Axxcelera Broand Wireless AB-ACCESS-AP02 Fixed Broadband Wireless Access Network User Manual AB Access Quick Reference

Axxcelera Broadband Wireless, Inc. Fixed Broadband Wireless Access Network AB Access Quick Reference

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Date Submitted2003-09-10 00:00:00
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UNII Config & User Guide
version 5.2
March 10, 2003
Company Confidential
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
175 Science Pkwy.
Rochester, NY 14620
U-NII Config & User Guide
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Revision History
Date
Version
Author
Comments
5.0
Jan 9, 02
Matt
Olson
5.0
Jan 14, 2002
Joe Higgs Format edits
5.0
Feb 19, 2002
Matt
Olson
More 5.0 updates
5.0
Feb 20, 2002
Matt
Olson
Added sections from old UNII Config
& User Guide.
5.1
Dec 13, 2002
Matt
Olson
Updated for the 5.1.8
Software & 5.1.6 EMS.
System
5.2.x
Apr 17, 2003
Matt
Olson
Updated for
software.
System
March 10, 2003
Updated for 5.0 system software
Company Confidential
the
5.2.x
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PLEASE READ THESE SAFETY PRECAUTIONS!
RF Energy Health Hazard
The radio equipment described in this guide uses radio frequency transmitters. Although
the power level is low, the concentrated energy from a directional antenna may pose a health
hazard. Do not allow people to come in within 20cm to the front of the antenna while the
transmitter is operating.
Protection from Lightning
Article 810 of the US National Electric Department of Energy Handbook 1996 specifies
that radio and television lead-in cables must have adequate surge protection at or near the point
of entry to the building. The code specifies that any shielded cable from an external antenna
must have the shield directly connected to a 10 AWG wire that connects to the building ground
electrode.
FCC Notice, USA
The AB-Access units comply with Part 15 of the FCC rules. Operation is subject to the
following two conditions:
•
•
This device may not cause harmful interference.
This device must accept any interference received including interference that
may cause undesired operation.
This device is specifically designed to be used under Part 15, Subpart E of the FCC Rules
and Regulations. Any unauthorized modification or changes to this device without the express
approval of Axxcelera Broadband may void the user’s authority to operate this device.
Furthermore, this device is intended to be used only when installed in accordance with the
instructions outlined in this manual. Failure to comply with these instructions may also void the
user’s authority to operate this device and/or the manufacturer’s warranty
Conditions specific to AB-Extender:
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AB-Extender complies with Part 15 of the FCC rules. The device is specifically designed
to be used under Part 15, Sub-part E of the FCC rules and regulations. Operation is subject to
following conditions:
•
•
•
•
•
The device to utilize a fixed mount antenna, for use on a permanent outdoor
structure.
The device to be installed by qualified installation/deployment personnel, and
a minimum of 1.5 meters of separation must exist between the device and
persons, when the device is operating.
The device installers and operators should be aware of the transmitter
operating conditions, specified in the AB-Extender installation manual and
other associated user documentation, as well as the antenna co-location
requirements of Part 1.1307 (b) (3), of FCC rules, pertaining to RF exposure.
The device may not cause harmful interference.
The device must accept interference received, including interference that may
cause undesired operation.
The device is intended to be used only when installed in accordance with instructions
outlined in this manual. Failure to comply with these instructions may void the user's authority to
operate this device and/or the manufacturer's warranty. Furthermore, any unauthorized
modification or changes to this device without the express approval of Axxcelera Broadband
may also void the user's authority to operate this device.
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Table of Contents
1 Revision History................................................................................................................2
PLEASE READ THESE SAFETY PRECAUTIONS!.................................................................3
2 Document Overview .......................................................................................................11
3 AB-Access Overview ......................................................................................................12
3.1
Topologies.............................................................................................................12
3.1.1
CLIP (RFC 1577) ...............................................................................................12
3.1.2
1483 Bridging (RFC 1483)................................................................................12
3.1.3
Native ATM ........................................................................................................12
3.1.4
PPPoA (RFC 2364)............................................................................................12
4 AB-Access Reference Model .........................................................................................13
4.1
Subnetting .............................................................................................................14
4.2
Peak Cell Rate - PCR ............................................................................................14
4.3
ATM Switch............................................................................................................15
5 Static Configurations......................................................................................................16
5.1
resolve ...................................................................................................................16
5.1.1
device ................................................................................................................16
5.1.2
nat ......................................................................................................................17
5.1.3
subnet................................................................................................................17
5.1.4
rip accept...........................................................................................................17
5.1.5
rip send..............................................................................................................18
5.1.6
rip relay..............................................................................................................18
5.1.7
route add ...........................................................................................................18
5.1.8
ipatm lifetime ....................................................................................................19
5.1.9
relay ...................................................................................................................19
5.1.10 ipatm pvc add ...................................................................................................19
5.2
system.conf ...........................................................................................................21
5.2.1
channel ..............................................................................................................21
5.2.2
antenna..............................................................................................................21
5.2.3
mode ..................................................................................................................21
5.2.4
mid .....................................................................................................................22
5.2.5
bid ......................................................................................................................22
5.2.6
interface.............................................................................................................22
5.2.7
duplex ................................................................................................................23
5.2.8
backoff...............................................................................................................23
5.2.9
provider .............................................................................................................23
5.2.10 key......................................................................................................................23
5.2.11 mask ..................................................................................................................24
5.2.12 leds ....................................................................................................................25
5.2.13 max_mid ............................................................................................................25
5.3
initswitchcli ...........................................................................................................25
5.3.1
tp ........................................................................................................................25
5.3.2
sp .......................................................................................................................26
5.3.3
add .....................................................................................................................26
5.4
initmr1483 ..............................................................................................................27
5.4.1
floodmode .........................................................................................................27
5.4.2
up .......................................................................................................................28
5.5
initr1483 .................................................................................................................28
5.5.1
pvc .....................................................................................................................28
5.6
initbridge................................................................................................................29
5.6.1
spanning............................................................................................................29
5.6.2
device add .........................................................................................................29
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5.7
dhcpd.conf.............................................................................................................30
5.7.1
subnet................................................................................................................30
5.7.2
range..................................................................................................................30
5.7.3
option routers ...................................................................................................30
5.7.4
max-lease-time..................................................................................................31
5.7.5
option domain-name ........................................................................................31
5.7.6
option domain-name-servers ..........................................................................31
5.8
snmpinit .................................................................................................................31
5.8.1
access write ......................................................................................................31
6 CLIP_T..............................................................................................................................33
6.1
Interactive CLIP_T Eth AP....................................................................................33
6.1.1
Adding AP and SU to EMS ..............................................................................33
6.1.2
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................35
6.1.2.1
AP Object ....................................................................................................35
6.1.2.2
SU Object ....................................................................................................36
6.2
Static CLIP_T Eth AP............................................................................................38
6.2.1
AP Configuration Files.....................................................................................39
6.2.1.1
AP resolve ...................................................................................................39
6.2.1.2
AP system.conf............................................................................................39
6.2.2
SU Configuration Files.....................................................................................40
6.2.2.1
SU resolve ...................................................................................................40
6.2.2.2
SU system.conf ...........................................................................................40
6.2.3
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................41
6.2.3.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ........................................41
6.2.3.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link ..............................................................41
6.3
Static CLIP_T ATM AP..........................................................................................42
6.3.1
AP Configuration Files.....................................................................................43
6.3.1.1
AP resolve ...................................................................................................43
6.3.1.2
AP system.conf............................................................................................43
6.3.2
SU Configuration Files.....................................................................................44
6.3.2.1
SU resolve ...................................................................................................44
6.3.2.2
SU system.conf ...........................................................................................44
6.3.3
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................45
6.3.3.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ........................................45
6.3.3.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link ..............................................................47
6.4
Hybrid CLIP_T Eth AP ..........................................................................................48
6.4.1
AP Configuration Files.....................................................................................49
6.4.1.1
AP resolve ...................................................................................................49
6.4.1.2
AP system.conf............................................................................................49
6.4.1.3
AP Switchcli.................................................................................................50
6.4.2
SU1 Configuration Files...................................................................................50
6.4.2.1
SU1 resolve .................................................................................................50
6.4.2.2
SU1 system.conf .........................................................................................51
6.4.3
SU2 Configuration Files...................................................................................51
6.4.3.1
SU2 resolve .................................................................................................51
6.4.3.2
SU2 system.conf .........................................................................................52
6.4.4
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................52
6.4.4.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ........................................52
6.4.4.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link ..............................................................52
7 CLIP_S..............................................................................................................................54
7.1
CLIP_S Interactive ................................................................................................54
7.1.1
Adding AP and SU to EMS ..............................................................................55
7.1.2
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................56
7.1.2.1
AP Object ....................................................................................................56
7.1.2.2
SU Object ....................................................................................................57
7.2
Static CLIP_S (routed management) ..................................................................60
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7.2.1
Routed Management PRO/CON ......................................................................60
7.2.2
AP Configuration Files.....................................................................................61
7.2.2.1
AP resolve ...................................................................................................61
7.2.2.2
AP system.conf............................................................................................61
7.2.2.3
AP initswitchcli.............................................................................................62
7.2.3
SU Configuration Files.....................................................................................62
7.2.3.1
SU resolve ...................................................................................................62
7.2.3.2
SU system.conf ...........................................................................................63
7.2.4
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................63
7.2.4.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ........................................63
7.2.4.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link ..............................................................65
7.3
Static CLIP_S (switched management) ..............................................................67
7.3.1
Switched Management PRO/CON...................................................................67
7.3.2
AP Configuration Files.....................................................................................68
7.3.2.1
AP resolve ...................................................................................................68
7.3.2.2
AP system.conf............................................................................................68
7.3.2.3
AP initswitchcli.............................................................................................69
7.3.3
SU Configuration Files.....................................................................................69
7.3.3.1
SU resolve ...................................................................................................69
7.3.3.2
SU system.conf ...........................................................................................70
7.3.4
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................70
7.3.4.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ........................................70
7.3.4.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link ..............................................................71
8 Hybrid CLIP_S .................................................................................................................73
8.1.1
AP1 Configuration Files...................................................................................73
8.1.1.1
AP1 resolve .................................................................................................73
8.1.1.2
AP1 system.conf..........................................................................................74
8.1.1.3
AP1 initswitchcli...........................................................................................75
8.1.2
SU1 Configuration Files...................................................................................75
8.1.2.1
SU1 resolve .................................................................................................75
8.1.2.2
SU1 system.conf .........................................................................................76
8.1.3
AP2 Configuration Files...................................................................................76
8.1.3.1
AP2 resolve .................................................................................................76
8.1.3.2
AP2 system.conf..........................................................................................77
8.1.3.3
AP2 initswitchcli...........................................................................................77
8.1.4
SU2 Configuration Files...................................................................................78
8.1.4.1
SU2 resolve .................................................................................................78
8.1.4.2
SU2 system.conf .........................................................................................78
8.1.5
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................79
8.1.5.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ........................................79
8.1.5.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link ..............................................................81
9 1483_T ..............................................................................................................................82
9.1
Interactive 1483_T.................................................................................................82
9.1.1
Adding AP or SU to EMS .................................................................................82
9.1.2
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................84
9.1.2.1
AP Object ....................................................................................................84
9.1.2.2
SU Object ....................................................................................................85
9.2
Static 1483_T.........................................................................................................87
9.2.1
AP Configuration Files.....................................................................................87
9.2.1.1
AP resolve ...................................................................................................87
9.2.1.2
AP initbridge ................................................................................................88
9.2.1.3
AP initmr1483 ..............................................................................................88
9.2.1.4
AP system.conf............................................................................................88
9.2.2
SU Configuration Files.....................................................................................88
9.2.2.1
SU resolve ...................................................................................................88
9.2.2.2
SU initbridge ................................................................................................89
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9.2.2.3
SU system.conf ...........................................................................................89
9.2.2.4
SU initr1483.................................................................................................89
9.2.3
Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................89
9.2.3.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface. .......................................89
9.2.3.2
Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link. ..............................................90
10
1483_S ..........................................................................................................................91
10.1
Interactive 1483_S ................................................................................................91
10.1.1 Adding AP and SU to EMS ..............................................................................92
10.1.2 Troubleshooting ...............................................................................................93
10.1.2.1 AP Object ....................................................................................................93
10.1.2.2 SU Object ....................................................................................................94
10.2
Static 1483_S (routed management)...................................................................97
10.2.1 Routed Management PRO/CON ......................................................................97
10.2.2 AP Configuration Files.....................................................................................98
10.2.2.1 AP resolve ...................................................................................................98
10.2.2.2 AP system.conf............................................................................................98
10.2.2.3 AP initswitchcli.............................................................................................99
10.2.3 SU Configuration Files.....................................................................................99
10.2.3.1 SU resolve ...................................................................................................99
10.2.3.2 SU initbridge ................................................................................................99
10.2.3.3 SU system.conf .........................................................................................100
10.2.3.4 SU initr1483...............................................................................................100
10.2.4 Troubleshooting .............................................................................................100
10.2.4.1 Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ......................................100
10.2.4.2 Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link. ............................................102
10.3
Static 1483_S (switched management) ............................................................104
10.3.1 Switched Management PRO/CON.................................................................104
10.3.2 AP Configuration Files...................................................................................105
10.3.2.1 AP resolve .................................................................................................105
10.3.2.2 AP system.conf..........................................................................................105
10.3.2.3 AP initswitchcli...........................................................................................106
10.3.3 SU Configuration Files...................................................................................106
10.3.3.1 SU resolve .................................................................................................106
10.3.3.2 SU initbridge ..............................................................................................106
10.3.3.3 SU system.conf .........................................................................................107
10.3.3.4 SU initr1483...............................................................................................107
10.3.4 Troubleshooting .............................................................................................107
10.3.4.1 Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ......................................107
10.3.4.2 Can’t ping across the wireless link ............................................................109
11
Native ATM.................................................................................................................110
11.1
Static Native ATM ...............................................................................................110
11.1.1 AP Configuration Files...................................................................................111
11.1.1.1 AP resolve .................................................................................................111
11.1.1.2 AP system.conf..........................................................................................111
11.1.1.3 AP initswitchcli...........................................................................................112
11.1.2 SU Configuration Files...................................................................................112
11.1.2.1 SU resolve .................................................................................................112
11.1.2.2 SU system.conf .........................................................................................113
11.1.2.3 SU initswitchcli...........................................................................................113
11.1.3 Troubleshooting .............................................................................................113
11.1.3.1 Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ......................................113
11.1.3.2 Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link. ............................................115
12
Extender .....................................................................................................................117
12.1
Ethernet Extender...............................................................................................117
12.1.1 BHM Configuration Files ...............................................................................118
12.1.1.1 BHM resolve ..............................................................................................118
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12.1.1.2 BHM initbridge ...........................................................................................118
12.1.1.3 BHM initr1483............................................................................................118
12.1.1.4 BHM system.conf ......................................................................................118
12.1.2 BHS Configuration Files ................................................................................119
12.1.2.1 BHS resolve...............................................................................................119
12.1.2.2 BHS initbridge............................................................................................119
12.1.2.3 BHS system.conf .......................................................................................119
12.1.2.4 BHS initr1483 ............................................................................................119
12.1.3 Troubleshooting .............................................................................................120
12.1.3.1 Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface. .....................................120
12.1.3.2 Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link. ............................................120
12.2
ATM Extender......................................................................................................121
12.2.1 BHM Configuration Files ...............................................................................122
12.2.1.1 BHM resolve ..............................................................................................122
12.2.1.2 BHM system.conf ......................................................................................122
12.2.1.3 BHM initswitchcli........................................................................................123
12.2.2 BHS Configuration Files ................................................................................123
12.2.2.1 BHS resolve...............................................................................................123
12.2.2.2 BHS system.conf .......................................................................................124
12.2.2.3 BHS initswitchcli ........................................................................................124
12.2.3 Troubleshooting .............................................................................................124
12.2.3.1 Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface ......................................124
12.2.3.2 Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link. ............................................126
13
RF Design and Planning...........................................................................................128
13.1
Overview ..............................................................................................................128
13.2
The U-NII & ISM Channel Plan ...........................................................................128
13.3
Air Interface.........................................................................................................128
13.4
Wireless MAC......................................................................................................128
13.4.1 Downstream burst..........................................................................................129
13.4.1.1 Access Point Turnaround Time (ATT).......................................................129
13.4.1.2 Frame Descriptor Header (FDHDR)..........................................................129
13.4.1.3 Reservation Grant (RG) ............................................................................129
13.4.1.4 Downstream Acknowledgement (DACK) ..................................................130
13.4.1.5 Downstream Data Cells (DCELL)..............................................................130
13.4.1.6 Subscriber Turnaround Time (STT) ..........................................................130
13.4.1.7 Reservation Request (RR) ........................................................................130
13.4.1.8 Upstream Acknowledgement (UACK) .......................................................130
13.4.1.9 Upstream Cell (UCELL/UCELLR) .............................................................130
13.5
Delay Compensation ..........................................................................................130
13.6
RF Channels spacing and output power..........................................................132
13.7
TDD (Time Division Duplex)...............................................................................132
13.8
AP and SU Specifications ..................................................................................133
13.8.1 AP/SU/Extender Functional Block Diagram ................................................133
13.8.2 Radio Specifications ......................................................................................134
13.8.3 Subscriber Unit Antenna ...............................................................................135
13.8.4 Access Point Antenna ...................................................................................136
13.8.5 Extender Antenna...........................................................................................137
13.9
Topology Types ..................................................................................................138
13.10 Interference Types..............................................................................................139
13.10.1
Type 1 Interference ....................................................................................140
13.10.2
Type 2 Interference ....................................................................................140
13.10.3
Type 3 Interference ....................................................................................141
13.10.4
Type 4 Interference ....................................................................................141
13.11 Recommended Channel Plans ..........................................................................142
13.11.1
Six-Sector, Three-Frequency Plan ...........................................................142
13.11.2
Six-Sector, Six-Frequency Plan................................................................143
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13.12 Antenna Spacing ................................................................................................143
14
SNMP ..........................................................................................................................145
15
Rupee .........................................................................................................................146
15.1
LINUX ...................................................................................................................146
15.2
DOS ......................................................................................................................146
15.3
Rupee Option Definitions...................................................................................147
16
RTFD (Return To Factory Default) ...........................................................................148
16.1
RTFD IP Configurations .....................................................................................148
16.2
Recover................................................................................................................148
16.3
Procedure to restore the default configuration ...............................................149
16.4
Disabling the RTFD Feature...............................................................................149
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2 Document Overview
This document covers technical specifications and configuration information for the ABAccess system. It also covers some general troubleshooting steps to resolve issues that may
occur while configuring or deploying the AB-Access system. This document should only be used
as a reference for the 5.1.6 EMS and 5.1.5 or newer System Software.
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3 AB-Access Overview
3.1 Topologies
There are three topologies that are available with the AB-Access units CLIP, 1483
Bridging, and Native ATM. There are several configuration variations within these topologies but
all will be referred by these names with an extension.
3.1.1
CLIP (RFC 1577)
CLIP stands for Classical IP and is a routed topology. The AP or SU acts as a standard
Layer 3 IP router, which means when data comes into the unit it analyzes the IP header and
sends it out one of its interfaces based on the information in the header and its routing tables. It
is important to note that only IP traffic can be passed over the units in this configuration.
3.1.2
1483 Bridging (RFC 1483)
1483 Bridging is a Layer 2 bridge, which will pass any valid Ethernet frame regardless of
protocol. 1483 is also referred to as MPoA (Multi-protocol over ATM). The basic concept of how
the bridge works is simple. It has two tables one for the terrestrial interface and one for the
wireless interface. The terrestrial table stores all source MAC address it has learned from the
terrestrial interface. It learns the MAC addresses by storing the source MAC address of any
packet that has originated from a device on its terrestrial interface. If a packet is received that
has a destination MAC address that is already in the table it will be discarded. The reason for
this is if the destination MAC address is in the table it must mean that the device with that MAC
address is on the terrestrial side of the radio. The wireless table works in the same manor
except it learns the source MAC address of packets that have been received from the wireless
interface. It is important to note that all broadcast packets will be sent over the link. It is also
important to note that the implementation of 1483 bridging that the AB-Access system uses is
LLC/SNAP encapsulation and we do not support the VC multiplexing implementation.
3.1.3
Native ATM
Native ATM is a mode where both the AP and the SU act as an ATM switch. In this
mode ATM cells are simply passed through the switching layer of the radio at layer 2. It is
important to note that the AB-Access radio only supports PVC and not SVC.
3.1.4
PPPoA (RFC 2364)
PPPoA is no longer supported.
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4 AB-Access Reference Model
The diagram below is the architectural reference model for this document. Depending
upon the required architecture, certain layers of this model may or may not be used.
Please note that both the wireless and terrestrial interfaces have access to all of the
functions of the unit. This is designed to allow the reader to understand where an incoming
service is terminating and where its configuration is managed. Management files (on Flashfs)
for each layer are as follows:
All: system.conf
Routing Layer: resolve
Bridging Layer: resolve, initbridge, initmr1483 or initr1483
Switching Layer: initswitchcli
An E or A will indicate the Terrestrial interface type below the interface at the corner. As
an example, the diagram above shows an SU (on the left) with an Ethernet terrestrial interface
and an AP (on the right) with an ATM interface. The Wireless interface is always ATM.
Additional services/clients such as NAT and/or DHCP will be depicted at the appropriate
interface.
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4.1 Subnetting
Subnetting within the AB-Access radios is done in hexadecimal format. There for it is
necessary to know the decimal to hex conversions for commonly used subnets. CIDR notation
is also used to define the subnets in all the diagrams, so refer to the chart below for any
questions on subnetting.
Decimal
Subnet
HEX
Subnet
CIDR
00
/24
128
80
/25
192
C0
/26
224
E0
/27
240
F0
/28
248
F8
/29
252
FC
/30
4.2 Peak Cell Rate - PCR
The Peak Cell Rate is policing not pacing, there for it will discard all cells received over
the limit and not buffer them. This means the cells will be have to be retransmitted via an upper
layer protocol. To calculate the Peak Cell Rate you simply divide the desired bandwidth by the
number of bits in an ATM cell. An ATM cell is 53 bytes consisting of a 5-byte header and a 48byte payload. In the following example, the PCR for a 1 Megabit circuit is calculated. PCR
values are rounded to the nearest integer.
1024000 bps/(48 bytes-per-cell*8 bits-per-byte) = 2667
The following table lists PCR values for several, common data rates.
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Data Rate
PCR
56 kbps
146
128 kbps
333
256 kbps
667
512 kbps
1333
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Data Rate
PCR
1 Mbps
2667
2 Mbps
5333
5 Mbps
13333
4.3 ATM Switch
ATM switches are referenced throughout this document. The ATM switch used for
illustration purposes is the FVC Access NGI. The switch used for the troubleshooting
screenshots represents FVC software version 5.07. Some of the commands for older FVC
switch software are different.
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5 Static Configurations
Before one creates a static system you must first know what everything in the
configuration files mean. The files listed below are all the configuration files that can be
configured on the system.
5.1 resolve
The resolve file stores the IP configuration information such as IP address, netmask, and
the routing table.
5.1.1
device
device add device interface drivers mtu mtusize ipaddress
device
{atm0 | atm1 | eth0} This name is used to define a virtual
device.
interface
{atm | ether} Used to define the physical medium of the
device
It is important to know that the wireless interface is always
ATM and the terrestrial interface can be either ATM or Ethernet.
drivers
{//bun | //edd | //bridge}
//bun = ATM interface
//edd = Ethernet interface
//bridge = Ethernet interface via bridge (all interactive modes
and 1483 bridging mode)
mtusize
maximum transmission unit (max: 1500)
ipaddress
{a.b.c.d | dhcp} IP address that will be associated with the
device.
Example
The following example shows an ATM device for the terrestrial interface.
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.2.50
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nat
nat add device
device
{atm0 |atm1 | eth0} Corresponds to the device in the device
line that you want NAT enabled on. NAT should be enabled on the
WAN interface.
Example
The following example shows NAT enabled on the atm1 device.
nat add atm1
5.1.3
subnet
subnet add device . networkID subnetmask
device
{atm0.home | atm1.home | eth0.home | bridge.home} Is used
to define what device the subnet is being defined for.
networkID
{a.b.c.d} The neworkID, which is defined in a decimal
format.
subnetmask
{ff:ff:ff:ff} The subnet mask in hexadecimal.
Example
The following example shows a subnet defined for the device that was defined in x.
NOTE: There is a period before the networkID, this is part of the
syntax and needs to be included.
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.2.32 ff:ff:ff:e0
5.1.4
rip accept
rip accept interface version
interface
{device | all} This will correspond to the device defined on
the device line.
version
{1 | 2 | 1 2 | none} Defines which version of RIP you want to
accept.
Example
The following example shows the Ethernet interface accepting RIP version 1 & 2.
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rip accept eth0 1 2
5.1.5
rip send
rip send interface version
interface
{device | all} This will correspond to the device defined in
device line.
version
{1 | 2 | 1 2 | none} Defines which version of RIP you want to
accept.
Example
The following example shows the wireless ATM interface sending RIP version 2.
rip send atm1 2
5.1.6
rip relay
rip relay version remoteip device timeout
version
{1 | 2 | 1 2} Version of RIP to send.
remoteip
{a.b.c.d} Remote IP address to send RIP to.
device
{device} Device that RIP is to be sent from. This will usually
be atm1 or atm0.
timeout
{seconds} The number of seconds until connection will
timeout. This parameter is optional, if not set the rip relay will not
timeout.
Example
The following example shows rip version 2 being sent over the wireless interface.
rip relay 2 192.168.10.3 atm1
5.1.7
route add
route add name network gateway netmask cost
name
Unique name used to identify the route.
network
{a.b.c.d} Network ID of remote network.
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gateway
{a.b.c.d} Target IP address for path to remote network.
netmask
{ff:ff:ff:ff} Subnet mask of remote network.
cost
{#} Hop count to destination network, also referred to as
metric. Cost is optional, and will be set to 1 if nothing is set. If this is
not set correctly and you are running RIP it could overwrite the static
route.
Example
The following example shows a default route. A # sign can be used to put comments after
the route. In the example it is used to state that it is a manual route.
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
5.1.8
ipatm lifetime
ipatm lifetime seconds
seconds
{?-?} The number of seconds an ATM cells can traverse a
network before it will timeout, like the TTL of an Ethernet frame.
Example
The following example shows the lifetime set to 60 seconds, which is the default.
ipatm lifetime 60
5.1.9
relay
relay interface
interface
{all} There are more options for this, but for the purpose of
keeping this simple just use “all”. Refer to the CLI document for
more options.
Example
The following example shows relay command being used to relay between all devices.
relay all
5.1.10
ipatm pvc add
ipatm pvc add interface port vpi/vci pcr pcr-rx/pcr-tx remoteip ipaddress
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{atm1 | atm0} This defines which device you want to bind the
ipatm pvc to.
port
{atm25m | atm25i}
atm25m = wireless port
atm25i = terrestrial port
vpi
{0-7} Currently only VPI 0 is supported on the wireless
interface. The terrestrial interface can use any in the range.
vci
{32-65535} Virtual Circuit Identifier
pcr-rx,
{0-70000} Peak Cell Rate, used to define the maximum cells
arrival/transmission rat at/from the wireless interface (ATM cells per
second).
pcr-tx
rx = data received from the wireless interface to be sent over
the terrestrial interface.
tx = data received from the terrestrial interface to be sent over
the wireless interface.
ipaddress
{a.b.c.d} The remote IP address of the other device.
Example
The following example is an ipatm pvc for the wireless interface bound to the device
atm1. It is using VPI 0 & VCI 768 with a peak cell rate of 60000 and a destination IP address of
192.168.10.3.
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25i 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.10.3
Old syntax
Note: The following old syntaxes are no longer valid.
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25i 0/768 pcr 60000 remoteip 192.168.10.3
ipatm pvc atm1 768/192.168.10.3/60000 atm25i
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5.2 system.conf
5.2.1
channel
channel number
number
{0-14} This defines the RF channel.
0-4 = lower power (indoor only)
5-9 = mid power (outdoor)
10-16 = high power (outdoor)
Note: The channel plans can vary in different countries.
Example
The following example shows a unit transmitting on channel 14, which is a high power
channel.
channel 14
5.2.2
antenna
antenna polarization
polarization
{vertical | horizontal} Defines the antenna.
Example
The following example shows the antenna set to vertical polarization.
antenna vertical
5.2.3
mode
mode operation
operation
{static | interactive} Defines the mode of operation.
static = puts radio in stand alone mode
Interactive = puts radio in mode that needs EMS to operate
Example
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The following example shows a unit operating in a static mode, which means the unit is
in a stand alone mode.
mode static
5.2.4
mid
mid number
number
{0-254} Mobile ID is a unique identifier per radio in a sector.
MID 0 is always used for the AP, and can’t be used for an
SU. MID 255 is reserved and used as the broadcast MID. Also no
MIDs can be duplicated in a sector.
Example
The following example shows a AP’s mid.
mid 0
5.2.5
bid
bid number
number
{0} The bid is currently not used.
Example
The following example shows bid of 0. The bid is not used at this time and should just be
left to the default of 0.
bid 0
5.2.6
interface
interface type
type
{atm0 | eth0} Defines the interface type for the terrestrial
interface.
Example
The following example shows a unit that has an Ethernet interface defined. It is
important to know that this is the only setting that makes a unit ATM or Ethernet on the physical
layer.
interface eth0
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duplex
duplex type
type
{half | full} Sets the Ethernet interface to half or full duplex.
Example
The following example shows a unit’s interface set to full duplex.
duplex full
NOTE: If set to full duplex unit must be connected to a switch or router and
not a hub. The unit will not auto-negotiate in full duplex, so you must set switch
to 10Mb Full Duplex.
5.2.8
backoff
backoff dB
dB
{0-20} Reduces the transmit power and is measured in dB.
Backoff should only be used indoors or in rare situations that call for
less power to be transmitted from the antenna. Backoff should also
be set the same on all units in the sector.
Example
The following example shows a unit that is not backed off. This is how most of units in
the field will be configured.
backoff 0
5.2.9
provider
provider text
text
Text field that can hold up to 24 characters.
Example
The following example shows the Provider as “abw”.
provider abw
5.2.10
key
key code
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Text field that can hold up to 14 characters. This function is
not currently enabled.
Example
The following example shows an authentication key that is default. Units currently
ignore this field.
key Axxcelera
5.2.11
mask
mask mask#
mask#
{5 digit hex #} This is only used in an interactive system. It
prevents the radio from scanning specific RF channels.
RF Channel Bit Map Table for Creating Mask#
Channel
16 15 14 13 12 11 10
Binary Position Value
Decimal Value
15
15
15
15
Hexadecimal Value
Decimal to Hexadecimal Conversion Table
Decimal
10 11 12 13 14 15
Hex
Example
The following example shows a unit that is masked to not scan channels 0-9 (Binary:
1:1111:1100:0000:0000 = Decimal: 1:15:12:0:0)
mask 1fc00
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leds
leds mode
mode
{active | debug} Defines the interpretation for the LEDs on
the wallbox.
Active = Upon boot the yellow light will go solid indicating
the unit has power. The green light is then a data traffic light and
flashes when data is transmitted on the terrestrial interface.
Debug = Upon boot the yellow light defines the terrestrial
interface, once for Ethernet, twice for ATM. The green light
becomes an RF link status light flashing once if the modems have
not synchronized and 5 times if they have.
Example
The follow example puts the unit’s wallbox into active mode.
leds active
5.2.13
max_mid
max_mid #
{1-254} This is only set in the AP and sets the number of
interactive SUs that are allowed to register with the AP.
Example
The following example specifies 32 as the maximum MID supported by the AP and
effectively limits the number of SUs to 32.
max_mid 32
5.3 initswitchcli
5.3.1
tp
tp name service pcr
name
service
{name | default} Can be assigned a name or the default.
{UBR | CBR | ABR | VBR} UBR is currently the only service
that is supported.
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pcr
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{0-70000} Peak Cell Rate, used to define the maximum cells
arrival/transmission rat at/from the wireless interface (ATM cells per
second).
Example
TP (traffic parameter) sets the type of service that is desired and peak cell rate. The
following example show the TP default set to Unspecified Bit Rate with a Peak Cell Rate of
2667.
tp default UBR 2667
NOTE: When setting PCR for a bi-directional PVC the following applies.
atm25i – atm25m = terrestrial – wireless : which is the same as the tx in the ipatm pvc settings.
atm25m – atm25i = wireless – terrestrial : which is the same as the rx in the ipatm pvc settings.
5.3.2
sp
sp name buffer stats
name
{name | default} Can be assigned a name or the default.
buffer
{cells} Number of cells that can be buffered.
stats
{stats} Is optional, but needs to be used for the stats
command to work.
Example
SP (switch parameter) sets the size of the buffer in the switchcli and whether or not stats
are recorded. The following shows the buffer set to 256 cells and stats recording enabled. This
should be the default for all configs using the switchcli.
sp default 256 stats
5.3.3
add
add iport ivpi ivci oport ovpi ovci tp sp type epd
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iport
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{atm25i | atm25m} In port of uni-directional PVC.
atm25i = terrestrial
atm25m = wireless
ivpi
{0-7} Currently only VPI 0 is supported on the wireless
interface. The terrestrial interface can use any in the range.
ivci
{32-65535} In port VCI.
oport
{atm25i | atm25m} Out port of the uni-directional PVC.
ovpi
{0-7} Currently only VPI 0 is supported on the wireless
interface. The terrestrial interface can use any in the range.
ovci
{32-65535} Out port VCI.
tp
{name} This is the name of the traffic parameter (previously
set) that applies to this PVC mapping.
sp
{name} This is the name of the switch parameter (previously
set) that applies to this PVC mapping.
type
{perm | soft | none} For all static configurations “perm”
should be used.
epd
{epd] Early Packet Discard will discard arriving cells when
buffering is below 32 cells.
Example
The following example shows a uni-directional PVC mapped from the terrestrial to
wireless port.
add atm25i 0 100 atm25m 0 256 default default perm epd
5.4 initmr1483
Use this file only on APs. The corresponding file for an SU is initr1483.
5.4.1
floodmode
floodmode mode
mode
{0 | 1}
0 = Flooding of unlearned unicast packets is disabled.
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1 = Flooding of unlearned unicast packets is enabled.
Example
The following example configures the mr1483 device to forward all unlearned unicast
packets.
floodmode 1
5.4.2
up
up mid vci port pcr-rx pcr-tx
mid
{1-254} MID of the SU that the data will be sent to.
vci
{MID*256} The MID of the SU multiplied by 256.
port
{atm25m} Only the wireless port can be used for this device.
pcr-rx
{0-70000} Peak Cell Rate, used to define the maximum cells
passed per second.
pcr-tx
{0-70000} Peak Cell Rate, used to define the maximum cells
passed per second.
Example
The following example sets up a mr1483 PVC to an SU with MID 3.
up 3 768 atm25m 70000 70000
5.5 initr1483
Use this file only on SUs. The corresponding file for an AP is initmr1483.
5.5.1
pvc
pvc vpi/vci port pcr-rx pcr-tx
vpi
{0} Only VPI 0 is supported.
vci
{MID*256} The MID of the SU multiplied by 256.
port
{atm25m} Only the wireless port can be used for this device.
pcr-rx
{0-70000} Peak Cell Rate, used to define the maximum cells
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arrival rate from the wireless interface (ATM cells per second).
pcr-tx
{0-70000} Peak Cell Rate, used to define the maximum cells
transmission rate at the wireless interface (ATM cells per second).
Example
The following example sets up a r1483 PVC to an AP from an SU with MID 3.
pvc 0/768 atm25m 70000 70000
5.6 initbridge
5.6.1
spanning
spanning mode
mode
{disable | enable} Currently spanning tree is not supported so
you must choose the disable option.
Example
The following example shows spanning tree disabled. Spanning tree is not supported at
this time.
spanning disable
5.6.2
device add
device add device
device
{edd | mr1483 | r1483}
edd = Ethernet interface
mr1483 = multi-port 1483 bridge (AP only)
r1483 = single-port 1483 bridge (SU, Backhaul Master,
Backhaul Slave)
Example
The follow example adds the Ethernet interface to the bridge.
device add edd
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5.7 dhcpd.conf
The dhcpd.conf file follows the same syntax as a Linux or UNIX dhcpd.conf file.
5.7.1
subnet
subnet networkid netmask subnet
networkid
{a.b.c.d} The network ID for the leased addresses.
subnet
{a.b.c.d} The subnet for the leased addresses.
Example
The following example sets the subnet for the 10.10.10.0 network with a class C netmask.
subnet 10.10.10.0 netmask 255.255.255.0
5.7.2
range
range startip stopip
startip
{a.b.c.d} First IP address in the range that will be leased out
to clients.
stopip
{a.b.c.d} Last IP address in the range that will be leased out
to clients.
Example
The following example shows the range of IP that the DHCP server can lease out to
clients.
range 10.10.10.10 10.10.10.20
5.7.3
option routers
option routers gateway
gateway
{a.b.c.d} Gateway IP for the computers leasing addresses.
Example
The following example sets the default route (gateway) address for all clients that lease
an address from the server.
option routers 10.10.10.1
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max-lease-time
max-lease-time seconds
seconds
{0-86400} Time in seconds that a client can hold a leased
address from the DHCP server. A setting of 0 seconds will make the
lease never timeout.
Example
The following example sets the lease time to 24 hours (=24x60x60).
max-lease-time 86400
5.7.5
option domain-name
option domain-name dnsname
dnsname
{name} Name of the DNS Server.
Example
The following example sets the DNS suffixes that the clients will use.
option domain-name www.dns.com
5.7.6
option domain-name-servers
option domain-name-servers dnsip
dnsip
{a.b.c.d} IP address of the DNS Server.
Example
The following example sets the DNS server that all the clients will use.
option domain-name-servers 192.168.1.254
5.8 snmpinit
5.8.1
access write
access write password
password
{password} Sets the password for the unit.
Example
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The following example sets the password to “atmos”.
access write atmos
NOTE: AB-Access only supports write access and does not support read
access.
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6 CLIP_T
The CLIP_T configuration is when both the AP and SU are setup as routers. This means
that when data arrives on any interface it is analyzed at layer 3 and based on the destination IP
address is forwarded out the proper interface.
6.1 Interactive CLIP_T Eth AP
All assumptions for troubleshooting Interactive CLIP_T Eth AP will be based on the
following diagram.
192.168.100.1
PVC 768
192.168.2.50 /27
RL
RL
192.168.100.3
BL
SL
192.168.3.65 /29
BL
SL
MID 0
MID 3
LAN
SU Data/Management PVC
Ethernet Switch
AP/SU Management/Data Path
Router
192.168.2.33 /27
PC
192.168.2.34 /27
6.1.1
Adding AP and SU to EMS
Dialogue boxes showing the information needed to add an AP or SU are shown below.
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6.1.2.1
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Troubleshooting
AP Object
If the AP will not register make sure all the fields in the EMS database are correctly filled
in. Here are a few important points that should be kept in mind if the AP doesn’t register.
1.
See if you can ping the unit. The default configuration is to have the AP receive a
DHCP address from the CS. If it has not received it you will not be able to ping it. So if you are
unable to ping the AP you should check and see that the dhcpd.conf file is setup properly. Notice
that in the example AP1 has a fixed address set, each AP must be given the same address every
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time it leases an address. It is important to be aware that by default most routers will not pass
DHCP request unless they are specifically configured to do so.
#eth0
subnet 192.168.2.0 netmask 255.255.255.224 {
range 192.168.2.34 192.168.2.50;
option routers 192.168.2.33;
host AP1 {
hardware ethernet 0:c0:69:0c:52:2f;
fixed-address 192.168.2.50;
For various reasons it may be desired to not use DHCP to give an AP an address. In this
case the IP address can be statically assigned to the unit. To do this you will need to create a
resolve file that looks identical to the CLIP_T static resolve file described in the section for
Static 1483_T.
2.
Make sure the MAC address is correct. Without the correct MAC address the AP
can not register. You can verify this by tailing the adapcs.log file. In this example an SU with the
indicated MAC address is trying to register and is not found in the database. Either the SU was
not added to the EMS or was entered with the wrong MAC address.
[root@cs1 /root]# tail -f /var/log/adapcs.log
CS[12399.8192](16Dec 21:33:39.524 ): Protocol: 00 00 00 00 01 00 02 00 00 14 00 01 00 c0 69 0c 52 2f 77 94
CS[12399.8192](16Dec 21:33:39.524 ): DynAccessPointImpl (CLIP_T AP): handleEstablishConnection (AP 00c0690c522f)
CS[12399.8192](16Dec 21:33:39.524 ): DynAccessPointImpl (CLIP_T AP): Received ESTABLISH_CONNECTION message
from unknown AP ap_02 1216_135100016_111
3.
correct.
If the CS is on a different network, than the default route in the AP must be
6.1.2.2
SU Object
If the SU will not register make sure all the fields in the EMS database are filled in
properly. Here are a few important points that should be kept in mind if the SU doesn’t register.
Many different things can cause the SU not to register so after verifying all of these points and it
still doesn’t register the next step will be to troubleshoot the RF link. See RF troubleshooting
document.
1.
Make sure the MAC address is correct. Without the correct MAC address the AP
can not register. You can verify this by tailing the adapcs.log file. In this example an SU with
this MAC address is trying to register and is not found in the database, which means when you
created the object it had the wrong MAC address.
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[root@cs1 /root]# tail -f /var/log/adapcs.log
CS[12801.8192](16Dec 21:39:20.034 ): Protocol: 00 00 00 00 01 00 00 05 00 14 00 04 00 c0 69 0b 58 7f b5 10
CS[12801.8192](16Dec 21:39:20.034 ): RegistrarProtocol: SU 00c0690b587f is already registering
CS[12801.8192](16Dec 21:39:20.555 ): EMSProtocol: received message REGMSG_REGISTER_SU for CS
CS[12801.8192](16Dec 21:39:20.555 ): Protocol: message contents (20 bytes)
2.
Make sure the default route is correct if the SU is on a different network than the
Control Server.
3.
Verify that the SU has been upgraded to the CLIP_T interactive configuration.
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
6.2 Static CLIP_T Eth AP
All assumptions for troubleshooting Static CLIP_T Eth AP will be based on the
following diagram.
192.168.100.1
PVC 768
192.168.2.50 /27
RL
RL
192.168.100.3
BL
SL
192.168.3.65 /29
BL
SL
MID 0
MID 3
LAN
SU Data/Management PVC
Ethernet Switch
AP/SU Management/Data Path
Router
192.168.2.33 /27
PC
192.168.2.34 /27
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6.2.1
6.2.1.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP Configuration Files
AP resolve
device add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.2.50
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.2.32 ff:ff:ff:e0
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.33 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
route add su1 192.168.3.64 192.168.100.3 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm pvc lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
6.2.1.2
AP system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
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6.2.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
SU Configuration Files
6.2.2.1
SU resolve
device add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.3.65
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.3.64 ff:ff:ff:f8
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
6.2.2.2
SU system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
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6.2.3
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
6.2.3.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight-through cable. To connect the radio to a
network device (hub, switch, router) use an Ethernet cross-over cable (1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and that the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio.
The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the
radio and the computer you are trying to ping from.
6.2.3.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link
There are numerous reason why you couldn’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
192.168.3.65 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the “ipatm pvc” is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
AP
192.168.2.50 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
4.
Check that there is a route in the AP that points to the SU’s terrestrial network.
192.168.2.50 ip> route
route add su1 192.168.3.64 192.168.100.3 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN via atm1
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.2.33 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via eth0
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
6.3 Static CLIP_T ATM AP
All assumptions for troubleshooting Static CLIP_T ATM AP will be based on the
following diagram.
192.168.100.1
PVC 768
192.168.2.50 /27
RL
RL
192.168.100.3
BL
SL
192.168.3.65 /29
BL
SL
MID 0
MID 3
LAN
SU Data/Management PVC
AP/SU Management/Data Path
ATM Switch
PVC 50
PVC 51
Router
192.168.2.33 /27
PC
192.168.2.34 /27
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6.3.1
6.3.1.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP Configuration Files
AP resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.2.50
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.2.32 ff:ff:ff:e0
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.33 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
route add su1 192.168.3.64 192.168.100.3 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm pvc lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/50 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.2.33
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/51 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.2.34
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
6.3.1.2
AP system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface atm0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
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6.3.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
SU Configuration Files
6.3.2.1
SU resolve
device add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.3.65
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.3.64 ff:ff:ff:f8
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
6.3.2.2
SU system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
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6.3.3
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
6.3.3.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
AP
1.
Check all physical connections. It is a straight cable from the CS to the Switch,
and a rollover twist from the wall box to the switch (1-7,2-8).
2.
Check to see if your atmarp entries are in the ARP table on the CS. ( ./atmarp if
you are already in the /usr/local/sbin directory)
•
Add an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:11:14 (4) [~] # atmarp -s 192.168.2.50 0.0.34
•
View an atmarp table
root@cs1 11:12:52 (5) [~] # atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4 0.0.34
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
•
Delete an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:13:42 (6) [~] # atmarp -d 192.168.2.50
3.
Check route on CS, by typing route at the Command line.
•
Add a route
root@cs1 11:17:19 (8) [~] # route add -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.2.50
•
View the routing table
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5.2
root@cs1 11:18:51 (9) [~] #
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway
10.9.144.1
192.168.100.0 192.168.2.50
192.168.2.0 *
10.9.144.0
127.0.0.0
•
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
route
Genmask
255.255.255.255
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.0.0.0
Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
UH 0
0 eth0
UG 0
0 atm0
0 atm0
0 eth0
0 lo
Delete a route
root@cs1 11:20:26 (10) [~] # route del -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0
4.
•
Check the Switch for the correct PVC’s.
Log into the ATM switch and check that the PVCs are mapped correctly. The
following commands are for an FVC switch.
•
Add a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc add 101 0 34 be 102 0 34 be
Adding PVC i=101/0/34 o=102/0/34 to switch fabrice
Updating FLASH memory. Please wait ... Done.
•
Show the PVCs mapped in the switch
ADMIN Access_NGI>show pvc list id 0
-----------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
-----------------------------------------------------------1
•
101
34
102
34
Delete a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc del 1
SU
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
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U-NII Config & User Guide
terminated correctly at
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
5.2
the
radio.
The
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
termination
at
the
radio
uses
568B
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
6.3.3.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link
There are numerous reasons why you couldn’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
192.168.3.10 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the ipatm pvc is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
AP
192.168.2.50 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
4.
Check that there is a route in the AP that points to the SU’s terrestrial network.
192.168.2.50 ip> route
route add su1 192.168.3.64 192.168.100.3 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN via atm1
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.2.34 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm0
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
6.4 Hybrid CLIP_T Eth AP
PVC 768
192.168.100.3
RL
PVC 769
192.168.3.65 /29
BL
192.168.2.50 /27
SL
RL
BL
192.168.100.1
SL
MID 3
LAN
PVC 1025
PVC
1024
MID 0
192.168.100.4
RL
192.168.3.9 /29
BL
Eth Switch
SL
192.168.2.33 /27
MID 4
Router
VPN PVC
SU Data Path
Control Server
192.168.2.34 /27
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LAN
U-NII Config & User Guide
6.4.1
6.4.1.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP Configuration Files
AP resolve
device add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.2.50
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.2.32 ff:ff:ff:e0
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.33 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
route add su1 192.168.3.64 192.168.100.3 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN
route add su2 192.168.3.8 192.168.100.4 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm pvc lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/1024 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.4
6.4.1.2
AP system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
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6.4.1.3
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP Switchcli
tp default UBR 2667
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 769 atm25m 0 1025 default default perm epd
add atm25m 0 1025 atm25m 0 769 default default perm epd
6.4.2
SU1 Configuration Files
6.4.2.1
SU1 resolve
device add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.3.65
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.3.64 ff:ff:ff:f8
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
route add su2
192.168.3.8 192.168.100.4 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/769 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.4
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6.4.2.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
SU1 system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
6.4.3
SU2 Configuration Files
6.4.3.1
SU2 resolve
device add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.3.9
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.4
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.3.8 ff:ff:ff:f8
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
route add su1
192.168.3.64 192.168.100.3 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/1024 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/1025 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
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6.4.3.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
SU2 system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 4
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
6.4.4
Troubleshooting
6.4.4.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight-through cable. To connect the radio to a
network device (hub, switch, router) use an Ethernet cross-over cable (1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and that the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio.
The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the
radio and the computer you are trying to ping from.
6.4.4.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link
There are numerous reason why you couldn’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
192.168.3.65 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the “ipatm pvc” is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP
192.168.2.50 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
4.
Check that there is a route in the AP that points to the SU’s terrestrial network.
192.168.2.50 ip> route
route add su1 192.168.3.64 192.168.100.3 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN via atm1
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.2.33 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via eth0
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
7 CLIP_S
The CLIP_S configuration is when the AP acts as an ATM switch and the SU acts as a
router. This means that the AP will pass ATM cells at layer 2, and the SU will act as a router
analyzing all data at layer 3 and based upon destination IP address forward the data out the
proper interface.
In static mode you can configure the management traffic in either routed or a switched
configuration. Each section describes the pros and cons of each configuration so you can
decide which is best for your network.
7.1 CLIP_S Interactive
All assumptions for troubleshooting CLIP_S are based on the following diagram.
192.168.2.100 /24
192.168.2.50 /24
RL
PVC
61
RL
192.168.5.5
BL
SL
PVC
35 PVC
36
192.168.3.65 /29
BL
SL
MID 0
PVC
33
ATM Switch
PVC
32
LAN
PVC
33
PVC
36
Router
SU Management PVC
AP Management PVC
AP Registration PVC
SU Data PVC
192.168.5.1
Control Server
atm0 192.168.2.1 /24
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7.1.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Adding AP and SU to EMS
Dialogue boxes showing the information needed to add an AP or SU are shown below.
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7.1.2
7.1.2.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
AP Object
If the AP will not register make sure all the fields in the EMS database are correctly filled
in. Here are a few important points that should be kept in mind if the AP doesn’t register.
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
1.
Make sure the MAC address is correct. Without the correct MAC address the AP
can not register. You can verify what MAC address the AP is attempting to register with by
tailing the adapcs.log file. In the following example an AP is trying to register and is not found in
the database, which means when you created the object it had the wrong MAC address.
[root@cs1 /root]# tail -f /var/log/adapcs.log
CS[5025.8192](16Dec 12:36:03.027 ): AtmAccessPointImpl: Unknown ATM AP 00c0690c522f trying to register
2.
The management address must be on the same subnet as the atm0 interface on the
Control Server.
3.
Check that the PVCs are mapped correctly in the switch. Since the problem is
with the AP registering, pay close attention to how the registration PVC (61) and management
PVC are mapped.
ADMIN Access_NGI>show pvc list id 0
ADMIN Access_NGI>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
---------------------------------------------------------------------------1
101
101
32
33
102
102
61
33
4.
The “AS Port” has to be filled in with the proper port if you have chosen to
manage the anchor switch with the EMS (selected when creating the Control Server).
5.
Make sure the Control Server has the created the proper atmarp entries in it. There
should be an atmarp entry for every management address.
•
Lists atmarp entries
[root@cs1 /root]# atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4 0.0.33
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
7.1.2.2
SU Object
If the SU will not register make sure all the fields in the EMS database are filled in
properly. Here are a few important points that should be kept in mind if the SU doesn’t register.
Many different things can cause the SU not to register so after verifying all of these points and it
still doesn’t register the next step will be to troubleshoot the RF link. See RF troubleshooting
document.
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
1.
Make sure the MAC address is correct. Without the correct MAC address the SU
can not register. You can verify this by tailing the adapcs.log file. In this example an SU with
this MAC address is trying to register and is not found in the database, which means when you
created the object it had the wrong MAC address.
[root@cs1 /root]# tail -f /var/log/adapcs.log
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.926 ): Protocol: 00 00 00 00 01 00 00 01 00 14 00 04 00 c0 69 0b 58 7f b5 10
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.926 ): RegistrarProtocol: Registering SU 00c0690b587f (MID 1)
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.926 ): DynAccessPointImpl (CLIP_S AP): handleRegisterSU (SU 00c0690b587f)
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.926 ): DynAccessPointImpl (CLIP_S AP): no key - fetch details from EMSAgent
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.930 ): DynAccessPointImpl: CORBA::BAD_PARAM exception thrown (minor code=0)
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.930 ): DynAccessPointImpl: An SU is trying to register but I can't talk to an EMSAgent
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.931 ): DynAP (CLIP_S AP): Couldn't get details for registering SU 00c0690b587f
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.931 ): RegistrarProtocol: Deferring deregistration of MID 1
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:35.426 ): EMSProtocol: received message REGMSG_REGISTER_SU for CS
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:35.426 ): Protocol: message contents (20 bytes)
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:35.426 ): Protocol: 00 00 00 00 01 00 00 01 00 14 00 04 00 c0 69 0b 58 7f b5 10
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:35.426 ): RegistrarProtocol: SU 00c0690b587f is already registering
2.
The management address must be on the same subnet as the atm0 interface on the
Control Server. This only applies for the management address.
3.
Check that the PVCs are mapped correctly in the switch. Since the problem is
with the SU not registering, pay close attention to the registration (61) and management (280)
PVC mapping.
ADMIN Access_NGI>show pvc list id 0
ADMIN Access_NGI>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
---------------------------------------------------------------------------1
101
101
101
101
32
33
36
35
102
102
102
106
61
33
36
35
4.
Make sure the Control Server has the created the proper atmarp entries in it. There
should be an atmarp entry for every management address.
•
Lists atmarp entries
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
[root@cs1 /root]# atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.100, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4
0.0.36
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4
0.0.33
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
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5.2
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7.2 Static CLIP_S (routed management)
All assumptions for troubleshooting CLIP_S (routed management) are based on the
following diagram.
192.168.100.1
192.168.2.50 /27
192.168.100.3
PVC 768
RL
RL
192.168.5.5
BL
PVC 769
SL
SL
192.168.3.65 /29
BL
MID 0
MID 3
LAN
PVC
200
ATM Switch
SU Management PVC
PVC
34
AP Management PVC
SU Data PVC
Router
192.168.5.1
PC
192.168.2.34 /27
7.2.1
Routed Management PRO/CON
CLIP_S can be configured with switched management or routed management. Read
PRO/CON of both to help you decide which you would like use.
PRO
•
Only one ATMARP entry will need to be added to the termination router.
•
Can be easier to troubleshoot and isolate a problem in the network.
CON
•
Need to add a route and ipatm pvc for every SU that is added to the AP.
•
May need to add a route to multiple routers for each SU depending upon network
design.
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7.2.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP Configuration Files
7.2.2.1
AP resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.2.50
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.2.32 ff:ff:ff:e0
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.34 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/34 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.2.34
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
7.2.2.2
AP system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
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7.2.2.3
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP initswitchcli
tp default UBR 2667
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i 0 200 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 200 atm25m 0 769 default default perm epd
7.2.3
SU Configuration Files
7.2.3.1
SU resolve
device add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.3.65
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
device add atm2 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.5.5
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.3.64 ff:ff:ff:f8
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm2.home . 192.168.5.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.5.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
route add mgmt 192.168.2.32 192.168.100.1 ff:ff:ff:e0 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
ipatm pvc atm2 atm25m 0/769 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.5.1
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7.2.3.2
7.2.4
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
SU system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
Troubleshooting
7.2.4.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
AP
1.
Check all physical connections. It is a straight cable from the CS to the Switch,
and a rollover twist from the wall box to the switch (1-7,2-8).
2.
Check to see if your atmarp entries are in the ARP table on the CS. ( ./atmarp if
you are already in the /usr/local/sbin directory)
•
Add an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:11:14 (4) [~] # atmarp -s 192.168.2.50 0.0.34
•
View an atmarp table
root@cs1 11:12:52 (5) [~] # atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4 0.0.34
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
•
Delete an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:13:42 (6) [~] # atmarp -d 192.168.2.50
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3.
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Check route on CS, by typing route at the Command line.
•
Add a route
root@cs1 11:17:19 (8) [~] # route add -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.2.50
•
View the routing table
root@cs1 11:18:51 (9) [~] #
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway
10.9.144.1
192.168.100.0 192.168.2.50
192.168.2.0 *
10.9.144.0
127.0.0.0
•
route
Genmask
255.255.255.255
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.0.0.0
Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
UH 0
0 eth0
UG 0
0 atm0
0 atm0
0 eth0
0 lo
Delete a route
root@cs1 11:20:26 (10) [~] # route del -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0
4.
•
Check the Switch for the correct PVC’s.
Log into the ATM switch and check that the PVCs are mapped correctly. The
following commands are for an FVC switch.
•
Add a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc add 101 0 34 be 102 0 34 be
Adding PVC i=101/0/34 o=102/0/34 to switch fabrice
Updating FLASH memory. Please wait ... Done.
•
Show the PVCs mapped in the switch
ADMIN Access_NGI>show pvc list id 0
-----------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
-----------------------------------------------------------1
March 10, 2003
101
34
102
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•
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Delete a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc del 1
SU
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio. The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
7.2.4.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link
There are numerous reason why you couldn’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
192.168.3.10 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the ipatm pvc is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
AP
192.168.2.50 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
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4.
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Check that there is a route in the AP that points to the SU’s terrestrial network.
192.168.2.50 ip> route
route add su1 192.168.3.64 192.168.100.3 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN via atm1
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.2.34 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm0
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
7.3 Static CLIP_S (switched management)
All assumptions for troubleshooting CLIP_S are based on the following diagram.
192.168.100.3
PVC 768
192.168.100.1
RL
RL
192.168.5.5
BL
SL
SL
PVC
103
PVC 769
MID 0
MID 3
LAN
PVC
101
PVC
200
ATM Switch
192.168.3.65 /29
BL
SU Management PVC
PVC
103
PVC
101
AP Management PVC
SU Data PVC
Router
192.168.5.1
PC
192.168.100.254 /24
7.3.1
Switched Management PRO/CON
CLIP_S can be configured with switched management or routed management. Read
PRO/CON of both to help you decide which you would like use.
PRO
•
No extra mgmt routes will have to be added to the termination router.
•
Multiple routes will not have to be added to network routers with the addition of
each SU.
CON
•
Will need to add an atmarp entry for each SU in the termination router.
•
Will need to add a management PVC in the switchcli of the AP for each SU.
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7.3.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP Configuration Files
7.3.2.1
AP resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.100.254 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/101 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.254
7.3.2.2
AP system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
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7.3.2.3
5.2
AP initswitchcli
tp default UBR 2667
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 768 atm25i
add atm25i 0 103 atm25m
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i
add atm25i 0 200 atm25m
7.3.3
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
103
768
200
769
default
default
default
default
default
default
default
default
perm epd
perm epd
perm epd
perm epd
SU Configuration Files
7.3.3.1
device
device
device
SU resolve
add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.3.65
add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
add atm2 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.5.5
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.3.64 ff:ff:ff:f8
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm2.home . 192.168.5.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.5.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.254
ipatm pvc atm2 atm25m 0/769 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.5.1
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7.3.3.2
7.3.4
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
SU system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
Troubleshooting
7.3.4.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
AP
1.
Check all physical connections. It is a straight cable from the CS to the Switch,
and a rollover twist from the wall box to the switch (1-7,2-8).
2.
Check to see if your atmarp entries are in the ARP table on the CS. ( ./atmarp if
you are already in the /usr/local/sbin directory)
•
Add an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:11:14 (4) [~] # atmarp -s 192.168.100.1 0.0.101
•
View an atmarp table
root@cs1 11:12:52 (5) [~] # atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.100.254, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.100.1, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4 0.0.101
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
•
Delete an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:13:42 (6) [~] # atmarp -d 192.168.100.1
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3.
•
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Check the Switch for the correct PVC’s.
Log into the ATM switch and check that the PVCs are mapped correctly. The
following commands are for an FVC switch.
•
Add a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc add 101 0 101 be 102 0 101 be
Adding PVC i=101/0/34 o=102/0/34 to switch fabrice
Updating FLASH memory. Please wait ... Done.
•
Show the PVCs mapped in the switch
ADMIN Access_NGI>show pvc list id 0
-----------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
-----------------------------------------------------------1
•
101
101
102
101
Delete a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc del 1
SU
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio. The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
7.3.4.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link
There are numerous reason why you couldn’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
192.168.3.10 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the that the pvc information is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
AP
192.168.100.254 switchcli> list all all perm
Displaying permanent entries for all ports.
port
vp
vc
port
vp
vc
atm25i
103 ==>
atm25m
768
atm25m
768 ==>
atm25i
103
atm25i
200 ==>
atm25m
769
atm25m
769 ==>
atm25i
200
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.254 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
8 Hybrid CLIP_S
The Hybrid CLIP_S configuration is a configuration that can be added onto an existing
CLIP_S static configuration. What this configuration allows you to do is create a VPN type
tunnel between two SUs across a network. This allows for two data paths: one to another private
network, and another to the internet. This can be done with either a switched or routed
management system.
8.1.1
8.1.1.1
AP1 Configuration Files
AP1 resolve
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.2.50
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.2.32 ff:ff:ff:e0
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.34 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/50 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.2.34
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
8.1.1.2
AP1 system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
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8.1.1.3
5.2
AP1 initswitchcli
tp default UBR 2667
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i
add atm25i 0 100 atm25m
add atm25m 0 770 atm25i
add atm25i 0 200 atm25m
8.1.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
100
769
200
770
default
default
default
default
default
default
default
default
perm epd
perm epd
perm epd
perm epd
SU1 Configuration Files
8.1.2.1
SU1 resolve
device add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.3.65
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
device add atm2 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.5.5
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.3.64 ff:ff:ff:f8
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm2.home . 192.168.5.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.5.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
route add su2 192.168.4.64 192.168.5.6 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN
route add mgmt 192.168.2.32 192.168.100.1 ff:ff:ff:e0 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
ipatm pvc atm2 atm25m 0/769 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.5.1
ipatm pvc atm2 atm25m 0/770 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.5.6
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8.1.2.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
SU1 system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
8.1.3
AP2 Configuration Files
8.1.3.1
AP2 resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.2.51
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.101.1
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.2.32 ff:ff:ff:e0
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.101.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.34 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/51 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.2.34
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.101.3
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8.1.3.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP2 system.conf
channel 2
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
8.1.3.3
AP2 initswitchcli
tp default UBR 2667
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i
add atm25i 0 101 atm25m
add atm25m 0 770 atm25i
add atm25i 0 200 atm25m
March 10, 2003
101
769
200
770
default
default
default
default
Company Confidential
default
default
default
default
perm epd
perm epd
perm epd
perm epd
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8.1.4
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
SU2 Configuration Files
8.1.4.1
device
device
device
SU2 resolve
add eth0 ether //edd mtu 1500 192.168.4.65
add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.101.3
add atm2 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.5.6
subnet add eth0.home . 192.168.4.64 ff:ff:ff:f8
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.101.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm2.home . 192.168.5.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.5.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
route add su1 192.168.3.64 192.168.5.5 ff:ff:ff:f8
1 # MAN
route add mgmt 192.168.2.32 192.168.101.1 ff:ff:ff:e0 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.101.1
ipatm pvc atm2 atm25m 0/769 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.5.1
ipatm pvc atm2 atm25m 0/770 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.5.5
8.1.4.2
SU2 system.conf
channel 2
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
duplex half
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
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8.1.5
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
8.1.5.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
AP
1.
Check all physical connections. It is a straight cable from the CS to the Switch,
and a rollover twist from the wall box to the switch (1-7,2-8).
2.
Check to see if your atmarp entries are in the ARP table on the CS. ( ./atmarp if
you are already in the /usr/local/sbin directory)
•
Add an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:11:14 (4) [~] # atmarp -s 192.168.2.50 0.0.34
•
View an atmarp table
root@cs1 11:12:52 (5) [~] # atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4 0.0.34
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
•
Delete an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:13:42 (6) [~] # atmarp -d 192.168.2.50
3.
Check route on CS, by typing route at the Command line.
•
Add a route
root@cs1 11:17:19 (8) [~] # route add -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.2.50
•
View the routing table
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5.2
root@cs1 11:18:51 (9) [~] #
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway
10.9.144.1
192.168.100.0 192.168.2.50
192.168.2.0 *
10.9.144.0
127.0.0.0
•
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
route
Genmask
255.255.255.255
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.0.0.0
Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
UH 0
0 eth0
UG 0
0 atm0
0 atm0
0 eth0
0 lo
Delete a route
root@cs1 11:20:26 (10) [~] # route del -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0
4.
•
Check the Switch for the correct PVC’s.
Log into the ATM switch and check that the PVCs are mapped correctly. The
following commands are for an FVC switch.
•
Add a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc add 101 0 34 be 102 0 34 be
Adding PVC i=101/0/34 o=102/0/34 to switch fabrice
Updating FLASH memory. Please wait ... Done.
•
Show the PVCs mapped in the switch
ADMIN Access_NGI>show pvc list id 0
-----------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
-----------------------------------------------------------1
•
101
34
102
34
Delete a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc del 1
SU
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
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terminated correctly at
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
5.2
the
radio.
The
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
termination
at
the
radio
uses
568B
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
8.1.5.2
Can’t ping across the wireless link
There are numerous reason why you couldn’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
192.168.3.10 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the ipatm pvc is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
AP
192.168.2.50 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
4.
Check that there is a route in the AP that points to the SU’s terrestrial network.
192.168.2.50 ip> route
route add su1 192.168.3.64 192.168.100.3 ff:ff:ff:f8 1 # MAN via atm1
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.2.34 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm0
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9 1483_T
The 1483_T configuration is where both the AP and the SU act as a layer 2 bridge. It is
important to understand that in this configuration data can only go from SU-AP & AP-SU within
the sector. Data will not be able to from SU-SU within the same sector. This can only be done
by connecting a router to the AP and redirecting that traffic back to the AP.
9.1 Interactive 1483_T
All assumptions for troubleshooting 1483_T are based on the following diagram.
192.168.3.9
RL
RL
BL
BL
SL
SL
192.168.3.10
MID 0
LAN
Ethernet HUB
Mgmt/Data
Router
192.168.3.1
9.1.1
Control Server
192.168.3.34
Adding AP or SU to EMS
Dialogue boxes showing the information needed to add an AP or SU are shown below.
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9.1.2
9.1.2.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
AP Object
If the AP will not register make sure all the fields in the EMS database are correctly filled
in. Here are a few important points that should be kept in mind if the AP doesn’t register.
1.
See if you can ping the unit. The default configuration is to have the AP receive a
DHCP address from the CS. If it has not received it you will not be able to ping it. So if you are
unable to ping the AP you should check and see that the dhcpd.conf file is setup properly. Notice
that in the example AP1 has a fixed address set, each AP must be given the same address every
time it leases an address. It is important to be aware that by default most routers will not pass
DHCP request unless they are specifically configured to do so.
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5.2
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#eth0
subnet 192.168.3.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
range 192.168.3.1 192.168.3.100;
option routers 192.168.3.1;
host AP1 {
hardware ethernet 0:c0:69:0c:52:2f;
fixed-address 192.168.3.9;
For various reasons it may be desired to not use DHCP to give an AP an address. In this
case the IP address can be statically assigned to the unit. To do this you will need to create a
resolve file that looks identical to the 1483_T static resolve file described in the section for Static
1483_T.
2.
Make sure the MAC address is correct. Without the correct MAC address the AP
can not register. You can verify this by tailing the adapcs.log file. In this example an SU with the
indicated MAC address is trying to register and is not found in the database. Either the SU was
not added to the EMS or was entered with the wrong MAC address.
[root@cs1 /root]# tail -f /var/log/adapcs.log
CS[12399.8192](16Dec 21:33:39.524 ): Protocol: 00 00 00 00 01 00 02 00 00 14 00 01 00 c0 69 0c 52 2f 77 94
CS[12399.8192](16Dec 21:33:39.524 ): DynAccessPointImpl (1483_T AP): handleEstablishConnection (AP 00c0690c522f)
CS[12399.8192](16Dec 21:33:39.524 ): DynAccessPointImpl (1483_T AP): Received ESTABLISH_CONNECTION message
from unknown AP ap_02 1216_135100016_111
3.
correct.
If the CS is on a different network, than the default route in the AP must be
9.1.2.2
SU Object
If the SU will not register make sure all the fields in the EMS database are filled in
properly. Here are a few important points that should be kept in mind if the SU doesn’t register.
Many different things can cause the SU not to register so after verifying all of these points and it
still doesn’t register the next step will be to troubleshoot the RF link. See RF troubleshooting.
1.
Make sure the MAC address is correct. Without the correct MAC address the AP
can not register. You can verify this by tailing the adapcs.log file. In this example an SU with
this MAC address is trying to register and is not found in the database, which means when you
created the object it had the wrong MAC address.
[root@cs1 /root]# tail -f /var/log/adapcs.log
CS[12801.8192](16Dec 21:39:20.034 ): Protocol: 00 00 00 00 01 00 00 05 00 14 00 04 00 c0 69 0b 58 7f b5 10
CS[12801.8192](16Dec 21:39:20.034 ): RegistrarProtocol: SU 00c0690b587f is already registering
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CS[12801.8192](16Dec 21:39:20.555 ): EMSProtocol: received message REGMSG_REGISTER_SU for CS
CS[12801.8192](16Dec 21:39:20.555 ): Protocol: message contents (20 bytes)
2.
Make sure the default route is correct if the SU is on a different network than the
Control Server.
3.
Verify that the SU has been upgraded to the 1483_T interactive configuration.
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5.2
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9.2 Static 1483_T
All assumptions for troubleshooting 1483_T will be based on the following diagram.
PVC 768
RL
192.168.3.9
RL
BL
BL
SL
SL
192.168.3.10
MID 0
MID 3
LAN
AP/SU Management/Data Path
Ethernet HUB
Router
192.168.3.1
PC
192.168.3.34
9.2.1
9.2.1.1
AP Configuration Files
AP resolve
device add bridge ether //bridge mtu 1500 192.168.3.9
subnet add bridge.home . 192.168.3.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.3.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
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5.2
9.2.1.2
AP initbridge
spanning disable
device add edd
device add mr1483
9.2.1.3
AP initmr1483
floodmode 1
up 3 768 atm25m 70000 70000
9.2.1.4
AP system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface eth0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
9.2.2
9.2.2.1
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
SU Configuration Files
SU resolve
device add bridge ether //bridge mtu 1500 192.168.3.10
subnet add bridge.home . 192.168.3.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.3.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
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5.2
9.2.2.2
SU initbridge
spanning disable
device add edd
device add r1483
9.2.2.3
SU system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
9.2.2.4
SU initr1483
pvc 0/768 atm25m 70000 70000
9.2.3
9.2.3.1
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface.
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio. The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
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9.2.3.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link.
There can be numerous reasons why you can’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check the 1483 processes in the radios. Make sure they are active and have the
correct PVC mapped.
AP (mr1483 command)
192.168.3.9 > mr1483 status 3
Device 3 is active
Active PVC: 768 Active port: atm25m
Pending PVC: 768 Pending port: atm25m
Active devices:
1 active in total
SU (r1483 command)
192.168.3.10 > r1483 pvc
Active PVC: 0/768
Active port: atm25m
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10 1483_S
In this configuration the AP acts as at ATM switch passing all cells at layer 2. The SU
acts as a 1483 Bridge.
10.1 Interactive 1483_S
All assumptions for troubleshooting 1483_S are based on the following diagram.
192.168.2.100 /24
192.168.2.50 /24
PVC
61
PVC
35
PVC
36
RL
RL
BL
BL
SL
SL
192.168.254.254
MID 0
PVC
33
ATM Switch
PVC
32
LAN
PVC
33
SU Management PVC
PVC
36
AP Management PVC
AP Registration PVC
SU Data PVC
Router
Control Server
atm0 192.168.2.1 /24
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10.1.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Adding AP and SU to EMS
Dialogue boxes showing the information needed to add an AP or SU are shown below.
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10.1.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
10.1.2.1
AP Object
If the AP will not register make sure all the fields in the EMS database are correctly filled
in. Here are a few important points that should be kept in mind if the AP doesn’t register.
1.
Make sure the MAC address is correct. Without the correct MAC address the AP
can not register. You can verify what MAC address the AP is attempting to register with by
tailing the adapcs.log file. In the following example an AP is trying to register and is not found in
the database, which means when you created the object it had the wrong MAC address.
[root@cs1 /root]# tail -f /var/log/adapcs.log
CS[5025.8192](16Dec 12:36:03.027 ): AtmAccessPointImpl: Unknown ATM AP 00c0690c522f trying to register
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2.
The management address must be on the same subnet as the atm0 interface on the
Control Server.
3.
Check that the PVCs are mapped correctly in the switch. Since the problem is
with the AP registering, pay close attention to how the registration PVC (61) and management
PVC are mapped.
ADMIN Access_NGI>show pvc list id 0
ADMIN Access_NGI>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
---------------------------------------------------------------------------1
101
101
32
33
102
102
61
33
4.
The “AS Port” has to be filled in with the proper port if you have chosen to
manage the anchor switch with the EMS (selected when creating the Control Server).
5.
Make sure the Control Server has the created the proper atmarp entries in it. There
should be an atmarp entry for every management address.
•
Lists atmarp entries
[root@cs1 /root]# atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4 0.0.33
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
10.1.2.2
SU Object
If the SU will not register make sure all the fields in the EMS database are filled in
properly. Here are a few important points that should be kept in mind if the SU doesn’t register.
Many different things can cause the SU not to register so after verifying all of these points and it
still doesn’t register the next step will be to troubleshoot the RF link. See RF troubleshooting
document.
1.
Make sure the MAC address is correct. Without the correct MAC address the SU
can not register. You can verify this by tailing the adapcs.log file. In this example an SU with
this MAC address is trying to register and is not found in the database, which means when you
created the object it had the wrong MAC address.
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[root@cs1 /root]# tail -f /var/log/adapcs.log
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.926 ): Protocol: 00 00 00 00 01 00 00 01 00 14 00 04 00 c0 69 0b 58 7f b5 10
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.926 ): RegistrarProtocol: Registering SU 00c0690b587f (MID 1)
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.926 ): DynAccessPointImpl (1483_S AP): handleRegisterSU (SU 00c0690b587f)
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.926 ): DynAccessPointImpl (1483_S AP): no key - fetch details from EMSAgent
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.930 ): DynAccessPointImpl: CORBA::BAD_PARAM exception thrown (minor code=0)
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.930 ): DynAccessPointImpl: An SU is trying to register but I can't talk to an EMSAgent
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.931 ): DynAP (1483_S AP): Couldn't get details for registering SU 00c0690b587f
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:34.931 ): RegistrarProtocol: Deferring deregistration of MID 1
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:35.426 ): EMSProtocol: received message REGMSG_REGISTER_SU for CS
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:35.426 ): Protocol: message contents (20 bytes)
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:35.426 ): Protocol: 00 00 00 00 01 00 00 01 00 14 00 04 00 c0 69 0b 58 7f b5 10
CS[5494.8192](16Dec 12:48:35.426 ): RegistrarProtocol: SU 00c0690b587f is already registering
2.
The management address must be on the same subnet as the atm0 interface on the
Control Server. This only applies for the management address.
3.
Check that the PVCs are mapped correctly in the switch. Since the problem is
with the SU not registering, pay close attention to the registration (61) and management (280)
PVC mapping.
ADMIN Access_NGI>show pvc list id 0
ADMIN Access_NGI>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
---------------------------------------------------------------------------1
101
101
101
101
32
33
36
35
102
102
102
106
61
33
36
35
4.
Make sure the Control Server has the created the proper atmarp entries in it. There
should be an atmarp entry for every management address.
•
Lists atmarp entries
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[root@cs1 /root]# atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.100, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4
0.0.36
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4
0.0.33
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
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10.2 Static 1483_S (routed management)
All assumptions for troubleshooting 1483_S are based on the following diagram.
PVC 768
192.168.100.3
192.168.2.50 /27
RL
RL
192.168.100.1
BL
192.168.3.10
BL
SL
PVC 769
SL
MID 3
MID 0
LAN
PVC
300
SU Management PVC
AP Management PVC
PVC
34
ATM Switch
SU Data PVC
Router
192.168.3.1
PC
192.168.2.34 /27
10.2.1
Routed Management PRO/CON
1483_S can be configured with switched management or routed management. Read
PRO/CON of both to help you decide which you would like use.
PRO
•
Only one ATMARP entry will need to be added to the termination router.
•
Can be easier to troubleshoot and isolate a problem in the network.
CON
•
Need to add a route and ipatm pvc for every SU that is added to the AP.
•
May need to add a route to multiple routers for each SU depending upon network
design.
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10.2.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP Configuration Files
10.2.2.1
AP resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.2.50
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.2.32 ff:ff:ff:e0
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.34 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/34 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.2.34
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
10.2.2.2
AP system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
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10.2.2.3
10.2.3
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP initswitchcli
tp default UBR 70000
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i 0 300 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 300 atm25m 0 769 default default perm epd
SU Configuration Files
10.2.3.1
SU resolve
device add bridge ether //bridge mtu 1500 192.168.3.10
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
subnet add bridge.home . 192.168.3.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route
route
relay
ipatm
ipatm
10.2.3.2
add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.3.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
add mgmt 192.168.2.32 192.168.100.1 ff:ff:ff:e0 1 # MAN
all
lifetime 60
pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
SU initbridge
spanning disable
device add edd
device add r1483
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5.2
10.2.3.3
SU system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
10.2.3.4
SU initr1483
pvc 0/769 atm25m 70000 70000
10.2.4
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
10.2.4.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
AP
1.
Check all physical connections. It is a straight cable from the CS to the Switch,
and a rollover twist from the wallbox to the switch (1-7,2-8).
2.
Check to see if your atmarp entries are in the ARP table on the CS ( ./atmarp if
you are already in the /usr/local/sbin directory).
•
Add an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:11:14 (4) [~] # atmarp -s 192.168.2.50 0.0.340
•
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View an atmarp table
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root@cs1 11:12:52 (5) [~] # atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4
0.0.34
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
•
Delete an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:13:42 (6) [~] # atmarp -d 192.168.2.50
3.
Check route on CS, by typing route at the Command line.
•
Add a route
root@cs1 11:17:19 (8) [~] # route add -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.2.50
•
View the routing table
root@cs1 11:18:51 (9) [~] #
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway
10.9.144.1
192.168.100.0 192.168.2.50
192.168.2.0 *
10.9.144.0
127.0.0.0
•
route
Genmask
255.255.255.255
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.0.0.0
Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
UH 0
0 eth0
UG 0
0 atm0
0 atm0
0 eth0
0 lo
Delete a route
root@cs1 11:20:26 (10) [~] # route del -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0
4.
•
Check the Switch for the correct PVC’s.
Log into the ATM switch and check that the PVCs are mapped correctly. The
following commands are for an FVC switch.
•
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Add a PVC
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ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc add 101 0 34 be 102 0 34 be
Adding PVC i=101/0/34 o=102/0/34 to switch fabrice
Updating FLASH memory. Please wait ... Done.
•
Show the PVCs mapped in the switch
ADMIN Access_NGI> show pvc list id 0
-----------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
-----------------------------------------------------------1
•
101
34
102
34
Delete a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI> set pvc del 1
SU
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio. The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
10.2.4.2
Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link.
There can be numerous reasons why you can’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
192.168.3.10 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the ipatm pvc is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
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AP
192.168.2.50 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
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Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
10.3 Static 1483_S (switched management)
All assumptions for troubleshooting 1483_S are based on the following diagram.
192.168.100.3
PVC 768
192.168.100.1
PVC
103
RL
RL
BL
BL
SL
SL
PVC 769
MID 0
MID 3
LAN
PVC
101
PVC
200
ATM Switch
192.168.3.10
SU Management PVC
PVC
103
PVC
101
AP Management PVC
SU Data PVC
Router
192.168.3.1
PC
192.168.100.254 /24
10.3.1
Switched Management PRO/CON
CLIP_S can be configured with switched management or routed management. Read
PRO/CON of both to help you decide which you would like use.
PRO
•
No extra mgmt routes will have to be added to the termination router.
•
Multiple routes will not have to be added to network routers with the addition of
each SU.
CON
•
Will need to add an atmarp entry for each SU in the termination router.
•
Will need to add a management PVC in the switchcli of the AP for each SU.
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10.3.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP Configuration Files
10.3.2.1
AP resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.100.254 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/101 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.254
10.3.2.2
AP system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
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10.3.2.3
5.2
AP initswitchcli
tp default UBR 70000
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 768 atm25i
add atm25i 0 103 atm25m
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i
add atm25i 0 200 atm25m
10.3.3
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
103
768
200
769
default
default
default
default
default
default
default
default
perm epd
perm epd
perm epd
perm epd
SU Configuration Files
10.3.3.1
SU resolve
device add bridge ether //bridge mtu 1500 192.168.3.10
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
subnet add bridge.home . 192.168.3.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route
relay
ipatm
ipatm
10.3.3.2
add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.3.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
all
lifetime 60
pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.254
SU initbridge
spanning disable
device add edd
device add r1483
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5.2
10.3.3.3
SU system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
10.3.3.4
SU initr1483
pvc 0/769 atm25m 70000 70000
10.3.4
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
10.3.4.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
AP
1.
Check all physical connections. It is a straight cable from the CS to the Switch,
and a rollover twist from the wall box to the switch (1-7,2-8).
2.
Check to see if your atmarp entries are in the ARP table on the CS. ( ./atmarp if
you are already in the /usr/local/sbin directory)
•
Add an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:11:14 (4) [~] # atmarp -s 192.168.100.1 0.0.101
•
View an atmarp table
root@cs1 11:12:52 (5) [~] # atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.100.254, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.100.1, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4 0.0.101
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
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•
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Delete an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:13:42 (6) [~] # atmarp -d 192.168.100.1
3.
•
Check the Switch for the correct PVC’s.
Log into the ATM switch and check that the PVCs are mapped correctly. The
following commands are for an FVC switch.
•
Add a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc add 101 0 101 be 102 0 101 be
Adding PVC i=101/0/34 o=102/0/34 to switch fabrice
Updating FLASH memory. Please wait ... Done.
•
Show the PVCs mapped in the switch
ADMIN Access_NGI>show pvc list id 0
-----------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
-----------------------------------------------------------1
•
101
101
102
101
Delete a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc del 1
SU
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio. The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
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10.3.4.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Can’t ping across the wireless link
There are numerous reason why you couldn’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
192.168.3.10 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the that the pvc information is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
AP
192.168.100.254 switchcli> list all all perm
Displaying permanent entries for all ports.
port
vp
vc
port
vp
vc
atm25i
103 ==>
atm25m
768
atm25m
768 ==>
atm25i
103
atm25i
200 ==>
atm25m
769
atm25m
769 ==>
atm25i
200
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.254 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
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11 Native ATM
In this configuration the AP and the SU act as an ATM switch. Both AP and SU will pass
any ATM cells without looking at upper level protocols.
11.1 Static Native ATM
All assumptions for troubleshooting Native ATM are based on the following diagram.
PVC 768
192.168.2.50
RL
192.168.100.3
PVC
192.168.100.1
769
BL
192.168.9.99
BL
PVC 200
PVC
99
SL
SL
PVC 770
MID 0
PVC
200
RL
PVC 300
MID 3
PV C
300
SU Management PVC
ATM Switch
AP Management PVC
ATM Switch
PVC
250
SU Data PVC
ATM Network
ATM Network
PC
192.168.2.34
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11.1.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP Configuration Files
11.1.1.1
AP resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.2.50
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.2.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.34 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/250 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.2.34
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
11.1.1.2
AP system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
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11.1.1.3
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP initswitchcli
tp default UBR 70000
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i 0 200 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 200 atm25m 0 769 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 300 atm25m 0 770 default default perm epd
add atm25m 0 770 atm25i 0 300 default default perm epd
11.1.2
SU Configuration Files
11.1.2.1
SU resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.9.99
device add atm1
atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.9.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/99 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.9.1
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
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5.2
11.1.2.2
SU system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
11.1.2.3
SU initswitchcli
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
tp default UBR 70000
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i 0 200 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 200 atm25m 0 769 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 300 atm25m 0 770 default default perm epd
add atm25m 0 770 atm25i 0 300 default default perm epd
11.1.3
Troubleshooting
11.1.3.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
AP
1.
Check all physical connections. It is a straight cable from the CS to the Switch,
and a rollover twist from the wallbox to the switch (1-7,2-8).
2.
Check to see if your atmarp entries are in the ARP table on the CS. ( ./atmarp if
you are already in the /usr/local/sbin directory)
•
Add an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:11:14 (4) [~] # atmarp -s 192.168.2.50 0.0.250
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•
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
View an atmarp table
root@cs1 11:12:52 (5) [~] # atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4
0.0.250
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
•
Delete an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:13:42 (6) [~] # atmarp -d 192.168.2.50
3.
Check route on CS, by typing route at the Command line.
•
Add a route
root@cs1 11:17:19 (8) [~] # route add -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.2.50
•
View the routing table
root@cs1 11:18:51 (9) [~] #
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway
10.9.144.1
192.168.100.0 192.168.2.50
192.168.2.0 *
192.168.2.0 *
10.9.144.0
127.0.0.0
•
route
Genmask
255.255.255.255
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.0.0.0
Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
UH 0
0 eth0
UG 0
0 atm0
0 atm0
0 atm0
0 eth0
0 lo
Delete a route
root@cs1 11:20:26 (10) [~] # route del -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0
4.
•
Check the Switch for the correct PVC’s.
Log into the ATM switch and check that the PVCs are mapped correctly. The
following commands are for an FVC switch.
•
March 10, 2003
Add a PVC
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Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc add 101 0 250 be 102 0 250 be
Adding PVC i=101/0/250 o=102/0/250 to switch fabrice
Updating FLASH memory. Please wait ... Done.
•
Show the PVCs mapped in the switch
ADMIN Access_NGI> show pvc list id 0
-----------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
-----------------------------------------------------------1
•
101
250
102
250
Delete a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI> set pvc del 1
SU
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio.
The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
11.1.3.2
Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link.
There can be numerous reasons why you can’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
192.168.3.10 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the ipatm pvc is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
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Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
AP
192.168.2.50 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
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12 Extender
The Extender (PTP) units operate in the same manner as the AB-Access (PMP) units.
The Ethernet Extender configuration and operation are almost identical to the 1483_T
configuration except they use a single port bridge which is more efficient.
The ATM Extender configuration and operation is identical to the Native_ATM
configuration, where as the AP and the SU act as an ATM switch. Both AP and SU will pass any
ATM cells without looking at upper level protocols.
BHM = Backhaul Master
BHS = Backhaul Slave
12.1 Ethernet Extender
All assumptions for troubleshooting the Ethernet Extender are based on the following diagram.
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12.1.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
BHM Configuration Files
12.1.1.1
BHM resolve
device add bridge ether //bridge mtu 1500 192.168.3.9
subnet add bridge.home . 192.168.3.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.3.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
12.1.1.2
BHM initbridge
spanning disable
device add edd
device add r1483
12.1.1.3
BHM initr1483
pvc 0/768 atm25m 70000 70000
12.1.1.4
BHM system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface eth0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
max_mid 254
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12.1.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
BHS Configuration Files
12.1.2.1
BHS resolve
device add bridge ether //bridge mtu 1500 192.168.3.10
subnet add bridge.home . 192.168.3.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.3.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
12.1.2.2
BHS initbridge
spanning disable
device add edd
device add r1483
12.1.2.3
BHS system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface eth0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
12.1.2.4
BHS initr1483
pvc 0/768 atm25m 70000 70000
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12.1.3
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Troubleshooting
12.1.3.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface.
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio. The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
12.1.3.2
Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link.
There can be numerous reasons why you can’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check the 1483 processes in the radios. Make sure they are active and have the
correct PVC mapped.
BHM (r1483 command)
192.168.3.9 > r1483 pvc
Active PVC: 3/768
Active port: atm25m
BHS (r1483 command)
192.168.3.10 > r1483 pvc
Active PVC: 0/768
Active port: atm25m
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5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
12.2 ATM Extender
All assumptions for troubleshooting the ATM Extender are based on the following diagram.
PVC 768
192.168.2.50
RL
192.168.100.3
PVC
192.168.100.1
769
BL
192.168.9.99
BL
PVC 200
PVC
99
SL
SL
PVC 770
MID 0
PVC
200
RL
PV C
300
SU Management PVC
PVC 300
MID 3
ATM Switch
AP Management PVC
ATM Switch
PVC
250
SU Data PVC
ATM Network
ATM Network
Mgmt Server
192.168.2.34
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12.2.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
BHM Configuration Files
12.2.1.1
BHM resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.2.50
device add atm1 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.1
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.2.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.2.34 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/250 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.2.34
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
12.2.1.2
BHM system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 0
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds active
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12.2.1.3
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
BHM initswitchcli
tp default UBR 70000
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i 0 200 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 200 atm25m 0 769 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 300 atm25m 0 770 default default perm epd
add atm25m 0 770 atm25i 0 300 default default perm epd
12.2.2
BHS Configuration Files
12.2.2.1
BHS resolve
device add atm0 atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.9.99
device add atm1
atm //bun mtu 1500 192.168.100.3
subnet add atm1.home . 192.168.100.0 ff:ff:ff:00
subnet add atm0.home . 192.168.9.0 ff:ff:ff:00
rip send all none
rip accept all none
route add default 0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN
relay all
ipatm lifetime 60
ipatm pvc atm0 atm25i 0/99 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.9.1
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
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12.2.2.2
BHS system.conf
channel 0
antenna horizontal
mode static
mid 3
bid 0
interface atm0
backoff 0
provider abw
key Axxcelera
mask 1ffff
leds debug
12.2.2.3
BHS initswitchcli
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
tp default UBR 70000
sp default 256 stats
add atm25m 0 769 atm25i 0 200 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 200 atm25m 0 769 default default perm epd
add atm25i 0 300 atm25m 0 770 default default perm epd
add atm25m 0 770 atm25i 0 300 default default perm epd
12.2.3
Troubleshooting
12.2.3.1
Can’t ping the radio from the terrestrial interface
AP
1.
Check all physical connections. It is a straight cable from the CS to the Switch,
and a rollover twist from the wallbox to the switch (1-7,2-8).
2.
Check to see if your atmarp entries are in the ARP table on the CS. ( ./atmarp if
you are already in the /usr/local/sbin directory)
•
Add an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:11:14 (4) [~] # atmarp -s 192.168.2.50 0.0.250
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•
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View an atmarp table
root@cs1 11:12:52 (5) [~] # atmarp -a
----- Itf 0 (192.168.2.1, netmask 255.255.255.0) ----Default QOS: ubr,aal5:max_sdu=9188
IP 192.168.2.50, state VALID, addr , flags 0x4
0.0.250
----- Unknown incoming connections --------- Incoming unidirectional connections --------- End of dump -----
•
Delete an atmarp entry
root@cs1 11:13:42 (6) [~] # atmarp -d 192.168.2.50
3.
Check route on CS, by typing route at the Command line.
•
Add a route
root@cs1 11:17:19 (8) [~] # route add -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.2.50
•
View the routing table
root@cs1 11:18:51 (9) [~] #
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway
10.9.144.1
192.168.100.0 192.168.2.50
192.168.2.0 *
192.168.2.0 *
10.9.144.0
127.0.0.0
•
route
Genmask
255.255.255.255
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.0
255.0.0.0
Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
UH 0
0 eth0
UG 0
0 atm0
0 atm0
0 atm0
0 eth0
0 lo
Delete a route
root@cs1 11:20:26 (10) [~] # route del -net 192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0
4.
•
Check the Switch for the correct PVC’s.
Log into the ATM switch and check that the PVCs are mapped correctly. The
following commands are for an FVC switch.
•
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ADMIN Access_NGI>set pvc add 101 0 250 be 102 0 250 be
Adding PVC i=101/0/250 o=102/0/250 to switch fabrice
Updating FLASH memory. Please wait ... Done.
•
Show the PVCs mapped in the switch
ADMIN Access_NGI> show pvc list id 0
-----------------------------------------------------------PVC ID IPort IVPI IVCI BW OPort OVPI OVCI BW
-----------------------------------------------------------1
•
101
250
102
250
Delete a PVC
ADMIN Access_NGI> set pvc del 1
SU
1.
Check all physical connections. The radio is a network device, which means if
you connect it to a PC (NIC) you will use a straight cable. If you connect the radio to a network
device (hub, switch, router) you will use a Ethernet cross-over cable(1-3, 2-6). It is also
important to check that the cable is punched down correctly in the wall box and the cable is
terminated correctly at the radio.
The termination at the radio uses 568B
(wo,o,wg,bl,wbl,g,wbr,br).
2.
Make sure the computer you are pinging from is on the same network as the AP.
If you are on a different network than the radio make sure you have the proper routes in the radio
and the computer you are trying to ping from.
12.2.3.2
Can’t ping the radio across the wireless link.
There can be numerous reasons why you can’t ping across the wireless link. After
following these troubleshooting steps and you still can’t ping across the wireless link refer to the
RF troubleshooting document.
1.
Check that SU has the proper MID.
192.168.3.10 hmm> system mid
MID 3
2.
Check the ipatm pvc is correct in relation to the MID and remoteip
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AP
192.168.2.50 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.3
SU
192.168.3.65 ip> ipatm pvc
ipatm pvc atm1 atm25m 0/768 pcr 70000/70000 remoteip 192.168.100.1
3.
Check the default route in the SU.
192.168.3.65 ip> route
route add default
0.0.0.0 192.168.100.1 00:00:00:00 1 # MAN via atm1
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13 RF Design and Planning
13.1 Overview
The AB-Access system is a communications system using wireless technology in the UNII & ISM frequency bands. Therefore understanding Radio Frequency (RF) system design is
necessary to ensure gook link quality and, thus, good system performance. This section discusses
the basics of RF Design and Planning from the perspective of deploying the AB-Access System.
13.2 The U-NII & ISM Channel Plan
In 1997 the FCC amended its Part 15 rules to make 300 MHz of spectrum available for
high-speed wireless digital communications with unlicensed operation. This band, called the
Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure or U-NII band, provides the spectrum at 5.15 to
5.25 GHz for indoor use, and 5.25 to 5.35 and 5.725 to 5.825 GHz for outdoor use. The peak
output power permitted is limited to 23 dBm EIRP in the lower (indoor) band, 30 dBm in the
mid-band, and 36 dBm in the upper band.
The 5.8 GHz ISM (Industrial Scientific and Medical) band ranges from 5.725-5.850 GHz.
Which is an unlicensed frequency limited to 36 dBm for PTMP equipment. The limit for PTP is
higher than PTMP.
NOTE: AB-Access uses both the U-NII and ISM band for its upper band channels.
NOTE: BPSK modulation is only approved by the FCC for the upper band
channels.
13.3 Air Interface
The SU talks to the AP over a proprietary airlink protocol on a single 15 MHz channel
using QPSK or BPSK modulation and a technique called Time Division Duplex (TDD). Both
upstream and downstream traffic time-share this channel.
13.4 Wireless MAC
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When data is sent over the wireless link it must first be put into a structure that each end
unit will understand. The hardware that does this is called the MAC (Medium Access
Controller).
idl
down-stream
- F
R AC Cell
idl
up-stream
Cell
SU
- AC
SU
-R
SU
- Cell
Cell
Variable length MAC
ATT
13.4.1
13.4.1.1
FDHDR
RG
DACK
DCELL
STT
RR
UACK
UCELL/
UCELLR
Downstream burst
Access Point Turnaround Time (ATT)
AB-Access system is TDD (Time Division Duplexing), meaning that the AP and SUs
transmit and receive on the same frequency. It is therefore necessary to have a small delay
between the transmit and receive processes, because it is using the same hardware to perform
both functions.
13.4.1.2
Frame Descriptor Header (FDHDR)
Downstream bursts begin with a Frame Descriptor Header (FDHDR) this portion of the
MAC frame is seen by all SUs in that sector. The FDHDR contains a map of all traffic upstream
and downstream, to occur within the MAC frame. This is why you assign a unit a MID, when an
SU sees an FDHDR it looks for its MID in the FDHDR to see if it is going to receive any cells. If
it does not see its MID it will ignore the rest of the frame.
13.4.1.3
Reservation Grant (RG)
The next field in the downstream burst is the Reservation Grant Response (RGR). An
RGR is a response to an Reservation Grant Request (Upstream Burst). The RGR acknowledges a
request and tells the SU that it can transmit on the upstream burst.
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Downstream Acknowledgement (DACK)
The Downstream Acknowledgement (DACK) is an acknowledgement sent from the AP,
which contains bit maps corresponding to the success or failure of individual cells sent to an SU
in the previous frame. If any cells were missed or dropped they will be resent in the next frame.
13.4.1.5
Downstream Data Cells (DCELL)
The Data Cells are the actual ATM cells that contain data. The maximum ATM cells per
frame are 32. The maximum ATM cells that can be sent to an individual SU is 6 per frame.
13.4.1.6
Subscriber Turnaround Time (STT)
AB-Access system is TDD (Time Division Duplexing), meaning that the AP and SUs
transmit and receive on the same frequency. It is therefore necessary to have a small delay
between transmit and receive processes, because it is using the same hardware to perform both
functions. There is also a set delay for each individual SU. This delay in turnaround is to
compensate for propagation delay.
13.4.1.7
Reservation Request (RR)
The Reservation Grant Request (RR) is a request sent by the SU to the AP when it has
data to send. The RGR is a contention based request, meaning it performs like an Ethernet
network were there is no guarantee that it will be received by the AP on the first try. This would
happen when another SU wants to transmit at the same time and would cause a collision. If a
collision occurs the SU will try again until it is acknowledged with a Reservation Grant
Response.
13.4.1.8
Upstream Acknowledgement (UACK)
The Upstream Acknowledgement (UACK) contains bit maps corresponding to the
success or failure of individual cells from an AP. If any cells were missed or dropped they will
be resent in the next frame.
13.4.1.9
Upstream Cell (UCELL/UCELLR)
The UCELL’s are the actual ATM cells that contain data. The maximum ATM cells per
frame are 32. The maximum ATM cells that can be sent to an AP by an individual SU is 6 per
frame. The UCELLR is a data cell that also has a Reservation Grant Request if the SU has more
than 6 data cells to send. The reason for this is so that the SU doesn’t have to contend for another
Reservation Grant in the contention slot.
13.5 Delay Compensation
During the upstream portion of the MAC several SUs transmit in sequence. Since SUs
are separated from the AP by anywhere from 0m to 16km, there is a wide range of propagation
times for the full path for the AP to the SUs and back. In order for the SUs transmissions to
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arrive at the AP properly aligned, some active compensation of propagation delay is performed.
An SU must delay compensate before it can transmit data, if it was allowed to transmit without
delay compensating it would confuse the AP because it would be receiving cells out of order.
As you can see in this diagram the dark green portion of the MAC frame represent time
delays.
AP
timing
FD
RG
WT1
timing
ACK
FD
ACK
RG
WT2
timing
ACK
FD
RG
Cell
ACK
ACK
Cell
Cell
ACK
Cell
Cell
RR
RR
Cell
RR
Ack
ACK
Cell
Ack
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
max propagation
delay
AP
timing
FD
RG
WT1
timing
ACK
FD
WT2
timing
ACK
RG
FD
ACK
RG
Cell
ACK
ACK
Cell
Cell
ACK
Cell
Cell
RR
Cell
RR
ACK
RR
Ack
Cell
Ack
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
max propagation
delay
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13.6 RF Channels spacing and output power
C hannel C enter Freq EIR P
(G H z)
(dB m )
----------------------------------------------0*
1*
2*
3*
4*
5.17
5.185
5.2
5.215
5.230
19
19
19
19
19
5.17
-18.5dB
5.27
5.285
5.3
5.315
5.33
5.745
5.76
5.775
5.79
5.805
5.820
5.835
5.27
M iddle B and
5.285
5.3
5.315
5.33
26
26
26
26
26
-18.5dB
----------------------------------------------10
11
12
13
14
15
16
5.25
5.15
----------------------------------------------5
Low B and * Indoor O nly
5.185
5.2
5.215 5.230
5.35
5.25
H igh B and
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
5.745
5.760
5.775
5.790
5.805
5.820 5.835
-18.5dB
5.725
B and Edge
G uard
5.850
U N II & IS M Frequency S pacing
for A B -A ccess 5-6G H z
13.7 TDD (Time Division Duplex)
The AB-Access system uses TDD (Time Division Duplex) to transfer data across the
wireless link as opposed to FDD (Frequency Division Duplex). The AB-Access implementation
of the TDD architecture allows the TDD frame to dynamically vary in size according to the
offered load: short frames when fewer users are sharing the channel, longer frames when there
are many simultaneous users. The TDD guard time is also adaptive, as it is set to round trip
propagation delay to the farthest SU. TDD has a number of advantages over a FDD system.
These include:
•
Spectral Efficiency – TDD can be deployed using less spectrum than a comparable
FDD system. A single TDD channel can be deployed per sector instead of two
channels needed for FDD. Likewise, a multi-cell deployment can be installed using a
total of three RF channels (both polarizations), whereas FDD needs four to six
channels.
•
Complexity – Since each transceiver is wither transmitting or receiving, but never
both at once, a single RF front end can be shared reducing the radio complexity.
•
Power Control – In cellular systems, where channels are reused many times
throughout the system in order to increase capacity, the highest efficiency is realized
when the power in each direction can be minimized. This reduces the amount of
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energy that is ‘leaked’ into surrounding areas, which appears as interference. In FDD
systems, it is quite difficult to accurately control the channel’s power since a feedback
path is required. No such path is needed in a TDD system since the same channel is
used in both directions. The SU needs to only measure the received power from the
AP in order to know how much to attenuate its upstream transmission.
•
Channel Efficiency – Because each frame carries upstream and downstream traffic
in proportion to the offered load in each direction, adaptive TDD systems are highly
efficient in its use of bandwidth. FDD systems have to make an estimate of the traffic
mixture and allocate channel bandwidth accordingly. As shown in the chart below,
any variation from this estimate (in this case 15:1 downlink) will result in wasted
bandwidth. This variation is inevitable due to the diurnal variation of business usage
during the daytime hours, residential usage in the afternoon and evening, a varying
mixture of user types according to the geographic location, and an ever-changing set
of user applications.
13.8 AP and SU Specifications
13.8.1
AP/SU/Extender Functional Block Diagram
The Access Point and Subscriber Unit functional block diagram is shown below. The
analog radio portion is highlighted in blue, while the digital section containing the
modem is in yellow.
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13.8.2
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Radio Specifications
This table represents the radio specifications for AP, SU, and Extender units.
Frequency of operation
5.150GHz to 5350GHz & 5.725GHz to 5.850 GHz
RF bandwidth
325 MHz
Channelization
15 MHz
FCC 26 dB Bandwidth
17.5 MHz (assumes QPSK with Raised Cosine Filtering, α=0.35)
typical
Output Power into antenna
Lower-band 1 dBm (include 3.5 dB backoff, max)
Mid-band 8 dBm (includes 3.5 dB backoff, max)
Upper-band 14 dBm (5.6km units) (includes 3.5 dB backoff, max)
Upper –band 16 dBm (8.0km units)(includes 3.5 backoff, max)
Spurious emissions
-17 dBm/MHz within 10 MHz of upper band (max)
-27 dBm/MHz beyond 10 MHz of upper band (max)
Blocking rejection
60 dB fc ± 50 MHz to ± 100 MHz (min)
70 dB fc + 100 MHz to 8 GHz (min)
70 dB fc 100 MHz to 4 GHz (min)
80 dB DC to 4 GHz and 7 to 12 GHz (min)
U-NII & ISM band blocking level
-41 dBm
Adjacent channel rejection
-25 dB (min)
Receiver noise figure
-7 dB (max)
Sensitivity
-81.6 dBm for 10^-4 demodulated BER
AGC range
55 dB
AGC accuracy
±1 dB
AGC response time
<200 ns
Transmit / receive switching time
<5 µs
Receive / transmit switching time
<2 µs
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Channel switching time
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
<100 µs
Horizontal / Vertical antenna switching <5 µs
time
13.8.3
Subscriber Unit Antenna
Peak gain
18 dBi
3 dB beamwidth
20º azimuth x 20º elevation
Front-to-back ratio
30 dB (min)
Sidelobe suppression
15 dB (min)
Input impedance
50 ohms
Polarization
Linear – vertical or horizontal switchable
VSWR
2:1 (max)
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Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Access Point Antenna
Peak gain
18 dBi
3 dB beamwidth
60º azimuth x 7º elevation
Front-to-back ratio
25 dB (min)
Sidelobe suppression
15 dB (min)
Input impedance
50 ¾ ohms
Polarization
Linear – vertical or horizontal switchable
VSWR
2:1 (max)
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Extender Antenna
Peak gain
23 dBi
3 dB beamwidth
10º azimuth x 10º elevation
Front-to-back ratio
25 dB (min)
Sidelobe suppression
15 dB (min)
Input impedance
50 ¾ ohms
Polarization
Linear – vertical or horizontal switchable
VSWR
2:1 (max)
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13.9 Topology Types
To properly deploy the AB-Access System, one must understand the
geographical physical topology. While the real world possibilities are endless, the
following three distinctive geographic topologies will be covered:
•
Macrocells
•
Microcells
•
Picocells
A Macrocell design should be used when you are trying to provide ubiquitous
coverage over a large area. Each cell has many Subscribers. The fundamental limit
in deploying in this manner is usually coverage zone (cell radius) due to U-NII &
ISM EIRP limits, as well as building and terrain obstructions.
A Microcell is normally used when you are trying to provide high density coverage to
a smaller geographic area. Each cell sector has many subscribers per sector. The
fundamental limit in deploying in this manner is co-channel interference due to LOS
interference paths.
A Picocell design normally covers an extremely small geographic area such as a
neighbourhood or a Multiple Dwelling Unit (MDU) complex. There are normally
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many sectors and few subscribers per sector. The fundamental limit in deploying in
this manner is Line of Sight (LOS) coverage.
While the above are generalizations, they can be used effectively as a starting point
for developing an RF plan for deployment. However, based upon the specifications
of the AB-Access equipment, it is necessary to have some pre-defined RF coloring
schemes. To better understand the benefits of different coloring schemes, a basic
concept of interference types should be understood.
13.10 Interference Types
There are four distinct types of interference that can occur in a cellular reuse pattern.
Each unique in its geometry and imposes unique frequency reuse constraints.
EFFECT
INTERFERENCE TYPE
Would affect only the one SU. Could Type 1 – Downlink
affect other units if they are in the
Downlink to Subscriber Unit Interfered with by another
same area.
Access Point transmission.
Would affect only the one SU. Could Type 2 – Downlink
affect other units if they are in the
Downlink to Subscriber Unit Interfered with by a Subscriber
same area.
Unit Uplink in another cell.
Would affect all units in the sector. Type 3 – Uplink
This would be a constant source of
Uplink to Access Point Interfered with by another Access
interference.
Point transmission.
Becomes critical if facets using same frequency face each
other.
Would affect all units in the sector. Type 4 – Uplink
Could be an intermittent problem
based on the amount of data that Uplink to Access Point Interfered with by a Subscriber Unit
uplink from another cell.
interfering SU is transmitting.
Hardest to eliminate and will reduce the performance of the
whole system.
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13.10.1
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Type 1 Interference
Downlink to Subscriber Unit
interfered with by another Access
Point Downlink. All Access Points
power control for full service at the
sector edge (in cusp). The worst
case scenario is when the SU (Cell
1) has the interfering AP at
Boresight (Cell 2) and is towards the
edge of its sector, i.e. min CNR from
its AP.
Cell 1
Interfer
ence
Cell 2
Interfering AP
Cell 1
13.10.2
Weak
Interference
path
Type 2 Interference
Downlink to Subscriber Unit
interfered with by a Subscriber Unit
Uplink in another cell. Worst case
scenario is interfering SU at range
(max Tx power), and victim SU at
range (lowest CNR) and SUs facing
each other, e.g. Cells 1 and 3. The
interference is reduced if SUs using
the same frequencies do not face
each other, e.g., Cells 1 and 2.
Strong
Interference
path
Cell 2
Cell 3
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Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
Type 3 Interference
Uplink to Access
Point interfered with by
another
Access
Point
Downlink. This is only an
issue if sectors using the
same frequency face each
other in the reuse pattern,
e.g., Cell 1 and Cell 3.
Otherwise it is a benign
interference type, e.g., Cell 1
and Cell 2.
Cell
Interferi
ng AP
Cell
Cell
Interference
path
13.10.4
Interfering AP
Type 4 Interference
Uplink to Access
Point interfered with by a
Subscriber Unit Uplink in
another cell. This is the worst
case of intercell interference,
as one SU, e.g., in Cell 2,
interferes with all the users
on the same frequency and
polarization
in
Cell
(whenever the SU in Cell 2 is
transmitting). As the system
has power control for SUs,
the worst case Type 4
interference will be caused
by SUs deployed at range
and at the edge of their
sector, i.e., in the Access
Point Antenna Cusp.
March 10, 2003
Interfering CT
Cell 1
Interference
path
Cell 2
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13.11 Recommended Channel Plans
The following sections will describe some pre-defined coloring schemes that will work in
the U-NII & ISM band with the AB-Access equipment.
13.11.1
Six-Sector, Three-Frequency Plan
This plan is good for Macrocells on relatively flat terrain:
• Use 1 channel guardband/separation between sectors
• Use opposite polarization in opposite directions
• Use 4 meter back-to-back separation (or equivalent isolation)
• Use >1 meter separation between sectors
• Use same frequencies and sector allocations in each cell.
Two closest interfering sectors
HP
VP
f1
f2
3 Frequency Reuse
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Six-Sector, Six-Frequency Plan
This plan is good for Microcells or Macrocells on uneven terrain:
•
•
•
•
•
Use 1 channel guardband/separation between sectors
Use opposite polarization in opposite directions
Use 4 meter separation (or equivalent isolation)
Use >1 meter separation between sectors
Use a different set of three frequencies on alternating cells.
Single closest
interfering sector
Sector
Numbering
HP
VP
f1
f2
f3
f4
6 Frequency Reuse
f5
f6
13.12 Antenna Spacing
In most Base Station deployments, multiple APs are placed on a single building or tower.
To minimize AP to AP interference, it is necessary to mount the antennas with proper spacing.
Based on the frequency plan identified, the following minimum spacing shown in the table
below should be maintained.
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Polarization
Co-Channel
Adjacent Channel
2nd Adjacent
5.2
Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
0 deg - Verticle 0 deg - Horizontal
60 deg
120 deg
180 deg
CO
OPP CO
OPP CO
OPP CO
OPP CO
OPP
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
4m
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
>8m+ 1m
1m
1m
1m
NA
NA
6"
6"
1m
1m
1m
1m
<1inch
<1inch 0.5m
0.5m
NA = Not acceptable
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14 SNMP
SNMP access has been added to AB-Access in software load 5.1.x and newer. This
allows you to monitor various parameters within the radio. Listed below are the non-standard
MIB’s added to AB-Access.
Object Name
Object Descriptor
AB-Access Info
snmpTotalSetVars
1.3.6.1.2.1.11.14
RSSI (only available on SU)
snmpOutSetRequests
1.3.6.1.2.1.11.27
PP processor loading (%)
snmpOutTooBigs
1.3.6.1.2.1.11.20
Channel Number
snmpOutNoSuchNames
1.3.6.1.2.1.11.9
Antenna polarization (0=H,
1=V)
snmpOutBadValues
1.3.6.1.2.1.11.22
SU distance from AP (meters)
snmpInSetRequests
1.3.6.1.2.1.11.17
# of ARP entries in the ARP
table
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Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
15 Rupee
There are configurations that are not covered by the upgrade scripts. Even if they are
covered, you will probably want to add settings that are specific to your network. To do this you
can edit the individual files and rupee them to the units. This is not meant to replace the upgrade
script. It is only meant to send individual configuration files to a unit.
You can send individual files from DOS or LINUX; unlike the upgrade scripts. The
reason for this is that the upgrade script is using expect scripting and can only be run from a
Unix based OS. One note about the rupee-dos is that it can only be run be a true DOS based OS
(Win95 or Win98 not NT). NT uses a Virtual DOS Machine (NTVDM) and will not work with
the rupee-dos command.
WARNING
If you rupee a file or files to a unit and do not reboot the unit, and
then rupee another file or files to the unit only the last set of files
will be saved to the flash.
15.1 LINUX
1.
Make sure you can ping the unit that you want to send files to.
2.
Change to the directory that the configuration files are in. The rupee-unix file
must also reside in this directory.
3.
To upload individual files:
./rupee-unix –p atmos –d 2 –r   
Note: You might have to change the permissions on the rupeeunix command using “chmod”
chmod +x ./rupee-unix
15.2 DOS
1.
Make sure you can ping the unit that you want to send files to.
2.
Change to the directory that the configuration files are in. The rupee-unix file
must also reside in this directory.
3.
To upload individual files:
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Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
rupee-dos –p atmos –d 2 –r   
15.3 Rupee Option Definitions
-p 
Specifies the password to use to allow write access to the AP/SU.
-d 2
Display debug level 2. Allows you to see what is being sent to the
unit.
-r
Reboot unit when done programming. Make sure all of your
configuration files are correct if you use this option. When the unit
reboots, changes are final.
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Axxcelera Broadband Wireless
16 RTFD (Return To Factory Default)
The new Return To Factory Default (RTFD) feature allows IP connectiviey to be
established with units that have unknown or invalid configurations. Using this feature, the ABAccess unit wil adopt a known IP configuration enabling Command Line Interface access via
telnet through the physical Ethernet interface.
Following a restart or power up, the AB-Access/AB-Extender units will listen for 1
second for a proprietary coded UDP packet on their Ethernet interface; adopting the appropriate
IP configurations as indicated below.
If the unit receives the UDP packet, it will retain the active configuration for 30 minutes,
after which the normal start-up procedures will continue with the IP and interface configuration
taken from the unit’s Flash files. If during the 30 minute period, a subsequent coded UDP packet
is received, the timeout will be restarted.
NOTE
On Windows 2K and XP you may need to disable the auto media sense. Some NICs will be
capable of disabling this feature from their configuration parameters. If this option is not
available on your NIC you will have to add a registry entry. Axxcelera has created a reg
edit that can be installed by simply double clicking on the media-sense.reg file. Or you can
enter the following register key via regedit.
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Tcpip\Parameters]
"DisableDHCPMediaSense"=dword:00000001
16.1 RTFD IP Configurations
Ethernet Interface Access:
IP Address
192.168.3.254
Netmask
255.255.255.0
Default Route
192.168.3.1
16.2 Recover
To supply the coded UDP packet the “recover” utility is provided with the system software in
two forms.
recover-dos.exe - For use with a DOS prompt under Microsoft Windows.
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Recover-unix - For use with Linux installations utilizing glibc 2.1.3.
16.3 Procedure to restore the default configuration
1.
Connect a PC (Windows or Linux) to the wallbox of the unit, ensuring that
there is appropriate connectivity at the physical and IP levels.
2.
Start the recovery utility. A sequence of dots will be displayed to indicate
successful network transmissions.
[root@temp SU_TEMPLATE]# ./recover-unix ethernet
SU/AP recovery client
……………………………..
3.
Restart the AB-Access unit.
4.
When the recover utility terminates, the AB-Access unit has been successfully
configured and can be contacted over the physical interface via a telnet session.
5.
It is best to do a full system upgrade after a unit has been recovered to a state
that IP connectivity is regained. This will insure the unit will function properly
once redeployed.
16.4 Disabling the RTFD Feature
RTFD can be disabled by writing a file to flash with the name “no_rtfd”. The file must be
a text file; i.e. only containing ASCII characters. A suggested first line for the file is “disable
RTFD” – though the actual content of the file will not be referenced: only the presence or
absence of the file is significant.
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