower by a pre-determined distance from Antenna A. As both radios have a receive path, traffic from the path with the best received bit error rate is routed to the customer interfaces in radio A. In an HSD terminal, a HSD Protection Switch Card (PSC) is always fitted in slot H in Radio A and a HSD Protection Interface Card (PIC) is always fitted in slot H in Radio B. The PSC card has a card front switch which controls the hardware setting of the HSD system Active Radio (Auto Select, Radio A or Radio B). Customer interfaces are provided on radio A only in interface slots A to G. Interface connections to Ethernet and the external alarm inputs and outputs are also provided on radio A only. Aprisa XE User Manual Protected Terminals | 191 HSD Terminal Cabling The two HSD radios are interconnected as follows: Cables Supplied with HSD Terminal The following cables are supplied with a HSD terminal: RF cable A 110 mm QMA female to QMA female low loss RF cable is required to interconnect between the TX ports of both radio A and radio B. This cable carries the radio B transmitter output to the radio A transmitter switch. Ethernet Cable A 200 mm RJ45 to RJ45 Ethernet cable between the Ethernet ports of radio A and radio B. This cable carries management IP traffic between radio A and radio B. Traffic Cable A 200 mm RJ45 to RJ45 Ethernet cable between the PSC and PIC. This cable carries all user traffic between Radio A and Radio B. Aprisa XE User Manual 192 | Protected Terminals HSD Terminal IP Addresses Each radio in the HSD link is assigned a unique IP address. All four radios in the HSD link must be on the same subnet. The IP address of the four terminals can only be changed by logging into the relevant radio A or radio B. When the IP addresses have been setup, an ethernet connection to any of the four radios can access all four radios in the HSD link. The usual ethernet connection is to the near end Radio A (see ‘IP Addressing of Terminals’ on page 53). Example of IP addressing Aprisa XE User Manual Protected Terminals | 193 Configuring HSD Terminals To simplify the management and configuration of the HSD terminals, SuperVisor provides four windows which display the parameters for all four radios, the local and remote, radios A and B. The HSD System menu item displays the four windows. When a parameter is changed in the four window mode, the relevant parameter is automatically changed to the same setting on the corresponding radio e.g. if a radio A modulation type is changed, the radio B modulation type is also changed to the same setting. The Local and Remote menus continue to display the parameters for the local and remote radios for the near end terminal logged into. The majority of SuperVisor HSD System pages contain the same parameters and controls as the standard 1+0 XE terminal. The main exceptions are the HSD Control page and the HSD Performance Summary page. Aprisa XE User Manual 194 | Protected Terminals HSD Active Radio Control The HSD system ‘Active Radio’ control determines if the selection of Radio A or Radio B is automatic or manual. This controls both the radio transmitters and receivers. The Active Radio can be set with the hardware switch on the PSC card front or with the SuperVisor software control. The last change of hardware / software control determines the state of the HSD system. The SuperVisor software control will always reflect the state of the HSD system. After terminal startup or reboot, the state of the PSC mode switch determines the setting used by the system and the SuperVisor software control is set to reflect the state of the HSD system. The PSC card has two card front LEDs which indicate the status of the HSD system: PSC Mode Switch Hardware Control Change Software Control Change LED A LED B LED A LED B Radio A Solid Amber Off Flashing Amber Off Auto Select Solid Green Solid Green Flashing Amber Flashing Amber Off Solid Amber Off Flashing Amber Radio B To set the HSD controls: 1. Select HSD System > Maintenance > Control. 2. Set the Active Radio parameter. Active Radio Mode of Operation Auto Select (default) Automatic mode: The hitless receive will select traffic from the receive path of best performance The HSD system will switch to the standby transmitter if the active transmitter fails (TX failure alarm) Radio A Only Manual selection of radio path A only for both the transmitter and receiver i.e. no automatic switching Radio B Only Manual selection of radio path B only for both the transmitter and receiver i.e. no automatic switching Note: There is no timeout for a manual selection of the Active Radio setting (Radio A only or Radio B only) but a ‘Mode Switch Software Override’ alarm will warn if the software has overwritten the PSC Mode Switch. Aprisa XE User Manual Protected Terminals | 195 3. Set the Parameter Compare Checking. Parameter Compare Checking Option On (default) Any mismatch in parameters shown in Terminal Settings between Radio A and Radio B will generate a Parameter Mismatch alarm. Off No Parameter Mismatch alarm will be generated. To view the HSD System Performance Summary: 1. Select HSD System > Performance > Summary. Field Explanation Terminal UCEs The total number of HSD terminal uncorrectable blocks since the last reset Terminal Errored seconds The total number of HSD terminal operational seconds with errored traffic since the last reset Terminal Error free seconds The total number of HSD terminal error free operational seconds since the last reset Terminal BER The system will report an estimated HSD terminal Bit Error Rate up to a maximum of 1 in 1021 Active Transmitter Dislays the current active transmitter (TxA or TxB) Click Reset Counters to reset the error counters to zero. Aprisa XE User Manual In-Service Commissioning | 197 12. In-Service Commissioning Before You Start When you have finished installing the hardware, RF and the traffic interface cabling, the system is ready to be commissioned. Commissioning the terminal is a simple process and consists of: 1. Powering up the terminals 2. Configuring both the local and remote terminals using SuperVisor 3. Aligning the antennas 4. Synchronizing the terminals 5. Testing the link is operating correctly. As a minimum, conduct the suggested tests to ensure correct operation. More extensive testing may be required to satisfy the end client or regulatory body requirements. 6. Connecting up the client or user interfaces What You Will Need Appropriately qualified commissioning staff at both ends of the link. Safety equipment appropriate for the antenna location at both ends of the link. Communication equipment, that is, mobile phones or two-way radios. SuperVisor software running on an appropriate laptop, computer, or workstation at one end of the link. Tools to facilitate loosening and re-tightening the antenna pan and tilt adjusters. Predicted receiver input levels and fade margin figures from the radio link budget (You can use Surveyor (see ‘Path planning’ on page 23) to calculate the RSSI, fade margin, and availability). Aprisa XE User Manual 198 | In-Service Commissioning Applying Power to the Terminals WARNING: Before applying power to a terminal, ensure you have connected the safety earth and antenna cable. Apply power to the terminals at each end of the link. When power is first applied, all the front panel LEDs will illuminate red for several seconds as the system initializes. After the system is initialized, the OK LED on the front panel should illuminate green and if the terminals are correctly configured, the TX and RX LED should also be illuminated green. If the RX LED is: Red the antennas are may be significantly mis-aligned with no signal being received Amber the antennas may be roughly aligned with some signal being received Green the antennas are well-aligned and adequate signal is being received to create a reliable path If the TX LED is: Red the transmitter is faulty Amber there is a fault in the antenna connection or feeder cable Green the transmitter is working normally Review the Link Configurations Using SuperVisor 1. Connect a PC, with SuperVisor installed, to both terminals in the link. 2. Log into the link. 3. Select Link > Summary and confirm the following basic information: Terminal IP address(es) Terminal TX and RX frequencies RSSI (dBm) TX power (dBm) SNR (dBm) Note: If the terminals have not already been configured, refer to ‘Configuring the terminal’ on page 69, ‘Configuring the traffic interfaces’ on page 91, and ‘Configuring the traffic cross connections’ on page 145. Aprisa XE User Manual In-Service Commissioning | 199 Antenna Alignment For any point-to-point link, it is important to correctly align the antennas to maximize the signal strength at both ends of the link. Each antenna must be pointing directly at the corresponding antenna at the remote site, and they must both be on the same polarization. The antennas are aligned visually, and then small adjustments are made while the link is operating to maximize the received signal. Directional antennas have a radiation pattern that is most sensitive in front of the antenna, in line with the main lobe of the radiation pattern. There are several other lobes (side lobes) that are not as sensitive as the main lobe in front of the antenna. For the link to operate reliably, it is important that the main lobes of both antennas are aligned. If any of the side lobes are aligned to the opposite antenna, the received signal strength of both terminals will be lower, which could result in fading. If in doubt, check the radiation patterns of the antennas you are using. Checking the Antenna Polarization Check that the polarization of the antennas at each end of the link is the same. Antenna polarization of grid antennas are normally indicated by an arrow or with ‘H’ and ‘V’ markers (indicating horizontal and vertical). On Yagi antennas, ensure the orientation of the elements are the same at each end of the link. Transmit frequency and power, and antenna polarization would normally be defined by a regulatory body, and typically licensed to a particular user. Refer to your license details when setting the antenna polarization. Aprisa XE User Manual 200 | In-Service Commissioning Visually Aligning Antennas 1. Stand behind the antenna, and move it from side to side until it is pointing directly at the antenna at the remote site. The remote antenna may be made more visible by using a mirror, strobe light, or flag. If the remote end of the link is not visible (due to smoke, haze, or local clutter, etc), align the antenna by using a magnetic compass. Calculate the bearing using a scale map of the link path. When setting the antenna on the desired bearing ensure that you use the appropriate true-north to magnetic-north offset. Also ensure that the compass reading is not affected by standing too close to metallic objects. 2. Once the antenna is pointing at the remote antenna, tighten the nuts on the U-bolt or antenna clamp just enough to hold it in position. Leave the nuts loose enough so that small adjustments can still be made. Check that the antenna is still pointing in the correct direction. 3. Move the antenna up or down until it is pointing directly at the remote site. 4. Tighten the elevation and azimuth adjustment clamps. 5. Mark the position of the antenna clamps so that the antenna can be returned to this rough aim point easily when accurately aligning the antennas. 6. Repeat steps 1-5 at the opposite site. Note: Low gain antennas need less adjustment in elevation as they are simply aimed at the horizon. They should always be panned horizontally to find the peak signal. Aprisa XE User Manual In-Service Commissioning | 201 Accurately Aligning the Antennas Once the antennas are visually aligned, accurately align both antennas by carefully making small adjustments while monitoring the RSSI. This will give the best possible link performance. Note: Remember that it is important to align the main radiation lobes of the two antennas to each other, not any side lobes. It may be easier to perform this procedure if you can communicate with someone at the remote site by telephone, mobile, or two-way radio. 1. Connect a laptop PC running SuperVisor software and power up the terminals at both ends of the link. Select Link > Performance > Summary so that you can see the RSSI indication for the local terminal. Alternatively, use the RSSI test point on the front panel together with a multimeter (see ‘Measuring the RSSI’ on page 202). 2. Move the antenna through a complete sweep horizontally (known as a 'pan') either side of the point established in the visual alignment process above. Note down the RSSI reading for all the peaks in RSSI that you discover in the pan. 3. Move the antenna to the position corresponding to the maximum RSSI value obtained during the pan. Move the antenna horizontally slightly to each side of this maximum to find the two points where the RSSI drops slightly. 4. Move the antenna halfway between these two points and tighten the clamp. 5. If the antenna has an elevation adjustment, move the antenna through a complete sweep (known as a 'tilt') vertically either side of the point established in the visual alignment process above. Note down the RSSI reading for all the peaks in RSSI that you discover in the tilt. 6. Move the antenna to the position corresponding to the maximum RSSI value obtained during the tilt. Move the antenna slightly up and then down from the maximum to find the two points where the RSSI drops slightly. 7. Move the antenna halfway between these two points and tighten the clamp. 8. Recheck the pan (steps 2-4) and tighten all the clamps firmly. 9. Perform steps 1-8 at the remote site. Aprisa XE User Manual 202 | In-Service Commissioning Measuring the RSSI Measure the RSSI value with a multimeter connected to the RSSI test port on the front of the terminal (see ‘Front panel connections and indicators’ on page 31). 1. Insert the positive probe of the multimeter into the RSSI test port, and clip the negative probe to the chassis of the terminal (earth). 2. Pan and tilt the antenna until you get the highest VDC reading. The values shown in the table below relate the measured VDC to the actual received signal level in dBm regardless of bandwidth and frequency. RSSI test port value (VDC) RSSI reading (dBm) RSSI test port value (VDC) RSSI reading (dBm) RSSI test port value (VDC) RSSI reading (dBm) 0.000 - 100 0.675 - 73 1.350 - 46 0.025 - 99 0.700 - 72 1.375 - 45 0.050 - 98 0.725 - 71 1.400 - 44 0.075 - 97 0.750 - 70 1.425 - 43 0.100 - 96 0.775 - 69 1.450 - 42 0.125 - 95 0.800 - 68 1.475 - 41 0.150 - 94 0.825 - 67 1.500 - 40 0.175 - 93 0.850 - 66 1.525 - 39 0.200 - 92 0.875 - 65 1.550 - 38 0.225 - 91 0.900 - 64 1.575 - 37 0.250 - 90 0.925 - 63 1.600 - 36 0.275 - 89 0.950 - 62 1.625 - 35 0.300 - 88 0.975 - 61 1.650 - 34 0.325 - 87 1.000 - 60 1.675 - 33 0.350 - 86 1.025 - 59 1.700 - 32 0.375 - 85 1.050 - 58 1.725 - 31 0.400 - 84 1.075 - 57 1.750 - 30 0.425 - 83 1.100 - 56 1.775 - 29 0.450 - 82 1.125 - 55 1.800 - 28 0.475 - 81 1.150 - 54 1.825 - 27 0.500 - 80 1.175 - 53 1.850 - 26 0.525 - 79 1.200 - 52 1.875 - 25 0.550 - 78 1.225 - 51 1.900 - 24 0.575 - 77 1.250 - 50 1.925 - 23 0.600 - 76 1.275 - 49 1.950 - 22 0.625 - 75 1.300 - 48 1.975 - 21 0.650 - 74 1.325 - 47 2.000 - 20 Aprisa XE User Manual In-Service Commissioning | 203 Checking Performance The amount of testing performed on the completed installation will depend on circumstances. Some customers may need to prove to a local licensing regulatory body that the link complies with the license provisions. This may require special telecommunications test equipment to complete these tests. Most customers simply want to confirm that their data traffic is successfully passing over the link, or that the customer interfaces comply with known quality standard. However, the most important performance verification checks are: Receive input level Fade margin Long-term BER Checking the Receive Input Level The received signal strength at the local terminal is affected by many components in the system and has a direct relationship with the resulting performance of the link. A link operating with a lower than expected signal strength is more likely to suffer from degraded performance during fading conditions. The receive input level of a link is normally symmetrical (that is, similar at both ends). 1. Compare the final RSSI figure obtained after antenna alignment with that calculated for the link. 2. If the RSSI figure is in excess of 3 dB down on the predicted level, recheck and correct problems using the table below and then recheck the RSSI. Alternatively, recheck the link budget calculations. Possible cause Terminal(s) Is the terminal operating on the correct frequency? Local & remote Is the remote terminal transmit power correct? Remote Are all the coaxial connectors tight? Local & remote Is the antenna the correct type, that is, gain and frequency of operation? Local & remote Is the antenna polarized? Local & remote Is the antenna aligned? Local & remote Is the path between the terminals obstructed? Note: If following the above steps does not resolve the situation, contact Customer Support for assistance. 3. Record the RSSI figure on the commissioning form. 4. Repeat steps 1 to 2 for the other end of the link. Aprisa XE User Manual 204 | In-Service Commissioning Checking the Fade Margin The fade margin is affected by many components in the system and is closely related to the received signal strength. A link operating with a lower than expected fade margin is more likely to suffer from degraded performance during fading conditions. A reduced fade margin can be due to operating the link too close to the noise floor, or the presence of external interference. The fade margin of a link can be asymmetrical (that is, different at each end). Possible causes of low fade margin are as follows: Problem Terminal Low receive signal strength (see above table) Local and Remote Interfering signals on the same, or very close to, the frequency of the local terminal receiver. Local Intermodulation products that land on the same or very close to the frequency of the local terminal receiver. Local or Remote Operating near the local receiver noise floor Local To check the fade margin: 1. Confirm (and correct if necessary) the receive input level (see the previous test). Note: If the receive input level is lower than expected, the fade margin may also be low. 2. Select Link > Performance > Summary and check the current BER of the link in its normal condition is better than 10-6 (If necessary, clear out any extraneous errors by clicking Reset Counters). 3. Check the signal to noise (S/N) indication on the Link > Performance > Summary page. This shows the quality of the signal as it is being processed in the modem. It should typically be better than 30 dB. If it is less than 25 dB, it means that either the RSSI is very low or in-band interference is degrading the S/N performance. 4. Temporarily reduce the remote site's transmit power using either an external attenuator or SuperVisor (Remote > Terminal > Basic). Note: Ideally, the transmit power of the remote site should be reduced by up to 20 dB, which will require the use of an external 50 ohm coaxial attenuator capable of handling the transmit power involved. In the absence of an attenuator, reduce the transmit power using SuperVisor. 5. Check and note the current BER of the link in its now faded condition (Again, if necessary, clear out any extraneous errors (introduced by the power reduction step above) by clicking Reset Counters). 6. Compare the unfaded and faded BER performance of the link (steps 2 and 4). Continue to reduce the remote transmit power until either the BER drops to 10 -6 or the remote transmitter power has been reduced by 20 dB. Note: The fade margin of the link is expressed as a number (of dB) that the link can be faded (transmitter power reduced) without reducing the BER below operating specifications (1 * 10-6 BER). A 20 dB fade margin is adequate for most links. Aprisa XE User Manual In-Service Commissioning | 205 7. Record the fade margin and SNR results on the commissioning form. Note: If the transmit power is reduced using SuperVisor rather than an external attenuator, the fade margin should be recorded as ‘Greater than x dB’ (where x = the power reduction). 8. Restore the remote terminal transmit power to normal. 9. Repeat steps 1 to 7 for the other end of the link. Note: If following all the guidelines above does not resolve the situation, contact Customer Support for assistance. Checking the Long-Term BER The BER test is a measure of the stability of the complete link. The BER results of a link can be asymmetrical (that is, different at each end). 1. Select Link > Performance > Summary and check the current BER and error counters of the link. If necessary, clear out any extraneous errors by selecting Reset Counters. 2. Wait 15 minutes, and check the BER display and error counters again. If there are a small number of errors and the BER is still better than 1 x 10-9, continue the test for 24 hours. If there are a significant number of errors, rectify the cause before completing the 24 hour test. Note: It is normal to conduct the BER test in both directions at the same time, and it is important that no further work be carried out on the equipment (including the antenna) during this period. 3. The BER after the 24 hour test should typically be better than 1 x 10-8. 4. Record the BER results on the commissioning form. Bit Error Rate Tests A Bit Error Rate (BER) test can be conducted on the bench, (see ‘Bench Setup’ on page 43). Attach the BER tester to the interface port(s) of one terminal, and either another BER tester or a loopback plug to the corresponding interface port of the other terminal. This BER test can be carried out over the Ethernet, E1 / T1, V.24 or HSS interfaces. It will test the link quality with regard to user payload data. CAUTION: Do not apply signals greater than -20 dBm to the antenna as they can damage the receiver. In a bench setup, there must be 60 - 80 dB at up to 2 GHz of 50 ohm coaxial attenuation (capable of handling the transmit power) between the terminals’ antenna connectors. Aprisa XE User Manual 206 | In-Service Commissioning Additional Tests Depending on license requirements or your particular needs, you may need to carry out additional tests, such as those listed below. Refer to the relevant test equipment manuals for test details. Test Test equipment required TX power output measurements (at TX and duplexer outputs) Power meter TX spectrum bandwidth Spectrum analyzer TX spectral purity or harmonic outputs Spectrum analyzer TX center frequency Frequency counter or spectrum analyzer Bulk capacity BER test BER tester LAN throughput or errors LAN tester G.703 / HDB3 waveforms Digital oscilloscope Serial interface BER BER tester Audio quality PCM4 or SINAD test set Aprisa XE User Manual In-Service Commissioning | 207 Checking the Link Performance For a graphical indication of the link performance, you can use the constellation analyzer. The 'dots' are a graphical indication of the quality of the demodulated signal. Small dots that are close together indicate a good signal. If the dots become spaced further apart, this indicates that the signal quality is degrading. This signal quality degradation can be caused by low Rx signal level due to, for example: external interference failure of any of the following: modem, receiver, far end transmitter, an antenna (either end), a feeder or connector (for example, due to water damage) path issues such as multipath fading or obstructions To check the performance of the link using the constellation analyzer: 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Performance > Constellation. 2. Click Start to start the constellation analyzer. While the constellation analyzer is running, the terminal will temporarily stop collecting error performance statistics. If you want to run the constellation analyzer anyway, click OK when you see this warning message: 3. Click Stop to stop the constellation analyzer. The terminal automatically resumes collecting error performance statistics. Aprisa XE User Manual 208 | In-Service Commissioning Viewing a Summary of the Link Performance To view the performance summary for a terminal: Select Link or Local or Remote > Performance > Summary. Field Explanation Link Performance Correctable errors The total number of correctable blocks since the last reset Uncorrectable errors The total number of uncorrectable blocks since the last reset SNR (dB) The Signal to Noise Ratio of the link in dB RSSI (dBm) The Received Signal Strength Indication at the Rx input in dBm Errored seconds The total number of operational seconds with errored traffic since the last reset Error free seconds The total number of error free operational seconds since the last reset BER The system will report an estimated Bit Error Rate up to a maximum of 1 in 1021 TX temperature The measured temperature in the transmitter module in °C RX temperature The measured temperature in the receiver module in °C Ethernet performance Transmitted packets The total number of transmitted Ethernet packets Received packets The total number of received Ethernet packets Received packet errors The total number of packets received with errors Click Reset Counters to reset the error counters to zero. Aprisa XE User Manual In-Service Commissioning | 209 Saving the History of the Link Performance Link performance history data is stored in a rolling buffer which can be saved as a *.cvs file (default filename is savedPerformanceHistory.csv). The maximum history data buffer is 1 week of 1 hour records and the last hour is displayed in minute records. The parameters saved are: Date / Time SNR (minimum over period) SNR (average over period) SNR (maximum over period) RSSI (minimum over period) RSSI (average over period) RSSI (maximum over period) BER (value at end of period) UCEs count (value at end of period) Transmitter temperature (value at end of period) To save the history of the link performance for a terminal: Select Local > Performance > Save History. Example of file (simulated fade data): PREVIOUS WEEK TIME Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr … 6 09:44:50 2009 6 10:44:50 2009 6 11:44:50 2009 6 12:44:51 2009 6 13:44:51 2009 6 14:44:51 2009 SNR min (dB) 35.14 35.14 35.14 15.31 22.52 16.20 SNR avg (dB) 35.26 35.26 35.26 25.77 22.75 26.05 SNR max (dB) 35.39 35.40 35.40 58.54 22.89 54.61 RSSI min (dBm) -54.00 -54.00 -54.00 -114.00 -84.10 -87.10 RSSI avg RSSI max (dBm) (dBm) -54.00 -54.00 -53.90 -53.90 -53.90 -53.90 -77.00 -54.00 -83.70 -83.60 -77.40 -60.20 SNR min (dB) 22.52 22.55 22.50 22.50 22.54 22.52 22.48 22.49 22.48 22.50 22.61 22.46 22.46 22.47 22.48 22.49 16.20 16.23 35.10 35.08 35.07 35.06 35.06 35.09 35.07 SNR avg (dB) 28.38 25.67 23.52 24.35 22.73 26.67 30.19 28.87 30.65 29.99 29.78 25.70 26.96 24.71 30.19 25.97 22.94 26.84 40.60 39.17 36.63 36.68 35.34 36.28 42.56 SNR max (dB) 22.75 22.75 22.75 22.78 22.77 22.75 22.79 22.74 22.74 22.75 22.76 22.74 22.75 22.75 22.73 22.75 54.61 49.90 35.24 35.28 35.26 35.24 35.25 35.24 35.28 RSSI min (dBm) -84.10 -84.10 -84.10 -84.10 -84.10 -84.10 -84.10 -84.10 -84.10 -84.00 -84.00 -84.10 -84.10 -84.10 -84.10 -84.20 -87.10 -87.00 -60.50 -60.50 -60.50 -60.60 -60.60 -60.50 -60.60 RSSI avg RSSI max (dBm) (dBm) -78.19 -83.80 -80.89 -83.80 -83.07 -83.70 -82.23 -83.70 -83.86 -83.80 -79.90 -83.80 -76.38 -83.70 -77.68 -83.80 -75.94 -83.80 -76.59 -83.80 -76.82 -83.80 -80.86 -83.90 -79.61 -83.80 -81.86 -83.80 -76.36 -83.80 -80.61 -83.80 -83.76 -83.90 -73.31 -60.30 -54.96 -60.30 -56.40 -60.30 -58.95 -60.20 -58.90 -60.30 -60.24 -60.30 -59.28 -60.30 -53.03 -60.30 BER 3.40E-12 3.39E-12 3.38E-12 1.58E-05 6.92E-06 9.67E-05 UCEs 144 144 144 1045 9912 72125 Tx Temp (deg C) 50 50 50 50 51 52 PREVIOUS HOUR TIME Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr Mon Apr … 6 14:11:51 2009 6 14:12:51 2009 6 14:13:51 2009 6 14:14:51 2009 6 14:15:51 2009 6 14:16:51 2009 6 14:17:51 2009 6 14:18:51 2009 6 14:19:51 2009 6 14:20:51 2009 6 14:21:51 2009 6 14:22:51 2009 6 14:23:51 2009 6 14:24:51 2009 6 14:25:51 2009 6 14:26:51 2009 6 14:27:51 2009 6 14:28:51 2009 6 14:29:51 2009 6 14:30:51 2009 6 14:31:51 2009 6 14:32:51 2009 6 14:33:51 2009 6 14:34:51 2009 6 14:35:51 2009 Aprisa XE User Manual BER 5.89E-06 5.86E-06 5.84E-06 5.81E-06 5.78E-06 5.75E-06 5.73E-06 5.71E-06 5.68E-06 5.66E-06 5.64E-06 5.62E-06 5.59E-06 5.57E-06 5.55E-06 5.53E-06 7.30E-06 6.67E-03 1.70E-03 9.13E-04 6.11E-04 4.52E-04 3.56E-04 2.92E-04 2.46E-04 UCEs 22821 23369 23847 24338 24855 25374 25918 26473 27007 27561 28167 28717 29237 29776 30368 30942 71751 72125 72125 72125 72125 72125 72125 72125 72125 Tx Temp (deg C) 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 52 210 | In-Service Commissioning To save the alarm history from the Remote terminal, login to the Remote terminal and Select Local > Alarms > Save History. Aprisa XE User Manual RSSI avg (dBm) Select Link or Local or Remote > Performance > Clear History. Aprisa XE User Manual 0.00 -10.00 -20.00 -30.00 -40.00 -50.00 -60.00 -70.00 To clear the history of the link performance for a terminal: -80.00 -90.00 Date / Time Mon Apr 6 14:26:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:27:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:28:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:29:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:30:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:31:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:32:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:33:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:34:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:35:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:27:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:28:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:29:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:30:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:31:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:32:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:33:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:34:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:35:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:24:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:23:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:22:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:21:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:20:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:19:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:18:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:26:51 2009 Date / Time Mon Apr 6 14:25:51 2009 Aprisa XE Link Performance Mon Apr 6 14:25:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:24:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:23:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:22:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:21:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:20:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:19:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:18:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:17:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:16:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:15:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:14:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:13:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:12:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:11:51 2009 Graph of Date / Time vs the average RSSI Mon Apr 6 14:17:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:16:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:15:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:14:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:13:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:12:51 2009 Mon Apr 6 14:11:51 2009 SNR avg (dB) In-Service Commissioning | 211 To create an Excel chart of the link performance for a terminal: 1. Open the *.csv file with Excel. 2. Select the ‘Time’ column and the column you wish to graph e.g. ‘SNR avg (dB)’ or ‘RSSI avg (dBm)’ 3. Select ‘Insert Chart’ from the Excel menu. Graph of Date / Time vs the average SNR Aprisa XE Link Performance 45.00 40.00 35.00 30.00 25.00 20.00 15.00 10.00 5.00 0.00 Maintenance | 213 13. Maintenance There are no user-serviceable components within the terminal. All hardware maintenance must be completed by 4RF or an authorized service centre. Do not attempt to carry out repairs to any boards or parts. Return all faulty terminals to 4RF or an authorized service centre. For more information on maintenance and training, please contact Customer Services. CAUTION: Electro Static Discharge (ESD) can damage or destroy the sensitive electrical components in the terminal. Routine Maintenance Every six or twelve months, for both ends of the link, you should record the RSSI and SNR levels as well as checking the following: Item What to check or look for Equipment shelter environment Water leaks Room temperature Excessive vibration Vermin damage Terminal mounting Firmly mounted Antenna cable connections Tight and dry Antenna cable and its supports Not loose or suffering from ultra-violet degradation Antenna and its mounting hardware Not loose, rusty or damaged Safety earth Connections tight Cabling intact DC system Connections tight Voltage in normal limits Batteries (if installed) Connections tight Electrolyte levels normal Aprisa XE User Manual 214 | Maintenance Terminal Upgrades You can upgrade all software for both terminals remotely (through a management network), which eliminates the need to physically visit either end of the link. A terminal is upgraded by accessing a running TFTP server (see ‘TFTP Upgrade Process’ on page 221). All the required files are uploaded from the TFTP server into the terminal and then activated following a terminal reboot. System files can be manually uploaded (see ‘Uploading System Files’ on page 226‘). Inventory File Software release 8.2.10 and all future software releases, contains an inventory file (similar to a manifest file) which is used to validate the software files in the terminal. To view the Software Status of the terminal: Select Link, Local or Remote > Summary Software status Function Standard Software Release The software status indicates ‘Standard Software Release’ if the following system software files have not been changed since the last TFTP Upgrade. Kernel image file Software image file Firmware image files Configuration files Modified Software Release The software status indicates ‘Modified Software Release’ if the system software files have been changed since the last TFTP Upgrade. This could be caused by: an image file which has been uploaded to the terminal since the last TFTP upgrade which is not part of that upgrade. an image file which was part of the last TFTP upgrade but was subsequently deleted. Upgrade Prerequisites To minimize disruption of link traffic and prevent your terminals from being rendered inoperative, please follow the procedures described in this section together with any additional information or instructions supplied with the upgrade package. Before upgrading the terminal, ensure that you have saved the configuration file (see ‘Saving the terminal's configuration’ on page 89) as well as the cross connection configuration (see ‘Saving cross connection configurations’ on page 155). The Remote terminal upgrade process will be faster if the bandwidth allocated to the management ethernet capacity is maximized. The terminal software must be identical at both ends of the link. At the end of the terminal upgrade process, the versions of image files (kernel software, and firmware) that were in use before the upgrade are still in the terminal. You can restore them, if required, by editing the image tables and reactivating the old files (see ‘Changing the Status of an Image ’ on page 232). IMPORTANT NOTE: Ensure you are logged into the Near end terminal as Admin before you start an upgrade. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 215 Software Upgrade Process Unzip and save the following folders to your hard drive: 8.6.77 Software tftpd32.exe The following steps are required for the software upgrade process: 1. Identify the correct TFTP upgrade type (see ‘Identifying the Correct TFTP Upgrade Type’ on page 217). 2. If the terminals are operating software prior to 8.3.40: Upload the Root File System (see ‘Uploading the Root File System’ on page 216) Upload the Motherboard Images (see ‘Uploading the Motherboard Images’ on page 216). Reboot the terminal. 3. Go through the steps of the TFTP upgrade process (see ‘TFTP Upgrade Process’ on page 221). 4. Upgrade for new FXO/FXS and modem images 5. Reboot the terminal. 6. Clear the Java and web browser caches (see ‘Step 7: Clear the Java and web browser caches’ on page 223). If the TFTP upload process fails, an ‘Upload Fail’ alarm is raised. If the TFTP upload process fails due to a power failure, the alarm is raised upon power recovery. Aprisa XE User Manual 216 | Maintenance Uploading the Root File System Note: Uploading of image files can only be performed to the local terminal i.e. not via the link to the remote terminal. 1. Logon to the local terminal as admin. 2. Go to SuperVisor > Local > Maintenance > Upload > Software. 3. Browse to the 8.6.77 Software folder and select ‘C-CC-R-8_6_7.img’. 4. Click Upload and wait for the upload status to display Succeeded. 5. Activate the ‘C-CC-R-8_6_7.img’ with SuperVisor Local > Maintenance > Image Table (see ‘Changing the Status of an Image File’ on page 232). Uploading the Motherboard Images The E1 and E2 motherboard images do not update as part of the TFTP upgrade. Check if the correct motherboard images are loaded with SuperVisor Local > Maintenance > Image Table. Example: Radio on V8.4.60 with a Rev C motherboard. The Motherboard Firmware images for this software version are: Motherboard Type Image Files Required Rev C C-fpga_E1-0-7-0.img C-fpga_E2-0-5-3.img (Motherboard 1 (Motherboard 2) Rev D C-fpga_E1-1-7-3.img C-fpga_E2-1-5-4.img (Motherboard 1 (Motherboard 2) If the motherboard image files are not correct, upload the relevant image files. Note: Uploading of image files can only be performed to the local terminal i.e. not via the link to the remote terminal. 1. Logon to the local terminal as admin 2. Go to SuperVisor > Local > Maintenance > Upload > Firmware. 3. Browse to the 8.6.77 Software folder and select ‘C-fpga_Ex-x-x-x.img’. 4. Click Upload and wait for the upload status to display Succeeded. 5. Activate the ‘C-fpga_Ex-x-x-x.img’ with SuperVisor Local > Maintenance > Image Table (see ‘Changing the Status of an Image File’ on page 232). Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 217 Identifying the Correct TFTP Upgrade Type The correct TFTP upgrade type will depend on both the Bootloader Version and the Software Version Type. Aprisa XE terminals running the older bootloader software (bootloader version 0) have a limitation on the number of software images that can be loaded simultaneously into a terminal. Identifying the Bootloader Version Determine which bootloader version your terminal is running by using the SuperVisor menu item Maintenance > Support Summary and look for the ‘Bootloader Version’ number: (1) If your terminal is running bootloader version 1 or greater, use the TFTP full upgrade process. (2) If your terminal is running bootloader version 0 and running a software version prior to 7.0.6, use the TFTP partial upgrade process. (3) If your terminal is running bootloader version 0 and running a software version 7.0.6 or later, use the TFTP standard upgrade process. (4) HSD terminals cannot run with bootloader version 0. Aprisa XE User Manual 218 | Maintenance Identifying the Software Version Type There are six different software version types; ETSI type 1, ETSI type 1 HSD, ETSI type 2, ETSI type 2 HSD, FCC Part 101 and FCC Part 90. To determine which Software Version Type is currently installed on the terminal, take note of the ‘Software Version’ on SuperVisor Summary page. The last three characters indicate the Software Version Type. ETSI Compliance Body 8_6_77_E0 The E0 variant supports ETSI (Type 1) 1+0 and MHSB terminals with the same variants as Aprisa XE software version 8.4.40. 8_6_77_E1 The E1 variant supports ETSI (Type 2) 1+0 and MHSB terminals with the same variants as Aprisa XE software version 8.4.40 except for the 400 MHz 25 kHz and 50 kHz which has been replaced with 900 MHz 25 kHz and 50 kHz. 8_6_77_E0h The E0h variant supports ETSI (Type 1) Hitless Space Diversity (HSD) terminals with the same variants as Aprisa XE software version 8.4.40. 8_6_77_E1h The E1 variant supports ETSI (Type 2) Hitless Space Diversity (HSD) terminals with the same variants as Aprisa XE software version 8.4.40 except for the 400 MHz 25 kHz and 50 kHz which has been replaced with 900 MHz 25 kHz and 50 kHz. FCC Compliance Body 8_6_77_F0 The F0 variant supports FCC part 90 1+0 and MHSB terminals. 8_6_77_F0h The F0h variant supports FCC part 90 Hitless Space Diversity (HSD) terminals. 8_6_77_F1 The F1 variant supports FCC part 101 1+0 and MHSB terminals. 8_6_77_F1h The F1h variant supports FCC part 101 Hitless Space Diversity (HSD) terminals. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 219 Upgrade Version Files The following table defines the purpose of the upgrade version files: Upgrade Version File Upgrade Type Software Version Type 8_6_77_E0a Full TFTP upgrade ETSI TYPE 1 8_6_77_E0 Standard TFTP upgrade ETSI TYPE 1 8_6_77_E0h Standard TFTP upgrade ETSI TYPE 1 HSD 8_6_77_E0p Partial TFTP upgrade ETSI TYPE 1 8_6_77_E1a Full TFTP upgrade ETSI TYPE 2 8_6_77_E1 Standard TFTP upgrade ETSI TYPE 2 8_6_77_E1h Standard TFTP upgrade ETSI TYPE 2 HSD 8_6_77_E1p Partial TFTP upgrade ETSI TYPE 2 8_6_77_F0a Full TFTP upgrade FCC Part 90 8_6_77_F0 Standard TFTP upgrade FCC Part 90 8_6_77_F1a Full TFTP upgrade FCC Part 101 8_6_77_F1 Standard TFTP upgrade FCC Part 101 Installing RF Synthesizer Configuration Files If you are upgrading from a software version prior to 7_1_x, you will need to install new RF synthesizer files, refer to ‘Configuration Files’ on page 226. You can then upgrade the terminal using TFTP (see page 221). Frequency Band Synthesizer File(to be installed) Comments 300, 400 MHz XE_300_400_type_1_synth.cfg BB synthesizer 300, 400 MHz XE_300_400_type_2_synth.cfg E3 synthesizer 300, 400 MHz XE_300_400_type_3_synth.cfg 5 kHz sythesizer step 600, 700, 800, 900 MHz XE_600_700_800_900_synth.cfg 1400 MHz XE_1400_synth.cfg 1400 MHz XE_1400TCVR_synth.cfg 1800 MHz XE_1800_synth.cfg 2000, 2500 MHz XE_2000_2500_synth.cfg Aprisa XE User Manual New transceiver (introduced April 2012) 220 | Maintenance TFTP Upgrade Process Types TFTP partial upgrade process Run the TFTP upgrade process by typing 8_6_77_E0p in the Upgrade Version field. This will perform a partial upgrade which will delete unnecessary image files that might be taking up space in the Image Table (which could prevent a standard upgrade succeeding). Reboot the terminal. Run a TFTP standard upgrade process on the terminal. Reboot the terminal again. TFTP standard upgrade process This TFTP standard upgrade process excludes FPGA images for the newly introduced revisions of the Modem, DFXO and DFXS cards. Run the TFTP upgrade process by typing ‘8_6_77_E0’ in the Upgrade Version field. If the standard upgrade fails, it may be necessary to make space for the new images by manually deleting ‘Inactive’ firmware image files. To delete a firmware image file, select the SuperVisor menu item Maintenance > Image Table, select the firmware image and click on Edit. Set the IMAGE DETAILS Command to ‘Delete’ and click ‘Apply’. Reboot the terminal. Additional TFTP upgrade options have been provided to load the new images separately. Run the TFTP upgrade process using the file: ‘F1_8_6_7’ to load images for the newest DFXO and DFXS cards (rev D). ‘F2_8_6_7’ to load images for all revisions of DFXO and DFXS cards. ‘F3_8_6_7’ to load images for the newest Modem card (rev D). Reboot the terminal again. TFTP full upgrade process Run the TFTP upgrade process for 1+0 and MHSB terminals by typing ‘8_6_77_E0a’ in the Upgrade Version field. Run the TFTP upgrade process for HSD terminals by typing ‘8_6_77_E0h’ in the Upgrade Version field. Reboot the terminal. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 221 TFTP Upgrade Process To upgrade a terminal using the TFTP: 1. Run the TFTP server. 2. Login to the Near end terminal / local terminal (see ‘IP Addressing of Terminals’ on page 53). 3. Run the TFTP upgrade process on the Remote terminal. 4. Reboot the Remote terminal. 5. Run the TFTP upgrade process on the Local terminal. 6. Reboot the Local terminal. 7. Clear the Java and web browser caches. Step 1: Run the TFTP server 1. Double-click tftpd32.exe (located in the TFTPD directory) from the Aprisa CD supplied with the product. Leave the TFTPD32 application running until the end of the upgrade process. 2. Click Settings and make sure that both SNTP server and DHCP server are not selected (no tick), and click OK. 3. Click Browse and navigate to the root directory on the Aprisa CD (for example, D:\) supplied with the product, then click OK. 4. Note down the IP address of the TFTP server (shown in the Server Interfaces drop-down list in the TFTPD32 window) as you will need it later. Aprisa XE User Manual 222 | Maintenance Step 2: Log into the Local terminal Use SuperVisor to log into the Near end terminal (now the Local terminal) (see ‘IP Addressing of Terminals’ on page 53) with either 'modify' or 'admin' privileges. Step 3: Run the TFTP upgrade process on the Remote terminal 1. Select Remote > Maintenance > Upload > TFTP Upgrade. 2. Enter the IP address of the TFTP server. 3. Enter the version number of the software that you are upgrading to as a three digit number separated by underscores, for example, 8_6_77_E0 for ETSI variants. 4. Click Apply and check the TFTP server for download activity. The Upgrade Result changes from 'Executing' to either 'Succeeded' or 'Failed'. Note: This may take several minutes when upgrading the remote terminal. If the upgrade has failed: The TFTP server IP address may be set incorrectly The 'Current Directory' on the TFTP server was not pointing to the location of the upload config file e.g. 'Rel_8_6_77_E0.cfg' . There may not be enough free space in the image table to write the file. Inactive images can be deleted (and the terminal rebooted) to free up space for the new image (see ‘Changing the Status of an Image File’ on page 232). Step 4: Reboot the Remote terminal Reboot the remote terminal before proceeding with the next step of the upgrade process (see ‘Rebooting the Terminal’ on page 233). 1. Select Remote > Maintenance > Reboot and select [Hard Reboot] Communications to SuperVisor remote page will fail until the remote terminal reboot has completed. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 223 Step 5: Run the TFTP upgrade process on the Local terminal. 1. Select Local > Maintenance > Upload > TFTP Upgrade. 2. Enter the IP address of the TFTP server (that you noted earlier) 3. Enter the version number of the software (that you are upgrading to) for example, 8_6_77_E0. 4. Click Apply and check the TFTP server for download activity. The Upgrade Result changes from 'Executing' to either 'Succeeded' or 'Failed'. Note: This may take several minutes when upgrading the remote terminal. Step 6: Reboot the Local terminal Reboot the local terminal before proceeding with the next step of the upgrade process (see ‘Rebooting the Terminal’ on page 233). 1. Select Local > Maintenance > Reboot and select [Hard Reboot] 2. Log back into the Local terminal when the reboot has completed. Step 7: Clear the Java and web browser caches After upgrading the terminal you should clear the Java and web browser caches. The files stored in them may cause the SuperVisor and Cross Connections applications to display incorrectly. To clear the Java cache (Windows XP, Java 1.6): 1. Select Start > Control Panel. 2. Select Java 3. Click the General tab. 4. In the ‘Temporary Internet Files’, click Settings 5. Click on ‘Delete Files’ (‘Applications and Applets’ and ‘Trace and Log Files’ both ticked) and OK to confirm. Aprisa XE User Manual 224 | Maintenance To clear your web browser cache (Mozilla Firefox 1.x and above): 1. Select Tools > Options. 2. Select Privacy and then click Cache. 3. Click Clear to clear the cache, and then click OK to confirm. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 225 To clear your web browser cache (Internet Explorer 7.0 and above): 1. Select Tools > Internet Options. 2. On the General tab 3. In Browsing history, click Delete 4. In the ‘Temporary Internet Files’, click Delete Files and Yes to confirm. Aprisa XE User Manual 226 | Maintenance Uploading System Files System files e.g. configuration files, kernel image files, software image files and firmware image files can be uploaded manually. Note: You should only upgrade components that need changing. It is not always necessary, for instance, to replace kernel or software files when upgrading a single firmware file. If interdependency exists between file types, this will be made clear in the documentation that accompanied the update package. Configuration Files Configuration files (.cfg) are compressed archives containing a script to instruct the terminal on how to handle the other files in the archive. Uploading of configuration files can only be performed to the Local Terminal (not via the link to the Remote Terminal). RF synthesizer configuration files The RF synthesizer configuration archive contains files that provide values for the transmitter and receiver synthesizers to operate across the supported frequency bands. Synthesizer configuration filenames have the following format: XE_(frequency bands)_synth.cfg e.g. XE_300_400_synth.cfg Modem configuration files The Modem configuration archive contains files that provide values for the Modem to operate at the various supported channel sizes and modulation types. Modem configuration filenames have the following format: modem_(version number).cfg e.g. modem_8_3_1.cfg (ETSI variants) Cross-connect configuration files The Cross-connect configuration archive contains the Cross Connections application program that can be launched from within SuperVisor. Cross-connect configuration filenames have the following format: C-crossconnect_(version number).cfg e.g. C-crossconnect_8_6_7.cfg Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 227 To upload a configuration file: 1. Select Local > Maintenance > Config Files > Upload Configuration 2. Browse to the location of the file required to be uploaded into the terminal *.cfg. 3. Click on Upload. The normal response is Succeeded if the file has been loaded correctly. A response of ‘Failed’ could be caused by: Not enough temporary space in the filesystem to uncompress the archive and execute the script A file or directory expected by the script not being present on the filesystem 4. Reboot the terminal using a ‘Hard Reboot’ (see ‘Rebooting the Terminal’ on page 233). Aprisa XE User Manual 228 | Maintenance Image Files Image files (.img) are loaded into the terminal and either contains code that is executed by the system processor, or contain instructions to configure the various programmable logic elements. The image file types that can be uploaded are: Kernel image files Software image files Firmware image files Note: The Bootloader image file C-CC-B-(version number).srec and Flash File System image file C-CC-F(version number).img can only be changed in the factory. Uploading of image files can only be performed to the local terminal (not via the link to the remote terminal). To upload and activate an image file: 1. Upload the required image file. If the Upload Status page show ‘executing’, then ‘writing to flash’, then ‘Succeeded’, then the file has been written into the image table correctly. If the Upload Status is ‘Failed’, there may not be enough free space in the image table to write the file. Inactive images can be deleted (and the terminal rebooted) to free up space for the new image (see ‘Changing the Status of an Image File’ on page 232). 2. Set the status of the image to ‘activate’ (see ‘Changing the Status of an Image ’ on page 232). This actually sets the status to ‘Selected’ until after a terminal reboot. 3. Reboot the terminal using a ‘Hard Reboot’ (see ‘Rebooting the Terminal’ on page 233). This activates the selected image. The image table status will now show ‘Active’. The previous image file status will now show as ‘Inactive’. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 229 Kernel image files Kernel image files contain code that forms the basis of the microprocessor’s operating system. There can only ever be two kernel image files in the image table, the active and the inactive. Kernel filenames have the following format: C-CC-K-(version number).img e.g. C-CC-K-6_0_0.img To upload a kernel image file; 1. Select Local > Maintenance > Upload > Kernel 2. Browse to the location of the file required to be uploaded into the terminal *.img. 3. Click on Upload. 4. Activate the image (see ‘Changing the Status of an Image File’ on page 232). 5. Reboot the terminal using a ‘Hard Reboot’ (see ‘Rebooting the Terminal’ on page 233). Software image files Software image files contain code that forms the basis of the terminal’s application and management software (including the Web-based GUI). There can only ever be two software image files in the image table, the active and the inactive. Software image filenames have the following format: C-CC-R-(version number).img e.g. C-CC-R-8_6_7.img To upload a software image file; 1. Select Local > Maintenance > Upload > Software 2. Browse to the location of the file required to be uploaded into the terminal *.img. 3. Click on Upload. Software image files may take one or two minutes to upload as they can be quite large (≈ 2 Mbytes). The size of this file has caused some Microsoft Internet Explorer proxy server setups to abort during the software update process. To avoid this problem, either set the proxy file size limit to 'unlimited' or avoid the use of the proxy altogether. 4. Activate the image (see ‘Changing the Status of an Image File’ on page 232). 5. Reboot the terminal using a ‘Hard Reboot’ (see ‘Rebooting the Terminal’ on page 233). Aprisa XE User Manual 230 | Maintenance Firmware image files Firmware image files contain instructions to configure the various programmable logic elements in the terminal. There can only ever be two firmware image files for the same HSC version in the image table, the active and the inactive. Firmware image filenames have the following format: C-fpga_ff-x-y-z.img e.g. C-fpga_E5-0-7-3.img where ff indicates the function (motherboard, interface card, etc). Function Number Function E1 Motherboard 1 E2 Motherboard 2 E5 QJET Interface Card E7 Q4EM Interface Card E8 DFXO Interface Card E9 DFXS Interface Card EA Modem EB QV24 Interface Card EC HSS Interface Card ED PSC (component of HSD system) EE PIC (component of HSD system) FA HSD modem FB QV24 Sync Interface Card where x indicates the HSC (hardware software compatibility) version. where y indicates the firmware major revision number where z indicates the firmware minor revision number To upload a firmware image file; 1. Select Local > Maintenance > Upload > Firmware 2. Browse to the location of the file required to be uploaded into the terminal *.img. 3. Click on Upload. 4. Activate the image (see ‘Changing the Status of an Image File’ on page 232). 5. Reboot the terminal using a ‘Hard Reboot’ (see ‘Rebooting the Terminal’ on page 233). Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 231 Viewing the Image Table To view the image table: 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Maintenance > Image Table. The image table shows the following information: Heading Function Index A reference number for the image file Type The image type ‘Kernel’, ‘Software’ or ‘Firmware’. Status The status of the image; 'Active', 'Inactive', ‘Selected’, ‘Current (deselected)’ Image Size The image file size in bytes Version The image file name and version details Note: Configuration file details do not appear in the image table. Aprisa XE User Manual 232 | Maintenance Changing the Status of an Image File To change the status of an image: 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Maintenance > Image Table. 2. Select the image you wish to change and click Edit. 3. On the Image Details, select the status from the Command drop-down list and click Apply. Status Function Active The image is currently being used by the system. Inactive The image is not currently being used by the system and could be deleted. Selected The image is not currently being used by the system but has been activated and will become active following a terminal reboot. Current (deselected) The image is currently being used by the system but as another image has been selected, it will become inactive following a terminal reboot. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 233 Rebooting the Terminal The local or remote terminals can be rebooted by SuperVisor. You can specify a ‘Soft Reboot’ which reboots the terminal without affecting traffic or a ‘Hard Reboot’ which reboots the terminal (similar to power cycling the terminal). You can specify an immediate reboot or setup a reboot to occur at a predetermined time. To reboot the terminal: 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Maintenance > Reboot. 2. Select the Reboot Type field: Reboot Type Function None Does nothing. Soft Reboot Reboots the software but does not affect customer traffic. Hard Reboot Reboots the entire terminal and affects customer traffic. This reboot is similar cycling the power off and on. 3. Select the Reboot Command field: Reboot Command Function None Does nothing Reboot Now Execute the selected reboot now Timed Reboot Set the Reboot Time field to execute the selected reboot at a later date and time. This feature can be used to schedule the resulting traffic outage for a time that has least customer impact. Cancel Reboot Cancel a timed reboot. 4. Click Apply to execute the reboot or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 234 | Maintenance Support Summary The support summary page lists key information about the terminal, for example, serial numbers, software version, frequencies and so on. To view the support summary: Select Link or Local or Remote > Maintenance > Support Summary. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 235 Installing Interface Cards CAUTION: You must power down the terminal before removing or installing interface cards. Interface cards are initially installed in the factory to the customers’ requirements however, during the life of the product, additional interface cards may need to be installed. Unless the terminals are protected (see ‘Protected terminals’ on page 197), installing new interface cards involves a substantial interruption of traffic across the link. Staff performing this task must have the appropriate level of education and experience; it should not be attempted by inexperienced personnel. To install an interface card: 1. Switch off the power to the terminal. 2. Prepare the terminal for new interface cards (see ‘Preparing the Terminal for New Interface Cards’ on page 236). 3. Install the interface card (see ‘Installing an Interface Card’ on page 238). 4. Power up the terminal. 5. Configure the slot (see ‘Configuring a Slot’ on page 240). A slot can be configured before installing a new interface card, or after the interface card is installed and the terminal power cycled. 6. Configure the cross connections. (see ‘Configuring the traffic cross connections’ on page 158) Aprisa XE User Manual 236 | Maintenance Preparing the Terminal for New Interface Cards To prepare the terminal for a new interface card: 1. Remove the terminal from service by first switching off the terminal power. For an AC powered terminal, remove the AC power connector. For a DC powered terminal, switch off the DC circuit breaker or supply fuse. 2. Remove all other cables from the terminal, marking their locations first, if necessary, to aid later restoration. The safety earth connection must be the last cable removed. 3. Ensure you have unobstructed access to the top and front of the terminal. Remove the terminal from the equipment rack, if required. 4. Remove the top cover of the terminal by removing two socket screws from the rear. Note: The top cover slides back towards the rear of the chassis. 5. Remove the front fascia by removing the four front panel socket screws. Note: The front fascia first hinges out to clear the antenna connector and earth stud, and is then removed by unclipping from the chassis and sliding downwards. See illustration below. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 237 6. Remove the card securing screw from the required interface slot. 7. There are two types of interface slot blanking plates, the seven tab break off and the single slot type (newer type). If the blanking plate is the seven tab break off, remove the slot blanking tab by folding the tab to and fro until it breaks off. If the blanking plate is the single slot type, unclip the blanking plate from behind the slot (assuming that the card securing screw has already been removed). Aprisa XE User Manual 238 | Maintenance Installing an Interface Card To install an interface card: 1. Remove the interface card from its packaging and static-safe bag. CAUTION: To avoid static damage to the terminal or the interface card being installed, use a static discharge wristband or similar antistatic device. 2. Offer the interface card into the chassis at an angle until the front panel of the card engages in the chassis. 3. Rotate the card in the chassis until it is level, and both parts of the card interface bus connector engage with the socket. Push down evenly on the interface card to seat it into the socket. Aprisa XE User Manual Maintenance | 239 4. Replace the card securing screw. Note: Some interface cards may not have the bracket to accept the card securing screw. 5. Replace the fascia and top covers, restore all cables, and power up the terminal. Aprisa XE User Manual 240 | Maintenance Configuring a Slot 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Slot Summary. 2. Select the required slot and click Configure Slot. 'Slot' shows the slot the interface card is plugged into in the terminal (A – H). Details of the interface card currently installed in the slot are: 'HSC’ (hardware software compatibility) A number used by the system software to determine which FPGA ‘firmware image file’ to use in the interface card installed. 'H/W Rev’ (hardware revision). ‘Installed’ field shows the actual interface card installed in the slot. If there is no interface card installed in the slot, this field will show ‘none’. ‘Expected’ shows interface card type that had been previously installed. Interface cards can be setup before they are installed in the terminal or after they are installed in the terminal. 3. To setup a new interface card in a slot, select the interface card type you want to fit (or has been fitted) from the ‘Expected’ drop-down menu. Note: The transmitter, receiver and modem are configured in other sections (see ‘Configuring the terminal’ on page 69). 4. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual Troubleshooting | 241 14. Troubleshooting Loopbacks Loopbacks are used as a tool for testing or as part of the commissioning process and will affect customer traffic across the link. The terminal supports three types of loopbacks: RF radio loopback Interface loopbacks, set at the interface ports Timeslot loopbacks RF Radio Loopback The RF radio loopback provides a loopback connection between the radio TX and radio RX. Each terminal is looped back independently. All traffic entering the transmit stage of the transceiver is transmitted on the RF link but is also looped back to the receiver section of the transceiver. This loopback will affect all traffic through the terminal. When the RF loopback is activated, both the radio RX and TX LEDs will flash. An RF loopback will automatically deactivate after the period set (in seconds) in the RF Loopback Timeout field. The default entry is 3600 seconds (60 minutes). When an RF loopback is activated, the ethernet path is disabled to prevent ethernet loopbacks. An RF loopback is deactivated if the terminal is rebooted. To activate or deactivate the RF loopback: Select Link or Local or Remote > Maintenance > Loopbacks. To activate the RF loopback, tick the RF Loopback checkbox. Untick the checkbox to deactivate it. Click Apply to apply changes or Reset to restore the previous configuration. Aprisa XE User Manual 242 | Troubleshooting Interface Loopbacks The interface loopback provides a loopback connection for the customer-connected equipment. These loopbacks are applied on a port-by-port basis and can only be enabled on active ports i.e. the port has to be activated by assigning traffic to it by the Cross Connections application. These are two types of interface loopbacks: Line Facing – port traffic from the customer is transmitted over the RF link but is also looped back to the customer Radio Facing – traffic received from the RF link is passed to the customer port but is also looped back to be transmitted over the RF link. Loopback type Description QJET (whole tributary) The QJET interface port has both Line Facing and Radio Facing loopbacks (see ‘QJET Port Settings’ on page 102). The interface card green LED flashes while the loopback is active. QJET (individual timeslot) The Cross Connections application can loopback framed E1 / T1 timeslots (see ‘Timeslot Loopbacks’ on page 243). Q4EM port The Q4EM interface port has both Line Facing and Radio Facing loopbacks (see ‘Q4EM Port Settings’ on page 104). The interface card yellow LED flashes while the loopback is active. DFXO port The DFXO interface Line Facing loopback loops back the port data to the customer. This loopback is performed on the digital path of the codec. The interface card yellow LED flashes while the loopback is active. DFXS port The DFXS interface Line Facing loopback loops back the port data to the customer. This loopback is performed on the digital path of the codec. The interface card yellow LED flashes while the loopback is active. HSS port The HSS interface Line Facing loopback loops back the port data to the customer. The interface card top green LED flashes while the loopback is active. QV24 port The QV24 interface Line Facing loopback will loop back the port data to the customer. Ethernet No loopback possible. Aprisa XE User Manual Troubleshooting | 243 Timeslot Loopbacks You can loopback framed E1 / T1 timeslots in the Cross Connections application. 1. Open the Cross Connections application. 2. Right-click the timeslot you want to loop back. 3. Select Timeslot Loopback - the looped timeslot will display in black: Aprisa XE User Manual 244 | Troubleshooting Alarms The LEDs (OK, RX, and TX) on the front panel illuminate either amber or red when there is a fault condition: Amber indicates a minor alarm that should not affect traffic across the link. Red indicates a major alarm condition that could affect traffic across the link. A major or minor alarm can be mapped to the external alarm outputs (see ‘Configuring the External Alarm Outputs’ on page 83). Diagnosing Alarms To view the Alarm Summary and their current states: Select Link or Local or Remote > Alarms > Summary. Aprisa XE User Manual Troubleshooting | 245 Alarm Explanation Synthesizer Status The selected transmit frequency is outside the tuning range of the transmitter synthesizer Modem Lock The terminal modem is not synchronized with the modem at the other end of the link TX Temp Shutdown The transmitter power amplifier temperature is greater than 75°C. The transmitter has shut down to prevent damage. TX Temp Warning The transmitter power amplifier temperature is greater than 70°C. The transmitter will continue to operate in this condition, but if the power amplifier temperature increases above 75°C, a major alarm condition is set and the transmitter will shut down to prevent further damage. TX AGC Voltage The transmitter power amplifier automatic gain control is out of limits for normal operation TX Reverse Power There is excessive reflected power at the transmitter port of the terminal, indicating a low return loss in the path between transmitter port and the antenna. TX Return Loss Status Indicates the difference between the transmitted power and the amount of power being reflected back into the terminal. The alarm will trigger when there is too much reflected power from the antenna that will degrade link performance. RX RSSI The RX RSSI alarm threshold is determined by the RSSI Thresholds for each of the modulation types (see ‘Setting the RSSI Alarm Threshold’ on page 80) Fan 1 The internal cooling fan 1 is not operating Fan 2 The internal cooling fan 2 is not operating External Input 1 -2 Indicates an active alarm state on the the external alarm input Alarm Output 1 - 4 Indicates an active alarm state on the the external alarm output MHSB Switch Indicates that the MHSB has switched over. The MHSB alarm is only shown if MHSB mode is enabled (see ‘Configuring the Terminals for MHSB’ on page 188). To view detailed alarm information: Select Link or Local or Remote > Alarms > Alarm Table The Alarm Table shows the source of the alarm and the type, the slot (and port, if applicable) where the alarm originated, the severity and the date and time the alarm occurred. To further diagnose the cause of the alarm (see ‘Identifying Causes of Alarms’ on page 250, and ‘Alarm Types’ on page 275). Aprisa XE User Manual 246 | Troubleshooting Viewing the Alarm History The alarm history page shows the historical alarm activity for up to 50 alarms. This page refreshes every 30 seconds. The alarm history for up to 100 alarms can be seen using SNMP (see ‘Configuring SNMP’ on page 85). To view the alarm history: Select Link or Local or Remote > Alarms > Alarm History. Field Explanation Source The component within the terminal that generated the alarm Type The type of alarm (see ‘Alarm types and sources’ on page 275) Slot The slot where the alarm originated, if applicable Port The port where the alarm originated, if applicable Severity Whether the alarm was a major or minor alarm Status Whether the alarm is active or cleared Time The date and time when the alarm occurred To clear the alarm history: Select Local or Remote > Alarms > Clear History This function clears all the alarm history including the 600 alarm rolling buffer (see ‘Saving the Alarm History’ on page 247). Aprisa XE User Manual Troubleshooting | 247 Saving the Alarm History The last 1500 alarms are stored in a rolling buffer which can be saved as a *.csv file. To save the alarm history: Select Local > Alarms > Save History A File Download dialog box opens. Click on Save to save the *.csv file to a folder or click on Open to open the file in the SuperVisor page. Example of file: Source Type Slot Port Severity Status Time Modem Modem Modem QV24 QV24 QV24 System Modem Modem Modem Transmitter Transmitter System QV24 QV24 QV24 HSS HSS QJET mdLOS mdTdmAlignmentLost mdDemodAlignmentLost v24CtrlLineLoss v24CtrlLineLoss v24CtrlLineLoss mdClkSyncFail mdLOS mdTdmAlignmentLost mdDemodAlignmentLost txADCChZeroLo txADCChZeroLo mdClkSyncFail v24CtrlLineLoss v24CtrlLineLoss v24CtrlLineLoss hssLoss hssLoss LOS Aux Aux Aux ---Aux Aux Aux Transmitter Transmitter ---G Major Major Major Major Major Major Major Major Major Major Minor Minor Major Major Major Major Minor Minor Minor Active Active Active Active Active Active Active Cleared Cleared Cleared Active Cleared Cleared Cleared Cleared Cleared Active Cleared Active Tue Jan 22 12:45:54 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:54 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:54 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:55 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:55 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:55 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:57 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:57 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:57 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:57 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:57 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:58 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:58 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:59 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:59 2008 Tue Jan 22 12:45:59 2008 Tue Jan 22 13:51:17 2008 Tue Jan 22 13:51:17 2008 Tue Jan 22 13:51:35 2008 SNR (dB) 35.28 35.29 35.26 35.28 35.27 35.29 RSSI (dBm) -52.8 -52.8 -52.8 Note: Windows security settings can prevent the download of files. In this case, click on the windows security message and select the SuperVisor menu option again (Alarms > Save History). To save the alarm history from the Remote terminal, login to the Remote terminal and Select Local > Alarms > Save History. Aprisa XE User Manual 248 | Troubleshooting Viewing Interface Alarms To view the alarms for a particular interface: 1. Select Link or Local or Remote > Interface > Interface Summary. 2. Select the desired interface card slot from the Interface Summary and click Alarms. This opens a page as shown below with a summary of the alarms on the interface card: The following fields are displayed: Source: The type of interface card that generated the alarm Type: The type of interface alarm Slot: The slot of the interface card that generated the interface alarm Port: The port that generated the interface alarm Severity: Whether the interface alarm was major or minor 3. Return to the Interface Summary page by either selecting Options > Interface Summary or clicking Back in the browser window. Aprisa XE User Manual Troubleshooting | 249 Clearing Alarms Select Link or Local or Remote > Alarms > Clear Alarms MHSB Command If a MHSB switchover event occurs, the OK LED on the front panel changes to amber. To clear the MHSB switchover alarm: Select ‘Clear Switched Alarm’ from the MHSB Command drop-down list and click on Apply. Image Table Alarm An image table alarm occurs if a problem occurred during the boot process which may have left the image table in an inconsistent state. To clear the image table alarm: The default image table alarm: this indicates that the image table has been rebuilt from defaults. This can indicate that an incorrect build of software is running on the terminal. Select ‘Clear the Default Image Table used alarm’ from the Image Table drop-down list and click on Apply. In addition to clearing the image table alarm, you should verify that the active images in the image table are correct for the software release. Upload Alarm An Upload Alarm occurs if the TFTP Upgrade process fails. This can indicate that the upgrade process cannot find the TFTP server or cannot find the software version number entered. To clear the upload alarm alarm: Select ‘Clear the Upload Failure Alarm’ from the Upload Alarm drop-down list and click on Apply. Aprisa XE User Manual 250 | Troubleshooting Identifying Causes of Alarms The following are possible causes of an alarm. LED Colour Possible causes OK Amber A minor system alarm is set Red A major system alarm is set Amber Low RSSI or AGC limits have been exceeded Red Receiver power supply or synthesizer failure Amber AGC, transmitter temperature, forward power or reverse power limits have been exceeded Red Transmit power supply or synthesizer failure RX TX OK LED Colour Alarm condition Suggested action Amber Fan failure Check that the fans are not blocked and can spin freely. Amber Interface card mismatch Using SuperVisor, check that the expected interface card and the fitted interface card are the same. Red Modem lock A modem lock alarm is generally seen when other conditions such as low RSSI are present. If there are no other alarms indicated, check the following: The terminal clocking is set up correctly. Both terminals are using the same modulation. Both terminals are using the same version of software. External RF Interference from equipment operating in adjacent channels. Check the constellation pattern for evidence of disturbances in the RF path. Compare RSSI with the expected values from the original path engineering calculation. Investigate any large differences. If the fault persists, contact your local representative. Red Interface alarms Check that the E1 or Ethernet interface cables are fitted correctly and the equipment they are connected to is functioning correctly. Aprisa XE User Manual Troubleshooting | 251 RX LED Colour Alarm condition Suggested action Amber Low RSSI Check that all antenna and feeder cables are firmly connected and not damaged or kinked Check there is no damage to the antenna Check the TX power and alarm status of the remote terminal Amber Receiver AGC Contact your local 4RF representative Red Receiver power supply Contact your local 4RF representative Colour Alarm condition Suggested action Amber Reverse power Check that all antenna and feeder cables are firmly connected and not damaged or kinked Check there is no damage to the antenna Check that the Receiver and Transmitter ports are correctly connected to the High and Low ports of the duplexer Red Transmitter temperature Check operation of cooling fan or fans Ensure the air grills on the sides of the terminal are clear Ensure the ambient air temperature around the equipment is less than 50˚C TX LED Aprisa XE User Manual 252 | Troubleshooting E1 / T1 Alarm Conditions The QJET interface yellow LED indicates: Loss of signal (LOS) A loss of signal alarm occurs when there is no valid G.703 signal at the E1 / T1 interface RX input from the downstream system. This alarm masks the LOF and AIS received alarms. Loss Of Frame alignment (LOF) A loss of frame alignment alarm occurs when the E1 / T1 interface RX input receives a valid G.703 signal (code and frequency) but does not receive a valid G.704 signal i.e. no frame alignment word, from the downstream system (in framed E1 / T1 modes only) (red alarm in framed T1 modes). This alarm masks the AIS received alarm. Alarm Indication Signal (AIS) An AIS received alarm occurs when AIS is received from the downstream system. An E1 / T1 interface will output AIS to the downstream system if the normal upstream traffic signal is not available e.g. loss of modem synchronization, loss of RF signal across the link (blue alarm in framed T1 modes). Remote Alarm Indicator (RAI) A remote alarm indicator occurs when RAI is received from the downstream system when it has an active LOS or LOF alarm (TS0 NFAS bit 3 in framed E1 modes and yellow alarm in framed T1 modes). TS16 Loss of signal (TS16LOS) A TS16 loss of signal alarm occurs when there is no valid TS16 signal at the E1 interface RX input from the downstream system (in E1 PCM 30 modes only). TS16 Remote Multi-frame Alarm Indicator (RMAI) A remote multiframe alarm indicator occurs when RMAI is received from the downstream system when it has an active TS16LOS alarm (TS16 F0 bit 6 in E1 PCM 30 modes only). TS16 Alarm Indication Signal (TS16AIS) A TS16 Alarm Indication Signal alarm occurs when AIS is received from the downstream system in TS16. An E1 interface will output the TS16 AIS signal to the downstream system if the normal TS16 multiframe signal is not available (in E1 PCM 30 modes only). The QJET interface green LED indicates: The QJET interface green LED flashes when the E1 / T1 port loopback is active. Aprisa XE User Manual Troubleshooting | 253 System Log SuperVisor automatically keeps a log, known as 'syslog', which captures all alarms, errors and events for each terminal. You can specify that the ‘syslog’ is saved to a particular file (see ‘Setting up for Remote Logging’ on page 255). You can then email this file to customer service, if requested, to enable them to fault-find more accurately. Checking the Syslog To view the Syslog: 1. Select Local > Performance > Logging > Syslog. This opens a new window: Aprisa XE User Manual 254 | Troubleshooting 2. The system log is quite hard to decipher in Internet Explorer. If you're using Internet Explorer, select View > Source, which opens the file in a more legible layout in Notepad. Save or print this file, as required. 3. If you want to save the system log, you can save it from within Notepad (or Internet Explorer). Select File > Save As. Navigate to where you want to save the file. Enter a meaningful filename and select 'Text File' from the Save As Type drop-down list. Click Save. You can specify that this file is automatically saved to a computer (see ‘Setting up for Remote Logging’ on page 255). Aprisa XE User Manual Troubleshooting | 255 Setting up for Remote Logging Note: When setting up to save the system log to a specific computer, be aware that the file is constantly updated and may get quite large quite quickly. To set up a terminal for remote logging: 1. Copy the TFTP server application (tftpd32.exe, which is located in the TFTPD directory) from the terminal product CD into a suitable directory on the PC (for example, C:\Program Files\TFTP Server). 2. Create another directory where you want the system logs to be saved for example; C:\Aprisa XE Syslog 3. Double-click tftpd32.exe. 4. Click Settings and make sure that both ‘Syslog Server’ and ‘Save syslog message’ boxes are ticked. 5. Click Browse and select a directory where you want the Syslog file to be saved (created in step 2). 6. Click OK to close the Settings dialog box. Aprisa XE User Manual 256 | Troubleshooting 7. In SuperVisor, select Link or Link or Local or Remote > Terminal > Advanced. 8. In the Remote Syslog Address field, enter the IP address of the PC on which the Syslog server is running. 9. In the Remote Syslog Port field, enter 514. 10. Reboot the terminal (Link or Local or Remote > Maintenance > Reboot). 11. Open the directory where the system logs are being saved to. You should see a file called syslog.txt. Aprisa XE User Manual Interface Connections | 257 15. Interface Connections RJ-45 Connector Pin Assignments RJ-45 pin numbering Interface Traffic Direction All interface traffic directions and labels used in this manual refer to the direction relative to the terminal. Refer to the diagram below. The traffic direction describes the transmit / receive paths and the direction of handshaking and clocking signals, depending on the interface. Aprisa XE User Manual 258 | Interface Connections QJET Interface Connections Pin number Pin function Direction TIA-568A wire colour Transmit Output Green/white Transmit Output Green Not used Receive Input Blue Receive Input Blue/white Not used Orange Not used Brown/white Not used Brown Orange/white RJ-45 connector LED indicators LED Status Explanation Green On Normal operation Yellow On Loss of signal (LOS) or Alarm Indication Signal (AIS) or Loss Of Frame alignment (LOF) in Framed modes Green Flashing Port in loopback The standard QJET interface is 120 ohm balanced. External Balun transformers can be used to provide a 75 ohm unbalanced interface. Aprisa XE User Manual Interface Connections | 259 Ethernet Interface Connections Pin number Pin function Direction TIA-568A wire colour Transmit Output Green/white Transmit Output Green Receive Input Orange/white Not used Blue Not used Blue/white Receive Not used Brown/white Not used Brown Input Orange RJ-45 connector LED indicators LED Status Explanation Green On Ethernet signal received Green Flashing Indicates data traffic present on the interface Note: Do not connect Power over Ethernet (PoE) connections to the Aprisa XE Ethernet ports as this will damage the port. Aprisa XE User Manual 260 | Interface Connections Q4EM Interface Connections Pin number Pin function Direction TIA-568A wire colour Input Green/white M1 Input Green Receive (Ra/R) Input Orange/white Transmit (Tb/R1) Output Blue Transmit (Ta/T1) Output Blue/white Receive (Rb/T) Input Orange Output Brown/white E1 Output Brown RJ-45 connector LED indicators LED Status Explanation Green Off No external source applied to M wire (no M wire current flowing) Green On External source applied to M wire (M wire current flowing) Green Flashing The interface loopback is active Yellow Off E wire relay contact open (no current in external device) Yellow On E wire relay contact closed (current flowing in external device) Aprisa XE User Manual Interface Connections | 261 E&M Signalling Types The Q4EM E&M signalling leads are optically isolated, bi-directional lines which can be externally referenced to meet any of the EIA-464 connection types I, II,IV or V (as shown below). The M1 lead associated with the M wire detector can be externally referenced to earth or battery as required. The E1 lead associated with the E wire output can be externally referenced to earth or battery as required. Aprisa XE User Manual 262 | Interface Connections Aprisa XE User Manual Interface Connections | 263 DFXS Interface Connections The subscriber interface connects the terminal to the customer's 2 wire telephone via a 2 wire line. Each 2 wire channel has two access points: one connects to a customer; the other is a local test port. CAUTION: If there is a power failure at either terminal, any telephone connected at the DFXS will not operate. Please ensure that a separate telephone that is not dependent on local power is available for use in an emergency. RJ-45 Pin number Pin function Direction TIA-568A wire colour Not used Green/white Not used Green Not used Orange/white Ring Bi-directional Blue Tip Bi-directional Blue/white Not used Orange Not used Brown/white Not used Brown RJ-45 connector LED indicators LED Status Explanation Green Off Interface operational but not in service Green On Normal operation Green Flashing Cadenced ringing on line Yellow Off No interface alarm Yellow On Interface alarm Yellow Flashing The interface loopback is active Both LEDs Flashing Loss of CAS signals Aprisa XE User Manual 264 | Interface Connections DFXO Interface Connections The DFXO interface connects the terminal to the telephone network via a 2 wire line. Each DFXO channel has two access points: one connects to a customer; the other is a local test port. RJ-45 Pin number Pin function Direction TIA-568A wire colour Not used Green/white Not used Green Not used Orange/white Ring Bi-directional Blue Tip Bi-directional Blue/white Not used Orange Not used Brown/white Not used Brown RJ-45 connector LED indicators LED Status Explanation Green Off Interface operational but not in service Green On Normal operation Green Flashing Cadenced ringing on line Yellow Off No interface alarm Yellow On Interface alarm Yellow Flashing The interface loopback is active Both LEDs Flashing Loss of CAS signals Aprisa XE User Manual Interface Connections | 265 HSS Interface Connections The connector on the high-speed synchronous serial interface is a high density LFH-60 (as used on standard Cisco WAN port serial interface cables and equivalents). The interface specification (X.21 / V.35 etc) is automatically changed by simply changing the type of interface cable connected to the HSS. LED indicators LED Status Explanation Top green LED On Normal operation Top green LED Flashing Loopback in place Lower green LED On Normal operation Aprisa XE User Manual 266 | Interface Connections Synchronous cable assemblies RS-449 Serial Cable Assembly for DCE (Part number: Cab Sync 449FC) Pin number Pin function Direction Shield Ground 22 SD+ SD- Input Input 23 ST+ ST- Output Output 24 RD+ RD- Output Output 25 RS+ RS- Input Input 26 RT+ RT- Output Output 27 CS+ CS- Output Output 10 37 LL SC Input 11 29 DM+ DM- Output Output 12 30 TR+ TR- Input Input 13 31 RR+ RR- Output Output 17 35 TT+ TT- Input Input 19 20 SG RC Aprisa XE User Manual Interface Connections | 267 RS-449 Serial Cable Assembly for DTE (Part number: Cab Sync 449MT) Pin number Pin function Direction Shield Ground 22 SD+ SD- Output Output 23 ST+ ST- Input Input 24 RD+ RD- Input Input 25 RS+ RS- Output Output 26 RT+ RT- Input Input 27 CS+ CS- Input Input 10 37 LL SC Output 11 29 DM+ DM- Input Input 12 30 TR+ TR- Output Output 13 31 RR+ RR- Input Input 17 35 TT+ TT- Output Output 19 20 SG RC Aprisa XE User Manual 268 | Interface Connections V.35 Serial Cable Assembly for DCE (Part number: Cab Sync V35FC) Pin number Pin function Direction Frame Ground Circuit Ground RTS Input CTS Output DSR Output RLSD Output DTR Input LT Input SD+ SD- Input Input RD+ RD- Output Output SCTE+ SCTE- Input Input SCR+ SCR- Output Output AA SCT+ SCT- Output Output V.35 Serial Cable Assembly for DTE (Part number: Cab Sync V35MT) Pin number Pin function Frame Ground Circuit Ground RTS Output CTS Input DSR Input RLSD Input DTR Output LT Output SD+ SD- Output Output RD+ RD- Input Input SCTE+ SCTE- Output Output SCR+ SCR- Input Input AA SCT+ SCT- Input Input Aprisa XE User Manual Direction Interface Connections | 269 X.21 Serial Cable Assembly for DCE (Part number: Cab Sync X21FC) Pin number Pin function Direction Shield Ground Transmit+ Transmit- Input Input 10 Control+ Control- Input Input 11 Receive+ Receive- Output Output 12 Indication+ Indication- Output Output 13 Timing+ Timing- Output Output Circuit Ground X.21 Serial Cable Assembly for DTE (Part number: Cab Sync X21MT) Pin number Pin function Direction Shield Ground Transmit+ Transmit- Output Output 10 Control+ Control- Output Output 11 Receive+ Receive- Input Input 12 Indication+ Indication- Input Input 13 Timing+ Timing- Input Input Circuit Ground Aprisa XE User Manual 270 | Interface Connections RS-530 Serial Cable Assembly for DCE (Part number: Cab Sync 530FC) Pin number Pin function Direction 14 BA(A), TXD+ BA(B), TXD- Input Input 16 BB(A), RXD+ BB(B), RXD- Output Output 19 CA(A), RTS+ CA(B), RTS- Input Input 13 CB(A), CTS+ CB(B), CTS- Output Output 22 CC(A), DSR+ CC(B), DSR- Output Output Shield 10 CF(A), DCD+ CF(B), DCD- Output Output 15 12 DB(A), TXC+ DB(B), TXC- Output Output 17 DD(A), RXC+ DD(B), RXC- Output Output 18 LL Circuit Ground Input 20 23 CD(A), DTR+ CD(B), DTR- Input Input 24 11 DA(A), TXCE+ DA(B), TXCE- Input Input 25 TM, not used Output Aprisa XE User Manual Interface Connections | 271 RS-530 Serial Cable Assembly for DTE (Part number: Cab Sync 530MT) Pin number Pin function Direction 14 BA(A), TXD+ BA(B), TXD- Output Output 16 BB(A), RXD+ BB(B), RXD- Input Input 19 CA(A), RTS+ CA(B), RTS- Output Output 13 CB(A), CTS+ CB(B), CTS- Input Input 22 CC(A), DSR+ CC(B), DSR- Input Input Shield 10 CF(A), DCD+ CF(B), DCD- Input Input 15 12 DB(A), TXC+ DB(B), TXC- Input Input 17 DD(A), RXC+ DD(B), RXC- Input Input 18 LL Circuit Ground Output 20 23 CD(A), DTR+ CD(B), DTR- Output Output 24 11 DA(A), TXCE+ DA(B), TXCE- Output Output 25 TM, not used Output Aprisa XE User Manual 272 | Interface Connections Cable WAN Connectors Cisco LFH-60 cable name WAN connector Connector gender Label on WAN end 449FC DB-37 female 'to DTE' 449MT DB-37 male 'to DCE' V35FC M34 female 'to DTE' V35MT M34 male 'to DCE' X21FC DB-15 female 'to DTE' X21MT DB-15 male 'to DCE' 530FC DB-25 female 'to DTE' 530MT DB-25 male 'to DCE' Aprisa XE User Manual Interface Connections | 273 QV24 Interface connections The QV24 is always configured as a DCE: RJ45 Pin number Pin function Direction TIA-568A wire colour RTS Input Green / white DTR Input Green TXD Input Orange / white Ground Blue Ground Blue / white RXD Output Orange DSR Output Brown / white CTS Output Brown RJ-45 connector LED indicators LED Status Explanation Green On / flashing Transmit data Yellow On / flashing Receive data QV24S Interface connections The QV24S is always configured as a DCE: RJ45 Pin number Pin function Direction TIA-568A wire colour RTS Input Green / white XTXC Input Green TXD Input Orange / white Ground Blue Ground Blue / white RXD Output Orange RXC Output Brown / white CTS Output Brown RJ-45 connector LED indicators LED Status Explanation Green On / flashing Transmit data Yellow On / flashing Receive data Aprisa XE User Manual Alarm Types and Sources | 275 16. Alarm Types and Sources Alarm Types Transmitter Alarms Transmitter Alarms for all Frequency Bands Type Explanation tx11VFail The transmitter 11 VDC power supply has failed tx28VFail The transmitter 28 VDC power supply has failed tx5VFail The transmitter 5 VDC power supply has failed txAmplifierBalance One side of the transmitter amplifier has failed txEEFail The transmitter on-board memory has failed txMibFail The transmitter MIB is corrupt in EEPROM txReturnLoss The transmitter return loss is high txSynthLD The transmitter synthesizer frequency is not set txTSensorFail The transmitter temperature sensor has failed Transmitter Alarms for 300, 400, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1400 MHz Frequency Bands txADCChZeroLo The transmitter AGC voltage is low txADCChZeroHi The transmitter AGC voltage is high txADCChOneLo The transmitter Forward Power Monitor reading is low txADCChOneHi The transmitter Forward Power Monitor reading is high txADCChTwoLo The transmitter Reverse Power Monitor reading is low txADCChTwoHi The transmitter Reverse Power Monitor reading is high txADCChThreeHi The transmitter temperature is greater than 75°C and the transmitter has shut down txADCChFourLo The transmitter synthesizer tuning voltage is low txADCChFourHi The transmitter synthesizer tuning voltage is high txADCChFiveLo The transmitter 28 VDC power supply voltage is low txADCChFiveHi The transmitter 28 VDC power supply voltage is high txADCChSixLo The transmitter 11 VDC power supply voltage is low txADCChSixHi The transmitter 11 VDC power supply voltage is high txADCChSevenLo The transmitter digital 5 VDC power supply voltage is low txADCChSevenHi The transmitter digital 5 VDC power supply voltage is high txADCChEightLo The transmitter reference 7 VDC power supply voltage is low txADCChEightHi The transmitter reference 7 VDC power supply voltage is high txADCChNineLo The transmitter VCO voltage is low txADCChNineHi The transmitter VCO voltage is high txADCChElevenHi The transmitter temperature is greater than 70°C. Aprisa XE User Manual 276 | Alarm Types and Sources Transmitter Alarms for 2000, 2500 MHz Frequency Bands txADCChZeroLo The transmitter AGC voltage is low txADCChZeroHi The transmitter AGC voltage is high txADCChOneLo The transmitter Forward Power Monitor reading is low txADCChOneHi The transmitter Forward Power Monitor reading is high txADCChTwoLo The transmitter Reverse Power Monitor reading is low txADCChTwoHi The transmitter Reverse Power Monitor reading is high txADCChThreeHi The transmitter temperature is greater than 75°C and the transmitter has shut down txADCChFourLo The transmitter synthesizer tuning voltage is low txADCChFourHi The transmitter synthesizer tuning voltage is high txADCChFiveLo The transmitter 28 VDC power supply voltage is low txADCChFiveHi The transmitter 28 VDC power supply voltage is high txADCChSixLo The transmitter 9 VDC power supply voltage is low txADCChSixHi The transmitter 9 VDC power supply voltage is high txADCChSevenLo The transmitter digital 5 VDC power supply voltage is low txADCChSevenHi The transmitter digital 5 VDC power supply voltage is high txADCChEightLo The transmitter reference -5 VDC power supply voltage is low txADCChEightHi The transmitter reference -5 VDC power supply voltage is high txADCChNineLo The transmitter VCO voltage is low txADCChNineHi The transmitter VCO voltage is high txADCChElevenHi The transmitter temperature is greater than 70°C. Aprisa XE User Manual Alarm Types and Sources | 277 Receiver Alarms Receiver Alarms for all Frequency Bands Type Explanation rx12VFail The receiver 12 VDC power supply has failed rxEEFail The on-board memory has failed rxMibFail The receiver MIB is corrupt in EEPROM rxOff The receiver is off rxRSSIHi The receiver maximum input level has been exceeded rxRSSILo The RSSI is below the alarm threshold setting (see page 80) rxSynthLD The synthesizer frequency is not set Receiver Alarms for 300, 400, 600, 700, 800, 900 MHz Frequency Bands rxADCChZeroLo The receiver 3.3 VDC power supply voltage is low rxADCChZeroHi The receiver 3.3 VDC power supply voltage is high rxADCChOneLo The receiver synthesizer tuning voltage is low rxADCChOneHi The receiver synthesizer tuning voltage is high rxADCChTwoLo The receiver +12 VDC power supply is low rxADCChTwoHi The receiver +12 VDC power supply is high rxADCChThreeLo The receiver +5 VDC power supply is low rxADCChThreeHi The receiver +5 VDC power supply is high rxADCChFourLo The receiver +12 VDC power supply is low (same alarm as TwoLo) rxADCChFourHi The receiver +12 VDC power supply is high (same alarm as TwoHi) rxADCChFiveLo The receiver VCO voltage is low rxADCChFiveHi The receiver VCO voltage is high rxADCChSevenLo The receiver RSSI is lower than the normal operating lower limit rxADCChSevenHi The receiver RSSI is higher than the normal operating upper limit rxADCChEightLo The receiver temperature is greater than 70°C (below spec) rxADCChEightHi The receiver temperature is less than -10°C (below spec) Aprisa XE User Manual 278 | Alarm Types and Sources Receiver Alarms for 1400 MHz Frequency Band rxADCChZeroLo The receiver 3.3 VDC power supply voltage is low rxADCChZeroHi The receiver 3.3 VDC power supply voltage is high rxADCChOneLo The receiver synthesizer tuning voltage is low rxADCChOneHi The receiver synthesizer tuning voltage is high rxADCChTwoLo The receiver -1.5 VDC power supply is low rxADCChTwoHi The receiver -1.5 VDC power supply is high rxADCChThreeLo The receiver +5 VDC power supply is low rxADCChThreeHi The receiver +5 VDC power supply is high rxADCChFourLo The receiver +9 VDC power supply is low rxADCChFourHi The receiver +9 VDC power supply is high rxADCChFiveLo The receiver VCO voltage is low rxADCChFiveHi The receiver VCO voltage is high rxADCChSevenLo The receiver RSSI is lower than the normal operating lower limit rxADCChSevenHi The receiver RSSI is higher than the normal operating upper limit rxADCChEightLo The receiver temperature is greater than 70°C (below spec) rxADCChEightHi The receiver temperature is less than -10°C (below spec) Aprisa XE User Manual Alarm Types and Sources | 279 Receiver Alarms for 2000, 2500 MHz Frequency Bands rxADCChZeroLo The receiver 3.3 VDC power supply voltage is low rxADCChZeroHi The receiver 3.3 VDC power supply voltage is high rxADCChOneLo The receiver synthesizer tuning voltage is low rxADCChOneHi The receiver synthesizer tuning voltage is high rxADCChTwoLo The receiver +12 VDC power supply is low rxADCChTwoHi The receiver +12 VDC power supply is high rxADCChThreeLo The receiver +5 VDC power supply is low rxADCChThreeHi The receiver +5 VDC power supply is high rxADCChFourLo The receiver +9 VDC power supply is low rxADCChFourHi The receiver +9 VDC power supply is high rxADCChFiveLo The receiver VCO voltage is low rxADCChFiveHi The receiver VCO voltage is high rxADCChSevenLo The receiver RSSI is lower than the normal operating lower limit rxADCChSevenHi The receiver RSSI is higher than the normal operating upper limit rxADCChEightLo The receiver temperature is greater than 70°C (below spec) rxADCChEightHi The receiver temperature is less than -10°C (below spec) Aprisa XE User Manual 280 | Alarm Types and Sources MUX Alarms Type Explanation muxInit A MUX card failed to program muxMibEEFail The MIB EEROM is corrupt muxCharEEFail The character data is corrupt Modem Alarms Type Explanation mdLOS The modem has loss of synchronization with the far end mdDemodAlignmentLost The modem is unable to synchronize to the payload framing mdTdmAlignmentLost The modem is unable to synchronize to the system bus timing mdRefAFail The modem reference clock A has failed mdRefBFail The modem reference clock B has failed mdClkSyncFail The modem is unable to synchronize to the system clock mdEEFail The modem EEPROM is corrupt mdUCEPresent The modem has uncorrectable errors Motherboard Alarms Type Explanation mbFan1Fail Fan 1 failure mbFan2Fail Fan 2 failure mbCardMismatch The expected interface card is different to the card that is fitted mbHwHsc A MUX card has an unsupported HSC number Aprisa XE User Manual Alarm Types and Sources | 281 QJET Alarms Type Explanation e1AIS The E1 interface RX input has received an Alarm Indication Signal from the downstream equipment. e1RAI The E1 interface RX input has received a Remote Alarm Indication alarm (RAI) from the downstream equipment. A remote alarm indicator signal is sent from the downstream equipment when it has an active LOS or LOF alarm. e1LOS The E1 interface Loss Of Signal alarm (LOS) e1CRC4 The E1 interface Cyclic Redundancy Check 4 alarm indicates a loss of or corrupted CRC data. e1LOF The E1 interface Loss Of Frame alignment (LOF) e1RMAI The E1 interface RX input has received an RMAI from the downstream equipment. A TS16 remote alarm indicator signal is sent from the downstream equipment when it has an active TS16 LOS or LOF alarm. e1TS16AIS The E1 interface RX input has received a TS16 Alarm Indication Signal from the downstream equipment. e1TS16LOS The E1 timeslot 16 Loss Of Signal alarm t1AIS The T1 interface RX input has received an Alarm Indication Signal from the downstream equipment (AIS Received alarm) t1RAI The T1 interface RX input has received a Remote Alarm Indication alarm (RAI) from the downstream equipment. t1LOS The T1 interface Loss Of Signal alarm (LOS) t1LOF The T1 interface Loss Of Frame alignment (LOF) DFXO Alarms Type Explanation fxoCodecOvld The DFXO detected a codec receive signal overload fxoBillToneOvld The DFXO detected a billing tone input signal overload (greater than 0.8 Vrms into 200 Ω) fxoUnplug The DFXO detected that the exchange line has been unplugged from interface fxoCurrentOvld The DFXO Loop current overload detected (greater than 100 mA) DFXS Alarms Type Explanation fxsCalibError The phone was off-hook during the DFXS initialization phase (during power up) fxsDCDCError The DFXS DC-DC converter has a low battery voltage error fxsCasLock The DFXS has a loss of CAS lock Aprisa XE User Manual 282 | Alarm Types and Sources HSS Alarms Type Explanation hssLoss The HSS has a loss of control pattern hssRxFifoFull The HSS RX FIFO has an overrun hssRxFifoEmpty The HSS RX FIFO has an underrun hssTxFifoFull The HSS TX FIFO has an overrun hssTxFifoEmpty The HSS TX FIFO has an underrun hssRxClockInvalid The HSS RX clock is invalid hssTxClockInvalid The HSS TX clock is invalid QV24 Alarms Type Explanation v24CtrlLineLoss The V.24 control lines are not in sync. External Alarm Inputs Type Explanation externalAlarm1 There has been an alarm on external alarm input 1. externalAlarm2 There has been an alarm on external alarm input 2. Remote Terminal Alarms Type Explanation remoteMajorAlarm There has been a major alarm on the remote terminal. remoteMinorAlarm There has been a minor alarm on the remote terminal. Aprisa XE User Manual Alarm Types and Sources | 283 Cross Connect Alarms Type Explanation ccNoBandwidth There is insufficient bandwidth for the current cross connection configuration. MHSB Alarms Type Explanation mhsbSwitchToStandby The terminal has switched from active to standby. HSD Alarms Type Explanation Mode Switch Software Override This alarm provides a warning if the SuperVisor ‘Active Radio’ HSD Control has overwritten the PSC Mode Switch. Companion Tx Fail This alarm occurs on Radio A if the Radio B transmitter (HSD Companion) has failed. This alarm could be caused by a missing RF cable between Radio A and Radio B. hsdCompanionLost This alarm occurs if there is no traffic from the HSD Companion radio. This alarm could be caused by a missing traffic cable between Radio A PSC card and Radio B PIC card. pscMuxAlignmentError This alarm occurs if the TDM mux loses alignment to the TDM bus. This alarm could be caused by a Radio A PSC hardware failure. pscDemuxAlignmentLost This alarm occurs if there is a change in state of the PSC Demux alignment. This alarm could be caused by a HSD system receiver signal loss (both Radio A and Radio B). pscTDMAlignmentLost This alarm occurs if there is a change in state of the PSC TDM alignment. This alarm could be caused by a HSD system receiver signal loss (both Radio A and Radio B) or a Radio A PSC hardware failure. hsdParamMismatch This alarm occurs if there is a parameter setting mismatch between Radio A and Radio B. The Parameter Mismatch alarms only occur if the HSD Control ‘Parameter Compare Checking’ option is set to ‘On’. hsdPMTxPower This alarm occurs if there is a parameter mismatch between Radio A and Radio B transmitter power setting. hsdPMTermRfChWidth This alarm occurs if there is a parameter mismatch between Radio A and Radio B channel size setting. hsdPMTxFreq This alarm occurs if there is a parameter mismatch between Radio A and Radio B transmitter frequency setting. hsdPMRxFreq This alarm occurs if there is a parameter mismatch between Radio A and Radio B receiver frequency setting. hsdPMTermModState This alarm occurs if there is a parameter mismatch between Radio A and Radio B modulation setting. hsdPMModemIntlvEna This alarm occurs if there is a parameter mismatch between Radio A and Radio B modem interleaver setting. Aprisa XE User Manual 284 | Alarm Types and Sources Software Alarms Type Explanation Upload Fail An Upload Fail alarm occurs if the TFTP Upgrade process fails. This can indicate that the upgrade process cannot find the TFTP server or cannot find the software version number entered. defaultImageTableUsed A default image table alarm indicates that the image table has been rebuilt from defaults. This can indicate that an incorrect build of software is running on the terminal. Aprisa XE User Manual Country Specific Settings | 285 17. Country Specific Settings The following table shows the country-specific settings for the DFXO / DFXS interface cards. If the country you want is not listed, contact the local telephone company for assistance. Country DFXO / DFXS Termination / balance impedance DFXO loop current limiter DFXO on-hook speed DFXO ringing impedance DFXO ringing detection threshold Argentina 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Australia TN12 220Ω + (820Ω ║ 120nF) On 26 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Austria TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Bahrain TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Belgium TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Brazil 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Bulgaria 220Ω + (820Ω ║ 120nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Canada 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Chile 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms China 600Ω and China 200Ω + (680Ω ║ 100nF) On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Colombia 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Croatia TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Cyprus TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Czech Republic TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Denmark TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Ecuador 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Egypt TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms El Salvador 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Finland TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms France TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Germany TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Greece TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Guam 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Hong Kong 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Hungary TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Iceland TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms India 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Indonesia 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Ireland TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Israel TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Italy TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Japan 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Jordan 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Kazakhstan 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Kuwait 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Aprisa XE User Manual 286 | Country Specific Settings Latvia TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Lebanon TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Luxembourg TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Macao 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Malaysia 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Malta TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Mexico 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Morocco TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Netherlands TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms New Zealand BT3 (370Ω + (620Ω ║ 310nF)) On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Nigeria TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Norway TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Oman 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Pakistan 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Peru 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Philippines 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Poland TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Portugal TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Romania TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Russia 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Saudi Arabia 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Singapore 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Slovakia TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Slovenia TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms South Africa TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On < 500 μs > 12 kΩ 16 Vrms South Korea 600Ω On < 500 μs > 12 kΩ 16 Vrms Spain TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Sweden TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Switzerland TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Taiwan 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Thailand 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms UAE 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms UK BT Network 320Ω + (1050Ω ║ 230nF) and TBR21 270Ω + (750Ω ║ 150nF) On 3 ms > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms USA 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Yemen 600Ω On < 500 μs > 1 MΩ 16 Vrms Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 287 18. Specifications RF Specifications ETSI Frequency Bands ETSI Frequency Bands ETSI Frequency Bands ETSI Frequency Band Frequency Tuning Range Synthesizer Step Size 300 MHz 330 - 400 MHz 6.25 kHz 400 MHz 394 - 460 MHz 5.0 kHz 400 MHz 400 - 470 MHz 6.25 kHz 600 MHz 620 - 715 MHz 12.5 kHz 800 MHz 805 - 890 MHz 12.5 kHz 900 MHz 850 - 960 MHz 12.5 kHz 1400 MHz 1350 - 1550 MHz 12.5 kHz 1800 MHz 1700 - 2100 MHz 62.5 kHz 2000 MHz 1900 - 2300 MHz 62.5 kHz 2500 MHz 2300 - 2700 MHz 62.5 kHz Modulation 16 / 32 / 64 / 128 QAM and QPSK (software configurable) Frequency stability (short term) < ±1 ppm Frequency stability (long term) < ±2 ppm Antenna connector N-type female 50 Ω Note 1 Frequency Ranges Country specific frequency ranges within the above tuning ranges can be accommodated Note 2 Modulation 128 QAM is unreleased: Please contact 4RF for availability. Note 3 Frequency stability Short term frequency stability is defined as changes in frequency due to environmental effects and power supply variations Long term frequency stability is defined as changes in frequency due to aging of crystal oscillators approx over 5 years Aprisa XE User Manual 288 | Specifications Product Range ETSI The Aprisa XE terminal provides the following ETSI frequency bands / channel sizes: Channel Size kHz MHz 25 50 75 125 150 200 250 500 1.00 1.35 1.75 3.50 7.00 14.00 112 256 400 640 808 1.02 1.24 2.39 4.89 6.62 8.63 17.18 35.51 65.46 300 400 Frequency Band MHz 600 800 900 1400 1800 2000 2500 kbit/s Mbit/s Transport capacity @ 64 QAM Product Released Product Release Pending Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 289 Link Capacity ETSI Channel size 25 kHz QPSK Gross 72 kbit/s E1 Gross E1 Wayside 75 kHz Gross E1 Wayside 125 kHz Gross E1 Wayside 150 kHz Gross E1 Wayside 200 kHz Gross E1 Wayside 250 kHz Gross E1 Wayside 500 kHz Gross E1 Wayside 1.0 MHz Gross E1 Wayside 1.35 MHz Gross E1 Wayside 1.75 MHz Gross E1 Wayside 3.5 MHz Gross E1 Wayside 7.0 MHz Gross E1 Wayside 14 MHz Gross E1 Wayside Notes 32 QAM 96 kbit/s 1 timeslot Wayside 50 kHz 16 QAM 80 kbit/s 1 timeslot 64 QAM 128 QAM 112 kbit/s 136 kbit/s 1 timeslot 1 timeslot 2 timeslots 8 kbit/s 32 kbit/s 48 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 168 kbit/s 208 kbit/s 256 kbit/s 296 kbit/s 2 timeslots 3 timeslots 4 timeslots 4 timeslots 16 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 16 kbit/s 0 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 128 kbit/s 264 kbit/s 312 kbit/s 400 kbit/s 440 kbit/s 2 timeslots 4 timeslots 4 timeslots 6 timeslots 6 timeslots 0 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 16 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 208 kbit/s 424 kbit/s 536 kbit/s 640 kbit/s 744 kbit/s 3 timeslots 6 timeslots 8 timeslots 10 timeslots 11 timeslots 16 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 0 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 264 kbit/s 536 kbit/s 672 kbit/s 808 kbit/s 944 kbit/s 4 timeslots 8 timeslots 10 timeslots 12 timeslots 14 timeslots 8 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 32 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 48 kbit/s 336 kbit/s 680 kbit/s 840 kbit/s 1024 kbit/s 1168 kbit/s 5 timeslots 10 timeslots 13 timeslots 16 timeslots 18 timeslots 16 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 0 kbit/s 16 kbit/s 408 kbit/s 824 kbit/s 1032 kbit/s 1240 kbit/s 1448 kbit/s 6 timeslots 12 timeslots 16 timeslots 19 timeslots 22 timeslots 24 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 792 kbit/s 1592 kbit/s 1992 kbit/s 2392 kbit/s 2792 kbit/s 12 timeslots 24 timeslots 31 timeslots 1 E1 1 E1 24 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 304 kbit/s 704 kbit/s 1624 kbit/s 3256 kbit/s 4072 kbit/s 4888 kbit/s 5704 kbit/s 1 E1 1 E1 24 kbit/s 1168 kbit/s 1984 kbit/s 712 kbit/s 1528 kbit/s 2200 kbit/s 4408 kbit/s 5512 kbit/s 6616 kbit/s 7720 kbit/s 25 timeslots 1 E1 2 E1s 2 E1s 2 E1s 3 E1s 2 E1s 3 E1s 112 kbit/s 232 kbit/s 1336 kbit/s 352 kbit/s 1456 kbit/s 2872 kbit/s 5752 kbit/s 7192 kbit/s 8632 kbit/s 10072 kbit/s 1 E1 2 E1s 3 E1s 4 E1s 4 E1s 784 kbit/s 1576 kbit/s 928 kbit/s 280 kbit/s 1720 kbit/s 5720 kbit/s 11448 kbit/s 14312 kbit/s 17176 kbit/s 20040 kbit/s 2 E1s 5 E1s 6 E1s 8 E1s 9 E1s 1544 kbit/s 1008 kbit/s 1784 kbit/s 472 kbit/s 1248 kbit/s 11832 kbit/s 23672 kbit/s 29592 kbit/s 35512 kbit/s 41432 kbit/s 5 E1s 11 E1s 14 E1s 17 E1s 1392 kbit/s 704 kbit/s 360 kbit/s 16 kbit/s 1760 kbit/s 23992 kbit/s 47992 kbit/s 59992 kbit/s 65464 kbit/s 65400 kbit/s 11 E1s 1024 kbit/s 22 E1s 2056 kbit/s 28 E1s 1528 kbit/s 28 E1s 7000 kbit/s The capacities specified are for Unframed E1 and so require 2088 kbit/s to transport via the radio. The management ethernet capacity must be subtracted from the gross capacity (default 64 kbit/s). See Product Range table for Channel Size / Frequency Band cross reference Aprisa XE User Manual 19 E1s 28 E1s 6936 kbit/s 290 | Specifications Receiver Sensitivity ETSI Channel size QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 25 kHz NA -105 dBm -102 dBm -99 dBm -96 dBm 50 kHz -109 dBm -103 dBm -100 dBm -97 dBm -94 dBm 75 kHz -107 dBm -101 dBm -98 dBm -95 dBm -92 dBm 125 kHz -105 dBm -99 dBm -96 dBm -93 dBm -90 dBm 150 kHz -104 dBm -98 dBm -95 dBm -92 dBm -89 dBm 200 kHz -102 dBm -96 dBm -93 dBm -90 dBm -87 dBm 250 kHz -101 dBm -95 dBm -92 dBm -89 dBm -86 dBm 500 kHz -99 dBm -93 dBm -90 dBm -87 dBm -84 dBm 1.0 MHz -96 dBm -90 dBm -87 dBm -84 dBm -81 dBm 1.35 MHz -95 dBm -89 dBm -86 dBm -83 dBm -80 dBm 1.75 MHz -94 dBm -88 dBm -85 dBm -82 dBm -79 dBm 3.5 MHz -90 dBm -84 dBm -81 dBm -78 dBm -75 dBm 7.0 MHz -87 dBm -81 dBm -78 dBm -75 dBm -72 dBm 14 MHz -84 dBm -78 dBm -75 dBm -72 dBm -69 dBm Notes Typical performance specified at the antenna port for 10-6 BER. The receiver is typically 1 dB more sensitive for a BER of 10-3. NA (Not Available) Transmitter Power ETSI Frequency Band QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 300 MHz 21 to 35 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 400 MHz 21 to 35 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 600 MHz 21 to 35 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 800 MHz 21 to 35 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 900 MHz 21 to 35 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 1400 MHz 21 to 35 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 1800 MHz 21 to 35 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 2000 MHz 20 to 34 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 2500 MHz 20 to 34 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 291 System Gain ETSI Channel Size QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 25 kHz NA 136 dB 132 dB 128 dB 125 dB 50 kHz 144 dB 134 dB 130 dB 126 dB 123 dB 75 kHz 142 dB 132 dB 128 dB 124 dB 121 dB 125 kHz 140 dB 130 dB 126 dB 122 dB 119 dB 150 kHz 139 dB 129 dB 125 dB 121 dB 118 dB 200 kHz 137 dB 127 dB 123 dB 119 dB 116 dB 250 kHz 136 dB 126 dB 122 dB 118 dB 115 dB 500 kHz 134 dB 124 dB 120 dB 116 dB 113 dB 1.0 MHz 131 dB 121 dB 117 dB 113 dB 110 dB 1.35 MHz 130 dB 120 dB 116 dB 112 dB 109 dB 1.75 MHz 129 dB 119 dB 115 dB 111 dB 108 dB 3.5 MHz 125 dB 115 dB 111 dB 107 dB 104 dB 7.0 MHz 122 dB 112 dB 108 dB 104 dB 101 dB 14 MHz 119 dB 109 dB 105 dB 101 dB 98 dB Notes Typical performance specified at the antenna port for 10-6 BER. The system gain is typically 1 dB greater for a BER of 10-3. Figures decrease by 1 dB for the 2000 and 2500 MHz bands at QPSK. System Gain = maximum transmit power - receiver sensitivity NA (Not Available) Aprisa XE User Manual 292 | Specifications Link Delays ETSI Note: The default Modem Interleaver Mode setting is on for channel sizes of 250 kHz and greater and off for channel sizes of 200 kHz and less (see ‘Modem Interleaver Mode’ on page 72). Typical 1+0, MHSB end-to-end link delay - interleaver off Channel size 25 kHz QPSK NA 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 51.8 ms 40.6 ms 35.7 ms 30.3 ms 50 kHz 46.2 ms 24.3 ms 20.2 ms 16.9 ms 15.0 ms 75 kHz 30.4 ms 16.2 ms 14.0 ms 11.4 ms 10.6 ms 125 kHz 22.3 ms 12.1 ms 10.0 ms 8.6 ms 7.0 ms 150 kHz 15.9 ms 8.8 ms 7.3 ms 6.4 ms 5.7 ms 200 kHz 12.8 ms 7.2 ms 6.2 ms 5.3 ms 4.9 ms 250 kHz 10.8 ms 6.2 ms 5.3 ms 4.6 ms 4.2 ms 500 kHz 6.3 ms 3.9 ms 3.4 ms 3.1 ms 2.8 ms 1.0 MHz 3.8 ms 2.6 ms 2.3 ms 2.2 ms 2.1 ms 1.35 MHz 3.1 ms 2.3 ms 2.1 ms 2.0 ms 1.9 ms 1.75 MHz 3.1 ms 2.3 ms 2.1 ms 2.0 ms 1.9 ms 3.5 MHz 2.0 ms 1.7 ms 1.6 ms 1.6 ms 1.6 ms 7.0 MHz 1.7 ms 1.5 ms 1.5 ms 1.5 ms 1.4 ms 14 MHz 1.5 ms 1.4 ms 1.4 ms 1.4 ms 1.4 ms Typical 1+0, MHSB end-to-end link delay - interleaver on QPSK 25 kHz 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 153.6 ms 118.9 ms 103.5 ms 86.9 ms 50 kHz 138.8 ms 70.5 ms 57.9 ms 47.8 ms 41.8 ms 75 kHz 90.3 ms 46.1 ms 39.5 ms 31.4 ms 28.8 ms 125 kHz 65.6 ms 33.7 ms 27.3 ms 23.1 ms 17.8 ms 150 kHz 45.8 ms 23.7 ms 19.3 ms 16.4 ms 14.3 ms 200 kHz 36.5 ms 19.0 ms 15.8 ms 13.2 ms 11.8 ms 250 kHz 30.4 ms 16.0 ms 13.1 ms 11.2 ms 9.8 ms 500 kHz 16.5 ms 9.0 ms 7.5 ms 6.5 ms 5.7 ms 1.0 MHz 8.8 ms 5.1 ms 4.3 ms 3.9 ms 3.5 ms 1.35 MHz 6.8 ms 4.1 ms 3.6 ms 3.2 ms 2.9 ms 1.75 MHz 5.6 ms 3.5 ms 3.1 ms 2.8 ms 2.9 ms 3.5 MHz 3.5 ms 2.4 ms 2.2 ms 2.1 ms 2.0 ms 7.0 MHz 2.4 ms 1.9 ms 1.8 ms 1.7 ms 1.7 ms 14 MHz 1.9 ms 1.6 ms 1.6 ms 1.5 ms 1.5 ms Notes NA 16 QAM The end to end link delays are measured from E1 / T1 interface to E1 / T1 interface The delay figures are typical and can vary when the system re-synchronizes NA (Not Available) Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 293 Typical HSD end-to-end link delay - interleaver on QPSK 25 kHz 16 QAM NA 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 305.4 ms 223.2 ms 202.2 ms NA 50 kHz 247.1 ms 142.0 ms 122.1 ms 95.2 ms NA 75 kHz 185.3 ms 95.8 ms 82.8 ms 67.0 ms NA 125 kHz NA NA NA NA NA 150 kHz 93.3 ms 47.3 ms 39.5 ms 33.7 ms NA 200 kHz 75.6 ms 38.9 ms 32.7 ms 25.5 ms NA 250 kHz 63.6 ms 32.8 ms 25.2 ms 21.6 ms NA 500 kHz 34.0 ms 17.0 ms 14.8 ms 11.4 ms NA 1.0 MHz 16.9 ms 9.5 ms 8.0 ms 6.5 ms NA 1.35 MHz NA NA NA NA NA 1.75 MHz 9.9 ms 5.1 ms 4.9 ms 4.4 ms NA 3.5 MHz 5.5 ms 3.5 ms 3.1 ms 3.1 ms NA 7.0 MHz 3.6 ms 2.5 ms 2.3 ms 2.3 ms NA 14 MHz 2.4 ms 2.0 ms 2.0 ms 2.0 ms NA Notes The end to end link delays are measured from E1 / T1 interface to E1 / T1 interface The delay figures are typical and can vary when the system re-synchronizes NA (Not Available) Aprisa XE User Manual 294 | Specifications FCC Frequency Bands FCC Frequency Bands FCC Frequency Band Frequency Tuning Range Synthesizer Step Size 400 MHz 421 - 512 MHz 6.25 kHz 700 MHz 698 - 806 MHz 12.5 kHz 900 MHz 928 - 960 MHz 12.5 kHz 2500 MHz 2314 - 2350 MHz 62.5 kHz Modulation 16 / 32 / 64 / 128 QAM and QPSK (software configurable) Frequency stability (short term) < ±1 ppm Frequency stability (long term) < ±2 ppm Antenna connector N-type female 50 Ω Note 1 Frequency bands Contact 4RF for other frequency band options Note 2 Modulation 128 QAM is unreleased: Please contact 4RF for availability. Note 3 Frequency stability Short term frequency stability is defined as changes in frequency due to environmental effects and power supply variations Long term frequency stability is defined as changes in frequency due to aging of crystal oscillators approx over 5 years Product Range FCC The Aprisa XE terminal provides the following FCC frequency bands / channel sizes: Channel Size kHz Frequency Band MHz 25 400 100 MHz 200 250 500 1.00 Part 27 Part 27 Part 90 700 900 Part 101 Part 101 2500 88 424 Part 27 Part 27 1.24 2.39 952 kbit/s Mbit/s Transport capacity @ 64 QAM Promoted Product Release Pending Aprisa XE User Manual 4.98 Specifications | 295 Link Capacity FCC Channel size 25 kHz QPSK Gross Gross 136 kbit/s T1 2 timeslots Wayside Gross Gross 500 kHz T1 1.0 MHz Gross Notes 24 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 280 kbit/s 352 kbit/s 424 kbit/s 608 kbit/s 4 timeslots 5 timeslots 6 timeslots 9 timeslots 312 kbit/s 632 kbit/s 792 kbit/s 952 kbit/s 1112 kbit/s 9 timeslots 12 timeslots 14 timeslots 17 timeslots 56 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 408 kbit/s 824 kbit/s 1032 kbit/s 1240 kbit/s 1448 kbit/s 12 timeslots 16 timeslots 19 timeslots 22 timeslots 24 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 792 kbit/s 1592 kbit/s 1992 kbit/s 2392 kbit/s 2792 kbit/s 1 T1 1 T1 1 T1 1 T1 24 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 408 kbit/s 808 kbit/s 1208 kbit/s 1656 kbit/s 3320 kbit/s 4152 kbit/s 4984 kbit/s 5816 kbit/s T1 1 T1 Wayside 1 timeslot 8 kbit/s 32 kbit/s 12 timeslots Wayside 1 timeslot 56 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 6 timeslots Gross 1 timeslot 128 QAM 104 kbit/s 32 kbit/s T1 Wayside 88 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 4 timeslots Wayside 64 QAM 8 kbit/s T1 250 kHz 72 kbit/s 0 timeslots Wayside 200 kHz 32 QAM 56 kbit/s T1 100 kHz 16 QAM 72 kbit/s 2 T1s 152 kbit/s 2 T1s 984 kbit/s 3 T1s 232 kbit/s 3 T1s 1064 kbit/s The capacities specified are for Unframed T1 and so require 1584 kbit/s to transport via the radio. The management ethernet capacity must be subtracted from the gross capacity (default 64 kbit/s). See Product Range table for Channel Size / Frequency Band cross reference Receiver Sensitivity FCC Channel Size QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 25 kHz NA -105 dBm -102 dBm -99 dBm -96 dBm 100 kHz -106 dBm -100 dBm -97 dBm -94 dBm -91 dBm 200 kHz -102 dBm -96 dBm -93 dBm -90 dBm -87 dBm 250 kHz -101 dBm -95 dBm -92 dBm -89 dBm -86 dBm 500 kHz -99 dBm -93 dBm -90 dBm -87 dBm -84 dBm 1.0 MHz -96 dBm -90 dBm -87 dBm -84 dBm -81 dBm Notes Typical performance specified at the antenna port for 10-6 BER. The receiver is typically 1 dB more sensitive for a BER of 10-3. Transmit Power FCC Frequency Band QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 400 MHz NA 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 700 MHz 21 to 35 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 900 MHz 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 2500 MHz 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm Aprisa XE User Manual 296 | Specifications System Gain FCC 400 MHz, 700 MHz, 900 MHz Channel Size QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 25 kHz NA 136 dB 132 dB 128 dB 125 dB 100 kHz 135 dB 129 dB 126 dB 123 dB 120 dB 200 kHz 131 dB 125 dB 122 dB 119 dB 116 dB 500 kHz 134 dB 124 dB 120 dB 116 dB 113 dB 1.0 MHz 131 dB 121 dB 117 dB 113 dB 110 dB QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 250 kHz 130 dB 124 dB 121 dB 118 dB 115 dB 500 kHz 128 dB 122 dB 119 dB 116 dB 113 dB 2500 MHz Notes Typical performance specified at the antenna port for 10-6 BER. The system gain is typically 1 dB greater for a BER of 10-3. System Gain = maximum transmit power - receiver sensitivity Link Delays FCC Note: The default Modem Interleaver Mode setting is on for channel sizes of 250 kHz and greater and off for channel sizes of 200 kHz and less (see ‘Modem Interleaver Mode’ on page 72). Interleaver off Channel size 25 kHz QPSK NA 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 64.4 ms 52.3 ms 44.2 ms 38.5 ms 100 kHz 28.8 ms 15.3 ms 12.7 ms 10.9 ms 8.2 ms 200 kHz 15.9 ms 8.8 ms 7.3 ms 6.4 ms 5.1 ms 250 kHz 11.2 ms 6.6 ms 5.4 ms 5.0 ms 4.2 ms 500 kHz 5.9 ms 3.5 ms 3.4 ms 3.2 ms 2.8 ms 1.0 MHz 3.8 ms 2.6 ms 2.3 ms 2.2 ms 2.1 ms Interleaver on Channel size 25 kHz QPSK 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 191.6 ms 154.1 ms 129.1 ms 111.2 ms 100 kHz 85.3 ms 43.6 ms 35.3 ms 29.7 ms 21.4 ms 200 kHz 45.8 ms 23.7 ms 19.3 ms 16.4 ms 12.3 ms 250 kHz 33.2 ms 17.5 ms 14.3 ms 12.1 ms 9.8 ms 500 kHz 17.5 ms 9.3 ms 8.0 ms 6.9 ms 5.7 ms 1.0 MHz 8.8 ms 5.1 ms 4.3 ms 3.9 ms 3.5 ms Notes NA 16 QAM The end to end link delays are measured from E1 / T1 interface to E1 / T1 interface The delay figures are typical and can vary when the system re-synchronizes Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 297 Industry Canada Frequency Bands IC Frequency Bands IC Frequency Band Frequency Tuning Range Synthesizer Step Size 400 MHz 400 - 470 MHz 6.25 kHz 900 MHz 928 - 960 MHz 12.5 kHz 2000 MHz 1900 - 2300 MHz 62.5 kHz Modulation 16 / 32 / 64 / 128 QAM and QPSK (software configurable) Frequency stability (short term) < ±1 ppm Frequency stability (long term) < ±2 ppm Antenna connector N-type female 50 Ω Note 1 Frequency bands Contact 4RF for other frequency band options Note 2 Modulation 128 QAM is unreleased: Please contact 4RF for availability. Note 3 Frequency stability Short term frequency stability is defined as changes in frequency due to environmental effects and power supply variations Long term frequency stability is defined as changes in frequency due to aging of crystal oscillators approx over 5 years Product Range IC The Aprisa XE terminal provides the following Industry Canada frequency bands / channel sizes: Channel Size Freq Band kHz MHz 25 75 100 150 200 500 1.00 1.75 3.50 7.00 14.00 88 400 424 808 952 2.39 4.89 8.63 17.18 35.51 65.46 400 900 2000 kbit/s Mbit/s Transport capacity @ 64 QAM Aprisa XE User Manual 298 | Specifications Link Capacity IC Channel size 25 kHz QPSK Gross NA T1 Gross T1 Wayside 100 kHz Gross T1 Wayside 150 kHz Gross T1 Wayside 200 kHz Gross T1 Wayside 500 kHz Gross T1 Wayside 1.0 MHz Gross T1 Wayside 1.75 MHz Gross T1 3.5 MHz 2 timeslots 88 kbit/s 1 timeslot NA 1 timeslot 56 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 264 kbit/s 312 kbit/s 400 kbit/s 4 timeslots 128 QAM 4 timeslots 6 timeslots 440 kbit/s 6 timeslots 0 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 16 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 136 kbit/s 280 kbit/s 352 kbit/s 424 kbit/s 608 kbit/s 2 timeslots 4 timeslots 5 timeslots 6 timeslots 9 timeslots 8 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 32 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 32 kbit/s 264 kbit/s 536 kbit/s 672 kbit/s 808 kbit/s 944 kbit/s 4 timeslots 8 timeslots 10 timeslots 12 timeslots 14 timeslots 8 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 32 kbit/s 40 kbit/s 48 kbit/s 312 kbit/s 632 kbit/s 792 kbit/s 952 kbit/s 1112 kbit/s 4 timeslots 56 kbit/s 792 kbit/s 12 timeslots 9 timeslots 12 timeslots 14 timeslots 17 timeslots 56 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 24 kbit/s 1592 kbit/s 1992 kbit/s 2392 kbit/s 2792 kbit/s 1 T1 1 T1 1 T1 1 T1 24 kbit/s 8 kbit/s 408 kbit/s 808 kbit/s 1208 kbit/s 1624 kbit/s 3256 kbit/s 4072 kbit/s 4888 kbit/s 5704 kbit/s 1 T1 2 T1s 40 kbit/s 88 kbit/s 904 kbit/s 136 kbit/s 952 kbit/s 2872 kbit/s 5752 kbit/s 7192 kbit/s 8632 kbit/s 10072 kbit/s 1 T1 2 T1s 3 T1s 3 T1s 4 T1s 5 T1s 3 T1s 6 T1s 1000 kbit/s 856 kbit/s 712 kbit/s 568 kbit/s Gross 5720 kbit/s 11448 kbit/s 14312 kbit/s 17176 kbit/s 20040 kbit/s Gross T1 Wayside Gross T1 Wayside Notes 128 kbit/s 64 QAM 1288 kbit/s Wayside 14 MHz 72 kbit/s Wayside T1 7.0 MHz 32 QAM 56 kbit/s 0 timeslots Wayside 75 kHz 16 QAM 3 T1s 7 T1s 9 T1s 10 T1s 12 T1s 968 kbit/s 360 kbit/s 56 kbit/s 1336 kbit/s 1032 kbit/s 11832 kbit/s 23672 kbit/s 29592 kbit/s 35512 kbit/s 41432 kbit/s 7 T1s 14 T1s 18 T1s 22 T1s 26 T1s 744 kbit/s 1496 kbit/s 1080 kbit/s 664 kbit/s 248 kbit/s NA 47992 kbit/s 59992 kbit/s 65464 kbit/s 65400 kbit/s 30 T1s 472 kbit/s 32 T1s 9304 kbit/s 32 T1s 14776 kbit/s The capacities specified are for Unframed T1 and so require 1584 kbit/s to transport via the radio. The management ethernet capacity must be subtracted from the gross capacity (default 64 kbit/s). See Product Range table for Channel Size / Frequency Band cross reference NA (Not Available) Aprisa XE User Manual 32 T1s 14712 kbit/s Specifications | 299 Receiver Sensitivity IC Channel size QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 25 kHz NA -105 dBm -102 dBm -99 dBm NA 75 kHz -107 dBm -101 dBm -98 dBm -95 dBm -92 dBm 100 kHz -106 dBm -100 dBm -97 dBm -94 dBm -91 dBm 150 kHz -104 dBm -98 dBm -95 dBm -92 dBm -89 dBm 200 kHz -102 dBm -96 dBm -93 dBm -90 dBm -87 dBm 500 kHz -99 dBm -93 dBm -90 dBm -87 dBm -84 dBm 1.0 MHz -96 dBm -90 dBm -87 dBm -84 dBm -81 dBm 1.75 MHz -94 dBm -88 dBm -85 dBm -82 dBm -79 dBm 3.5 MHz -90 dBm -84 dBm -81 dBm -78 dBm -75 dBm 7.0 MHz -87 dBm -81 dBm -78 dBm -75 dBm -72 dBm 14 MHz NA -78 dBm -75 dBm -72 dBm -69 dBm Notes Typical performance specified at the antenna port for 10-6 BER. The receiver is typically 1 dB more sensitive for a BER of 10-3. NA (Not Available) Transmitter Power IC Frequency Band QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 400 MHz 15 to 35 dBm 15 to 31 dBm 15 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 900 MHz 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 2000 MHz 20 to 34 dBm 17 to 31 dBm 16 to 30 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 15 to 29 dBm 128 QAM System Gain IC Channel Size QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 25 kHz NA 136 dB 132 dB 128 dB NA 75 kHz 142 dB 132 dB 128 dB 124 dB 121 dB 100 kHz 135 dB 129 dB 126 dB 123 dB 120 dB 150 kHz 139 dB 129 dB 125 dB 121 dB 118 dB 200 kHz 131 dB 125 dB 122 dB 119 dB 116 dB 500 kHz 133 dB 124 dB 120 dB 116 dB 113 dB 1.0 MHz 130 dB 121 dB 117 dB 113 dB 110 dB 1.75 MHz 128 dB 119 dB 115 dB 111 dB 108 dB 3.5 MHz 124 dB 115 dB 111 dB 107 dB 104 dB 7.0 MHz 121 dB 112 dB 108 dB 104 dB 101 dB 14 MHz NA 109 dB 105 dB 101 dB 98 dB Notes Typical performance specified at the antenna port for 10-6 BER. The system gain is typically 1 dB greater for a BER of 10-3. System Gain = maximum transmit power - receiver sensitivity NA (Not Available) Aprisa XE User Manual 300 | Specifications Link Delays IC Note: The default Modem Interleaver Mode setting is on for channel sizes of 250 kHz and greater and off for channel sizes of 200 kHz and less (see ‘Modem Interleaver Mode’ on page 72). Interleaver off Channel size QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 25 kHz NA 49.6 ms 39.4 ms 34.9 ms NA 75 kHz 35.5 ms 19.0 ms 16.8 ms 13.6 ms 10.6 ms 100 kHz 28.8 ms 15.3 ms 12.7 ms 10.9 ms 8.2 ms 150 kHz 17.5 ms 10.1 ms 8.5 ms 7.1 ms 5.7 ms 200 kHz 15.9 ms 8.8 ms 7.3 ms 6.4 ms 5.1 ms 500 kHz 6.3 ms 3.5 ms 3.4 ms 3.2 ms 2.8 ms 1.0 MHz 3.8 ms 2.6 ms 2.3 ms 2.2 ms 2.1 ms 1.75 MHz 3.1 ms 2.3 ms 2.1 ms 2.0 ms 1.9 ms 3.5 MHz 2.6 ms 2.0 ms 1.8 ms 1.8 ms 1.7 ms 7.0 MHz 2.0 ms 1.7 ms 1.6 ms 1.6 ms 1.6 ms 14 MHz NA 1.6 ms 1.5 ms 1.5 ms 1.5 ms Interleaver on Channel size QPSK 16 QAM 32 QAM 64 QAM 128 QAM 25 kHz NA 164.7 ms 127.7 ms 111.8 ms NA 75 kHz 103.7 ms 53.2 ms 45.8 ms 36.4 ms 28.8 ms 100 kHz 85.3 ms 43.6 ms 35.3 ms 29.7 ms 21.4 ms 150 kHz 51.4 ms 26.8 ms 21.9 ms 18.6 ms 14.3 ms 200 kHz 45.8 ms 23.7 ms 19.3 ms 16.4 ms 12.3 ms 500 kHz 16.5 ms 9.3 ms 8.0 ms 6.9 ms 5.7 ms 1.0 MHz 8.8 ms 5.1 ms 4.3 ms 3.9 ms 3.5 ms 1.75 MHz 6.8 ms 4.1 ms 3.6 ms 3.2 ms 2.9 ms 3.5 MHz 5.1 ms 3.2 ms 2.8 ms 2.6 ms 2.4 ms 7.0 MHz 3.5 ms 2.4 ms 2.2 ms 2.1 ms 2.0 ms 14 MHz NA 2.1 ms 1.9 ms 1.8 ms 1.8 ms Notes The end to end link delays are measured from E1 / T1 interface to E1 / T1 interface The delay figures are typical and can vary when the system re-synchronizes NA (Not Available) Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 301 Receiver Performance Maximum input level -20 dBm Dynamic range 58 to 87 dB (at 10-6 BER) depending on modulation type and channel size C/I ratio (carrier to interference ratio) C/I ratio = CdB - IdB Co-channel better than 16 dB at QPSK better than 20 dB at 16 QAM better than 23 dB at 32 QAM better than 27 dB at 64 QAM better than 30 dB at 128 QAM 1st adjacent channel better than -5 dB 2nd adjacent channel better than -30 dB Typical performance specified at the antenna port for 10-6 BER. Notes The dynamic range is typically 2 dB greater for a BER of 10-3. Duplexers Code Frequency Band Option A0 300 MHz Standard A1 300 MHz A2 300 MHz B0 TX / RX Min Split Passband Lo Band Hi Band Mounting 9.45 MHz 2 MHz 330 - 400 MHz 330 - 400 MHz External Option 1 5 MHz 0.5 MHz 330 - 400 MHz 330 - 400 MHz External Option 2 20 MHz 3.5 MHz 330 - 400 MHz 330 - 400 MHz External 400 MHz Standard 9.45 MHz 2 MHz 400 - 470 MHz 400 - 470 MHz External B1 400 MHz Option 1 5 MHz 0.5 MHz 400 - 470 MHz 400 - 470 MHz External B2 400 MHz Option 2 20 MHz 3.5 MHz 400 - 470 MHz 400 - 470 MHz External C0 400 MHz Standard 3 MHz 0.5 MHz 470 - 492 MHz 473 - 495 MHz External D0 600 MHz Standard 45 MHz 7 MHz 620 - 715 MHz 620 - 715 MHz Internal E0 700 MHz Standard 30 MHz 7 MHz 698 - 806 MHz 698 - 806 MHz Internal F0 800 MHz Standard 40 MHz 7 MHz 805 - 890 MHz 805 - 890 MHz Internal G0 900 MHz Standard 40 MHz 7 MHz 850 - 960 MHz 850 - 960 MHz Internal G1 900 MHz Option 1 9 MHz 1.5 MHz 928 - 960 MHz 928 - 960 MHz External G2 900 MHz Option 2 9 MHz 1 MHz 928 - 960 MHz 928 - 960 MHz Internal G3 900 MHz Option 3 5.5 MHz 0.5 MHz 900 - 960 MHz 900 - 960 MHz External G4 900 MHz Option 4 3.6 MHz 0.5 MHz 900 - 960 MHz 900 - 960 MHz External H0 1400 MHz Standard 48 MHz 7 MHz 1350 - 1550 MHz 1350 - 1550 MHz Internal H1 1400 MHz Option 1 23.5 MHz 7 MHz 1350 - 1550 MHz 1350 - 1550 MHz Internal K0 1800 MHz Standard 47.5 MHz 14 MHz 1700 - 2100 MHz 1700 - 2100 MHz Internal I0 2000 MHz Standard 91 MHz 14 MHz 1900 - 2300 MHz 1900 - 2300 MHz Internal J0 2500 MHz Standard 74 MHz 14 MHz 2300 - 2700 MHz 2300 - 2700 MHz Internal J1 2500 MHz Option 1 32 MHz 4 MHz 2314 - 2318 MHz 2346 - 2350 MHz Internal Notes All duplexers are bandpass Contact 4RF for other duplexer options Aprisa XE User Manual 302 | Specifications Interface Specifications Ethernet Interface General Diagnostics Interface RJ-45 * 4 (Integrated 4-port switch) Cabling CAT-5 UTP, supports auto MDIX (Standard Ethernet) Maximum line length 100 metres on cat-5 or better Bandwidth allocation n x 8 kbit/s up to maximum available. n x 64 kbit/s is recommended for terminals with higher channel size (> 500 kHz, 32 QAM). Ethernet capacity The ethernet capacity maximum is determined by the lesser of the available radio link capacity or 50 Mbit/s. Maximum packet size ‘Standard’ Ethernet packets: max 1518 octets Tagged and double-tagged packets: max 1526 octets Data buffer size Up to 256 frames Address table size 2048 IP addresses WAN protocol HDLC Ethernet mode 10Base-T or 100Base-TX Full duplex or half duplex (Auto-negotiating and auto-sensing) VLAN tagging IEEE 802.1Q VLAN tagging QoS IEEE 802.1p Ipv4 TOS DiffServ Ipv6 traffic class Spanning Tree Forwards 802.1D Spanning Tree Protocol packets up to 1526 bytes in length. Green LED On: Ethernet signal received Flashing: Indicates data traffic present on the interface Note: Do not connect Power over Ethernet (PoE) connections to the Aprisa XE Ethernet ports as this will damage the port. Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 303 QJET Quad E1 / T1 Interface General Standard G.703 and G.704 Interface RJ-45 Line termination impedance E1 120 Ω balanced T1 100 Ω balanced Maximum line length E1 typically up to 1.7 km (43 dB of loss at 1024 kHz in standard 0.4 mm2 cable). T1 typically up to 1.7 km (36 dB of loss at 772 kHz in standard 0.4 mm2 cable). Bandwidth allocation Framed E1s require a link bandwidth of 2048 kbit/s. Unframed E1s require a link bandwidth of 2088 kbit/s. Framed T1s require a link bandwidth of 1544 kbit/s. Unframed T1s require a link bandwidth of 1584 kbit/s. Line code E1 HDB3 or AMI T1 B8ZS or AMI Diagnostics Tx Waveform Shaper (T1 only) 0 ~ 133 ft 133 ~ 266 ft 266 ~ 399 ft 399 ~ 533 ft 533 ~ 655 ft Stability ±50 ppm Jitter performance G.823 (sections 2 & 3) Green LED On: Interface is operational and in service Off: No 2 Mbit/s input signal Flashing: The interface loopback is active. Yellow LED On: Alarm Off: No alarm Aprisa XE User Manual 304 | Specifications Q4EM Quad 4 Wire E&M Interface General Analogue Signalling Diagnostics Audio 64 kbit/s (PCM A-Law as per ITU G.711) 32, 24 and 16 kbit/s (ADPCM as per ITU G.726 and ANSI TI.303) E&M signalling 8 kbit/s per port Maximum line length 400 metres Transmission performance characteristics ITU G.712 E4 for an operating level range of -14 dBr to +4 dBr for a G.711 64 kbit/s coded channel Input level range -14.0 dBr to +4.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps Output level range -14.0 dBr to +4.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps Default output level 0 dBr Default input level 0 dBr Maximum level +3.14 dBm0 Port impedance 600 Ω Return loss better than 25 dB over the frequency range 200 - 3600 Hz Transformer isolation 3.88 kV End to end gain Frequency response 0 dB ± 0.1 dB (300-3000 Hz) 0 dB ± 0.5 dB (250-3400 Hz) Audio line protection Secondary protection Signal to total distortion > 30 dB (0 dBm0 to -30 dBm0) > 22 dB (-45 dBm0) E&M Mode independent (external power supply / ground reference required) Pulse distortion 4:1 multiplexed < 2.250 ms Non-multiplexed 250 µs M loop current 5.0 to 6.5 mA (constant current) M detection voltage 9 VDC M maximum voltage 60 VDC E circuit impedance 45 Ω closed > 100 kΩ open Maximum E circuit current 100 mA E maximum voltage 60 V E&M circuit protection E: Current limited to 120 mA, overvoltage to 350 V M: Current limited to 6.5 mA, overvoltage to 100 V Green LED Off: No external source applied to M wire On: External source applied to M wire Flashing: The interface loopback is active Yellow LED Off: E wire relay contact open On: E wire relay contact closed Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 305 DFXO Dual Foreign Exchange Office Interface General Analogue Audio 64 kbit/s (PCM as per ITU G.711) 32, 24 and 16 kbit/s (ADPCM as per ITU G.726 and ANSI TI.303) Signalling allocation 8 or 32 kbit/s allocated for CAS (multiplexed / non multiplexed) Companding A-Law or µ-Law Maximum line length 600 metres (2000 feet) on 0.4 mm / 26 AWG copper pair Calling line ID (CLI) Support provided for ETSI: EN 300 659-1 & 2 and BT: SIN 227 and 242 Fax Conforms to G3 standard for 64 kbit/s PCM and 32 kbit/s ADPCM compression Transmission performance characteristics ITU G.712 E2 for an operating level range of -6 dBr to +1 dBr for a G.711 64 kbit/s coded channel Input level range -10 dBr to +1.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps Output level range -10 dBr to +1.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps Default Input level -4.0 dBr Default Output level -1.0 dBr Maximum level +3.14 dBm0 Line impedance / Hybrid balance impedance options 600 Ω 900 Ω 600 Ω + 2.16 µF 900 Ω + 2.16 µF 270 Ω + 750 Ω || 150 nF (TBR-21) 220 Ω + 820 Ω || 120 nF (TN12) 370 Ω + 620 Ω || 310 nF (BT3) 320 Ω + 1050 Ω || 210 nF (BT Network) 200 Ω + 680 Ω || 100 nF (China) Return Loss better than 12 dB 300 Hz to 600 Hz better than 15 dB 600 Hz to 3400 Hz Trans hybrid loss better than 13 dB 300 Hz to 3400 Hz better than 17 dB 500 Hz to 2500 Hz (with matched external line and hybrid balance impedance) Common mode rejection ratio better than 40 dB 50 Hz to 3800 Hz Echo Canceller provides up to 64 ms of echo cancellation reduces the echo by more than 15 dB at an input signal level of 10 dBm0. better than 46 dB 600 Hz to 3400 Hz Aprisa XE User Manual 306 | Specifications Signalling DTMF dialing Standard DTMF dialing over the voice channel Pulse dialing Transparent decadic signalling at 7 - 14 PPS with break period limits of 60 - 73 % Pulse distortion 4:1 multiplexed < 2.250 ms Non-multiplexed 250 µs Reversals Line polarity reversal detection Loop current limit maximum of 60 mA with Loop Current Limiter On maximum of 160 mA with Loop Current Limiter Off Metering level sensitivity 12 kHz / 16 kHz billing tone detection with a selectable level sensitivity of -17dBm to -40 dBm in 1dB steps into 200 Ω (60 mV rms to 5 mV rms into 200 Ω). Metering level maximum The maximum level of metering signal the DFXO can tolerate without voice band interference is 0.8 Vrms into 200 Ω. Loop resistance on-hook >1 MΩ Ringing detection threshold Three selectable options of 16 Vrms, 26 Vrms and 49 Vrms ± 20 %. Ringing detection frequency 15 to 50 Hz sine wave Ringing input impedance Two selectable options of >1 MΩ and >12 kΩ Ringing DC offset range tolerance 0 to -75VDC Ringing input voltage maximum up to 100 Vrms Ringing cadence limits Ringing ON: Ringing OFF: min 270 ms 180 ms max 10 secs 4 secs Ringing cadence distortion < 40 ms cadence error on both ring and silent periods Physical Physical interface Dual RJ-45 per port (1 line port, 1 monitor port) Diagnostics Green LED Off: Interface operational but not in service On: Interface in service Flashing: Cadenced ringing on line Yellow LED Off: No interface alarm On: Interface alarm Flashing: The interface loopback is active Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 307 DFXS Dual Foreign Exchange Subscriber Interface General Analogue Audio 64 kbit/s (PCM as per ITU G.711) 32, 24 and 16 kbit/s (ADPCM as per ITU G.726 and ANSI TI.303) Signalling Allocation 8 or 32 kbit/s allocated for CAS (multiplexed / non multiplexed) Compression coding A-Law or µ-Law Maximum line length 600 metres (2000 feet) on 0.4 mm / 26 AWG copper pair Calling line ID (CLI) Support provided for ETSI: EN 300 659-1 & 2 and BT: SIN 227 and 242 Fax Conforms to G3 standard for 64 kbit/s PCM and 32 kbit/s ADPCM compression Transmission performance characteristics ITU G.712 E2 for an operating level range of -6 dBr to +2.0 dBr for a G.711 64 kbit/s coded channel Input level range -9.0 dBr to +2.0 dBr in 0.5 dB steps Output level range -9.5 dBr to +2.5 dBr in 0.5 dB steps Default Input level +1.0 dBr Default Output level -6.0 dBr Maximum level +3.14 dBm0 Line impedance / Hybrid balance impedance options 600 Ω 900 Ω 600 Ω + 2.16 µF 900 Ω + 2.16 µF 220 Ω + (820 Ω || 120 nF) (TN12) 270 Ω + (750 Ω || 150 nF) (TBR21) 370 Ω + (620 Ω || 310 nF) (BT3) Return Loss better than 12 dB 300 Hz to 600 Hz better than 15 dB 600 Hz to 3400 Hz Trans hybrid loss better than 13 dB 300 Hz to 3400 Hz better than 17 dB 500 Hz to 2500 Hz (with matched external line and hybrid balance impedance) Common mode rejection ratio better than 40 dB 50 Hz to 3800 Hz better than 46 dB 600 Hz to 3400 Hz Aprisa XE User Manual 308 | Specifications Signalling Physical Diagnostics Feed voltage output -48 V (160 + 160 Ω voltage source current limited) Loop current limit 35 mA ± 10 %. Seize signal Loop start only (no ground start) Loop detect threshold 9 to 12 mA (step function between on hook and off hook) Loop non-seizure current > 6 mA (step function between on hook and off hook) Loop release threshold > 4 mA DTMF dialing Standard DTMF dialing over the voice channel Pulse dialing Transparent decadic signalling at 7 - 14 PPS with break period limits of 60 - 73 % (with loop current > 23 mA) Pulse distortion 4:1 multiplexed < 2.250 ms Non-multiplexed 250 µs Reversals output Line polarity reversal output (optional) Metering output frequency 12 kHz / 16 kHz ± 0.5 %. Metering output voltage Four selectable output voltages of 100 mV, 200 mV, 300 mV and 400 mV rms into 200 Ω ± 20 % sourced via the Line Impedance setting but limited to a maximum open circuit voltage of 1 Vrms. Metering output distortion Billing tone total distortion < 5 %. Ringer waveform Sinusoidal with a maximum total distortion of 10% (into 3 REN load) Ringer voltage (open circuit) Five selectable ringer output voltages sourced via an internal ringing resistance of 178 per port. The ringing output is a composite balanced AC ringing voltage with a differential DC offset voltage. 60 Vrms + 0 VDC 55 Vrms + 10 VDC 50 Vrms + 18 VDC 45 Vrms + 22 VDC 40 Vrms + 24 VDC Both the DC and AC components have a tolerance of ± 5%. Ringer output frequency Three selectable options of 17, 25 or 50 Hz ± 5% Ringer output power 60 Vrms source into a load of 2 REN 45 Vrms source into a load of 3 REN (1 REN 6930 F) Ring trip Ring trip will ocurr in < 150 ms following DC loop of > 20 mA Ring trip immunity Ring trip will not ocurr if the DFXS outputs ringing into a load of 500 in series with 4.4 F or less. Physical interface Dual RJ-45 per port (1 line port, 1 monitor port) Line protection Secondary protection (4RF recommends the use of external primary protection in lightning prone areas) Green LED Off: Interface operational but not in service On: Interface in service Flashing: Cadenced ringing on line Yellow LED Off: No interface alarm On: Interface alarm Flashing: The interface loopback is active Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 309 QV24 Quad V.24 Serial Data Interface General Interface ITU-T V.24 / EIA/TIA RS-232E Interface direction DCE only Bandwidth allocation 8 to 120 kbit/s in 8 kbit/s steps (dependent on rate selected) Control line allocation 8 kbit/s Maximum line length 10 metres Data clamp Mark hold when out of sync. Control line clamp Off when loss of sync. Clock Internally generated from 2.048 MHz system clock (synchronized at both ends) Transparent mode Operation is completely transparent but limited to 0-600 bit/s Standard mode data bits 7 or 8 bits Standard mode parity Transparent (enable / disable) Standard mode stop bits 1 or 2 bits Asynchronous Data rates 300, 600, 1200, 2400, 4800, 7200, 9600, 12800, 14400, 19200, 23040, 28800, 38400, 57600 and 115200 bit/s Control signals End-to-end CTS to RTS, DSR to DTR Diagnostics Green LED Indicates RX data traffic present Yellow LED Indicates TX data traffic present Async parameters QV24S Quad V.24 Serial Data Interface General Interface ITU-T V.24 / EIA/TIA RS-232E Interface direction DCE only Bandwidth allocation 8 to 120 kbit/s in 8 kbit/s steps (dependent on rate selected) Control line allocation 8 kbit/s Maximum line length 10 metres Data clamp Mark hold when out of sync. Control line clamp Off when loss of sync. Synchronous Data rates 300, 600, 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600 and 19200 bit/s Control signals End-to-end CTS to RTS Diagnostics Green LED Indicates RX data traffic present Yellow LED Indicates TX data traffic present Aprisa XE User Manual 310 | Specifications HSS Single High Speed Synchronous Data Interface General Diagnostics Interfaces ITU-T V.35 ITU-T X.21 EIA RS-449 EIA RS-530 Bandwidth allocation 8 to 2048 kbit/s in 8 kbit/s steps (dependent on rate selected) 8 kbit/s for control lines Maximum line length 3 metres Clock Internally generated from 2.048 MHz system clock (synchronized at both ends) on DCE to DCE mode. Clock provided by external DCE when in DTE mode. Remote DCE outputs clock-timed by incoming clock at DTE. Top Green LED On: Normal operation Flashing: Loopback Lower Green LED On: Normal operation External Alarm Interfaces Alarm inputs Alarm outputs Overall Detector type Isolated current detectors Detection current 5.0 to 6.5 mA (constant current) Detection voltage 9 to 60 VDC or AC rms Contact type Isolated semiconductor relay type contacts Maximum current 100 mA Maximum voltage 0 to 60 VDC or AC rms Ouput impedance 45 Ω closed > 100 kΩ open Latency The latency for an alarm presented on an external alarm input to the alarm being output on an external alarm output is < 2 seconds Auxiliary Interfaces Management Configuration and management Embedded web server and / or SNMP accessed via Ethernet interface or across link Test points RSSI Front panel test point for measuring the RSSI voltage Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 311 Power Specifications AC Power Supply Nominal voltage Input voltage range Maximum Power input Max VA Frequency 115 VAC 103 - 127 Vrms 180 W 400 VA 47 - 63 Hz 230 VAC 207 - 254 Vrms 180 W 400 VA 47 - 63 Hz Nominal voltage Input voltage range Maximum Power input Maximum input current Recommended DC breaker rating +12 VDC LP 10.5 to 18 VDC 53 W 5A 8A ±12 VDC 10.5 to 18 VDC 180 W 18 A 25 A ±24 VDC 20.5 to 30 VDC 180 W 8A 10 A ±48 VDC 40 to 60 VDC 180 W 4A 5A DC Power Supply Aprisa XE User Manual 312 | Specifications Power Consumption Terminal Type Power Consumption (min – max) Standard Aprisa XE 1+0 terminal 34 to 170 W Input power (dependent on the transmitter output power, the interface cards fitted and the power supply option) Standard Aprisa XE 1+1 terminal 74 to 375 W Input power (dependent on the transmitter output power, the interface cards fitted, the number of trib switches and the power supply option) Standard Aprisa XE HSD terminal 68 to 286 W Input power (dependent on the transmitter output power, the interface cards fitted and the power supply option) Power Consumption Model An Aprisa XE Power Consumption model program called XEpower is on the Aprisa XE CD. This program shows the typical power consumption for any product configuration. Java 1.6 is required to be installed on your PC to run this program. Standard Aprisa XE 1+0 terminal – 48 VDC These power consumption figures represent the typical power drawn by a single standard 1400 MHz 1+0 terminal measured at the input to a ± 48 VDC power supply. Power Consumption (min – max) 40 to 150 W Input power (dependent on interface cards fitted and transmitter output power level) Terminal only: TX power of + 20 dBm 44 W TX power of + 25 dBm 54 W TX power of + 30 dBm 61 W TX power of + 35 dBm 64 W Interface cards: QJET four port E1 card 2.3 W (four ports operating) Q4EM four port 4W E&M card 0.6 W (all states) QV24 four port V.24 card 0.2 W (all states) DFXO two port 2W FXO card 0.7 W (all states) DFXS two port 2W FXS card One DFXS card installed with both ports idle (on hook): 2.5 W Plus: 1.9 W / line off-hook (200 ohm copper loop plus 450 ohm telephone) 1.0 W / line ringing (60 Vrms 25Hz source via 100 ohm copper loop into a 1 REN load) 1.5 W / line ringing (45 Vrms 25Hz source via 100 ohm copper loop into a 3 REN load) HSS single port high speed data 1.0 W (all states) MHSB: Tributary and RF switch 13 W not switched 25 W switched Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 313 Low Power Aprisa XE 1+0 terminal – 12 VDC These power consumption figures represent the typical power drawn by a single low power 1400 MHz 1+0 terminal measured at the input to a low power +12 VDC power supply. Power Consumption (min – max) 34 to 53 W Input power (dependent on interface cards fitted and transmitter output power level) Terminal only: TX power of + 20 dBm 34 W TX power of + 24 dBm 40 W Interface cards: QJET four port E1 card 1.9 W (four ports operating) Q4EM four port 4W E&M card 0.53 W (all states) QV24 four port V.24 card 0.15 W (all states) DFXO two port 2W FXO card 0.56 W (all states) DFXS two port 2W FXS card One DFXS card installed with both ports idle (on hook): 2.1 W Plus: 1.6 W / line off-hook (200 ohm copper loop plus 450 ohm telephone) 0.8 W / line ringing (60 Vrms 25Hz source via 100 ohm copper loop into a 1 REN load) 1.2 W / line ringing (45 Vrms 25Hz source via 100 ohm copper loop into a 3 REN load) HSS single port high speed data 0.85 W (all states) Aprisa XE User Manual 314 | Specifications Protection System Specifications MHSB Protection MHSB switches RF switch Tributary switch Switching time < 25 ms from detection of alarm condition Switch hysteresis 30 seconds (to prevent switching on short alarm transients) RF path restore time < 10 seconds TX relay / cable loss 1.0 dB RX splitter / cable loss 4.0 dB Total system loss System gain reduced by a maximum of 5 dB Ports HSD Protection TX path TX relay / cable loss Switching times Transmit path < 25 ms from detection of alarm condition Receive path Hitless 1.0 dB Aprisa XE User Manual Specifications | 315 General Specifications Environmental Operating range -10 to +50˚ C Storage range -20 to +70˚ C Humidity Maximum 95% non-condensing Acoustic noise emission 59 dBA (A-weighted Sound Power Level) Mechanical Height Standard terminal 2 U high (internal duplexer) 3 – 4 U high (depending on external duplexer type) MHSB terminal 6 U high (internal duplexer) 7 – 8 U high (depending on external duplexer type) HSD terminal 4 U high (internal duplexer) 6 – 8 U high (depending on external duplexer type) Width 19-inch rack mount 434 mm (without mounting brackets attached) 483 mm (with mounting brackets attached) Depth 372 mm Colour Pure black Weight Standard terminal 8 kg (internal duplexer) 9 - 12 kg (depending on external duplexer type) MHSB terminal 25 kg (internal duplexer) 26 – 29 kg (depending on external duplexer type) HSD terminal 17 kg (internal duplexer) 19 – 24 kg (depending on external duplexer type) ETSI Compliance Radio EN 301 751, EN 300 630 EN 302 217 Parts 1, 2.1, and 2.2 EMI/EMC EN 301 489 Parts 1 & 4 Safety EN 60950 CSA 253147 applicable for AC, 48 VDC and 24 VDC product variants Environmental ETS 300 019 Class 3.2 Aprisa XE User Manual Product End Of Life | 317 19. Product End Of Life End-of-Life Recycling Programme (WEEE) The WEEE Directive concerns the recovery, reuse, and recycling of electronic and electrical equipment. Under the Directive, used equipment must be marked, collected separately, and disposed of properly. 4RF Limited has implemented an end-of-life recycling programme to manage the reuse, recycling, and recovery of waste in an environmentally safe manner using processes that comply with the WEEE Directive (EU Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment 2002/96/EC). The WEEE Symbol Explained This symbol appears on Electrical and Electronic Equipment (EEE) as part of the WEEE (Waste EEE) directive. It means that the EEE may contain hazardous substances and must not be thrown away with municipal or other waste. WEEE Must Be Collected Separately You must not dispose of electrical and electronic waste with municipal and other waste. You must separate it from other waste and recycling so that it can be easily collected by the proper regional WEEE collection system in your area. YOUR ROLE in the Recovery of WEEE By separately collecting and properly disposing of WEEE, you are helping to reduce the amount of WEEE that enters the waste stream. One of the aims of the WEEE directive is to divert EEE away from landfill and encourage recycling. Recycling EEE means that valuable resources such as metals and other materials (which require energy to source and manufacture) are not wasted. Also, the pollution associated with accessing new materials and manufacturing new products is reduced. EEE Waste Impacts the Environment and Health Electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) contains hazardous substances which have potential effects on the environment and human health. If you want environmental information on the Aprisa XE terminal, contact us (on page 19). Aprisa XE User Manual Abbreviations | 319 20. Abbreviations ADC Analogue to Digital Converter H/W Hardware ADPCM Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation IC Integrated Circuit IF Intermediate Frequency ADSL Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line IP Internet Protocol AGC Automatic Gain Control I/O Input/Output AMP Amplifier ISP Internet Service Provider BER Bit Error Rate kbit/s Kilobits per second CAS Channel Associated Signalling kHz Kilohertz CPE Customer Premises Equipment LAN Local Area Network CLI Calling Line Identification LED Light Emitting Diode DAC Digital to Analogue Converter LOS Loss of Signal dB Decibels mA Milliamps dBc Decibels relative to carrier power MAC Media Access Control dBm Decibels relative to 1 mW Mbit/s Megabits per second dBr Decibels relative to the transmission reference point MHSB Monitored Hot Standby MHz Megahertz DCE Data Communications Equipment MIB Management Information Base DTE Data Terminal Equipment MTBF Mean Time Between Failures DTI Digital Trunk Interface MTTR Mean Time To Repair E&M Ear and Mouth ms milliseconds EMC Electro-Magnetic Compatibility NFAS EMI Electro-Magnetic Interference Not Frame Alignment Signal (E1 frame) ESD Electro-Static Discharge NMS Network Management System ETSI European Telecommunications Standards Institute OSI Open Systems Interconnection PABX FAS Frame frame) Private Exchange PBX Private Branch Exchange FEC Forward Error Correction PC Personal Computer FFE Feed Forward Equalizer PCM Pulse Code Modulation F/W Firmware PCA Printed Circuit Assembly FXO Foreign Exchange Office PLL Phase Locked Loop FXS Foreign Exchange Subscriber POP Point of Presence GSM Global System communications POTS Plain Old Telephone Service ppm Parts Per Million PSTN Public Switched Network PMR Public Mobile Radio Alignment Signal for (E1 Mobile HSC Hardware Software Compatibility HSS High-Speed Synchronous Serial Aprisa XE User Manual Automatic Branch Telephone QAM Quadrature Amplitude Modulation QPSK Quadrature Phase Shift Keying RAI Remote Alarm Indicator RF Radio Frequency RoHS Restriction Substances of RSSI Received Indication Signal RX Receiver SNMP Simple Network Protocol SNR Signal to Noise Ratio SWR Standing Wave Ratio TCP/IP Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol Hazardous Strength Management TCXO Temperature Crystal Oscillator Compensated TETRA Terrestrial Trunk Radio TFTP Trivial File Transfer Protocol TMR Trunk Mobile Radio TX Transmitter UTP Unshielded Twisted Pair VAC Volts AC VCO Voltage Controlled Oscillator VDC Volts DC VoIP Voice over Internet Protocol WEEE Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Acknowledgments and Licensing | 321 21. Acknowledgments and Licensing The Aprisa XE product software runs the GNU Linux Operating System and incorporates several other packages in accordance with the free software philosophy. The following list identifies the licensed software used: BusyBox Description: Tiny versions of common UNIX utilities Reference: http://busybox.net/ License Type: GNU General Public License (GPL) DropBear SSH Server Description: Small and secure SSH Server Reference: http://matt.ucc.asn.au/dropbear/ License Type: MIT Style License GoAhead WebServer 2.1 Description: Embedded Web Server Reference: http://webserver.goahead.com/ License Type: Private License Linux Kernel Description: Linux Kernel version 2.4.26 Reference: http://www.kernel.org/ License Type: GNU General Public License (GPL) Net-SNMP Description: Various tools relating to SNMP Reference: http://www.net-snmp.org/ License Type: CMU/UCD and BSD License uClibc Description: C library for embedded Linux systems Reference: http://uclibc.org/ License Type: GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) U-Boot Description: Bootloader Reference: http://u-boot.sourceforge.net/ License Type: GNU General Public License (GPL) Aprisa XE User Manual 322 | Acknowledgments and Licensing Software Licensed Under the GPL Some of the above packages licensed under the GPL have been modified by 4RF Limited. The copyright holders of these modified packages (including 4RF Limited) agree to them being distributed under the terms of the General Public License. Copies of the GNU General Public License (GPL) and Lesser General Public License (LGPL) can be obtained from the Free Software Foundation Inc, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA, 02111-1307, USA. Plain text copies of these licenses can also be found at: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.txt http://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl.txt If you would like a copy of the GPL source code used in this product on a CD, please send US$50.00 (to cover the preparation of the CD and transport costs) to 4RF Limited, PO Box 13-506, Wellington, New Zealand. Software Licensed Under Other Licenses The following copyright notices are included for packages not covered by the GPL: Dropbear SSH Server (MIT License) Dropbear—a SSH2 server Copyright © 2002, 2003 Matt Johnston All rights reserved Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the ‘Software’), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. Aprisa XE User Manual Acknowledgments and Licensing | 323 Net-SNMP Part 1: CMU/UCD (BSD like) Copyright © 2001-2003, Networks Associates Technology, Inc All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. Neither the name of the Networks Associates Technology, Inc nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS ‘AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. Part 2: Networks Associates Technology, Inc. (BSD) Copyright © 2001-2003, Networks Associates Technology, Inc All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. Neither the name of the Networks Associates Technology, Inc nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS ‘AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. Aprisa XE User Manual 324 | Acknowledgments and Licensing Part 3: Cambridge Broadband Ltd (BSD) Portions of this code are copyright © 2001-2003, Cambridge Broadband Ltd. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. The name of Cambridge Broadband Ltd. may not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER ‘AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. Part 4: Sun Microsystems, Inc. (BSD) Copyright © 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa Clara, California 95054, U.S.A. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms below. This distribution may include materials developed by third parties. Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo and Solaris are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. Neither the name of the Sun Microsystems, Inc. nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS ‘AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. Aprisa XE User Manual Acknowledgments and Licensing | 325 Part 5: Sparta, Inc. (BSD) Copyright © 2003-2004, Sparta, Inc All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. Neither the name of the Networks Associates Technology, Inc nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS ‘AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. GoAhead WebServer (Private License) GoAhead WebServer Copyright (c) 2000 GoAhead Software, Inc. All Rights Reserved Aprisa XE User Manual Commissioning Form | 327 22. Commissioning Form Aprisa XE User Manual Index | 329 23. Index 2 wire 105 4 wire 102 AC power supply access rights accessory kit AIS alarms alarm summary clearing alarms E1 / T1 alarm conditions external history identifying causes interface alarms saving history termination types A-law antennas aligning checking polarization corner reflector directional antennas installing parabolic selection and siting siting yagi attenuators 38 63 19 250 242 247 250 33 244 248 246 245 33 273 110 197 197 23 21, 22 32 21 21 23 22 41 balun transformer basic terminal settings bench setup BER brownout recovery module browser cache, clearing 256 72 41 203 39 222 cabling accessory kit 19 coaxial feeder 24, 41 for HSD 189 for MHSB 183 262 shielded cache, clearing 221, 222 CAS 110, 159, 160, 161, 162 Castle Rock 83 CD contents 18 clock source setting for 100, 131 compatibility of interfaces 156 configuration files 224 configuration, saving 87, 153 constellation analyser 205 corner reflector antenna 23 country specific settings 283 cross connections creating 150 deleting 155 drop and insert 152 point to point 150 printing 154 saving configurations 153 selecting timeslots 164 sending configurations 153 Symmetrical Connection Wizard 174 cross connections application about 145 ethernet capacity 148 getting configurations 149 installing 144 143 required system configuration for 147 toolbar total assigned link capacity 145 user capacity 148 DC power supply DCD mode declaration of conformity DFXO interface card country specific settings cross connections for Aprisa XE User Manual 35 135 iii 118 283 169 330 | Index interface connections for port settings for signalling for DFXS interface card country specific settings cross connections for interface connections for port settings for signalling for directional antennas Drop & Insert capacity DSR DTR mode duplexer parameters 262 118 169 110 283 169 261 110 169 21, 22 146 134 77 E&M interface E1 alarm conditions framed unframed earthing environmental requirements error counters Ethernet capacity port status Quality of Service VLAN tagging exchange end external alarms configuring inputs mapping outputs 102 250 158, 159 158 24, 26, 41 25 203 148 98 94 91 118 79 79 81 81 180 gateway factory default 62 handshaking DCD mode 135 DSR DTR mode 134 133 RTS CTS mode hardware accessory kit 19 installing 31, 32 hitless 188 HSD 188 189 cabling configuring terminals 191 IP addresses 190 HSS clocking clocking types 137 cloud mode 141 internal clocking 137 pass-through clocking 137 pipe mode 138 primary/secondary master clocking 137 synchronous clock selection modes 136 HSS interface card 131 172 cross connections for handshaking 133 interface connections for 263 port settings for 131 humidity 25 fade margin fault finding feeder cables framed mode framed modes PCM30C mode PCM31C mode T1 ESF modes T1 SF modes frequency bands frequency bands ETSI front panel connections indicators tributary switch 202 201, 239, 251 24 158 159 159 161, 162 160 27 285 29 29 image files updating table of in-service commissioning installation interface cabling interface cards before installing configuring installing port settings summary types interface connections DFXO Aprisa XE User Manual 226 230 195 31, 33 34 234 90 236 90 89 30 255 262 Index | 331 DFXS Ethernet HSS Q4EM QJET QV24 QV24S interface pinouts HSS interface traffic direction interfaces, compatibility IP address factory defaults network terminal understanding 261 257 263 258 256 271 271 263 255 156 62 52 73 51 Java clearing cache requirement for 221 18, 47, 143 clearing alarms for 187 configuring radios for 184 configuring the terminals 186 front panel RF protection switch ................... 181 hot stand-by 179 184 IP addressing monitored hot stand-by 179 185 mounting 183 power supply slave tributary switch 182 181 standby mode tributary switch front panel ............................... 180 MIB saving 87 minor alarms, mapping 81 modify user group 63 mounting kit 19 operating temperature 25 LEDs identifying colours 248 interface 256, 257, 258, 261, 262, 263 RF protection switch 182 tributary protection switch 181 lightning protection 26 link budget 24 link capacity, assigned 146 link performance 201, 205 LOF 250 logging in SuperVisor 58 Loop interface circuits 105 loopbacks about 239 interface lookbacks 240 timeslot loopbacks 241 LOS 250 maintenance major alarms, mapping management ethernet capacity MHSB cabling 211 81 148 179 183 passwords changing 65 path planning 21 path propagation calculator 21 158, 159, 160, 161, 162 PCM modes performance, of link 201, 205, 206 performance, save history 207 pinouts 262 DFXS 261 257 Ethernet Q4EM 258 QJET 256 QV24 271 271 QV24S Synchronous cable assemblies 264 POTS 105, 110, 118 power AC power 38 DC cabling 36 35 DC power power supply 25, 35 powering up 196 protected terminals HSD 188 MHSB 179 Aprisa XE User Manual 332 | Index Q4EM interface card cross connections for 168 E&M signalling types 259 interface connections for 258 port settings for 102 QJET interface card cross connections for 157 interface connections for 256 modes 158, 159, 160, 161, 162 port settings for 100 Quality of Service (QoS) 94 QV24 interface card 126, 127 baud rate 170 cross connections for 170 interface connections for 271 port settings for 126, 127 QV24S interface card 128 interface connections for 271 port settings for 128 rack space RAI rebooting the terminal receiver RF protection switch front panel LEDs RF settings modem performance RS-449 synchronous data RS-530 synchronous data RSSI alarm threshold aligning the antennas RTS CTS mode 31 250 231 28 181 182 67 70 131 131 78 199 133 MIB details setting access controls setting trap destinations viewing traps Space Diversity specifications auxiliary interfaces DFXO interface DFXS interface environmental ethernet interface ETSI external alarms interface general HSS interface MHSB Q4EM interface QJET interface QV24 interface QV24s interface static damage, avoiding storage temperature subnet mask factory default subscriber end SuperVisor logging into logging out opening page PC requirements for PC settings for Surveyor syslog error logging remote logging system performance specifications ETSI 86 84 85 86 188 285 308 303 305 313 300 313 308 313 308 312 302 301 307 307 236 25 62 110 57 58 59 60 47 48 21 251 251 253 285 safety earth setup menu COM port settings Hyperterminal setup basic settings signalling mode slots configuring terminal SNMP T1 40 44 44 55 169 238 30 83 alarm conditions framed unframed temperature terminal alarm summary applying power clocking earthing installing logging into Aprisa XE User Manual 250 158, 160, 161, 162 158 25 242 196 74 26, 40, 41 31 58 Index | 333 logging out modules near and far, explained operating conditions power supplies rebooting upgrading terminal emulator test equipment TFTP server timed reboot timeslots PCM modes selecting tools traffic direction of interfaces tranformer, Balun transmitter tributary switch LEDs troubleshooting 59 28 51 25 35 231 224 87 204 219 231 X.21 synchronous data 159 164 31 255 256 28 181 239 unframed mode upgrading the terminal uploading system files user ethernet capacity users access rights adding changing passwords deleting disabling saving user information session details user groups view user group 158 224 148 63 63 65 64 64 64 65 63 63 V.24 serial data V.35 synchronous data 126, 127, 128 131 web browser cache, clearing WEEE 222 315 Aprisa XE User Manual 131
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