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Table Of Contents

Configuring Transponder Line Card Interfaces

Configuring Protocol Encapsulation or Clock Rate

Displaying Protocol Encapsulation or Clock Rate Configuration

About Transponder Line Card Channel Frequencies

Configuring Transponder Line Card Channel Frequency

Displaying Transponder Line Card Channel Frequency

About Protocol Monitoring

Configuring Protocol Monitoring

Displaying Protocol Monitoring Configuration

About Alarm Thresholds

Configuring Alarm Thresholds

Displaying Alarm Threshold Configuration

About Laser Shutdown

About Forward Laser Control

About Open Fibre Control

About Laser Safety Control

Configuring Laser Shutdown

Configuring Forward Laser Control

Configuring Laser Safety Control

Configuring Optical Power Thresholds

About Patch Connections

Configuring Patch Connections

Displaying Patch Connections

About Cross Connections

Displaying Cross Connections


Configuring Transponder Line Card Interfaces


This chapter describes how to configure interfaces and patch connections on the Cisco ONS 15530. This chapter includes the following sections:

Configuring Protocol Encapsulation or Clock Rate

About Transponder Line Card Channel Frequencies

Configuring Transponder Line Card Channel Frequency

About Protocol Monitoring

Configuring Protocol Monitoring

About Alarm Thresholds

Configuring Alarm Thresholds

About Laser Shutdown

Configuring Laser Shutdown

Configuring Optical Power Thresholds

About Patch Connections

Configuring Patch Connections

About Cross Connections


Note To ensure the installed Cisco IOS software supports your hardware and provides the software features you wish to use, see the "New and Changed Information" section on page xiii. Also refer to the "Hardware Supported" section and "Feature Set" section of the latest release notes for the Cisco ONS 15530.


To configure transparent interfaces on the Cisco ONS 15530, perform the following steps:


Step 1 Specify the protocol encapsulation and, if required, the transmission rate and OFC (open fiber control), or specify the signal clock rate (required).

Step 2 Specify the laser frequency (optional).

Step 3 Enable protocol monitoring (optional).

Step 4 Create alarm threshold lists and apply them to the interfaces (optional).

Step 5 Enable forward laser control (optional).


To configure wave interfaces on the Cisco ONS 15530, perform the following steps:


Step 1 Enable forward laser control (optional).

Step 2 Enable laser safety protocol (optional).


To configure patch connections on the Cisco ONS 15530, perform the following steps:


Step 1 Configure the patch connections between the OADM modules and the wavepatch interface of the transponder line card (required).

Step 2 Configure the patch connections between the OSC (optical supervisory channel) interface on the OADM modules and the wavepatch interface of the OSC (required if the OSC is present).


Configuring Protocol Encapsulation or Clock Rate

A transparent interface does not terminate the protocol of the signal it receives, but it does convert it from an optical signal to an electrical signal and back to an optical signal. Therefore, you must configure the signal transmission rate by specifying either the protocol encapsulation or the clock rate.

To configure the protocol encapsulation or the clock rate for a transparent interface, perform the following steps, beginning in global configuration mode:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

Switch(config)# interface transparent slot/subcard/0

Switch(config-if)#

Selects the interface to configure and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 2 

Switch(config-if)# encapsulation {fastethernet | fddi | gigabitethernet | escon}

Specifies Fast Ethernet, FDDI, Gigabit Ethernet, or ESCON. OFC1  is disabled.

Switch(config-if)# encapsulation sysplex clo

Specifies Sysplex CLO2 . OFC is disabled. Forward laser control is enabled on both the transparent and wave interfaces. OFC is disabled.

Switch(config-if)# encapsulation sysplex etr

Specifies Sysplex ETR3 . OFC is disabled.

Switch(config-if)# encapsulation sysplex isc {compatibility | peer [1g | 2g]}

Specifies ISC4 links compatibility mode (1 Gbps) or peer mode (1 Gbps or 2 Gbps ). OFC is enabled for compatibility mode and disabled for peer mode. The default rate for peer mode is 2 Gbps.

Switch(config-if)# encapsulation ficon {1g | 2g}

Specifies FICON encapsulation and rate. OFC is disabled.

Switch(config-if)# encapsulation sonet {oc3 | oc12 | oc48}

Specifies SONET as the signal protocol and OC-3, OC-12, or OC-48 as the transmission rate. OFC is disabled.

Switch(config-if)# encapsulation sdh {stm-1 | stm-4 | stm-16}

Specifies SDH as the signal protocol and STM-1, STM-4, or STM-16 as the transmission rate. OFC is disabled.

Switch(config-if)# encapsulation fibrechannel {1g | 2g} [ofc {enable | disable}]

Specifies Fibre Channel as the signal protocol and 1 Gbps or 2 Gbps as the transmission rate. Enables or disables OFC. OFC is disabled by default.

Switch(config-if)# clock rate value

Specifies the signal transmission clock rate without an associated protocol. OFC is disabled.

Note Protocol monitoring cannot be enabled on the interface when the clock rate command is configured.

1 For information about OFC, see the "About Laser Shutdown" section.

2 CLO = control link oscillator

3 ETR = external timer reference

4 ISC = Intersystem Channel Links


Note Disable autonegotiation 2-Gbps Fibre Channel client equipment connected to Cisco ONS 15530 and set the speed to match the clock rate or protocol encapsulation set on the transparent interfaces. The transponder modules only recognize the configured clock rate or protocol encapsulation and do not support autonegotiation.



Note Use the encapsulation command for clock rates supported by protocol monitoring rather than the clock rate command. For more information protocol monitoring, see the "About Protocol Monitoring" section.



Note When you must use Sysplex CLO encapsulation or Sysplex ETR encapsulation, you must configure APS bidirectional path switching. For more information on APS and bidirectional path switching, see Chapter 10, "Configuring APS."



Caution Do not configure y-cable protection with Sysplex CLO, Sysplex ETR, or ISC compatibility protocol encapsulation, or with the OFC safety protocol.

Sysplex CLO and Sysplex ETR are supported outside the nominal range of the clock rates for the Cisco ONS 15530 because of the nature of the traffic type.

Table 6-1 lists the clock rates for well-known protocols supported by the transponder line card:

Table 6-1 Supported Clock Rates for Well-Known Protocols 

Well-Known Protocol
Clock Rate
(in kbps)
Well-Known Protocol
Clock Rate
(in kbps)

DS3

44,736

Gigabit Ethernet

1,250,000

DV11 in ADI2 mode

270,000

ISC Compatibility Mode (ISC-1)

1,062,500

E3

34,368

ISC Peer Mode (ISC-3)

2,125,000

ESCON

200,000

SONET OC-1

51,840

Fibre Channel (1 Gbps)

1,062,500

SONET OC-3/SDH STM-1

155,520

Fibre Channel (2 Gbps)

2,125,000

SONET OC-12/SDH STM-4

622,080

FICON (1 Gbps)

1,062,500

SONET OC-24

1,244,160

FICON (2 Gbps)

2,125,000

SONET OC-48/SDH STM-16

2,488,320

1 DV = digital video

2 ADI = Asynchronous Digital Interface



Note Data coding, as well as clock rate, determines whether a particular traffic type is supported onCisco ONS 15530 transponder line cards. For information on supported traffic types, contact your SE (systems engineer) at Cisco Systems.



Note Error-free transmission of some D1 video signals (defined by the SMPTE 259M standard) and test patterns (such as Matrix SDI) cannot be guaranteed by the Cisco ONS 15500 Series because of the pathological pattern in D1 video. This well-known limitation is usually overcome by the D1 video equipment vendor, who uses a proprietary, second level of scrambling. No standards exist at this time for the second level of scrambling.


Examples

The following example shows how to configure GE (Gigabit Ethernet) encapsulation on a transparent interface:

Switch(config)# interface transparent 8/0/0
Switch(config-if)# encapsulation gigabitethernet

The following example shows how to configure a clock rate on a transparent interface:

Switch(config)# interface transparent 10/1/0
Switch(config-if)# clock rate 1065

Note Removing the protocol encapsulation or the clock rate does not shut down the transmit lasers. To shut down the lasers, use the shutdown command.


Displaying Protocol Encapsulation or Clock Rate Configuration

To display the protocol encapsulation configuration of a transparent interface, use the following EXEC command:

Command
Purpose

show interfaces transparent slot/subcard/0

Displays the transparent interface configuration.


Examples

The following example shows how to display the protocol encapsulation configuration of a transparent interface:

Switch# show interfaces transparent 8/0/0
Transparent11/3/0 is up, line protocol is up
   Encapsulation: GigabitEthernet
Signal monitoring: off
Time of last "monitor" state change never
Time of last "encapsulation" change 00:00:03
Forward laser control: Off
Configured threshold Group: None
Loopback not set
Last clearing of "show interface" counters 00:00:03
Hardware is transparent

The following example shows how to display the clock rate configuration of a transparent interface:

Switch# show interfaces transparent 10/0/0
Transparent10/0/0 is up, line protocol is up
Encapsulation: Unknown
   Clock rate: 1000000 KHz
Signal monitoring: off
Time of last "monitor" state change never
Time of last "encapsulation" change never
Forward laser control: Off
Configured threshold Group: None
Loopback not set
Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
Hardware is transparent

About Transponder Line Card Channel Frequencies

The transponder line card supported by the Cisco ONS 15530 is tunable to one of two frequencies. These frequencies are adjacent on the ITU grid. For example, a transponder line card can support the frequencies for channel  5 and channel  6, but not for channel  5 and channel  8. By default, the transponder line card operates at the laser frequency for the lower channel number. However, you can configure the transponder line card to operate at the laser frequency for the higher channel number using the CLI.

Configuring Transponder Line Card Channel Frequency

To select the desired channel frequency for the transponder line cards supported by the Cisco ONS 15530, perform the following steps, beginning in global configuration mode:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

Switch(config)# interface wave slot/subcard

Switch(config-if)#

Selects the wave interface to configure and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 2 

Switch(config-if)# laser frequency number

Selects one of the two frequencies in GHz supported by the laser. The default is the lower frequency for the transponder module.


Note The laser requires approximately 10 seconds to change to the new frequency and stabilize. Any laser frequency commands entered during this time are ignored.


Example

The following example shows how to change the transponder line card channel frequency:

Switch(config)# interface wave 10/0
Switch(config-if)# laser frequency 195700

Displaying Transponder Line Card Channel Frequency

To display the channel frequency configuration, use the following EXEC command:

Command
Purpose

show interfaces wave slot/subcard

Displays the wave interface configuration.


Example

The following example shows how to display the transponder line card channel frequency:

Switch# show interface wave 10/0
Wave10/0 is down, line protocol is down
 Channel: 30 Frequency: 195.7 Thz Wavelength: 1531.90 nm
Active Wavepatch : Wavepatch10/0/0
Splitter Protected: No
Signal quality: Loss of light
Receiver power level:
Forward laser control: Off
Laser safety control: Off
Osc physical port: No
Wavelength used for inband management: No
Configured threshold Group: None
Loopback not set
Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
Hardware is data_only_port

About Protocol Monitoring

Transparent interfaces on the Cisco ONS 15530 can be configured to monitor protocol and signal performance. When monitoring is enabled, the system maintains statistics that are used to determine the quality of the signal.

The following protocols can be monitored:

ESCON (Enterprise Systems Connection)

FC (Fibre Channel) (1 Gbps and 2 Gbps)

FICON (Fiber Connection) (1 Gbps and 2 Gbps)

GE (Gigabit Ethernet)

ISC (InterSystem Channel) links peer mode

ISC links compatibility mode (1 Gbps and 2 Gbps)

SDH (Synchronous Digital Hierarchy) (STM-1, STM-4, STM-16)

SONET (OC-3, OC-12, OC-48)


Note Enabling monitoring on a transparent interface also enables monitoring on the corresponding wave interface. For example, if you enable monitoring on transparent interface 3/0/0, monitoring is also enabled on wave interface 3/0.



Note To monitor 2-Gbps FC, FICON, and ISC links peer mode, you must upgrade the transponder line card functional image to release 1.A3.


For GE, FC, and FICON traffic, the Cisco ONS 15530 monitors the following conditions:

CVRD (code violation running disparity) error counts

Loss of Sync

Loss of Lock

Loss of Light

For SONET errors, the Cisco ONS 15530 monitors the SONET section overhead only, not the SONET line overhead. Specifically, the Cisco ONS 15530 monitors the B1 byte and the framing bytes. The system can detect the following defect conditions:

Loss of light

Loss of lock (when the clock cannot be recovered from the received data stream)

Severely errored frame

Loss of frame

For SONET performance, the system monitors the B1 byte, which is used to compute the four SONET section layer performance monitor parameters:

The definitions for these acronyms come from the Telcordia SONET standard spec page 6-110.

SEFS-S (second severely errored framing seconds)

CV-S (section code violations)

ES-S (section errored seconds)

SES-S (section severely errored seconds)

For ISC links compatibilty and peer mode traffic, the system monitors the following conditions:

CVRD error counts

Loss of CDR (clock data recovery) Lock

Loss of Light

Configuring Protocol Monitoring

To configure protocol monitoring on a transparent interface, and its corresponding wave interface, perform the following steps, beginning in global configuration mode:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

Switch(config)# interface transparent slot/subcard/0

Switch(config-if)#

Selects the transparent interface to configure and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 2 

Switch(config-if)# monitor enable

Enables signal monitoring.

Note Protocol encapsulation must be configured on the transparent interface before enabling monitoring.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable protocol monitoring on a transparent interface:

Switch(config)# interface transparent 10/0/0
Switch(config-if)# monitor enable

The following example shows how to disable protocol monitoring on a transparent interface:

Switch(config)# interface transparent 10/0/0
Switch(config-if)# no monitor

Displaying Protocol Monitoring Configuration

To display the protocol monitoring configuration of a transparent interface, use the following EXEC command:

Command
Purpose

show interfaces {transparent slot/subcard/0 | wave slot/subcard}

Displays the transparent interface configuration.


Examples

The following example shows how to display the protocol monitoring configuration of a transparent interface:

Switch# show interfaces transparent 10/0/0
Transparent10/0/0 is up, line protocol is up
  Encapsulation: Sonet Rate: oc3
 Signal monitoring: on
Forward laser control: Off
Configured threshold Group: None
 Section code violation error count(bip1): 3714369135
 Number of errored seconds(es): 57209
 Number of severely errored seconds(ses): 57209
 Number of severely errored framing seconds(sefs): 0
 Number of times SEF alarm raised: 0
 Number of times SF threshold exceeded: 0
 Number of times SD threshold exceeded: 384
Loopback not set
Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
Hardware is transparent

The following example shows how to display the protocol monitoring configuration of a wave interface:

Switch# show interfaces wave 7/0
Wave7/0 is up, line protocol is up
Channel: 31 Frequency: 195.8 Thz Wavelength: 1531.12 nm
Active Wavepatch : Wavepatch7/0/0
Splitter Protected: No
Signal quality: Good
Receiver power level: -14.71 dBm
Forward laser control: Off
Laser safety control: Off
Osc physical port: No
Wavelength used for inband management: No
Configured threshold Group: None
Loopback not set
Last clearing of "show interface" counters 09:20:01
Hardware is data_only_port

About Alarm Thresholds

You can configure thresholds on transparent and wave interfaces that issue alarm messages to the system if the thresholds are exceeded. The threshold values are applied to both transparent and wave interfaces on a transponder line card when protocol monitoring is enabled on the transparent interface.

The rate is based on the protocol encapsulation or the clock rate for the interface. Every second, the monitoring facility updates the counters that correspond to the alarm thresholds. When the signal degrades, or fails entirely, the system issues alarms to the console. These alarms can help isolate failures in the system and in the network.

You can configure more than one threshold list on an interface. The threshold lists cannot have overlapping counters so that only one counter is set for the interface. Also, the threshold list name cannot begin with the text string "default" because the it is reserved for use by the system.

Configuring Alarm Thresholds

To configure alarm thresholds on transparent interfaces, perform the following steps, beginning in global configuration mode:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

Switch(config)# threshold-list name

Switch(config-t-list)#

Creates or selects the threshold list to configure and enters threshold list configuration mode.

Note You cannot modify an existing threshold list if it is associated with an interface.

Step 2 

Switch(config-t-list)# notification-throttle timer seconds

Configures the SNMP notification timer. The default value is 5 seconds. (Optional)

Step 3 

Switch(config-t-list)# threshold name {cvrd | cdl hec | crc | sonet-sdh section cv | tx-crc} {failure | degrade} [index value]

Switch(config-threshold)#

Specifies a threshold type to modify and enters threshold configuration mode.

Step 4 

Switch(config-threshold)# value rate value

Specifies the threshold rate value. This value is the negative power of 10 (10-n).

Step 5 

Switch(config-threshold)# description text

Specifies a description of the threshold. The default value is the null string. (Optional)

Step 6 

Switch(config-threshold)# aps trigger

Enables APS switchover when this threshold is crossed. (Optional)

Note This command only triggers switchovers for y-cable protection, not for splitter protection.

Step 7 

Switch(config-threshold)# exit

Switch(config-t-list)#

Returns to threshold list configuration mode.

Repeat Step 3 through Step 7 to configure more thresholds in the threshold list.

Step 8 

Switch(config-t-list)# exit

Switch(config)#

Returns to global configuration mode.

Step 9 

Switch(config)# interface {transparent slot/subcard/0 | wave slot/subcard}

Switch(config-if)#

Selects the transparent or wave interface to configure and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 10 

Switch(config-if)# threshold-group name

Configures the threshold list on the interface.


Note If a threshold type does not apply to the encapsulation type for the interface, that threshold type is ignored.


Table 6-2 lists the threshold error rates in errors per second for each of the protocol encapsulations.

Table 6-2 Thresholds for Monitored Protocols in Errors Per Second

Rate
SONET OC-3 or SDH STM-1
SONET OC-12 or SDH STM-4
SONET OC-48 or SDH STM-16
Gigabit Ethernet
ESCON
FICON1
Fibre Channel2
ISC3

3

31,753

32,000

32,000

1,244,390

199,102

1,057,731

1,057,731

1,057,731

4

12,318

27,421

31,987

124,944

19,991

106,202

106,202

106,202

5

1518

5654

17,296

12,499

2000

10,625

10,625

10,625

6

155

616

2394

1250

200

1062

1062

1062

7

15.5

62

248

125

20

106

106

106

8

1.55

6.2

24.8

12.5

2

10.6

10.6

10.6

9

0.155

0.62

2.48

1.25

0.2

1.06

1.06

1.06

1 One Gbps rate only.

2 One Gbps rate only.

3 Compatibility mode only.

3 3. Rate is limited by the hardware.


Examples

The following example shows how to create an alarm threshold list and configure that list on a transparent interface:

Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# threshold-list sonet-counters
Switch(config-t-list)# threshold name sonet-sdh section cv degrade
Switch(config-threshold)# value rate 9
Switch(config-threshold)# exit
Switch(config-t-list)# threshold name sonet-sdh section cv failure
Switch(config-threshold)# value rate 7
Switch(config-threshold)# exit
Switch(config-t-list)# exit
Switch(config)# interface transparent 10/0/0
Switch(config-if)# threshold-group sonet-counters

The following example shows how to create an alarm threshold list with the APS switchover trigger and configure that list on a pair of associated transparent interfaces:

Switch(config)# threshold-list sonet-alarms
Switch(config-t-list)# threshold name sonet-sdh section cv failure
Switch(config-threshold)# value rate 6
Switch(config-threshold)# aps trigger
Switch(config-threshold)# exit
Switch(config-t-list)# exit
Switch(config)# redundancy
Switch(config-red)# associate group sonet-channel
Switch(config-red-aps)# aps working transparent 3/0/0
Switch(config-red-aps)# aps protection transparent 5/0/0
Switch(config-red-aps)# aps y-cable
Switch(config-red-aps)# aps revertive
Switch(config-red-aps)# enable
Switch(config-red-aps)# exit
Switch(config-red)# exit
Switch(config)# interface transparent 3/0/0
Switch(config-if)# encapsulation sonet oc3
Switch(config-if)# monitor enable
Switch(config-if)# threshold-group sonet-alarms
Switch(config-if)# exit
Switch(config)# interface transparent 5/0/0
Switch(config-if)# encapsulation sonet oc3
Switch(config-if)# monitor enable
Switch(config-if)# threshold-group sonet-alarms

Displaying Alarm Threshold Configuration

To display the configuration of a threshold list and the threshold group for a transparent or wave interface, use the following EXEC commands:

Command
Purpose

show threshold-list [name]

Displays the threshold group configuration.

show interfaces {transparent slot/subcard/0 | wave slot[/subcard]}

Displays the transparent or wave interface configuration.


Examples

The following example shows how to display the configuration of a threshold group:

Switch# show threshold-list sonet-counters

Threshold List Name: sonet-counters
Notification throttle timer : 5 (in secs)
Threshold name : sonet-sdh section cv Severity : Degrade
Value : 10e-9
APS Trigger : Not set
Description : SONET BIP1 counter
Threshold name : sonet-sdh section cv Severity : Failure
Value : 10e-6
APS Trigger : Set
Description : SONET BIP1 counter

The following example shows how to display the threshold group information for an interface:

Switch# show interfaces transparent 3/0/0
Transparent3/0/0 is up, line protocol is up
Encapsulation: Sonet Rate: oc3
Signal monitoring: on
Forward laser control: Off
 Configured threshold Group: sonet-counters
 Threshold monitored for: sonet-sdh section cv
 SF set value: 10e-8 (155 in 100 secs)
 SD set value: 10e-9 (155 in 1000 secs)
  Section code violation error count(bip1): 3713975925
  Number of errored seconds(es): 57203
  Number of severely errored seconds(ses): 57203
  Number of severely errored framing seconds(sefs): 0
  Number of times SEF alarm raised: 0
  Number of times SF threshold exceeded: 0
    Number of times SD threshold exceeded: 378
Loopback not set
Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
Hardware is transparent

About Laser Shutdown

To avoid operator injury or transmission of unreliable data, or to provide quick path switchover, the Cisco ONS 15530 supports mechanisms to automatically shut down transponder line card lasers. The three types of laser shutdown mechanisms are:

Forward laser control

OFC safety protocol

Laser safety control

About Forward Laser Control

When loss of light occurs on a receive interface (client, trunk, or intermediate) in a DWDM network, the corresponding transmitting laser on the far end of the network continues to function and may send unreliable information to the client. FLC provides a means to quickly shut down a transmitting laser when a receive signal failure occurs and pass the fault to the client devices ( Figure 6-1). Loss of light can result from a failure in upstream optics or in the client equipment, a laser shutdown on an upstream node in the network, or a receiver failure in the module.

Figure 6-1 Forward Laser Control Overview

FLC works by optical shutdown or in-band signaling.

In optical shutdown, all intermediate transmitters (lasers) are shut down when loss of light is detected. As a hop shuts down, the loss of light is passed to the next hop causing that hop to shut down. When a hop receives light causing its laser to restart, the signal is passed to the next hop, causing its laser to restart. Optical shutdown is used primarily by transparent transponders.

Optical shutdown is independent of service protocol. A disadvantage to optical shutdown is the delay caused by the shutdown and restart on the intermediate lasers. Services and clients that include shut/unshut of their transmitters in their link initialization protocol and that expect peer responses within the loop propagation delay may not be able to initialize their links through the DWDM with FLC enabled.

In-band signaling occurs when a link break is detected by the edge DWDM device on the far end, but shutdown of the intermediate optics on the trunk is not done. This method is also referred to as end-to-end FLC or E2EFLC. The advantage of in-band signaling is that it provides faster loop response for fault propagation and restoration than regular FLC. Unlike optical shutdown, in-band signaling is protocol dependent and cannot be applied to generic or unknown traffic types. This method of FLC is used by specific protocol types on the transparent transponders and by aggregation cards on the Cisco ONS 15530.

FLC cannot be configured with OFC or ISC (Compatibility Mode). For the following services, the IOS software enables FLC in both directions during encapsulation configuration. In these cases, a user should not modify FLC:

Sysplex ETR

Sysplex CLO

Sysplex ISC peer mode

ESCON aggregation card (15530-LCMB-0200)

ESCON encapsulation on multiservice aggregation cards (15530-MSMP-xxxx)

All Y-cable automatic protection switching configurations

FLC is recommended for Gigabit Ethernet and FICON. For Gigabit Ethernet and FICON without FLC enabled, network fault propagation and recovery are dependent on the client device. Client fault propagation and detection may not work properly without FLC.

About Open Fibre Control

The Cisco ONS 15530 allows you to enable the OFC safety protocol on the client side interfaces. When the system detects an "open fiber," the laser that transmits to the client equipment shuts down. An open fiber condition occurs when the connectors to the client equipment are detached from the transponder line card ports or when the fiber is cut (see  Figure 6-2).

Figure 6-2 OFC Overview

The OFC safety protocol conforms to the Fibre Channel standard. It applies only to the Fibre Channel and ISC compatibility mode encapsulations. The Cisco ONS 15530 interoperates with OFC-standard-compliant client equipment.


Caution Do not configure OFC with either forward laser control or laser safety control. Combining these features interferes with the OFC protocol.

Use the encapsulation command, described in the "Configuring Transponder Line Card Channel Frequency" section to configure OFC on a transparent interface.

About Laser Safety Control

The Cisco ONS 15530 allows you to enable laser safety control on the trunk side interfaces of the transponder line cards and the 2.5-Gbps ITU trunk cards. Much like OFC, the laser safety control protocol shuts down the transponder line card laser transmitting to the trunk when a fiber cut occurs or when the trunk fiber is detached from the shelf (see  Figure 6-3).

Figure 6-3 Laser Safety Control Overview

Laser safety control uses the same protocol state machine as OFC, but not the same timing. Laser safety control uses the pulse interval and pulse duration timers compliant with the ALS (automatic laser shutdown) standard (ITU-T G.664).

Use laser safety control with line card protected and unprotected configurations only. Enable laser safety control on all wave interfaces, including the OSC.


Caution Laser safety control can interrupt signal transmission with splitter protected configurations. If you configure the system with splitter protection and enable laser safety control, the transmit laser to the client shuts down when an open fiber occurs on one transport fiber and signal transmission to the client is interrupted.

Configuring Laser Shutdown

This sections describes how to configure forward laser control and laser safety control on the Cisco ONS 15530 transponder line card interfaces.


Note To function correctly, configure forward laser control on both the transparent and wave interfaces on a transponder line card. For y-cable protection, forward laser control on both the transparent and wave interfaces on both transponder line cards will be configured automatically.


Configuring Forward Laser Control

To configure forward laser control for transparent and wave interfaces on a transponder line card, perform the following steps, beginning in global configuration mode:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

Switch(config)# interface transparent slot/subcard/port

Switch(config-if)#

Selects the transparent interface to configure and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 2 

Switch(config-if)# [no] laser control forward enable

Configures forward laser control on the interface. The default state is disabled.

Configuring FLC on the transparent interface shuts down the transparent interface laser when loss of light occurs on the trunk (wave) side.

Step 3 

Switch(config-if)# exit

Returns to global configuration mode.

Step 4 

Switch(config)# interface wave slot/subcard

Switch(config-if)#

Selects the wave interface to configure and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 5 

Switch(config-if)# [no] laser control forward enable

Configures forward laser control on the interface. The default state is disabled.

Configuring FLC on the wave interface shuts down the wave interface laser when loss of light occurs on the client (transparent) side.


Caution Do not configure forward laser control when OFC is enabled. Combining these features interferes with the OFC protocol.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure forward laser control for the transparent and wave interfaces on a transponder line card:

Switch(config)# interface transparent 5/0/0
Switch(config-if)# laser control forward enable
Switch(config-if)# exit
Switch(config)# interface wave 5/0
Switch(config-if)# laser control forward enable

Displaying Forward Laser Control Configuration

To display the forward laser control configuration of a transparent or wave interface, use the following EXEC command:

Command
Purpose

show interfaces {transparent slot/subcard/port | wave slot/subcard}

Displays interface information.


Example

The following example shows how to display the forward laser control configuration for an interface:

Switch# show interfaces transparent 10/0/0
Transparent10/0/0 is up, line protocol is up
Encapsulation: Sonet Rate: oc3
Signal monitoring: off
Time of last "monitor" state change never
Time of last "encapsulation" change 10:18:20
 Forward laser control: On
Configured threshold Group: None
Loopback not set
Last clearing of "show interface" counters 10:18:20
Hardware is transparent

Configuring Laser Safety Control

To configure laser safety control on a wave interface, perform the following steps, beginning in global configuration mode:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

Switch(config)# interface wave slot/subcard}

Switch(config-if)#

Selects the wave interface to configure and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 2 

Switch(config-if)# [no] laser control safety enable

Enables or disables laser safety control.


Note Use laser safety control only with line card protected and unprotected configurations. Enable laser safety control on all the wave interfaces in the shelf, including the OSC.



Caution Do not configure laser safety control when OFC is enabled. Combining these features interferes with the OFC safety protocol.

Example

The following example shows how to configure laser safety control on a wave interface:

Switch(config)# interface wave 8/0
Switch(config-if)# laser control safety enable

Displaying Laser Safety Control Configuration

To display the laser safety control configuration of a wave interface, use the following EXEC command:

Command
Purpose

show interfaces wave slot/subcard

Displays interface information.


Example

The following example shows how to display the laser safety control configuration for an interface:

Switch# show interfaces wave 10/0
Wave10/0 is up, line protocol is up
Channel: 25 Frequency: 195.1 Thz Wavelength: 1536.61 nm
Splitter Protected: Yes
Receiver power level: -10.0 dBm
  Laser safety control: On
Forward laser control: Off
Osc physical port: No
Wavelength used for inband management: No
Configured threshold Group: None
Loopback not set
Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
Hardware is data_only_port

Configuring Optical Power Thresholds

Optical power thresholds provide a means of monitoring the signal power from the ITU laser. Four types of thresholds are provided:

Low alarm

Low warning

High warning

High alarm

When a threshold is crossed, the system sends a message to the console.


Note The default values for the optical power receive thresholds are sufficient for most network configurations.


To configure optical power thresholds for wavepatch interfaces on a transponder line card, perform the following steps, beginning in global configuration mode:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

Switch(config)# interface wavepatch slot/subcard/port

Switch(config-if)#

Selects the transparent interface to configure and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 2 

Switch(config-if)# optical threshold power receive {low | high} {alarm | warning} value [severity {critical | major | minor | not alarmed | not reported}]

Specifies the optical power threshold value in units of 0.1 dBm. The default values for the active wavepatch interfaces are as follows:

Low alarm: -28 dBm

Low warning: -24 dBm

High warning: -10 dBm

High alarm: -8 dBm

Alarm severity: major

Warning severity: not alarmed

The default values for the standby wavepatch interfaces are as follows:

Low alarm: -28 dBm

Low warning: -24 dBm

High warning: -15 dBm

High alarm: -13 dBm

Alarm severity: major

Warning severity: not alarmed

Examples

The following example shows how to configure optical power thresholds for wavepatch interfaces on a transponder line card:

Switch(config)# interface wavepatch 5/0/0
Switch(config-if)# optical threshold power receive high alarm -70

Displaying Optical Power Threshold Configuration

To display the optical power thresholds for a wavepatch interface, use the following EXEC command:

Command
Purpose

show interfaces wavepatch slot/subcard/port

Displays interface information.


Example

The following example shows how to display the forward laser control configuration for an interface:

Switch# show interfaces wavepatch 4/0/0
Wavepatch4/0/0 is up, line protocol is up
Receiver power level: -23.91 dBm
Optical threshold monitored for : Receive Power (in dBm)
Low alarm value = -28.0 (default)
Low Alarm Severity = major
Low warning value = -24.0 (default)
Low Warning Severity = not alarmed
High alarm value = -8.0 (default)
High Alarm Severity = major
High warning value = -10.0 (default)
High Warning Severity = not alarmed
Hardware is passive_port

About Patch Connections

Because the OADM modules are passive devices, the Cisco ONS 15530 does not detect its optical patch connection configuration. For system management purposes, you must also configure the patch connection configuration using the CLI.

Table 6-3 describes the types of patch connections on the Cisco ONS 15530.

Table 6-3 Patch Connection Types 

Patch Connection
Description

Thru interface to thru interface

Connection between two OADM modules in different chassis slots.

Wavepatch interface to filter interface or
filter interface to wavepatch interface

Connection between the wavepatch on a transponder line card and the filter interface on an OADM module.

OSC wave interface to oscfilter interface or
oscfilter interface to OSC wave interface

Connection between the OSC wave interface and the oscfilter interface on the OADM module in the same chassis slot.


For more information on patch connection rules, refer to the
Cisco ONS 15530 Planning and Design Guide.

Configuring Patch Connections

To configure patch connections between OADM modules within the same shelf, use the following global configuration commands:

Command
Purpose

patch thru slot1/subcard1 thru slot2/subcard2

Configures the patch connection between two add/drop OADM modules in different chassis slots.

patch wavepatch slot1/subcard1/port1 filter slot2/subcard2/port2

or

patch filter slot1/subcard1/port1 wavepatch slot2/subcard2/port2

Configures the patch connection between a transponder line card and a OADM module.

patch wave slot/subcard oscfilter slot/subcard

or

patch oscfilter slot/subcard wave slot/subcard

Connection between the OSC wave interface and the oscfilter interface on the OADM module in the same chassis slot.



Note If you correctly patch your OADM modules, patch command configuration is not necessary for the signal to pass from the client to the trunk fiber. However, without correct patch command configuration, CDP is unable to locate the wdm interfaces that connect to the trunk fiber and discover the topology neighbors. For more information on network monitoring, see the "Configuring CDP" section on page 12-3.


Example

The following example shows how to configure the patch connections:

Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# patch thru 0/0 thru 0/1
Switch(config)# patch wave 1/0 oscfilter 0/0
Switch(config)# patch wave 1/1 oscfilter 0/1
Switch(config)# patch wavepatch 4/0/0 filter 0/0/1
Switch(config)# patch wavepatch 4/0/1 filter 0/1/1

Displaying Patch Connections

To display the patch connections, use the following privileged EXEC command:

Command
Purpose

show patch [detail]

Displays the patch connections.



Note The error field in the show patch command output helps troubleshoot shelf misconfigurations. When there is a channel mismatch between a transponder line card and a OADM module, "Channel Mismatch" appears for the patch connection. When more than one OADM module drops the same channels, "Channel Mismatch" appears for all patch connections.


Example

The following example shows the patch connections:

Switch# show patch

Patch Interface Patch Interface Type Error
--------------- --------------- ---- -----
Thru0/0 Wdm0/1 USER
Thru0/1 Wdm0/2 USER
Thru0/2 Thru1/0 USER
Thru1/1 Wdm1/0 USER
Thru1/2 Wdm1/1 USER
Wave0 Oscfilter0/0 USER
Wave1 Oscfilter1/2 USER

About Cross Connections

The client signal follows a path of interface optical cross connections through the Cisco ONS 15530. Knowing the path of a signal through the shelf helps with system management and troubleshooting.

Displaying Cross Connections

To display the signal path cross connections, use the following privileged EXEC command:

Command
Purpose

show connect [edge | intermediate [sort-channel | interface {transparent slot/subcard/port | wave slot/subcard}]]

Displays the optical connections.


Examples

The following example shows the cross connections within a system configured for splitter protection:

Switch# show connect intermediate
client/ wave wave wdm
wave client patch filter trk channel
------------ ------------ ------- ------ --- -------
Trans2/0/0 Wave2/0 2/0/0* 0/0/0 0/0 1
2/0/1 1/0/0 1/0 1
Trans2/2/0 Wave2/2 2/2/0* 0/0/2 0/0 3
2/2/1 1/0/2 1/0 3
Trans2/3/0 Wave2/3 2/3/0* 0/0/3 0/0 4
2/3/1 1/0/3 1/0 4

The following example shows the cross connections within a system configured for line card protection using splitter protected line card motherboards:

Switch# show connect intermediate
client/ wave wave wdm
wave client patch filter trk channel
------------ ------------ ------- ------ --- -------
Trans10/0/0 Wave10/0 10/0/0* 0/3/0 0/2 25
10/0/1
Trans10/1/0 Wave10/1 10/1/0* 0/3/1 0/2 26
10/1/1
Trans10/2/0 Wave10/2 10/2/0* 0/3/2 0/2 27
10/2/1
Trans10/3/0 Wave10/3 10/3/0* 0/3/3 0/2 28
10/3/1

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Posted: Tue Apr 5 08:24:25 PDT 2005
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