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Title page Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PHOTONIC SERVICE SWITCH (PSS) | Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1 Quick Reference Guide 8DG60888JAAA Issue 1 June 2011

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Title pageAlcatel-Lucent 1830PHOTONIC SERVICE SWITCH (PSS) | Release 3.6.0 and3.6.1Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAAIssue 1June 2011Legal noticeLegal noticeAlcatel, Lucent, Alcatel-Lucent and the Alcatel-Lucent logo are trademarks of Alcatel-Lucent. All other trademarks are the property of their respectiveowners.The information presented is subject to change without notice. Alcatel-Lucent assumes no responsibility for inaccuracies contained herein.Copyright 2011 Alcatel-Lucent. All rights reserved.NoticeEvery effort has been made to ensure that the information in this document is complete and accurate at the time of printing. However, information is subjectto change.This manual applies to Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS.Documentation supportPlease contact your Technical Support Services (TSS) team.ContentsAbout this documentPurpose ............................................................................................................................................................................................ vii viiAudience ......................................................................................................................................................................................... vii viiSafety information...................................................................................................................................................................... vii viiRelated information.................................................................................................................................................................... vii viiDocument support ........................................................................................................................................................................ ix ixTechnical support .......................................................................................................................................................................... ix ixHow to order ................................................................................................................................................................................... ix ixPackaging collection and recovery requirements .............................................................................................................. ix ixRecycling/Take-Back/Disposal of Product ........................................................................................................................... x xSafety information......................................................................................................................................................................... x xHow to comment............................................................................................................................................................................ x xQuick Reference GuideOverview .......................................................................................................................................................................................... 11SafetyOverview .......................................................................................................................................................................................... 33Structure of safety statements ................................................................................................................................................... 33Laser safety..................................................................................................................................................................................... 441830 PSS productProduct description.................................................................................................................................................................... 10 101830 PSS documentationCustomer documents ................................................................................................................................................................. 17 17....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011iii1830 PSS web user interfaceWebUI functions and features ................................................................................................................................................ 19 19Using the WebUI........................................................................................................................................................................ 19 19WebUI startup .............................................................................................................................................................................. 21 211830 PSS WebUI menuMenu operations......................................................................................................................................................................... 23 231830 PSS provisioningCommon procedures................................................................................................................................................................. 26 26Security administration ............................................................................................................................................................. 27 27Equipment management ........................................................................................................................................................... 28 28Alarm management .................................................................................................................................................................... 29 29Performance monitoring.......................................................................................................................................................... 30 30Connections.................................................................................................................................................................................. 31 31Protection ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 32 32Wavelength Tracker ................................................................................................................................................................... 33 33Database backup and restore .................................................................................................................................................. 34 34Software upgrade ........................................................................................................................................................................ 36 361830 PSS alarmsCommon alarm conditions ...................................................................................................................................................... 37 37Corrective Action Procedures................................................................................................................................................ 44 44Related software1830 PSS Engineering and Planning Tool ......................................................................................................................... 51 511354 RM-PhM Photonic Manager ....................................................................................................................................... 52 52Technical supportContact information ................................................................................................................................................................... 54 54IndexContents........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................iv1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011List of figures1 Laser warning labels..................................................................................................................................................... 9 92 Reports Menu............................................................................................................................................................... 24 243 Administration Menu ................................................................................................................................................. 24 244 Connections Menu...................................................................................................................................................... 25 25....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011vList of figures........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................vi1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011About this document About this documentPurposeThe purpose of this document is to provide users of the Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS systema streamlined, easy-to-use navigation aid to facilitate use of the system.AudienceThis document is intended for the following users of the Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSSdocumentation library: administrators operators maintenance personnelAlcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS products are meant to be installed, operated, and maintained bypersonnel who have the knowledge, training, and qualifications required to safely performthe tasks assigned to them. The information, processes, and procedures contained in theAlcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS product documentation are intended for use by trained andqualified personnel.Safety informationRefer to the Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Safety Guide for safety information.Related informationThe Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1 QuickReference Guide is part of a set of documents that support the Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSSSystem. The following items are available:Document Number Document Title8DG60888AAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 36/32/16(PSS-36/32/16) Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1 Product Information andPlanning Guide...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011viiDocument Number Document Title8DG60888BAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 36/32/16(PSS-36/32/16) Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1 User Provisioning Guide8DG60888CAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 36/32/16(PSS-36/32/16) Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1 Maintenance andTrouble-Clearing Guide8DG60888DAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 36/32/16(PSS-36/32/16) Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1 Installation and SystemTurn-Up Guide8DG60888EAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) Release 3.6.0and 3.6.1 TL1 Commands and Messages Guide8DG60888FAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) Release 3.6.0and 3.6.1 Command Line Interface Guide8DG60888GAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) Release 3.6.0Engineering and Planning Tool User Guide8DG60888HAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) Release 3.6.0and 3.6.1 Safety Guide8DG60888JAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) Release 3.6.0and 3.6.1 Quick Reference Guide8DG60888KAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 1 (PSS-1) Release1.1.0 MSAH User Guide8DG60888LAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 1 (PSS-1) Release1.8.0 MD4H Edge Device User Guide8DG60888MAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 36/32/16(PSS-36/32/16) Release 3.6.1 GMPLS Command Line InterfaceGuide8DG60888NAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 36/32/16(PSS-36/32/16) Release 3.6.1 GMRE/GMPLS ConfigurationGuide8DG60888RAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 36/32/16(PSS-36/32/16) Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1 Data CommunicationNetwork (DCN) Planning Guide3AL61336AAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1354 RM-PhM Release 8.6 Photonic ManagerEMS Reference Guide3KC13011AAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 4 (PSS-4) Release1.5.x User Guide8DG60418LAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch 1 (PSS-1) Release2.7.0 GBEH Edge Device User GuideAbout this document........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................viii1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011Document Number Document Title8DG60386JAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS-1) Release1.0.0 AHP Amplifier User Guide8DG60013MAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-32 RAMAN Amplifier and EDFA Release2.0.0 User Guide8DG60889AAAA Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) ProductFamily Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1 CD-ROMDocument supportAlcatel-Lucent provides a referral telephone number for document support. Use thisnumber to report errors or to ask questions about the document. This is a non-technicalnumber. The referral number is 1 (888) 727 3615 (continental United States) or +1 (630)713 5000 (for all countries).Technical supportLogin to OnLine Customer Support (OLCS) at http://support.alcatel-lucent.com andselect your country from the pulldown menu under "Product Technical Support - Phoneand Email Contact Information".How to orderContact your local sales representative, or login to OLCS at http://support.alcatel-lucent.com and select your product from the pulldown menu under "Technical Contentfor".Packaging collection and recovery requirementsCountries, states, localities, or other jurisdictions may require that systems be establishedfor the return and/or collection of packaging waste from the consumer, or other end user,or from the waste stream. Additionally, reuse, recovery, and/or recycling targets for thereturn and/or collection of the packaging waste may be established.For more information regarding collection and recovery of packaging and packagingwaste within specific jurisdictions, please contact the Alcatel-Lucent FieldServices/Installation - Environmental Health and Safety organization.About this document........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011ixRecycling/Take-Back/Disposal of ProductCollect and treat electronic products bearing or referencing the following symbol, withinthe European Union, at the end of their useful life in compliance with applicableEuropean Union and local legislation. Do not dispose of these products as part ofunsorted municipal waste. Due to materials that may be contained in the product, such asheavy metals or batteries, the environment and human health may be negatively impactedas a result of inappropriate disposal.Note: In the European Union, a solid bar under the crossed-out wheeled bin indicates thatthe product was put on the market after 13 August 2005.Moreover, in compliance with legal requirements and contractual agreements, whereapplicable, Alcatel-Lucent provides for the collection and treatment of Alcatel-Lucentproducts at the end of their useful life. Alcatel-Lucent also provides for the collection andtreatment of existing products that have been displaced by Alcatel-Lucent equipment.For information regarding take-back of equipment by Alcatel-Lucent, or for moreinformation regarding the requirements for recycling/disposal of product, please contactyour Alcatel-Lucent account manager or Alcatel-Lucent Take-Back Support [email protected] informationFor your safety, this document contains safety statements. Safety statements are given atpoints where risks of damage to personnel, equipment, and operation may exist. Failure tofollow the directions in a safety statement may result in serious consequences.How to commentTo comment on this document, go to the Online Comment Form (http://infodoc.alcatel-lucent.com/comments/) or e-mail your comments to the Comments Hotline([email protected]).About this document........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................x1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011Quick Reference GuideOverviewPurposeThe purpose of this document is to provide users of the Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS systema streamlined, easy-to-use navigation aid to facilitate use of the system.ContentsSafety 3Structure of safety statements 3Laser safety 41830 PSS product 10Product description 101830 PSS documentation 17Customer documents 171830 PSS web user interface 19WebUI functions and features 19Using the WebUI 19WebUI startup 211830 PSS WebUI menu 23Menu operations 231830 PSS provisioning 26Common procedures 26Security administration 27Equipment management 28Alarm management 29Performance monitoring 30Connections 31....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 20111Protection 32Wavelength Tracker 33Database backup and restore 34Software upgrade 361830 PSS alarms 37Common alarm conditions 37Corrective Action Procedures 44Related software 511830 PSS Engineering and Planning Tool 511354 RM-PhM Photonic Manager 52Technical support 54Contact information 54Quick Reference Guide Overview........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................21830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011SafetyOverviewPurposeThis chapter provides important safety instructions for Alcatel-Lucent Alcatel-Lucent1830 PSS.ContentsStructure of safety statements 3Laser safety 4Structure of safety statementsOverviewThis topic describes the components of safety statements that appear in this document.General structureSafety statements include the following structural elements:Item Structure element Purpose1 Safety alert symbol Indicates the potential for personal injury(optional)2 Safety symbol Indicates hazard type (optional)SAMPLEB C DEFGHLifting this equipment by yourself can result in injurydue to the size and weight of the equipment.Always use three people or a lifting device to transportand position this equipment. [ABC123]CAUTIONLiftinghazardQuick Reference GuideSafetyOverview........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 20113Item Structure element Purpose3 Signal word Indicates the severity of the hazard4 Hazard type Describes the source of the risk of damage orinjury5 Safety message Consequences if protective measures fail6 Avoidance message Protective measures to take to avoid the hazard7 Identifier The reference ID of the safety statement(optional)Signal wordsThe signal words identify the hazard severity levels as follows:Signal word MeaningDANGER Indicates an extremely hazardous situation which, if not avoided, willresult in death or serious injury.WARNING Indicates a hazardous situation which, if not avoided, could result indeath or serious injury.CAUTION Indicates a hazardous situation which, if not avoided, could result inminor or moderate injury.NOTICE Indicates a hazardous situation not related to personal injury.Laser safetySystem complianceAlcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS complies with the following laser safety regulations andstandards: International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 60825-2: 2004 rules classifyAlcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS as a Class 1M laser product International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 60825-2: 2004 rules classifyAlcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS as a Class 1 laser product Food and Drug Administration's Center for Devices and Radiological Health(FDA/CDRH) 21 CFR 1040.10 and 1040.11 rules classify Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSSas a Class IIIb laser product Food and Drug Administration's Center for Devices and Radiological Health(FDA/CDRH) 21 CFR 1040.10 and 1040.11 rules classify Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSSas a Class I laser productQuick Reference GuideSafetyStructure of safety statements........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................41830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011General laser informationOptical fiber telecommunication systems, their associated test sets, and similar operatingsystems use semiconductor laser transmitters that emit infrared (IR) light at wavelengthsbetween approximately 800 nanometers (nm) and 1600 nm. The emitted light is above thered end of the visible spectrum, which is normally not visible to the human eye. Althoughradiant energy at near-IR wavelengths is officially designated invisible, some people cansee the shorter wavelength energy even at power levels several orders of magnitude belowany that have been shown to cause injury to the eye.Conventional lasers can produce an intense beam of monochromatic light.Monochromatic light is a single wavelength output of pure color that may be visible orinvisible to the eye. Aconventional laser produces a small-sized beam of light, andbecause the beam size is small, the power density (also called irradiance) is very high.Consequently, lasers and laser products are subject to federal and applicable stateregulations as well as international standards for their safe operation.Aconventional laser beam expands very little over distance, or is said to be very wellcollimated. Thus, conventional laser irradiance remains relatively constant over distance.However, lasers used in lightwave systems have a large beam divergence, typically 10 to20 degrees. Here, irradiance obeys the inverse square law (doubling the distance reducesthe irradiance by a factor of four) and rapidly decreases over distance.Lasers and eye damageThe optical energy emitted by laser and high-radiance LEDs in the 400 to 1400-nm rangemay cause eye damage if absorbed by the retina. When a beam of light enters the eye, theeye magnifies and focuses the energy on the retina magnifying the irradiance. Theirradiance of the energy that reaches the retina is approximately 105 (or 100,000 timesmore than at the cornea) and, if sufficiently intense, may cause a retinal burn.The damage mechanism at the wavelengths used in an optical fiber telecommunications isthermal in origin; for example, damage caused by heating. Therefore, a specific amountof energy is required for a definite time to heat an area of retinal tissue. Damage to theretina occurs only when one looks at the light sufficiently long that the product of theretinal irradiance and the viewing time exceeds the damage threshold. Optical energiesabove 1400 nm cause corneal and skin burns, but these optical energies do not affect theretina. The thresholds for injury at wavelengths greater than 1400 nm are significantlyhigher than that for wavelengths in the retinal hazard region.Classification of lasersManufacturers of lasers and laser products in the United States are regulated by the Foodand Drug Administration's Center for Devices and Radiological Health (FDA/CDRH)under 21 CFR 1040. These regulations require manufacturers to certify each laser or laserproduct as belonging to one of four major classes: I, II, lla, IlIa, lllb, or IV.Quick Reference GuideSafetyLaser safety........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 20115The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) is an international standards bodythat writes laser safety standards under IEC-60825. Classification schemes are similar anddivided into Classes 1, 1M, 2, 2M, 3B, 3R, and 4. Lasers are classified according to theaccessible emission limits and their potential for causing injury.Optical fiber telecommunication systems are generally classified as Class I/1, because,under normal operating conditions, all energized laser transmitting circuit packs areterminated on optical fibers which enclose the laser energy with the fiber sheath forminga protective housing. Also, a protective housing/access panel is typically installed in frontof the laser circuit pack shelves. The circuit packs themselves, however, may beFDA/CDRH Class I, IIIb, or IV or IEC Class 1, 1M, 3B, 3R, or 4. State-of-the-art Ramanoptical amplifiers have now extended into the Class IV/4 designations.Laser safety precautions for optical fiber telecommunications systemsIn its normal operating mode, an optical fiber telecommunication system is totallyenclosed and presents no risk of eye injury. It is a Class I/1 system under the FDA/CDRHand IEC classifications.The fiber optic cables that interconnect various components of an optical fibertelecommunication system can disconnect or break and may expose people to lightwaveemission. Also, certain measures and maintenance procedures may expose the technicianto emission from the semiconductor laser during installation and servicing. Unlike morefamiliar laser devices, such as solid-state and gas lasers, the emission pattern of asemiconductor laser results in a highly divergent beam. In a divergent beam, theirradiance (power density) decreases rapidly with distance. The greater the distance, theless energy will enter the eye and the less potential risk for eye injury. If you inadvertentlyview an unterminated fiber or damaged fiber with the unaided eye at distances greaterthan 5 to 6 inches, normally, it will not cause eye injury provided that the power in thefiber is less than a few milliwatts at the near IR wavelengths and a few tens of milliwattsat the far IR wavelengths. However, damage may occur if you use an optical instrumentsuch as a microscope, magnifying glass, or eye loupe to stare at the energized fiber end.Laser RadiationCAUTIONLaser hazardUse of controls, adjustments, and procedures other than those specified herein may resultin hazardous laser radiation exposure.Use controls, adjustments, and procedures specified in this document to avoid hazardouslaser radiation exposure.Quick Reference GuideSafetyLaser safety........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................61830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011Laser safety precautions for enclosed systemsUnder normal operating conditions, optical fiber telecommunication systems arecompletely enclosed. Observe the following laser safety precautions for enclosedsystems: Because of the potential for eye damage, do not stare into optical connectors orbroken fibers. Do not under any circumstances perform laser/fiber optic operations beforesatisfactorily completing laser safety training. Since viewing lightwave emission directly in excess of Class I/1 limits with an opticalinstrument such as an eye loupe greatly increases the risk of eye damage,observe/follow laser safety labels. Appropriate labels must appear in plain view, inclose proximity to the optical port on the protective housing/access panel of theterminal equipmentLaser safety precautions for unenclosed systemsDuring service, maintenance, or restoration, an optical fiber telecommunication system isconsidered unenclosed. Observe the following laser safety precautions for unenclosedsystems: Only authorized, trained personnel shall be permitted to do service, maintenance, andrestoration. Avoid exposing the eye to emissions from unterminated, energized opticalconnectors at close distances. Laser modules associated with the optical ports of lasercircuit packs are typically recessed, which limits the exposure distance. Optical portshutters, automatic power reduction (APR), and automatic power shutdown (APSD)are engineering controls that are also used to limit the emissions. However, do notstare or look directly into the optical port with optical instruments or magnifyinglenses when removing or replacing laser circuit packs. (Normal eye wear or indirectviewing instruments, such as a Find-R-Scopes, are not considered magnifying lensesor optical instruments.) Only authorized, trained personnel shall use the optical test equipment duringinstallation or servicing since this equipment contains semiconductor lasers. (Someexamples of optical test equipment are Optical Time Domain Reflectometers[OTDRs] and Hand-Held Loss Test Sets.) Do not, under any circumstance, scan a fiber with an optical test set without verifyingthat all laser sources on the fiber are turned off. Only authorized personnel are permitted in the immediate area of the optical fibertelecommunication systems during installation and service.For guidance on the safe use of optical fiber optic communication systems in theworkplace, consult ANSI Z136.2, American National Standard for Safe Use of OpticalFiber Communication Systems Utilizing Laser Diodes and LED Sources in the UnitedStates or outside the United States, IEC-60825, Part 2.Quick Reference GuideSafetyLaser safety........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 20117Laser warning labelsThe following figure shows the different types of laser warning labels:Figure 1 Laser warning labels (1 of 2)CAUTIONDo not view directlywith opticalinstruments.CLASS 1M INVISIBLELASER RADIATIONWHEN OPENAND FIBERDISCONNECTED.ATTENTIONRAYONNEMENTLASER DE CLASSE1M INVISIBLELORSQUELAPPAREIL ESTOUVERT ET QUELA FIBRE ESTDCONNECT E.Ne pas regarderdirectement au moyendun instrument optique.848950572MA-DMX-416HAZARDLEVEL1M123CLASS1LASERPRODUCTDANGERINVISIBLE LASER RADIATIONWHEN OPEN AND FIBERDISCONNECTEDAvoid direct exposure to beamDo not view beam directly withoptical instrumentsQuick Reference GuideSafetyLaser safety........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................81830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011Legend1. Laser symbol2. Laser classification labels (This label may show only the laser class or both the laserclass and the maximum output power.)3. Laser warning labelsFigure 1 Laser warning labels (2 of 2)FAULTMA-metro-428LIHTRINVISIBLE LASER RADIATIONWHEN OPEN AND FIBERDISCONNECTEDAvoid direct exposure to beamDo not view beam directly withoptical instrumentsCLASS1LASERPRODUCT312DANGERQuick Reference GuideSafetyLaser safety........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201191830 PSS productProduct descriptionOverviewThe Alcatel-Lucent 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) product family providesincreased network flexibility and operational automation through zero-touch, transparentphotonic networking. Photonic networks use simplified and accelerated operations totransform wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) into true transport networking withadvanced flexibility, performance, automation, and integration.The Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS product family includes the following: Universal slot-based shelves Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-36 Shelf Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-32 Central Office Shelf Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-16 End Office Shelf Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-4 Shelf Edge device (1 RU) shelves Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-1 GBEH Edge Device Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-1 MD4H Edge Device Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-1 MSAH Edge Device Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-1 AHPAmplifierThe Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS platform family represents the next generation zero-touchtransparent photonic network solution. They compose a family of service-optimized,flexible platforms that deliver advanced OADM/CWDM/DWDM transport capabilities.This highly scalable and versatile set of packages support interoffice facility/convergedcore transport and wavelength services such as SDH/SONET, GigE/10 GigE and StorageArea Networks.The Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS platform family supports the delivery of wavelength andSDH/SONET services, while lowering the cost per bit carried, to accommodate changingtraffic patterns and enable fast service provisioning times. The open photonic layerenables service providers to lower transport network costs by eliminating unnecessaryOEO conversions. TheAlcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS platform family can reduce networkcapital and operating costs by more than 50 percent each, improve service velocity, andimprove optical network manageability.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS productProduct description........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................101830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16The Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-36, PSS-32 and PSS-16 are three closely related shelvesthat compose the 1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16 multi-service multi-reach solution. Theyare scalable optical transport platforms that provide an evolution toward a singleconverged platform for multi-service DWDM metro-area, long-haul, and OpticalTransport Network (OTN) switching, and leading edge flexibility with next generationoptical and OTN capabilities.For core, central office applications, the Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-36 Universal shelfprovides a 36-slot platform that supports up to 18 full-height universal or service slots andup to 32 half-height universal or service slots, and the Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-32Central Office Shelf provides a 32-slot platform. The Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-16 EndOffice Shelf provides an economical 16-slot platform with a smaller footprint for endoffice or smaller core office applications. In this document, these shelves are referred tocollectively as the Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16.The 1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16 multi-service multi-reach shelves are designed toprovide options that drive down the costs of metro, regional, and long-haul networkdeployments while increasing network manageability and responsiveness. One of themain benefits of this platform is its scalability and application support, from simpleCWDM networks, through aggregation of CWDM/DWDM ring/mesh networks, toregional and long-haul DWDM networks.The Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS-36, PSS-32 and PSS-16 support a control plane (on top ofthe transport or data plane) in building the GMPLS/ASON networks with a set ofprotocols (OSPF-TE, RSVP-TE, LMP) which are used to exchange information betweennetwork elements (NEs, also called nodes) for establishing and releasing paths in anautomated, distributed fashion across a network. Each Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS networkelement in the transport plane can be equipped with a controller called GMPLS RoutingEngine (GMRE). The GMRE nodes in a network are forming the control plane and arerunning the GMPLS protocol suite. All the resources of the GMRE nodes are stored into atopology database, which will be used for routing and link and alarm administration.Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1 feature list1830 PSS Release 3.6 includes two software versions: Release 3.6.0 and Release 3.6.1.Release 3.6.0 supports the photonic functionality without GMPLS control plane. Release3.6.1 supports the photonic functionality with GMPLS control plane. The following listsummarizes the feature support in Release 3.6.0 and Release 3.6.1Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS productProduct description........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201111Transponders and pluggable modules features: The dual pluggable 12xAny OT (11DPM12) was introduced in Release 3.5.1. Thefollowing feature enhancements are introduced in Release 3.6.0/3.6.1: Client interfaces support: 3G-SDI (2970 Mb/s), Fiber Channel FC-100/-200/-400 OPTSG (155G subODU1 time slot group) mapping for STM-1/STM-4 to improveODU bandwidth efficiency allowing 3 STM-1/STM-4 clients mapped to ODU1and 12 STM-1/STM-4 clients mapped to ODU2 Add Drop Multiplex (ADM) on a blade functionality supporting ADD/DROPclients from/to any client ports and direct ODU0/ODU1/ODUflex pass-throughfunction ODUk E-SNCP support. 1+1 Y-cable protection with 11DPM12 Drop & continue support for GbE and video services (HD-SDI and SD-SDI) Support of slow eVOAon the line ports of 11DPM12 The coherent 4x10Gb/s muxponder (43SCX4) was introduced in Release 3.5.1. Thefollowing enhancements are introduced in Release 3.6.0/3.6.1: 1+1 Y-cable protection with 43SCX4 8G Fiber Channel client interface support The 11G Quad Port Pluggable Anyrate (4 client) transponder (11QPA4) wasintroduced in Release 2.5. The following enhancements are introduced in Release3.6.0/3.6.1: 1+1 Y-cable protection with a pair of adjacent 11QPA4 packs for client types of10GbE LAN, OC192/STM64, 8G/10G Fibre Channel. OPS line protection with 11QPA4 packs Drop and continue support for the 10GbE service The temperature hardened 11G Quad Port Pluggable Anyrate (4 client) transponder(11QPA4A) is introduced in Release 3.6.0. The 11QPA4 and 11QPA4Asupport samefeatures except temperature harden. The software manages the 11QPA4Aas 11QPA4. The 11G Dual Port Pluggable 12xGbE Mux OT (12 clients) (11DPE12E) wereintroduced in Release 3.5.0. The following enhancements are introduced in Release3.6.0/3.6.1: Line port SVID provision (The SVID is either kept or POPed as traffic leaves thisport, i.e. supports 802.1ad or 802.1q traffic hand off) for a native 10GbE lineconfiguration. Support CIR/EIR provision range from 0 to 10Gbps at the step of 500Mb/s for the10GbE line port (Q-in-Q mode) VLAN ESNCP for up to 32 flowsQuick Reference Guide1830 PSS productProduct description........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................121830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011 Synchronous Ethernet support (without SSM) with EEC Options 1 or 2 (ITU-TG.8261) Ethernet OAM (Y.1731/802.1ag) The 11G Dual Port Pluggable 12xGbE Mux OT (12 clients) (11DPE12) wasintroduced in Release 2.5.0. The following enhancement is introduced in Release3.6.0/3.6.1: Traffic Add Drop Multiplexing (ADM) between two adjacent 11DPE12 packs viabackplane on 1830 PSS-32 and 1830 PSS-36 shelf ESNCP between two adjacent 11DPE12 packs via backplane on 1830 PSS-32 and1830 PSS-36 shelfOptical transmission features: The WR8-88Awavelength router card with add-side 9x1 WSS supporting 50GHzchannel spacing is introduced in Release 3.6.0/3.6.1. The WR8-88Acan be used forAnydirection/ Colorless configurations The 1x4 Mesh Expansion Card (Mesh4) is supported on the 1830 PSS-32 and 1830PSS-36 shelf. The MESH4 is a uni-directional pack that monitors and amplifies aninput signal then splits it into 4 outputs. It is used to split the MESHOUT signal froma WR8-88 pack into 4 signals. The Unidirectional Interleaver Card (ITLU) is optimized for the T/ROAMDarchitecture with WR8-88Acircuit packs The low gain modular amplifier (AM2318A) without DCM access is a single-slotwidth full height circuit pack introduced and optimized to support coherenttransmission Anydirection/colorless configuration with local Add/Drop supported by GMPLScontrol plane is introduced in this release. Anode with Anydirection Add/Drop degreeN+M is composed of N Connection blocks and MAdd/Drop blocks. Thisconfiguration supports colorless anydirection add/drop channels, with automatedcommissioning, power control and optical monitoring provisioning The power management algorithm is enhanced to improve the transmissionperformanceCommon equipment features: 60ADC Power Filter support for PSS-32 shelf (PFDC60)PSS-36 shelf features: Support of PSS-36 shelf controller redundancy (FLC36EAand MT0C) Multiple PSS-36 shelves support managed as a single TID (up to 4 shelves) Configuration support with a PSS-36 shelf as master and PSS-32 shelves as extensionmanaged as a single TIDQuick Reference Guide1830 PSS productProduct description........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201113Operation, administration and maintenance features: Authentication of OSPF message using MD5 code via WebUI is supported Support of multi-area OSPF to improve DCN set-up and scalability is introduced inRelease 3.6.0/3.6.1. The NE will support creating and deleting system-level OSPFAreas. The NE can be up to 3 OSPF areas, in addition to the default backbone area(0-0-0-0). After an OSPF Area is created, it can then be assigned to an OAMP, VOIP,E1, E2, OSC or GCC interface Support for Alarm to indicate excessive power consumption in the PSS-32 shelf Support the ability to provision 16 GB compact flash memory on the equipmentcontroller for supporting GMPLS functionality. When the flash memory card isprovisioned to 16 GB and the physical flash card is less than the provisioned value analarm is reported.Security features: Access Control List (ACL) support on GNE allowing traffic control based on sourceIP, source port, destination IP and destination port. ACL can be used to blockundesired or insecure types of traffic (e.g. block TFTP port). CIT port disablement support is introduced in Release 3.6.0. The CIT interface can beconfigured for auto-disabled after node installation. The default for the CIT interfacewill be "ON". Possible states are "ON", "OFF", and "AUTO". When in "AUTO", theCIT interface will be disabled if the NE is able to communicate with a source IP(typically the management system); if the NE is not able to communicate with thesource IP after some configured interval, the CIT interface will be automatically set to"ON". SSL key management support for configurable parameters in certificate, certificatetransfer between NMS and NE and certificate installation in NEConfiguration support features: Support of 1830 PSS-32 or 1830 PSS-16 as point-of-presence for PSS-4 DWDM ringwithout LD or OSCT where the GCC management is used The configuration of 11DPM12 cascaded with 43SCX4 (4x10Gb/s coherent) and43STX4P (4x10Gb/s OT based on P-DPSK modulation) on 1830 PSS-32 and 1830PSS-36 shelves is supportedPerformance monitoring features: OTN Overhead monitoring support (excluding TCM) is introduced on 43STA1P(PSS-32), 11DPE12E, 11DPM12 and 11STAR1 circuit packs Digital performance monitoring is introduced on 43STA1P (PSS-32), 11DPE12E,11DPM12 and 11STAR1 circuit packs Pre-FEC/Post-FEC Bit Error Rate monitoring support is introduced on 43STA1P(PSS-32), 11DPE12E, 11DPM12, 11STAR1, 43SCX4 circuit packsQuick Reference Guide1830 PSS productProduct description........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................141830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011 Analog parameters monitoring support is introduced on 43STA1P (PSS-32),11DPE12E, AHPLG, ALPHG, OSCT, ALPFGT (PSS-32) circuit packs TCMi support on 43STX4P circuit packsGMPLS Control Plane Support in Release 3.6.1GMPLS/ASON networks are based on the introduction of a control plane (on top of thetransport or data plane) with a set of protocols (OSPF-TE, RSVP-TE, LMP) which areused to exchange information between network elements (NEs, also called nodes) forestablishing and releasing paths in an automated, distributed fashion across a network.Each Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS network element in the transport plane can be equippedwith a controller called GMPLS Routing Engine (GMRE). The GMRE software ispackaged together with basic NE software and can be installed as a single entity on theEquipment Controller (EC). No additional hardware is required for the implementation ofthe GMRE. The GMRE nodes in a network are forming the control plane and are runningthe GMPLS protocol suite. Then all the resources of the GMRE nodes are stored into atopology database, which will be used for routing and link and alarm administration.1830 PSS Release 3.6.1 supports the following functionalities: Automatic topology discovery Link management protocol (LMP) WDM constrain-based path computation 1+1 OSNCP SBR (Source Based Restoration) PRC (1+1 OSNCP and SBR combined) Nominal routeThe shelf types supported by GMRE in 1830 PSS Release 3.6.1 include PSS-36, PSS-32shelves and PSS-16 shelf (as ILA). The LDs and amplifiers supported by the controlplane include AHPLG, A2325A, AM2125A, AM2318Aand RA2P circuit packs. Thecontrol plane also supports the OTs including 112SCX10, 43STX4P, 43STA1P, 43SCX4,11DPE12, 11DPE12E, 11DPM12, 11QPA4, and 11STAR1.The OT regeneration support under GMPLS in Release 3.6.1 includes 11STAR1, 11QPA4and 43STA1P. The GMPLS networks is managed by 1350 OMS.Management interfacesThe1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16 NE supports a range of management interfaces.Web GUI interfaceThe1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16 network element (NE) includes a web server so thatcraft can manage an NE from any Windows-based PC with a web browser, without theneed for any other special software.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS productProduct description........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201115Transaction language 1 (TL1)The1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16 system supports a TL1 command interface for allprovisioning, reporting, and alarming.Command line interface (CLI)ACLI supports all 1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16 system functionality.Simple network management protocol (SNMP)The1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16 system supports the following SNMP functions. Provisioning interface for all equipment and parameters via SNMPv2c and SNMPv3. Reporting of all alarms/traps and ability to define trap destination.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS productProduct description........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................161830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 20111830 PSS documentationCustomer documentsOverviewThere is a set of published customer documents (see Related information (p. vii))associated with the Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS product family. The documents are targetedat specific audiences and contain information specific to various uses of the product. Thebest document for obtaining an overview of what the product is and how it is used is the1830 PSS Product Information and Planning Guide. The best document for obtaininginformation about how to provision and operate the product is the 1830 PSS UserProvisioning Guide. Each document contains a Table of Contents and most include anIndex and a Glossary to aid in finding information. All documents are in Adobe PDFformatting that enables quick searching by chapter or section title.The following list provide a summary of several main documents. Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS Product Information and Planning Guide - This documentdescribes the features, applications, configurations, and technical specifications forthe 1830 Photonic Services Switch 36 (PSS-36), 1830 Photonic Services Switch 32(PSS-32) and 1830 Photonic Services Switch 16 (PSS-16). 1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16 hardware components, network elements, and networks are described indetail.The intended audience is primarily people responsible for the installation of networkelements and for the node to node system connections. 1830 PSS User Provisioning Guide - This document provides information aboutprovisioning the 1830 PSS network element. It provides step by step procedures foruse in daily system operation. It demonstrates how to perform system provisioning,operations, and administrative tasks by use of the craft interface terminal.The intended audience primarily consists of people responsible for the provisioningand maintenance of the product in daily operations, and for the supervision oftransmission operation. 1830 PSS Maintenance and Trouble-Clearing Guide - This document providesinformation on the alarm messages that can be generated by the network elements. Italso provides procedures for routine maintenance including troubleshooting,diagnostics, and component replacement.The intended audience is primarily people who are responsible for productmaintenance and supervision of transmission operation. 1830 PSS Installation and System Turn-up Guide - This manual provides instructionsfor installation, turn-up and testing of the 1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS documentationCustomer documents........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201117This installation manual portion of this document is for personnel who will install1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16. The System Turn-up and Test (also called Integration)is for personnel who will integrate the NEs into a complete network. 1830 PSS Engineering and Planning Tool User Guide - This document provides adetailed description of the EPT application and how to use it for network design.EPT users are Customer Capacity Planning Organizations, Customer Route Planners,Customer and Alcatel-Lucent Network Designers. They will use this tool to design thenetwork equipment configurations and to design traffic services through the network.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS documentationCustomer documents........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................181830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 20111830 PSS web user interfaceWebUI functions and featuresDescriptionThe web user interface (WebUI) provides web-based access to the network element (NE).The WebUI interface is accessed using Internet Explorer running on a computer that isconnected via Ethernet to the NE, either directly or over a LAN. The WebUI supportsprovisioning, administration, performance monitoring, and display of alarms andconditions from the NE. It provides an intuitive, easy-to-use tool to assist in the initialinstallation and troubleshooting of NEs.The Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS WebUI interface provides a graphical user interface to thenode software using HTML, JavaScript, and Java. The application runs on the NE and iscontrolled and viewed through a standard web browser that is provided by the PC. TheWebUI displays a physical view of the NE topology. This view includes the shelves, cardsand ports applicable to fiber connection management, as well as the existing fiberconnections between ports on the NE.The WebUI does not run the full Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS features as does the 1354RM-PhM. The CIT port only provides basic NE management (for local and remotemanagement via SNMP). IP Routing functions have to be configured so that all NEsintended to be managed, are reachable from the local NE. In other words, IP applicationsfrom any external DCN network will work only when there is full IP reach capability toevery GNE and RNE in the network.Using the WebUIOverviewThe web user interface (WebUI) provides web-based access to the network element (NE).You access the WebUI interface using Internet Explorer running on a computer that isconnected via Ethernet to the NE, either directly or over a LAN.WebUI hardware requirements Laptop or desktop computer capable of running the required software. Ethernet card (10 Mb/s minimum, 10/100 Mb/s recommended). It is recommended that you use a monitor capable of displaying at a resolution of1024x768 or greater.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS web user interfaceWebUI functions and features........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201119WebUI software requirements Windows XP, Windows 2000, or Windows 7 updated to the most recent patch level. Internet Explorer 6.0, 7.0, or 8.0 updated to the most recent patch level. J2SE Java Runtime Environment (JRE) version 5.0. The supported version for the NEsoftware version you are running is included on the NE software CD-ROM.Note: Vista is not supported for WebUI.Navigating the WebUIThe Equipment Tree allows the user to navigate through the NE equipment in ahierarchical fashion from the system level down to the port level and select a single entityfrom the hierarchy. The NE Equipment Tree provides the equipment selection mechanismfor all the NE management functions supported. The selection on the NE Equipment Treeis always in sync with the information displayed in the Display Panel.When navigating the equipment tree, the following applies: Click on the plus sign (+) next to the piece of equipment to expand the tree. Click on the minus sign (-) next to a piece of equipment to collapse the tree. Click on a piece of equipment to select it.Equipment Tree HierarchyThe Equipment Tree hierarchy is as follows: System + Shelf + Slot/Card + PortThe user will traverse the hierarchy and select a specific equipment to access thefunctions supported by that equipment.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS web user interfaceUsing the WebUI........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................201830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011WebUI startupLog into the WebUI...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 Launch the Internet Explorer browser....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Enter the IP address of the network element.Result: The WebUI interface login window is displayed.Note: If you are logging into the NE for the first time (that is, the NE has not yet beenprovisioned), see Initial NE configuration (p. 22)When a user connects to an NE after the initial NE configuration, the WebUI displaysa window where the user can enter their User ID and Password and submit the loginrequest....................................................................................................................................................................................................3 Enter your User ID in the User: field....................................................................................................................................................................................................4 Enter the password associated with the User ID in the Password: field. The characters youenter for the password are not displayed.Note: Passwords are case sensitive. If you experience difficulty logging in, verify thatthe Caps Lock key is off....................................................................................................................................................................................................5 Click on the Login button, or press the Enter key.Result: Upon successful login, the System Details screen is displayed.Exit the WebUI...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 To end the WebUI session, click on Logout.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS web user interfaceWebUI startup........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201121END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................Initial NE configuration...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 When connecting to an NE for the first time, connect the Ethernet cable (RJ45) from thePC to the EC CIT port on the NE and type in the default IP address of 172.16.0.1 in orderto connect to the NE.Result: Awindow is displayed where the user can enter their User ID and Passwordand submit the login request....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Enter your User ID in the Username: field....................................................................................................................................................................................................3 Enter the password associated with the User ID in the Password: field. The characters youenter for the password are not displayed.Note: Passwords are case sensitive. If you experience difficulty logging in, verify thatthe Caps Lock key is off....................................................................................................................................................................................................4 If the login is successful, the WebUI displays a message indicating that the database needsto be initialized. The user will be given 2 options: OK upon selection, the WebUI sends a request to the NE to initialize the database.Note: Initializing the database causes the NE to reboot. Cancel upon selection, the WebUI displays the System Details screen. From here,the user can navigate to the Admin screens to configure the NE as needed (forexample, restore a previously backed up database).Result: The following informational text will be displayed on the screen: Thedatabase is invalid....................................................................................................................................................................................................5 Select one of the following: Click OK to initialize the database. The NE will automatically restart afterinitialization is complete. This will interrupt service if the NE has live traffic. Click Cancel to bypass initialization and proceed to the WebUI. Use this option whenthe NE has services that you do not want to interrupt. You will be asked to supply anNE Name and then the NE will automatically restart without affecting service....................................................................................................................................................................................................6 When the user logs into the NE after database initialization, the WebUI prompts the userto enter NE information (NE Name). Enter and submit this information.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS web user interfaceWebUI startup........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................221830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011Result: The WebUI sends the data to the NE resulting in another NE reboot. The NEand WebUI are now ready for normal operation. The WebUI will automaticallyreconnect to the NE when it is available.1830 PSS WebUI menuMenu operationsOverviewThe 1830 PSS-36/PSS-32/PSS-16 WebUI menu bar provides access to the available pulldown menus. With this, the user can perform any of the available operations includingprocedures to configure user accounts, log procedures, RADIUS server procedures,SNMP procedures, data communication set-up procedures, equipment provisioning andmanagement, alarm management, performance monitoring, connections procedures,protection procedures, wave keys procedures, database backup/restore, and other variousroutine procedures.Menu bar itemsThe Alcatel-Lucent 1830 PSS menu bar includes the following items: Reports Administration ConnectionsThe following figures show the menu bar pull-down items and their function.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS web user interfaceWebUI startup........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201123END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................Figure 2 Reports MenuFigure 3 Administration MenuQuick Reference Guide1830 PSS WebUI menuMenu operations........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................241830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011Figure 4 Connections MenuQuick Reference Guide Menu operations........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011251830 PSS provisioningCommon proceduresThis section includes examples of common provisioning tasks. For comprehensiveprovisioning details and a complete list of procedures, see the 1830 PSS UserProvisioning Guide.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS provisioningCommon procedures........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................261830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011Security administrationCreate a user...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI, select Administration > Security > Users....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Click Create.Result: Create User screen is displayed....................................................................................................................................................................................................3 Enter appropriate information and click Apply.Change password...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI, select Administration > Security > Change Password....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Enter the old password and the new password, and confirm the new password. Then clickApply.View / modify system security attributes...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI, select Administration > Security > System.Result: The System Security Administration window with current settings isdisplayed....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 To modify existing value(s), enter desired value(s) and click Apply.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS provisioningSecurity administration........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201127END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................Equipment managementCreate (pre-provision) a shelf...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 From the WebUI, select System > Create Shelf.Result: The Create Shelf screen is displayed....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Enter shelf parameters and click Apply.View / modify card properties...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 Select the card from the equipment tree.Result: Slot Settings and Circuit Pack Information are displayed under the Detailstab.Note: The Primary State (PST) setting of specific cards can be provisioned from thisscreen. Acard cannot be placed Out of Service (OOS) if any ports on the card are inservice....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 To modify card properties, select the Provisioning tab.Result: Provisionable card properties are displayed.Note: The units displayed are dependent on the value of the system setting. If set toCelsius, the attribute values are displayed in Celsius. If set to Fahrenheit, the attributevalues are displayed in Fahrenheit....................................................................................................................................................................................................3 Enter appropriate values in the respective fields and click Submit.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS provisioningEquipment management........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................281830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................Alarm managementDisplay active alarm list...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI, select Reports > Alarm List > {Total, Critical, Major, Minor}Note: Alarms can also be selected via the alarms display area on the WebUI toolbar.Result: The selected alarms are displayed.Display active alarms or alarm level on a shelf or slot/cardNote: The WebUI will display a list of all active alarms on the selected shelf orslot/card and all entities hierarchically below....................................................................................................................................................................................................1 From the WebUI equipment tree, select the shelf or slot/card. Click the Fault function.Result: The Alarm List/Alarm Level is displayed.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS provisioningAlarm management........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201129END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................Performance monitoringDisplay all TCA profile assignments...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI, select System from the equipment tree and select Reports > TCAAssignment.Result: The TCAProfile Assignments are displayed.Display PM data for port...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI, select the port and click the Performance function.Result: The PM Data screen is displayed under the PM Report tab....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Select the PM group and click Retrieve.Result: The PM report is displayed....................................................................................................................................................................................................3 The WebUI will allow a user to clear current 15-min, 1-day, and/or free running (i.e. rawcounter) bins on a port. This request will clear the bins for all monitored types on the port.To clear bins, click Clear Bins.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS provisioningPerformance monitoring........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................301830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................ConnectionsProvision cross-connects...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI, select Connections > Cross-Connects.Result: Cross-connects are displayed. The following cross-connect options areavailable: Create, View/modify, Delete.Provision EVPL connections...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI, select Connections > EVPL > FullRate/SubRate.Result: The EVPL Connections window is displayed....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Select Create.Result: The Create EVPL Connection window is displayed....................................................................................................................................................................................................3 Enter parameters and click Apply.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS provisioningConnections........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 201131END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................ProtectionCreate protection group...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI equipment tree, select the port and click the Port Protection tab.Result: The create APS Group screen is displayed....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Enter the APS group parameters and click Submit.Request protection switchNote: The WebUI does not allow the user to execute a switch command if the card isnot equipped. When a protection switch is requested, the WebUI displays a warningmessage indicating that the switch could be service affecting. The user can continuewith the request or cancel....................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI equipment tree, select the port and click the Port Protection tab.Result: The APS Group Details screen is displayed if the selected port is a member ofan APS group....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Select the switch request for the port and click Submit.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS provisioningProtection........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................321830 PSS Quick Reference Guide8DG60888JAAA Release 3.6.0 and 3.6.1Issue 1 June 2011END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................END OF STEPS...................................................................................................................................................................................................Wavelength TrackerView channel power summary...................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI equipment tree, select the appropriate port and click on the Wave Keys In orWave Keys Out tab.Result: The Wave Keys Decoder In/Out screen is displayed....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Click Power Summary.Result: Agraphical Power Summary is displayed.View wave key data at NE levelThe WebUI displays wave key data for wave keys in use on the NE....................................................................................................................................................................................................1 In the WebUI, select Reports > Wavelength Tracker > Port Wave Keys....................................................................................................................................................................................................2 On the ensuing Wave Keys screen, select Port, Direction, Frequency, or All and clickRetrieve.Result: The selected wave key data is displayed.Quick Reference Guide1830 PSS provisioningWavelength Tracker......................................................