Mcc card, Radsl or mvl card, Hotwire dslam features – Paradyne 8310 MVLt User Manual

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Hotwire DSLAM System Description

1-5

8000-A2-GB26-10

January 1999

MCC Card

The chassis requires one MCC card, which is a processor card that administers
and provides diagnostic connectivity to the DSL cards. It acts as a mid-level
manager and works in conjunction with a Simple Network Management Protocol
(SNMP) system, such as Paradyne’s OpenLane

t

DCE Manager for HP

OpenView, via its LAN port. It gathers operational status for each of the DSL
cards and responds to the SNMP requests. It also has a serial port for a local
user interface to the DSLAM.

For more information, see the

Hotwire Management Communications Controller

(MCC) Card, IP Conservative, User’s Guide.

RADSL or MVL Card

The chassis requires at least one RADSL or MVL card, which is a circuit card that
contains four RADSL or MVL ports, an Ethernet interface to the Internet Service
Provider (ISP), and a processor/packet forwarder. The processor/packet
forwarder controls the endpoints and forwards the packet traffic via the Ethernet
and RADSL or MVL interfaces. When the 8600 DSLAM chassis is fully populated
with 5 expansion chassis, it provides a total of 68 RADSL or MVL modem ports.
When the 8800 or 8810 DSLAM chassis is fully populated, it provides a total of
72 RADSL or MVL modem ports.

Hotwire DSLAM Features

The Hotwire DSLAM system contains the following features:

H

High-speed Internet or intranet access

H

RADSL ports

H

MVL ports

H

Subscriber authentication, security access, and permission features that
prevent users from accessing unauthorized services

H

Diagnostic tests and performance capabilities

H

Primary network management support via SNMP agent for monitoring and
traps

H

Telnet for configuration and diagnostics

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