GE MDS DS-MERCURY3650 Wireless IP/Ethernet Transceiver User Manual 4446A Mercury
GE MDS LLC Wireless IP/Ethernet Transceiver 4446A Mercury
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Wireless IP/Ethernet Transceiver Covering AP and Remote Units DRAFT MDS 05-4446A01, Rev. 02 AUGUST 2008 Reference Manual MDS Mercury Series TM TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND APPLICATIONS............ 1 1.1 ABOUT THIS MANUAL......................................................................................................... 3 1.1.1 Start-Up Guide ...........................................................................................................................3 1.1.2 Online Access to Manuals ..........................................................................................................3 1.1.3 Conventions Used in This Manual ..............................................................................................3 1.2 PRODUCT DESCRIPTION................................................................................................... 4 1.2.1 Model Offerings ..........................................................................................................................6 1.2.2 GE MDS P23 Protected Network (Redundant) Configuration ....................................................7 1.2.3 External GPS PPS Option ..........................................................................................................7 1.3 APPLICATIONS .................................................................................................................... 7 1.3.1 1.3.2 1.3.3 1.3.4 1.3.5 1.3.6 1.3.7 Mobile/Fixed Data System .........................................................................................................8 Wireless LAN ..............................................................................................................................8 Point-to-Point LAN Extension .....................................................................................................9 Serial Radio Network Connectivity .............................................................................................9 Multiple Protocols and/or Services ...........................................................................................10 Wireless LAN with Mixed Services ........................................................................................... 11 Upgrading Older Wireless Network with Serial Interfaces ........................................................12 1.4 NETWORK DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS.......................................................................... 12 1.4.1 Extending Network Coverage with Repeaters ..........................................................................12 1.4.2 Protected Network Operation using Multiple Access Points .....................................................14 1.4.3 Collocating Multiple Radio Networks ........................................................................................15 1.5 GE MDS CYBER SECURITY SUITE.................................................................................. 16 1.6 ACCESSORIES .................................................................................................................. 17 TABLETOP EVALUATION AND TEST SETUP....... 19 2.1 OVERVIEW......................................................................................................................... 21 2.2 STEP 1—CONNECT THE ANTENNA PORTS ................................................................... 21 2.3 STEP 2—CONNECT THE PRIMARY POWER .................................................................. 22 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 2.4 STEP 3—CONNECT PC TO THE TRANSCEIVER............................................................ 23 2.5 STEP 4—REVIEW TRANSCEIVER CONFIGURATION .................................................... 23 2.5.1 Getting Started .........................................................................................................................23 2.5.2 Procedure .................................................................................................................................23 2.5.3 Basic Configuration Defaults ....................................................................................................23 2.6 STEP 5—CONNECT LAN OR SERIAL DATA EQUIPMENT .............................................. 24 2.7 STEP 6—CHECK FOR NORMAL OPERATION................................................................. 26 3 EMBEDDED MANAGEMENT SYSTEM ................... 29 3.1 MS INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................... 31 3.1.1 Differences in the User Interfaces ............................................................................................31 3.2 ACCESSING THE MENU SYSTEM ................................................................................... 33 3.2.1 Methods of Control ...................................................................................................................34 3.2.2 PC Connection and Log In Procedures ....................................................................................34 3.2.3 Navigating the Menus ...............................................................................................................38 3.3 BASIC OVERVIEW OF OPERATION ................................................................................. 40 3.3.1 Starting Information Screen ......................................................................................................40 3.3.2 Main Menu ................................................................................................................................42 3.4 CONFIGURING NETWORK PARAMETERS ..................................................................... 43 3.4.1 3.4.2 3.4.3 3.4.4 3.4.5 3.4.6 Network Configuration Menu ....................................................................................................43 Ethernet Port Configuration Menu ............................................................................................51 Bridge Configuration .................................................................................................................52 SNMP Agent Configuration .......................................................................................................53 AP Location Push Config Menu ................................................................................................55 SNTP Server Configuration ......................................................................................................57 3.5 RADIO CONFIGURATION.................................................................................................. 58 3.5.1 Radio Configuration Menu .......................................................................................................58 3.5.2 Serial Port Configuration ..........................................................................................................67 3.6 MODBUS / TCP SERVER CONFIGURATION ................................................................... 80 3.6.1 Modbus/TCP in Mercury Transceivers—An Overview .............................................................80 3.6.2 Menu Selections .......................................................................................................................80 3.7 SECURITY CONFIGURATION MENU ............................................................................... 85 3.7.1 Device Security Menu ..............................................................................................................86 3.7.2 Wireless Security Menu ............................................................................................................87 ii Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 3.7.3 IEEE 802.1x Device Authentication ..........................................................................................89 3.7.4 Manage Certificates .................................................................................................................91 3.8 REDUNDANCY CONFIGURATION (AP ONLY) ................................................................. 93 3.9 GPS CONFIGURATION (REMOTE ONLY) ........................................................................ 98 3.10 DEVICE INFORMATION MENU ..................................................................................... 100 3.11 PERFORMANCE INFORMATION MENU....................................................................... 101 3.12 MAINTENANCE/TOOLS MENU ..................................................................................... 113 3.12.1 Auto Firmware Upgrade Menu (AP Only) .............................................................................124 3.13 PERFORMANCE OPTIMIZATION.................................................................................. 127 3.13.1 Proper Operation—What to Look For ......................................................................... 129 TROUBLESHOOTING & RADIO MEASUREMENTS .................................................. 133 4.1 TROUBLESHOOTING...................................................................................................... 135 4.1.1 4.1.2 4.1.3 4.1.4 4.1.5 4.1.6 Interpreting the Front Panel LEDs ..........................................................................................135 Troubleshooting Using the Embedded Management System ................................................136 Using Logged Operation Events ............................................................................................139 Alarm Conditions ....................................................................................................................140 Correcting Alarm Conditions ...................................................................................................141 Logged Events .......................................................................................................................142 4.2 RADIO (RF) MEASUREMENTS ....................................................................................... 143 4.2.1 Antenna System SWR and Transmitter Power Output ...........................................................143 4.2.2 Antenna Aiming—For Directional Antennas ...........................................................................144 5 PLANNING A RADIO NETWORK .......................... 147 5.1 INSTALLATION PLANNING ............................................................................................. 149 5.1.1 5.1.2 5.1.3 5.1.4 5.1.5 5.1.6 General Requirements ...........................................................................................................149 Site Selection .........................................................................................................................151 Terrain and Signal Strength ....................................................................................................151 Antenna & Feedline Selection ................................................................................................151 How Much Output Power Can be Used? ...............................................................................155 Conducting a Site Survey .......................................................................................................155 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual iii - 5.1.7 A Word About Radio Interference ...........................................................................................156 5.2 dBm-WATTS-VOLTS CONVERSION CHART .................................................................. 158 6 TECHNICAL REFERENCE..................................... 159 6.1 DATA INTERFACE CONNECTORS ................................................................................. 161 6.1.1 LAN Port .................................................................................................................................161 6.1.2 COM1 Port .............................................................................................................................162 6.2 SPECIFICATIONS ............................................................................................................ 162 6.3 NOTES ON SNMP............................................................................................................ 165 6.3.1 Overview ................................................................................................................................165 7 GLOSSARY OF TERMS & ABBREVIATIONS....... 169 Copyright Notice This publication is protected by U.S.A. copyright law. Copyright 2008, GE MDS. All rights reserved. ISO 9001 Registration GE MDS adheres to the internationally-accepted ISO 9001 quality system standard. To our Customers We appreciate your patronage. You are our business. We promise to serve and anticipate your needs. We will strive to give you solutions that are cost effective, innovative, reliable and of the highest quality possible. We promise to build a relationship that is forthright and ethical, one that builds confidence and trust. sheets, frequently asked questions, case studies, application notes, firmware upgrades and other updated information is available on the GE MDS Web site at www.GEmds.com. Related Materials on the Internet—Data About GE MDS Over two decades ago, GE MDS began building radios for business-critical applications. Since then, we have installed thousands of radios in over 110 countries. To succeed, we overcame impassable terrain, brutal operating conditions and disparate, complex network configurations. We also became experts in wireless communication standards and system applications worldwide. The result of our efforts is that today, thousands of utilities around the world rely on GE MDS-based wireless networks to manage their most critical assets. iv Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C The majority of GE MDS radios deployed since 1985 are still installed and performing within our customers’ wireless networks. That's because we design and manufacture our products in-house, according to ISO 9001 which allows us to control and meet stringent global quality standards. Our durable products and comprehensive solutions has made GE MDS the wireless leader in industrial automation—including oil and gas production and transportation, water/wastewater treatment, supply and transportation, electric transmission and distribution and many other utility applications. GE MDS is also at the forefront of wireless communications for private and public infrastructure and online transaction processing. Now is an exciting time for GE MDS and our customers as we look forward to further demonstrating our abilities in new and emerging markets. As your wireless needs change you can continue to expect more from GE MDS. We’ll always put the performance of your network above all. Visit us at www.GEmds.com for more information. OPERATIONAL & SAFETY NOTICES RF Exposure Professional installation required. The transceiver described here emits radio frequency energy. Although the power level is low, the concentrated energy from a directional antenna may pose a health hazard. Do not allow people to come closer than 20 cm (7.87 inches) to the antenna when the transmitter is operating. This calculation is based on an 18 dBi panel antenna. Additional information on RF exposure is on the Internet at www.fcc.gov/oet/info/documents/bulletins. ERP Compliance To maintain regulatory compliance for Effective Radiated Power (ERP) of 1-Watt per MHz, the following table of transmit power settings must be observed for the listed bandwidths and antenna types approved. Consult the factory for other antenna options of lower gain. CSA/us Notice This product is approved for use in Class 1, Division 2, Groups A, B, C & D Hazardous Locations. Such locations are defined in Article 500 of the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) publication NFPA 70, otherwise known as the National Electrical Code. The transceiver has been recognized for use in these hazardous locations by the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) which also issues the US mark of approval (CSA/US). The CSA Certification is in accordance with CSA STD C22.2 No. 213-M1987. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual CSA Conditions of Approval: The transceiver is not acceptable as a stand-alone unit for use in the hazardous locations described above. It must either be mounted within another piece of equipment which is certified for hazardous locations, or installed within guidelines, or conditions of approval, as set forth by the approving agencies. These conditions of approval are as follows: The transceiver must be mounted within a separate enclosure which is suitable for the intended application. The antenna feedline, DC power cable and interface cable must be routed through conduit in accordance with the National Electrical Code. Installation, operation and maintenance of the transceiver should be in accordance with the transceiver’s installation manual, and the National Electrical Code. Tampering or replacement with non-factory components may adversely affect the safe use of the transceiver in hazardous locations, and may void the approval. A power connector with screw-type retaining screws as supplied by GE MDS must be used. Do not disconnect equipment unless power has been switched off or the area is known to be non-hazardous. EXPLOSION HAZARD! Refer to Articles 500 through 502 of the National Electrical Code (NFPA 70) for further information on hazardous locations and approved Division 2 wiring methods. FCC Part 15 Notices The transceiver series complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. This device is specifically designed to be used under Section 15.247 of the FCC Rules and Regulations. Any unauthorized modification or changes to this device without the express approval of Microwave Data Systems may void the user s authority to operate this device. Furthermore, the Mercury Series 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. Part 15 rules also require that the Effective Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) from a Mercury Series installation not exceed 36 dBm. Refer to Antenna & Feedline Selection on Page 151 for more information. Manual Revision and Accuracy This manual was prepared to cover a specific version of firmware code. Accordingly, some screens and features may differ from the actual unit you are working with. While every reasonable effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this publication, product improvements may also result in minor differences between the manual and the product shipped to you. If you have additional questions or need an exact specification for a product, please contact our Customer Service Team using the information at the back of this guide. In addition, manual updates can often be found on the GE MDS Web site at www.GEmds.com. Environmental Information The manufacture of this equipment has required the extraction and use of natural resources. Improper disposal may contaminate the environment and present a health risk due to hazardous substances contained within. To avoid dissemination of these substances into our environment, and to limit the demand on natural resources, we encourage you to use the appropriate recycling systems for disposal. These systems will reuse or recycle most of the materials found in this equipment in a sound way. Please contact GE MDS or your supplier for more information on the proper disposal of this equipment. vi Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 1 PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND APPLICATIONS 1 Chapter Counter Reset Paragraph Contents 1.1 ABOUT THIS MANUAL ............................................................... 3 1.1.1 Start-Up Guide .............................................................................. 3 1.1.2 Online Access to Manuals ............................................................. 3 1.1.3 Conventions Used in This Manual ................................................ 3 1.2 PRODUCT DESCRIPTION ......................................................... 4 1.2.1 Model Offerings ............................................................................. 6 1.2.2 GE MDS P23 Protected Network (Redundant) Configuration ....... 7 1.2.3 External GPS PPS Option ............................................................. 7 1.3 APPLICATIONS........................................................................... 7 1.3.1 1.3.2 1.3.3 1.3.4 1.3.5 1.3.6 1.3.7 Mobile/Fixed Data System ............................................................ 8 Wireless LAN ................................................................................ 8 Point-to-Point LAN Extension ........................................................ 9 Serial Radio Network Connectivity ................................................ 9 Multiple Protocols and/or Services .............................................. 10 Wireless LAN with Mixed Services .............................................. 11 Upgrading Older Wireless Network with Serial Interfaces .......... 12 1.4 NETWORK DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS ................................ 12 1.4.1 Extending Network Coverage with Repeaters ............................ 12 1.4.2 Protected Network Operation using Multiple Access Points ....... 14 1.4.3 Collocating Multiple Radio Networks ........................................... 15 1.5 GE MDS CYBER SECURITY SUITE ........................................ 16 1.6 ACCESSORIES......................................................................... 17 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 2 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 1.1 ABOUT THIS MANUAL This Reference Manual is one of two publications provided for users of the Mercury SeriesTM transceiver system. It contains detailed product information, an overview of common applications, a screen-by-screen review of the menu system, technical specifications, suggested settings for various scenarios, and detailed troubleshooting information. This manual should be available to all personnel responsible for network design, setup, commissioning and troubleshooting. 1.1.1 Start-Up Guide The Mercury Series Start-Up Guide (Part No. 05-4558A01) is a companion publication to the Reference Manual. It is a smaller book, with a specific purpose—to guide an installer in the basic steps for getting a transceiver on the air and communicating with other units in a network. It provides only the essential information installers require for getting their equipment up and running in the shortest time possible. 1.1.2 Online Access to Manuals In addition to printed manuals, many users need access to documents electronically. This is especially useful when you need to access documentation while traveling, or want to share a document with another user in the field. Electronic documents also allow searching for a specific term or subject, especially in larger manuals. Access manuals for our equipment anytime from our Web site at www.GEmds.com. Simply click the Downloads tab at the top of the home page and select Product Manuals from the drop-down list. A search window appears to help you locate the manual you need. Online manuals are provided as PDF files in the Adobe® Acrobat® standard. If necessary, download the free reader for PDF files from www.adobe.com. 1.1.3 Conventions Used in This Manual On-Screen Menu Items On-screen menu items or command entries are presented in a distinctive font to set them apart from regular text (for example: Network Name, IP Address, Password). You will find this font most often in Chapter 3, where the menu system is discussed in detail. When variable settings or a range of options are available for a menu option, the items are presented inside brackets, with the default setting (if any) shown last after a semicolon: [available settings or range; default setting] 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual Menu Strings To help show the path to a menu selection, navigation strings are used in several places in this manual. For example, suppose you want to view or set the Network Name assigned to your system. This item is located in the Network Configuration Menu, so the navigation string in the text would appear as shown: Main Menu>>Network Configuration>>Network Name By following this order of menus, you can quickly reach the desired menu. 1.2 PRODUCT DESCRIPTION The GE MDS Mercury SeriesTM transceiver is an easy-to-install wireless solution offering extended range, secure operation, and multi-megabit performance in a compact and rugged package. The transceiver is ideally suited for demanding applications in fixed or mobile environments, where reliability and range are paramount. The transceivers are commonly used to convey text documents, graphics, e-mail, video, Voice over IP (VoIP), and a variety of other application data between mobile, fixed-point, and WAN/LAN-based entities. Based on multi-carrier Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM), the transceiver features high speed/low latency, basic Quality of Service (QoS) for prioritizing traffic, Ethernet and serial encapsulation, and network roaming. It also provides enhanced security features including AES encryption and IEEE 802.1x Device Authentication, making the Mercury system the best combination of security, range, and speed of any industrial wireless solution on the market today. Invisible place holder Figure 1-1. The GE MDS Mercury SeriesTM Transceiver (Remote unit shown, AP is similar in appearance) Rugged Packaging The transceivers are housed in a compact and rugged die cast-aluminum case that need only be protected from direct exposure to the weather. Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C This one enclosure contains all necessary components for radio operation and data communications. Simple Installation Mercury Transceivers are designed for rapid and trouble-free installation. For basic services, you simply connect the antennas (900 MHz and GPS, as required), connect your data equipment, apply primary power, and set some operating parameters. No license is required for operation in the USA, Canada, and many other countries. Check requirements for your region before placing the equipment into service. Most installations employ an omni-directional antenna at the Access Point (AP) location and mobile stations. Fixed Remote stations often employ a directional antenna aimed at the AP. Regardless of the type used, antennas are a vital part of the system and must be chosen and installed correctly. Refer to INSTALLATION PLANNING on Page 149 for guidance on choosing suitable antennas and installation sites. Secure Operation Data network security is a vital issue in today’s wireless world. Mercury transceivers provide multiple tools to help you build a network that minimizes the risk of eavesdropping and unauthorized access. Some are inherent in the radio’s operation, such as the use of 900 MHz spread-spectrum transmissions; others include data encryption, enabling/disabling channels, and password protection. Security is not a one-step process that can simply be turned on and forgotten. It must be practiced and enforced at multiple levels, 24 hours-a-day and 7 days-a-week. See “GE MDS CYBER SECURITY SUITE” on Page 16 for more information about the transceiver’s security tools. Robust Radio Operation The transceivers are designed for operation in the license-free 900 MHz Industrial, Scientific, and Medical (ISM) band. They provide reliable communications over long distances, even in the presence of weak signals or interference. Mobile range depends on many factors, including terrain, building density, antenna gain, and speed of travel. The unit is designed for successful application in a variety of mobile environments, and offers the best combination of range, speed and robustness available in an industrial wireless package today. By using multiple Access Points, a network can be created that provides consistent, reliable coverage over a large metropolitan area. See “SPECIFICATIONS” on Page 162 for more information on transmission range. Flexible Services 05-4446A01, Rev. C Users with a mix of equipment having Ethernet and serial data interfaces can use this equipment via a Remote transceiver. The transceiver provides services in data networks that are migrating from legacy serial/EIA-232-based hardware to the faster and more easily interfaced Ethernet protocol. Mercury Reference Manual Flexible Management You can locally or remotely configure, commission, troubleshoot, and maintain the transceiver. Four different modes of access are available: local RS-232 console terminal, local or remote IP access (via Telnet or SSH), web browser (HTTP, HTTPS), and SNMP (v1/v2/v3). The text-based interfaces (RS-232 console, Telnet, and SSH) are implemented in the form of easy-to-follow menus, and the terminal server provides a wizard to help you configure the units correctly. Transceiver Features The transceiver’s design makes the installation and configuration easy, while allowing for future changes. • Industrial-Grade Product—Extended temperature range for trouble-free operation in extreme environments. • Robust Radio Communications—Designed to operate over long distances in dense, high-interference environments. • Robust Network Security—Prevents common attack schemes and hardware from gaining access or control of the network. Common attack events are logged and reported by alarms. • High Speed—1.5 Mbps is over 100-times faster than 9.6 kbps radios. • Plug-and-Play Connectivity—AP or Remote configuration requires minimal setup. • Built-in GPS Receiver—GPS technology is used for timing and location data. The only external equipment needed for this functionality is a GPS antenna (several types are available from GE MDS). 1.2.1 Model Offerings The transceiver comes in two primary models—Access Point and Remote. Unique hardware is used for each model. Of the Remote radios, there are two sub-types available—Standard Remote and Max Remote, both of which support Ethernet and serial services. Table 1-1 summarizes each radio’s interface services. Table 1-1. Transceiver Models and Data Interface Services Model Sub-Type Access Point N/A Yes Yes No No Remote Standard Remote Yes Yes No No Max Remote Yes Yes Yes Yes Ethernet/LAN1 COM11 USB Integrated WiFi NOTES 1. COM1 provides access to the embedded Management System for all units. Access Point or Remote?—Identification Tip The outward appearance of AP and Remote radios is nearly identical, however, the hardware for each type is different and they are not interchangeable. An quick way to identify them is to observe the color of the Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C gasket seal in the center of the radio case. APs have a black gasket, while Remote units have a yellow gasket. In addition to gasket color, a label on the top of each radio identifies it as an AP or Remote unit. If the label shows an –A suffix, it is an AP. If it shows a –R suffix, it is a Remote. 1.2.2 GE MDS P23 Protected Network (Redundant) Configuration For mission-critical applications, a Protected Network Station is also offered. This unit incorporates two Access Points, two power supplies, and a switchover logic board that automatically selects between Transceiver A and Transceiver B as the active radio. Figure 1-2 shows the protected chassis. For system-level information on this product, refer to MDS publication 05-4161A01. Invisible place holder Figure 1-2. MDS P23 Protected Network Station (incorporates two transceivers, with automatic switchover) 1.2.3 External GPS PPS Option The External GPS Precise Positioning Service (PPS) option allows for an external GPS device to provide the PPS input to the Mercury. This is useful in installations where multiple radios require GPS timing. This option prevents each Mercury from requiring its own GPS antenna. Refer to the electrical specifications in the External GPS PPS Option section on Page 164. This option is only available in hardware revision 1.0.2 or later. 1.3 APPLICATIONS The following sections provide illustrations of typical transceiver installations. This is an overview only. A Network Administrator should be involved in all installation planning activities. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 1.3.1 Mobile/Fixed Data System Mercury transceivers support high-speed data communications in a mobile environment. In this application, Remote radios “roam” between different Access Points, providing seamless transitions and continuous coverage throughout a municipal area. Figure 1-3 shows an example of an integrated system employing both mobile and fixed Mercury transceivers. Invisible place holder Mercury remote Mercury AP Video Surveillance RTU/PLC (Ethernet) MDS NETview MS® Computer Mercury remote WAN Long Range WLAN Router RS-232 RTU/PLC (Serial) RS-232 RTU/PLC (Serial) MDS 4710 RS-232 MDS 4790 Master Radio Server (Ethernet) Control Center MDS 4710 Licensed Serial/IP Integration Mercury remote Mercury remote Mobile Data Mobile Data Figure 1-3. Integrated Mobile/Fixed Application 1.3.2 Wireless LAN The wireless LAN is a common application of the transceiver. It consists of a central control station (Access Point) and one or more associated Remote units, as shown in Figure 1-4. A LAN provides communications between a central WAN/LAN and remote Ethernet segments. The operation of the radio system is transparent to the computer equipment connected to the transceiver. The Access Point is positioned at a location from which it communicates with all Remote units in the system. Commonly, this is a high location on top of a building or communications tower. Messages are exchanged at the Ethernet level. This includes all types of IP traffic. A Remote transceiver can only communicate over-the-air to an Access Point (AP). Peer-to-peer communications between Remotes can only take place indirectly via the AP. In the same fashion, an AP can only communicate over-the-air to associated Remote units. Exception: Two APs can communicate with each other “off-the-air” through their Ethernet connectors using a common LAN/WAN. Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C InvisibleRemote place holder LAN Remote Remote LAN LAN WAN/LAN Remote LAN Access Point Figure 1-4. Typical Wireless LAN 1.3.3 Point-to-Point LAN Extension A point-to-point configuration (Figure 1-5) is a simple arrangement consisting of an Access Point and a Remote unit. This provides a communications link for transferring data between two locations. Invisible place holder Access Point Remote LAN/WAN LAN Figure 1-5. Typical Point-to-Point Link 1.3.4 Serial Radio Network Connectivity The transceiver provides a path for serial devices to migrate to IP/Ethernet systems. Many radio networks in operation today still rely on serial networks at data rates of 9600 bps or less. These networks can use the transceiver as a means to continue using the serial service, while allowing the infrastructure to migrate to an IP format. A Remote transceiver with its serial port connected to a GE MDS serial-based radio, such as the MDS x790/x710, MDS TransNET and others, provides a path for bringing the data from the older radio into the IP/Ethernet environment of a Mercury-based system. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual Invisible place holder Serial Device Serial Conn. MDS 4710 Remote Remote Serial NETWORK ROUTER Serial Device MDS 4790 Master MDS 4710 Remote ROUTER Access Point HUB Serial Device Serial Conn. MDS 9710 Remote Remote Serial Serial Device MDS 9790 Master MDS 9710 Remote NMS Control Point SCADA Host Modbus/IP Serial Device MDS 9810 Remote Serial Conn. Remote Serial MDS 9810 Master Serial Device MDS 9810 Remote Figure 1-6. Backhaul Network 1.3.5 Multiple Protocols and/or Services Prior to the introduction of Ethernet/IP-based radios, two radios were often used to service two different types of devices (typically connected to different SCADA hosts). A Mercury radio provides this capability using a single remote unit. The unit’s serial port can be connected via IP to different SCADA hosts, transporting different (or the same) protocols. Both data streams are completely independent, and the transceiver provides seamless simultaneous operation as shown in Figure 1-7. Invisible place holder Remote Serial RTU EIA-232 Flow Meter SCADA Host Modbus/IP EIA-232 Remote Serial HUB HUB EIA-232 Serial Device EIA-232 Serial Device EIA-232 Serial Device EIA-232 Serial Device Access Point WAN ROUTER Remote Serial HUB HUB Access Point NETview SCADA Host Total Flow Figure 1-7. Multiple Protocol Network 10 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C By using a single radio, the cost of deployment is cut in half. Beyond requiring only one radio instead of two, the biggest cost reduction comes from using half of the required infrastructure at the remote site: one antenna, one feedline, one lightning protector and ancillary hardware. Other cost reductions come from the system as a whole, such as reduced management requirements. And above all, the radio provides the potential for future applications that run over Ethernet and IP, such as video for remote surveillance. 1.3.6 Wireless LAN with Mixed Services The transceiver is an excellent solution for a long-range industrial wireless LAN. It offers several advantages over commercial solutions, primarily improved performance over extended distances. The rugged construction of the radio and its extended temperature range make it an ideal solution even in harsh locations. In extreme environments, a simple NEMA enclosure is sufficient to house the unit. The transceiver trades higher speed for longer range. Commercial 802.11a/b/g solutions are designed to provide service to relatively small areas such as offices, warehouses and homes. They provide high data rates but have limited range. The Mercury transmits at a higher power level, uses a different frequency band, has higher sensitivity, and a narrower channel to concentrate the radio energy, reaching farther distances. It is designed for industrial operation from the ground up. IP-based devices that may be used with the transceiver include new, powerful Remote Terminal Units (RTUs) and Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs). These, as well as other devices, may be used in applications ranging from SCADA/telemetry monitoring, web-based video, security monitoring, and Voice over IP. Figure 1-8 shows a typical wireless IP network. Invisible place holder Remote Bridge IP Camera IP/Ethernet Access Point Remote Bridge IP/Ethernet NMS Control Point SCADA Host Modbus/IP IP/Ethernet Printer Figure 1-8. Extended-Range LAN with Mixed Applications 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 11 1.3.7 Upgrading Older Wireless Network with Serial Interfaces Millions of wireless data products have been installed in the last two decades for licensed and license-free operation, many of them manufactured by GE MDS. There are several ways that these systems can benefit from incorporating Mercury equipment. The chief advantages are interface flexibility (serial and Ethernet in one unit), and higher data throughput. By taking advantage of its built-in serial and Ethernet interfaces, the transceiver is well suited to replace leased lines, dial-up lines, or existing 900 MHz “multiple address” data transceivers. Replacing Legacy Wireless Products In most cases, legacy radio transceivers supporting serial-interface equipment can be replaced with Mercury transceivers. Legacy equipment can be connected to the transceiver through the COM1 port with a DB-25 to DB-9 cable wired for EIA-232 signaling. The COM1 port acts as a Data Communications Equipment (DCE) port. NOTE: Several previous GE MDS-brand products had non-standard signal lines on their interface connectors (for example, to control sleep functions and alarm lines). These special functions are not provided nor supported by the Mercury transceiver. Consult equipment manuals for complete pinout information. 1.4 NETWORK DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS 1.4.1 Extending Network Coverage with Repeaters What is a Repeater System? A repeater works by re-transmitting data from outlying remote sites to the Access Point, and vice-versa. It introduces some additional end-to-end transmission delay but provides longer-range connectivity. In some geographical areas, obstacles can make communications difficult. These obstacles are commonly large buildings, hills, or dense foliage. These obstacles can often be overcome with a repeater station. Option 1—Using two transceivers to form a repeater station (back-to-back repeater) Although the range between fixed transceivers can be up to 40 km (25 miles) over favorable terrain, it is possible to extend the range considerably by connecting two units together at one site in a “back-to-back” fashion, creating repeater as shown in Figure 1-9. Use this arrangement whenever the objective is to utilize the maximum range between sta12 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C tions. In this case, using high-gain Yagi antennas at each location provides more reliable communications than their counterparts— omnidirectional antennas. Invisible place holder Remote REPEATER OIN LAN O-P T-T IN PO Access Point LIN Access Point Ethernet Crossover Cable Remote LAN Remote Remote LAN/WAN LAN Figure 1-9. Typical LAN with a Repeater Link Overview Two transceivers may be connected “back-to-back” through the LAN ports to form a repeater station. If the transceivers are connected directly to each other, you must use an Ethernet cross-over cable. This configuration is sometimes required in a network that includes a distant Remote that would otherwise be unable to communicate directly with the Access Point station due to distance or terrain. The geographic location of a repeater station is especially important. Choose a site that allows good communication with both the Access Point and the outlying Remote site. This is often on top of a hill, building, or other elevated terrain from which both sites can be “seen” by the repeater station antennas. A detailed discussion on the effects of terrain is given in Section 5.1.2, Site Selection (beginning on Page 151). The following paragraphs contain specific requirements for repeater systems. Antennas Two antennas are required at this type of repeater station—one for each radio. You must take measures to minimize the chance of interference between these antennas. One effective technique for limiting interference is to employ vertical separation. In this arrangement, assuming both antennas are vertically polarized, one antenna is mounted directly over the other, separated by at least 10 feet (3 meters). This takes advantage of the minimal radiation exhibited by most antennas directly above and below their driven elements. Another interference reduction technique is to cross-polarize the repeater antennas. If one antenna is mounted for polarization in the vertical plane, and the other in the horizontal plane, an additional 20 dB of attenuation is achieved. The corresponding stations should use the same antenna orientation when cross-polarization is used. Network Name 05-4446A01, Rev. C The two radios that are wired together at the repeater site must have different network names. For information on how to set or view the netMercury Reference Manual 13 work names, see “STEP 3—CONNECT PC TO THE TRANSCEIVER” on Page 23. TDD Sync Mode To avoid interference between the two APs that form a repeater station, they should be synchronized so that they will transmit at the same time and receive at the same time. This eliminates the possibility of one AP transmitting while another is trying to receive. This can be accomplished by setting the TDD Sync Mode parameter in the Frequency Configuration menu to GPS Required. See Frequency Control Menu on Page 60 for details. Option 2—Using the AP as a Store-and-Forward Packet Repeater You can extend a wireless network by using the Access Point as a repeater to re-transmit the signals of all stations in the network. (See Figure 1-10 on Page 14.) Invisible place holder Remote Remote LAN Remote Access Point REPEATER LAN LAN/WAN Remote LAN Figure 1-10. Typical Store-and-Forward Repeater Arrangement As with the conventional repeater described in Option 1 above, the location of a store and forward repeater is also important. A site must be chosen that allows good communication with both the Access Point and the outlying Remote site. This can be on the top of a hill, building, or other elevated terrain from which all sites can be “seen” by the repeater station antenna. A detailed discussion on the effects of terrain is given in Section 5.1.2, Site Selection (beginning on Page 151). 1.4.2 Protected Network Operation using Multiple Access Points Although GE MDS transceivers have a very robust design and have undergone intensive testing before being shipped, it is possible for isolated failures to occur. In mission-critical applications, down time can be virtually eliminated by using some, or all, of the following configurations: In a point-to-multipoint scenario, the Access Point services multiple remotes. A problem in the Access Point will have an effect on all remotes, since none will have access to the network. When operation of the network does not tolerate any down time, it is possible to set up a 14 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C protected configuration for the Access Point to greatly reduce the possibility of this occurrence. Two or more Access Points can be configured identically, each with its own independent antenna. In this scenario, Remotes will associate with one of the available Access Points. In case of a failure of that AP, the Remotes will quickly associate with another Access Point, re-establishing connectivity to the end devices. Because only one Access Point operates at any given time, collisions between APs is not possible. 1.4.3 Collocating Multiple Radio Networks Many networks can operate in relatively close physical proximity to one another provided reasonable measures are taken to assure the radio signal of one Access Point is not directed at the antenna of the second Access Point. The Network Name and the Association Process The Network Name is the foundation for building individual radio networks. Remotes in a network with the same network name as an Access Point (AP) unit are “associated” with that AP. The use of a different Network Name does not guarantee an interference-free system. It does, however, assure that only data destined for a unique network is passed through to that network. Co-Location for Multiple Networks It may be desirable to co-locate Access Points at one location to take advantage of an excellent location that can serve two independent networks. Configure each network with a unique Network Name, and install each AP’s antenna with at least 10 feet of vertical separation to minimize RFI. To co-locate APs, configure them with Time Division Duplex (TDD) Sync set to GPS Required. Configure all APs that are within range of each other with the same pattern, but with a unique Hop Pattern Offset. For more information, see “Frequency Control Menu” on Page 60. NOTE: Transceivers are shipped with the Network Name set to MDS-Mercury as a factory default. Can radio frequency interference (RFI) disrupt my wireless network? When multiple radio networks operate in close physical proximity to other wireless networks, individual units may not operate reliably under weak signal conditions and may be influenced by strong radio signals on adjacent bands. This radio frequency interference cannot be predicted with certainty, and can only be determined by experimentation. If you need to co-locate two units, start by using the largest possible vertical antenna separation between the two AP antennas on the same support 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 15 structure. If that does not work, consult with your factory representative about other techniques for controlling radio frequency interference between the radios. (See “A Word About Radio Interference” on Page 156 for more details.) 1.5 GE MDS CYBER SECURITY SUITE Today, the operation and management of an enterprise is increasingly dependent on electronic information flow. An accompanying concern becomes the cyber security of the communication infrastructure and the security of the data itself. The transceiver is capable of dealing with many common security issues. Table 1-2 profiles security risks and how the transceiver provides a solution for minimizing vulnerability. Table 1-2. Security Risk Management Security Vulnerability GE MDS Cyber Security Solution Unauthorized access to the backbone network through a foreign remote radio • IEEE 802.1x device authentication • Approved Remotes List (local) Only those remotes included in the AP list will associate “Rogue” AP, where a foreign AP takes control of some or all remote radios and thus remote devices • IEEE 802.1x device authentication • Approved AP List A remote will only associate to those APs included in its local authorized list of APs Dictionary attacks, where a hacker runs a program that sequentially tries to break a password. • Failed-login lockdown Denial of service, where Remote radios could be reconfigured with bad parameters, bringing the network down. •Remote login with SSH or HTTPS After five tries, the transceiver ignores login requests for 5 minutes. Critical event reports (traps) are generated as well. •Local console login •Disabled HTTP and Telnet to allow only local management services Airsnort and other war-driving hackers in parking lots, etc. •900 MHz operation is not interoperable with standard 802.11 wireless cards •The transceiver cannot be put in a promiscuous mode •Proprietary data framing Eavesdropping, intercepting messages 16 Mercury Reference Manual •AES-128 encryption 05-4446A01, Rev. C Table 1-2. Security Risk Management Security Vulnerability GE MDS Cyber Security Solution Unprotected access to configuration via SNMPv1 •Implement SNMPv3 secure Intrusion detection • Provides early warning via SNMP operation through critical event reports (unauthorized, logging attempts, etc.) • Unauthorized AP MAC address detected at Remote • Unauthorized Remote MAC address detected at AP • Login attempt limit exceeded (Accessed via: Telnet, HTTP, or local) • Successful login/logout (Accessed via: Telnet, HTTP, or local) 1.6 ACCESSORIES The transceiver can be used with one or more of the accessories listed in Table 1-3. Contact the factory for ordering details. Table 1-3. Accessories Accessory Description GE MDS Part No. AC Power Adapter Kit A small power supply module designed for continuous service. UL approved. Input: 120/220; Output: 13.8 Vdc @ 2.5 A 01-3682A02 OmniDirectional Antennas Rugged antennas well suited for use at Access Point installations. Consult with your factory Sales Representative for details -- Yagi Antenna (Directional) Rugged antennas well suited for use at fixed Remote sites. Consult with your factory Sales Representative for details. -- GPS Receiving Antennas A variety of fixed and mobile GPS antennas (active and passive) are available. Consult with your factory Sales Representative for details. -- TNC Male-to-N Female Adapter One-piece RF adaptor plug. 97-1677A161 TNC Male-to-N Female Adapter Cable Short length of coaxial cable used to connect the radio’s TNC antenna connector to a Type N commonly used on large diameter coaxial cables. 97-1677A159 (3 ft./1m) Cable assembly used to cross-connect the Ethernet ports of two transceivers used in a repeater configuration. (Cable length ≈ 3 ft./1M) 97-1870A21 Ethernet RJ-45 Crossover Cable (CAT5) 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 97-1677A160 (6 ft./1.8m) 17 Table 1-3. Accessories (Continued) 18 Accessory Description GE MDS Part No. 2-Pin Power Plug Mates with power connector on transceiver. Screw terminals provided for wires, threaded locking screws to prevent accidental disconnect. 73-1194A39 Ethernet RJ-45 Straight-thru Cable (CAT5) Cable assembly used to connect an Ethernet device to the transceiver. Both ends of the cable are wired identically. (Cable length ≈ 3 ft./1M) 97-1870A20 EIA-232 Shielded Data Cable Shielded cable terminated with a DB-25 male connector on one end, and a DB-9 female on the other end. Two lengths available (see part numbers at right). 97-3035L06 (6 ft./1.8m) EIA-232 Shielded Data Cable Shielded cable terminated with a DB-9 male connector on one end, and a DB-9 female on the other end, 6 ft./1.8m long. 97-1971A03 Flat-Surface Mounting Brackets & Screws Brackets: 2″ x 3″ plates designed to be screwed onto the bottom of the unit for surface-mounting the radio. 82-1753-A01 Bracket screws: 6-32/1/4″ with locking adhesive. (Industry Standard MS 51957-26) 70-2620-A01 Fuse Internal fuse, 5.0 Ampere 29-1784A04 DIN Rail Mounting Bracket Bracket used to mount the transceiver to standard 35 mm DIN rails commonly found in equipment cabinets and panels. 03-4022A03 COM1 Interface Adapter DB-25(F) to DB-9(M) shielded cable assembly (6 ft./1.8 m) for connection of equipment or other EIA-232 serial devices previously connected to “legacy” units. (Consult factory for other lengths and variations.) 97-3035A06 Bandpass Filter Antenna system filter that helps eliminate interference from nearby paging transmitters. 20-2822A02 Ethernet Surge Suppressor Surge suppressor for protection of Ethernet port against lightning. 29-4018A01 Mercury Reference Manual 97-3035L15 (15 ft./4.6m) 05-4446A01, Rev. C 2 TABLETOP EVALUATION AND TEST SETUP 2 Chapter Counter Reset Paragraph Contents 2.1 OVERVIEW ............................................................................... 21 2.2 STEP 1—CONNECT THE ANTENNA PORTS ......................... 21 2.3 STEP 2—CONNECT THE PRIMARY POWER......................... 22 2.4 STEP 3—CONNECT PC TO THE TRANSCEIVER .................. 23 2.5 STEP 4—REVIEW TRANSCEIVER CONFIGURATION ........... 23 2.5.1 Getting Started ............................................................................ 23 2.5.2 Procedure .................................................................................... 23 2.5.3 Basic Configuration Defaults ....................................................... 23 2.6 STEP 5—CONNECT LAN OR SERIAL DATA EQUIPMENT .... 24 2.7 STEP 6—CHECK FOR NORMAL OPERATION ....................... 26 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 19 20 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 2.1 OVERVIEW GE MDS recommends that you set up a “tabletop network” to verify the basic operation of the transceivers. This allows experimenting with network designs, configurations, or network equipment in a convenient location. This test can be performed with any number of radios. When you are satisfied that the network is functioning properly in a benchtop setting, perform the field installation. Complete information for field installation, including mounting dimensions and antenna selection, is provided in INSTALLATION PLANNING on Page 149. NOTE: It is important to use a “Network Name” that is different from any currently in use in your area during the testing period. To simulate data traffic over the radio network, connect a PC or LAN to the Ethernet port of the Access Point and PING each transceiver several times. 2.2 STEP 1—CONNECT THE ANTENNA PORTS Figure 2-1 shows the tabletop arrangement. Connect the antenna ports of each transceiver as shown. This provides stable radio communications between each unit and prevents interference to nearby electronic equipment. Invisible place holder Remote POWER ATTENUATORS • Fixed or adjustable • 2W Minimum Rating Remote Remote Access Point COMPUTER POWER DIVIDER NON-RADIATING ATTENUATORS • Install on unused divider ports (if any) • 2W Minimum Rating Figure 2-1. Typical Setup for Tabletop-Testing of Radios 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 21 NOTE: Use attenuation between all units in the test setup. The amount of attenuation required depends on the number of units tested and the desired signal strength (RSSI) at each transceiver during the test. In no case should a signal greater than –50 dBm be applied to any transceiver in the test setup. GE MDS recommends an RF power output level of +20 dBm from the AP. Remote power is not setable. (See “Radio Configuration Menu” on Page 58.) 2.3 STEP 2—CONNECT THE PRIMARY POWER The primary power at the transceiver’s power connector must be within 10.5–30 Vdc and be capable of continuously providing 30 Watts. Typical power consumption for 13.8 Vdc and 24 Vdc operation are listed in SPECIFICATIONS on Page 162. A Phoenix two-pole power connector with screw-terminals is provided with each unit. Strip the wire leads to 6 mm (0.25"). Be sure to observe proper polarity with the positive lead (+) on the left and negative (–) on the right, as shown in Figure 2-2. NOTE: The transceiver typically requires about 30 seconds to power up, and might require several minutes to associate with another unit, if GPS is required for time synchronization. GPS is required for all configurations except when “Free Run” single-channel (non-frequency hopping) operation is used, which might be possible in some low-interference environments. CAUTION POSSIBLE EQUIPMENT DAMAGE Only use the transceiver with negative-ground power systems. Make sure the polarity of the power source is correct. Invisible place holder Figure 2-2. Power Connector (Polarity: Left +, Right –) 22 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 2.4 STEP 3—CONNECT PC TO THE TRANSCEIVER Connect a PC’s Ethernet port to the LAN port using an Ethernet crossover cable. The LAN LED should light. Alternatively, you can use a serial cable to connect to the COM1 port (Figure 2-3 on Page 25). 2.5 STEP 4—REVIEW TRANSCEIVER CONFIGURATION 2.5.1 Getting Started Start by logging into the Access Point radio. This is done first because the Remotes are dependent on the AP’s beacon signal to achieve an “associated” state. Once the Access Point is up and running, move the computer connection to each of the Remote units, log-in at each unit, review their configuration, set their IP addresses, Network Name, and frequency configuration, then wait for each AP to achieve an associated state. With all units associated, you will be ready to connect and test your data services. 2.5.2 Procedure The following is a summary of the configuration procedure that must be done on each unit in the system. Key parameters are shown on the Embedded Management System overview (Figure 3-1 on Page 32). A lists of parameters is located in two tables—Table 4-5 on Page 140 and Table 4-7 on Page 142. Detailed information on using the Management System can be found in MS INTRODUCTION on Page 31. NOTE: The Management System supports the use of “configuration files” to help consistently configure multiple units. These are explained in Configuration Scripts Menu on Page 119. 2.5.3 Basic Configuration Defaults Table 2-1 provides a selection of key operating parameters, their range, and default values. All of these are accessible through a terminal emulator connected to the COM1 serial port or through a Web browser connected to the LAN port (see Figure 5-1 on Page 149 for hookup). NOTE: Access to the transceiver’s Management System and changes to all parameters requires entering a security password. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 23 Table 2-1. Basic Configuration Defaults Item Menu Location Default Values/Range Network Name Main Menu>> Radio Configuration>> Network Name MDS-Mercury • 1–15 alphanumeric characters IP Address Main Menu>> Network Configuration>> IP Address 192.168.1.1 Contact your network administrator RF Output Power Main Menu>> Radio Configuration>> Transmit Power +30 dBm (1.0 Watt) AP: -30 to +30 dBm RM: 0 to +30 dBm (Max. 1.0 Watt) Unit Password Main Menu>> Device Information>> User Password admin (lower case) • 1–13 alphanumeric characters • Case-sensitive; can be mixed case • Case-sensitive; can be mixed case For benchtop evaluation, configure: • • • • = Single Channel Single Frequency Channel = 0 RF Bandwidth = 1.75 TDD Sync = Free Run Frequency Mode For more information on configuring these parameters, see “Frequency Control Menu” on Page 60. A unique IP address and subnet are required to access all IP-based management interfaces (telnet, SSH, SNMP, and Web), either through the LAN port or remotely over-the-air. 2.6 STEP 5—CONNECT LAN OR SERIAL DATA EQUIPMENT Connect a local area network to the LAN port or a serial device to the COM1 (DCE) port. The LAN port supports any Ethernet-compatible equipment. This includes devices that use Internet Protocol (IP). Figure 2-3 on Page 25 shows the interface connectors on the front panel of the transceiver. NOTE: The use of shielded Ethernet cable is recommended for connection to the radio’s ETH port. The radio meets regulatory emission standards without shielded cable, but shielding reduces the possibility of interference in sensitive environments, and is in keeping with good engineering practice. 24 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder LAN PORT LED INDICATOR PANEL COM1 SERIAL PORT DC POWER INPUT (10—30 VDC, 2.5A) RX2 ANTENNA PORT GPS ANTENNA TX/RX1 CONNECTION ANTENNA PORT Figure 2-3. Transceiver Interface Connectors • LED INDICATOR PANEL—Displays the basic operating status of the transceiver. Section 2.7 on page 26 contains detailed information. • COM1 SERIAL PORT— DB-9 connector used for management of the transceiver using a connected PC. MS INTRODUCTION on Page 31 provides complete connection details. • LAN PORT—Connection point for Ethernet Local Area Network. The connector has integrated LEDs to indicate signal activity as follows: A steady green LED indicates that a link has been achieved; a flashing green LED indicates data activity; and a yellow LED indicates 100 Mbps operation. • PWR— DC power connection for the transceiver. Power source must be 10 Vdc to 30 Vdc, negative ground, and capable of providing at least 25 watts. • GPS ANTENNA PORT— Coaxial connector (SMA-type) for connection of a GPS receiving antenna. Provides 3.5 Vdc output for compatibility with powered (active) GPS antennas. Do not short this connector, as you might cause damage to the internal power supply. The GPS receiving antenna’s gain must be 16 dBi or less. NOTE: GPS functionality is required on all Access Points and Remotes except when “Free Run” single-channel (non-frequency hopping) operation is used, which might be possible in some low-interference environments. • RX2 ANTENNA PORT— Reserved for future functionality. Coaxial connector (TNC-type) for attachment of a second 900 MHz receiving antenna used in space diversity arrangements. • TX/RX1 ANTENNA PORT— Coaxial connector (TNC-type) for attachment of the main station antenna (transmit and receive). 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 25 2.7 STEP 6—CHECK FOR NORMAL OPERATION Once the data equipment is connected, you can check the transceiver for normal operation. Observe the LEDs on the top cover for the proper indications. In a normally operating system, you will see the following LED indications within 45seconds of start-up: • PWR—Lit continuously • LINK—On, or blinking intermittently to indicate traffic flow • LAN—On, or blinking intermittently to indicate traffic flow Figure 2-4 shows a close-up view of the transceiver’s LED Indicator panel. Table 2-2 provides details on each LED function. Invisible place holder Figure 2-4. LED Indicator Panel If the radio network seems to be operating properly based on observation of the unit’s LEDs, use the PING command to verify the link integrity with the Access Point. Table 2-2. Transceiver LED Functions LED Label Activity Indication PWR ON Primary power (DC) present Blinking Unit in “Alarmed” state OFF Primary power (DC) absent ON LAN detected Blinking Data TX/RX OFF LAN not detected, or excessive traffic present Blinking Data TX/RX OFF No data activity LAN* COM1 (MGT System) 26 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Table 2-2. Transceiver LED Functions (Continued) LED Label Activity Indication GPS ON Internal GPS receiver is synchronized with the satellite network. Blinking AP modem is synchronizing with the GPS timing. OFF Internal GPS receiver is not synchronized with the satellite network. LINK ON Default state (Access Point) OFF Not transmitting. Usually occurs while waiting for GPS sync. LINK ON Associated to AP (Remote) OFF Not associated with AP * The LAN connector has two integrated LEDs to indicate signal activity as follows: A steady green LED indicates that a link has been achieved; a flashing green LED indicates data activity, and a yellow LED indicates 100 Mbps operation. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 27 28 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 3 EMBEDDED MANAGEMENT SYSTEM 3 Chapter Counter Reset Paragraph Contents 3.1 MS INTRODUCTION................................................................. 31 3.1.1 Differences in the User Interfaces ............................................... 31 3.2 ACCESSING THE MENU SYSTEM .......................................... 33 3.2.1 Methods of Control ...................................................................... 34 3.2.2 PC Connection and Log In Procedures ....................................... 34 3.2.3 Navigating the Menus .................................................................38 3.3 BASIC OVERVIEW OF OPERATION........................................ 40 3.3.1 Starting Information Screen ......................................................... 40 3.3.2 Main Menu .................................................................................. 42 3.4 CONFIGURING NETWORK PARAMETERS ............................ 43 3.4.1 3.4.2 3.4.3 3.4.4 3.4.5 3.4.6 Network Configuration Menu ....................................................... 43 Ethernet Port Configuration Menu ............................................... 51 Bridge Configuration ................................................................... 52 SNMP Agent Configuration ......................................................... 53 AP Location Push Config Menu .................................................. 55 SNTP Server Configuration ......................................................... 57 3.5 RADIO CONFIGURATION ........................................................ 58 3.5.1 Radio Configuration Menu ........................................................ 58 3.5.2 Serial Port Configuration ............................................................. 67 3.6 MODBUS / TCP SERVER CONFIGURATION .......................... 80 3.6.1 Modbus/TCP in Mercury Transceivers—An Overview ................ 80 3.6.2 Menu Selections .......................................................................... 80 3.7 SECURITY CONFIGURATION MENU ...................................... 85 3.7.1 3.7.2 3.7.3 3.7.4 Device Security Menu .................................................................86 Wireless Security Menu .............................................................. 87 IEEE 802.1x Device Authentication ............................................ 89 Manage Certificates .................................................................... 91 3.8 REDUNDANCY CONFIGURATION (AP ONLY)........................ 93 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 29 3.9 GPS CONFIGURATION (REMOTE ONLY)............................... 98 3.10 DEVICE INFORMATION MENU............................................ 100 3.11 PERFORMANCE INFORMATION MENU ............................. 101 3.12 MAINTENANCE/TOOLS MENU.............................................113 3.12.1 Auto Firmware Upgrade Menu (AP Only) ...............................124 3.13 PERFORMANCE OPTIMIZATION ........................................ 127 3.13.1 Proper Operation—What to Look For ...........................................129 30 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 3.1 MS INTRODUCTION The transceiver’s embedded management system is accessible through the COM1 (serial) port, the LAN (Ethernet) port, and using over-the-air Ethernet. Telnet, SSH, HTTP/HTTPS, and SNMP are the Ethernet-based interfaces. Essentially, the same capabilities are available through any of these paths. For support of SNMP software, a set of MIB files is available for download from the GE MDS Web site at www.GEmds.com. An overview of SNMP commands can be found at SNMP Agent Configuration section on Page 53 of this manual. The transceiver’s Management System and its functions are divided into seven functional groups as listed below. • Section 3.3, BASIC OVERVIEW OF OPERATION (beginning on Page 40) • Section 3.4, CONFIGURING NETWORK PARAMETERS (beginning on Page 43) • Section 3.5, RADIO CONFIGURATION (beginning on Page 58) • Section 3.7, SECURITY CONFIGURATION MENU (beginning on Page 85) • Section 3.13, PERFORMANCE OPTIMIZATION (beginning on Page 127) • Section 3.12, MAINTENANCE/TOOLS MENU (beginning on Page 113) Each of these sections has a focus that is reflected in its heading. The section you are now reading provides information on connecting to the Management System, how to navigate through it, how it is structured, and how to perform top-level configuration tasks. Figure 3-1 on Page 32 shows a top-level view of the Management System (MS). 3.1.1 Differences in the User Interfaces Although there are slight differences in navigation among the user interfaces, the content is very similar. You will notice a few differences in capabilities as the communications tool is driven by limitations of the access channel. Figure 3-2 and Figure 3-3 on Page 33 show examples of the Starting Information Screen as seen through a console terminal and a web-browser, respectively. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 31 Figure 3-1. Embedded Management System—Top-Level Flowchart 32 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Radio Test Performance Trend Date Format Force Switchover Adv. Config. AP Location Info (RM) NOTES • Chart shows top-level view only. See Reference Manual for details. • Not all menu items are-user configurable • Spacebar is used to make some menu selections • AP = Access Point Only • RM = Remote Only GPS UDP Server UDP Port GPS UDP Server IP Address Send GPS via UDP Stream GPS to Console GPS Configuration (RM) Reset to Defaults Intl. Radio Stat. (RM) Time Red. Config. Options Freq. Control SNMP Agent Config. (AP) SNTP Server Config. Auth. Codes Wireless Ntwk Stat. Date Hdwr Event Triggers Manage Certif. Ping Utility GPS Status Uptime Radio Event Triggers Receive Pwr. (AP) Bridge Configuration Device Names UTC Time Offset Console Bd. Rt. F/W Upgrade F/W Versions Config. Scripts Reprogramming RADIUS Configuration Packet Statistics Serial Number Ntwk Event Triggers Wireless Security Transmit Power Ethernet Port Config Event Log Model Redundancy Config. Maintenance/Tools Device Security Performance Information Network Name Device Information Ntwk. Intfc. Config Redundancy Configuration (AP) Security Configuration Radio Configuration Network Configuration MAIN MENU Starting Information Screen (Read-Only Status) Figure 3-2. View of MS with a text-based program— (Console Terminal shown—Telnet has similar appearance) Invisible place holder Figure 3-3. View of the MS with a Browser (Selections at left provide links to the various menus) 3.2 ACCESSING THE MENU SYSTEM The radio has no external controls or adjustments. All configuration, diagnostics, and control is performed electronically using a connected PC. This section explains how to connect a PC, log into the unit, and gain access to the built-in menus. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 33 3.2.1 Methods of Control Access the unit’s configuration menus in one of several ways: • Local Console—This is the primary method used for the examples in this manual. Connect a PC directly to the COM1 port using a serial communications cable and launch a terminal communications program such as HyperTerminal (found on most PCs by selecting Start>>Programs>>Accessories>>Communications>>HyperTerminal). This method provides text-based access to the unit’s menu screens. Console control is a hardware-based technique, and is intended for local use only (maximum recommended cable length of 50 ft./15 m). • Telnet or SSH*—Connect a PC to the unit’s LAN port, either directly or via a network, and launch a Telnet session. This method provides text-based access to the unit’s menu screens in a manner similar to a Local Console session. You can run Telnet sessions locally or remotely through an IP connection. • Web Browser*—Connect a PC to the unit’s LAN port, either directly or via a network, and launch a web browser session (for example, Internet Explorer, Firefox, etc.). Enter the IP address of the device to be managed into the browser’s address field. This method provides a graphical representation of each screen, just as you would see when viewing an Internet web site. The appearance of menu screens differs slightly from other methods of control, but the content and organization of screen items is similar. Web browser sessions may be run locally or remotely using an IP connection. When connecting directly to a radio, a crossover cable is required. When connecting using a network, switch, or router, a straight-through cable is required. 3.2.2 PC Connection and Log In Procedures The following steps describe how to access the radio’s menu system. These steps require a PC to be connected to the unit’s COM1 or LAN port as shown in Figure 3-4 on Page 35. 34 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Transceiver To COM1 or LAN Port (see text) PC Running Terminal Session (115,200 bps, 8N1) Figure 3-4. PC Configuration Setup Starting a Local Console Session (Recommended for first-time log-in) 1. Connect a serial communications cable between the PC and the unit’s COM1 port. If necessary, a cable may be constructed for this purpose as shown in Figure 3-5. Invisible place holder DCE DB-9 MALE (TO MDS PRODUCT) DTE DB-9 FEMALE (TO COMPUTER) RXD RXD TXD TXD GND GND Figure 3-5. Serial Communications Cable (DB-9M to DB-9F) (Maximum Recommended Cable Length 50 feet/15 meters) 2. Launch a terminal emulation program such as HyperTerminal and configure the program with the following settings: • • • • 115,200 bps data rate 8 data bits, no parity One stop bit, and no flow-control Use ANSI or VT100 emulation. TIP: The HyperTerminal communications program can be accessed on most PCs by selecting this menu sequence: Start>>Programs>>Accessories>>Communications>>HyperTerminal. NOTE: If the unit is powered-up or rebooted while connected to a terminal, you will see a series of pages of text information relating to the booting of the unit’s processor. Wait for the log-in screen before proceeding. 3. Press the ENTER key to receive the login: prompt. 4. Enter the username (default username is admin). Press 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual ENTER . 35 5. Enter your password (default password is admin). For security, your password keystrokes do not appear on the screen. Press ENTER . NOTE: Passwords are case sensitive. Do not use punctuation mark characters. You may use up to 13 alpha-numeric characters. The unit responds with the Starting Information Screen (Figure 3-6). From here, you can review basic information about the unit or press G to proceed to the Main Menu. Invisible place holder Figure 3-6. Starting Information Screen—Local Console Session Starting a Telnet Session NOTE: This method requires that you know the IP address of the unit beforehand. If you do not know the address, use the Local Console method (above) and access the Starting Information Screen. The address is displayed on this screen. 1. Connect a PC to the unit’s LAN port, either directly with a crossover cable or via a network with a straight-through cable. The LAN LED lights to indicate an active connection. NOTE: When using Ethernet to access the unit, you might need to change your computer’s IP address to be on the same subnet as the radio. You can identify or verify the unit’s IP address by using a Local Console session to communicate with the radio through its COM1 Port and viewing the Starting Information Screen. 2. Start the Telnet program on your computer, targeting the IP address of the unit to which you are connected, and press ENTER . 36 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C TIP: You can start a Telnet session on most PCs by selecting: Start>>Programs>>Accessories>>Command Prompt. At the command prompt window, type the word telnet, followed by the unit’s IP address (e.g., telnet 10.1.1.168). Press ENTER to receive the Telnet log in screen. NOTE: Never connect multiple units to a network with the same IP address. Address conflicts will result in improper operation. 3. Enter your username (default username is admin). Press ENTER . Next, the Password: prompt appears. Enter your password (default password is admin). For security, your password keystrokes will not appear on the screen. Press ENTER . The unit responds with a Starting Information Screen (see Figure 3-6 on Page 36). From here, you can review basic information about the unit or press G to proceed to the Main Menu. NOTE: Passwords are case sensitive. Do not use punctuation mark characters. You may use up to 13 alpha-numeric characters. Starting a Web Browser Session NOTE: Web access requires that you know the IP address of the unit you are connecting to. If you do not know the address, start a Local Console session (see Starting a Local Console Session (Recommended for first-time log-in) on Page 35) and access the Starting Information Screen. The IP address is displayed on this screen. 1. Connect a PC to the unit’s LAN port, either directly or using a network. If connecting directly, use an Ethernet crossover cable; if connecting using a network, use a straight-through cable. The LAN LED lights to indicate an active connection. 2. Launch a Web-browser session on your computer (i.e., Internet Explorer, Firefox, etc.). 3. Type the unit’s IP address and press ENTER . 4. A log-in screen is displayed (Figure 3-7 on Page 38) where you enter a user name and password to access the unit’s menu system. Note that the default entries are made in lower case. (Default User Name: admin; Default Password: admin) 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 37 Invisible place holder Figure 3-7. Log-in Screen when using a Web Browser NOTE: Passwords are case sensitive. Do not use punctuation mark characters. You may use up to 13 alpha-numeric characters. 5. Click OK. The unit responds with a startup menu screen similar to that shown in Figure 3-8. From here, you can review basic information about the unit or click one of the menu items at the left side of the screen. Invisible place holder Figure 3-8. Starting Information Screen—Web Browser Example 3.2.3 Navigating the Menus Via Terminal Telnet or SSH Sessions Recommended for first-time log-in Local Console, Telnet, and SSH sessions use multi-layered text menu systems that are nearly identical. To move further down a menu tree, you type the letter assigned to an item of interest. This takes you to an 38 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C associated screen where settings may be viewed or changed. In most cases, pressing the ESCAPE key moves the screen back one level in the menu tree. In general, the top portion of menu screens show read-only information (with no user selection letter). The bottom portion of the screen contains parameters you can select for further information, alteration of values, or to navigate to other submenus. NOTE: Early versions of PuTTY might not operate when using SSH to connect to the transceiver. The latest version (0.60 at the time of publication) does work with the transceiver’s internal server. Both the latest released and the latest development snapshot can be downloaded from: www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/. When you arrive at a screen with user-controllable parameter fields, you select the menu item by pressing an associated letter on the keyboard. If there is a user definable value, the field will clear to the right of the menu item and you can type the value you wish to use. Follow this action by pressing the ENTER key to save the changes. If you make a mistake or change your mind before pressing the ENTER key, simply press ESCAPE to restore the previous value. In some cases, when you type a letter to select a parameter, you will see a prompt at the bottom of the screen that says Choose an Option. In these screens, press the keyboard’s SPACEBAR to step through the available selections. When the desired option appears, press the ENTER key to choose that selection. In some cases, you can change several parameters and then save them with a single keystroke. Use the ESCAPE key to cancel the action and restore the previous values. Logging Out Via Terminal Emulator or Telnet From the Main Menu screen, press Q to quit and terminate the session. NOTE: To maintain security, it is best to log-out of the menu system entirely when you are done working with it. If you do not log out, the session automatically ends after 10 minutes of inactivity. Navigating via Web Browser Navigating with a Web browser is straightforward with a framed “home page.” The primary navigation menu is permanently located on the left-hand side of this page. Simply click the desired menu item to make it active. Logging Out Via Web Browser 05-4446A01, Rev. C Click Logout in the left-hand frame of the browser window. The right-hand frame changes to a logout page. Follow the remaining instructions on this screen. Mercury Reference Manual 39 NOTE: In the menu descriptions that follow, parameter options/range, and any default values are displayed at the end of the text between square brackets. Note that the default setting is always shown after a semicolon: [available settings or range; default setting] 3.3 BASIC OVERVIEW OF OPERATION 3.3.1 Starting Information Screen Once you have logged into the Management System, the Starting Information Screen (Figure 3-9) appears with an overview of the transceiver and its current operating conditions. Figure 3-9. Starting Information Screen (AP screen shown; Remote similar, differences noted below) • Device Mode—Operating mode of the unit as it relates to the radio network. is a user-defined parameter that appears in the heading of all pages. (To change it, see Network Configuration Menu on Page 43.) • Current IP Address—Unit’s IP address [169.254.0.2] • Device Status—Condition of the unit’s operation as follows: • Device Name—This At Access Point: • Operational—Unit operating normally. • Initializing—This is the first phase after boot-up. • Synchronizing—Unit is waiting for the GPS receiver to obtain a satellite fix and for its internal clock to synchronize to the GPS timing signals. 40 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Alarmed—The unit is has detected one or more alarms that have not been cleared. At Remote: • Scanning—The unit is looking for an Access Point beacon signal. • Ranging—Unit is adjusting power, timing, and frequency with an AP. • Connecting—The unit has found a valid beacon signal for its network. • Authenticating—Device is attempting device authentication. • Associated —The unit has successfully synchronized and associated with an Access Point. • Alarmed—The unit is has detected one or more alarms that have not been cleared. NOTE: If an alarm is present when this screen is displayed, an “A)” appears to the left of the Device Status field. Pressing the “A” key on your keyboard takes you directly to the “Current Alarms” screen. • • • • • • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C (AP Only)—Indicates the number of Remotes that have achieved association with the AP. Connection Status (Remote Only)—Indicates whether the Remote has an RF connection with an AP. Satellite Fix Status—Indicates whether internal GPS receiver has achieved synchronization with GPS satellite signals. Uptime—Elapsed time since the transceiver was last booted up. Firmware Version—Version of firmware that is currently active in the unit. Hardware Version— Hardware version of the transceiver’s printed circuit board. Serial Number—Make a record of this number. Provide this number when purchasing Authorization Codes to upgrade unit capabilities in the future. (See “Authorization Codes” on Page 123.) Associated Remotes Mercury Reference Manual 41 3.3.2 Main Menu The Main Menu is the entry point for all user-controllable features. The transceiver’s Device Name appears at the top of this and all other screens as a reminder of the unit you are currently controlling. Figure 3-10. Main Menu (AP) (AP screen shown; Remote similar, differences noted below) • • • • • • • • 42 Starting Information Screen—Select this item to return to the Start- ing Information screen described above. Network Configuration—Tools for configuring the data network layer of the transceiver. (See “CONFIGURING NETWORK PARAMETERS” on Page 43) Radio Configuration—Tools to configure the wireless (radio) layer of the transceiver. (See “RADIO CONFIGURATION” on Page 58) Serial Port Configuration—Menus for tailoring the COM1 port for data mode operation (data only). (See “Serial Port Configuration” on Page 67) Security Configuration—Tools to configure the security services available with the transceiver’s environment. (See “SECURITY CONFIGURATION MENU” on Page 85) Redundancy Configuration—(AP Only) Allows setting of the criteria for switchover in the event of loss of associated Remotes or excessive packet receive errors. GPS Configuration—(Remote Only) View/set parameters related to GPS streaming location output. (See “GPS CONFIGURATION (REMOTE ONLY)” on Page 98) Device Information—Top level device fields such as model, serial number, date/time, etc. (See “DEVICE INFORMATION MENU” on Page 100) Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Performance Information—Status information relating to the radio and data layer’s performance in the radio network. (See “PERFORMANCE INFORMATION MENU” on Page 101) • Maintenance/Tools—Tools for upgrading firmware code and testing major unit capabilities. (See “MAINTENANCE/TOOLS MENU” on Page 113) 3.4 CONFIGURING NETWORK PARAMETERS 3.4.1 Network Configuration Menu The Network Configuration Menu is the home of several parameters that you should review and set as necessary before placing a transceiver into service. Figure 3-11. Network Configuration Menu • Network Interface Config—Presents a menu where you can view or set various parameters (VLAN Status, IP Configuration, and DHCP Server Configuration). • Ethernet Port Config—Presents a menu for defining the status of the Ethernet port (enabled or disabled), port follows association, and Ethernet filtering configuration. Detailed explanations of this menu are contained in Ethernet Port Configuration Menu on Page 51. • Bridge Configuration—View/set options for Ethernet Bridge operation. • SNMP Agent Config—View/set SNMP configuration parameters. See “SNMP Agent Configuration” on Page 53 for more information. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 43 • AP Location Push Config—Presents a submenu for configuring an AP to automatically force connected remotes to receive the AP Locations file from the AP. See “AP Location Push Config Menu” on Page 55 for details. • SNTP Server—Address of SNTP server (RFC 2030) from which the transceiver will automatically get the time-of-day. You can also manually set the date and time. A Mercury unit tries to get the time and date from the SNTP server only if an IP address is configured. It will continue to retry every minute until it succeeds. The transceivers use UTC (Universal Time Coordinated) with a configurable time offset. [0] NOTE: The Mercury gets time of day data from the GPS receiver if the receiver gets a satellite fix. Network Interface Configuration Submenu Invisible place holder Figure 3-12. Network Interface Configuration Submenu • selection is used to enable or disable virtual LAN operation. For details, refer to VLAN Configuration Menu on Page 45. [enable, disabled; disabled] • IP Configuration—This selection presents a submenu for configuring the local IP address of the transceiver. Detailed explanations are provided in the section titled IP Configuration Menu on Page 50. • DHCP Server Config—Menu for configuration of DHCP services by the Access Point. DHCP provides “on-the-fly” IP address assignments to other LAN devices, including Mercury Series units. For details, refer to DHCP Server Configuration (Data and Mgmt) on Page 48. 44 VLAN Status—This Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C VLAN Configuration Menu The VLAN Configuration menu (Figure 3-13) becomes active and visible when you enable VLAN Status on the Network Interface Configuration Menu, and you press the Enter key. CAUTION:The VLAN Status parameter must be consistent at both the Access Point and Remote radios in order for data to flow correctly. Failure to do so might result in data not being transported correctly even when the radios are in an associated state and able to communicate over-the-air. About Virtual LAN in Mercury A VLAN is essentially a limited broadcast domain, meaning that all members of a VLAN receive broadcast frames sent by members of the same VLAN but not frames sent by members of a different VLAN. For more information, refer to the IEEE 802.1Q standard. The transceiver supports port-based VLAN at the Ethernet interface and over the air, according to the IEEE 802.1Q standard. When VLAN Status is enabled, the wireless port of both AP and remote radios act as a trunk port. The Ethernet port of an Access Point radio is normally configured as a trunk port. This type of port expects incoming frames to have a VLAN ID tag and sends outgoing frames with a VLAN tag as well. The Ethernet port of a Mercury radio can be configured as an access port or as a trunk port. When the Ethernet port of a Mercury radio is configured as VLAN Access Port, the radio tags incoming traffic with a VLAN ID, and strips the tag before sending traffic out. This VLAN is known as the DATA VLAN. Additionally, a second VLAN is assigned for other traffic that is terminated at the radio, such as SNMP, TFTP, ICMP, Telnet, and so on. This is known as the MANAGEMENT VLAN. Traffic directed to the integrated terminal server that handles the serial ports is assigned to the DATA VLAN. When the Ethernet port of a remote radio is configured as a VLAN trunk, the radio expects all incoming Ethernet frames to be tagged, and passes all outgoing frames as received from the wireless link, with the unchanged VLAN tag. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 45 Network Interface Configuration Menu—VLAN Items Invisible place holder Figure 3-13. VLAN Configuration Menu • • • • • • • • 46 VLAN Status—Defines whether the radio handles Ethernet frames in “extended” 802.1Q mode or in “normal” mode in the Ethernet port. If configured with a trunk port, the Mercury passes all tagged traffic regardless of the VLAN ID. The Mercury only uses the Data VLAN ID parameter when the ETH port is configured as an Access Port. [enabled, disabled; disabled] VLAN Ethport Mode—Defines if the Ethernet port acts as a trunk port or as an access port. Auto mode defines the port as a trunk port in an AP, or an access port in a Remote radio. [Auto, Trunk, Access; Auto] Management VLAN ID—Defines the VLAN ID for traffic directed to the radio itself, other than the terminal server process. This VLAN ID is used for filtering and for tagging purposes. [1-4094; 2] Data VLAN ID—Defines the VLAN ID assigned to traffic directed to and from the Ethernet port and the terminal server process in the radio. This VLAN ID is used for filtering and tagging purposes. [1-4094; 3] Default Route IF—Defines the VLAN that contains the default gateway in the radio. [MGMT, DATA; MGMT] Management VLAN Mode—Applies the VLAN tag to management frames. [Tagged, Native; Tagged]. Management VLAN Subnet Config—Presents a screen where you can set the IP Address Mode, Static IP Address, and Static IP Netmask (see Figure 3-14 on Page 47). DHCP Server Config (Mgmt)—Presents a screen where you can view or set the DHCP server status and address information for management functions (see Figure 3-15 on Page 48). Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Data VLAN Subnet Config—Presents a screen where you can view or set the IP mode and address information (see Figure 3-17 on Page 49). • DHCP Server Config (Data)—Presents a screen where you can view or set DHCP server status and address information for data functions (see Figure 3-16 on Page 49). Management VLAN Subnet Configuration Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-14. Management VLAN Subnet Configuration Menu NOTE: Changes to any of the following parameters while communicating over the network (LAN or over-the-air) might cause a loss of communication with the unit you are configuring. You must re-establish communication using the new IP address. • IP Address Mode—Defines the source of the IP address of this device. Only static IP addressing mode is available when VLAN Status is enabled. [Static, Dynamic; Static] • Static IP Address—The IPv4 local IP address. [192.168.1.1] • Static IP Netmask—The IPv4 local subnet mask. This value is used when the radio attempts to send a locally initiated message, either from the terminal server, or from a management process. [255.255.0.0] The lower three lines of the screen (Current IP Address, Current IP Netmask, Current IP Gateway) show the current addressing configured at the transceiver. Current IP Gateway only displays on this screen if Default Route IF on the Network Interface Config menu (Figure 3-13 on Page 46) is set to Management. Selecting option I from the menu in Figure 3-13 on Page 46 displays the screen shown in Figure 3-17 on Page 49. Note that the IP address is different even though it is the same physical unit. This is because this IP address is defined for a different VLAN. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 47 DHCP Server Configuration (Data and Mgmt) A transceiver can provide automatic IP address assignments to other IP devices in the network by providing DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) services. This service eliminates setting an individual device IP address on Remotes in the network, but it requires some planning of the IP address range. One drawback to network-wide automatic IP address assignments is that SNMP services might become inaccessible as they are dependent on fixed IP addresses. You can make a network of radios with the DHCP-provided IP address enabled or with DHCP services disabled. In this way, you can accommodate locations for which a fixed IP address is desired. NOTE: There should be only one active DHCP server in a network. If more than one DHCP server exists, network devices might randomly get their IP address from different servers every time they request one. NOTE: Combining DHCP and IEEE 802.1x device authentication might result in a non-working radio if the DHCP server is located at a Remote radio. If possible, place the DHCP server at the AP location. A DHCP server can be run at a Remote, but it is not recommended if 802.1x Device Authentication is in use and if the AP gets its IP address from the DHCP server on the Remote. In this case, the Remote cannot authenticate to allow the AP to get its address, because the AP needs an address to do perform 802.1x device authentication. This results in an unsolvable condition where the AP needs to get an IP address from DHCP at the Remote, but it can’t get the address until it is authenticated. Invisible place holder Figure 3-15. DHCP Server Configuration (Mgmt) Menu 48 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Figure 3-16. DHCP Server Configuration (Data) Menu • • • • • • Data VLAN Subnet Configuration Menu DHCP Server Status—Enable/Disable the response to DHCP requests to assign an IP address. [Disabled/Enabled; Disabled] DHCP Netmask—IP netmask to be assigned along with the IP address in response to a DHCP request. [0.0.0.0] DHCP starting address—Lowest IP address in the range of addresses provided by this device. [0.0.0.0] DHCP ending address—Highest IP address in the range of addresses provided by this device. A maximum of 256 addresses is allowed in this range. [0.0.0.0] DHCP DNS address—Domain Name Server address provided by this service. DHCP WINS address—Windows Internet Naming Service server address provided by this service. Invisible place holder Figure 3-17. Data VLAN Subnet Configuration Menu 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 49 • IP Address Mode—Defines the source of this device’s IP address. Only static IP addressing mode is available when VLAN Status is enabled [Static; Static] • IP Address—The IPv4 local IP address. [192.168.1.1] • IP Netmask—The IPv4 local subnet mask. This value is used when the radio attempts to send a locally initiated message, from either the terminal server or the management process. [255.255.0.0] • IP Gateway—The IPv4 address of the default gateway device, typically a router. [0.0.0.0] The lower three lines of the screen (Current IP Address, Current IP Netmask, and Current IP Gateway) show the current addressing configured at the transceiver. Current IP Gateway only displays on this screen if Default Route IF on the Network Interface Config menu (Figure 3-13 on Page 46) is set to Data. Invisible place holder IP Configuration Menu Figure 3-18. IP Configuration Menu CAUTION: Changes to the following parameters while communicating over the network (LAN or over-the-air) might cause a loss of communication with the unit being configured. You must re-establish communication using the new IP address. • • 50 IP Address Mode—Defines the source of this device’s IP address. [Static, Dynamic; Static] Static IP Address (User Review Recommended)—Essential for connec- tivity to the transceiver’s MS using the LAN port. Enter any valid IP address that is unique within the network. This field is unnecessary if DHCP is enabled. [192.168.1.1] Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Static IP Netmask—The IPv4 local subnet mask. This field is unnecessary if DHCP is enabled. [255.255.0.0] • Static IP Gateway—The IPv4 address of the network gateway device, typically a router. This field is unnecessary if DHCP is enabled. [0.0.0.0] The lower three items on the screen (Current IP Address, Netmask and Gateway) show the actual addressing at the transceiver whether it was obtained from static configuration or from a DHCP server. 3.4.2 Ethernet Port Configuration Menu The transceiver allows for special control of the Ethernet interface, to allow traffic awareness and availability of the backhaul network for redundancy purposes. NOTE: The transceiver’s network port supports 10BaseT and 100BaseT connections. Confirm that your hub/switch is capable of auto-switching data rates. To prevent excessive Ethernet traffic from degrading performance, place the transceiver in a segment, or behind routers. Figure 3-19. Ethernet Port Configuration Menu • • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C Ethernet Port Enable—Allows enabling/disabling Ethernet traffic for security purposes. Setting it to enabled enables the port. [enabled, disabled; enabled] Ethernet Port Phy Rate—The Ethernet port’s configured speed. (Remote Only)—When enabled, the Ethernet port is disabled when not associated. [enabled, disabled; disabled] Eth Port Follows Association Mercury Reference Manual 51 • Ethernet Filtering Config—Allows enabling/disabling filtering and specifying of Ethernet addresses. Ethernet Filtering Configuration Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-20. Ethernet Filtering Configuration Menu • • Enable Filtering—Activates Ethernet [enabled, disabled; disabled] filtering. Address 1, 2, 3, 4—Ethernet address fields. When filtering is enabled, the Mercury only accepts traffic on its Ethernet port from the configured addresses. [Valid IP address string] 3.4.3 Bridge Configuration Invisible place holder Figure 3-21. Bridge Configuration Menu • 52 Bridge Priority—View/set the ning tree. [0-65535; 32769] Mercury Reference Manual priority of the bridge in the span- 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Bridge Hello Time—View/set spanning tree hello time. This parameter affects how often the bridge sends a spanning tree Bridge Protocol Data Unit (BPDU). [1-10 seconds; 2 seconds] • Bridge Forward Delay—View/set spanning tree forwarding delay. Affects how long the bridge spends listening and learning after initialization. [4-30 seconds; 5 seconds]. 3.4.4 SNMP Agent Configuration The transceiver contains over 100 custom SNMP-manageable objects as well as the IETF standard RFC1213 for protocol statistics, also known as MIB II. You can use off-the-shelf SNMP managers to access the transceiver’s SNMP Agent’s MIB, such as Castle Rock Computing SNMPc™ and Hewlett Packard OpenView™. The transceiver’s SNMP agent supports SNMPv1, v2, and v3. The objects are split into nine MIB files for use with your SNMP manager. There are textual conventions, common files, and specific files. This allows the flexibility to change areas of the MIB and not affect other existing installations or customers. • • • • • • • • • msdreg.mib—MDS sub-tree registrations mds_comm.mib—MDS Common MIB definitions for objects and events common to the entire product family mercury_reg.mib—MDS sub-tree registrations mercurytrv1.mib—SNMPv1 enterprise-specific traps mercurytrv2.mib—SNMPv2 enterprise-specific traps mercury_comm.mib— MIB definitions for objects and events common to the entire Mercury Series mercury_ap.mib—MIB definitions for objects and events for an Access Point transceiver mercury_rem.mib—Definitions for objects and events for a Remote radio mercury_sec.mib—For security management of the radio system NOTE: SNMP management requires that the proper IP address, network, and gateway addresses are configured in each associated network transceiver. In addition, some management systems might require that you compile the MIB files in the order shown above. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 53 Invisible place holder Figure 3-22. SNMP Server Configuration Menu This menu provides configuration and control of vital SNMP functions. • • • • • • 54 Read Community String—SNMP community name with SNMPv1/SNMPv2c read access. This string can contain up to 30 alpha-numeric characters. Write Community String—SNMP community name with SNMPv1/SNMPv2c write access. This string can contain up to 30 alpha-numeric characters. Trap Community String—SNMP community name with SNMPv1/SNMPv2c trap access. This string can contain up to 30 alpha-numeric characters. V3 Authentication Password—Authentication password stored in flash memory. This is used when the Agent is managing passwords locally (or initially for all cases on reboot). This is the SNMPv3 password used for Authentication (currently, only MD5 is supported). This string can contain up to 30 alpha-numeric characters. V3 Privacy Password—Privacy password stored in flash memory. Used when the SNMP Agent is managing passwords locally (or initially for all cases on reboot). This is the SNMPv3 password used for privacy (DES encryption). This string can contain between 8 and 30 alpha-numeric characters. SNMP Mode—This specifies the mode of operation of the radio’s SNMP Agent. The choices are: disabled, v1_only, v2_only, v3_only, v1-v2, and v1-v2-v3. If the mode is disabled, the Agent does not respond to any SNMP traffic. If the mode is v1_only, v2_only, or v3_only, the Agent responds only to that version of SNMP traffic. If the mode is v1-v2 or v1-v2-v3, the Agent responds to the specified version of SNMP traffic. [v1-v2-v3] Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Trap Version—This specifies which version of SNMP is used to encode the outgoing traps. The choices are v1_traps, v2_traps, and v3_traps. When v3_traps is selected, v2-style traps are sent, but with a v3 header. [v1_traps, v2_traps, v3_traps] • Auth Traps Status—Indicates whether or not traps are generated for failed authentication of an SNMP PDU. [Disabled/Enabled; Disabled] • SNMP V3 Passwords—Determines whether v3 passwords are managed locally or via an SNMP Manager. The different behaviors of the Agent, depending on the mode selected, are described in SNMP Mode above. • Trap Manager #1–#4— Table of up to four locations on the network to which traps are sent. [Any standard IP address] NOTE: The number in the upper right-hand corner of the screen is the SNMP Agent’s SNMPv3 Engine ID. Some SNMP Managers may need to know this ID in order interface with the transceiver’s SNMP Agent. The ID only appears on the screen when SNMP Mode is either v1-v2-v3 or v3_only. NOTE: For more SNMP information, see “NOTES ON SNMP” on Page 165. 3.4.5 AP Location Push Config Menu This menu configures the AP for updating connected remotes with the AP Locations File loaded on the AP. Invisible place holder Figure 3-23. AP Location Push Config Menu • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C TFTP Host Address—IP address of the TFTP server that holds the AP locations file. [any valid IP address; 0.0.0.0] Transfer Options—Menu for configuring the TFTP transfer. Mercury Reference Manual 55 • • AP Locations Filename—Name of the AP Locations server. [any valid filename string; ap_locations.txt] file on the Auto AP Location Download—A setting to force connected remotes to download immediately the AP Locations file on the AP. Remotes that associate to an AP with this feature will also download the file. • Retrieve Text File—Download AP Locations text file from the server. • Send Text File—Upload the local AP Locations file to the server. • View AP Location File—Allows on-screen review of the AP Locations file. An example screen is shown in Figure 3-24. Invisible place holder Figure 3-24. AP Location Text File AP Locations File Syntax and Guidelines The AP Locations file is used by the Remote radio to determine which Access Point to connect to when operating in Hopping w/ Hand-offs mode. The AP Locations file is a simple text file containing information about the location and configuration of all Access Points that the Remote can associate with. The file is filled in by creating “AP definition blocks” using tags and labels. Thetag is used to begin a definition block and the tag ends the block. Within the block, you can declare several parameters using a LABEL=VALUE syntax. The possible labels are: • • • • • • • • 56 NAME—The name of the AP. Typically set to the Device Name configured on the AP LAT—GPS Latitude of the AP in decimal degrees LONG—GPS Longitude of the AP in decimal degrees OFFSET—Pattern Offset configured on the AP BW—Bandwidth (1.75 or 3.5) configured on the AP DUR—Frame duration (10 or 20) configured on the AP MAC—The “Wireless MAN Address” configured on the AP CHANNELS—Specifies which channels are being used by the AP Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • GROUP—Name of a grouping of Access Points. A Remote configured with Eth Follows Association enabled does not disable its wired port when moving between APs of the same group.This is useful when two or more APs are on the same subnet. • MODE—Single or Hopping. Specifies the Frequency Mode of the AP. • SINGLE_CHAN—Specifies the AP’s Single Frequency mode channel. The MAC label may appear twice if a P23 redundant Access Point is installed at that location. In this case, one MAC statement provides the MAC address of the A radio and the other MAC statement provides the MAC address of the B radio. The CHANNELS statement only needs to be present if the channel selection feature is used at the Access Point to limit which channels are active. If all channels are used, you can leave out the CHANNELS statement. You can leave out the BW statement for APs that are configured to 1.75 MHz bandwidth. You can also leave out the DUR statement for APs that are configured with a 20 millisecond frame duration. The following shows the syntax of the AP Locations file: # Mercury Remote AP Locations file # These lines are comments # The following line defines the beginning of an AP definition blockNAME=MyAccessPoint LAT=43.11790 LONG=-77.61270 OFFSET=3 BW=1.75 DUR=20 MAC=00:06:3D:00:01:23 CHANNELS=1,3,5,7,9,11,13 # The following line defines the end of the AP definition block 3.4.6 SNTP Server Configuration The Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) allows the Mercury to obtain time of day data from a network server. NOTE: The Mercury can also obtain time of day data from the GPS receiver, if the receiver has a satellite fix. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 57 Invisible place holder Figure 3-25. SNTP Server Entry (on Network Configuration Menu) When SNTP Server is selected (item H), the area to the right of the parameter becomes active, allowing you to enter a valid SNTP server address. Press the Return key to make the address entry active. 3.5 RADIO CONFIGURATION There are two primary layers in the transceiver network—radio and data. Since the data layer is dependent on the radio layer working properly, configure and set the radio items before proceeding. This section explains the Radio Configuration Menu, (Figure 3-26 for AP, Figure 3-27 for Remote). 3.5.1 Radio Configuration Menu Figure 3-26. Radio Configuration Menu (From Access Point) 58 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Figure 3-27. Radio Configuration Menu (From Remote Unit) • • • • • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C Network Name—The user-defined name for the wireless network. [Any 40 character string; MDS-Mercury] Transmit Power (AP Only)—Sets/displays RF power output level in dBm. This setting should reflect local regulatory limitations and losses in antenna transmission line. (See “How Much Output Power Can be Used?” on Page 155 for information on how to calculate this value.) [0–30; 30] Max Transmit Power (Remote Only)—Sets/displays maximum RF power output level in dBm of the Remote. Power level is still controlled by the AP, but it is limited to the maximum level set here. This setting should reflect local regulatory limitations and losses in antenna transmission line. (See “How Much Output Power Can be Used?” on Page 155 for information on how to calculate this value.) [0–30; 30] Receive Power (AP Only)—View/set the receiver gain setpoint for the expected strength of incoming signals from Remotes. This setting indicates at what level (in dBm) the AP expects to hear the Remote stations. A setting of -70 would set the AP receiver’s gain to a relatively low level, while a setting of -85 would be a comparatively high gain setting. [-100 to -20; -75] Frequency Control—Opens a submenu where you can view or set frequency mode bandwidth, channel and other parameters as described in Frequency Control Menu below. Advanced Configuration—Opens a submenu where you can view or set modulation, protection/hysteresis margins, data compression, ARQ settings, and other parameters as described in Advanced Configuration Menu on Page 65. Mercury Reference Manual 59 Frequency Control Menu The items shown on this menu vary depending on the Frequency Mode Selection (Single Channel, Static Hopping, Hopping w/Hand-offs). Examples of all three screens are provided below, followed by a description of the menu items. Invisible place holder Figure 3-28. Frequency Control Menu (Single Channel Freq. Mode) Invisible place holder Figure 3-29. Frequency Control Menu (Static Hopping Freq. Mode) 60 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Figure 3-30. Frequency Control Menu (Hopping w/Hand-offs Freq. Mode [Remote only]) • Frequency Mode—The unit can operate on one selected frequency or frequency hop. Remotes have the option of using a static hopping configuration or using the AP locations file to select an AP and perform hand-offs. For more information on hand-offs, see Table 3-2 on Page 64. Changing this parameter requires a radio reboot. [Static Hopping, Hopping with Hand-offs, Single Channel; Single Channel] NOTE: Frequency Mode Static Hopping on Access Points requires TDD Sync Mode GPS Required. Channel/Frequency Allocations for Single Channel operation are shown in Table 3-1. The transceiver utilizes up to 14 channels (0-13) depending on the bandwidth used (1.75 MHz or 3.5 MHz). Table 3-1. Channel/Frequency Allocations 05-4446A01, Rev. C Channel 1.75 MHz B/W 3.5 MHz B/W 903.000000 904.000000 904.800000 907.600000 906.600000 911.400000 908.600000 915.000000 910.400000 918.600000 912.200000 922.400000 914.000000 926.000000 916.000000 917.800000 919.600000 Mercury Reference Manual 61 Table 3-1. Channel/Frequency Allocations • Channel 1.75 MHz B/W 10 921.400000 11 923.400000 12 925.200000 13 927.000000 3.5 MHz B/W RF Bandwidth—View/set the radio’s RF operating bandwidth. Radios are factory-configured for either 1.75 MHz or 3.5 MHz maximum bandwidth. Determine the factory configuration of a radio by viewing the “CONFIG” number on the label at the bottom of the radio. 1.75 MHz units will have a Configuration string starting with HGA/R9N1, and 3.5 MHz units will have a string starting with HGA/R9N3. The bandwidth setting on this menu does not necessarily have to match the configured bandwidth of the radio, but it is limited by it. That is, you can set a 3.5 MHz radio to either 1.75 or 3.5, but you can only set a 1.75 MHz radio to 1.75. Note that setting a 3.5 MHz bandwidth radio to operate at 1.75 MHz bandwidth will cause a slight degradation of interference rejection capability. [1.75MHz, 3.5MHz] • Hop Pattern—Selects a pre-defined series of channels that is followed when hopping. • Hop Pattern Offset—Inserts an offset into the hop pattern that is synchronized with the GPS. For example, if the offset is 0, then the start of the pattern is aligned with the GPS timing. If the offset is 3, then the fourth hop of the pattern is aligned with the GPS timing. All of the APs that are part of a network should use the same pattern and each one should have its own offset. In the diagram below, one Remote is configured for static hopping and will only associate with AP1 because they are both 62 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C using Offset 0. The hand-off configured Remote, using its AP Locations file, may connect to AP1, AP2, or AP3. The Remote does this by determining the Offset for each AP, then configuring its radio. AP 1 Pattern A Offset 0 AP 2 Pattern A Offset 1 RM Static Hopping Offset 0 • • • • • • • Hand-Off Mode Parameters 05-4446A01, Rev. C AP 3 Pattern A Offset 2 RM Hopping w/ Hand-offs Current AP—Shows the name of the AP that the Remote is trying to associate with. Advanced Control—Provides access to frequency setup parameters. TDD Sync Mode—Indicates if the Access Point’s transmissions should synchronize with the GPS timing. Configure this parameter to GPS Required when the AP is configured for Static Hopping. TDD Sync Mode (Time-Division Duplex) is useful in eliminating same-network interference for multiple-AP installations. When enabled, all AP transmissions are synchronized using GPS timing information. The result is that no AP transmits while another is receiving, which prevents AP-to-AP interference. Changing this parameter requires a radio reboot. [Free Run, GPS Required; Free Run] Note: Do not use the Prefer GPS setting. Channel Selection—Opens a submenu where you can specify channel usage. Single Frequency Channel—The RF frequency that the integrated radio will operate on when in single frequency (non-hopping) mode. [0 to 6 for 3.5-MHz, 0 to 13 for 1.75-MHz; 0]. Frame Duration—Defines the over-the-air media access control framing. [5, 8, 10, or 20 msec; 20 msec] Hardware Filter—This field provides a read-only indication of the maximum bandwidth of the radio. [1.75 MHz or 3.5 MHz] In a mobile or portable application, a Remote radio needs to move and associate with different APs depending on its location. The process by which the Remote ends the connection with one AP and begins a connection with another AP is called “hand-off.” Table 3-2 lists the Mercury Reference Manual 63 hand-off parameters for Remote transceivers and explains how they operate under different signal conditions. Table 3-2. Remote Hand-Off Parameters Strict Distance Strict Connection Strict Signal Signal and Distance Signal, Distance, and Bearing Description The Remote always chooses the closest AP regardless of connection status, RSSI, etc. The Remote will only choose a new AP when the modem link is lost. The Remote chooses a new AP when the modem link is lost or when the RSSI or SNR falls below the threshold. The Remote then chooses the closest AP. Operates the same way as the Strict SIgnal method except that the current AP is abandoned only if the next AP is within the distance threshold. Operates the same way as the Signal and Distance method except that the current AP is abandoned only if the bearing is away from the current AP. AP(s) Used (see note below Table 3-2) Only closest. Closest 3 APs. Closest 3 APs. Closest 3 APs; AP must be within Distance Threshold. Closest 3 APs; AP must be within Distance Threshold. Max. Scanning Seconds N/A Applicable Applicable Applicable Applicable RSSI Threshold N/A N/A Applicable Applicable Applicable SNR Threshold N/A N/A Applicable Applicable Applicable Distance Threshold N/A N/A N/A Applicable Applicable Blacklist Time N/A Applicable Applicable Applicable Applicable NOTE: In Table 3-2 on Page 64, modes using the “Closest 3 APs” first attempt to connect to the closest AP. If after the maximum number of scanning seconds (Max. Scanning Seconds) a link is not established, then the next closest AP is chosen. If after another maximum number of scanning seconds a link is not established, then the third closest AP is chosen. If a link still is not established, the Remote again chooses the closest AP and continues this cycle until it is associated to one of the APs. NOTE: In Table 3-2 on Page 64, modes which use the RSSI and SNR Thresholds use them in an “or” logic fashion. That is, if the RSSI is below the set threshold OR the SNR is below threshold, the Remote drops the current AP. 64 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Advanced Configuration Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-31. Advanced Configuration Menu • • • • • • • Adaptive Modulation—Enables automatic selection of modulation and FEC rate based on SNR. [enabled, disabled; enabled] Protection Margin—A number of decibels of SNR added to the minimum SNR required for a given modulation and FEC rate. See “Modulation Protection and Hysteresis Margins” on Page 66 for more information. [0-50; 3] Hysteresis Margin—A number of decibels of SNR added to the maximum SNR required before shifting to the next higher modulation and FEC rate. See “Modulation Protection and Hysteresis Margins” on Page 66 for more information. [0-50; 3] Data Compression—This setting determines whether over-the-air data packets will be compressed. [enabled, disabled; enabled] Max Modulation—Sets the highest modulation speed the transceiver will use. [BPSK, QPSK-1/2, QPSK-3/4, 16QAM-1/2, 16QAM-3/4, 64QAM-2/3, 64QAM-3/4; QAM16-3/4] Cyclic Prefix—Amount of additional information added to the over-the-air packets to mitigate the effects of channel multipath. [1/4, 1/8, 1/16,1/32; 1/16] Channel Type—This parameter, available on Access Point units, must be set appropriately according to the signal conditions of a network. For installations with strong signals, low interference, and minimal fading, set the Channel Type parameter to Static. This setting is generally appropriate for Access Points whose Remotes are in fixed locations. It supports a large offered payload with high packet rates. For installations with significant interference and fading or nomadic/mobile Remotes, set the Channel Type parameter to Dynamic. [Static, Dynamic; Static] 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 65 • • • • • • • • Modulation Protection and Hysteresis Margins ARQ—Enables the Automatic [enable, disable; enabled] Repeat Request function. ARQ Window Size—The maximum number of blocks to send before receiving an acknowledgement. [1–1024; 512] ARQ Block Size—ARQ is applied to payload data in blocks of this size. [4–2040; 256] ARQ Block Lifetime—ARQ blocks are valid for this length of time. [0–655; 655] ARQ Transmitter Delay—The length of time the transmitter waits before repeating an unacknowledged packet. [1–655; 35] ARQ Receiver Delay—The length of time the receiver waits before repeating an unacknowledged packet. [1–655; 35] Downlink Percentage—The percentage of link time given to downstream traffic. It should be set to 50% when Adaptive Split is set to enabled. [10-90%; 50%] Adaptive Split—The adaptive split feature provides improved link utilitization and throughput for burst payload traffic. The Mercury is a TDD system and normally allocates 50% of its capacity to the downlink and 50% to the uplink. When adaptive split is enabled, the Media Access Controller (MAC) in the Access Point monitors the traffic flow continuously in the downlink and uplink directions. The MAC auotmatically modifies the downlink split in response to the traffic load. When more traffic is flowing upstream, the downlink split changes to allocate additional capacity to the uplink. When more traffic is flowing downstream, the downlink gets additional capacity. If TDD synchronization is used to synchronize Access Points and minimize inter-Access Point interference, Adaptive Split should be disabled. [enabled, disabled; enabled] Table 3-3 on Page 67 shows the relationship between the radio’s Protection Margin, Hysteresis Margin, and the SNR range allowed for each form of modulation. Column A lists the available modulation types for the radio, while columns B and C show the minimum SNR range required to operate in each modulation. For example, an SNR of 5.8 dB in Column B is required for QPSK modulation with an FEC rate of 1/2. An SNR of 8.4 dB is required for QPSK modulation with an FEC rate of 3/4. Columns B and C have a Hysteresis Margin of 0 dB. This means there is no overlap between the maximum SNR for BPSK (5.8 dB) and the minimum SNR for QPSK-1/2 (5.8 dB). Columns D and E show the SNR ranges with a Protection Margin and Hysteresis Margin of 3 dB. The Protection Margin is added to each value in Columns B and C to get the corresponding value in Columns D and E. The Hysteresis Margin is then added to the Max SNR value. 66 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C For example, the third SNR value in Column D is 11.4 dB (8.4 + 3 = 11.4 dB), and the third SNR value in Column E is 17.1 (11.1 + 3 + 3 = 17.1 dB). Note that with a Hysteresis Margin of 3 dB, there is an overlap of 3 between the Max SNR of one modulation and the Min SNR of the next higher modulation. In this case, if a link is operating with an SNR of 15 dB, then QPSK-3/4 modulation is used. The SNR must go above 17.1 dB before the link shifts up to 16QAM-1/2 modulation. Conversely, the SNR will need to drop below 11.4 dB before the link shifts down to QPSK-1/2. The blank entries (--) in the table indicate infinite SNR (i.e., the top of the range). For example, in columns B and C, 64QAM-3/4 modulation is used for all SNR values from 20 dB and up. Table 3-3. Adaptive Modulation Protection and Hysteresis Margins Protection Protection Protection Hysteresis Hysteresis Hysteresis Min SNR Max SNR Min SNR Max SNR Min SNR Max SNR BPSK 3.3 5.8 3.3 11.8 3.3 13.8 QPSK-1/2 5.8 8.4 8.8 14.4 10.8 16.4 QPSK-3/4 8.4 11.1 11.4 17.1 13.4 19.1 16QAM-1/2 11.1 14.4 14.1 20.4 16.1 22.4 16QAM-3/4 14.4 18.4 17.4 24.4 19.4 26.4 64QAM-2/3 18.4 20 21.4 26 23.4 28 64QAM-3/4 20 -- 23 -- 25 -- 3.5.2 Serial Port Configuration Overview The transceiver includes an embedded serial device server that provides transparent encapsulation over IP. In this capacity, it acts as a gateway between serial and IP devices. Two common scenarios are PC applications using IP to talk to remote devices, and serial PC applications talking to remote serial devices over an IP network. These data services are available from the COM1 port of the radio. COM1 Port–Dual Purpose Capability 05-4446A01, Rev. C The COM1 port is used as a local console connection point and to pass serial data with an external device. Setting the COM1 port status to Enable prevents access to the Management System (MS) through this port. However, the MS can still be accessed via the LAN port using Telnet or a web browser. Mercury Reference Manual 67 NOTE: To restore the COM1 port to support Management System services, connect a terminal to the port, select the proper baud rate (115,200 is default), and enter an escape sequence (+++) to reset it to the console mode. There is a configuration parameter for the console baud rate and another parameter for the serial data baud rate. These items can be different, so when switching out of data mode to console mode, the port might also change its baud rate. TCP vs. UDP TCP and UDP services are used by the transceiver’s embedded serial device server. TCP provides a connection-oriented link with end-to-end acknowledgment of data, but with some added overhead. UDP provides a connectionless best-effort delivery service with no acknowledgment. Most polled protocols are best served by UDP service as the protocol itself has built-in error recovery mechanisms. UDP provides the needed multidrop operation by means of multicast addressing. On the other hand, TCP services are best suited for applications without a recovery mechanism (error-correction) and must have the guaranteed delivery that TCP provides in spite of the extra overhead. The IP-to-Serial Application Example on Page 75 shows how to do this. Serial Encapsulation Transparent encapsulation, or IP tunneling, provides a mechanism to encapsulate serial data in an IP envelope. All bytes received through the serial port are put into the data portion of a TCP or UDP packet (TCP or UDP are user-configurable options). In the same manner, all data bytes received in a TCP or UDP packet are output through the serial port. When the radio receives data through the serial port, it is buffered until the packet is received completely. There are two events that signal an end-of-packet to the radio: a period of time since the last byte was received, or a number of bytes that exceed the buffer size. Both of these triggers are user-configurable. One radio can perform serial data encapsulation (IP-to-Serial) and talk to a PC. You can use two radios together (or one radio and a terminal server) to provide a serial-to-serial channel. For more information, see “IP-to-Serial Application Example” on Page 75 and Point-to-Point Serial-to-Serial Application Example on Page 76. TCP Client vs. TCP Server On a TCP session there is a server side and a client side. You can configure the transceiver to act as either a server or a client. The server always waits for requests from clients. The client mode attempts to establish a connection to a server (typically running on a PC) whenever it receives data on the serial port. There is also a Client/Server mode, where the client establishes a connection when data is received on the serial port and the server is not currently handling a connection. 68 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C UDP Multicast IP provides a mechanism to perform a limited broadcast to a specific group of devices. This is known as multicast addressing. Multicast addressing requires the use of a specific branch of IP addresses set apart by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) for this purpose. UDP multicast is generally used to transport polling protocols typically used in SCADA applications where multiple remote devices will receive and process the same poll message. As part of the Multicast implementation, the radio sends IGMP membership reports and IGMP queries, and responds to membership queries. It defaults to V2 membership reports, but responds to both V1 and V2 queries. The Point-to-Multipoint Serial-to-Serial Application Example on Page 76 shows how to provide multicast services. Data Buffering Data buffering is always active regardless of the selected mode. If you connect EIA-232 serial devices to the transceiver, review these parameters carefully. Serial Configuration Wizard GE MDS recommends the Serial Configuration Wizard, available through the Serial Port Configuration Menu, for configuration of the serial terminal services. The wizard uses a step-by-step process, eliminates possible conflicting settings, and streamlines complex configurations. You can bypass the wizard by selecting option B) View Current Settings and adjusting the individual settings of the appropriate parameter. Serial Port Configuration Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-32. Serial Port Configuration Menu 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 69 Figure 3-33. Serial Configuration Wizard • Begin Wizard—Tool for configuring serial ports using a step-by-step process. • View Current Settings—Displays all setable options. Varies depending on the selected IP protocol. Configuring for UDP Point-to-Multipoint Invisible place holder Figure 3-34. UDP Point-to-Multipoint Menu Use UDP point-to-multipoint to send a copy of the same packet to multiple destinations, such as in a polling protocol. • • 70 Status—Enable/Disable the serial data port. Mode—The type of IP port offered by the transceiver’s serial device server. [TCP, UDP; TCP] Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • • • • • • • • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C RX IP Port—Receive IP data from this source and pass it through to the connected serial device. The port number must be used by the application connecting to local TCP or UDP socket. [Any valid IP port; 30010] TX IP Address (used instead of Local IP Address when using UDP Point-to-Multipoint)— Configure with a valid Multicast address (224.0.0.0–239.255.255.255). IP packets received with a matching destination address are processed by this unit. [Any legal IP address; 0.0.0.0] TX IP Port (used instead of Local IP Port when using UDP Point-to-Multipoint)—This port number must match the number used by the application connecting to local TCP or UDP socket. [1-64,000; 30010] Talkback Enable—Talkback is a mode where the radio returns a serial message received within a time-out period back to the last address of an incoming UDP message. If the time-out expires, the unit sends the serial data to the configured address. [Enable, Disable; Disabled] Baud Rate—Data rate (payload) for the COM port, in bits-per-second. [1,200–115,200; 19200] Byte Format—Formatting of data bytes, representing data bits, parity and stop bits. [7N1, 7E1, 7O1, 8N1, 8E1, 8O1, 8N1, 7N2, 7E2, 7O2, 8N2, 8E2, 8O2; 8N1] Buffer Size—Maximum amount of characters that the Remote end buffers locally before transmitting data through the serial port. [1–255; 255] Inter-Packet Delay—Amount of time that signal the end of a message, measured in tenths of a second. [default = 1 (that is, 1/10th of a second)] Commit Changes and Exit Wizard—Save and execute changes made on this screen (shown only after changes have been entered). Mercury Reference Manual 71 Invisible place holder Figure 3-35. UDP Point-to-Point Menu Configuring for UDP Point-to-Point Use UDP point-to-point configuration to send information to a single device. • • • • • • • • 72 Status—Enable/Disable the serial data port. IP Protocol—UDP Point-to-Point. This is the type of IP port offered by the transceiver’s serial device server. [TCP, UDP; TCP] Remote IP Address—Data received through the serial port is sent to this IP address. To reach multiple Remotes in the network, use UDP Point-to-Multipoint. [Any legal IP address; 0.0.0.0] Remote IP Port—The destination IP port for data packets received through the serial port on the transceiver. [1–64,000; 30010] Local IP Port—Port number where data is received and passed through to the serial port. The application connecting to this transceiver must use this port number. [1–64,000; 30010,] Packet Redundancy Mode—For proper operation, all radios’ Serial Packet Redundancy mode must match (Single Packet mode vs. Packet Repeat mode). This is because a transceiver, when in Packet Repeat mode, sends 12 extra characters (sequence numbers, etc.) to control the delivery of the repeated data. Misconfigurations might result in undesired operation. Data Baud Rate—Data rate (payload) for the COM port, in bits-per-second. [1,200–115,200; 19200] Byte Format—Formatting of data bytes. Data bits, parity and stop bits. [7N1, 7E1, 7O1, 8N1, 8E1, 8O1, 8N1, 7N2, 7E2, 7O2, 8N2, 8E2, 8O2; 8N1] Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Commit Changes and Exit Wizard—Save and execute changes made on this screen (shown only after changes have been entered). Configuring for TCP Mode Invisible place holder Figure 3-36. TCP Client Menu (Remote) • • • • • • • • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C Status—Enable/Disable the serial data port. IP Protocol—TCP Client. This is the type of IP port offered by the transceiver’s serial device server. [TCP, UDP; TCP] Primary Host Address—The IP address to be used as a destination for data received through the serial port. [Any legal IP address; 0.0.0.0] Primary IP Port—The destination IP port for data packets received through the serial port on the transceiver. [Any valid IP port; 30010] Secondary Host Address—The IP address to be used as a destination for data received through the serial port, in case the primary host address is not available. [Any legal IP address; 0.0.0.0] Secondary IP Port—The destination IP port for data packets received through the serial port on the transceiver, used along with the secondary host address above. [Any valid IP port; COM1: 30010] Outgoing Connection’s Inactivity Timeout—Amount of time (in seconds) that the transceiver waits for data before terminating the TCP session. [0–600; 600] Data Baud Rate—Data rate (payload) for the COM port, in bits-per-second. [1,200–115,200; 19200] Byte Format—Interface signaling parameters. Data bits, parity and stop bits. [7N1, 7E1, 7O1, 8N1, 8E1, 8O1, 8N1, 7N2, 7E2, 7O2, 8N2, 8E2, 8O2; 8N1] Mercury Reference Manual 73 • Buffer Size—Maximum amount of characters that the Remote end buffers locally before transmitting data through the serial port. [1–255; 255] • Inter-Frame Packet Delay—A measurement representing the end of a message, measured in tenths of a second. [default = 1 (that is, 1/10th of a second)] • Commit Changes and Exit Wizard—Save and execute changes made on this screen (shown only after changes have been entered). Invisible place holder Figure 3-37. TCP Server Menu (AP) • • • • • • • 74 Status—Enable/Disable the serial data port. IP Protocol—TCP Server. This is the type of IP port offered by the transceiver’s serial device server. [TCP, UDP; TCP] Local Listening IP Port—Receive IP data from this source and pass it through to the connected serial device. The application connecting to the local TCP or UDP socket must use this port number. [Any valid IP port; 30010] Baud Rate—Data rate (payload) for the COM port, in bits-per-second. [1,200–115,200; 19200] Byte Format—Interface signaling parameters. Data bits, parity and stop bits. [7N1, 7E1, 7O1, 8N1, 8E1, 8O1, 8N1, 7N2, 7E2, 7O2, 8N2, 8E2, 8O2; 8N1] Buffer Size—Maximum amount of characters that the Remote end buffers locally before transmitting data through the serial port. [1–255; 255] Inter-Packet Delay—Amount of time that signal the end of a message, measured in tenths of a second. [default = 1 (that is, 1/10th of a second)] Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Commit Changes and Exit Wizard—Save and execute changes made on this screen (shown only after changes have been entered). IP-to-Serial Application Example You must choose UDP or TCP to establish communications. This depends on the type of device you are communicating with at the other end of the IP network. In this example, we will use TCP to illustrate its use. In TCP mode, the transceiver remains in a passive mode, offering a socket for connection. Once a request is received, data received at the serial port is sent through the IP socket and vice versa, until the connection is closed or the link is interrupted. In this mode, the transceiver behaves the same, whether it is an Access Point or a Remote. (See Figure 3-38 and Table 3-4) NOTE: The TCP session has a timeout of 10 minutes (600 seconds). If inactive for that time, the session is closed. The transceiver offers the port again for connection after this time expires. Establishing a Connection From the PC, establish a TCP connection to the IP address of the Remote transceiver and to the IP port as configured above (30010). Use a Telnet client application to establish this connection. Data can now be sent between the PC and the RTU or other connected device. Invisible place holder 192.168.0.10 192.168.0.1 Ethernet Crosssover 192.168.0.2 LA COM COM PW LIN Remote Access Point Computer or Network EIA-232 RTU Figure 3-38. IP-to-Serial Application Diagram Table 3-4. Serial Port Application Configuration IP-to-Serial Connection 05-4446A01, Rev. C Transceiver Location Menu Item Setting Access Point None is required None is required Remote Unit IP Address 192.168.0.2 Status Enabled IP Protocol TCP Baud Rate 9,600 (Example) Flow Control None Local IP Port 30010 Mercury Reference Manual 75 Point-to-Point Serial-to-Serial Application Example Once you have configured the transceivers, they begin processing data presented at the COM ports. Data presented at the Access Point’s COM port is packetized and sent via UDP to the Remote. Upon receiving the packet, the Remote strips the data out of the UDP packet and sends it out its COM port. Likewise, data presented at the Remote’s COM port is packetized, sent to the Access Point, stripped, and sent out the Access Point’s COM port. This configuration does not use multicast addressing. Invisible place holder 192.168.0.10 192.168.0.1 192.168.0.2 LA COM EIA-232 Terminal or Computer EIA-232 COM PW LIN Access Point Remote RTU Figure 3-39. Point-to-Point Serial-to-Serial Application Diagram Table 3-5. Serial Port Application Configuration Transceiver Location Menu Item Setting Access Point (COM1) Status Enabled Data Baud Rate 9,600 (Example) Remote Unit (COM1) SIFD IP Protocol UDP Remote IP Address 192.168.0.2 (IP address of the Remote radio) Remote IP Port 30010 Local IP Port 30010 Status Enabled Data Baud Rate 9,600 (Example) Flow Control X-ON/X-OFF (Example) SIFD 4 (Characters) IP Protocol UDP Remote IP Address 192.168.0.1 (IP address of the AP) Remote IP Port 30010 Local IP Port 30010 Point-to-Multipoint Serial-to-Serial Application Example The operation and data flow for this mode is very similar to Point-to-Point serial-to-serial application, except that it uses multicast addressing. The primary difference is that data presented at the Access Point’s COM port is packetized and sent using UDP to all of the Remotes. Upon receiving the packet, all of the Remotes strip the data from the UDP packet and send it out their COM ports. Likewise, data presented at any of the Remotes’ COM ports is packetized, sent to the 76 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Access Point, stripped, and sent out the Access Point’s COM port (see Figure 3-40, Table 3-6, Figure 3-41, and Figure 3-42 on Page 78). Invisible place holder 192.168.0.2 192.168.0.10 LA 192.168.0.1 COM EIA-232 COM PW LIN Remote RTU 192.168.0.3 EIA-232 LA COM EIA-232 COM PW Terminal or Computer LIN Access Point RTU Remote LA COM EIA-232 COM PW LIN 192.168.0.4 Remote RTU Figure 3-40. Point-to-Multipoint Serial-to-Serial Application Diagram Invisible place holder Table 3-6. Serial Port Application Configuration Transceiver Location Menu Item Setting Access Point (COM1) Status Enabled Baud Rate 9600 (Example) Flow Control Disabled IP Protocol UDP Remote IP Address 224.254.1.1— Multicast Address1 Remote IP Port 30010 Local IP Port 30010 Enable Enabled Baud Rate 2,400 (Example) Flow Control Hardware (Example) IP Protocol UDP Remote IP Address 192.168.0.1 Remote IP Port 30010 Local IP Port 30010 Local Multicast Address 224.254.1.1 — Multicast Address2 Remote Units (COM1) 1. This address is an example only. Any Class D IP address (224.0.0.0–239.255.255.255) will work. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 77 Figure 3-41. Serial Port Configuration—Access Point Figure 3-42. Radio Serial Port Configuration—Remote Mixed Modes In this example, the TCP mode does not involve the Access Point. Thus, the transceiver in a single network can run in both modes at the same time. In other words, you can configure some Remotes for TCP mode and others (along with the Access Point) for UDP mode. In this configuration, the Host PC can use both data paths to reach the RTUs. This is helpful when a mixed collection of RTUs is present where some RTUs can operate in a broadcast form while others cannot (see Figure 3-43 on Page 79 and Table 3-7 on Page 79). 78 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Operation and Data Flow • Communicate with RTU A by Telneting to Remote 1, port 30010. • Communicate with RTU B by Telneting to Remote 2, port 30010. • Communicate with RTUs C and D by sending and receiving data from the Access Point’s COM port. • All communication paths can be used simultaneously. Invisible place holder RTU–A LA COM EIA-232 COM PW LIN Remote 1 Access Point Transceiver LA COM EIA-232 COM PW LIN RTU–B Remote 2 Ethernet Crosssover RTU–C LA COM EIA-232 COM PW Terminal or Computer LIN EIA-232 Remote 3 LA COM EIA-232 COM PW LIN RTU–D Remote 4 Figure 3-43. Mixed-Modes Application Diagram Table 3-7. Serial Port Application Configuration Transceiver Location Menu Item Setting Access Point Status Enabled Baud Rate 9,600 Flow Control Disabled IP Protocol UDP Send to Address A multicast IP address such as 224.254.1.1 Send to Port 30010 Receive on Port 30010 Receive on Address 0.0.0.0 (Not Used) Status Enabled Baud Rate 2,400 Flow Control Disabled IP Protocol TCP Receive on Port 30010 Status Enabled Baud Rate 9,600 Flow Control Disabled IP Protocol UDP Send to Address IP address of the AP Send to Port 30010 Remote Units 1 & 2 (COM1) Remote Units 3 & 4 (COM1) 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 79 Table 3-7. Serial Port Application Configuration (Continued) Transceiver Location Menu Item Setting Receive on Port 30010 Receive on Address 224.254.1.1 (The multicast IP address used for the AP’s Send To Address above) 3.6 MODBUS / TCP SERVER CONFIGURATION Modbus is a serial communications protocol developed by Schneider Electric (Modicon) for communication between programmable logic controllers (PLCs), remote terminal units (RTUs) and other industrial electronic devices. It has become an established standard in the industry, and is now used by many manufacturers of industrial data equipment. Mercury Series transceivers running version 2.2.0 firmware or later include Modbus functionality. This section of the addendum contains an overview of the Modbus/TCP Server and provides menu details for using this feature. You should also review Configuring for TCP Mode section on Page 73. NOTE: This material assumes you have an understanding of Ethernet networking, TCP/IP, and Modbus serial protocols. Refer to the following web site for additional information: www.modicon.com/TECHPUBS/intr7.html. NOTE: Modbus/TCP functionality is provided on the COM1 port of the transceiver only. 3.6.1 Modbus/TCP in Mercury Transceivers—An Overview The transceiver implements a Modbus/TCP server that bridges Modbus/TCP to either: Modbus RTU or Modbus/ASCII. It does not function as a Modbus/TCP client. The transceiver converts Modbus/TCP requests to either RTU or ASCII serial Modbus packets and sends them to the configured serial port. It waits up to the timeout period for a reply on the serial port, and if one arrives, it converts the response back to Modbus/TCP and sends it to the connected Modbus/TCP client. 3.6.2 Menu Selections Connect a PC to the transceiver as described in STEP 3—CONNECT PC TO THE TRANSCEIVER section on Page 23, and access the embedded 80 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C management system. Follow the steps below to proceed with Modbus/TCP configuration. 1. From the Serial Configuration Wizard opening screen (Figure 3-44 on Page 81), select A to begin the wizard. Invisible place holder Figure 3-44. Configuration Wizard Opening Screen 2. Choose the IP protocol you wish to use (TCP, UDP, or Modbus/TCP) by selecting the appropriate letter from the menu. Figure 3-45. IP Protocol Selection Screen 3. On the next screen (Figure 3-46 on Page 82), choose the listening port you wish to use for the Modbus/TCP server. The default is port 502. Press N to continue. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 81 Figure 3-46. Modbus/TCP Server Listening Port 4. On the next screen (Figure 3-47), press A to change the Modbus serial format, then press the space bar to toggle between the available formats (MODBUS/RTU or MODBUS/ASCII). Press B to enter the Modbus serial timeout value in milliseconds. Press N to continue the wizard. NOTE: The only difference between Modbus/RTU and Modbus/ASCII is the form of the framing sequence, error check pattern, and address interpretation. Figure 3-47. Choose Modbus Serial Format and Timeout Value Note: Modbus Timeout setting is in milliseconds, not seconds as displayed in the example above. 82 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 5. When the next screen appears (Figure 3-48), press A to select the desired data baud rate and B to select the data byte format. Press N to continue. Figure 3-48. Select Data Baud Rate and Byte Format 6. The screen shown in Figure 3-49 appears next. Press A to select the Buffer Size of message packets, and B to select the Inter-Frame Delay. Press N to continue with the wizard. Invisible place holder Figure 3-49. Buffer Size and Inter-Frame Delay Values 7. On the next screen (Figure 3-50 on Page 84), select A and use the spacebar to enable the serial port for data communication. Press N to continue the wizard. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 83 Invisible place holder Figure 3-50. Serial Port Status Screen 8. Review all settings on the summary screen shown in Figure 3-51. If all settings are correct, press X to confirm and exit the wizard. If not, select the letter of the item(s) you wish to change. Invisible place holder Figure 3-51. Serial Configuration—Summary Screen This completes the menu selections for Modbus/TCP operation. 84 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 3.7 SECURITY CONFIGURATION MENU The transceiver’s security features are grouped into four major categories and are accessible from the Security Configuration Menu (see Figure 3-52). These categories are: Device Security—Contains settings for controlling access to the radio itself for configuration and management. Wireless Security—Controls how and when radios communicate with each other, as well as how data traffic is handled. RADIUS Configuration—Deals with IEEE 802.1x device authentication and authorization using a central server. Manage Certificates (Remote only)—Allows download paths, and TFTP parameters. setting of certificate types, Invisible place holder Figure 3-52. Security Configuration Menu Selecting any of the Security Configuration Menu items opens a submenu where you can view or change settings. Examples of these screens and more detailed descriptions of their contents are provided below. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 85 3.7.1 Device Security Menu The Device Security Menu (Figure 3-53) controls how the radios can be accessed either locally or remotely for configuration and management. Invisible place holder Figure 3-53. Device Security Menu • • • • • • • 86 Telnet Access—Controls Telnet access to the agement system. [enabled, disabled; enabled] SSH Access—Controls access [enabled, disabled; enabled] transceiver’s man- to the Secure Shell (SSH) server. HTTP Mode—Controls access to the transceiver’s management system via the web server. [disabled, HTTP, HTTPS; HTTP] HTTP Auth Mode—Selects the mode used for authenticating a web user. [Basic Auth, MD5 Digest; Basic Auth] User Auth Method—View/set the method of authentication for users. [Local, Radius; Local] User Auth Fallback—View/set method of authentication to use if the RADIUS server is unavailable. [None, Local; None] User Passwords—Allows changing of Administrative and Guest passwords. When selected, a new screen appears (Figure 3-54 on Page 87). Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C User Passwords Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-54. User Passwords Menu To change the Administrator or Guest password, select the appropriate menu item (A or B). A flashing cursor appears to the right. From here, type the new password, which can be any alpha-numeric string up to 13 characters long. The change is asserted when you press the Return key. • • Change Admin Password—Allows you to set a new [any alpha-numeric string up to 13 characters; admin] Change Guest Password—Allows you to set a new [any alpha-numeric string up to 13 characters; guest] password. password. TIP: For enhanced security, consider using misspelled words, a combination of letters and numbers, and a combination of upper and lower case letters. Also, the more characters used (up to 13), the more secure the password. These strategies help protect against sophisticated hackers who use a database of common words (for example, dictionary attacks) to determine a password. 3.7.2 Wireless Security Menu The features in the Wireless Security menu (Figure 3-55 on Page 88) control the communication of data across the wireless link. You can authenticate the radios locally via a list of authorized radios, or remotely via a centralized IEEE 802.1x device authentication server. This server provides a centralized authentication mechanism based on standards. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 87 Invisible place holder Figure 3-55. Wireless Security Menu • • Device Auth Mode—View/set the device’s authentication method. [None, Local, IEEE 802.1X; None] Data Encryption—Controls the over-the-air payload data’s AES-128 bit encryption. [enable, disable; disabled] • Encryption Phrase—View/set the phrase used to generate encryption keys when encrypting over-the-air payload. [any alpha-numeric string of 8 to 15 characters;] • Max Remotes (AP only)—The maximum number of remotes an AP can associate with. • Approved Remotes (AP only)—Launches a submenu where you can view, add, or delete approved Remotes. (See Figure 3-56.) Approved Remotes Submenu Setting the Device Auth Mode to Local forces an AP to check the Approved Remotes List before establishing a radio link. A Remote must be in the list before the AP associates and grants authorization. Before enabling this option, at least one entry must already exist in the View Approved Remotes list. 88 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Figure 3-56. Approved Remotes Submenu • • Add Remote—Enter the MAC address of Remote. [Any valid 6-digit hexadecimal MAC address; 00:00:00:00:00:00] Delete Remote—Enter the MAC address of Remote. For security purposes, you should delete a stolen or deprovisioned radio from this list. • Add Associated Remotes—Add all currently associated remotes to the approved remote list. Alternatively, you can enter each Remote MAC manually. • Delete All Remotes—Remove (complete purge) all Remotes from current list. • View Approved Remotes—Listing of approved Remotes by MAC address. These radios are authorized to join this AP. If a Remote is not in this list, it cannot associate with this AP. 3.7.3 IEEE 802.1x Device Authentication This section covers the configuration needed for the radios to access the IEEE 802.1x device authentication server, which provides Device Level Security and for Wireless Access Security. GE MDS does not provide the server software. Operation of Device Authentication Device authentication forces the radio to authenticate before allowing user traffic to traverse the wireless network. When Device Security is configured to use IEEE 802.1x as the Authentication Method, Remote radios need three types of certificates: public (client), private, and root (Certificate Authority). These files are unique to each Remote radio and must first be created at the server and then installed into each unit via TFTP. The certificate files must be in DER format. Device authentication uses the serial number of each radio as the Common Name (CN) in its certificate and in its RADIUS identity field. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 89 Each Access Point and Remote radio must be identified/recognized by the device authentication server through the Common Name (Serial number) and IP address entries. NOTE: Consult your network administrator for assistance in configuration, or for help with other issues that may arise. To activate device authentication, select Device Auth Method and set RADIUS as the active mode. The behavior of this setting differs depending on whether it is implemented on an Access Point or a Remote transceiver. An explanation of these behaviors is given below: Access Point: When Device Auth Method is set to RADIUS, the AP disassociates all associated Remotes and waits for the device authentication server to authenticate the Remotes before allowing data from them to pass. When approval is received from the authentication server, data from the Remote passes. Remote: When Device Auth Method is set to RADIUS, the Remote halts any data it is passing, and requests Authentication from the device authentication server. If accepted, data is transmitted. Operation of User Authentication User Authentication controls authentication of users who can manage the device. This is in contrast to Device Authentication (above), which authenticates devices that can participate in the data network. When user authentication is set to Local or RADIUS, you must enter a valid user name and password before you can manage the radio. In RADIUS mode, both of these fields can be up to 40 characters long. In Local mode the user name is admin and the password can be up to 13 characters long. When set to RADIUS, all logins to the local configuration services must be authenticated via the device authentication server, including Telnet and SSH (Secure Shell) sessions. Authentication must be accepted before access to the radio menu is granted. 90 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C RADIUS Configuration Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-57. Radius Configuration Menu • • • Auth Server Address—The IP address server. [any valid IP address; 0.0.0.0] Auth Server Port—The [1812, 1645, 1812] of the authentication UDP Port of the authentication server. Auth Server Shared Secret—User authentication and Device authentication require a common shared secret to complete an authentication transaction. This entry must match the string used to configure the appropriate files on the authentication server. [ ; any alpha-numeric string up to 16 characters] • User Auth Mode—RADIUS Authentication algorithm. [PAP, CHAP, EAP; PAP] NOTE: CHAP is more secure than PAP. PAP may display the login password in log files at the authentication server while CHAP will encrypt the login password. 3.7.4 Manage Certificates Use Certificate generation software to generate certificate files, then install these files into each Remote unit using TFTP. This is done using the Manage Certificates Menu (Figure 3-58 on Page 92). The certificate files must be in DER format. The Common Name (CN) field in the public certificate file must match the serial number of the unit it is installed on. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 91 Invisible place holder Figure 3-58. Manage Certificates Menu • TFTP Host Address—(Telnet/Terminal only)—IP address of the com- puter on which the TFTP server resides. This same IP address is used in other screens/functions (reprogramming, logging, etc.). Changing it here also changes it for other screens/functions. [Any valid IP address; 127.0.0.1]. • Transfer Options—A menu for configuring the TFTP transfer. (See Figure 3-59 on Page 93.) Three certificate files (Root CA, Client, and Private Key) must be present in each of the Remote radios. Use the commands described below to install these files into each Remote radio: • • Certificate Type—Selects one of the three certificate file mentioned above. [Root CA, Client, Private Key; Root CA] types Certificate Filename—Specifies the software path and filename for downloading certificates. • Retrieve Certificate—Initiates the retrieval of the certificate file from the storage location. A successful installation issues a Complete status message. NOTE: It is imperative that the three certificate files are installed correctly into the Remote radio, in their respective file types. If they are not, the Remote is un-authenticated for data traffic. Consult your network administrator for more information. 92 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Figure 3-59. Transfer Options Menu • TFTP Timeout—The time the client radio will wait for a response from the server before ending the transfer. • TFTP Block Size—The amount of data sent in each TFTP packet. 3.8 REDUNDANCY CONFIGURATION (AP ONLY) For operation in protected (redundant) mode, an AP must be in a Packaged P23 enclosure with a backup radio. See MDS publication 05-4161A01 for details. This manual is available under the Downloads tab at www.GEmds.com. The Redundancy Configuration Menu (Figure 3-60) is where you enable/disable redundancy operation and define the triggers that will cause a switchover. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 93 Invisible place holder Figure 3-60. Redundancy Configuration Menu (AP Only) • • • • • • 94 Redundancy Configuration—Enable/disable ver for AP. [enabled, disabled; disabled] redundancy switcho- Network Event Triggers—This selection opens a submenu (Figure 3-61 on Page 95) where you can set/view the trigger status for Network Events. Radio Event Triggers—This selection opens a submenu (Figure 3-62 on Page 95) where you can set/view the trigger status for Radio Events, such as a loss of associated Remotes or excessive packet errors. Hardware Event Triggers—This selection opens a submenu (Figure 3-63 on Page 96) where you can set/view the trigger status for initialization/hardware errors. Redundancy Configuration Options—This selection opens a submenu (Figure 3-64 on Page 96) where you can set the threshold criteria for declaring an error event. Force Switchover—Selecting this option forces a manual (user initiated) switchover to the backup AP. The “challenge question” Are you sure? (y/n) is presented to avoid an unintended switchover. To invoke the change, press the letter y followed by the Enter key. Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Network Event Triggers Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-61. Network Events Triggers Menu • Network Interface Error—This setting determines whether or not a network interface error will cause redundancy switchover. [enabled, disabled; disabled] Radio Event Triggers Invisible place holder Figure 3-62. Radio Event Triggers • setting determines whether or not a switchover occurs when a lack of associated Remote units exceeds the time period set in Figure 3-65 on Page 97. [enabled, disabled; disabled] • Packet Receive Errors exceeded threshold—This setting determines whether or not a switchover occurs when the number of Packet Receive errors exceeds the number set in Figure 3-66 on Page 97. [enabled, disabled; disabled] 05-4446A01, Rev. C Lack of associated remotes exceeded threshold—This Mercury Reference Manual 95 Hardware Event Triggers Invisible place holder Figure 3-63. Hardware Event Triggers • Init/Hardware Error—This setting determines whether or not an initialization or hardware error results in a redundancy switchover. [enabled, disabled; disabled] Redundancy Configuration Options Menu Use this menu (Figure 3-64) to set the thresholds for the Lack of Associated Remotes and Packet Receive Errors. Selecting either item opens a submenu where you can view or change settings. Invisible place holder Figure 3-64. Redundancy Configuration Options Menu • 96 Lack of Associated Remotes Exceeded Threshold—This selection opens a submenu (Figure 3-65) where you can view or change the time period allowed for a lack of associated Remotes. Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Packet Receive Errors Exceeded Threshold—This selection opens a submenu (Figure 3-66 on Page 97) where you can view or change the maximum allowable number of receive errors. Lack of Associated Remotes Exceeded Threshold Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-65. Lack of Associated Remotes Exceeded Threshold Menu • Packet Receive Errors Exceeded Threshold Menu Lack of Remotes for—Select this item to change the time setting (in seconds) for a lack of associated Remotes. When there are no associated Remotes for a period exceeding this time, a redundancy switchover occurs. [60-500; 500] Invisible place holder Figure 3-66. Packet Receive Errors Exceeded Threshold Menu 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 97 • 3.9 Maximum Receive Errors—Select this item to change the maximum allowable number of receive errors. When the number of errors exceeds this number, a redundancy switchover occurs. [0-1000; 500] GPS CONFIGURATION (REMOTE ONLY) This menu allows you to view or set important parameters for the built-in Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver in the Mercury Remote. Invisible place holder Figure 3-67. GPS Configuration Menu (Remote Only) • • • • • • 98 Stream GPS to Console—Used to enable/disable streaming of GPS NMEA data to the console port (COM1). Baud rate is 4800 baud when Stream GPS to console is enabled. [enabled, disabled; disabled] GPS to Console Baud Rate—The serial baud rate when GPS streaming is enabled. Send GPS via UDP—Used to enable/disable sending GPS NMEA data to a server via UDP. [enabled, disabled; disabled] GPS UDP Server IP Address—Specify the destination address for GPS NMEA UDP packets. [any valid IP address; 0.0.0.0] GPS UDP Server UDP Port—Destination UDP port for GPS NMEA UDP packets. [valid UDP port number; 0] GPS Streaming Configuration—A submenu for setting GPS NMEA outputs. (See Figure 3-68 on Page 99.) Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Figure 3-68. GPS Streaming Configuration Menu • • • • • • • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C GGA Polling—Seconds between GGA string outputs, the satellite fix information. GLL Polling—Seconds between GLL string outputs, the latitude and longitude information. GSA Polling—Seconds between GSA string outputs, the overall satellite data. GSV Polling—Seconds between GSV string outputs, the detailed satellite data. RMC Polling—Seconds between RMC string outputs, the recommended minimum data. VTG Polling—Seconds between VTG string outputs, the vector track and speed over ground. MSS Polling—Seconds between MSS string outputs, the beacon receiver status information. ZDA Polling—Seconds between ZDA string outputs, data, and time. Mercury Reference Manual 99 3.10 DEVICE INFORMATION MENU Figure 3-69 shows the menu that displays basic administrative data on the unit to which you are connected. It also provides access to user-specific parameters such as date/time settings and device names. Figure 3-69. Device Information Menu • • • • • • • • 100 Model (Display only) Serial Number (Display only) Uptime (Display only)—Elapsed time since boot-up. Date—Current date being used for the transceiver logs. User-setable. (Value lost with power failure if SNTP [Simple Network Time Protocol] server not accessible.) Time—Current time of day. User-setable. Setting: HH:MM:SS (Value lost with power failure if SNTP server not accessible.) Date Format—Select presentation format: • Generic = dd Mmm yyyy • European = dd-mm-yyyy • US = mm-dd-yyyy Console Baud Rate—Used to set/display data communications rate (in bits-per-second) between a connected console terminal and the radio. [115200] UTC Time Offset—Set/view the number of hours difference between your local clock time and Universal Coordinated Time. Offsets for U.S. times zones are shown in the chart below. Mercury Reference Manual Time Zone (U.S.) UTC Offset (Hours) PST -8 MST -7 CST -6 EST -5 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Device Names—Fields used at user’s discretion for general administrative purposes. The Device Name field is shown on all menu screen headings. (See Figure 3-70 on Page 101) NOTE: The transceivers do not save time and date information when power is removed. Device Names Menu Figure 3-70. Device Names Menu • Device Name—Used by the transceiver as the “Realm” name for network login (web browser only) and menu headings. • Contact—User defined; appears on this screen only. • Location—User defined; appears on this screen only. • Description—User defined; appears on this screen only. 3.11 PERFORMANCE INFORMATION MENU The Performance Information Menu (Figure 3-71 on Page 102) is the entry point for a series of submenus where you can evaluate transceiver operating status and network performance. You can use this menu as an important troubleshooting tool, or for evaluating changes made to the network configuration or equipment. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 101 Invisible place holder Figure 3-71. Performance Information Menu • • • • • • • 102 Event Log—Access this menu for managing the unit’s operational activities log. (See Figure 3-74 on Page 104 for details.) Packet Statistics—Multiple radio and network operating statistics. (See Figure 3-76 on Page 106 for details.) GPS Status—Shows satellite fix status, number of satellites being received, and unit location data. (See Figure 3-77 on Page 107 for details.) Wireless Network Status—Current AP association state and MAC address. (See Figure 3-79 on Page 109 for details.) Internal Radio Status (Remote Only)—Shows connection status, RF parameters, and total FEC count for the unit. (See Figure 3-84 on Page 111 for details.) Performance Trend (Remote Only)—Launches a continuously updated list of performance parameters (RSSI, Signal-to-Noise Ratio, Transmit Power, Latitude, Longitude, Connection Status, and FEC Blocks). (See Figure 3-72 on Page 103.) Bridge Status—Displays the network bridge status. (See Figure 3-73 on Page 103.) Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Figure 3-72. Performance Trend Screen Invisible place holder Figure 3-73. Bridge Status Menu 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 103 Event Log Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-74. Event Log Menu • Current Alarms—Shows • View Event Log—Displays a log of radio events arranged by event • • • • • • 104 transceiver. active alarms (if any) reported by the number, date, and time. (Example shown in Figure 3-75 on Page 105). Clear Event Log—Erases all previously logged events. Send Event Log—Sends the event log to the server. You must answer the challenge question Send File? y/n before the request proceeds. Event Log Host Address—Set/display the IP address of the TFTP server. [any valid IP address; 0.0.0.0] Event Log Filename—Set/display the name of the event log file on the TFTP server. [any valid filename; eventlog.txt] Transfer Options—A menu for configuring the TFTP transfer. Syslog Server Address—Use this selection to set or view the IP address of the Syslog server. Syslog is a standardized protocol for sending IP log data across a network. Low cost (or even free) Syslog downloads are available online by searching for the term “Syslog Server.” [any valid IP address; 0.0.0.0] Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C View Event Log Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-75. View Event Log Menu The transceiver’s microprocessor monitors many operational parameters and logs them. Events are classified into four levels of importance, which are described in Table 3-8. Some of these events result from a condition that prevents normal operation of the unit. These are “critical” events that cause the unit to enter an “alarmed” state and the PWR LED to blink until the condition is corrected. All events are stored in the Event Log.. Table 3-8. Event Classifications Time and Date Level Description/Impact Informational Normal operating activities Minor Does not affect unit operation Major Degraded unit performance but still capable of operation Critical Prevents the unit from operating The events stored in the Event Log are time-stamped using the time and date of the locally connected device. The Access Point obtains the time and date from a Time Server. This server is typically a standard Windows PC server SNTP application. In the absence of the SNTP services, the user must manually enter time and date information at the Access Point. (See “DEVICE INFORMATION MENU” on Page 100 for SNTP server identification.) The manually set time and date clock relies on the unit’s primary power. A loss of power resets the clock to 02 Jan 2005 but does not affect previously stored error events. Packet Statistics Menu The transceivers maintain running counters of different categories of events in the Ethernet protocol. The Packet Statistics refer to each Ethernet interface from the perspective of the radio. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 105 Invisible place holder Figure 3-76. Packet Statistics Menu • • • • • • • • • 106 Packets Received—Data packets received by this unit. Packets Sent—Data packets sent by this unit. Bytes Received—Data bytes received by this unit. Bytes Sent—Data bytes sent by this unit. Packets Dropped—To-be-transmitted packets dropped because of a lack of buffers in the outbound queue. Receive Errors—Packets that do not pass CRC. This may be due to transmissions corrupted by RF interference, Ethernet collisions, or degradation. If significant Ethernet Receive Errors are observed, check the quality of your Ethernet cabling and connectors, or that you do not have cable lengths exceeding the specification limits. Lost Carrier Detected—This parameter reports how many times the wired Ethernet connection has lost link. Clear Ethernet Statistics—Resets the statistics counter. You must answer the challenge question Send File? y/n before the request proceeds. Clear MDS Wireless Statistics—Resets the statistics counter. You must answer the challenge question Send File? y/n before the request proceeds. Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C GPS Status Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-77. GPS Status Menu • GPS Serial Number—The • GPS Firmware Version—The • Satellite Fix Status—Indicates • • • • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C radio. GPS chip. serial number of the GPS unit in the firmware version running on the whether or not the unit has achieved signal lock with the minimum required number of GPS satellites. The transceiver requires a fix on five satellites to achieve Precise Positioning Service (PPS) and four to maintain PPS. [No Fix, Fix] Number of Satellites—Shows the number of GPS satellites received by the transceiver. Although there are typically 24 active GPS satellites orbiting the Earth twice a day, only a subset of these is “visible” to a receiver at a given location. A good signal provides information from six to ten satellites. Latitude—Shows the transceiver’s latitudinal location (in degrees), based on GPS data received from the satellites. Longitude—Shows the transceiver’s longitudinal location (in degrees), based on GPS data received from the satellites. Altitude—Shows the transceiver’s altitude above sea level (in feet), based on GPS data received from the satellites. GPS Information—Shows data about the individual satellites being received, including the Pseudo-Random Noise (PRN) code (a unique bit stream for each satellite), the satellite’s elevation (in degrees), azimuth (in degrees), and the signal-to-noise ratio of the carrier signal (SNR). Figure 3-78 on Page 108 shows a layout example for this screen. Mercury Reference Manual 107 GPS Information Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-78. GPS Information Menu Wireless Network Status Menu The Wireless Network Status screen provides information on a key operating process of the transceiver—the association of the Remote with the Access Point. The following is a description of how this process takes place and is monitored by the menu system. The Transceiver’s Association Process If the Access Point and Remote are configured for single channel operation, the Remote monitors the channel for Access Point transmissions. The Remote synchronizes its power, timing, and frequency to the Access Point, then requests access to the network. The Access Point and Remote check each other’s authorization and authentication according to the configuration of the Device Authorization and Encryption Enable parameters, and the Network Name parameter. The Remote is then associated. If the Access Point and Remote are configured for frequency hopping, the Remote hops with the Access Point according to Access Point’s configuration. Once the Remote is hopping in sync with the Access Point, the rest of the association process is the same as for single channel operation. 108 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Figure 3-79. Wireless Network Status Menu (AP) Invisible place holder Figure 3-80. Wireless Network Status Menu (Remote) • • Device Status—Displays the overall transceiver. [Operational, Alarmed] operating condition of the (AP Only)—Shows the number of Remote transceivers currently associated with the AP. • PA Temperature—Shows the power amplifier temperature in degrees Celsius. • Remote Database (AP Only)—Displays a submenu where associated Remotes are listed in table form according to their number, operational state, MAC address, IP address, and name (if assigned). (See Figure 3-81 on Page 110.) • Remote Performance Database (AP Only)—Displays a submenu where associated Remote performance data is listed in table form. Remotes are presented according to their number, MAC address, RSSI, SNR, modulation type, uplink modulation, and FEC total. (See Figure 3-82 on Page 110.) 05-4446A01, Rev. C Associated Remotes Mercury Reference Manual 109 • • • • • (Remote Only)—Displays the current state of the wireless network communication as follows: Scanning, Ranging, Connecting, Authenticating, Associated, or Alarmed. A complete explanation of these operating states is provided in Table 4-3 on Page 138. Current AP Eth Address—Displays the Ethernet MAC address of the current AP. Current AP IP Address—Shows the IP address of the current AP. Current AP Name—Displays the device name of the current AP. Time Connected—Shows the time at which the remote connected to the AP. The Remote has been continually connected since this time. Invisible place holder Connection Status Figure 3-81. Remote Database Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-82. Remote Performance Database Menu 110 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Figure 3-83. Remote Database Details Menu (AP) Internal Radio Status Menu (Remote Only) Invisible place holder Figure 3-84. Internal Radio Status (Remote Only) • whether or not the Remote station has associated with an AP. [Associated, Scanning, Ranging, Connecting, Authorizing] • Current AP Name—Shows the Device Name of the current AP. • Transmit Power—Shows the RF power output from the transmitter. The AP changes the transmit power of the Remote to match the desired receive power at the APs receiver. This provides end-to-end power control. • Average RSSI—Shows average received signal strength indication (RSSI) of incoming RF signals, displayed in dBm. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Connection Status—Indicates Mercury Reference Manual 111 • Average SNR—Shows average signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) of received signals, displayed in dB. This is a measurement of the quality of the incoming signal. It is possible for incoming signals to be strong, yet be affected by interference or other noise, resulting in a low SNR. Use this parameter to help determine the actual quality of signals. • Radio Details—This selection presents a screen (Figure 3-85) showing key operating details of the transceiver. Invisible place holder Figure 3-85. Radio Details Menu • • • • • • • 112 RSSI—Shows received signal strength indication (RSSI) in dBm. SNR—Shows signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in dB. TX Frequency Offset—Shows the RF carrier shift of the Remote’s transmitter, measured in Hertz (Hz). The transmitted frequency is continually reviewed and adjusted to agree with what the AP expects to see. This optimization results in more efficient operation, corrects for doppler shift, and results in higher throughput between AP and Remote stations. RX Frequency Offset—This is a measurement of how far in frequency the Remote’s receiver has shifted (in Hz) to accommodate the incoming signal from the AP. Total FEC Count—This parameter shows the total number of Forward Error Correction (FEC) blocks handled by the radio. Corrected FEC Count—Displays the number of errored blocks corrected with FEC by the radio. Uncorrected FEC Count—Shows the number of errored blocks that can’t be corrected with FEC by the radio. Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 3.12 MAINTENANCE/TOOLS MENU In the course of operating your network, you may wish to upgrade transceiver firmware to take advantage of product improvements, work with configuration scripts, conduct “ping” tests of your system, or reset operating parameters to factory default settings. All of these tasks are performed using the Maintenance/Tools Menu (Figure 3-86). This section explains how to take advantage of these services. Invisible place holder Figure 3-86. Maintenance/Tools Menu • Reprogramming—Managing and selecting the unit’s operating system firmware resources. (See “Reprogramming Menu” on Page 114) • Configuration Scripts—Saving and importing data files containing unit operating parameters/settings. (See “Configuration Scripts Menu” on Page 119) • Ping Utility—Diagnostic tool to test network connectivity. (See “Ping Utility Menu” on Page 122) • Authorization Codes—Alter the unit’s overall capabilities by enabling the built-in resources. (See “Authorization Codes” on Page 123) • • • • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C Reset to Factory Defaults—Restores parameters to factory default settings. (See “Reset to Factory Defaults” on Page 123) Radio Test—A diagnostic tool for testing RF operation. (See “Radio Test Menu” on Page 125) Firmware Versions—Shows the firmware code versions stored in the radio and indicates which one is the active image. (See Figure 3-87 on Page 114.) Auto Firmware Upgrade—Brings up a submenu where you can perform tasks related to loading new firmware. (See “Auto Firmware Upgrade Menu (AP Only)” on Page 124.) Telnet Utility—A submenu for opening Telnet connections to network devices (Figure 3-88 on Page 114). Mercury Reference Manual 113 Invisible place holder Figure 3-87. Firmware Versions Menu Figure 3-88. Telnet Utility Menu • • Host Address—The Connect—Connect IP address of the target device. to the target device at the host address. Reprogramming Menu The factory sometimes offers upgrades to the transceiver firmware. Loading new firmware into the unit will not alter any privileges provided by Authorization Keys and does not require you to take the transceiver off-line until you want to operate the unit with the newly installed firmware image. Firmware images are available free-of-charge at: www.GEmds.com/Resources/TechnicalSupport/ NOTE: Firmware for AP radios is different than for Remotes, and may not be interchanged. This was only true for earlier (pre-2.1.0) firmware. 114 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C NOTE: Always read the release notes for downloaded firmware. These notes contain important information on compatibility and any special steps needed for proper installation. All units and versions have two resident images. Version 1.4.4 had two .mpk files, one for the Access Point and one for the Remote. As of version 2.1.0, there is only one .mpk file which you can use with both Access Points and Remotes. The transceiver has two copies of the firmware (microprocessor code) used for the operating system and applications. One copy is “active” and the second is standing by, ready to be used once activated. You can load new firmware into the inactive position and place it in service whenever you desire. Invisible place holder Figure 3-89. Reprogramming Menu • • • • • • 05-4446A01, Rev. C TFTP Host Address—IP address of the host computer from which to get the file. [Any valid IP address] This same IP address is used in other screens/functions (reprogramming, logging, etc.). Changing it here also changes it for other screens/functions. Firmware Filename—Name of file to be received by the TFTP server. [Any 40-character alphanumeric string] Verify that this corresponds to the TFTP directory location. May require sub-directory, for example: me-bkrc-2_1_0.mpk. Transfer Options—A menu for configuring the TFTP transfer. Retrieve File—Initiates the file transfer from the TFTP server. The new file is placed into inactive firmware image. [Y, N] Image Verify—Initiate the verification of the integrity of firmware file held in unit. Image Copy—Initiate the copying of the active firmware into the inactive image. Mercury Reference Manual 115 • Reboot Device—Initiates rebooting of the transceiver. This will interrupt data traffic through this unit, and the network if performed on an Access Point. Intended to be used for switching between firmware images 1 and 2. • Current Firmware—Displays the versions of firmware images installed in the transceiver and shows whether Image 1 or Image 2 is currently active. NOTE: See Upgrade Procedure on Page 117 for details on setting up the TFTP server. Firmware images are available free-of-charge at: www.GEmds.com/Resources/TechnicalSupport/. NOTE: You may not install AP firmware in Remote radios, or vice-versa. This was only true for earlier (pre-2.1.0) firmware. To install firmware by TFTP, you will need: • A PC with a TFTP server running • The IP address of the PC running the TFTP server • A valid firmware file The IP address of the radio can be found under the Management System’s Starting Information Screen. (See “Starting Information Screen” on Page 40.) A TFTP server is available on the GE MDS Web site at: www.GEmds.com/Resources/TechnicalSupport/. TIP: If you do not know your computer’s address on a Windows PC, you can use the RUN function from the Start menu and enter winipcfg or ipconfig to determine your local PC’s IP address. There are several alternatives to connecting the transceiver for firmware upgrades. Figure 3-90 and Figure 3-91 show two variations. It is essential that all equipment be on the same subnet. 116 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder TRANSCEIVER LOCAL WINDOWS PC WITH CONFIG. FILES TP R TFRVE ET S TELN CROSS-O VE RC ABL LAN PORT IP ADDRESS: 172.0.0.B IP ADDRESS: 172.0.0.A INITIATE UPLOAD FROM HERE Figure 3-90. Firmware Upgrade Setup—Option 1 (TFTP Server and Firmware File on Same CPU) Invisible place holder REMOTE PC W/FIRMWARE FILES TFTP SERVER HUB/LAN/WAN/MAN TCP/IP ETHERNET PORT IP ADDRESS: 172.0.0.A TRANSCEIVER IP ADDRESS: 172.0.0.B LAN PORT LOCAL WINDOWS PC COM1, 2, ETC. (DTE) COM1 PORT (DCE) NS IP ADDRESS: w.x.y.z INITIATE UPLOAD FROM HERE Figure 3-91. Firmware Upgrade Setup—Option 2 (TFTP Server and Firmware File on Remote Server) NOTE: The LAN and COM1 ports share a common data channel when loading firmware over-the-air. Transferring the radio firmware image file (≈ 6 MB) might take several minutes depending on traffic between the TFTP server and the transceiver. Regardless of your connection to the transceiver, loading firmware/configuration files into the unit’s flash memory is much slower than loading software onto a PC hard drive or RAM. Upgrade Procedure 05-4446A01, Rev. C To load a new firmware file (filename.mpk) into the transceiver, use the following procedure: Mercury Reference Manual 117 1. Launch a TFTP server on a PC connected either directly or via a LAN to the Ethernet port (LAN) of the radio. Point the server towards the directory containing the firmware image file. 2. Connect to the Management System by whichever means is convenient: browser or Telnet via the LAN, or Terminal emulator via the COM1 port. 3. Go to the MS Reprogramming Menu. (Main Menu>>Maintenance Menu>>Reprogramming Menu) 4. Fill in the information for the: • TFTP Host Address—IP Address of server (host computer) running TFTP server. • Firmware Filename—Name of file (filename.mpk) to be downloaded from the TFTP server holding the firmware file. 5. Download the firmware file from the TFTP server into the transceiver. (Main Menu>>Maintenance Menu>>Reprogramming Menu>>Retrieve File) Status messages on the transfer are posted on the Management System screen. NOTE: The new firmware image file that replaces the “Inactive Image” file is automatically verified. 6. Reboot the transceiver. Main Menu>>Maintenance Menu>>Reprogramming Menu>>Reboot Device 7. Test the transceiver for normal operation. End of Procedure Error Messages During File Transfers It is possible to encounter errors during a file transfer. In most cases, you can correct errors by performing the corrective actions described in Table 3-9. Table 3-9. Common Errors During TFTP Transfer 118 Error Message Likely Cause/Corrective Action Invalid File Type Indicates that the file is not a valid firmware file. Locate proper file and re-load. File not found Invalid or non-existent filename on TFTP server. Invalid file path Invalid or non-existent file path to TFTP server. Timeout TFTP transfer time expired. Increase the timeout value. Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Table 3-9. Common Errors During TFTP Transfer (Continued) Error Message Likely Cause/Corrective Action Flash Error Flash memory error. Contact factory for assistance. Bad CRC Cyclic Redundancy Check reporting a corrupted file. Attempt to re-load, or use a different file. Version String Mismatch Invalid file detected. Attempt to re-load, or use a different file. Configuration Scripts Menu A configuration script file contains all of a radio’s setable parameters that are accessible through the menu interface, with a few exceptions. A configuration script file is in plain text format and can be easily edited in any text program. Configuration scripts can be helpful in several ways. Three common uses for them are: • To save “known-good” configuration files from your radios. These can be used for later restoration if a configuration problem occurs, and it is unclear what parameter is causing the issue. • To facilitate the rapid configuration of a large number of radios. • To provide troubleshooting information when you contact the factory for technical support. A technician can often spot potential problems by reviewing a configuration file. How Configuration Files Work When a configuration script file is downloaded to a radio (Retrieve File), the radio executes the parameters as commands and takes the values contained in it. When a configuration script file is uploaded from the radio (Send), it contains the current values of the radio’s configuration parameters. Figure 3-92 on Page 120 shows the Configuration Scripts Menu. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 119 Invisible place holder Figure 3-92. Configuration Scripts Menu • TFTP Host Address—IP address of the computer on which the TFTP server resides. [Any valid IP address] • Config Filename—Name of file containing this unit’s configuration profile that will be transferred to the TFTP server. The configuration information is in plain-text ASCII format. [Any 40-character alphanumeric string] May require a sub-directory, for example: config\mercury-config.txt. (See “Configuration Scripts Menu” on Page 119 for more information.) NOTE: The filename field is used to identify the desired incoming file and as the name of the file exported to the TFTP server. Before exporting a unit’s configuration, name it in a way that reflects the radio’s services or other identification. • • • Transfer Options—A menu for configuring the TFTP transfer. Category—The category of parameters to send or receive. Retrieve File—Initiate the file transfer of the configuration file from TFTP server into the transceiver. • Send File—Initiate the file transfer from the transceiver’s current configuration file to TFTP server. NOTE: See “Upgrade Procedure” on Page 117 for details on setting up the TFTP server. Sample of Configuration Script File A sample configuration script file is provided as part of every firmware release. Firmware images and sample files are available free-of-charge at: www.GEmds.com/Resources/TechnicalSupport/. The name of the specific file includes the firmware revision number, represented by the “x” characters in the following example: mercury-config-x_x_x.txt. 120 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Editing Configuration Files Once a Remote unit’s operation is fine-tuned, use the Configuration Scripts Menu on Page 119 to save a copy of the configuration onto a PC. Once the file is saved on the PC, you can use it as a source to generate modified copies adjusted to match other devices. Modify the configuration files using a text editor or an automated process. (These applications are not provided by GE MDS). We recommend that you review and update the following parameters for each individual unit. Change other parameters as necessary. Save each resulting file with a different name. We recommend using directories and file names that reflect the location of the unit to facilitate later identification. Table 3-10. Common User-Alterable Parameters Field Comment Range IP Address Unique for each individual radio. Any legal IP address IP Gateway May change for different groups or locations. Any legal IP address Device Name Should reflect a specific device. Any 20-character alphanumeric string This information will appear in Management System headings. Location Editing Rules Used only as reference for network administration. Any 40-character alphanumeric string • Only include parameters you want to change from the default value. • Change only the parameter values. • Capitalization counts in some field parameters. • Comment Fields: a. Edit or delete anything on each line to the right of the comment delineator, the semicolon (;). b. Comments can be of any length, but must be on the same line as the parameter, or on a new line that begins with a semicolon character. c. Comments after parameters in files exported from a transceiver do not need to be present in your customized files. • Some fields are read-only. These are designated by “(RO)” in the configuration sample file. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 121 Ping Utility Menu Invisible place holder Figure 3-93. Ping Utility Menu • • • • Address to Ping—Address to send a Ping. [Any valid IP address] of Ping packets to be sent. Packet Size—Size of each Ping data packet (bytes). Ping—Send Ping packets to address shown on screen. Count—Number This screen is replaced with a detailed report of Ping activity (see example in Figure 3-94). Press any key after viewing the results to return to this menu. Invisible place holder Figure 3-94. Ping Results Screen 122 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Authorization Codes Invisible place holder Figure 3-95. Authorization Codes Menu • Authorization Key—For entering an Authorization Key into the transceiver’s non-volatile memory. • Authorized Features—List of the transceiver’s authorized features. Each item shows enabled or disabled according to the settings allowed by the Authorization Key entered into the radio. Reset to Factory Defaults Use the Reset to Factory Defaults selection on the Maintenance/Tools Menu to return all configurable settings to those set at the factory prior to shipping. Use this selection with caution, as you will lose any custom settings you have established for your transceiver, and will need to re-enter them using the menu system. To prevent accidental use of the command, a “challenge” question is presented at the bottom of the screen when this choice is selected (see Figure 3-96 on Page 124). To proceed, enter y for yes or n for no, and then press Enter. (You may also press the Escape key on your keyboard to exit this command without making any changes.) 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 123 Invisible place holder Figure 3-96. Reset to Factory Defaults Action (Note challenge question at bottom of screen) 3.12.1Auto Firmware Upgrade Menu (AP Only)holder Invisible place Figure 3-97.Auto Firmware Upgrade Menu • all of the Remotes associated to this AP to read the AP’s specified (by Firmware for Upgrade) firmware version (active or inactive), and download it via TFTP to the inactive image if the Remote does not already have that firmware version. • Firmware Autoboot—Boot connected remotes to Firmware for Upgrade (see below). • Reboot Remotes—Determines how a Remote behaves once it has downloaded new firmware from the AP as part of an auto-upgrade. When enabled, the Remotes reboot to the new firmware. 124 Firmware Upgrade—Causes Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C NOTE: To use the Auto Upgrade/Reboot feature, both the AP and Remotes must already be running version 2.1.0 or newer firmware. • Firmware for Upgrade—Specifies the firmware version that the Remotes should download, if they do not already have it. Radio Test Menu Using this menu, you can manually key the radio transmitter for performance checks and set several parameters that will be used when the Radio Mode is set to Test. Invisible place holder Figure 3-98. Radio Test Menu NOTE : Using Test Mode disrupts traffic through the radio. If the unit is an Access Point, it will disrupt traffic through the entire network. The Test Mode function is automatically limited to 10 minutes. Only use Test Mode for brief measurements. • Radio Mode—Sets/displays the radio’s operating mode. To change the setting, press A on the PC’s keyboard and press the Spacebar to toggle between the two settings. Press the Enter key to select the desired state. [Normal, Test; Normal] • Test Status—This read-only parameter shows the current state of the radio. [Radio is Operational, Reconfiguring the Radio, Ready to KEY] The following parameters are read-only unless A) Radio Mode is first selected and set to Test. In Test Mode, these items become selectable, and you can set their entries using the Spacebar or with a numeric entry, followed by pressing the Enter key. • 05-4446A01, Rev. C Test Key—Sets/displays keying status of the radio’s transmitter. Use the Spacebar to view selections. [disabled, enabled; disabled] Mercury Reference Manual 125 • Test Transmit Power—Sets/displays the transmitter’s power setting. Make a numerical entry within the allowable range. [-30 to +30 dBm] • Test Channel—Sets/displays the radio’s test channel number. Make a numerical entry within the allowable range. [0-13; 0] • Test RF Bandwidth—Sets/displays the transmitter’s bandwidth for testing. Use the Spacebar to view selections. [1.75. 3.5 MHz; 1.75 MHz] • Test Burst Percentage—Sets/displays the percentage of Burst size to use for testing. Make a numerical entry within the allowable range. [0-100%; 100] Spectrum Analyzer Menu (Remote Only) Using this menu, you can enable or disable the remote’s spectrum analyzer mode (Figure 3-99 on Page 126). When enabled, the remote displays through the terminal a spectrum analyzer view of its transmit power and frequency (Figure 3-100 on Page 127). Figure 3-99. Spectrum Analyzer Menu 126 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Figure 3-100. Spectrum Analyzer Display 3.13 PERFORMANCE OPTIMIZATION After checking basic radio operation, you can optimize the network’s performance. The effectiveness of these techniques varies with the design of your system and the format of the data being sent. There are two major areas for possible improvement—the radio and the data network. These sections provide a variety of items to check in both categories, and in many cases, ways to improve performance. NOTE: As with any wireless system, the antennas are one of the most important portions of the system. A properly installed antenna with an unobstructed path to associated stations is the optimal configuration, and should be among the first items checked when searching for performance gains. Stronger signals allow the use of wider bandwidths and higher data speeds with fewer retries of data transmissions. Time spent optimizing the antenna systems on both AP and Remote stations will often pay huge dividends in system performance. Refer to INSTALLATION PLANNING on Page 149 for additional recommendations on antenna systems. Table 3-11 on Page 128 provides suggested settings for typical installation scenarios. These settings provide a starting point for configuration of AP and Remote units. Changes might be required to achieve the desired results in a particular situation. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 127 Table 3-11. Recommended Settings for Common Scenarios For Fixed Locations, where best combination of range and throughput is desired. Remote User discretion User discretion Transmit Power (AP)/ Max Transmit Power (RM) 30 30 dBm In most cases, power can be set to +30 dBm and left alone. Setting it lower helps control cell overlap. Receive Power -70 N/A dBm Sets AP receiver for medium gain. Typical range: -60, -80 dBm. Frequency Mode Static Hopping Static Hopping Frame Duration 20 20 ms Changing to 10 ms lowers latency. 5 and 8 ms selections not functional for this release. Hop Pattern A, B, C, D A, B, C, D AP and RM must match. Hop Pattern Offset 0-13 or 0-6 0-13 or 0-6 AP and RM must match. Channel Selection User discretion User discretion Disable channels with interference. AP and RM must match. TDD Sync Mode GPS Required N/A GPS Antennas must be connected to both AP and RM. Adaptive Modulation Enabled Enabled Protection Margin dB Hysteresis Margin dB Data Compression Enabled Enabled Max Modulation QAM/16-3-4 QAM16-3/4 Cyclic Prefix 1/16 N/A Best throughput setting. Channel Type Static N/A Less periodic ranging when channel type is Static. ARQ Enabled N/A ARQ Block Size 256 N/A bytes ARQ Block Lifetime 655 N/A ms ARQ TX Delay 35 N/A ms ARQ RX Delay 35 N/A ms Adaptive Split Enabled N/A Downlink% 50 N/A Advanced Configuration Radio Configuration Frequency Control AP Network Name 128 Mercury Reference Manual Units Notes AP and Remote must match. Gives best throughput numbers, but may hide true performance if only tested with PING or Text File FTP. Best combination of range and throughput. These 3 settings make the max. no. of ARQ retries =9. (655 ms)/(35 ms + 35 ms = 9.35=>9 Maximizes one-way burst throughput. If Adaptive Split is disabled, can set downlink% to 15%–75%. 05-4446A01, Rev. C For Optimal Sensitivity (Trades off throughput for best possible sensitivity. AP more susceptible to interference) Radio Configuration Receive Power AP Remote Units Notes -80 N/A dBm Sets AP receiver for highest gain. When Heavy Interference Exists at AP (Trades off range for robustness in the face of interference) Radio Configuration Receive Power AP Remote Units -60 N/A dBm Notes Sets AP receiver for low gain, which forces Remote transmit power to be high. For Mobile Systems (Where hand-offs between APs are required) Frequency Control Radio Configuration AP Remote Frequency Mode Static Hopping Hopping w/Hand-offs Protection Margin Channel Type Static N/A Retrieve Text File N/A AP Locations file Units Notes dB More channel variation in mobile, so use more robust modulation with greater SNRs. Advanced Configuration Network AP Location Configuration Info Config Less periodic ranging when Channel Type = Static. AP locations file with coordinates and key attributes of APs to which Remote can associate. 3.13.1Proper Operation—What to Look For Table 3-12 and Table 3-13 on Page 130 show target performance values for AP and Remote transceivers. View these values using the built-in menu system by navigating the path shown under each table title. Table 3-12. Mercury Remote Transceiver (Performance Information>>Internal Radio Status Menu) 05-4446A01, Rev. C Name Target Value Notes Connection Status Associated Remote must be associated for network operation. Transmit Power Varies Adjusts automatically as requested by AP. RSSI (Received Signal Strength Indication) Varies The less negative an RSSI reading, the stronger the signal (i.e., -75 dBm is stronger than -85 dBm). Mercury Reference Manual 129 Table 3-12. Mercury Remote Transceiver (Continued) (Performance Information>>Internal Radio Status Menu) Name Target Value Notes SNR (Signal-to-Noise Ratio) Strong signal (bench setting): 25-28 dB A low SNR may be caused by noise or interfering signals. Operational: 3-30 dB Typ. System: 10-20 dB TX Freq. Offset 0-22,875 Hz Adjusts to accommodate what is expected by the AP. RX Freq. Offset 0-22,875 Hz Adjusts to accommodate what is expected by the AP. Total FEC Count Varies Corrected FEC Count Varies Uncorrected FEC Count Varies Current AP Name Device name of associated AP Typically set to reflect the application or system the radio is used in. Table 3-13. Mercury Access Point (Performance Information>>Wireless Network Status>> Remote Performance Database) Name Target Value Notes MAC ADDR MAC Address of associated Remote Must match Remote’s MAC address exactly RSSI (Received Signal Strength Indication) Varies The less negative an RSSI reading, the stronger the signal (i.e., -75 dBm is stronger than -85 dBm). SNR Signal-to-Noise Ratio Strong signal (bench): 25-28 dB A low SNR may be caused by noise or interfering signals. Operational: 3-30 dB Typ. System:10-20 dB 130 Downlink Varies QPSK/FEC-3/4 Preferred Uplink Varies QPSK/FEC-3/4 Preferred FEC Total Varies Corrected FEC Count Varies Uncorrected FEC Count Varies Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Additional Considerations for Mobile Operation Consider the following key points for all mobile installations: • Use connectionware—The use of connectionware in the mobile laptops is highly recommended for better operation of a mobile data system. GE MDS provides connectionware from one of the vendors in this market. Contact your factory representative for details. • Plan your network coverage—Deploy Access Points so that they provide overlapping coverage with each other. Access Points must use the same Network Name to enable roaming service. • Set the RSSI Threshold to -85 dBm—This level is typically used for mobile systems with good performance. Make sure there is overlapping coverage of more than one AP to provide continuous coverage. • At every AP Radio, review the following settings when providing service to mobile remotes: • TDD Sync—Set to GPS Required. • Pattern Offset—Each AP should be different. Cell planning is required if there are overlaps. • Hop Pattern—Set the same on all APs. • Compression [disabled]—Disable radio compression. Data compression is best performed by the connectionware running on the mobile laptop PC. Gains in efficiency are made because connectionware compresses data at a higher stack level, and it aggregates multiple data frames and streams into a single packet. Compression at the radio level, although highly efficient, works only at the individual packet level. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 131 132 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 4 TROUBLESHOOTING & RADIO MEASUREMENTS 4 Chapter Counter Reset Paragraph Contents 4.1 TROUBLESHOOTING ............................................................ 135 4.1.1 4.1.2 4.1.3 4.1.4 4.1.5 4.1.6 Interpreting the Front Panel LEDs .............................................135 Troubleshooting Using the Embedded Management System ...136 Using Logged Operation Events ...............................................139 Alarm Conditions .......................................................................140 Correcting Alarm Conditions .....................................................141 Logged Events ..........................................................................142 4.2 RADIO (RF) MEASUREMENTS.............................................. 143 4.2.1 Antenna System SWR and Transmitter Power Output .............143 4.2.2 Antenna Aiming—For Directional Antennas ..............................144 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 133 134 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 4.1 TROUBLESHOOTING Successful troubleshooting of a wireless system is not difficult, but requires a logical approach. It is best to begin troubleshooting at the Access Point unit, as the rest of the system depends on the Access Point for synchronization data. If the Access Point has problems, the operation of the entire wireless network is affected. When you find communication problems, it is good practice to begin by checking the simple causes. Applying basic troubleshooting techniques in a logical progression identifies many problems. Multiple Communication Layers It is important to remember that the operation of the network is built on a radio communications link. On top of that are two data levels— wireless MAC, and the data layer. It is essential that the wireless aspect of the Access Point and the Remotes units to be associated operates properly before data-layer traffic will function. Unit Configuration There are numerous user-configurable parameters in the Management System. Do not overlook the possibility that human error is the cause of the problem. With so many parameters to view and change, a parameter might be incorrectly set, and then that change is forgotten. To help avoid these problems, GE MDS recommends creating an archive of the transceiver’s profile in a Configuration File when your installation is complete. You can reload this file into the transceiver to restore the unit to the factory defaults or your unique profile. For details on creating and archiving Configuration Files, see “Configuration Scripts Menu” on Page 119. Factory Assistance If problems cannot be resolved using the guidance provided here, review the GE MDS web site’s technical support area for recent software/firmware updates, general troubleshooting help, and service information. Additional help is available through our Technical Support Department. (See “TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE” on the inside of the rear cover.) 4.1.1 Interpreting the Front Panel LEDs An important set of troubleshooting tools are the LED status indicators on the front panel of the radio case. You should check them first whenever a problem is suspected. Table 2-2 on Page 26 describes the function of each status LED. Table 4-1 on Page 136 provides suggestions for 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 135 resolving common system difficulties using the LEDs, and Table 4-2 on Page 137 provides other simple techniques. Table 4-1. Troubleshooting Using LEDs—Symptom-Based Symptom Problem/Recommended System Checks PWR LED does not turn on a. Voltage too low—Check for the proper supply voltage at the power connector. (10–30 Vdc) b. Indefinite Problem—Cycle the power and wait (≈ 30 seconds) for the unit to reboot. Then, recheck for normal operation. LINK LED does not turn on a. Network Name of Remote not identical to desired Access Point—Verify that the system has a unique Network Name. b. Not yet associated with an Access Point with the same Network Name. Check the “Status” of the unit’s process of associating with the Access Point. Use the Management System. c. Poor Antenna System—Check the antenna, feedline and connectors. Reflected power should be less than 10% of the forward power reading (SWR 2:1 or lower). PWR LED is blinking a. Blinking indicates that an alarm condition exists. b. View Current Alarms and Event Log and correct the problem if possible. (See “Using Logged Operation Events” on Page 139) c. Blinking continues until the source of the alarm is corrected, for example, a valid IP address is entered, etc. LAN LED does not turn on a. Verify the Ethernet cable is connect at both ends. LAN LED lights, but turns off after some time Verify traffic in LAN. Typically, the radio should not be placed in high traffic enterprise LANs, as it will not pass this level of traffic. If needed, use routers to filter traffic. GPS LED not lit No satellite fix has been obtained. A fix is required for all operation except single-frequency channel (non-hopping) configurations. The lack of a fix may be caused by an obstructed “view” of the satellites, or a GPS antenna problem. b. Verify that the appropriate type of Ethernet cable is used: straight-through or crossover. The GPS LED blinks slowly on the AP while it synchronizes its internal clock to the GPS signal. When in this condition, the AP does not transmit. 4.1.2 Troubleshooting Using the Embedded Management System If you have reviewed and tried the items listed in Table 4-1 and still have not resolved the problem, there are additional tools and techniques you can use. The embedded Management System is a good source of information that you can use remotely to provide preliminary diagnostic information, or may even provide a path to correcting the problem. Refer to Table 4-2 on Page 137 for more information on using the Management System as a troubleshooting tool. 136 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Table 4-2. Basic Troubleshooting Using the Management System Symptom Problem/Recommended System Checks Cannot access the MS through COM1 a. Connect to unit via Telnet or Web browser. b. Disable the serial mode for COM1 (Serial Gateway Configuration>>Com1 Serial Data Port>>Status>>Disabled). Or, if you know the unit’s data configuration: a. Connect to COM 1 via a terminal set to VT100 and the port’s data baud rate. b. Type +++. c. Change the terminal’s baud rate to match the transceiver’s Console Baud Rate. d. Type +++. Display on terminal/Telnet screen garbled Verify the terminal/terminal emulator or Telnet application is set to VT100. Password forgotten a. Connect to the transceiver using a terminal through the COM1 Port. b. Obtain a password-resetting Authorization Key from your factory representative. c. At the login prompt, try the user name authcode, and enter the Authorization Key for the password. Remote only gets to Connecting a. Check Network Name, encryption, and Device Auth Mode settings. b. Verify that the correct MAC address is listed in the Approved Remotes List of the Security Configuration Menu. Remote only gets to Authenticating Check encryption settings and security mode settings. Cannot pass IP data to WAN a. Verify your IP settings. b. Use the PING command to test communication with the transceivers in the local radio system. c. If successful with local PING, attempt to PING an IP unit attached to a transceiver. d. If successful with the LAN PINGs, try connecting to a known good unit in the WAN. Wireless Retries too high Possible Radio Frequency Interference: a. If omnidirectional antennas are used, consider changing to directional antennas. This usually limits interference to and from other stations. b. Try disabling channels where persistent interference is known or suspected. c. The installation of a filter in the antenna feedline may be necessary. Consult the factory for further assistance. d. Try using an antenna with a downward tilt. The following is a summary of how you can use several screens in the Management System as diagnostic tools. For information on how to 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 137 connect to the Management System, see “STEP 3—CONNECT PC TO THE TRANSCEIVER” on Page 23. Starting Information Screen (See Starting Information Screen on Page 40) The Management System’s home page provides some valuable bits of data. One of the most important is the Device Status field. This item tells you if the unit is operational. If the Device Status field says Associated, then look in the network areas beginning with network data statistics. If it displays some other message, such as Scanning, Connecting, or Alarmed, you must determine why it is in this state. The Scanning state indicates a Remote unit is looking for an Access Point beacon signal to lock onto. It should move to the Connecting state and finally to the Associated state within less than a minute. If this Remote unit is not providing reliable service, look at the Event Logs for signs of lost association with the Access Point, or low signal alarms. Table 4-3 provides a description of the Device Status messages. Table 4-3. Device Status1 Scanning The unit is looking for an Access Point beacon signal. Ranging Remote has detected AP and is synchronizing to it. Connecting The Remote has established a radio (RF) connection with the Access Point and is negotiating the network layer connectivity. Authenticating2 The Remote is authenticating itself to the network to obtain cyber-security clearance in order to pass data. Associated This unit has successfully synchronized and is “associated” with an Access Point. This is the normal operating state. Alarmed The unit has detected one or more alarms that have not been cleared. 1. Device Status is available in the Startup Information Screen or the Wireless Status Screen at Remotes. 2. If Device Authentication is enabled. If the Remote is in an Alarmed state, the unit might still be operational and associated. Look for the association state in the Wireless Network Status screen to determine if the unit is associated. If it is, look at the Error Log for possible clues. If the unit is in an Alarmed state and is not associated with an Access Point, then there might be a problem with the wireless network layer. Call a radio technician to deal with wireless issues. Refer the technician to the RADIO (RF) MEASUREMENTS on Page 143 for information on antenna system checks. 138 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Packet Statistics Menu (See Packet Statistics Menu on Page 105) This screen provides detailed information on data exchanges between the unit being viewed and the network through the wireless and the Ethernet (data) layers. These include: Wireless Packet Statistics • Packets received • Packets dropped • Packets sent • Receive errors • Bytes received • Retries • Bytes sent • Retry errors Ethernet Packet Statistics • Packets received • Packets dropped • Packets sent • Receive errors • Bytes received • Retries • Bytes sent • Retry errors • Lost carrier detected The most significant fields are the Packets Dropped, Retries, Retry Errors, Receive Errors and Lost Carrier Detected. If the data values are more than 10% of their sent and received counterparts, or the Lost Carrier Detected value is greater than a few dozen, there might be trouble with radio-frequency interference or a radio link of marginal strength. If errors are excessive, check the aiming of the antenna system, and check for a satisfactory SWR. Refer to RADIO (RF) MEASUREMENTS on Page 143 for information on antenna system checks. Diagnostic Tools (See MAINTENANCE/TOOLS MENU on Page 113) The radio’s Maintenance menu contains two tools that are especially useful to network technicians—the Radio Test Menu and the Ping Utility. Use the Radio Test selection for testing RF operation. Use the Ping Utility to verify communications access to pieces of equipment connected to the radio network. This includes transceivers and user-supplied Ethernet devices. 4.1.3 Using Logged Operation Events (See PERFORMANCE INFORMATION MENU on Page 101) The transceiver’s microprocessor monitors many operational parameters and logs them as various classes of events. If the event is one that affects performance, it is an alarm. There are also normal or routine events such as those marking the rebooting of the system, implementation of parameter changes, and external access to the Management System. Informational events are stored in temporary (RAM) memory that is lost in the absence of primary power, and Alarms are stored in 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 139 permanent memory (Flash memory) until cleared by user request. Table 4-4 summarizes these classifications. Table 4-4. Event Classifications Level Description/Impact Storage Alarms Transceiver has detected one or more alarm conditions Flash Memory Informational Normal operating activities Flash Memory Temporary Informational Transient conditions or events RAM Minor Does not affect unit operation RAM Major Degraded unit performance but still capable of operation RAM Critical Prevents the unit from operating RAM These events are stored in the transceiver’s Event Log and can be a valuable aid in troubleshooting unit problems or detecting attempts at breaching network security. 4.1.4 Alarm Conditions (See Event Log Menu on Page 104) Most events, classified as “critical” will cause the PWR LED to blink, and will inhibit normal operation of the transceiver. The LED blinks until the corrective action is completed. Table 4-5. Alarm Conditions (Alphabetical Order) Alarm Condition Reported Event Log Entry SNMP Trap EVENT_BRIDGE Network Interface /Error networkInterface(17) EVENT_FREQ_CAL Frequency Not Calibrated frequencyCal(7) EVENT_INIT_ERR Initialization Error initializationError(18) EVENT_IPADDR* IP Address Invalid ipAddressNotSet(4) EVENT_IPMASK* IP Mask Invalid ipNetmaskNotSet(5) EVENT_LAN_PORT 140 lanPortStatus(78) EVENT_MAC MAC communication Failed macCommunication(1) EVENT_MACADDR MAC Address Invalid noMacAddress(6) EVENT_NETNAME* Netname Invalid invalidNetname(12) EVENT_POWER_CAL Power Calibrated/Not Calibrated powerCal(8) EVENT_REMOTE Remote Added/ Removed (AP Only) eventRemote(66) EVENT_RSSI* RSSI Exceeds threshold rssi(11) Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Table 4-5. Alarm Conditions (Alphabetical Order) (Continued) Alarm Condition Reported Event Log Entry SNMP Trap EVENT_RSSI_CAL RSSI Not Calibrated rssiCal(9) EVENT_SYSTEM_ERROR* System Error Cleared; Please Reboot systemError(16) EVENT_TFTP_CONN TFTP connectivity achieved tftpConnection(73) EVENT_TFTP_ERR Attempted TFTP connection failed tftpConnFailed(79) * User can correct condition, clearing the alarm. 4.1.5 Correcting Alarm Conditions (See Event Log Menu on Page 104) Table 4-6 provides likely causes of events that inhibit the unit from operating, and possible corrective actions. The Event Description column appears on the Event Log screen. Table 4-6. Correcting Alarm Conditions—Alphabetical Order 05-4446A01, Rev. C Event Log Entry Generating Condition Clearing Condition or Action Bridge Down The Bridge fails to be initialized. Contact factory Technical Services for assistance. General System Error Internal checks suggest unit is not functioning properly. Reboot the transceiver. Initialization Error Unit fails to complete boot cycle. Contact factory Technical Services for assistance. Invalid IP Address The IP address is either 0.0.0.0 or 127.0.0.1. Program IP address to something other than 0.0.0.0 or 127.0.0.1. Network Interface Error Unit does not recognize the LAN interface. Contact factory Technical Services for assistance. RSSI Exceeds Threshold The running-average RSSI level is weaker (more negative) than the user-defined value. Check the aiming of the directional antenna at the Remote; raise the threshold level to a stronger (less-negative) value. Mercury Reference Manual 141 4.1.6 Logged Events (See Event Log Menu on Page 104) The following events allow the transceiver to continue operation and do not make the PWR LED blink. Each is reported through an SNMP trap. The left hand column, Event Log Entry, is what shows in the Event Log. Table 4-7. Non-Critical Events—Alphabetical Order 142 Event Log Entry Severity Description Association Attempt Success/Failed MAJOR Self explanatory Association Lost - Local IP Address Changed MAJOR Self explanatory Association Lost - Local Network Name Changed MAJOR Self explanatory Association Lost/Established MAJOR Self explanatory Auth Demo Mode Expired -Rebooted Radio/Enabled MAJOR Self explanatory Auth Key Entered - Key Valid/Key Invalid MAJOR Self explanatory Console Access Locked for 5 Min MAJOR Self explanatory Console User Logged Out/Logged In MAJOR Self explanatory Current AP No Longer Approved MAJOR May occur during the Scanning process at a Remote. Indicates that the received beacon came from an AP which is not in the “Approved AP” list. This might be caused by some Remotes hearing multiple AP's. This event is expected behavior. Decryption Error/Decryption OK MAJOR A decryption error is logged when an encryption phrase mismatch has occurred. A mismatch is declared after five consecutive errors over a 40-second window. When the error has cleared, DECRYPT OK appears. Ethernet Port Enabled/Disabled INFORM Self explanatory Ranging Lost/Established INFORM Self explanatory Connecting Lost/Established INFORM Self explanatory HTTP Access Locked for 5 Min MAJOR Self explanatory HTTP User Logged Out/Logged In MAJOR httpLogin(49) Log Cleared INFORM Self explanatory Reprogramming Complete INFORM Self explanatory Reprogramming Failed MAJOR Self explanatory Reprogramming Started INFORM Self explanatory Scanning Started INFORM Self explanatory Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Table 4-7. Non-Critical Events—Alphabetical Order (Continued) Event Log Entry Severity Description SNR Within threshold/Below threshold INFORM Self explanatory System Bootup (power on) INFORM Self explanatory Telnet Access Locked for 5 Min MAJOR Self explanatory Telnet User Logged Out/Logged In MAJOR Self explanatory User Selected Reboot MAJOR Self explanatory 4.2 RADIO (RF) MEASUREMENTS There are several measurements that should be performed during the initial installation. These measurements confirm proper operation of the unit and, if they are recorded, serve as a benchmark in troubleshooting should difficulties appear in the future. These measurements are: • Transmitter Power Output • Antenna System SWR (Standing-Wave Ratio) • Antenna Direction Optimization These procedures might interrupt traffic through an established network and should only be performed by a skilled radio-technician in cooperation with the Network Administrator. 4.2.1 Antenna System SWR and Transmitter Power Output Introduction A proper impedance match between the transceiver and the antenna system is important. It ensures the maximum signal transfer between the radio and antenna. You can check the impedance match indirectly by measuring the SWR (standing-wave ratio) of the antenna system. If the results are normal, record them for comparison during future routine preventive maintenance. Abnormal readings indicate possible trouble with the antenna or the transmission line, and should be corrected. Check the SWR of the antenna system before putting the radio into regular service. For accurate readings, a wattmeter suited to the frequency of operation is required. One unit meeting this criteria is the Bird Model 43™ directional wattmeter with the appropriate element installed. The reflected power should be less than 10% of the forward power (≈2:1 SWR). Higher readings indicate problems with the antenna, feedline or coaxial connectors. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 143 Record the current transmitter power output level, then set it to 30 dBm for the duration of the test to provide an adequate signal level for the directional wattmeter. Procedure 1. Place a directional wattmeter between the TX antenna connector and the antenna system. 2. Place the transceiver into the Radio Test Mode using the menu sequence below: (Maintenance/Tools Menu>>Radio Test>>Radio Mode>>Test) 3. Set the transmit power to 30 dBm. (This setting does not affect the output level during normal operation—only during Test Mode.) (Maintenance/Tools Menu>>Radio Test >>Test Mode>>Test>>Test Transmit Power) 4. Key the transmitter. (Maintenance/Tools Menu>>Radio Test>>Test Mode>>Test>>Test Key>> enabled) Use the PC’s spacebar to key and unkey the transmitter. (Enable/Disable) NOTE: The Transmit Key has a 10-minute timer, after which it unkeys the radio. Manually unkey the transmitter by selecting Test Key>>disabled on the menu, or temporarily disconnecting the radio’s DC power. 5. Measure the forward and reflected power into the antenna system and calculate the SWR and power output level. The output should agree with the programmed value set in the Radio Configuration Menu. (Radio Configuration>>Transmit Power) 6. Turn off Radio Test Mode. (Maintenance/Tools Menu>>Radio Test>>Test Key>>disabled) End of procedure. 4.2.2 Antenna Aiming—For Directional Antennas Introduction The radio network integrity depends, in a large part, on stable radio signal levels at each end of a data link. In general, signal levels stronger than –80 dBm provide the basis for reliable communication that includes a 15 dB fade margin. As the distance between the Access Point and Remotes increases, the influence of terrain, foliage, and man-made obstructions become more influential, and the use of directional antennas at Remote locations becomes necessary. Directional antennas require fine-tuning of their bearing to optimize the received signal 144 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C strength. The transceiver has a built-in received signal strength indicator (RSSI) that can tell you when the antenna is in a position that provides the optimum received signal. RSSI measurements and Wireless Packet Statistics are based on multiple samples over a period of several seconds. The average of these measurements is displayed by the Management System. The measurement and antenna alignment process usually takes 10 or more minutes at each radio unit. The path to the Management System menu item is shown in bold text below each step of the procedure. Procedure 1. Verify the Remote transceiver is associated with an Access Point unit by observing the condition of the LINK LED (LINK LED = On or Blinking). This indicates that you have an adequate signal level for the measurements and it is safe to proceed. 2. Record the Wireless Packets Dropped and Received Error rates. (Main Menu>>Performance Information>>Packet Statistics>>Wireless Packet Statistics) This information will be used later. 3. Clear the Wireless Packets Statistics history. (Main Menu>>Performance Information>>Packet Statistics>>Wireless Packet Statistics>>Clear Wireless Stats) 4. Read the RSSI level at the Remote. (Main Menu>>Performance Information>>Internal Radio Status) 5. Optimize RSSI (less negative is better) by slowly adjusting the direction of the antenna. Watch the RSSI indication for several seconds after making each adjustment so that the RSSI accurately reflects any change in the link signal strength. 6. View the Wireless Packets Dropped and Received Error rates at the point of maximum RSSI level. They should be the same or lower than the previous reading. (Main Menu>>Performance Information>>Packet Statistics>>Wireless Packet Statistics) 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 145 7. If the RSSI peak results in an increase in the Wireless Packets Dropped and Received Error, the antenna may be aimed at an undesired signal source. Try a different antenna orientation. End of procedure. 146 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 5 PLANNING A RADIO NETWORK 5 Chapter Counter Reset Paragraph Contents 5.1 INSTALLATION PLANNING .................................................... 149 5.1.1 5.1.2 5.1.3 5.1.4 5.1.5 5.1.6 5.1.7 General Requirements ..............................................................149 Site Selection ............................................................................151 Terrain and Signal Strength .......................................................151 Antenna & Feedline Selection ...................................................151 How Much Output Power Can be Used? ..................................155 Conducting a Site Survey ..........................................................155 A Word About Radio Interference .............................................156 5.2 dBm-WATTS-VOLTS CONVERSION CHART......................... 158 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 147 148 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 5.1 INSTALLATION PLANNING This section provides tips for selecting an appropriate site, choosing an antenna system, and reducing the chance of harmful interference. 5.1.1 General Requirements There are three main requirements for installing a transceiver—adequate and stable primary power, a good antenna system, and the correct interface between the transceiver and the data device. Figure 5-1 shows a typical Remote installation. NOTE: The transceiver’s network port supports 10BaseT and 100BaseT connections. Confirm that your hub/switch is capable of auto-switching data rates. To prevent excessive Ethernet traffic from degrading performance, place the transceiver in a segment, or behind routers. Invisible place holder ANTENNA SYSTEM TRANSCEIVER Network LIN LO EE LO COMPUTER RUNNING TERMINAL PROGRAM POWER SUPPLY 13.8 VDC @ 580 mA (Max.) (10.5–30 Vdc) Negative Ground Only Figure 5-1. Typical Fixed Remote Installation With a Directional Antenna (Connect user data equipment to any compatible LAN Port) Unit Dimensions Figure 5-2 on Page 150 shows the dimensions of the transceiver case and its mounting holes, and Figure 5-3 on Page 150 shows the dimensions for mounting with factory-supplied brackets. If possible, choose a 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 149 4.5″ (11.43 cm) mounting location that provides easy access to the connectors on the end of the radio and an unobstructed view of the LED status indicators. TOP VIEW 6.75″ (17.15 cm) 1.4″ (3.56 cm) FRONT VIEW Figure 5-2. Transceiver Dimensions 2.75″ (7 cm) Invisible place holder 8 5/8″ (21.8 cm) Figure 5-3. Mounting Bracket Dimensions (center to center) NOTE: To prevent moisture from entering the radio, do not mount the radio with the cable connectors pointing up. Also, dress all cables to prevent moisture from running along the cables and into the radio. 150 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 5.1.2 Site Selection Suitable sites should provide: • Protection from direct weather exposure • A source of adequate and stable primary power • Suitable entrances for antenna, interface, or other required cabling • An antenna location that provides a transmission path that is as unobstructed as possible in the direction of the associated station(s) With the exception of the transmission path, you can quickly determine these requirements. Radio signals travel primarily by line-of-sight, and obstructions between the sending and receiving stations will affect system performance. If you are not familiar with the effects of terrain and other obstructions on radio transmission, the discussion below will provide helpful background. 5.1.3 Terrain and Signal Strength While the license-free 900 MHz band offers many advantages for data transmission services, signal propagation is attenuated by obstructions such as terrain, foliage, or buildings in the transmission path. A line-of-sight transmission path between the central transceiver and its associated remote site(s) is highly desirable and provides the most reliable communications link. Much depends on the minimum signal strength that can be tolerated in a given system. Although the exact figure will differ from one system to another, a Received Signal Strength Indication (RSSI) of –80 dBm or stronger will provide acceptable performance in most systems. While the equipment will work at lower-strength signals, signals stronger than – 77 dBm provide a fade margin of 15 dB to account for variations in signal strength that might occur. You can measure RSSI with a terminal connected to the COM1 port, or with an HTTP browser connected to the LAN (Ethernet) connector. (See “Antenna Aiming—For Directional Antennas” on Page 144 for details.) 5.1.4 Antenna & Feedline Selection NOTE: The transceiver must be installed by trained professional installers, or factory trained technicians. The following text will help the professional installer in the proper methods of maintaining compliance with FCC Part 15 limits and 1-Watt per MHz ERP requirement. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 151 Antennas The radio equipment can be installed with a number of antennas. The exact style used depends on the physical size and layout of a system. Contact your factory representative for specific recommendations on antenna types and hardware sources. In general, an omnidirectional antenna (Figure 5-4) is used at the Access Points and mobile Remote stations. This provides equal signal coverage in all directions. NOTE: Antenna polarization is important. If the wrong polarization is used, a signal reduction of 20 dB or more will result. Most systems using a gain-type omnidirectional antenna at Access Point stations employ vertical polarization of the signal; therefore, the Remote antenna(s) must also be vertically polarized (elements oriented perpendicular to the horizon). When required, horizontally polarized omnidirectional antennas are also available. Contact your factory representative for details. Invisible place holder High-gain Type Unity-gain Type Figure 5-4. Typical Omnidirectional Antennas At fixed Remote sites, a directional Yagi antenna (Figure 5-5 on Page 153) minimizes interference to and from other users. Antennas are available from a number of manufacturers. 152 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Invisible place holder Figure 5-5. Typical Yagi Antenna (mounted to mast) Diversity Reception (RX2) Antenna Port Reserved for future functionality. Future releases of the product will allow you to connect a second antenna to the transceiver for space diversity reception. GPS Antennas A number of GPS antennas (both active and passive) are available for use with the transceivers. Consult your factory representative for more information. Feedlines Carefully consider the choice of feedline used with the antenna. Avoid poor-quality coaxial cables, as they degrade system performance for both transmission and reception. Keep the cable as short as possible to minimize signal loss. For cable runs of less than 20 feet (6 meters), or for short range transmission, an inexpensive cable such as Type RG-8A/U might be acceptable. Otherwise, we recommend using a low-loss cable type suited for 900 MHz, such as Heliax®. Table 5-1 on Page 154 lists several types of popular feedlines and indicates the signal losses (in dB) that result when using various lengths of 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 153 cable at 900 MHz. The choice of cable depends on the required length, cost considerations, and the acceptable amount of signal loss. Table 5-1. Length vs. Loss in Coaxial Cables at 900 MHz Cable Type 10 Feet (3.05 m) 50 Feet (15.24 m) 100 Feet (30.48 m) 500 Feet (152.4 m) RG-214 .76 dB 3.8 dB 7.6 dB Unacceptable Loss LMR-400 0.39 dB 1.95 dB 3.90 dB Unacceptable Loss 1/2 inch HELIAX 0.23 dB 1.15 dB 2.29 dB 11.45 dB 7/8 inch HELIAX 0.13 dB 0.64 dB 1.28 dB 6.40 dB 1-1/4 inch HELIAX 0.10 dB 0.48 dB 0.95 dB 4.75 dB 1-5/8 inch HELIAX 0.08 dB 0.40 dB 0.80 dB 4.00 dB The tables below outline the minimum lengths of RG-214 coaxial cable that must be used with common GE MDS omnidirectional antennas in order to maintain compliance with FCC maximum limit of +36 dBi. If other coaxial cable is used, make the appropriate changes in loss figures. NOTE: The authority to operate the transceiver in the USA may be void if antennas other than those approved by the FCC are used. Contact your factory representative for additional antenna information. Table 5-2. Feedline Length vs. Antenna Gain* (Required for Regulatory compliance) Antenna Gain (dBd) Antenna Gain (dBi) Minimum Feedline Length (Loss in dB) EIRP Level @ Min. Length Maxrad Antenna Part No. Unity (0 dB) 2.15 dBi No minimum length +32.15 dBm Omni #MFB900 3 dBd 5.15 dBi No minimum length +35.15 dBm Omni # MFB900 5 dBd 7.15 dBi 3.1 meters (1.2 dB) +35.95 dBm Omni # MFB900 6 dBd 8.15 dBi 9.1 meters (2.2 dB) +35.95 dBm Yagi # BMOY8903 10 dBd 12.15 dBi 24.7 meters (6.15 dB) +35.25 dBm Yagi # Z941 15.2 dBd 17.4 dBi 50 meters (12 dB) +35.4 dBm Andrew DB878G90A-XY *Refer to Table 5-3 on Page 157 for allowable transceiver power settings for each antenna type. 154 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C NOTE: There is no minimum feedline length required when a 6 dBi gain or less antenna is used, as the EIRP will never exceed 36 dBm which is the maximum allowed, per FCC rules. Only the manufacturer or a sub-contracted professional installer can adjust the transceiver’s RF output power. The transceiver’s power output is factory set to maintain compliance with the FCC’s Digital Transmission System (DTS) Part 15 rules. These rules limit power to a maximum of 8 dBm/3 kHz, thus the transceiver is factory set to +30 dBm. When calculating maximum transceiver power output, use +30 dBm if the antenna gain is 6 dBi or less (36 dBm ERP). See How Much Output Power Can be Used? below for power control of higher gain antennas. 5.1.5 How Much Output Power Can be Used? The transceiver is normally configured at the factory for a nominal +30 dBm RF power output setting; this is the maximum transmitter output power allowed under FCC rules. The power must be decreased from this level if the antenna system gain exceeds 6 dBi. The allowable level is dependent on the antenna gain, feedline loss, and the transmitter output power setting. NOTE: In some countries, the maximum allowable RF output might be limited to less than the figures referenced here. Be sure to check for and comply with the requirements for your area. 5.1.6 Conducting a Site Survey If you are in doubt about the suitability of the radio sites in your system, it is best to evaluate them before a permanent installation is underway. You can do this with an on-the-air test (preferred method), or indirectly, using path-study software. An on-the-air test is preferred because it allows you to see firsthand the factors involved at an installation site, and to directly observe the quality of system operation. Even if a computer path study was conducted earlier, perform this test to verify the predicted results. Perform the test by first installing a radio and antenna at the proposed Access Point (AP) station site (one-per-system). Then visit the Remote site(s) with another transceiver (programmed as a remote) and a hand-held antenna. (A PC with a network adapter can be connected to each radio in the network to simulate data during this test, using the PING command.) With the hand-held antenna positioned near the proposed mounting spot, a technician can check for synchronization with the Access Point station (shown by a lit LINK LED on the front panel), then measure the 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 155 reported RSSI value. (See “Antenna Aiming—For Directional Antennas” on Page 144 for details.) If you cannot obtain adequate signal strength, it might be necessary to mount the station antennas higher, use higher gain antennas, select a different site, or install a repeater station. To prepare the equipment for an on-the-air test, follow the general installation procedures given in this guide and become familiar with the operating instructions found in the CHAPTER-2 TABLETOP EVALUATION AND TEST SETUP on Page 19. 5.1.7 A Word About Radio Interference The transceiver shares the radio-frequency spectrum with other 900 MHz services and other Part 15 (unlicensed) devices in the USA. Completely error-free communications might not be achievable in a given location, and some level of interference should be expected. However, the radio’s flexible design and hopping techniques should allow adequate performance as long as you carefully choose the station location, configuration of radio parameters, and software/protocol techniques. In general, keep the following points in mind when setting up your communications network: • Systems installed in rural areas are least likely to encounter interference; those in suburban and urban environments are more likely to be affected by other devices operating in the license-free frequency band and by adjacent licensed services. • Use a directional antenna at remote sites whenever possible. Although these antennas may be more costly than omnidirectional types, they confine the transmission and reception pattern to a comparatively narrow lobe, minimizing interference to (and from) stations located outside the pattern. • If interference is suspected from a nearby licensed system (such as a paging transmitter), it might be helpful to use horizontal polarization of all antennas in the network. Because most other services use vertical polarization in this band, you can achieve an additional 20 dB of attenuation to interference by using horizontal polarization. Another approach is to use a bandpass filter to attenuate all signals outside the 900 MHz band. • Multiple Access Point units can co-exist in proximity to each other with no interference. The APs should be configured to operate in TDD Sync Mode, where their transmissions are synchronized to GPS timing. See “Protected Network Operation using Multiple Access Points” on Page 14. For additional isolation, separate directional antennas with as much vertical or horizontal separation as is practical. • The power output of all radios in a system should be set for the lowest level necessary for reliable communications. This lessens the 156 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C chance of causing unnecessary interference to nearby systems. If you are not familiar with these interference-control techniques, contact your factory representative for more information. Calculating System Gain To determine the maximum allowable power setting of the radio, perform the following steps: 1. Determine the antenna system gain by subtracting the feedline loss (in dB) from the antenna gain (in dBi). For example, if the antenna gain is 9.5 dBi, and the feedline loss is 1.5 dB, the antenna system gain would be 8 dB. (If the antenna system gain is 6 dB or less, no power adjustment is required.) 2. Subtract the antenna system gain from 36 dBm (the maximum allowable EIRP). The result indicates the maximum transmitter power (in dBm) allowed under the rules. In the example above, this is 28 dBm. 3. If the maximum transmitter power allowed is less than 30 dBm, set the power to the desired level using the Management System. (Main Menu>>Radio Configuration>>Transmit Power) For convenience, Table 5-3 lists several antenna system gains and shows the maximum allowable power setting of the radio. Note that a gain of 6 dB or less entitles you to operate the radio at full power output –30 dBm. For assistance in the conversion of dBm to Watts, see dBm-WATTS-VOLTS CONVERSION CHART on Page 158. Table 5-3. Examples of Antenna System Gain vs. Power Output Setting Antenna System Gain Maximum Power Setting (Antenna Gain in dBi* (PWR command) EIRP (in dBm) minus Feedline Loss in dB†) Omni 6 (or less) 30 36 Omni 9 27 36 Yagi 12 24 36 Yagi 14 22 36 Yagi 16 20 36 Panel 17.4** 20 36 * Most antenna manufacturers rate antenna gain in dBd in their literature. To convert to dBi, add 2.15 dB. ** Must use with the appropriate length of feedline cable to reduce transmitter power by at least 2 dB. † Feedline loss varies by cable type and length. To determine the loss for common lengths of feedline, see Table 5-1 on Page 154. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 157 5.2 dBm-WATTS-VOLTS CONVERSION CHART Table 5-4 is provided as a convenience for determining the equivalent voltage or wattage of an RF power expressed in dBm. Table 5-4. dBm-Watts-Volts conversion—for 50 ohm systems 158 dBm V Po dBm V Po dBm mV +53 +50 +49 +48 +47 +46 +45 +44 +43 +42 +41 +40 +39 +38 +37 +36 +35 +34 +33 +32 +31 +30 +29 +28 +27 +26 +25 +24 +23 +22 +21 +20 +19 +18 +17 +16 +15 +14 +13 +12 +11 +10 +9 +8 +7 +6 +5 +4 +3 +2 +1 200W 100W 80W 64W 50W 40W 32W 25W 20W 16W 12.5W 10W 8W 6.4W 5W 4W 3.2W 2.5W 2W 1.6W 1.25W 1.0W 800mW 640mW 500mW 400mW 320mW 250mW 200mW 160mW 125mW 100mW 80mW 64mW 50mW 40mW 32mW 25mW 20mW 16mW 12.5mW 10mW 8mW 6.4mW 5mW 4mW 3.2mW 2.5mW 2.0mW 1.6mW 1.25mW -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 -6 -7 -8 -9 -10 -11 -12 -13 -14 -15 -16 1.0mW .80mW .64mW .50mW .40mW .32mW .25mW .20mW .16mW .125mW .10mW -49 -50 -51 -52 -53 -54 -55 -56 -57 -58 -59 -60 -61 -62 -63 -64 100.0 70.7 64.0 58.0 50.0 44.5 40.0 32.5 32.0 28.0 26.2 22.5 20.0 18.0 16.0 14.1 12.5 11.5 10.0 9.0 8.0 7.10 6.40 5.80 5.00 4.45 4.00 3.55 3.20 2.80 2.52 2.25 2.00 1.80 1.60 1.41 1.25 1.15 1.00 .90 .80 .71 .64 .58 .500 .445 .400 .355 .320 .280 .252 .225 .200 .180 .160 .141 .125 .115 .100 .090 .080 .071 .064 .058 .050 .045 .040 .0355 dBm µV dBm mV -17 -18 -19 -20 -21 -22 -23 -24 -25 -26 -27 -28 -29 -30 -31 -32 -33 -34 -35 -36 -37 -38 -39 -40 -41 -42 -43 -44 -45 -46 -47 -48 31.5 28.5 25.1 22.5 20.0 17.9 15.9 14.1 12.8 11.5 10.0 8.9 8.0 7.1 6.25 5.8 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.2 2.85 2.5 2.25 2.0 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.25 1.18 1.00 0.90 Mercury Reference Manual Po .01mW .001mW .1µW -65 -66 -67 -68 -69 -70 -71 -72 -73 -74 -75 -76 -77 -78 -79 -80 -81 -82 -83 -84 -85 -86 -87 -88 -89 -90 -91 -92 -93 -94 -95 -96 -97 Po 0.80 0.71 .01µW 0.64 0.57 0.50 0.45 0.40 0.351 0.32 0.286 0.251 0.225 .001µW 0.200 0.180 0.160 0.141 128 115 100 90 80 71 65 58 50 45 40 35 32 29 25 22.5 20.0 18.0 16.0 11.1 12.9 11.5 10.0 9.0 8.0 7.1 6.1 5.75 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.51 3.2 Po .1nW .01nW .001nW dBm µV -98 -99 -100 -101 -102 -103 -104 -105 -106 2.9 2.51 2.25 2.0 1.8 1.6 1.41 1.27 1.18 dBm nV -107 -108 -109 -110 -111 -112 -113 -114 -115 -116 -117 -118 -119 -120 -121 -122 -123 -124 -125 -126 -127 -128 -129 -130 -131 -132 -133 -134 -135 -136 -137 -138 -139 -140 1000 900 800 710 640 580 500 450 400 355 325 285 251 225 200 180 160 141 128 117 100 90 80 71 61 58 50 45 40 35 33 29 25 23 Po .1pW Po .01pW .001pW .1ƒW .01ƒW 05-4446A01, Rev. C 6 TECHNICAL REFERENCE 6 Chapter Counter Reset Paragraph Contents 6.1 DATA INTERFACE CONNECTORS ........................................ 161 6.1.1 LAN Port ....................................................................................161 6.1.2 COM1 Port ................................................................................162 6.2 SPECIFICATIONS ................................................................... 162 6.3 NOTES ON SNMP .................................................................. 165 6.3.1 Overview ...................................................................................165 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 159 160 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 6.1 DATA INTERFACE CONNECTORS Two types of data interface connectors are provided on the front panel of the transceiver—an RJ-45 LAN port, and a DB-9 serial port (COM1), which uses the RS-232 (EIA-232) signaling standard. CAUTION RADIO FREQUENCY INTERFERENCE POTENTIAL The transceiver meets U.S.A.’s FCC Part 15, Class A limits when used with shielded data cables. 6.1.1 LAN Port Use the transceiver’s LAN port to connect the radio to an Ethernet network. The transceiver provides a data link to an Internet Protocol-based (IP) network via the Access Point station. Each radio in the network must have a unique IP address for the network to function properly. • To connect a PC directly to the radio’s LAN port, an RJ-45 to RJ-45 cross-over cable is required. • To connect the radio to a Ethernet hub or bridge, use a straight-through cable. The connector uses the standard Ethernet RJ-45 cables and wiring. For custom-made cables, use the pinout information in Figure 6-1 and Table 6-1. 12345678 Figure 6-1. LAN Port (RJ-45) Pinout (Viewed from the outside of the unit) Table 6-1. LAN Port (IP/Ethernet) 05-4446A01, Rev. C Pin Functions Ref. Transmit Data (TX) High Transmit Data (TX) Low Receive Data (RX) High Unused Unused Receive Data (RX) Unused Unused Mercury Reference Manual Low 161 6.1.2 COM1 Port The COM1 serial port is a DB-9 female connector. Connect a PC to the transceiver via this port with a DB-9M to DB-9F “straight-through” cable. These cables are available commercially, or may be constructed using the pinout information in Figure 6-2 and Table 6-2. Figure 6-2. COM1 Port (DCE) (Viewed from the outside of the unit.) Table 6-2. COM1 Port Pinout, DB-9F/RS-232 Interface 6.2 Pin Functions DCE Unused Receive Data (RXD) <—[Out Transmit Data (TXD) —>[In Unused Signal Ground (GND) 6–9 Unused SPECIFICATIONS General • Raw Bit Rate: from 600 kbps to 12.7 Mbps (see chart below) • Frequency Band: 902-928 MHz ISM band • Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) • 200 Carriers per Channel • Available Configurations: • Access Point: Ethernet, Serial, GPS • Remote: Ethernet, Serial, GPS Radio • System Gain: 140 dB for 1.75 MHz channel, 137 dB for 3.5 MHz channel • Carrier Power—AP: -30 to +30 dBm, RM: 0 to +30 dBm (1 watt max.) • RF Output Impedance: 50 Ohms 162 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Sensitivity and Data Rate (see chart below): 3.5 MHz Channel Modulation (CP=1/16) Sensitivity Signaling Rate 1.75 MHz Channel Max. User Throughput (Aggregate)* Sensitivity Signaling Rate Max. User Throughput (Aggregate)* 64 QAM 3/4 FEC -77 dBm 12.7 Mbps 7.2 Mbps -80 dBm 6.35 Mbps 3.6 Mbps 16 QAM 3/4 FEC -86 dBm 8.4 Mbps 4.8 Mbps -89.5 dBm 4.2 Mbps 2.4 Mbps QPSK 3/4 FEC -92 dBm 4.2 Mbps 2.4 Mbps -95 dBm 2.1 Mbps 1.2 Mbps BPSK 1/2 FEC -95 dBm 1.4 Mbps 500 Kbps -98 dBm 706 Kbps 250 Kbps * The transceiver is a half-duplex radio, so maximum user throughput is based on a configured or dynamic duty cycle, which is typically 50/50 indicating that half of the maximum throughput would be available one way. The maximum user throughput is also based on high protocol overhead from TCP/IP applications. For UDP applications, these throughput numbers will increase. Physical Interface • Ethernet: 10/100BaseT, RJ-45 • Serial: 1,200 – 115,200 bps • COM1: RS-232, DB-9F • Antennas: TX/RX–TNC connector, GPS—SMA connector • LED Indicators: PWR, COM1, LINK, LAN Protocols (Pending—contact factory for details) • Ethernet: IEEE 802.3, Spanning Tree (Bridging), VLAN, IGMP • TCP/IP: DHCP, ICMP, UDP, TCP, ARP, Multicast, SNTP, TFTP • Serial: Encapsulation over IP (tunneling) for serial async multidrop protocols including MODBUS™, DNP.3, DF1, BSAP GE MDS Cyber Security Suite, Level 1 • Encryption: AES-128. • Authentication: 802.1x, RADIUS, EAP/TLS, PKI, PAP, CHAP • Management: SSL, SSH, HTTPS Management • HTTP, HTTPS, TELNET, SSH, local console • SNMPv1/v2/v3, MIB-II, Enterprise MIB • SYSLOG • MDS NETview MS™ compatible Environmental • Temperature: -40°C to +70°C (-40°F to +158°F) • Humidity: 95% at 40°C (104°F) non-condensing 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 163 Electrical • Input Power: 10-30 Vdc • Current Consumption (nominal): Mode Power 13.8 Vdc 24 Vdc AP Transmit 25 W 1.8 A 1.0 A AP Receive 8W 579 mA 333 mA RM Transmit 25W 1.8 mA 1.0 A RM Receive 6.5W 471 mA 270 mA Mechanical • Case: Die Cast Aluminum • Dimensions: 5.715 H x 20 W x 12.382 D cm. (2.25 H x 7.875 W x 4.875 D in.) • Weight: 1kg (2.2 lb.) • Mounting options: Flat surface mount brackets, DIN rail, 19” rack tray External GPS PPS Option Parameter Minimum Maximum Pulse Voltage (logic low) 0V 1V Pulse Voltage (logic high) 1.7 V 10 V Source Impedance (ohms) – 200 Ω 0.0001% (1μsec) 50% (0.5 sec) 0.99999999 Hz (-0.1 ppm error) 1.00000001 Hz (+0.1 ppm error) Module Clamping Voltage 2.7 V 3.3 V Module Imput Resistance 150 Ω (Vin >2.6 V) 10 kΩ (Vin < 2 V) 7 mV N/A Duty Cycle (ton) Operating Frequency Input Hysteresis Agency Approvals • FCC Part 15.247 (DTS) • CSA Class 1 Div. 2, (CSA C22.2-213-M1987 & CSA C22.2-142-M1987) (UL1604 & UL916) • IC RSS-210 “Issue 7” NOTE: GE MDS products are manufactured under a quality system certified to ISO 9001. GE MDS reserves the right to make changes to specifications of products described in this manual at any time without notice and without obligation to notify any person of such changes. 164 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 6.3 NOTES ON SNMP 6.3.1 Overview The firmware release described in this manual contains changes to the transceiver’s SNMP Agent, several new MIB variables, and new Agent configuration options. This guide reviews the changes and shows how to properly configure the Agent to take advantage of these new features. SNMPv3 Support The updated SNMP Agent now supports SNMP version 3 (SNMPv3). The SNMPv3 protocol introduces Authentication (MD5/SHA-1), Encryption (DES), the USM User Table, and View-Based Access (refer to RFC2574 for full details). The SNMP Agent has limited SNMPv3 support in the following areas: • Only MD5 Authentication is supported (no SHA-1). SNMPv3 provides support for MD5 and SHA-1. • Limited USM User Table Manipulation. The SNMP Agent starts with 5 default accounts. New accounts can be added (SNMPv3 adds new accounts by cloning existing ones), but they will be volatile (will not survive a power-cycle). New views cannot be configured on the SNMP Agent. Views are inherited for new accounts from the account that was cloned. The SNMP Agent uses one password pair (Authentication/Privacy) for all accounts. This means that when the passwords change for one user, they change for all users. SNMPv3 Accounts The following default accounts are available for the SNMP Agent: enc_mdsadmin—Read/write tion. account using Authentication and Encryp- auth_mdsadmin—Read/write enc_mdsviewer—Read tion. only account using Authentication and Encryp- auth_mdsviewer—Read def_mdsviewer—Read tion. account using Authentication. only account using Authentication. only account with no Authentication or Encryp- Context Names The following Context Names are used (refer to RFC2574 for full details): 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 165 Admin accounts: context_a/Viewer accounts: context_v. All accounts share the same default passwords: Authentication default password: MDSAuthPwd/Privacy default password: MDSPrivPwd. Passwords can be changed either locally (via the console) or from an SNMP Manager, depending on how the Agent is configured. If passwords are configured and managed locally, they are non-volatile and will survive a power-cycle. If passwords are configured from an SNMP manager, they will be reset to whatever has been stored for local management on power-cycle. This behavior was chosen based on RFC specifications. The SNMP Manager and Agent do not exchange passwords, but actually exchange keys based on passwords. If the Manager changes the Agent’s password, the Agent does not know the new password. The Agent only knows the new key. In this case, only the Manager knows the new password. This could cause problems if the Manager loses the password. If that happens, the Agent becomes unmanageable. Resetting the Agent’s passwords (and therefore keys) to what is stored in flash memory upon power-cycle prevents the serious problem of losing the Agent’s passwords. If passwords are managed locally, they can be changed on the Agent (via the console). Any attempts to change the passwords for the Agent via an SNMP Manager will fail when the Agent is in this mode. Locally defined passwords will survive a power-cycle. In either case, the SNMP Manager needs to know the initial passwords being used in order to talk to the Agent. If the Agent’s passwords are configured via the Manager, they can be changed from the Manager. If the passwords are managed locally, then the Manager must be re-configured with any password changes in order to continue talking to the Agent. Password-Mode Management Changes When the password management mode is changed, the active passwords used by the Agent may also change. Some common scenarios are discussed below: Common Scenarios 166 • Passwords are currently being handled by the Manager. The assigned passwords are Microwave (Auth), and Rochester (Priv). Configuration is changed to manage the passwords locally. The passwords stored on the radio were Fairport (Auth), and Churchville (Priv) (if local passwords have never been used, then MDSAuthPwd and MDSPrivPwd are used). These passwords will now be used by the Agent to re-generate keys. The Manager must know these passwords to talk to the Agent. Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C • Passwords are currently managed locally. The local passwords are Fairport (Auth) and Churchville (Priv). Configuration is changed to handle the passwords from the Manager. The same passwords will continue to be used, but now the Manager can change them. • Passwords are currently managed locally. The local passwords are Fairport (Auth) and Churchville (Priv). Passwords are changed to Brighton (Auth) and Perinton (Priv). The Agent will immediately generate new keys based on these passwords and start using them. The Manager will have to be re-configured to use these new passwords. • Passwords are currently managed locally. The local passwords are Fairport (Auth) and Churchville (Priv). Configuration is changed to handle the passwords from the Manager. The Manager changes the passwords to Brighton (Auth) and Perinton (Priv). The radio is then rebooted. After a power-cycle, the radio will use the passwords stored in flash memory, which are Fairport (Auth) and Churchville (Priv). The Manager must be re-configured to use these new passwords. Table 6-3. SNMP Traps (Sorted by Code) SNMP Trap Severity Description bootup(34) CRITICAL System Bootup reboot(35) MAJOR User Selected Reboot reprogStarted(36) INFORM Reprogramming Started reprogCompleted(37) INFORM Reprogramming Completed reprogFailed(38) MAJOR Reprogramming Failed telnetLogin(39) MAJOR Telnet/SSH User login/logout httpLogin(40) MAJOR HTTP User login/logout logClear(41) INFORM Event Log Cleared dhcpServer(42) INFORM DHCP server enabled/disabled dhcpClient(43) INFORM DHCP client enabled/disabled dhcpAddr(44) MINOR Obtained DHCP address timeNotSet(45) INFORM Date/time not set timeByUser(46) INFORM Date/time changed by user timeFromServer(47) INFORM Date/time from server consoleLogin(48) MAJOR Console user login/logout httpLockdown(49) MAJOR HTTP Access locked down parmChanged(50) INFORM Parameter changed cfgscript(51) INFORM Configuration script generated/received authKey(52) MAJOR Authorization key entered - valid/invalid authDemo(53) MAJOR Demo authorization enabled/expired maxDemos(54) CRITICAL Max demos reset/reached 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 167 Table 6-3. SNMP Traps (Sorted by Code) (Continued) 168 SNMP Trap Severity Description modemRestart(55) MAJOR Modem restarted internalError(56) MAJOR Internal error gpsRestarted(57) MAJOR GPS Restarted remoteConnection(58) INFORM Remote associated/disassociated imageCopyStarted(59) INFORM Firmware image copy started imageCopyComplete(60) INFORM Firmware image copy complete imageCopyFailed(61) MAJOR Firmware image copy failed connectionStatus(64) INFORM Connection status change connAbort(65) MAJOR Connection aborted authenticating(66) INFORM Authenticating to Access Point association(67) MAJOR Associated to Access Point established/lost redundLackRem(72) MAJOR Lack of associated remotes exceeded threshold for P21 AP redundRecvErr(73) MAJOR Packet receive errors exceeded threshold for P21 AP redundForced(74) MAJOR P21 AP forced switchover redundancySwitch(75) MAJOR P21 AP auto switchover radioError(76) CRITICAL Radio error procopen(77) MAJOR Proc filesystem access failed procformat(78) MAJOR Unexpected proc filesystem format csropen(79) MAJOR Failed to open CSR device csrstatus(80) MAJOR CSR read failed csrctrlsignal(81) MAJOR CSR write failed bandwidthMismatch(83) INFORM Bandwidth of AP in Locations file does not match this unit gpsSync(84) INFORM GPS synchronized/lost sync gpsTddSync(85) INFORM TDD synchronized/lost sync tftpClientConn(86) INFORM TFTP Connection to Client Opened/Closed tftpClientError(87) MAJOR Error in TFTP Transfer to Client autoUpgrade(88) MAJOR Auto Firmware Upgrade Retry Scheduled/Starting autoReboot(89) MAJOR Auto Firmware Boot Failed/Starting certVerify(90) CRITICAL X.509 certificates loaded/failed certChainVerify(91) CRITICAL Certificate chain verified/invalid paTemp(92) MAJOR PowerAmp temperature Normal/Too hot Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C 7 GLOSSARY OF TERMS AND ABBREVIATIONS 7 Chapter Counter Reset Paragraph If you are new to wireless IP/Ethernet systems, some of the terms used in this manual might be unfamiliar. The following glossary explains many of these terms and will prove helpful in understanding the operation of your radio network. Some of these terms do not appear in the manual, but are often encountered in the wireless industry, and are therefore provided for completeness. Access Point (AP)—The transceiver in the network that provides synchronization information to one or more associated Remote units. See “Network Configuration Menu” on Page 43. AGC—Automatic Gain Control Antenna System Gain—A figure, normally expressed in dB, representing the power increase resulting from the use of a gain-type antenna. System losses (from the feedline and coaxial connectors, for example) are subtracted from this figure to calculate the total antenna system gain. AP—See Access Point Association—Condition in which the frequency hopping pattern of the Remote is synchronized with the Access Point station, and the Remote is ready to pass traffic. Authorization Key—Alphanumeric string (code) that is used to enable additional capabilities in the transceiver. Bit—The smallest unit of digital data, often represented by a one or a zero. Eight bits usually comprise a byte. Bits-per-second—See BPS. BPDU—Bridge Protocol Data Units BPS—Bits-per-second (bps). A measure of the information transfer rate of digital data across a communication channel. Byte—A string of digital data made up of eight data bits. CSMA/CA—Carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision Avoidance CSMA/CD—Carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision Detection Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC)—A technique used to verify data integrity. It is based on an algorithm which generates a value derived 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 169 from the number and order of bits in a data string. This value is compared with a locally-generated value and a match indicates that the message is unchanged, and therefore valid. Data Circuit-terminating Equipment—See DCE. Data Communications Equipment—See DCE. Datagram—A data string consisting of an IP header and the IP message within. Data Terminal Equipment—See DTE. dBd—Decibels (dipole antenna). dBi—Decibels referenced to an “ideal” isotropic radiator in free space. Frequently used to express antenna gain. dBm—Decibels referenced to one milliwatt. An absolute unit used to measure signal power, as in transmitter power output, or received signal strength. DCE—Data Circuit-terminating Equipment (or Data Communications Equipment). In data communications terminology, this is the “modem” side of a computer-to-modem connection. COM1 Port of the transceiver is set as DCE. Decibel (dB)—A measure of the ratio between two signal levels. Frequently used to express the gain (or loss) of a system. Delimiter—A flag that marks the beginning and end of a data packet. Device Mode—The operating mode/role of a transceiver (Access Point or Remote) in a wireless network. DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol)—An Internet standard that allows a client (i.e. any computer or network device) to obtain an IP address from a server on the network. This allows network administrators to avoid the tedious process of manually configuring and managing IP addresses for a large number of users and devices. When a network device powers on, if it is configured to use DHCP, it will contact a DHCP server on the network and request an IP address. The DHCP server will provide an address from a pool of addresses allocated by the network administrator. The network device may use this address on a “time lease” basis or indefinitely depending on the policy set by the network administrator. The DHCP server can restrict allocation of IP addresses based on security policies. An Access Point may be configured by the system administrator to act as a DHCP server if one is not available on the wired network. 170 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Digital Signal Processing—See DSP. DSP—Digital Signal Processing. DSP circuitry is responsible for the most critical real-time tasks; primarily modulation, demodulation, and servicing of the data port. DTE—Data Terminal Equipment. A device that provides data in the form of digital signals at its output. Connects to the DCE device. Encapsulation—Process in by which, a complete data packet, such as MODBUS™ frame or any other polled asynchronous protocol frame, is placed in the data portion of another protocol frame (in this case IP) to be transported over a network. Typically this action is done at the transmitting end, before being sent as an IP packet to a network. A similar reversed process is applied at the other end of the network extracting the data from the IP envelope, resulting in the original packet in the original protocol. Endpoint—Data equipment connected to the Ethernet port of the radio. Equalization—The process of reducing the effects of amplitude, frequency or phase distortion with compensating networks. Fade Margin—The greatest tolerable reduction in average received signal strength that will be anticipated under most conditions. Provides an allowance for reduced signal strength due to multipath, slight antenna movement or changing atmospheric losses. A fade margin of 15 to 20 dB is usually sufficient in most systems. Fragmentation—A technique used for breaking a large message down into smaller parts so it can be accommodated by a less capable media. Frame—A segment of data that adheres to a specific data protocol and contains definite start and end points. It provides a method of synchronizing transmissions. Frequency Hopping—The spread spectrum technique used by the transceiver, where two or more associated radios change their operating frequencies many times per second using a set pattern. Since the pattern appears to jump around, it is said to “hop” from one frequency to another. GPS—Global Positioning System. A constellation of orbiting satellites used for navigation and timing data. Although 24 satellites are normally active, a number of spares are also available in case of malfunction. Originally designed for military applications by the U.S. Department of Defense, GPS was released for civilian use in the 1980s. GPS satellites operate in the vicinity of the “L” frequency band (1500 MHz). Hardware Flow Control—A transceiver feature used to prevent data buffer overruns when handling high-speed data from the connected data 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 171 communications device. When the buffer approaches overflow, the radio drops the clear-to-send (CTS) line, that instructs the connected device to delay further transmission until CTS again returns to the high state. Host Computer—The computer installed at the master station site, that controls the collection of data from one or more remote sites. HTTP—Hypertext Transfer Protocol ICMP—Internet Control Message Protocol IGMP (Internet Gateway Management Protocol)—Ethernet level protocol used by routers and similar devices to manage the distribution of multicast addresses in a network. IEEE—Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers IEEE 802.1Q—A standard for Ethernet framing which adds a four-byte tag after the Ethernet header. The four-byte tag contains a VLAN ID and a IEEE 802.1P priority value. IEEE 802.1X—A standard for performing authentication and port blocking. The 802.1X port/device denies access to the network until the client device has authenticated itself. Image (File)—Data file that contains the operating system and other essential resources for the basic operation of the radio’s CPU. LAN—Local Area Network Latency—The delay (usually expressed in milliseconds) between when data is applied at the transmit port at one radio, until it appears at the receive port at the other radio. MAC—Media Access Controller MD5—A highly secure data encoding scheme. MD5 is a one-way hash algorithm that takes any length of data and produces a 128 bit “fingerprint.” This fingerprint is “non-reversible,” it is computationally infeasible to determine the file based on the fingerprint. For more details review “RFC 1321” available on the Internet. MIB—Management Information Base Microcontroller Unit—See MCU. Mobility—Refers to a station that moves about while maintaining active connections with the network. Mobility generally implies physical motion. The movement of the station is not limited to a specific network and IP subnet. In order for a station to be mobile it must establish 172 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C and tear down connections with various access points as it moves through the access points' territory. Mode—See Device Mode. MTBF—Mean-Time Between Failures Multiple Address System (MAS)—See Point-Multipoint System. NMEA—National Marine Electronics Association. National body that established a protocol for interfacing GPS data between electronic equipment. Network Name—User-selectable alphanumeric string that is used to identify a group of radio units that form a communications network. The Access Point and all Remotes within a given system should have the same network address. Network-Wide Diagnostics—An advanced method of controlling and interrogating GE MDS radios in a radio network. NTP—Network Time Protocol Packet—The basic unit of data carried on a link layer. On an IP network, this refers to an entire IP datagram or a fragment thereof. PING—Packet INternet Groper. Diagnostic message generally used to test reachability of a network device, either over a wired or wireless network. PKI—Private Key Infrastructure. A set of policies and technologies needed to create, store, and distribute Public Key Certificates used to protect the security of network communications. Point-to-Multipoint System—A radio communications network or system designed with a central control station that exchanges data with a number of remote locations equipped with terminal equipment. Poll—A request for data issued from the host computer (or master PLC) to a remote device. Portability—A station is considered connected when it has successfully authenticated and associated with an access point. A station is considered authenticated when it has agreed with the access point on the type of encryption that will be used for data packets traveling between them. The process of association causes a station to be bound to an access point and allows it to receive and transmit packets to and from the access point. In order for a station to be associated it must first authenticate with the access point. The authentication and association processes occur automatically without user intervention. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 173 Portability refers to the ability of a station to connect to an access point from multiple locations without the need to reconfigure the network settings. For example, a remote transceiver that is connected to an access point may be turned off, moved to new site, turned back on, and, assuming the right information is entered, can immediately reconnect to the access point without user intervention. PLC—Programmable Logic Controller. A dedicated microprocessor configured for a specific application with discrete inputs and outputs. It can serve as a host or as an RTU. PuTTY—A free implementation of Telnet and SSH for Win32 and Unix platforms. It is written and maintained primarily by Simon Tatham. Refer to http://www.pobox.com/~anakin/ for more information. RADIUS—Remote Authentication Dial In User Service. An authentication, authorization, and accounting protocol used to secure remote access to a device or network. Remote—A transceiver in a network that communicates with an associated Access Point. Remote Terminal Unit—See RTU. RFI—Radio Frequency Interference Roaming—A station's ability to automatically switch its wireless connection between various access points (APs) as the need arises. A station may roam from one AP to another because the signal strength or quality of the current AP has degraded below what another AP can provide. Roaming may also be employed in conjunction with Portability where the station has been moved beyond the range of the original AP to which it was connected. As the station comes in range of a new AP, it will switch its connection to the stronger signal. Roaming refers to a station's logical, not necessarily physical, move between access points within a specific network and IP subnet. RSSI—Received Signal Strength Indicator RTU—Remote Terminal Unit. A data collection device installed at a remote radio site. SCADA—Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition. An overall term for the functions commonly provided through an MAS radio system. SNMP—Simple Network Management Protocol SNR—Signal-to-Noise Ratio. A measurement of the desired signal to ambient noise levels.This measurement provides a relative indication of signal quality. Because this is a relative number, higher signal-to-noise ratios indicate improved performance. 174 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C SNTP—Simple Network Time Protocol SSL—Secure Socket Layer SSH—Secure Shell STP—Spanning Tree Protocol Standing-Wave Ratio—See SWR. SWR—Standing-Wave Ratio. A parameter related to the ratio between forward transmitter power and the reflected power from the antenna system. As a general guideline, reflected power should not exceed 10% of the forward power (≈ 2:1 SWR). TCP—Transmission Control Protocol TFTP—Trivial File Transfer Protocol Trap Manager—Software that collects SNMP traps for display or logging of events. UDP—User Datagram Protocol UTP—Unshielded Twisted Pair VLAN—Virtual Local Area Network. A network configuration employing IEEE 802.1Q tagging, which allows multiple groups of devices to share the same physical medium while on separate broadcast domains. 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual 175 176 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C INDEX Numerics 100BaseT 51, 149 10BaseT 51, 149 16QAM 67 64QAM 67 802.11b 11 Access Point (AP), defined 169 accessories 17 Active Scanning, defined 169 adapter TNC Male-to-N Female 17 Adaptive Modulation 65 Split 66 Add Associated Remotes 89 Remote 89 Address to Ping 122 Advanced Configuration 59 Control 63 AES encryption 4 agency approvals 164 alarm conditions 140 correcting 141 Alarmed 138 alarms 139 Altitude 107 antenna 900 MHz 5 aiming 144 cross-polarization 13 directional 5, 156 for repeater stations 13 GPS 5, 153 receiving 17 minimizing interference 13 Minimum Feedline Length versus Antenna Gain 154 omni-directional 5, 13, 17, 152 polarization 152 selection 151 SWR check 143 system gain defined 169 vs. power output setting 157 vertical separation 13 Yagi 13, 17, 153 AP current name 130 Location Info Config 44 locations 55–57 05-4446A01, Rev. C application IP-to-Serial 75 Mixed-Modes 79 Point-to-Multipoint Serial-to-Serial 76 Point-to-Point Serial-to-Serial 76 Serial Port 79 approvals agency 164 Approved Remotes 88 ARQ 66 Block Lifetime 66 Block Size 66 Receiver Delay 66 Transmitter Delay 66 Window Size 66 Associated 138 Remotes 41, 109 association defined 169 process 108 attenuation 22 Auth Server Address 91 Port 91 Shared Secret 91 Auth Traps Status 55 Authenticating 138 authentication device 89 user 90 Authorization Codes 113, 123 Key 123 defined 169 Authorized Features 123 Auto Firmware Upgrade 113 Automatic Repeat Request 66 Auto-Upgrade/Remote-Reboot 124 Average RSSI 111 SNR 112 Backhaul for serial radio networks 9 Network 10 bandpass filter 156 baud rate 71, 74 console 68 serial data 68 Begin Wizard 70 Bit, defined 169 Bits-per-second (bps), defined 169 Mercury Reference Manual I-1 BPDU 53 defined 169 BPS, defined 169 BPSK 67 Bridge Configuration 43 Forward Delay 53 Hello Time 53 Priority 52 Protocol Data Unit 53 Bridge Status 102 Buffer Size 71, 74 BW 56 Byte Format 71 byte format 72, 74 bytes defined 169 received 106 sent 106 cable crossover 34, 36, 161 EIA-232 Shielded Data 18 Ethernet crossover 13, 23, 37 Ethernet RJ-45 Crossover 17 Ethernet RJ-45 Straight-thru 18 feedlines 153 serial communications 23, 35 straight-through 36, 37, 161 certificate files 89 type 92 Certificate Filename 92 Change Admin Password 87 Guest Password 87 channel selection 63 single frequency 63 type 65 CHANNELS 56 clear Ethernet statistics 106 Event Log 104 MDS wireless statistics 106 Collocating Multiple Radio Networks 15 Commit Changes and Exit Wizard 71, 73, 74, 75 communication peer-to-peer 8 Compression 131 Computer host, defined 172 Config filename 120 configuration 23, 73 advanced 59 defaults 23 DHCP server 48 editing files 121 Ethernet Port 51 I-2 file 23, 135 IP address 50 network 43 P23 7 protected network 7 radio parameters 58–80 RADIUS 91 redundant 7 script 113, 119 SNMP Agent 53 TCP Mode 73 UDP mode 70 Connecting 138 Connection Status 41, 110, 111, 129 connectionware 131 connector descriptions 161 Ethernet 8 console baud rate 68, 100 Contact 101 context names 165 Corrected FEC Count 112, 130 cost of deployment 11 Count 122 CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check), defined 169 CSMA CA, defined 169 CD, defined 169 Current Alarms 104 Current AP 63 Eth Address 110 IP Address 110 Name 110, 111, 130 Current IP Address 40, 47, 50 Gateway 47, 50 Netmask 47, 50 Cyclic Prefix 65 data baud rate 72, 73 buffering 69 compression 65 encryption 88 VLAN ID 46 VLAN Subnet Config 47 Datagram, defined 170 Date 100 Format 100 dB, defined 170 dBd, defined 170 dBi, defined 170 dBm defined 170 watts-volts conversion 158 DCE, defined 170 Default Route IF 46 defaults resetting 123 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Delete All Remotes 89 Remote 89 Delimiter, defined 170 deployment costs 11 Description 101 Device Auth Mode 88 Authentication 89 Information 42 Menu 100 Mode 40 defined 170 Name 40, 101, 121 Security Menu 86 Status 40, 109, 138 messages 138 DHCP 50 defined 170 DNS address 49 ending address 49 Netmask 49 Server 46 Config 46, 47 Configuration 43, 44 Status 49 starting address 49 WINS address 49 Diagnostic Tools 139 dimensions 149 DIN Rail Mounting Bracket 18 DKEY command 143 Downlink 130 Percentage 66 DSP (Digital Signal Processing), defined 171 DTE defined 171 DUR 56 EIA-232 12 Embedded Management System 23 Enable Filtering 52 encapsulation defined 171 serial 68 transparent 68 encryption 5 AES 4 Phrase 88 Endpoint defined 171 Equalization, defined 171 Ethernet filtering configuration 52 Port Config 43 port enable 51 port follows association 51 port phy rate 51 05-4446A01, Rev. C event Alarms 140 Critical 140 Informational 140 Major 140 Minor 140 Temporary Informational 140 Event Log 102, 105, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142 clear 104 filename 104 host address 104 Menu 104 send 104 view 104 events 139 factory defaults resetting 123 Fade Margin 171 FEC 65 count corrected 112, 130 total 112, 130 uncorrected 112, 130 Total 130 feedline selection 151, 153 file certificate 89 MIB 31 Filename 115 filtering enable 52 firmware automatic upgrade 113 current 116 filename 118 for Upgrade 125 installing 116 upgrade 117, 124 version 41, 113 Flow Control hardware, defined 171 Force Switchover 94 Fragmentation defined 171 frame defined 171 duration 63 Free Run 22, 25 frequency control 59 hopping, defined 171 mode 24, 61 offset RX 130 TX 130 fuse 18 Mercury Reference Manual I-3 G gain antenna, defined 169 system 157 gateway current IP 50 Glossary 169–175 GPS antenna 153 Configuration 42 defined 171 external GPS PPS option 7, 164 Firmware Version 107 information 107 latitude 56 longitude 56 Precise Positioning Service 107 pseudo-random noise 107 receiver 40 satellite fix 57 Serial Number 107 Status 102 Menu 107 Streaming Configuration 98 time of day 57 timing signals 40 to Console Baud Rate 98 UDP Server IP Address 98 UDP Server UDP Port 98 GROUP 57 hand-off 63 Signal and Distance 64 Signal, Distance, and Bearing 64 Strict Connection 64 Strict Distance 64 Strict Signal 64 Hardware Event Triggers 94, 96 flow control, defined 171 Version 41 hop pattern 62, 131 pattern offset 62 Hopping frequency, defined 171 Host computer 78 computer, defined 172 HTTP Auth Mode 86 defined 172 Mode 86 HyperTerminal 34, 35 Hysteresis Margin 65, 66 IANA 69 ICMP defined 172 I-4 IEEE 802.1Q 45, 46, 172 802.1X 172 defined 172 IEEE 802.1x Device Authentication 4, 48, 89 IETF standard RFC1213 53 IGMP 69 defined 172 Image Copy 115 file, defined 172 Verify 115 iNET II, differences of 144 Init/Hardware Error 96 Installation antenna & feedline 151 feedline selection 153 general information 5 mobile 8 planning 149 requirements 149 site selection 151 site survey 155 Interference 156 inter-frame packet delay 74 Internal Radio Status 102 Menu 111 Internet Assigned Numbers Authority 69 Control Message Protocol, defined 172 Inter-Packet Delay 71, 74 IP 11, 48 Address 24, 40, 50, 121 Configuration 44 Mode 46, 47, 50 Configuration 43 current address 47, 50 gateway 47 netmask 47 gateway 50, 121 netmask 50 Protocol 71, 72, 73, 74 static address 46 netmask 46 tunneling 68 KEY command 143 transmitter, for antenna SWR check 143 Lack of Associated Remotes Exceeded Threshold 95, 96 Menu 97 Lack of Remotes for 97 LAN defined 172 wireless 8, 11 LAT 56 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Latency, defined 172 Latitude 107 LED COM1 26 LAN 26, 36, 37, 136 LINK 26, 27, 136, 145, 155 PWR 26, 105, 136, 140, 142 use during troubleshooting 135 Local Area Network, defined 172 Console 34 session 35 IP Port 72 Listening IP Port 74 Location 101, 121 logged events 142 LONG 56 Longitude 107 Lost Carrier Detected 106, 139 MAC 56 ADDR 130 Main Menu 42 Maintenance/Tools 43 Menu 113 Manage Certificates 85 Management VLAN ID 46 VLAN Mode 46 VLAN Subnet Config 46 Management System 23, 67, 118 as a troubleshooting tool 136 user interfaces 31 manuals Reference Manual 3 Start-Up Guide 3 margin hysteresis 66 protection 66 Max Modulation 65 Transmit Power 59 Max Remotes 88 Maximum Receive Errors 98 MD5, defined 172 MDS Security Suite 16 measurements radio 143 Media Access Controller, defined 172 MIB defined 172 files 31, 53 version II 53 mobile 8 Mobility defined 172 MODBUS 80 ASCII 82 RTU 82 05-4446A01, Rev. C Modbus TCP Server 80 Mode 57, 70 Device, defined 170 mixed 78 Model 100 modulation protection 66 MTBF, defined 173 multicast addressing 69 NAME 56 NEMA 11 netmask current IP 50 network Administrator 7 Configuration 42 coverage 131 design 12 antennas 13 collocating multiple radio networks 15 name 13 repeaters 12 using multiple Access Points 14 Using the AP as a Store-and-Forward Packet Repeater 14 Using two transceivers to form a repeater station 12 Event Triggers 94, 95 Interface Config 43 Error 95 LAN 8 name 15, 21, 24, 59, 131 defined 173 tabletop 21 Time Protocol (NTP), defined 173 WAN 8 -wide diagnostics 173 NTP (Network Time Protocol), defined 173 Number of Satellites 107 OFDM 4 OFFSET 56 optimizing radio performance 127 Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing 4 Outgoing Connection’s Inactivity Timeout 73 P23 7 PA Temperature 109 Packet defined 173 Receive Errors Exceeded Threshold 95, 97 Menu 97 Redundancy Mode 72 Size 122 Statistics 102, 105, 139 Mercury Reference Manual I-5 packets dropped 106, 139 received 106 sent 106 password admin 87 guest 87 Pattern Offset 131 PC connection to transceiver 23 host 78 peer-to-peer communications 8 Performance Information 43 Trend 102 PING 21, 26, 113, 155 address 122 defined 173 utility 113 PKI 173 PLC 11 defined 174 point-to-multipoint 14 defined 173 Point-to-Point LAN Extension 9 Link 9 Poll, defined 173 port access 45, 46 COM1 12, 23, 24, 25, 31, 34, 36, 42, 67, 75, 80, 117, 118, 151, 161, 162 COM2 24, 75 Ethernet 21, 45, 46 GPS antenna 25 IP 75 LAN 23, 24, 25, 31, 34, 36, 37, 50, 67, 117, 118, 151, 161 PWR 25 RX2 25, 153 serial 10 trunk 45, 46 TX/RX1 antenna 25 Portability, defined 173 power connector 22 how much can be used 155 primary 22 transmitter power output 143 PPS 107 Precise Positioning Service 107 Primary Host Address 73 IP Port 73 PRN 107 Programmable Logic Controller 11 Protection Margin 65, 66 I-6 protocol DHCP 50 HTTP 31 HTTPS 31 ICMP 45 defined 172 IP 11, 24, 48, 67 SNMP 31, 45, 48, 53, 165 defined 174 SNTP 44, 175 SSH 31, 34 STP, defined 175 Syslog 104 TCP 68, 73, 75, 78 defined 175 Telnet 31, 34, 36, 45 TFTP 45, 116 defined 175 UDP 68, 69, 75, 76, 78 defined 175 Pseudo-Random Noise 107 PuTTY usage 39 defined 174 QoS 4 QPSK 67 Quality of Service 4 Radio Configuration 42 Details 112 Event Triggers 94, 95 Frequency Interference 15 interference 156 Mode 125 performance optimization 127 Remote, defined 174 Test 113 RADIUS 174 configuration 85, 91 User Auth Mode 91 range, transmission 11 ranging 138 Read Community String 54 reboot Device 116 on upgrade 124 Remotes 124 receive errors 106, 139 power 59 Received Signal Strength Indicator 22, 151 defined 174 Redundancy Configuration 42, 94 Options 94, 96 Using multiple Access Points 14 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C Remote add 89 associated 89 approved 88 Database 109 delete 89 all 89 IP Address 72 Port 72 Max 6 Performance Database 109 radio, defined 174 Standard 6 Terminal Unit 11 defined 174 view approved 89 Repeater 12 antennas 13 Network Name 13 Using the AP as a Store-and-Forward Packet Repeater 14 Using two transceivers to form a repeater station 12 Reprogramming 113 Menu 114 Reset to Factory Defaults 113, 123 Retries 139 Retrieve Certificate 92 File 115, 120 Retry errors 139 RF bandwidth 24, 62 Output Power 24 power output level 22 RFI 15 defined 174 Roaming, defined 174 RSSI 22, 112, 129, 130, 145, 151 average 111 defined 174 RTU 11, 75, 79 defined 174 RX Frequency Offset 112, 130 IP Port 71 satellite fix status 41, 107 number of 107 SCADA 10, 11, 69 defined 174 Scanning 138 script configuration 113 Secondary Host Address 73 IP Port 73 05-4446A01, Rev. C security Configuration 42 Menu 85 device level 89 general information 5 monitoring 11 password 23 risk management 16 suite 16 wireless access 89 Send Event Log 104 file 120 GPS via UDP 98 Serial Configuration Wizard 69 data baud rate 68 encapsulation 68 Number 41, 100 Port Configuration 42 radio networks, backhaul 9 server status 49 time 105 signal strength 151 -to-noise ratio 107 defined 174 Simple Network Management Protocol, defined 174 Time Protocol 57 defined 175 Single channel operation 22 Frequency Channel 24, 63 SINGLE_CHAN 57 Site selection 151 SNMP 31, 48 Agent Config 43 defined 174 Mode 54, 55 traps 167 usage 165 V3 Passwords 55 SNMPv3 165 accounts 165 SNR 65, 107, 112, 130 average 112 defined 174 max 67 min 67 range 66 SNTP defined 175 Server 44 configuration 57 Spanning Tree Protocol, defined 175 Spectrum Analyzer Mode 126 spread-spectrum transmission 5 Mercury Reference Manual I-7 SSH 34, 90 Access 86 defined 175 SSL, defined 175 Standing Wave Ratio 175 Starting Information Screen 36, 42 Static IP Address 46, 47, 50 Gateway 51 Netmask 46, 47, 51 Status 40, 70, 72, 73, 74 alarmed 138 associated 138 authenticating 138 connecting 138 scanning 138 STP, defined 175 Stream GPS to Console 98 subnet 51 SWR 143, 175 defined 175 performance optimization 143 Syslog Server Address 104 system gain, antenna (defined) 169 tabletop network 21 Talkback Enable 71 TCP 68, 78 client 68 defined 175 server 68 TDD Sync Mode 14, 63, 131 TDD Sync 24 Telnet 34, 67, 75, 90 Access 86 session 36 Utility 113 Test Burst Percentage 126 Channel 126 Key 125 RF Bandwidth 126 Status 125 Transmit Power 126 TFTP Block Size 93 defined 175 Host Address 55, 92, 115, 118, 120 Timeout 93 Time 100 Connected 110 Division Duplex 63 server 105 Total FEC Count 112, 130 transceiver models 6 Transfer Options 92, 104 I-8 Transmission Control Protocol, defined 175 range 11 transmit max power 59 power 59, 111, 129 transparent encapsulation 68 Trap Community String 54 Manager 55 defined 175 Version 55 triggers hardware event 96 radio event 95 Troubleshooting 135–143 Using the Embedded Management System 136 TX Frequency Offset 112, 130 IP Address 71 Port 71 UDP 68, 76, 78 defined 175 mode 70 multicast 69 Point-to-Point 72 Uncorrected FEC Count 112, 130 Unit Password 24 upgrade firmware 125 Uplink 130 Uptime 41, 100 User Auth Fallback 86 Auth Method 86 Authentication 90 Datagram Protocol, defined 175 Passwords 86 Menu 87 User Auth Mode 91 UTC Time Offset 100 UTP, defined 175 V3 Authentication Password 54 View Approved Remotes 89 Current Settings 70 Event Log 104 Menu 105 VLAN 45, 175 data 45, 46 Ethport Mode 46 ID 46 management 45, 46 Status 43, 44, 46 Voice over IP 4, 11 VoIP 4, 11 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C volts-dBm-watts conversion 158 watts-dBm-volts conversion 158 Web browser 34, 67 session 37 Wireless LAN 8 Network Status 102 Menu 108 Security 85 Menu 87 wizard serial configuration 69 Write community String 54 Yagi antenna 153 05-4446A01, Rev. C Mercury Reference Manual I-9 I-10 Mercury Reference Manual 05-4446A01, Rev. C IN CASE OF DIFFICULTY... GE MDS products are designed for long life and trouble-free operation. However, this equipment, as with all electronic equipment, may have an occasional component failure. The following information will assist you in the event that servicing becomes necessary. TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE Technical assistance for GE MDS products is available from our Technical Support Department during business hours (8:00 A.M.–5:30 P.M. Eastern Time). When calling, please give the complete model number of the radio, along with a description of the trouble/symptom(s) that you are experiencing. In many cases, problems can be resolved over the telephone, without the need for returning the unit to the factory. Please use one of the following means for product assistance: Phone: 585 241-5510 E-Mail: TechSupport@GEmds.com FAX: 585 242-8369 Web: www.GEmds.com FACTORY SERVICE Component level repair of this equipment is not recommended in the field. Many components are installed using surface mount technology, which requires specialized training and equipment for proper servicing. For this reason, the equipment should be returned to the factory for any PC board repairs. The factory is best equipped to diagnose, repair and align your radio to its proper operating specifications. If return of the equipment is necessary, you must obtain a Service Request Order (SRO) number. This number helps expedite the repair so that the equipment can be repaired and returned to you as quickly as possible. Please be sure to include the SRO number on the outside of the shipping box, and on any correspondence relating to the repair. No equipment will be accepted for repair without an SRO number. SRO numbers are issued online at www.GEmds.com/support/product/sro/. Your number will be issued immediately after the required information is entered. Please be sure to have the model number(s), serial number(s), detailed reason for return, "ship to" address, "bill to" address, and contact name, phone number, and fax number available when requesting an SRO number. A purchase order number or pre-payment will be required for any units that are out of warranty, or for product conversion. If you prefer, you may contact our Product Services department to obtain an SRO number: Phone Number: 585-241-5540 Fax Number: 585-242-8400 E-mail Address: productservices@GEmds.com The radio must be properly packed for return to the factory. The original shipping container and packaging materials should be used whenever possible. All factory returns should be addressed to: GE MDS, LLC Product Services Department (SRO No. XXXX) 175 Science Parkway Rochester, NY 14620 USA When repairs have been completed, the equipment will be returned to you by the same shipping method used to send it to the factory. Please specify if you wish to make different shipping arrangements. To inquire about an in-process repair, you may contact our Product Services Group using the telephone, Fax, or E-mail information given above. GE MDS, LLC 175 Science Parkway Rochester, NY 14620 General Business: +1 585 242-9600 FAX: +1 585 242-9620 Web: www.GEmds.com
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