User Guide for the Cisco Mobile Wireless Transport Manager 6.1.6
Understanding Basic Object Functions

Table Of Contents

Understanding Basic Object Functions

Displaying Object Windows

Right-Click Menu for All Objects

Node Distributions Table

Nodes Table

Alarms

Uptime

Nodes by Alarm

Software Versions

Serial Numbers

Signaling Points Table

Linksets Table

Links Table

Application Servers Table

Application Server Processes Table

Application Server Process Associations Table

Signaling Gateway Mated Pairs Table

Interfaces Table

Cards Table

RAN Backhauls Table

RAN Shorthauls Table

PWE3 Backhauls Table

PWE3 Virtual Circuits Table

Access Point Names Table

IP Addresses Table

Point Code Table

Editing Properties

Editing Properties for a RAN-O Backhaul

Attaching Notes

Viewing Notes

Deleting Objects

Deleting an Object from Your Network

Deleting an Object from the MWTM Database

Deleting a Node from the MWTM Discovery Dialog

Unmanaging and Managing Nodes or ITP Signaling Points

Excluding Nodes or ITP Signaling Points from a View

Ignoring and Unignoring Objects


Understanding Basic Object Functions


You can use the Cisco Mobile Wireless Transport Manager (MWTM) to view basic information about any discovered MWTM object, including its associated objects, status, and other important information.

To view basic information for an object, click Summary Lists in the navigation tree of the MWTM main window, then select one of these objects:


Note Objects only appear if your network contains that particular object type.


Summary Lists
Applicable Network Type

Node Distributions

(only in web interface)

All networks

Nodes

The following options are available under Summary Lists > Nodes in the web interface:

Nodes > Alarms

Nodes > Uptime

Nodes > Config Download Alarms

Nodes > SNMP Timeout Alarms

Nodes > Software Versions

Nodes > Serial Numbers

Note In the Java client, Alarms, Software Versions, and Serial Numbers appear under Summary Lists.

All networks

Signaling Points

Note In a multi-instance network, the signaling point name has the format pointcode:instanceName.

In a multi-instance network, the MWTM does not display signaling points that are only partly configured (that is, the variant and network name are configured, but not the primary point code).

ITP only

Linksets

Links

Application Servers

Application Server Processes

Application Server Process Associations

Signaling Gateway Mated Pairs

Interfaces

All networks

Cards

RAN-O only

RAN Backhauls

RAN Shorthauls

PWE3 Backhauls

PWE3 Virtual Circuits

Access Point Names

mSEF and GGSN only

IP Addresses

(only in web interface)

All networks

Point Code

(only in web interface)

ITP only


This chapter contains:

Displaying Object Windows

Editing Properties

Attaching Notes

Viewing Notes

Deleting Objects

Unmanaging and Managing Nodes or ITP Signaling Points

Excluding Nodes or ITP Signaling Points from a View

Ignoring and Unignoring Objects

Displaying Object Windows

To display an object window, in the MWTM main window, under Summary Lists in the navigation tree, click the object type. The object window appears in the right pane.

Example:

To display the nodes table, choose Summary Lists > Nodes. The nodes table appears.

The table lists all objects of the object type that you choose in the navigation tree. To see the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of any object in the table, hover over the object with the mouse. A tooltip lists the FQDN for the object.

Some table columns may be hidden by default. To see a list all columns, right-click on any column, and check the box for the columns that you want to expose.

Tables are sorted based on the column that is highlighted. To sort by a different column, simply click the desired column.


Tip For detailed information on working in tables, see Navigating Table Columns, page 4-23.


Object windows provide information about all objects of a specific type that the MWTM has discovered and can contain:

Right-Click Menu for All Objects

Node Distributions Table

Nodes Table

Signaling Points Table

Linksets Table

Links Table

Application Servers Table

Application Server Processes Table

Application Server Process Associations Table

Signaling Gateway Mated Pairs Table

Interfaces Table

Cards Table

RAN Backhauls Table

RAN Shorthauls Table

PWE3 Backhauls Table

PWE3 Virtual Circuits Table

Access Point Names Table

IP Addresses Table

Point Code Table

Right-Click Menu for All Objects

To see the right-click menu for all objects, in the MWTM main window, under Summary Lists in the navigation tree, select the object type and right-click it. The right-click menu contains:

Menu Command
Description

Show in New Window

Opens the object window in a new window.

Back > List of Windows

Navigates back to a window viewed in this session.

The MWTM maintains a list of up to 10 Back windows.

Forward > List of Windows

Navigates forward to a window viewed in this session.

The MWTM maintains a list of up to 10 Forward windows.



Note The right-click menu, available by clicking on a specific object in the right pane, is described in Viewing the Right-Click Menu for an Object, page 7-2.


Node Distributions Table

The Node Distributions link displays the percentage distribution summary lists. To display the Node Distributions table, choose Summary Lists > Node Distributions. The available distribution display options are:

Type

Feature

Software Version

Severity

Node Distributions By Type

To display the Node Distributions by Type table, use the following procedure:


Step 1 In the left pane (navigation tree) of the MWTM web interface, choose Summary Lists > Node Distributions.

Step 2 In the tool bar of the right pane, choose Type from the Attribute drop-down menu.

Step 3 Click the Run icon (green arrow).

The Node Distribution by Type table contains:

Column
Description

Type

Description of the hardware platform that supports a feature. See the description of Node Type in Nodes Table for more information.

Total (total number of nodes)

Total number of nodes of a particular type.

Percentage

Percentage of nodes of this type out of all the discovered nodes.


Node Distributions By Feature

To display the Node Distributions by Feature table, use the following procedure:


Step 1 In the left pane (navigation tree) of the MWTM web interface, choose Summary Lists > Node Distributions.

Step 2 In the tool bar of the right pane, choose Feature from the Attribute drop-down menu.

Step 3 Click the Run icon (green arrow).

The Node Distribution by Feature table contains:

Column
Description

Feature

Primary function performed by a node type:

Unknown—Any device which is not pollable by MWTM.

ITP—IP Transfer Protocol

IP-RAN features:

ONS—Optical Networking Service

RAN_SVC—RAN Service

CSR—Cell Site Router

Cisco 7600 devices with Pseudowire Virtual Circuits configured

MetroE-Switch (fault support only)

mSEF features:

CSG1 or CSG2—Content Services Gateway

GGSN—Gateway GPRS Support Node

HA—Home Agent

BWG—Broadband Wireless Gateway

PDSN—Packet Data Serving Node

PDNGW—Packet Data Node Gateway

SGW—Serving Gateway

SPGW—Serving Gateway/PDN Gateway

PCRF—Policy and Charging Rules Function

CDT—Cisco Data for Telecommunications (CDT)

Generic—Any pollable device not classified as one of the above types.

Total (total number of nodes)

Total number of nodes of a particular type.

Percentage

Percentage of nodes of this type out of all the discovered nodes.


Node Distributions By Software Version

To display the Node Distributions by Software Version table, use the following procedure:


Step 1 In the left pane (navigation tree) of the MWTM web interface, choose Summary Lists > Nodes Distributions.

Step 2 In the tool bar of the right pane, choose Software Version from the Attribute drop-down menu.

Step 3 Click the Run icon (green arrow).

The Node Distribution by Software Version table contains:

Column
Description

Software Version

Version of the software that is installed on the node.

Total (total number of nodes)

Total number of nodes of a particular software version.

Percentage

Percentage of nodes of this type out of all the discovered nodes.


Node Distributions By Severity

To display the Node Distributions by Severity table, use the following procedure:


Step 1 In the left pane (navigation tree) of the MWTM web interface, choose Summary Lists > Nodes Distributions.

Step 2 In the tool bar of the right pane, choose Severity from the Attribute drop-down menu.

Step 3 Click the Run icon (green arrow).

The Node Distribution by Severity table contains:

Column
Description

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen node. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

Total (total number of nodes)

Total number of nodes of a particular severity.

Percentage

Percentage of nodes of this type out of all the discovered nodes.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Nodes Table

The nodes table displays information about nodes that the MWTM has discovered.

You can view the following links under Summary Lists > Nodes in web interface:

Alarms

Uptime

Nodes by Alarm

Software Versions

Serial Numbers


Note In Java client, the Alarms, Software Versions, and Serial Numbers appear under Summary Lists.


To display the nodes table, choose Summary Lists > Nodes.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The nodes table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the node. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, which the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. This ID can also be useful when the TAC is debugging problems.

Display Name

Name of the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Custom Name

Custom name of the node.

IP Address or DNS Hostname

IP address or DNS name of the node, as the MWTM discovered it.

SysName

System name of the node.

Primary SNMP Address

IP address of the node, which SNMP uses to poll the node. (There might be other IP addresses on the node that are not the primary SNMP address).

This column is displayed by default.

CLLI Code (ITP only)

Common Language Location Identification code for the node. A CLLI code is a standardized 11-character identifier that uniquely identifies the geographic location of the node. If the node has no CLLI code configured, this field is blank.

Node Type

Description of the hardware platform that supports a feature.

ITP Node Types

Cisco2650XM, Cisco2651XM, Cisco 2651

Cisco2811

Cisco7204VXR, Cisco7206VXR

Cisco7301

Cisco7507, Cisco7507mx, Cisco7507z, Cisco7513, Cisco7513mx, Cisco7513z

Cisco 7603, Cisco 7603s, Cisco7604, Cisco7606, Cisco7606s, Cisco7609, Cisco7609s, Cisco7613

IPRAN Node Types

Cell Site Routers (CSR):

CiscoMWR-1941-DC—Cisco MWR-1941-DC-A series router

CiscoMWR-2941-DC—Cisco MWR-2941-DC series router

Cisco3825—Integrated Services Router

CiscoONS15454—Cisco ONS 15454 SONET multiplexer

RAN_SVC—RAN Service Module in the Cisco ONS 15454

Cisco 7603, Cisco 7603s, Cisco7604, Cisco7606, Cisco7606s, Cisco7609, Cisco7609s, Cisco7613

Cisco ME3400 Metro Ethernet switch

Cisco ME3750 Metro Ethernet switch

Skyla cards

mSEF Node Types

CiscoSAMI—Service Application Module for IP (SAMI)

CiscoMWAM—Multiprocessor WAN Application Module (MWAM)

Cisco 7603, Cisco 7603s, Cisco7604, Cisco7606, Cisco7606s, Cisco7609, Cisco7609s, Cisco7613

Other Node Types

IPDevice—IP device, other than those listed previously. You can assign this icon to an unknown node if you know that it is an IP device.

Unknown—MWTM is unable to determine the node type.

Linux—Hardware platform for Cisco Database for Telecommunications (CDT)

Cisco ME 3400 Series Ethernet Access Switches

This column is displayed by default.

Feature

Primary function performed by a node type:

Unknown—Any device which is not pollable by MWTM.

ITP—IP Transfer Protocol

IP-RAN features:

ONS—Optical Networking Service

RAN_SVC—RAN Service

CSR—Cell Site Router

Cisco 7600 devices with Pseudowire Virtual Circuits configured

MetroE-Switch (fault support only)

mSEF features:

CSG1 or CSG2—Content Services Gateway

GGSN—Gateway GPRS Support Node

HA—Home Agent

BWG—Broadband Wireless Gateway

PDSN—Packet Data Serving Node (PDSN)

PDNGW—Packet Data Node Gateway

SGW—Serving Gateway

SPGW—Serving Gateway/PDN Gateway

PCRF—Policy and Charging Rules Function

CDT—Cisco Data for Telecommunications (CDT)

Generic—Any pollable device not classified as one of the above types.

This column is displayed by default.

Software Version

Version of node's software.

This column is displayed by default.

Avg. MWTM Poll Response (secs)

Average response time for the device to respond to poll from the MWTM server.

Serial Number

Serial number of the node.

Uptime

Time the node has been up, in days, hours, minutes, and seconds.

This column is displayed by default.

Reboot Reason

Reason for the last reboot of the node.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Process Traps

Indicates whether the MWTM should process traps from this node. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Trap Polling

Indicates whether or not trap polling is enabled for this node. By default, trap polling is enabled for all nodes except for IP-RAN nodes. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

For IP-RAN nodes, you can modify this setting by using the following commands:

To enable trap polling for this node, set ipran-mib snmp-access to inBand on the node.

To disable trap polling for this node, set ipran-mib snmp-access to outOfBand on the node.

Note For information about in-band and out-of-band management, see IP-RAN Specific FAQs, page C-19.

Report Polling

Indicates whether or not report polling is enabled for this node. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client for ITP nodes.

For IP-RAN nodes, you can modify this setting by using the following commands:

To enable report polling for this node, set ipran-mib location to aggSite on the node.

To disable report polling for this node, set ipran-mib location to cellSite on the node.

For all other nodes, this field is not editable.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Events
(MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the node has received any events. If the node has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the node.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen node. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the node last changed.

Status

Current status of the node. Possible values are:

Active

Discovering

Polling

Unknown

Unmanaged

Waiting

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions."

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the node.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons appear in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Alarms

The alarms table displays a count of alarms by node and severity. To display the Alarms table, choose Summary Lists > Nodes > Alarms.

In Java client, to display the Alarms table, choose Summary Lists > Alarms.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The alarms table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the node. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, which the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. This ID can also be useful when the TAC is debugging problems.

Node

Name of the node. When you click any of the node names, the Alarms tab of that node is displayed. This column is displayed by default.

Feature

The feature name of the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This column is available only in web client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is available only in web client and is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the node alarms last changed.

Total

Total number of alarms for the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Critical (alarm count) (alarm percentage)

Total number of critical alarms for the node. Click the severity name to sort the page by Critical severity.

This column is displayed by default.

Major (alarm count) (alarm percentage)

Total number of major alarms for the node. Click the severity name to sort the page by Major severity.

This column is displayed by default.

Minor (alarm count) (alarm percentage)

Total number of minor alarms for the node. Click the severity name to sort the page by Minor severity.

This column is displayed by default.

Warning (alarm count) (alarm percentage)

Total number of warning alarms for the node. Click the severity name to sort the page by Warning severity.

This column is displayed by default.

Informational (alarm count) (alarm percentage)

Total number of informational alarms for the node. Click the severity name to sort the page by Informational severity.

This column is displayed by default.

Indeterminate (alarm count) (alarm percentage)

Total number of indeterminate alarms for the node. Click the severity name to sort the page by Indeterminate severity.

This column is displayed by default.

Normal (alarm count) (alarm percentage)

Total number of normal alarms for the node. Click the severity name to sort the page by Normal severity.

This column is displayed by default.


Uptime

The Uptime link displays the uptime for managed nodes. To display the Uptime for Managed Nodes table, choose Summary Lists > Nodes > Uptime.

The uptime for managed nodes table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the node. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, which the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. This ID can also be useful when the TAC is debugging problems.

Name

Name of the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Node Type

Description of the hardware platform that supports a feature. See the description of Node Type in Nodes Table for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Feature

Primary function performed by a node type:

Unknown—Any device which is not pollable by MWTM.

ITP—IP Transfer Protocol

IP-RAN features:

ONS—Optical Networking Service

RAN_SVC—RAN Service

CSR—Cell Site Router

Cisco 7600 devices with Pseudowire Virtual Circuits configured

MetroE-Switch (fault support only)

mSEF features:

CSG1 or CSG2—Content Services Gateway

GGSN—Gateway GPRS Support Node

HA—Home Agent

BWG—Broadband Wireless Gateway

PDSN—Packet Data Serving Node (PDSN)

PDNGW—Packet Data Node Gateway

SGW—Serving Gateway

SPGW—Serving Gateway/PDN Gateway

PCRF—Policy and Charging Rules Function

CDT—Cisco Data for Telecommunications (CDT)

Generic—Any pollable device not classified as one of the above types.

This column is displayed by default.

Uptime

Time the node has been up, in days, hours, minutes, and seconds.

This column is displayed by default.

Reboot Reason

Reason for the last reboot of the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen node. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Nodes by Alarm

This section contains:

Config Download Alarms

SNMP Timeout Alarms

Config Download Alarms

The Config Download Alarms link displays the Nodes for Alarm ConfigurationDownload table. To display this table, choose Summary Lists > Nodes > Configuration Download Alarms.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The table displays the same columns as that of Nodes Table, but the columns Status and Status Reason are hidden by default. See Nodes Table.


Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


SNMP Timeout Alarms

The SNMP Timeout Alarms link displays the Nodes for Alarm NodeUnreachable table. To display this table, choose Summary Lists > Nodes > SNMP Timeout Alarms.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The table displays the same columns as that of Nodes Table, but the columns Status and Status Reason are hidden by default. See Nodes Table.


Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Software Versions

The Software Versions table lists the software versions for each node the MWTM manages. To display the Software Versions table, choose Summary Lists > Nodes > Software Versions.

In Java client, to display the Software Versions table choose Summary Lists > Software Versions.

The Software Versions table contains:

Column
Description

Name

Name of the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Node Type

Type of node.

This column is displayed by default.

Feature

Name of the feature.

This column is displayed by default.

Software Version

Software version used by the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Software Description

Full software version information.

This column is displayed by default.


For details on the Software Versions table, see Displaying Software Versions, page 11-20.

Serial Numbers

The serial numbers table displays information about serial numbers of the nodes that the MWTM has discovered. To display the serial numbers table, choose Summary Lists > Nodes > Serial Numbers.

In Java client, to display the Serial Numbers table choose Summary Lists > Serial Numbers.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The serial numbers table contains:

Column
Description

Name

Name of the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Node Type

Description of the hardware platform that supports a feature.

ITP Node Types

Cisco2650XM, Cisco2651XM, Cisco 2651

Cisco2811

Cisco7204VXR, Cisco7206VXR

Cisco7301

Cisco7507, Cisco7507mx, Cisco7507z, Cisco7513, Cisco7513mx, Cisco7513z

Cisco 7603, Cisco 7603s, Cisco7604, Cisco7606, Cisco7606s, Cisco7609, Cisco7609s, Cisco7613

IPRAN Node Types

Cell Site Routers (CSR):

CiscoMWR-1941-DC—Cisco MWR-1941-DC-A series router

CiscoMWR-2941-DC—Cisco MWR-2941-DC series router

Cisco3825—Integrated Services Router

CiscoONS15454—Cisco ONS 15454 SONET multiplexer

RAN_SVC—RAN Service Module in the Cisco ONS 15454

Cisco 7603, Cisco 7603s, Cisco7604, Cisco7606, Cisco7606s, Cisco7609, Cisco7609s, Cisco7613

Cisco ME3400 Metro Ethernet switch

Cisco ME3750 Metro Ethernet switch

Skyla cards

mSEF Node Types

CiscoSAMI—Service Application Module for IP (SAMI)

CiscoMWAM—Multiprocessor WAN Application Module (MWAM)

Cisco 7603, Cisco 7603s, Cisco7604, Cisco7606, Cisco7606s, Cisco7609, Cisco7609s, Cisco7613

Other Node Types

IPDevice—IP device, other than those listed previously. You can assign this icon to an unknown node if you know that it is an IP device.

Unknown—MWTM is unable to determine the node type.

Linux—Hardware platform for Cisco Database for Telecommunications (CDT)

Cisco ME 3400 Series Ethernet Access Switches

This column is displayed by default.

Serial Number

Serial number of the node.

This column is displayed by default.

CLLI Code

Common Language Location Identification code for the node. A CLLI code is a standardized 11-character identifier that uniquely identifies the geographic location of the node. If the node has no CLLI code configured, this field is blank.

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Signaling Points Table

The signaling points table displays information about the signaling points that the MWTM has discovered. To display the signaling points table, choose Summary Lists > Signaling Points.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The signaling points table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the signaling point. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, which the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. It can also be useful when the TAC is debugging problems.

Name

Name of the signaling point.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node associated with this signaling point.

This column is displayed by default.

Instance Number

Number of the instance associated with the signaling point.

Network Name

Name of the instance associated with the signaling point.

This column is displayed by default.

Point Code

Primary point code of the signaling point.

This column is displayed by default.

Variant

SS7 protocol variant. Valid variants are:

ANSI

China

ITU

NTT

TTC

This column is displayed by default.

Network Indicator

Determines the type of call that is being placed. Valid values are:

National—National-bound call. The MWTM routes national calls through the national network.

NationalSpare—National-bound call, used in countries in which more than one carrier can share a point code. In those countries, the Network Indicator differentiates the networks.

International—International-bound call. The MWTM forwards international-bound calls to an STP pair that acts as an international gateway.

InternationalSpare—International-bound call; used in countries in which more than one carrier can share a point code. In those countries, the Network Indicator differentiates the networks.

This column is displayed by default.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the signaling point.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the signaling point has received any events. If the signaling point has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the signaling point.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen signaling point. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the signaling point last changed.

Status

Current status of the signaling point. Possible values are:

Active

Unknown

Unmanaged

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the signaling point.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file resides at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file reside in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full status reason in a mouse over help popup.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Linksets Table

The linksets table displays information about the linksets that the MWTM has discovered. To display the linksets table, choose Summary Lists > Linksets.


Tip Linksets that are associated with nodes that are excluded from the current view are not visible in the linksets table. See Creating a New View, page 6-7, for more information about excluding nodes.



Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The linksets table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the linkset. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, which the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. It can also be useful when the TAC is debugging problems.

Name

Name of the linkset.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Node associated with the linkset.

Signaling Point

Signaling point associated with the linkset.

Local Point Code

Point code of the primary signaling point for the linkset.

This column is displayed by default.

Adjacent Pt Code

Point code of the adjacent signaling point for the linkset.

This column is displayed by default.

Linkset Type

Type of linkset, which the MWTM determines by examining the links defined in the linkset. Possible linkset types are:

HSL—The links in this linkset use the SS7-over-ATM high-speed protocol.

SCTPIP—The links in this linkset use the Stream Control TCP/IP transport protocol.

Serial—The links in this linkset use the serial SS7 signaling protocol.

Mixed—The links in this linkset are of two or more types. (This configuration is not recommended.)

Virtual—The links in this linkset are virtual links, which connect signaling point instances running on the same node. The MWTM does not poll virtual linksets, nor does it display real-time data or accounting statistics for virtual linksets.

Note Prior to IOS release 12.2(23)SW1, the user manually created virtual linksets on multi-instance nodes. In and after that release, users can now automatically create virtual linksets.

Other—No links have been defined for this linkset.

This column is displayed by default.

Links

Total number of links in the linkset.

This column is displayed by default.

Active Links

Number of links in the linkset that are Active.

This column is displayed by default.

Congested Links

Number of links in the linkset that are Congested.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the linkset.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the linkset has received any events. If the linkset has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the linkset.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen linkset. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the linkset last changed.

Status

Current status of the linkset. Possible values are:

Active

Shutdown

Unavailable

Unknown

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the signaling gateway-mated pair.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Links Table

The links table displays information about the links that the MWTM has discovered. To display the links table, choose Summary Lists > Links.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The links table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the link. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, which the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. This ID can also be useful when the TAC is debugging problems.

Node

Name of the node associated with the link.

This column is displayed by default.

Signaling Point

Name of the signaling point associated with the link.

This column is displayed by default.

Linkset

Name of the linkset associated with the link.

This column is displayed by default.

SLC

Signaling link code (SLC) ID for the link.

This column is displayed by default.

Type

Type of link. Possible link types are:

HSL—The link uses the SS7-over-ATM high-speed protocol.

SCTPIP—The link uses the Stream Control TCP/IP transport protocol.

Serial—The link uses the serial SS7 signaling protocol.

Virtual—The link is a virtual link, which connects signaling point instances running on the same node. The MWTM does not poll virtual links, nor does it display real-time data or accounting statistics for virtual links.

This column is displayed by default.

Slot

Slot number. The column displays a proper value only when the link is offloaded to a PA line card or a SAMI line card. Otherwise it displays N/A.

Bay

Number of bays. The column displays a proper value only when the link is offloaded to a PA line card. Otherwise it displays N/A.

Processor

Number of processors. The column displays a proper value only when the link is offloaded to a SAMI line card. Otherwise it displays N/A.

Congestion Level

Indicates the level of congestion on the link. A link is congested if it has too many packets waiting to be sent. This condition could result from the failure of an element in your network.

Possible values for the Congestion Level field are None, indicating no congestion, and 1 to 3, indicating levels of congestion from very light (1) to very heavy (3).

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the link.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the link has received any events. If the link has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the link.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen link. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the link last changed.

Status

Current status of the link. Possible values are:

Active

Blocked

Failed

InhibitLoc

InhibitRem

Shutdown

Unknown

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the signaling gateway-mated pair.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons appear in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Application Servers Table

The application servers table displays information about the application servers that the MWTM has discovered. To display the application servers table, choose Summary Lists > App. Servers.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The application servers table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the application server. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. This ID can also be useful when the TAC is debugging problems.

Name

Name of the application server.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node associated with the application server.

This column is displayed by default.

Signaling Point

Name of the signaling point associated with the application server.

This column is displayed by default.

Protocol

Protocol associated with the application server. Possible values are:

M3UA—MTP3-User Adaptation.

SUA—SCCP-User Adaptation.

Routing Key

Routing key associated with the application server. The application server bases its routing decisions on the routing key value.

Traffic Mode

Method by which the application server forwards requests to its active application server processes. Possible values are:

overRide—One application server process takes over all traffic for the application server, possibly overriding any currently active application server process in the application server.

broadcast—Every active application server process receives the same message.

loadBind—Each application server process shares in the traffic distribution with every other currently active application server process, based on application server process bindings.

loadRndRobin—Each application server process shares in the traffic distribution with every other currently active application server process, using a round-robin algorithm.

undefined—The traffic mode is not defined. The first application server process that becomes active defines the traffic mode.

Application Server Process Associations

Total number of application server processes associated with the application server.

This column is displayed by default.

Active ASP Associations

Number of currently active application server processes associated with the application server.

This column is displayed by default.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the application server.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the application server has received any events. If the application server has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the application server.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen application server. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the application server last changed.

Status

Current status of the application server. Possible values are:

Active

Down

Inactive

Pending

Shutdown

Unknown

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the signaling gateway-mated pair.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Application Server Processes Table

The application server processes table displays information about the application server processes that the MWTM has discovered. To display the application server processes table, choose Summary Lists > App. Server Processes.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The application server processes table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the application server process. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. This ID can also be useful when the TAC is debugging problems.

Name

Name of the application server process.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node associated with the application server process.

This column is displayed by default.

Local IP Address

Local IP address that the application server process is currently using.

This column is displayed by default.

Local Port

Local port number that the application server process is currently using.

This column is displayed by default.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the application server process.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the application server process has received any events. If the application server process has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the application server process.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen application server process. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the application server process last changed.

Status

Current status of the application server process. Possible values are:

Unknown

Unmanaged

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the application server process.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Application Server Process Associations Table

The application server process associations table displays information about the application server process associations that the MWTM has discovered. To display the application server process associations table, choose Summary Lists > App. Server Proc. Assoc.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The application server process associations table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the application server process association. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. The ID can also be useful to TAC when troubleshooting problems.

Name

Name of the application server process association.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node associated with the application server process association.

This column is displayed by default.

Signaling Point

Name of the signaling point associated with the application server process association.

This column is displayed by default.

Application Server

Name of the application server associated with the application server process association.

This column is displayed by default.

Slot

Slot number. The column displays a proper value only when the ASPA is offloaded to a PA line card or a SAMI line card. Otherwise it displays N/A.

Bay

Bay number. The column displays a proper value only when the ASPA is offloaded to a PA line card. Otherwise it displays N/A.

Processor

Processor number. The column displays a proper value only when the ASPA is offloaded to a SAMI line card. Otherwise it displays N/A.

Protocol

Protocol associated with the application server process association. Possible values are:

M3UA—MTP3-User Adaptation.

SUA—SCCP-User Adaptation.

This column is displayed by default.

Congestion Level

Indicates the level of congestion of an application server process association. An application server process association is congested if it has too many packets waiting to be sent. This condition could result from the failure of an element in your network.

Possible values for the Congestion Level field are None, indicating no congestion, and 1 to 7, indicating levels of congestion from very light (1) to very heavy (7).

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the application server process association.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the application server process association has received any events. If the application server process association has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the application server process association.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen application server process association. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the application server process association last changed.

Status

Current status of the application server process association. Possible values are:

Active

Blocked

Down

Inactive

Pending

Shutdown

Unknown

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the application server process association.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.


Signaling Gateway Mated Pairs Table

The signaling gateway-mated pairs table displays information about the signaling gateway-mated pairs that the MWTM has discovered. To display the signaling gateway-mated pairs table, choose Summary Lists > Signaling Gateway Mated Pairs.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The signaling gateway-mated pairs table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the signaling gateway-mated pair. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. The ID can also be useful to TAC when troubleshooting problems.

Name

Name of the signaling gateway-mated pair.

This column is displayed by default.

Mate

Name of the node associated with the mate of the signaling gateway-mated pair.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node associated with the signaling gateway-mated pair.

This column is displayed by default.

Congestion Level

Indicates the congestion level of a signaling gateway-mated pair. A signaling gateway-mated pair is congested if it has too many packets waiting to be sent. This condition could result from the failure of an element in your network.

Possible values for the Congestion Level field are None, indicating no congestion, and 1 to 7, indicating levels of congestion from very light (1) to very heavy (7).

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the signaling gateway-mated pair.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the signaling gateway-mated pair has received any events. If the signaling gateway-mated pair has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the signaling gateway-mated pair.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen signaling gateway-mated pair. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the signaling gateway-mated pair last changed.

Status

Current status of the signaling gateway-mated pair. Possible values are:

Active

Down

Inactive

Shutdown

Unknown

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the signaling gateway-mated pair.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Interfaces Table

The interfaces table displays information about the ITP or RAN interfaces that the MWTM has discovered. To display the interfaces table, choose Summary Lists > Interfaces.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The interfaces table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the interface. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. The ID can also be useful to TAC when troubleshooting problems.

Name

Name of the interface. The node specifies the name of the interface.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node with the interface.

This column is displayed by default.

Interface Type

Type of interface.

Send Speed

Interface send speed in bits per second.

This column is displayed by default.

Receive Speed

Interface receive speed in bits per second.

This column is displayed by default.

Interface Index

Unique numeric identifier of the interface. This identifier appears in the interface table (ifTable).

This column is displayed by default.

Interface Description

Description of the interface. This field displays N/A if the Interface Description is blank for the particular node.

Maximum Packet Size

The maximum packet size that traverses the interface in bytes.

Physical Address

The physical address of the interface. If a physical address does not apply to the interface, N/A appears in the table cell.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the interface.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the interface has received any events. If the interface has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the interface.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen interface. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the interface last changed.

Status

Current status of the interface. Possible values are:

Active

Down

Inactive

Shutdown

Unknown

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Admin Status

Desired state of the interface:

Up

Down

Testing

Shutdown

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Oper. Status

Current operational state of the interface:

Up

Down

Testing

Unknown

Dormant

Not present

Lower layer down

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the interface.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Cards Table

The cards table displays information about the cards in the ONS 15454 IPRAN node that the MWTM has discovered. To display the cards table, choose Summary Lists > Cards.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The cards table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the card. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. The ID can also be useful to TAC when troubleshooting problems.

Name

Name of the card. The node specifies the name of the card.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node in which the card resides.

This column is displayed by default.

Card Type

Type of the card in the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Model Name

Model name of the card (can include the part number).

Description

Description of the card.

Slot Number

The slot number of the card in the node.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the card.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the card has received any events. If the card has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the card.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen card. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the card last changed.

Status

Current status of the card. Possible values are:

Active

Down

Inactive

Shutdown

Unknown

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the card.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

Hardware Version

Hardware version of the card.

Firmware Version

Firmware version of the card.

Software Version

Software version of the card.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


RAN Backhauls Table

The RAN backhauls table displays information about the RAN backhauls that the MWTM has discovered. To display the RAN backhauls table, choose Summary Lists > RAN Backhauls.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The RAN backhauls table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the RAN backhaul. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. The ID can also be useful to TAC when troubleshooting problems.

Name

Name of the RAN backhaul.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node on which this RAN backhaul resides.

This column is displayed by default.

Location

Location of the node (either at the cell site or the aggregation node site).

This column is displayed by default.

Peer Name

Name of the object's peer.

This column is displayed by default.

Peer Node

Name of the node to which the peer object belongs.

This column is displayed by default.

Type

Indicates whether the RAN backhaul is a normal backhaul or a virtual backhaul (see Creating Virtual RAN Backhauls, page 7-145).

User Send Bandwidth

The bandwidth that the user specified for the backhaul. Values for send and receive bandwidths will be different if the interface is asymmetrical. To change this value, see Editing Properties for a RAN-O Backhaul.

User Receive Bandwidth

System Send Bandwidth

The bandwidth that the system specifies for the backhaul. Values for send and receive bandwidths will be different if the interface is asymmetrical.

System Receive Bandwidth

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the RAN backhaul.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the RAN backhaul has received any events. If the RAN backhaul has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the RAN backhaul.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen RAN backhaul. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the RAN backhaul last changed.

Status

Current status of the RAN backhaul. Possible values are:

Active

Failed

Warning

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the RAN backhaul.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.

Accept Threshold1

The percentage threshold setting below which the backhaul is considered acceptable.

Warning Threshold1

The percentage threshold setting beyond which the backhaul issues a warning. Subsequent warnings are issued only if the value goes below the Acceptable Threshold.

Overload Threshold1

The percentage threshold setting beyond which the backhaul is considered overloaded. Subsequent overload messages are issued only if the value goes below the Warning Threshold.

1 To change the default setting, see Editing Properties for a RAN-O Backhaul.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


RAN Shorthauls Table

The RAN shorthauls table displays information about the RAN shorthauls that the MWTM has discovered. To display the RAN shorthauls table, choose Summary Lists > RAN Shorthauls.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The RAN shorthauls table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the RAN shorthaul. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. The ID can also be useful to TAC when troubleshooting problems.

Name

Name of the RAN shorthaul.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node to which the RAN shorthaul is connected.

This column is displayed by default.

Type

Type of shorthaul, either GSM or UMTS.

This column is displayed by default.

Optimized

Whether or not the traffic is optimized.

This column is displayed by default.

Location

Location of the node (either at the cell site or the aggregation node site).

This column is displayed by default.

Peer Name

Name of the object's peer.

This column is displayed by default.

Peer Node

Name of the node to which the peer object belongs.

This column is displayed by default.

Interface Type

Type of interface (for example, a point-to-point interface or an ATM interface).

Send Speed

Send speed of the interface in bits per second (for example, 1.98M).

Receive Speed

Receive Speed of the interface in bits per second (for example, 1.98M).

Interface Index

Unique numeric identifier of the interface. This identifier appears in the interface table (ifTable).

Maximum Packet Size (bytes)

Maximum packet size on the interface in bytes.

Physical Address

Physical address, if applicable, of the interface.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the RAN shorthaul.

This column is displayed by default.

Events (MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the RAN shorthaul has received any events. If the RAN shorthaul has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the RAN shorthaul.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen RAN shorthaul. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the shorthaul last changed.

Status

Current status of the RAN shorthaul.

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

This column is displayed by default.

Admin Status

Desired state of the interface:

Up

Down

Testing

Shutdown

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

Operational Status

Current operational state of the interface:

Up

Down

Testing

Unknown

Dormant

Not present

Lower layer down

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the RAN shorthaul.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


PWE3 Backhauls Table

The PWE3 Backhauls table displays information about the PWE3 backhauls that the MWTM has discovered. A PWE3 backhaul is an object created for the logical grouping of PWE3 virtual circuits on a given node that have the same remote peer.

To display the PWE3 backhauls table, choose Summary Lists > PWE3 Backhauls.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The PWE3 Backhauls table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the PWE3 backhaul. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. The ID can also be useful to TAC when troubleshooting problems.

Name

Name of the PWE3 backhaul.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node on which this PWE3 backhaul resides.

This column is displayed by default.

Peer Name

Name of the object's peer.

This column is displayed by default.

Peer Node

Name of the node to which the peer object belongs.

This column is displayed by default.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the PWE3 backhaul.

This column is displayed by default.

Events
(MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the PWE3 backhaul has received any events. If the PWE3 backhaul has received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the PWE3 backhaul.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen PWE3 backhaul. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the PWE3 backhaul last changed.

Status

Current status of the PWE3 backhaul. Possible values are:

Active

Warning

Unknown

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the PWE3 backhaul.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


PWE3 Virtual Circuits Table

The PWE3 virtual circuits table displays information about the PWE3 virtual circuits that the MWTM has discovered. To display the PWE3 virtual circuits table, choose Summary Lists > PWE3 Virtual Circuits.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The PWE3 virtual circuits table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Internal ID of the PWE3 virtual circuit. The internal ID is a unique ID for every object, that the MWTM assigns for its own internal use.

Name

Name of the PWE3 virtual circuits.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name of the node on which this PWE3 virtual circuits resides.

This column is displayed by default.

Peer Name

Name of the object's peer.

This column is displayed by default.

Peer Node

Name of the node to which the peer object belongs.

This column is displayed by default.

Type

Indicates the service to be carried over this virtual circuit type.

PSN Type

Packet Switched Network (PSN) type on which this virtual circuit is carried.

This column is displayed by default.

ID

Virtual circuit identifier.

Primary

Indicates whether the virtual circuit is primary. A virtual circuit that services traffic is considered primary. A virtual circuit that provides redundancy is not primary.

This column is displayed by default.

Remote Interface String

If provided by the protocol, displays the interface description of the remote side of the virtual circuit.

Description

Each virtual circuit is associated to an interface in the ifTable of the node as part of the service configuration. If specified, this field displays the description of the interface.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the PWE3 virtual circuits.

This column is displayed by default.

Events
(MWTM client only)

Indicates whether the PWE3 virtual circuits have received any events. If the PWE3 virtual circuits have received an event, an icon appears in the table cell. Clicking the icon clears the event and takes you to the Recent Events tab for the PWE3 virtual circuits.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen PWE3 virtual circuits. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the virtual circuit last changed.

Status

Current status of the PWE3 virtual circuits. Possible values are:

Active

Shutdown

Unknown

Warning

This column is displayed by default.

Admin Status

Desired state of the interface:

Up

Down

Testing

Shutdown

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

Oper Status

Indicates the actual combined operational status of this virtual circuit. Oper Status is up if both Inbound Oper Status and Outbound Oper Status are in the up state.

Up

Down

For detailed definitions of each status, see Appendix E, "Status Definitions".

Inbound Oper Status

Indicates the actual operational status of this virtual circuit in the inbound direction.

Outbound Oper Status

Indicates the actual operational status of this virtual circuit in the outbound direction.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the virtual circuits.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Access Point Names Table

The Access Point Names (APN) table displays information about the APNs the MWTM has discovered. To display the Access Point Names table, choose Summary Lists > Access Point Names.


Note Some table columns are hidden by default. Right-click on the web table header to see all columns.


The Access Point Names table contains:

Column
Description

Internal ID

Not shown by default, the Internal ID of the APN is a unique ID for every object the MWTM assigns for its own internal use. The ID can also be useful to TAC when troubleshooting problems.

Name

Name of the APN node.

This column is displayed by default.

Ignored

Indicates whether to include the signaling point when aggregating and displaying MWTM status information. This field is read-only for the web client, but editable in the Java client.

Users with authentication level Network Operator (level 3) and higher can edit this field. Users with authentication level Power User (level 2) and higher can edit the Unignore field.

This column is displayed by default.

Notes

Indicates whether a note is associated with the APN.

This column is displayed by default.

Severity

Indicates the alarm severity for the chosen APN. The severity can be Critical, Major, Minor, Warning, Informational, Indeterminate, Unmanaged, or Normal. See Managing Alarms and Events, page 9-1 for more information.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Status Change

Date and time that the status of the access point name last changed.

Status

Current status of the access point names. Possible values are:

Active

Shutdown

Unknown

Warning

This column is displayed by default.

Status Reason

Reason for the current status of the access point names.

For a full list of possible reasons, see the stateReasons.html file. If you installed the MWTM in:

The default directory, /opt, then the file is located at /opt/CSCOsgm/apache/share/htdocs/eventHelp directory.

A different directory, then the help directory and file are located in that directory.

If the cell is too small to show all of the status reason, place the cursor over the cell to see the full text in a tooltip.

The status reasons are listed in order of decreasing magnitude. If two or more reasons apply, the reason of greatest magnitude appears first.

If the status reason is Unsupported Configuration, correct the configuration and enter the mwtm cleandiscover command to delete all current network data and begin a discovery of the network. If the status reason remains Unsupported Configuration, enter the mwtm clean command to restore the MWTM server to a state that would exist after a new installation of the MWTM, excluding the log files, which the MWTM retains. To also remove the log files, enter the mwtm cleanall command. For more information on the use of these commands, see Appendix B, "Command Reference".

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


IP Addresses Table

You can view current IP Addresses reports using the MWTM. You can also export the reports.

IP Addresses Statistics

To display the IP Address report table, choose Summary Lists > IP Addresses.

The IP Addresses table is sorted based on the information in the Node column. However, you can sort the table based on the information in any of the columns (see Navigating Table Columns, page 4-23).

The IP Addresses table contains:

Field or Column1
Description

Node

Name or IP address of the node.

To see more information for the node, click the node name.

Note Each node can be associated with one or more IP addresses.

This column is displayed by default.

IP Address

IP address of the node.

This column is displayed by default.

Last Regular Poll Interval

The last time this node was polled.

This column is displayed by default.

SNMP Pollable

Whether the node can be polled by SNMP (yes or no).

This column is displayed by default.

IP Address Type

Indicates whether the IP address displayed is the primary or secondary IP address for the device.

1 To sort the column in descending order, click the column heading. Click again to sort the list in ascending order.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Point Code Table

You can view current point code reports using the MWTM. You can also export the reports.

Point Code Statistics

The Point Codes page shows all point codes that are currently being used by all nodes that the MWTM detected. To display the Point Code table, choose Summary Lists > Point Code.

The Point Code table is sorted based on the information in the Node column. However, you can sort the table based on the information in any of the columns (see Navigating Table Columns, page 4-23).

Field or Column
Description

Signaling Point

Signaling point that is currently being used by a node.

To sort the point codes by signaling point in descending order, click the Signaling Points heading.

Click again to sort the point codes in ascending order.

This column is displayed by default.

Point Code

Point code that is currently being used by a node.

To sort the point codes by point code in ascending order, click the Point Codes heading. This is the default display.

Click again to sort the point codes in descending order.

This column is displayed by default.

Node

Name or IP address of the node.

To see more information for the node, click the node name.

To sort the point codes by node in descending order, click the Node heading.

Click again to sort the point codes in ascending order.

This column is displayed by default.

Point Code Type

Type of point code:

Primary—Main point code used by a node.

Secondary—Alternate or backup point code used by a node.

Capability—Shared by more than one node, each of which is also assigned a real point code. Also called an alias point code.

To sort the point codes by type in ascending order, click the Point Code Type heading.

Click again to sort the point codes in descending order.

This column is displayed by default.



Note For toolbar details, see Using the Toolbar, page 11-6.


Editing Properties

In the Edit Properties dialog box you can change the basic properties associated with these objects:

Views

Nodes

Signaling Points (ITP only)

Application Server Processes (ITP only)

Backhauls (RAN-O only), (see Editing Properties for a RAN-O Backhaul)

In the MWTM web interface, to edit node's properties, select Edit Properties option from the Actions menu in the Details tab of the node. See MWTM: Edit Properties Dialog, page 11-11.

To edit a node's properties, right-click the node in the Node table in the right pane or in a view in the navigation tree, and choose Edit > Properties in the right-click menu. The MWTM displays the Edit Properties dialog box, which contains:

Field or Button
Description

Name

Name of the object.

For application server processes only—This field cannot be edited.

For nodes only—By default, this field displays the node's DNS name, which the MWTM discovered. However, if you modified your preferences to identify nodes by their IP addresses, then that is how the node is identified in this field. For more information, see Node Name Settings, page 4-5.

For signaling points only—By default, this field displays the signaling point's point code and network name, which the MWTM discovered (for example, 1.22.0:net0).

 

You can also use this field to specify a new, more meaningful name for the node or ITP signaling point. Remember that:

You can change an object's name to a new name or IP address.

A new name can be from 1 to 30 characters, and can contain any letters (upper- or lowercase) and any numbers, as well as blank spaces ( ), hyphens (-), and underscores (_), but no periods (.). If you enter a name that is longer than 30 characters, or if you enter any other special characters or periods, the MWTM beeps and retains the current name.

If you enter a name that includes a period (.), the MWTM assumes that you are entering a new IP address. A new IP address must use the x.x.x.x format, where x is between 0 and 255, and must contain only numbers and periods (.), but no letters or special characters. If you enter an IP address that contains any letters or special characters, the MWTM beeps and retains the current IP address.

 

If you edit an object whose current name already contains invalid characters, the MWTM beeps and replaces the name with blanks. Enter a new name that uses only valid characters, or click Cancel to keep the existing name. If you click Cancel, the MWTM exits the Edit Properties dialog box without saving any changes to the Name, Connect Address, or Icon Name field.

If you leave the Name field blank, the MWTM reverts to the object's default name (dependent upon network type).

The new object's name is used when launching context-based applications, such as CiscoWorks. Therefore, if the new name that you enter is not the object's DNS name, and the application knows the object by its DNS name, context links into the application for that object might not work.

When you click Save, all MWTM windows are updated automatically to reflect the new name.

Connect Address (Nodes only)

Connect IP address to pass to the Telnet or SSH command.

A new Telnet or SSH IP address must use the x.x.x.x format, where x is between 0 and 255, and must contain only numbers and periods, but no letters or special characters. If you enter a Telnet or SSH IP address that contains any letters or special characters, the MWTM beeps and retains the current IP address.

Connection Protocol

Connection protocol to use. You cannot modify this field.

Connect Port (Nodes only)

Port to be used with the protocol specified in the Connector Protocol field. The default values are:

23—Telnet

22—SSH

Icon Name

Drop-down menu of graphic icons to assign to this object in topology maps. The MWTM automatically assigns an appropriate icon to each discovered node and to Unknown nodes; but, you can use this field to assign a different icon (for example, if you know that a given Unknown node is a mobile switching center).

Note Additional icon types appear in the list for user customization.

When the MWTM discovers a single-instance node, it assigns the icon that corresponds to the node. When the MWTM discovers a multi-instance node, it assigns a separate icon for each unique instance.

Icon names include the following:

ASP—Application server process

BSC—Base Station Controller 1

BTS—Base Transceiver Station 1

Building—Icon representing a collection of network objects in a building.

Cisco2600—Cisco 2650, Cisco 2650XM, Cisco 2651, Cisco 2651XM

Cisco2800

Cisco3845

Cisco7202, Cisco7204 (Cisco 7204, Cisco 7204VXR), Cisco7206 (Cisco 7206, Cisco 7206VXR)

Cisco7301, Cisco7304

Cisco7505, Cisco7507 (Cisco 7507, Cisco 7507mx, Cisco 7507z), Cisco7513 (Cisco 7513, Cisco 7513mx, Cisco 7513z)

Icon Name

(continued)

Cisco 7600—Cisco 7603, Cisco 7603s, Cisco 7604, Cisco 7606, Cisco 7606s, Cisco 7609, Cisco 7609s, Cisco 7613

CiscoMWR1900—Cisco Mobile Wireless Router 1900

City—Icon representing a collection of network objects in a city.

Cloud—Collection of network objects, called a submap. A submap can also contain other submaps.

Database—Icon representing a database object.

IPDevice—IP device, other than those listed previously.

MatedPair—Mated pair of signaling points

MSC—Mobile switching center.

Node B—The radio transmission/reception unit for communication between radio cells 1

PGW—Cisco Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) Gateway (PGW) 2200 Softswitch

RAN_SVC—RAN Service Module in the Cisco ONS 15454

RNC—Radio Network Controller 1

SCP—Service control point

SignalingPoint—An SCP, SSP, or STP, or an ITP instance

SSP—Service switching point

STP—Signal transfer point

Tower—Icon representing a PC tower.

TrafficGenerator—Icon representing a device or emulator used to generate traffic, usually in a test environment.

Unknown—The MWTM is unable to determine the node or signaling point type.

Workstation—Icon representing a workstation.

Workstation2—Icon representing a different workstation.

When you click Save, the topology window is updated automatically to reflect the new icon.

Interface Structure

Drop-down menu to configure the way the MWTM displays the physical interfaces of a node (excluding the ONS node). Choices include:

Default—Restores the interface structure to the default setting for the node. For example, if the default structure is hierarchical, choosing this option restores the parent-child hierarchy in the Physical folder.

Note In cases where the MWTM cannot determine the interface hierarchy of a node, the MWTM sets its default structure to be flat (that is, all interfaces appear at the same level).

Force Flat—Forces the interface structure of a node to be flat (that is, no hierarchy). All interfaces in the Physical folder appear at the same level.

Force Hierarchical—Forces the interface structure of a node to be hierarchical (that is, to display parent-child relationships among interfaces).

When you choose a different setting, the MWTM opens a popup with this message:

A clean poll will be triggered if this value is changed.

Click OK to close the popup. Click Save to activate your changes. You can view your changes in the MWTM client and web interfaces.

Save

Button to save the changes that you make to the object information. Updates all MWTM windows to reflect your changes, and exits the dialog box.

Restore

Button to restore changes that you make to the Name and Icon Name fields of the Edit Properties dialog box and leave the dialog box open.

Cancel

Button to exit the dialog box without saving any changes.

Help

Button to display online help for the dialog box.

1 The MWTM does not manage BSC, BTS, RNC, or Node B objects but displays them in the topology window to help you visualize the network.


Editing Properties for a RAN-O Backhaul

To edit the properties of a backhaul or virtual backhaul interface, right-click the backhaul object in the navigation tree or right pane, and choose Edit > Properties in the right-click menu.

The MWTM displays the Edit RAN Backhaul Properties dialog box, which contains:

Field or Button
Description

Name

Name of the backhaul.

You can use this field to specify a new, more meaningful name for the backhaul.

 

Remember that:

You can change a backhaul's name to a new name. A new name can contain:

From 1 to 30 characters

Any letters (upper- or lowercase)

Any numbers, as well as blank spaces ( ), dashes (-), underscores (_), or periods (.)

If you enter a name that is longer than 30 characters, or if you enter any other special characters, the MWTM beeps and retains the current name.

 

If you edit an object whose current name already contains invalid characters, the MWTM beeps and replaces the name with blanks. Enter a new name that uses only valid characters, or click Cancel to keep the existing name. If you click Cancel, the MWTM exits the Edit RAN Backhaul Properties dialog box without saving any changes to the Name, Connect Address, or Icon Name field.

When you click Save, all MWTM windows are updated automatically to reflect the new name.

Threshold Information

Displays slider bars for controlling the Acceptable, Warning, and Overloaded threshold settings. Left-click the slider and drag it to the desired setting for each threshold. See Threshold Information (RAN-O Only), page 7-36, for descriptions of these thresholds.

Bandwidth Information

Displays:

User Send Bandwidth (bits or bytes)/sec)

User Receive Bandwidth (bits or bytes)/sec)

The user bandwidth is the value that you (the user) specify for the backhaul. Send and receive values will differ if the interface is asymmetrical.

The backhaul appears in the backhaul real-time chart as a percentage of the User Bandwidth. The preset value for the User Bandwidth is the same as the System Bandwidth.

When you change the User Bandwidth, you are changing the scale of the Y axis of the backhaul real-time chart in the Performance tab (see Displaying Backhaul Performance Statistics, page 11-37). The X and Y values of the data do not change. The threshold ranges resize because they are percentages of User Bandwidth.

The User Bandwidth represents 100%. Data points that are higher than the User Bandwidth will exceed 100%. The Y axis dynamically increases to display all data points. (See Why does my backhaul graph show greater than 100% for transmit traffic?, page C-24).

System Send Bandwidth (bits/sec)

System Receive Bandwidth (bits/sec)

The system bandwidth is the value that the system specifies for the backhaul. Send and receive values will differ if the interface is asymmetrical. You cannot edit this field.

Save

Saves changes that you make to the object information, updates all MWTM windows to reflect your changes, and exits the dialog box.

Restore

Restores changes that you make to the Name, and sets the Threshold Information, and Bandwidth Information fields to the system defaults. The dialog box is left open.

Cancel

Exits the dialog box without saving any changes.

Help

Displays online help for the dialog box.


Attaching Notes


Tip Users with East Asian Languages configured on Windows are supported.


You use the MWTM to annotate an object, attaching a descriptive string to it. To attach a note to an object, in the:

MWTM client, right-click the object in the navigation tree, then choose Edit > Notes. The Edit Notes dialog box appears.

Web interface, left-click the object in the navigation tree, click the Notes tab, then click Edit. The text area becomes active.


Note You can add a note to a node by using either the MWTM client or the web interface. You can also view the note from either interface.


The Edit Notes dialog contains:

Field or Button
Description

Name

Name of the object. You cannot edit this field.

Note Last Updated

Date and time the Notes field for this object was last updated. If no note is currently associated with this object, this field displays the value Not Set.

You cannot edit this field.

Notes

Notes to associate with this object. In this field, you can enter any important information about the object, such as a detailed description, location, service history, and so on.

Edit

(Web interface only) Enables you to edit or add a note in the content area.

Save

Saves changes that you make to the object's notes, updates all MWTM windows to reflect your changes, and closes the dialog box.

When you annotate an object, the MWTM displays a note icon in the Notes column of all object tables for the annotated object, and the topology map in the topology window displays a note icon in the upper-left corner of the object.

Cancel

Cancels the operation without saving any changes.

Help

Displays online help for the dialog box.


Related Topic

Viewing Notes

Viewing Notes

You use the MWTM to view any notes that are associated with an object. To view a note:

Select an object in the navigation tree, then click the Notes tab.

Right-click an object in a window, then choose View > Notes. (The Notes option is dimmed if no note is associated with the chosen object.)

The MWTM displays the Notes tab for the chosen object, which shows:

Notes associated with the object.

The date and time the notes associated with the object were last updated, or the message Not Set if no notes are associated with the object.

The message No Notes if no notes are associated with the object.


Note The Notes tab is not supported on the DEFAULT View in the web interface.


For example, to view a note for a node, right-click the node in the Node table in the right pane or in a view in the navigation tree, then choose View > Notes in the right-click menu.

Related Topic

Attaching Notes

Deleting Objects

After discovery, the objects in your network are known to the MWTM and added to the MWTM database. Physically deleting objects from your network is not the same as deleting them from the MWTM database. These sections describe the differences between deleting objects from your network, the MWTM database, and the MWTM discovery database, and the procedures for doing so:

Deleting an Object from Your Network

Deleting an Object from the MWTM Database

Deleting an Object from Your Network

If you physically delete a known object from your network (for example, by powering down a node), it remains in the MWTM database, the MWTM labels it Unknown, and the system administrator is responsible for deleting it from the MWTM database, if you choose to do so.


Note For nodes, the MWTM also labels all associated network objects Unknown because the MWTM attempts to poll the node and gets no response. For details on polling nodes, see Polling Nodes, page 7-52.


Deleting an Object from the MWTM Database

Typically, you delete an object from the MWTM database for one of these reasons:

You physically deleted the object from your network. This is the most common reason for deleting a object from the MWTM database.

The object state is one of these:

Object
States
Applicable To

Node

Unknown, Unmanaged

ITP and IPRAN networks

Interface

Unknown

Signaling Point

Unknown, Unmanaged

ITP networks only

Linkset

Unknown

Link

Unknown

Application Server

Unknown

Application Server Process

Unknown

Application Server Process Association

Unknown

Signaling Gateway Mated Pair

Unknown


You are aware of the reason for the state, and you no longer want to see the object in the MWTM displays. For example, the object might be a test lab device, or it could be associated with an object that was removed from the network.


Note If an object has at least one adjacent object in Active, Discovering, Waiting, or Warning state, you cannot delete the object. If you try, the MWTM cancels the deletion.


If you delete all associated connections to an Unmanaged object, the MWTM does not automatically delete the object. Instead, you must manually delete the object.

If you have physically deleted a known object from your network, and you then delete it from the MWTM, it is no longer in the MWTM database, it does not appear in MWTM windows, and it is not discovered when you run discovery.

If you have not physically deleted a known object from your network, and you delete it from the MWTM, any associated objects are also automatically deleted from the MWTM database (if applicable). However, at the next poll the MWTM finds the object (and any associated objects) and adds it back to the MWTM database, setting the status appropriately. If this happens, do not delete the object again. Instead, set it to Ignored. See Ignoring and Unignoring Objects, for more information.

To delete an object from the MWTM database, use one of these procedures:


Note If you delete an object from the MWTM database, the object is deleted for all MWTM clients and views that are connected to that MWTM server.


Select one or more objects in a window, then choose Edit > Delete from the MWTM main menu.

Right-click the object in a window, then select Delete from the right-click menu. (You cannot delete more than one object at a time from the right-click menu.)

The MWTM asks you to confirm the deletion. Click:

Yes to delete the chosen objects. The MWTM deletes the objects from the MWTM database.

No to return to the window without deleting any objects from the MWTM database.

You can also enter the mwtm delete commands from the command line interface to delete one or more objects from the MWTM database. See mwtm delete, page B-26, for more information on the use of this command.

Deleting a Node from the MWTM Discovery Dialog

If you want to completely eliminate a given node from the MWTM database, you can delete it from the MWTM Discovery dialog box, ensuring that the MWTM never even discovers it.


Note If you delete a node from the MWTM Discovery dialog box, the node is deleted for all MWTM clients and views connected to that MWTM server.


To delete a node from the MWTM Discovery dialog box:


Step 1 Choose Network > Network Discovery from the MWTM main menu. The Discovery dialog box appears.

Step 2 Click the Discovery tab.

Step 3 In the Discovered Nodes table, select the node that you want to delete.

Step 4 Click Delete Node.

The MWTM deletes the nodes from the MWTM database, without asking for confirmation. The MWTM will no longer discover the nodes.


Unmanaging and Managing Nodes or ITP Signaling Points

You use the MWTM to change a node or any associated signaling point to the Unmanaged state. You can also remove the Unmanaged state from these objects.

In some situations, you might not want to a node or signaling point to appear in MWTM windows. However, you might be unable to delete the object from the MWTM database. For example, if:

You have not physically deleted a known node or signaling point from your network, and you delete it from the MWTM, the object is removed from the poll list. However, at the next poll, the MWTM returns the object to the DEFAULT view. If you are using a custom view, the MWTM labels the object as new.

A node has at least one adjacent node in Active, Discovering, Waiting, or Warning state; or, if a signaling point has at least one adjacent signaling point in Active or Warning state, you cannot delete the node or signaling point. If you try, the MWTM cancels the deletion.

In these situations, you can label the object as Unmanaged. When you set a node or signaling point to the Unmanaged state, the MWTM removes the object from the poll list.


Note Users with authentication level Network Administrator (level 4) and higher can only Unmanage nodes or ITP signaling points.

Users with authentication level System Administrator (level 5) can Manage nodes or ITP signaling points.



Note If you change a node or signaling point to the Unmanaged state, the object is Unmanaged for all MWTM clients and views connected to that MWTM server.


To label a node or signaling point Unmanaged:


Step 1 Choose the node or signaling point in a window.


Note You cannot label a node Unmanaged if it has a Node Type of Unknown. If you select a node with a Node Type of Unknown, this menu option is dimmed and cannot be chosen. If you select more than one node, and at least one of them has a Node Type of Unknown, this menu option is grayed-out and cannot be chosen.


Step 2 Select Unmanage from the right-click menu. The MWTM labels the chosen node and any associated signaling point(s) Unmanaged and removes them from the poll list.


Note When you set a node or signaling point to the Unmanaged state, the events for the object will continue to appear in the Events window. If you want to suppress events for unmanaged objects, see Setting Alarm or Event Filters, page 9-12).



You can also remove the Unmanaged status from a node or signaling point, when you are ready to return them to the MWTM poll list. To remove the Unmanaged status from an object:


Step 1 Select the node or signaling point in a window.


Note You cannot remove the Unmanaged status from a node with a Node Type of Unknown. If you select a node with a Node Type of Unknown, then this menu option is dimmed and cannot be chosen. If you select more than one node, and at least one of them has a Node Type of Unknown, then this menu option is grayed-out and cannot be chosen.


Step 2 Select Manage from the right-click menu. The MWTM removes the Unmanaged status from the chosen node, returns it to the poll list, and polls it immediately.



Note (ITP only) You can also remove the Unmanaged status from a signaling point, when you are ready to return the signaling point to the MWTM poll list. To remove the Unmanaged status from a signaling point, right-click a signaling point in a window, then select Manage Node from the right-click menu. The MWTM removes the Unmanaged status from the chosen signaling point, the node associated with the signaling point, and all other signaling points associated with that node. The MWTM then returns these objects to the poll list, and polls them immediately.



Note In MWTM Web interface, to manage/unmanage the nodes, select Manage/Unmanage Node option from the Actions menu of the Details tab.


Excluding Nodes or ITP Signaling Points from a View

To exclude a node or signaling point from the current view, right-click the node or signaling point in a window, then select Exclude from View in the right-click menu. The MWTM excludes the node or signaling point from the current view. See Creating a New View, page 6-7, for more information about excluding objects from views.

Ignoring and Unignoring Objects

You can instruct the MWTM to ignore an object when it aggregates and displays network data. Setting objects to Ignored prevents known problems from affecting MWTM displays for associated network objects. In effect, you are preventing a known problem from distracting you from other, more urgent network problems.

Example:

You can set a node to Ignored before shutting down the node for maintenance.


Note If you set an object to Ignored, the object is ignored for all MWTM clients and views connected to that MWTM server.

Also, if you set an object to Ignored, make a note of the change, and remember to reset the object when the problem is corrected or the maintenance is complete.


To set an object to Ignored:

Right-click the object, then select Ignore from the menu

or

In the object window in the right pane, check the Ignored check box.

To display all objects that are ignored in the object window, click the Ignored column heading. The MWTM displays all ignored objects at the top of the table.

To set an object to ignore in the topology window, select an object in the topology map, then, in the left pane, select the Ignored check box for the object you want to ignore.

To unignore an object, right-click the object, then select Unignore from the menu.


Note In MWTM Web interface, to ignore or unignore the objects, select Ignore/Unignore option from the Actions menu of the Details tab.