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® 68x Series Enterprise LANMeter ® Getting Started PN 1546949 January 2000 © 2000 Fluke Corporation. All rights reserved. Printed in USA All product names are trademarks of their respective companies. LIMITED WARRANTY AND LIMITATION OF LIABILITY Each Fluke product is warranted to be free from defects in material and workmanship under normal use and service. The warranty period is one year and begins on the date of shipment. Parts, product repairs, and services are warranted for 90 days. This warranty extends only to the original buyer or end-user customer of a Fluke authorized reseller, and does not apply to fuses, disposable batteries, or to any product which, in Fluke’s opinion, has been misused, altered, neglected, contaminated, or damaged by accident or abnormal conditions of operation or handling. Fluke warrants that software will operate substantially in accordance with its functional specifications for 90 days and that it has been properly recorded on non-defective media. Fluke does not warrant that software will be error free or operate without interruption. Fluke authorized resellers shall extend this warranty on new and unused products to enduser customers only but have no authority to extend a greater or different warranty on behalf of Fluke. Warranty support is available only if product is purchased through a Fluke authorized sales outlet or Buyer has paid the applicable international price. Fluke reserves the right to invoice Buyer for importation costs of repair/replacement parts when product purchased in one country is submitted for repair in another country. Fluke’s warranty obligation is limited, at Fluke’s option, to refund of the purchase price, free of charge repair, or replacement of a defective product which is returned to a Fluke authorized service center within the warranty period. To obtain warranty service, contact your nearest Fluke authorized service center to obtain return authorization information, then send the product to that service center, with a description of the difficulty, postage and insurance prepaid (FOB Destination). Fluke assumes no risk for damage in transit. Following warranty repair, the product will be returned to Buyer, transportation prepaid (FOB Destination). If Fluke determines that failure was caused by neglect, misuse, contamination, alteration, accident, or abnormal condition of operation or handling, including overvoltage failures caused by use outside the product’s specified rating, or normal wear and tear of mechanical components, Fluke will provide an estimate of repair costs and obtain authorization before commencing the work. Following repair, the product will be returned to the Buyer transportation prepaid and the Buyer will be billed for the repair and return transportation charges (FOB Shipping Point). THIS WARRANTY IS BUYER'S SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE REMEDY AND IS IN LIEU OF ALL OTHER WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. FLUKE SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSSES, INCLUDING LOSS OF DATA, ARISING FROM ANY CAUSE OR THEORY. Since some countries or states do not allow limitation of the term of an implied warranty, or exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damages, the limitations and exclusions of this warranty may not apply to every buyer. If any provision of this Warranty is held invalid or unenforceable by a court or other decision-maker of competent jurisdiction, such holding will not affect the validity or enforceability of any other provision. Fluke Corporation P.O. Box 9090 Everett, WA 98206-9090 U.S.A. 11/99 Fluke Europe B.V. P.O. Box 1186 5602 BD Eindhoven The Netherlands Table of Contents Title Introduction .......................................................................................... Fluke 68x Series Instruments................................................................ Options ................................................................................................. Functions .............................................................................................. Equipment Supplied ............................................................................. Interface Mode Icons............................................................................ Setting Up Your Instrument ................................................................. Connecting the AC Adapter.............................................................. Changing the Network Interface....................................................... User Interface ................................................................................... LCD Display................................................................................. Keyboard ...................................................................................... LED Indicators ............................................................................. Setup/Utils............................................................................................ Network Configuration..................................................................... Ethernet ........................................................................................ Station List ....................................................................................... Manage Options ............................................................................... File Manager..................................................................................... Terminal Emulator............................................................................ System Information .......................................................................... Update Software ............................................................................... Time and Date .................................................................................. Display Configuration ...................................................................... Self-Test ........................................................................................... Self Test........................................................................................ Keyboard Test .............................................................................. Serial Test..................................................................................... 100 MHz Cable Remote Test........................................................ Attaching Cables .................................................................................. TO MAU, TO HUB, or BNC Connection .................................... TO NIC Connection...................................................................... Expert-T Autotest Connection ...................................................... Running a Test...................................................................................... Auto Test .......................................................................................... Overview of Tests................................................................................. Page 1 1 2 3 4 4 4 5 6 6 8 10 21 26 28 28 30 30 30 31 31 31 31 32 33 33 33 34 34 34 36 39 40 41 42 43 Index..................................................................................................... 51 i 68x Series Getting Started ii List of Tables Table 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Title LANMeter Instrument Network Configuration .............. Valid Serial #s for Upgraded 67x Series......................... Arrow Key Functions...................................................... Battery Charger Status LED ........................................... Cable and Media Information and Problems .................. Ethernet NIC and Hub Problems .................................... Ethernet Performance Information ................................. Ethernet and Token Ring Network Information ............. Token Ring Network Information .................................. Token Ring NIC and MAU Problems ............................ Novell NetWare Network Information ........................... TCP/IP Configuration and Performance......................... Banyan VINES Client/Server Connectivity.................... NetBIOS Configuration and Performance ...................... Utilities............................................................................ iii Page 2 2 17 26 43 43 44 44 45 46 47 48 49 49 50 68x Series Getting Started iv List of Figures Figure 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. Title Page Network and AC Adapter Connectors (686/685 Shown) LANMeter Instrument User Interface (Fluke 686 Shown) LCD Display Areas......................................................... Keyboard and LEDs (686/685 Shown)........................... Ethernet Softkey Tree (Version 9.50) ............................. Token Ring Softkey Tree (Version 9.50) ....................... Ethernet Top-Level Softkeys (Version 9.50).................. Token Ring Top-Level Softkeys (Version 9.50) ............ Alphanumeric Keys ........................................................ Network and AC Adapter Connectors (686/685 Shown) Network and AC Adapter Connectors (683/682 Shown) Network and AC Adapter Connectors (680 Shown) ...... Setup/Utils Softkeys (Version 9.50) ............................... Configuration Pop-up Menu ........................................... User Interface (Fluke 686 shown)................................... TO HUB/MAU Connection Using RJ-45 Connector ..... BNC Connection............................................................. TO NIC Connection........................................................ Expert-T Autotest Connections....................................... v 5 7 8 10 12 13 14 14 20 24 25 25 27 27 35 36 37 39 40 68x Series Getting Started vi 68x Series Enterprise LANMeter Introduction This manual helps you become familiar with and quickly begin using your 68x Series LANMeter instrument. Basic information is provided that will allow you to set up your instrument, configure and operate it. Detailed information about specific features is provided in the Enterprise LANMeter 68x Series Users Manual (P/N 1546951). The Users Manual is contained on the CD that came with your instrument. Adobe Acrobat Reader is required to view the Users Manual and is included on the CD or can be downloaded from www.adobe.com. Fluke 68x Series Instruments The Fluke Enterprise LANMeter (68x Series) instruments are versatile batteryoperated handheld instruments used to isolate many problems that can occur on your Ethernet and Token Ring networks. The Fluke Enterprise LANMeter series consists of the Fluke 686, Fluke 685, Fluke 683, Fluke 682, and Fluke 680 LANMeter instruments. 1 68x Series Getting Started Table 1. LANMeter Instrument Network Configuration Model # 680 682 683 685 686 10 Mbps Ethernet X X X X 100 Mbps Ethernet 4 Mbps Token Ring 16 Mbps Token Ring X X X X X X X X The majority of this manual describes operations common to the Fluke 686, 685, 683, 682, and 680. Any differences between the LANMeter instruments are pointed out as appropriate. Options The 100 MHz Cable Test option (also called 100 MHz Remote) gives you additional cable test capabilities. The 100 MHz Remote is compatible with all Fluke 68x Series instruments except some Fluke 67x Series instruments upgraded to 68x Series. Your 67x instrument is compatible with the 100 MHz Remote if its serial number is as described in Table 2 or if your instrument displays 100 MHz Cable Test Compatible in the power-on screen or in the top-level softkey screen. The 100 MHz Cable Test option is covered in the Users Manual, “Testing Cables and Connectors.” Table 2. Valid Serial #s for Upgraded 67x Series Model # Valid Serial #s for Upgraded 67x Series 100 MHz Remote Compatibility 670 672 675 > 6311801 > 6296601 > 6281701 The SwitchWizard option enhances Segment Discovery and adds the SwitchWizard MultiPort Statistics test. SwitchWizard gives you the ability to discover and diagnose problems on the other side of Ethernet, Token Ring, and 2 Enterprise LANMeter Functions FDDI switches. SwitchWizard is compatible with all Fluke 68x Series instruments with software version 7.0 or greater, and is covered in the Users Manual, “SwitchWizard Option.” The WideAreaWizard option enhances the Internet Toolkit’s Interface Table by adding reporting and some configuration capabilities for discovered WAN interfaces. WideAreaWizard gives you the ability to discover and diagnose problems on Frame Relay, ISDN, and T1/E1 interfaces on routers, switches, and bridges. WideAreaWizard also allows you to display and configure virtual circuit information for appropriate technologies. WideAreaWizard is compatible with all Fluke 68x Series instruments with software version 8.0 or greater, and is covered in the Users Manual, “WideAreaWizard Option.” The WebRemote Control option adds the ability to control your LANMeter instrument remotely using a web browser. It is also required to use the Network Inspector LANMeter Edition reporting and monitoring package (see www.fluke.com\nettools for more information on Network Inspector). WebRemote Control is compatible with all Fluke 68x Series instruments with software version 9.0 or greater, and is covered in the Users Manual, “Web Agent / WebRemote Control.” The Terminal Emulator option adds a command line interface that allows you to inspect or change the configuration of a network device by utilizing your LANMeter instrument’s serial port connection. Terminal Emulator is included whenever you purchase the SwitchWizard or WideAreaWizard options. Terminal Emulator operation is covered in the Users Manual, “Terminal Emulator.” Functions This manual generally refers to features common to all the Fluke 68x Series LANMeter instruments as the “Enterprise LANMeter” or as the “LANMeter instrument.” The individual Fluke 68x Series model number is used when features are specific to an individual model of the Enterprise LANMeter. Use the LANMeter instrument to perform the following functions on your network: r Diagnose problems with network cabling r Test key network components r Monitor important attributes of the network environment 3 68x Series Getting Started Refer to the Users Manual for specific information on using your LANMeter instrument. Equipment Supplied The following equipment is supplied with the LANMeter instrument: r r r r r r Combination Wire Map and Cable Identifier #0 Remote Adapter Instrument Case Getting Started Manual Users Manual (on CD) AC Adapter/Battery Charger 3 ½-inch Utility Diskette Interface Mode Icons This icon is used in this manual to signify that the text that follows refers to the Ethernet interface only. The Fluke 683 and 682 have the Ethernet interface only and the Fluke 686 and 685 can be switched between the Ethernet and Token Ring interfaces. This icon is used in this manual to signify that the text that follows refers to the Token Ring interface only. The Fluke 680 has the Token Ring interface only and the Fluke 686 and 685 can be switched between the Ethernet and Token Ring interfaces. Setting Up Your Instrument The following sections describe the initial setup and use of your instrument. r r r r r r 4 Connecting the AC Adapter Changing the Network Interface User Interface Setup/Utils Attaching Cables Running a Test Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument Connecting the AC Adapter Connect the AC Adapter to the AC Adapter connector as shown in Figure 1. The AC Adapter power cord must be connected to a power receptacle with Earth Ground. Turn the power switch located on top of the instrument to ON. You can now use your instrument while the battery is charging. Before using the instrument without the AC Adapter, charge the battery for about 3 hours. Charge the battery or use the AC Adapter when the instrument displays a low battery indicator on the status line just above the softkey labels. You can use a fully charged battery for about 3 hours. AC Adapter Connector TO HUB/MAU RJ - 45 Connector TO HUB/MAU DB - 9 Connector TO HUB/MAU Battery Charger Status LED BNC Connector 18-28V 1.25A + - ON TO NIC DB - 9 Connector OFF NOT FOR CONNECTION TO PUBLIC TELEPHONE SYSTEMS TO NIC RJ - 45 Connector TO NIC Figure 1. Network and AC Adapter Connectors (686/685 Shown) 5 68x Series Getting Started Changing the Network Interface For the Fluke 686 and 685, use the following procedure to change the interface between Ethernet and Token Ring: 1. Press B from the top-level softkeys. 2. Press I to confirm the change of interface or press G to cancel. 3. Wait about 20 seconds for the change of interface to be completed. User Interface The instrument’s user interface provides easy access to all functions and consists of the following parts: r LCD Display r Keyboard r Individual and Bargraph LEDs The user interface is the same for all of the Fluke 68x Series Enterprise LANMeter instruments. They differ only in the way the individual (status) LEDs are labeled and in the name on the instrument. The Fluke 686 and 685 are labeled for both Ethernet and Token Ring functions, the Fluke 683 and 682 have an Ethernet label, and the Fluke 680 has a Token Ring label. Examples of LANMeter instrument labeling are shown in Figures 2 and 4. 6 Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument THESE LEDS INDICATE WHICH LAN CONNECTORS TO USE HUB/MAU NIC 10/100 ETHERNET TOKEN RING 686 ENTERPRISE LANMETER SOFTKEYS EXIT STOP % UTILIZATION FRAME ERROR BEACON MORE TAB COLLISION RING ERROR G POLARITY WIRE FAULT J LINK ACTIVE INSERT M TRANSMIT 16 Mb/S P BNC 4 Mb/S S D H E K A V I 7 4 1 0 Q T F L B N MENU C O 8 R 5 U 2 W X • Y ENTER RUN PRINT 9 6 HELP 3 ALPHA Z SPACE SHIFT Figure 2. LANMeter Instrument User Interface (Fluke 686 Shown) The instrument softkeys are organized by commonly performed tasks. Tests that are useful for several different tasks are accessible from all relevant modes of operation. The available softkeys depend on which options are enabled (if any) and which interface is selected (Fluke 686 and 685 only). 7 68x Series Getting Started LCD Display The instrument’s display consists of a LCD graphic screen for output as shown in Figure 3. The display has the following specific areas for displaying different types of information: r Work Area r Softkey Labels r Status Line Work Area Status Line Softkey Labels Figure 3. LCD Display Areas Use the Display Config softkey to control the screen backlight operation. The Display Config softkey is accessed by pressing the Setup/Utils softkey and then the E key. At any time, you can press and release H, then press T to turn the LCD backlight on and off. Refer to the “Display Configuration” section in this manual for more information on controlling the screen backlight. You can control the display contrast from the top-level (power-on) menu by using K and J. Press K to make the display lighter and press J to make the display darker. 8 Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument Work Area The instrument provides test data and pop-up menus for selecting test and configuration options. If you need to set any of these options, do so before running a test. Pop-up menus cannot be accessed while running a test. Whenever a procedure tells you to press C, doing so causes a pop-up menu to appear. To move from one choice to another, press M or L. Press I to accept a menu choice. Press G to close a pop-up menu without making a selection. You can access a pop-up Test Menu by highlighting a test softkey label and then pressing C. Select Configure and then press I to configure the selected test. Pop-up Configuration Menus are available for most tests. You can access a pop-up Configuration Menu by selecting a top-level softkey, highlighting the desired test softkey label, pressing C, and selecting the desired action. Softkey Labels The softkey label area is found along the bottom of the display, directly above the five blue softkeys as shown in Figure 3. For each softkey, the label and its associated function changes as you move through the menu system. Figure 5 shows the Ethernet softkey tree and Figure 6 shows the Token Ring softkey tree. The softkey trees are specific to the Ethernet or Token Ring interface, depending on which LANMeter instrument is being used or which mode is selected (Fluke 686 and 685 only). The softkeys show options or operations available within a test. Status Line The instrument displays the status line above the softkey labels as shown in Figure 3. The status line provides information about the state of your instrument or about controlling your instrument. For example, from the toplevel softkeys, the status line indicates how to control the screen contrast, as shown in Figure 3. 9 68x Series Getting Started Keyboard The instrument has a custom keyboard (shown in Figure 4). The keyboard consists of the following types of keys: r Softkeys r Dedicated keys r Alphanumeric keys SOFTKEYS BARGRAPH LEDS EXIT STOP % UTILIZATION FRAME ERROR BEACON STATUS LEDs MORE TAB COLLISION RING ERROR G POLARITY WIRE FAULT J LINK ACTIVE INSERT M TRANSMIT 16 Mb/S P BNC 4 Mb/S S V D A 7 4 1 0 H K N Q T I E L B O 8 R 5 U 2 W X • Y MENU F C ENTER RUN 9 PRINT 6 HELP 3 ALPHA Z SPACE SHIFT ALPHANUMERIC KEYS Figure 4. Keyboard and LEDs (686/685 Shown) 10 Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument Softkeys Use the instrument softkeys to select functions, to configure tests, and to run tests. The instrument displays softkey labels directly above each softkey. Figure 5 shows the Ethernet softkey tree and Figure 6 shows the Token Ring softkey tree. The softkey trees are specific to Ethernet or Token Ring depending on which instrument is being used or which mode is selected (Fluke 686 and 685 only). Softkeys operate in one of two ways: some access a second level of softkeys and some execute a function. Figures 7 and 8 show the Ethernet and Token Ring top-level softkeys, respectively. 11 12 Network Stats Network Monitor Figure 5. Ethernet Softkey Tree (Version 9.50) Error Stats Hub Autotest NIC/Hub Tests MAC Matrix NIC Autotest IP Auto Config Internet TCP/IP Protocol Mix Expert-T Autotest Traffic Gen More Trace Route Top MAC Internet Toolkit More Scan Host Multiport Stats Segment Discovery ICMP Monitor NEXT More Cable Autotest Fiber Test Cable I.D. ICMP Ping Atten System Info Wire Map Top NetWare Routing Analysis NetWare Stats Cable Scan Top NetBIOS Top VINES NetBIOS Ping Server Discovery Web Agent NetBIOS Discovery Address Servers Banyan Vines Terminal More Emulator NetWare Ping IP Auto Config NetBIOS File Manager Server List Novell NetWare Manage Options More Station List Setup/ Utils Network Config Cable Tests Top IP DC Cont Update Software IP Matrix Find NVP Time/ Date Calibrate Remote Display Config Self Test Unused Softkeys Top Level Softkeys 68x Series Getting Started Network Stats Network Monitor Error Stats MAU Autotest NIC/MAU Tests Ring Stations NIC Autotest IP Auto Config Internet TCP/IP Protocol Mix Expert-T Autotest Traffic Gen Lobe Test More MAU Reset Trace Route Top MAC Internet Toolkit MAC Matrix More Scan Host Multiport Stats Segment Discovery ICMP Monitor NEXT More Cable Autotest Fiber Test Cable I.D. Wire Map Cable Scan Top NetWare Routing Analysis NetWare Stats Token Rotation ICMP Ping Atten System Info Top NetBIOS NetBIOS Ping Top VINES Phase Jitter Station Ping Server Discovery Web Agent Network Tests NetBIOS Discovery Address Servers Banyan VINES Terminal More Emulator NetWare Ping IP Auto Config NetBIOS File Manager Server List Novell NetWare Manage Options More Station List Setup/ Utils Network Config Cable Tests Top IP DC Cont Update Software IP Matrix Find NVP Time/ Date Adapter Status Calibrate Remote Display Config Remove Station Self Test Unused Softkeys Top Level Softkeys Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument Figure 6. Token Ring Softkey Tree (Version 9.50) 13 68x Series Getting Started Use E to access additional softkeys on the current functional level. The E key is operational only when the MORE label is displayed above the far right softkey label (in the status line) as shown in Figure 3. Figure 7. Ethernet Top-Level Softkeys (Version 9.50) Figure 8. Token Ring Top-Level Softkeys (Version 9.50) The softkey menu structure uses two kinds of softkey labels. The top-level softkeys, with the exception of Setup/Utils, access test categories. The small boxes in the lower right-hand corners of the top-level softkey labels indicate that there is a second level of softkeys beneath these softkeys. Pressing one of these softkeys causes the next level of softkeys to be displayed. A test is selected when its softkey label is highlighted. A highlighted softkey label is displayed in inverse video. In inverse-video, text is displayed in white on a black background. Pressing a highlighted test softkey executes the test. 14 Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument Dedicated Keys Dedicated keys provide access to commonly used functions. The following paragraphs describe each dedicated key: Note Never press and hold down any key while pressing a second key. Always press and release the first key and then press the second key. For example, when you press and release H, the instrument temporarily replaces the MORE display label (on the status line) with SHIFT and executes the shift function of the next key pressed. ENTER/RUN Press I in the following situations: 1. Press I to confirm operations or to close some pop-up windows. 2. Press I to run the highlighted test. 3. Press I from the top-level display screen to run Auto Test. 4. Press I while a test is running, or after it has stopped, to zoom-in (or follow the hyperlinks). The instrument will beep if you press I when there are no additional zoom-in items. When a test is stopped and displaying its result screen, you must press the Run Again softkey, not I to run the test again. For tests that run simultaneous tests (like Network Stats) you can use the available test softkeys to run the desired test. MORE Press E to access an additional row of softkey labels. The instrument displays the MORE label above the far right softkey label when additional softkeys at the same level are available but not displayed. 15 68x Series Getting Started EXIT/STOP Press G to stop the currently running test, to exit a function (such as Setup or Help), to return to the top-level softkeys, to return up hyperlink paths, to respond to a pop-up menu prompt, or close a pop-up window. Pressing G from a Configuration Menu or Station List Menu saves the changes you have made to non-volatile memory and exits the Menu. TAB Use B in the following situations: PRINT 1. For most tests that display station addresses, press B to switch the address display format from symbolic name, dotted decimal, manufacturer prefix, and hexadecimal. Selecting the Address Mode softkey also allows this selection by use of a menu. 2. In tests that display configuration fields and scroll lists on the same screen, such as Station Ping, press B to move between configuration parameters and output results. 3. From the top-level softkeys, press B, then press I to switch between the Token Ring and Ethernet interface (Fluke 686 and 685 only). 4. To jump between hyperlink objects press B, or press H, then B to jump backwards between hyperlink objects. Use D in the following situations: 1. Press D to output the graphic image of the current screen to the serial printer port or to the instrument’s virtual disk. This depends on the Output Type parameter in File Manager’s configuration. 2. To print scrollable lists and ASCII reports, press C, Print All, or H, then D. Tests must be stopped to print ASCII information. 3. For some tests, after you stop a test you can press and release H, then D to print all of the information collected by the test. MENU Press C to access the pop-up test and configuration menus. UP/DOWN & Press M, L, K, and J for display 16 Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument LEFT/RIGHT ARROW KEYS navigation, screen page up and page down, and field scrolling. Table 3 shows arrow key functions. Table 3. Arrow Key Functions SHIFT Key Function M Up one row L Down one row J Adjusts screen contrast (top-level only), screen page down, steps through configuration field selections, or Page Down function in results screens. K Adjusts screen contrast (top-level only), screen page up, steps through configuration field selections, or Page Up function in results screens. H, then L Page down H, then M Page up H, then J End of list (END) H, then K Beginning of list (HOME) Press H to access extended functions and to enter a secondary character from an alphanumeric key. When you press and release H, the instrument temporarily replaces the MORE display label with SHIFT and executes the shift function of the next key pressed. Press and release H each time you want to access the shift function of a key. For an example, refer to the “Alphanumeric Keys” section. 17 68x Series Getting Started ALPHA HELP Press T in the following situations: 1. Press T to enter a secondary character from an alphanumeric key. These secondary characters are the same color (orange) as the lettering on the ALPHA key. When you press and release T, the instrument temporarily replaces the MORE display label with ALPHA and executes the Alpha function of the next key pressed. After pressing T, the orange keyboard characters are active. Press and release T each time you want to access the Alpha function of a key. For an example, refer to the “Alphanumeric Keys” section. 2. Press and release H and then press T to turn the screen backlight on and off. Refer to the “Display Configuration” section in this manual for more information on controlling the screen backlight. Use A to access information on the highlighted test. Use the following procedure to obtain help on any test: Note You must stop all tests prior to using A. 1. Select the desired test category. 2. Highlight the desired test softkey. The exact steps required to highlight a test softkey depends on which test you want to run. The first test is automatically highlighted. Otherwise, you either press the test softkey once or press E, then press the test softkey once (if there is a second row of tests). 18 3. Press A. 4. Use the arrow keys (as shown in Table 3) and the Prev Page and Next Page softkeys to move around in the help text. 5. Press G to exit the Help System. Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument . (period key) SPACE Use O in the following situations: 1. Use as a period when entering alpha characters, such as a station list name. 2. Press O to move from one address octet to the next for editing IP addresses. Press S to access configuration choices of the selected configuration field or to bring up the Station List when an address is selected. Alphanumeric Keys You can enter the numbers 0 through 9, the letters A through F, the period, and the SPACE directly from the keyboard (also called base keys). For example, press and release S to enter a space. To enter the letters G through W and Y, press and release T, then press the correct base key. For example, press and release T, then press S to input the character Y. To enter the letters X and Z, press and release H, then press the correct base key. For example, press and release H, then press S to input the character Z. Figure 9 shows the Alphanumeric Keys. 19 68x Series Getting Started G J M P S V D A 7 4 1 0 H K N Q T I E L B O 8 R 5 U 2 W X • Y F C 9 6 3 Z SPACE Figure 9. Alphanumeric Keys The following procedure shows how to enter the string LAZY 8: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 20 Press and release T, then press L. Press A. Press and release H, then press Z. Press and release T, then press Y. Press S. Press 8. Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument LED Indicators The instrument LEDs include both status (individual) and bargraph LEDs that indicate important network conditions. Figure 4 shows the status and bargraph LEDs. You can use these LED indicators for quick problem isolation. The Fluke 686 and 685 individual LEDs have two sets of labels, one for Ethernet (the top label) and one for Token Ring (the bottom label). The instrument also has two individual LEDs to indicate which network connector to use, what Ethernet speed (686 and 683 only), and one LED to indicate battery charger status. The following sections describe the meaning of these LEDs: r r r r r r r r r r Utilization Percentage Bargraph Frame Error/Beacon Collision/Ring Error Polarity/Wire Fault Link Active/Insert Transmit/16 Mb/s BNC/4 Mb/s HUB/MAU NIC Battery Charger Status Utilization Percentage Bargraph Utilization Percentage bargraph LEDs show the instantaneous network utilization percentage. Each LED represents 10% utilization on the network up to a total of 100% utilization when all 10 LEDs are lit. The more LEDs that the instrument lights, the higher the network utilization. When the instrument first inserts into a ring, the utilization LED’s will briefly light while the instrument performs its Lobe Test. Frame Error/Beacon The red FRAME ERROR LED is on when the instrument detects a jabber frame (a frame with greater than 1518 bytes), a short frame (one with less than 64 bytes), or a frame with a bad frame check sequence. 21 68x Series Getting Started The red BEACON LED is on when the instrument detects a beacon frame on the network or when it transmits a Beacon frame. If this LED is on continuously, your ring is in a beaconing state. Manual intervention is usually required to recover a ring that has been in a beaconing state for more than a minute. Collision/Ring Error The yellow COLLISION LED is on when the instrument detects a late, a local, or a remote collision. Local and Remote collisions are not reported on 100 Mbps networks. The yellow RING ERROR LED is on when the instrument detects any kind of ring recovery frame on the network, such as soft error, ring purge, claim token, or when the neighbor notification is incomplete. Polarity/Wire Fault The red POLARITY LED is on when the instrument detects reversed polarity on the receive link for a 10BASE-T connection. The state of the Polarity LED is only valid if the instrument is connected to a hub. The red WIRE FAULT LED is on when the instrument detects a fault in the lobe wiring between it and the MAU. Link Active/Insert The green LINK ACTIVE LED is on when the instrument receives the link pulse from an Ethernet hub. The green INSERT LED is on when the instrument inserts into the ring or, in the Expert-T mode, when the attached station is inserted into the network through the instrument. Transmit/16 Mb/s The yellow TRANSMIT LED is on when the instrument transmits a frame. The yellow 16 Mb/s LED is on when the instrument detects the ring speed as 16 Mbps or, if doing a NIC Autotest, when it detects the NIC speed as 16 Mbps. 22 Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument BNC/4 Mb/s The green BNC LED is on to indicate that you should connect to the BNC connector. The BNC LED will flash when the instrument’s BNC connector is terminated internally in 50 ohms. The green 4 Mb/s LED is on when the instrument detects the ring speed as 4 Mbps or, if doing an NIC Autotest, when it detects the NIC speed as 4 Mbps. HUB/MAU The HUB/MAU LED is located near the TO HUB/MAU connectors. The instrument turns on the green HUB/MAU LED to identify the correct port for attaching a cable to run the selected test. The LED flashes green/blue on the Fluke 686 and 683 instruments. The Fluke 680 labels this LED as MAU, the Fluke 683 and 682 label this LED as HUB, and the Fluke 686 and 685 label this LED as HUB/MAU. For Fluke 686 and 683 instruments only, the HUB/MAU and HUB LEDs are dual-color (green/blue) and have two functions: first, to identify the correct port for attaching the cable to run the selected test and second, to identify the Ethernet speed. When the LANMeter instrument’s Ethernet Speed is configured for 100 Mbps, the LED is blue and when it is configured for 10 Mbps, the LED is green. When you configure the instrument’s Ethernet Speed for Auto Detect, the LED flashes green/blue until a network connection is made. The LED turns on solid blue when connected to a 100 Mbps network or turns on solid green when connected to a 10 Mbps network. NIC The instrument turns on the green NIC (Network Interface Card) LED, located near the TO NIC connectors, to identify the correct port for attaching a cable to run the selected test. The LED flashes green/blue on the Fluke 686 and 683 instruments. For Fluke 686 and 683 instruments only, the NIC LED is dual-color (green/blue) and has two functions: first, to identify the correct port for attaching the cable to run the selected test and second, to identify the Ethernet speed. When the LANMeter instrument’s Ethernet Speed is configured for 100 Mbps, the LED is blue and when it is configured for 10 Mbps, the LED is green. When you configure the instrument’s Ethernet Speed for Auto Detect, 23 68x Series Getting Started the LED is blue and stays blue when connected to a 100 Mbps network or changes to green when connected to a 10 Mbps network. Battery Charger Status The red Battery Charger Status LED is located next to the AC Adapter input connector. Figure 10 shows the Fluke 686/685, Figure 11 shows the Fluke 683/682, and Figure 12 shows the Fluke 680. The Battery Charger Status LED has several on/off patterns to indicate the charging state of the battery. The Battery Charger Status LED is off when the AC Adapter is disconnected. AC Adapter Connector TO HUB/MAU RJ - 45 Connector TO HUB/MAU DB - 9 Connector TO HUB/MAU Battery Charger Status LED BNC Connector 18-28V 1.25A + - ON TO NIC DB - 9 Connector OFF NOT FOR CONNECTION TO PUBLIC TELEPHONE SYSTEMS TO NIC RJ - 45 Connector TO NIC Figure 10. Network and AC Adapter Connectors (686/685 Shown) 24 Enterprise LANMeter Setting Up Your Instrument AC Adapter Connector TO HUB RJ - 45 Connector Battery Charger Status LED TO NIC RJ - 45 Connector BNC Connector 18-28V 1.25A TO HUB + ON - OFF NOT FOR CONNECTION TO PUBLIC TELEPHONE SYSTEMS TO NIC Figure 11. Network and AC Adapter Connectors (683/682 Shown) AC Adapter Connector TO MAU RJ - 45 Connector TO MAU DB - 9 Connector Battery Charger Status LED 18-28V 1.25A + - ON OFF TO NIC RJ - 45 Connector TO NIC DB - 9 Connector TO MAU NOT FOR CONNECTION TO PUBLIC TELEPHONE SYSTEMS TO NIC Figure 12. Network and AC Adapter Connectors (680 Shown) The instrument has a fast charging capability to completely charge the battery in about 2 1/2 hours. You can use a fully charged battery for about 3 hours. Continuous use of the screen backlight reduces this time by about 30%. You can leave the AC Adapter connected after the battery is completely charged. It continues to trickle charge the battery and the Battery Charger Status LED remains in the “charge complete” pattern. 25 68x Series Getting Started The instrument replaces the status line label with the battery icon when the battery requires charging. Table 4 shows the battery charger status LED on/off patterns. Refer to the “Maximizing Battery Life” section in Appendix C of the Users Manual, for more information on the battery. Table 4. Battery Charger Status LED LED State Meaning OFF External power is disconnected or battery is absent. ON Continuously Batteries are being fast-charged. Fast (4 Hz) Blinking Battery charging has been completed; trickle charging continues. Slow (0.6 Hz) Blinking Batteries are not within the temperature and voltage range for fast charging. Trickle charging is occurring. Setup/Utils The instrument comes from the factory configured with default values. You can configure test and setup parameters as required by your network or test conditions. Refer to the appropriate section of the Users Manual for specific information on test configurations. The following sections contain configuration information accessible with the Setup/Utils softkey: r r r r r r r r r r 26 Network Configuration Station List Manage Options File Manager Terminal Emulator System Information Update Software Time and Date Display Configuration Self Test Enterprise LANMeter Setup/Utils Figure 13 shows the Setup/Utils softkeys. Figure 13. Setup/Utils Softkeys (Version 9.50) Any configuration changes that you make are automatically saved to nonvolatile memory when you press G. You can undo configuration changes before you press G by selecting Cancel Changes in the pop-up Configuration Menu, and pressing I. Figure 14 shows a Configuration Menu. Figure 14. Configuration Pop-up Menu You can use the factory defaults for the selected Setup/Utils category by selecting Restore Defaults, and then pressing I from the Configuration Menu (when available). The defaults are then saved to non-volatile memory when you press G to exit the Setup/Utils category. You can reset all Setup/Utils categories and test configurations by selecting Reset All Configs, then pressing I from the Configuration Menu. Resetting all configurations does not erase saved Station Lists. 27 68x Series Getting Started Note For the Fluke 686 and 685, the Reset All Configs option has no effect on the opposite interface mode. That is, selecting the Reset All Configs option while in the Ethernet interface does not reset configuration settings in the Token Ring interface, and vice versa. Network Configuration Press the top-level Setup/Utils softkey, and the Network Configuration screen is automatically selected. Configure the following Ethernet or Token Ring parameters to your specific testing requirements. The default parameters are underlined. Ethernet Caution Always configure the Fluke 686 and 683 LANMeter instrument’s Ethernet Speed parameter to Auto Detect when you are unsure whether you are attaching to a 10 Mbps or to a 100 Mbps Ethernet network. Do not configure the LANMeter instrument for 100 Mbps and then attach it to a 10 Mbps network. The presence of the 100 Mbps link pulse on a 10 Mbps network effectively brings down the network by preventing all stations from transmitting. Configuring the LANMeter instrument to 10 Mbps and then attaching it to a 100 Mbps network causes erroneous results (such as excessive collisions) to be reported. 28 Enterprise LANMeter Setup/Utils r Connector Type as RJ-45, or BNC r Ethernet Speed as Auto Detect, 10 Mbps, or 100 Mbps (for RJ-45 only and on Fluke 686 and 683 instruments only) r LANMeter MAC as Predefined or user definable The Auto Detect Ethernet Speed selection puts the instrument in a mode where it automatically detects the network speed and sets its configuration to match that speed. If the instrument is configured for Auto Detect and is then connected to an auto-speed port, it automatically negotiates for a speed of 100 Mbps. The LANMeter MAC is the MAC address used by the instrument while it is inserted in the network. Token Ring Caution Selecting an incorrect ring speed will cause the ring to beacon. r r r r Connector Type as DB-9, or RJ-45 Ring Speed as Auto, 4 Mbps, or 16 Mbps LANMeter MAC as Predefined or user definable Beacon Detect as Enable or Disable The Auto ring speed selection puts the instrument in a mode where it automatically detects the network speed and sets its configuration to match that speed. The Auto ring speed selection should not be used when using smart MAUs such as the IBM Controlled Access Unit (CAU), Lobe Attachment Modules, or the Madge SmartCAU. The Beacon Detect field enables or disables the Beacon pop-up window to appear when a beacon frame is detected. 29 68x Series Getting Started Station List A Station List is a list of symbolic station names (optional) and their associated network addresses, which can be used in certain instrument tests. Refer to the Users Manual, “Station List” chapter for more information on using Station List. Manage Options Press the Manage Options softkey to enable software options such as SwitchWizard and WideAreaWizard. Refer to the specific chapter in the Users Manual for information on enabling any particular option. You can run Manage Options to list the enabled options. The number of trial uses remaining for software options (if any) is also listed. File Manager You can use File Manager to print, email, import, export, rename, or delete the following types of saved files: r Reports and Graphics r Data Logs r Station Lists Press Setup/Utils and then press File Manager twice to access File Manager. Refer to the Users Manual, “File Manager” chapter for more information on File Manager functions. File Manager functions are also available via the Web Agent measurement. Refer to the Users Manual, “Web Agent/WebRemote Control” chapter for more information. 30 Enterprise LANMeter Setup/Utils Terminal Emulator Terminal Emulator is a feature supported in the Fluke Enterprise LANMeter (68x Series) instrument Software Version 9.50, and later, that gives you the ability to use your LANMeter instrument to inspect and configure network devices. Refer to the Users Manual, “Terminal Emulator Option” for more information. System Information Pressing the top-level Setup/Utils softkey followed by the E key will display the Sys Info screen. The System Info softkey will be highlighted. You can view the instrument software and hardware revision levels, the LANMeter instrument default MAC address (for the Fluke 686 and 685, both Ethernet and Token Ring MAC addresses are shown) and whether the backlight option is installed on your instrument. Update Software As new software becomes available, the instrument can be updated by using an IBM-compatible computer and a Fluke supplied software update disk. Refer to the “Software Update” section in Appendix D of the Users Manual, and the documentation provided with the Fluke software update disk for information on updating the LANMeter instrument software. Time and Date Use the following procedure to set the Time and Date: 1. Press the top-level Setup/Utils softkey. 2. Press E and then the Time/Date softkey. 3. Enter the current date and time using the numbers 0 through 9 and move between fields using B, L, M or I. 4. Press G to save your changes to non-volatile memory and to return to the top-level softkeys. 31 68x Series Getting Started Display Configuration The Display Configuration screen allows you to configure the automatic screen backlight. The following parameters can be configured for Display Configuration (the defaults are underlined): r Backlight Timeout as 1 minute, 5 minutes, or 10 minutes. r Auto Backlight as Disable or Enable. Use the following procedure to configure the automatic screen backlight: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Press the top-level Setup/Utils softkey. Press E and then the Display Config softkey. Use K and J to set the Backlight Timeout field to 1, 5, or 10 minutes. Press L to select the Auto Backlight field. Press K or J to enable or disable the backlight function. After you set the Auto Backlight field to Enable, the screen backlight turns on for the configured timeout period and then turns off. You can then turn on the backlight again by pressing any key. While the backlight is on, you can press and release H and then press T to turn off the backlight. Turning off the backlight saves battery power when the instrument is not plugged in using the AC adapter. After you set the Auto Backlight field to Disable, the screen backlight turns off after the configured timeout period. While the backlight is off, you can press and release H and then press T to turn on the backlight for the configured timeout period. 32 Enterprise LANMeter Setup/Utils Self-Test The first time you turn on your LANMeter instrument on a particular day, the instrument automatically performs extensive power-on self tests. All subsequent power-on self tests for that day are less extensive and completed in much less time. You can verify correct operation of the instrument manually by using the following procedure: 1. 2. 3. Press the top-level Setup/Utils softkey. Press E and then the Self Test softkey. Select the appropriate self-test and press I. You can run the following self-tests on the LANMeter instrument: 1. 2. 3. 4. LANMeter Self Test LANMeter Keyboard Test LANMeter Serial Test 100 MHz Cable Remote Test Self Test When running the LANMeter Self Test, disconnect all cables from the instrument TO MAU and TO NIC connectors. Verify that all tests pass. The instrument displays the message Passed for each test to indicate proper operation. These self tests are more extensive than the power-on self tests. If the instrument reports a failure, perform the steps in the “Service Center Repair” section of Appendix C “Maintenance” of the Users Manual. Keyboard Test When running the LANMeter Keyboard Test, manually perform the steps displayed on the screen and verify that the test passed. The five softkeys shown in Figure 4 are referred to as F1 through F5 with F1 being the leftmost softkey and F5 the rightmost. 33 68x Series Getting Started Serial Test When running the LANMeter Serial Test, attach a loopback connector to the Serial connector on the lower left-hand side of the instrument. To make a loopback connector, take a female DB-9 connector and connect jumpers between pins 2 and 3 and between pins 6 and 7. Verify that all tests pass. 100 MHz Cable Remote Test This test requires the optional 100 MHz Cable Remote. When running the 100 MHz Cable Remote Test, attach the supplied ScTP Cat 5 Patch Cable between the LANMeter instrument’s TO HUB/MAU (686/685) or TO Hub (683/682) and the 100 MHz Remote. Verify that all tests pass. Attaching Cables You attach cables to the instrument in one of the following three configurations. The configuration that you use depends on the test you want to run. r TO MAU, TO HUB, or BNC Connection r TO NIC Connection r Expert-T Autotest Connection The instrument lights the MAU (or HUB) and/or NIC LEDs on the top-front of the instrument to indicate which of the LAN connectors you should use for the selected test. The Fluke 680 has a MAU LED, the Fluke 683 and 682 have a HUB LED, and the Fluke 686 and 685 have a HUB/MAU LED. Figure 2 shows these LEDs on the instrument’s user interface. On the Fluke 686, 685, and 680 there are two TO MAU (or TO HUB) and two TO NIC connectors, as shown in Figure 1. Each pair consists of an RJ-45 and DB-9 type connector that are connected in parallel. Use only one TO MAU or TO NIC connector at a time. If your network uses BNC connectors, use the BNC connector as shown in Figure 1. Warning Do not connect the instrument to the public telephone system. If you do, damage can occur to the LANMeter instrument. 34 Enterprise LANMeter Attaching Cables THESE LEDS INDICATE WHICH LAN CONNECTORS TO USE HUB/MAU NIC 10/100 ETHERNET TOKEN RING 686 ENTERPRISE LANMETER SOFTKEYS EXIT STOP % UTILIZATION FRAME ERROR BEACON MORE TAB COLLISION RING ERROR G POLARITY WIRE FAULT J LINK ACTIVE INSERT M TRANSMIT 16 Mb/S P BNC 4 Mb/S S D H E K A V I 7 4 1 0 Q T F L B N MENU C O 8 R 5 U 2 W X • Y ENTER RUN PRINT 9 6 HELP 3 ALPHA Z SPACE SHIFT Figure 15. User Interface (Fluke 686 shown) 35 68x Series Getting Started TO MAU, TO HUB, or BNC Connection Most instrument tests require connecting only to the TO MAU (or TO HUB) or BNC connector. Figure 16 and Figure 17 show the LANMeter instrument connected to the network using the TO HUB/MAU and BNC connector, respectively. Use one of the TO MAU (or TO HUB) or BNC connectors for all cable tests. The Fluke 686 and 685 have TO HUB/MAU connectors and a BNC connector, the Fluke 683 and 682 have a TO HUB connector and a BNC connector, and the Fluke 680 has TO MAU connectors. HUB or MAU MDI-X/MD1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 MDI-X HUB NIC 10/100 ETHERNET TOKEN RING 686 ENTERPRISE LANMETER EXIT STOP % UTILIZATION FRAME ERROR BEACON MORE TAB COLLISION RING ERROR G POLARITY WIRE FAULT J LINK ACTIVE INSERT M TRANSMIT 16 Mb/S P BNC 4 Mb/S S V D A 7 4 1 0 H K N Q T I E L B O 8 R 5 U 2 W X • Y MENU F C ENTER RUN 9 PRINT 6 HELP ALPHA 3 Z SPACE SHIFT Figure 16. TO HUB/MAU Connection Using RJ-45 Connector 36 Enterprise LANMeter Attaching Cables For 100BASE-TX or 10BASE-T cabling systems, select RJ-45 as the connector type under Network Configuration, which is accessed by pressing the Setup/Utils softkey. You can attach the instrument at the hub (a central connecting point in a star-wired network) or at the station. When connecting at the hub, use a cable connected between the hub and the instrument’s TO HUB connector. When connecting at the station, disconnect the station’s cable from the station and attach it to the instrument’s TO HUB connector. Figure 16 shows the instrument connected to a hub. For a ThinLAN connection, select BNC as the connector type under Network Configuration. Attach the instrument at the T-connector. Figure 17 shows a BNC connection. HUB NIC 10/100 ETHERNET TOKEN RING 686 ENTERPRISE LANMETER EXIT STOP % UTILIZATION FRAME ERROR BEACON MORE TAB COLLISION RING ERROR G POLARITY WIRE FAULT J LINK ACTIVE INSERT M TRANSMIT 16 Mb/S P BNC 4 Mb/S S V D A 7 4 1 0 H K N Q T I E L B O 8 R 5 U 2 W X • Y MENU F C ENTER RUN 9 PRINT 6 HELP ALPHA 3 Z SPACE SHIFT Figure 17. BNC Connection For an AUI connection, select RJ-45 as the connector type under Network Configuration and use a 100BASE-TX-to-AUI or 10BASE-TX-to-AUI adapter. 37 68x Series Getting Started For STP cabling systems, select DB-9; for UTP cabling systems, select RJ-45 as the connector type under Network Configuration. You can attach the instrument at the Multi-station Access Unit (MAU) or at the station. When connecting at the MAU, use a lobe cable connected between the MAU and the instrument’s TO MAU connector. When connecting at the station, disconnect the station’s lobe cable from the station and attach it to the instrument’s TO MAU connector. Figure 16 shows the instrument connected to a MAU. Note In Token Ring networks and especially for the Phase Jitter test, it is important to set the connector type correctly. Failure to do so could result in excessive soft errors, ring purges, and/or beaconing. This is due to the instrument’s internal termination being improperly set for your network. The DB-9 setting provides a 150 ohm termination and the RJ-45 setting provides a 100 ohm termination. Refer to the “Running a Test” section in this manual for information on configuring the Connector Type parameter. 38 Enterprise LANMeter Attaching Cables TO NIC Connection Use the TO NIC connector for the NIC Autotest as shown in Figure 18. HUB NIC 10/100 ETHERNET TOKEN RING 686 ENTERPRISE LANMETER EXIT STOP % UTILIZATION FRAME ERROR BEACON MORE TAB COLLISION RING ERROR G POLARITY WIRE FAULT J LINK ACTIVE INSERT M TRANSMIT 16 Mb/S P BNC 4 Mb/S S V D A 7 4 1 0 H K N Q T I E L B O 8 R 5 U 2 W X • Y MENU F C ENTER RUN 9 PRINT 6 HELP ALPHA 3 Z SPACE SHIFT Figure 18. TO NIC Connection For 100BASE-TX or 10BASE-T networks, connect the NIC card to the instrument’s TO NIC connector. Refer to the section on the test that you are going to run for additional connection information. For ThinLAN coaxial networks, the instrument and the NIC under test must be the only devices on the network. The connection should be a relatively short coaxial cable (less than 20 feet) with a single terminator and T connector at the network interface card. The instrument automatically terminates its end of the cable for this test. 39 68x Series Getting Started Expert-T Autotest Connection Use both the TO MAU (or TO HUB) and TO NIC connectors for the Expert-T Autotest as shown in Figure 19. HUB or MAU MDI-X/MD1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 MDI-X HUB NIC 10/100 ETHERNET TOKEN RING 686 ENTERPRISE LANMETER EXIT STOP % UTILIZATION FRAME ERROR BEACON MORE TAB COLLISION RING ERROR G POLARITY WIRE FAULT J LINK ACTIVE INSERT M TRANSMIT 16 Mb/S P BNC 4 Mb/S S V D A 7 4 1 0 H K N Q T I E L B O 8 R 5 U 2 W X • Y MENU F C ENTER RUN PRINT 9 6 HELP 3 ALPHA Z SPACE SHIFT Figure 19. Expert-T Autotest Connections 40 Enterprise LANMeter Running a Test Running a Test The instrument displays the top-level softkeys after it is turned on. The MORE label above the Setup/Utils softkey label indicates that there are additional softkeys on this level. Press E to access the second row of softkeys. Figure 7 shows the instrument’s Ethernet top-level softkeys and Figure 8 shows the instrument’s Token Ring top-level softkeys. Use the following general procedure to run and stop a test. 1. Configure the instrument as required for your Ethernet or Token Ring network. Verify that the Connector Type and the network speed parameters are correct under Network Configuration, which is accessed by pressing the Setup/Utils softkey from the top-level softkeys. 2. Select the desired test category by pressing the appropriate top-level softkey. (Figures 5 and 6 show the LANMeter instrument’s softkey trees.) 3. Highlight the desired test to run. The exact steps required to highlight a test depend on which test you want to run. The first test is automatically highlighted. Otherwise, you either press the test softkey once or press E, then press the test softkey once (if there is a second row of tests). 4. Attach the appropriate cables. Refer to the previous “Attaching Cables” section for more information. 5. Press the C softkey and select Configure to configure the test that you are about to run unless you want to use the default settings. Some tests do not have configurable parameters. 6. Press the test softkey a second time or press I to run the test. 7. Observe the test results. 8. Press G. (Some tests stop automatically and do not require pressing G.) 41 68x Series Getting Started Auto Test You can perform a quick analysis of the health of your network by running Auto Test. After setting up your LANMeter instrument, configuring it and connecting it to the network, as described in previous sections of this manual; press I from the top-level softkey menu. This will automatically configure the IP address of the LANMeter instrument using DHCP and initiate the Segment Discovery test. Refer to the Users Manual, “Testing TCP/IP Networks” chapter for more information on Auto Test, IP Auto Config and Segment Discovery. 42 Enterprise LANMeter Overview of Tests Overview of Tests Use the information in the following tables to help you select a test to accomplish a particular task. Tables 5 through 15 show the appropriate test category and test to use for the desired task. The test category is the same as its top-level softkey. Table 5. Cable and Media Information and Problems To Do the Following Task Use this Test Under this Test Category Verify a 100 MHz Cat 5 Cable installation. # Cable Autotest # Cable Tests Measure cable lengths. Cable Scan Cable Tests Find and isolate cable and connector problems. Cable Scan Cable Tests Verify coax cable is terminated correctly. DC Continuity* Cable Tests Map the physical layout of your network. Cable Identifier Cable Tests Identify incorrect cable to connector wiring. Wire Map, NEXT Cable Tests Determine the NVP of an unknown cable type. Find NVP Cable Tests * Available only for Ethernet # Requires the 100 MHz Cable Test Option Table 6. Ethernet NIC and Hub Problems To Do The Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category Verify that a hub can successfully transmit and receive traffic. Hub Autotest NIC/Hub Tests Test a NIC’s link pulse, transmit polarity, and transmit level. NIC Autotest NIC/Hub Tests Expert-T Autotest NIC/Hub Tests Identify the protocol a NIC is running. Automatically check hub and NIC. 43 68x Series Getting Started Table 7. Ethernet Performance Information To Do The Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category Identify the types and sources of collisions and errors. Error Statistics Network Monitor Measure network utilization, collision, error, and broadcast rates. Network Statistics Network Monitor Determine the affect of added traffic on the collision and error rate. Network Statistics with the Traffic Generator operating in the background. Network Monitor Table 8. Ethernet and Token Ring Network Information To Do The Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category Identify the protocols running on the network. Protocol Mix Network Monitor Determine the transmitting stations and their protocols. Protocol Mix Network Monitor Identify stations (by MAC address) sending and receiving the most traffic. Top MAC or MAC Matrix Network Monitor Determine the source and type of broadcasts. Top MAC (Top Broadcasts) Network Monitor Test bridge, hub and router frame capacity. Traffic Generator Network Monitor Test traffic patterns for switch placement. MAC Matrix Network Monitor Discover the source of bottlenecks on Cisco ISL trunk lines. Protocol Mix Network Monitor 44 Enterprise LANMeter Overview of Tests Table 9. Token Ring Network Information To Do The Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category List stations currently attached to the ring. Ring Stations Network Monitor Determine if the network is operating efficiently. Network Statistics Network Monitor Identify and locate a noisy lobe cable or network interface card. Error Statistics Network Monitor Station Ping Network Tests Identify stations performing Token Ring functions, such as Ring Error Monitor. Adapter Status Network Tests Remove a station from the ring. Identify the active monitor. Map stations to lobe cables. Determine the source and causes of soft errors. Determine the route, maximum frame size, and number of hops between stations across Token Ring source routing bridges. Verify network connectivity across Token Ring source routing bridges. Remove Station Network Tests Troubleshoot a beaconing ring. Network Statistics Network Monitor Determine ring speed as 4 Mbps or 16 Mbps. Network Statistics configured for AUTO speed in Network Config Network Monitor Calculate the Adjusted Ring Length (ARL). Token Rotation Time Network Monitor Quantify what percentage of traffic is ring maintenance. Protocol Mix Network Monitor Determine if your network is operating on the secondary (backup) path. Token Rotation Time Network Monitor Verify that a lobe cable can pass 4 Mbps and/or 16 Mbps traffic. Lobe Test NIC/MAU Tests Measure the relative noise level on your network. Phase Jitter Network Tests Measure the Token Rotation Time. 45 68x Series Getting Started Table 10. Token Ring NIC and MAU Problems To Do The Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category Identify a stuck MAU port or verify MAU operation. MAU Autotest & NIC/MAU Tests Monitor the NIC insertion process. NIC Autotest NIC/MAU Tests Verify that an NIC can insert into a MAU. Expert-T Autotest NIC/MAU Tests Determine why a NIC cannot insert into a network. Expert-T Autotest NIC/MAU Tests 46 MAU Reset Enterprise LANMeter Overview of Tests Table 11. Novell NetWare Network Information To Do The Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category Verify network connectivity across a NetWare router. NetWare Ping Novell NetWare List nearest server and frame type. List of all servers. List of file servers. Server List Novell NetWare Identify stations (by IPX network address) sending and receiving the most traffic. Top NetWare (Top Senders and Top Receivers) Novell NetWare Load balance NetWare traffic for segments and rings. Routing Analysis Novell NetWare NetWare Stats (File Statistics and Packet Statistics) Novell NetWare NetWare Stats (Packet Statistics) Novell NetWare Server List, Novell NetWare Determine the percentage of traffic that is routed. Identify overloaded servers. Determine which stations are placing the largest demand on servers. Determine the percentage of traffic that is burst mode. Determine the local IPX network number. Routing Analysis, NetWare Stats (File Statistics and Packet Statistics) Identify the encapsulation types used. Server List Novell NetWare Protocol Mix Network Monitor NetWare Ping Novell NetWare 47 68x Series Getting Started Table 12. TCP/IP Configuration and Performance To Do the Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category Automatically have the LANMeter instrument assist in its own IP configuration. IP Auto Config Internet TCP/IP Discover IP configuration of attached network. Segment Discovery Internet TCP/IP Analyze a troublesome IP host. Scan Host Internet TCP/IP Analyze the path through the network that an IP session would follow. Trace Route Internet TCP/IP Focus on host identification, configuration and attached interface health and performance. Internet Toolkit Internet TCP/IP Identify Duplicate IP Addresses. Segment Discovery Internet TCP/IP Scan Host Monitor the status of important user designated IP devices. Segment Discovery (Key Devices) Internet TCP/IP Analyze the performance of remote LAN segments. Internet Toolkit Internet TCP/IP Identify the Node names of TCP/IP stations so that the LANMeter instrument can use names instead of Hex addresses. Segment Discovery Internet TCP/IP Verify network connectivity. ICMP Ping Internet TCP/IP Identify stations by IP address that are sending and receiving the most traffic. Top IP (Top Senders and Top Receivers) Internet TCP/IP Identify misconfigured routers and hosts. ICMP Monitor Internet TCP/IP Find route to an IP host. Trace Route Internet TCP/IP Analyze IP traffic flow for router load balancing. IP Matrix Internet TCP/IP Given an IP address, find out the MAC address. Find congested routers and gateways. Locate routing loops. 48 Enterprise LANMeter Overview of Tests Table 13. Banyan VINES Client/Server Connectivity To Do the Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category Identify available VINES devices that can provide a VINES client with a dynamic VIP address. Address Servers Banyan VINES Discover available VINES servers, local or remote Server Discovery Banyan VINES Identify stations (by VIP Address) sending and receiving the most traffic. Top VINES (Top Senders and Top Receivers) Banyan VINES Table 14. NetBIOS Configuration and Performance To Do the Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category Automatically have the LANMeter instrument assist in its own IP configuration for NetBIOS over TCP/IP environments. IP Auto Config NetBIOS Discover the available NetBIOS domains and identify critical servers acting as Master Domain Controllers and Master Browsers. NetBIOS Discovery NetBIOS Identify the node names of NetBIOS stations so that the LANMeter instrument can use names instead of Hex addresses. NetBIOS Discovery NetBIOS Check the availability of a NetBIOS station for a variety of protocols. NetBIOS Ping NetBIOS Identify NetBIOS stations that are sending and receiving the most traffic. Top NetBIOS (Top Senders and Top Receivers) NetBIOS 49 68x Series Getting Started Table 15. Utilities To Do the Following Task Use This Test Under this Test Category Email, Print, Import, or Export files to or from LANMeter. File Manager Setup/Utils Inspect or change the configuration of network devices using the LANMeter’s serial connection. Terminal Emulator Setup/Utils Remotely monitor the LANMeter instrument using a web browser. Web Agent Web Agent Remotely control the LANMeter instrument using a web browser. Web Agent (WebRemote Control) Web Agent 50 Index 100 MHz Cable Test Option, 2 100 MHz Remote, 2 Self Test, 34 100BASE-TX Cabling Systems Selecting Connector Type, 37 100BASE-TX-to-AUI Adapter, 37 10BASE-T Connection, 22 10BASE-T Cabling Systems Selecting Connector Type, 37 10BASE-TX-to-AUI Adapter, 37 16 Mbps LED Indicator, 22 3 ½-inch Utility Diskette, 4 4 Mbps LED Indicator, 23 AC Adapter, 4, 5, 24, 25 Adapter 100BASE-TX-to-AUI, 37 10BASE-TX-to-AUI, 37 Address Mode, 16 Alphanumeric Keys, 18, 19 Attaching Cables, 34 AUI Connection Selecting Connector Type, 37 Auto Detect Ethernet Speed, 29 Auto Ring Speed, 29 Auto Screen Backlight, 32 Auto Test, 33, 42 Backlight Screen ALPHA Key, 18 Backlight, Auto, 32 Battery Charge Time, 25 Charger Status LED, 21, 24, 25 Charging State, 24 Fast Charging, 25 Low-Battery Indicator, 26 Beacon Frame, 22, 29 BNC Connection, 36 Connector, 23 Cable Identifier #0 Remote Adapter, 4 Cables Attaching, 34 Caution Fluke 686 and 683 Speed Configuration, 28 Selecting incorrect ring speed, 29 Changing the Network Interface, 6 Claim Token, 22 Collision Frame Late, 22 Local, 22 Remote, 22 Configuration Default Values, 26, 27 Fluke 686 and 683, 29 Menu, 27 Network Configuration, 28 Resetting Default Values, 27 Saving Changes, 27 Undoing Changes, 27 Configuring Instrument, 26 Tests, 9 Connection AC Adapter, 5 51 68x Series Getting Started BNC, 36 Expert-T Autotest, 40 NIC Autotest, 39 TO HUB, 36 TO MAU, 36 TO NIC, 39 Connector AC Adapter, 5, 24 BNC, 23 Ethernet Types, 29 HUB/MAU, 23 Serial, 34 To NIC, 23 Token Ring Types, 29 Connector Type Selecting 100BASE-TX Cabling Systems, 37 10BASE-T Cabling Systems, 37 AUI Connection, 37 STP Cabling Systems, 38 ThinLAN Cabling Systems, 37 Connectors Fluke 680, 36 Fluke 682, 36 Fluke 683, 36 Fluke 685, 36 Fluke 686, 36 Default Configuration Values, 26, 27 Resetting, 27 Display Changing Contrast, 8, 9, 17 Navigation, 17 Page Down, 17 Page Up, 17 Scrolling, 17 Display Configuration, 32 Enterprise LANMeter Uses of, 3 Equipment Supplied, 4 Ethernet Interface Icon, 4 Top-Level Softkeys, 41 Ethernet Speed 52 Auto Detect, 100 Mbps, and 10 Mbps, 29 Configuring, 29 HUB LED Indicator, 23 MAU LED Indicator, 23 NIC LED Indicator, 23 Expert-T Autotest Connection, 40 Expert-T Mode, 22 File Manager Introduction, 30 Fluke 680 Labeling, 23 TO MAU Connectors, 36 Fluke 682 Labeling, 23 TO HUB and BNC Connectors, 36 Fluke 683 Fast Ethernet Capability, 2 Labeling, 23 TO HUB and BNC Connectors, 36 Fluke 685, 21 Labeling, 23 TO HUB/MAU and BNC Connectors, 36 Fluke 686, 21 and 683, Configuration, 29 and 683, Speed Configuration Caution, 28 Fast Ethernet Capability, 2 Labeling, 23 TO HUB/MAU and BNC Connectors, 36 Fluke 68x Series Instruments, 1 Frame Check Sequence Bad, 21 Getting Started Manual, 4 Hardware Revision Of the LANMeter Instrument, 31 Help Key, 18 Hub, 22 HUB/MAU Connector, 23 Icon Contents (continued) Ethernet Interface, 4 Interface Mode, 4 Token Ring Interface, 4 Inserting Into the Ring, 22 Instrument Case, 4 LEDs, 34 Setting Up for Use AC Adapter, 5 Attaching Cables, 34 Running a Test, 41 Interface Change, 6, 16 Interface Mode Icons, 4 Introduction, 1 Key ALPHA, 18, 19 Alphanumeric, 10, 19 Arrow, 16 Dedicated, 10, 15 ENTER/RUN, 15 EXIT/STOP, 16 Extended (Shift) Functions, 17 HELP, 18 MENU, 16 MORE, 15, 17 Print, 16 Red (Secondary) Key Functions, 18 SHIFT, 17 SPACE, 19 TAB, 16 I, 15 Keyboard, 6, 10 Keyboard Test, 33 LANMeter Instrument Default MAC Address, 31 Equipment Supplied, 4 MAC Address of the, 29 Uses of, 3 LCD Display, 6, 8 Auto Backlight, 32 Display Configuration, 32 Parts of, 8 Screen Backlight ALPHA Key, 18 LED Indicators, 6, 21 16 Mb/s, 22 4 Mb/s, 23 Bargraph, 21 Network Utilization, 21 Battery Status, 21, 24, 25 Beacon, 22 BNC, 23 Collision, 22 For Fluke 685, 21 For Fluke 686, 21 Frame Error, 21 HUB, 23 Dual-Color, 23 Ethernet Speed, 23 Individual (status), 6, 21 Insert, 22 Instrument, 34 Link Active, 22 MAU, 23 Dual-Color, 23 Ethernet Speed, 23 Network Connector, 21 NIC, 23 Dual-Color, 23 Ethernet Speed, 23 Polarity, 22 Ring Error, 22 Transmit, 22 Using for Problem Isolation, 21 Wire Fault, 22 Link Pulse, 22 Lobe Test, 21 Lobe Wiring Fault, 22 Loopback Connector, 34 Making a, 34 MAC Address of the LANMeter Instrument, 29 Manage Options, 30 MAU, 22 Neighbor Notification Incomplete, 22 Network Conditions Shown on LEDs, 21 53 68x Series Getting Started Network Configuration, 28 Default Values, 28 NIC Autotest, 22, 23 Connection, 39 NIC Speed, 22, 23 Options Cable Remote, 2 Cable Test, 2 Manage, softkey, 30 SwitchWizard, 2 Terminal Emulator, 3, 31 WebRemote Control, 3 WideAreaWizard, 3 Overview of Tests, 43 Page Down, 17 Page Up, 17 Patch Cable ScTP Cat 5, 34 Polarity Reversed, 22 Pop-Up Menus, 9, 16 Accessing, 9 Closing, 15 Responding to Choices, 16 Using, 9 Printing ASCII Text, 16 To Serial Port, 16 To Virtual Disk, 16 Remote Self Test, 34 Ring Error, 22 Ring Purge, 22 Ring Speed, 22, 23, 29 Auto, 29 Running a Test, 41 Saving Configuration Changes, 27 ScTP Cat 5 Patch Cable, 34 Self Test, 33 100 MHz Cable Remote, 34 Auto Test, 33 Keyboard Test, 33 Running, 33 54 Serial Test, 34 Serial Connector, 34 Serial Test, 34 Setting Up Your Instrument, 4 Setup/Utils, 26 Softkey Labels, 8, 9 Highlighted, 14 Two Kinds, 14 Softkey Tree, 11 Softkeys, 7, 10, 11 Accessing Additional, 14, 15 Labels, 11 Second Level, 14 Top-Level, 9, 11, 14 Returning to, 16 Using, 11 Software Updating the LANMeter Instrument, 31 Software Revision Of the LANMeter Instrument, 31 Speed Configuration Fluke 686 and 683 Caution, 28 Station Addresses, 16 Displaying Different Formats, 16 Dotted Decimal, 16 Hexadecimal (MAC), 16 Manufacturer Prefix, 16 Symbolic Name, 16, 30 Station List Usage and Description, 30 Status Line, 8, 9 STP Cabling Systems Selecting Connector Type, 38 Strings Entering, 20 SwitchWizard Option, 2 System Information, 31 Terminal Emulator, 3, 31 Test Expert-T Autotest Connection, 40 NIC Autotest Contents (continued) Connection, 39 Overview of Tests, 43 Results, 16 Running, 14, 41 Stopping, 16 ThinLAN Cabling Systems Selecting Connector Type, 37 Time and Date Setting, 31 TO HUB Connection, 36 TO MAU Connection, 36 TO NIC Connection, 39 Token Ring Interface Icon, 4 Top-Level Softkeys, 41 Top-Level Menu, 8 Top-Level Softkeys Ethernet, 11 Ethernet, 41 Token Ring, 11, 41 Transmitting a Frame, 22 Updating the LANMeter Instrument Software, 31 User Interface Differences Between Ethernet and Token Ring, 6 Parts of, 6 Users Manual, 4 Warning Do not connect, 34 WebRemote Control, 3 WideAreaWizard Option, 3 Wire Map/Cable Identifier #0 Remote Adapter, 4 Work Area, 8 55 68x Series Getting Started 56