Thresholds and alarms, Thresholds and alarms -8 – Finisar Surveyor User Manual

Page 192

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9-8

Surveyor

User’s Guide

Thresholds and Alarms

Alarm thresholds are set by specifying the values in the

Sample Type

,

Rising Value

,

Falling Value

, and

Interval

fields for each alarm row in the alarm table. The numbers

or percentages set for rising and falling values are referred to as thresholds. The key
to creating a meaningful alarm is to specify these values so you get alerted to the
exact network conditions you want to analyze.

The sample type can be set to either

Delta

or

Absolute

. The setting for the

Sample

Type

field determines how Surveyor will use the threshold values set in the

Rising

Value

and

Falling Value

fields.

An absolute sample means that if the

Rising Value

is exceeded an alarm event

occurs. If a value is specified for the

Falling Value

, an alarm event occurs when the

value drops below the threshold.

A delta sample type means that if a difference between samples increases (rising) or
decreases (falling) over time is more than the specified threshold, an alarm event
occurs. The

Interval

field sets the time period between samples. Samples are actually

taken at least twice as often as the interval. This allows the detection of threshold
crossings that span the sample boundary. For example, if the delta sample is taken
twice per interval, the sum of the latest two samples are compared to the threshold.

For most cases, the default

Sample Type

of delta is more useful. One exception is

the MAC Layer Alarm for Utilization. Because utilization is expressed in the

Rising

Value

field as a percentage, the absolute sample type is more useful to catch

utilization that exceeds a certain percentage from a baseline of zero network traffic.

Multi-QoS alarms do not use the

Sample Type

,

Rising Value

,

Falling Value

, and

Interval

fields. A simple threshold value is used to trigger the alarm when the

threshold is exceeded.

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