Configuring a t1 port, Configuring a t1 port -4 – Alcatel Carrier Internetworking Solutions Omni Switch/Router User Manual

Page 992

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Configuring a T1 Port

Page 33-4

Configuring a T1 Port

The

temod

command configures a T1 port at the physical level and is generic to all such ports

regardless of the logical level service, such as circuit emulation, that controls them.

To configure a T1 port, enter the following command

temod <slot>/<port>

where

<slot>

is the slot number where the board is located, and

<port>

is the T1 port number

on the board that you want to modify. For example, to modify port number 2 on the board in
switch slot 5, enter

temod 5/2

A screen similar to the following displays:

T1 Port Configuration for slot 5, port 2

1) Circuit Identifier (30 chars max)

: Alcatel T1 Circuit

2) Frame Format { ESF (2), SF (3), unframed (8) }

: ESF

3) Line Build Out { short(1), long(2) }

: short

30) Line Length in meters (0-200)

: 30

4) Line Coding { B8ZS (2) , AMI (5) }

: B8ZS

5) Facility Datalink { ANSI T1.403 (2), AT&T 54016 (4),

T1.403-AT&T (6), none (8) }

: none

6) Facility Datalink Port Role { network (1), user (2) }

: network

7) Transmit Clock Source { loopTiming (1),

localTiming (2) }

: localTiming

8) Loopback Mode { none (1), payload (2), line (3),

inward (5) }

: inward

9) Signalling { none (1), CAS (2), CCS (3) }

: none

10) Trap Generation { enabled (1), disabled (2) }

: disabled

11) Yellow Alarm Detection { enabled (1), disabled (2) }

: enabled

Enter (option=value/save/cancel) :

1) Circuit Identifier

Enter a textual description of this

T1

port, up to 30 characters. This text will be used in other

screen displays to identify this

T1

port.

2) Frame Format

Specify the frame format to be used on this port. The choices are Extended SuperFrame
(

ESF

), SuperFrame or

D4

(

SF

), or no special frame format (

unframed

). A

T1

frame consists of

24 8-bit time slots and a 1-bit synchronization and control. Twelve (12)

T1

frames can be

grouped into a SuperFrame, and

24 T1

frames can be grouped into an Extended SuperFrame.

Normally, you should configure a T1 port as ESF (the default) since a T1 port configured as
SuperFrame (SF) can produce false yellow alarms if a Layer 2 protocol like High-Level Data
Link Control (HDLC) is being used.

If you must set the port as SF, you can disable Yellow Alarm detection with the

Yellow Alarm

Detection

option, which is described on page 33-7.

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