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LIM Controller Module Events

LIM Controller Module Events

This chapter explains how to diagnose and handle line interface module (LIM) controller module events that are generated by the Cisco 6100 Series system. The following information is presented for each of the events:

If none of the actions presented for the event are successful, contact the Cisco Technical Assistance Center (TAC) for additional support.


Note Refer to the ViewRunner for Windows User Guide or the ViewRunner for HP OpenView User Guide for detailed information on viewing events in the ViewRunner management software. Refer to "Event Guidelines and Definitions" for detailed information on event severity guidelines and alarm event status changes.

Table 12-1 lists LIM controller module events and their IDs, definition, severity, and description. A detailed explanation of these events and the corrective actions that are required (if any) is located in this chapter.


Table 12-1: LIM Controller Module Events
ID Definition Severity Description

2

SCL_SOFTWARE_FAILED_CRC

Minor

Software failed CRC check during download

3

SCL_OUT_OF_MEMORY

Critical

Application was unable to allocate memory

128

LR_CREATE_OBJ

Info

Module was detected

129

LR_PING_FAIL

Critical

Module did not respond to system monitor


Note Events with an ID less than 128 are specific to the module in alarm. Events with an ID value greater than or equal to 128 are system-wide events.

Software Failed CRC Check During Download

Event Summary

ID Event Name Severity

2

SCL_SOFTWARE_FAILED_CRC

Minor

Description

The following description appears in the ViewRunner for Windows Event History View dialog box or the ViewRunner for HP OpenView Error Events Browser:

Software failed CRC check during download

Impact

Events of this type are not run-time events. They occur only during module power up and self-test, and they do not affect service (because subscriber service is typically not active yet). The module fails self-test as a result of this event, and immediately retries the self-test, but no self-test will end in success. A failure message is generated with each failure. Without a successful self-test, the module cannot be put into service, so the node does not complete its installation cycle.

Software update events fall into this description, because it is assumed that the updates are always monitored by an operator. Consequently, the events need not be coded as critical. In any case, the goal is to monitor the node status until the node becomes fully operational.

Action

Alarm events of this type are generated only during module initialization and automatically force a module reset.


Step 1 If the reset condition continues (the module does not exit self-test mode), reinsert the module.

Step 2 If a problem persists, replace the module.


Application Unable to Allocate Memory

Event Summary

ID Event Name Severity

3

SCL_OUT_OF_MEMORY

Critical

Description

The following description appears in the ViewRunner for Windows Event History View dialog box or the ViewRunner for HP OpenView Error Events Browser:

Application was unable to allocate memory

Impact

An event of this severity causes loss of service for more than four subscribers. Here are two examples of this type of event:

Action

In some cases, a module forces itself into a self-test based on the alarm condition. In other cases, the system controller module forces the alarmed module to reset. A module reset forces the module to be power cycled, self-tested, and reconfigured into the slot by the system controller module.

Several alarm event conditions are cleared by a module reset. Look for the alarm event to clear within 1 minute. An alarm event is cleared when the system controller module faceplate ALARM LED changes from red to off.

In the ViewRunner management software, two actions show that an alarm event is cleared:

If the alarm event does not clear:


Step 1 Remove and reinsert the module. This forces a module to reset if neither the module nor the system controller module could force a reset. A module reset usually clears all alarm conditions.

Step 2 Observe the system controller module ALARM LED or the ViewRunner ejector tabs to see if the alarm condition returns. If the previous problem persists, the condition will probably reoccur within 1 minute.

Step 3 If the alarm condition persists, replace the module.


Module Detected

Event Summary

ID Event Name Severity

128

LR_CREATE_OBJ

Info

Description

The following description appears in the ViewRunner for Windows Event History View dialog box or the ViewRunner for HP OpenView Error Events Browser:

Module was detected

Impact

Events of this type do not indicate service impairment or loss.

Action

This is an information event, not an alarm event. Information events do not represent a state change and therefore are not followed by a Cleared event.

Information events are typically one-time occurrences that are corrected by the module without a reset. They do not cause service degradation.

No craft action is required.

Module Did Not Respond to System Monitor

Event Summary

ID Event Name Severity

129

LR_PING_FAIL

Critical

Description

The following description appears in the ViewRunner for Windows Event History View dialog box or the ViewRunner for HP OpenView Error Events Browser:

Module did not respond to the system monitor

Impact

An event of this severity causes loss of service for more than four subscribers. Here are two examples of this type of event:

Action

In some cases, a module forces itself into a self-test based on the alarm condition. In other cases, the system controller module forces the alarmed module to reset. A module reset forces the module to be power cycled, self-tested, and reconfigured into the slot by the system controller module.

Several alarm event conditions are cleared by a module reset. Look for the alarm event to clear within 1 minute. An alarm event is cleared when the system controller module faceplate ALARM LED changes from red to off.

In the ViewRunner management software, two actions show that an alarm event is cleared:

If the alarm event does not clear:


Step 1 Remove and reinsert the module. This forces a module to reset if neither the module nor the system controller module could force a reset. A module reset usually clears all alarm conditions.

Step 2 Observe the system controller module ALARM LED or the ViewRunner ejector tabs to see if the alarm condition returns. If the previous problem persists, the condition will probably reoccur within 1 minute.

Step 3 If the alarm condition persists, replace the module.



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Posted: Wed May 10 13:43:16 PDT 2000
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