C H A P T E R 1
Hardware Description
This chapter provides an overview of the Cisco 6200 advanced digital subscriber line access multiplexer (DSLAM) and describes the system???s hardware components. The chapter is arranged as follows:
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Cisco DSL Product Family on page
Cisco 6200 Chassis on page
Network Trunk Cards (NTCs) on page
Management Processor Card (MPC) on page
Subscriber Line Card (SLC) on page
Warning For translations of the safety warnings in this chapter, see Appendix C, ???Translated Safety Warnings.???
1.1 Cisco DSL Product Family
The Cisco 6200 is part of a family of digital subscriber line (DSL) products that provide
???The Cisco 6200 DSLAM is a
???ADSL customer premises equipment (CPE) devices, which reside at the subscriber site connected to PCs or routers, modulate data so that it can travel over telephone lines to the Cisco 6200 DSLAM at the CO. CPE devices in the Cisco DSL product family include the Cisco 675 and the Cisco 605.
???The Cisco 6200 Manager is an
???ADSL plain old telephone service (POTS) splitters, or voice ???lters, located both at the subscriber premises and at the CO, support simultaneous voice and data transmission. (If a subscriber is using a telephone line for data only, the POTS splitter connection is not required.)
The Cisco DSL family also includes a Frame Relay IDSL multiplexer, a service selection gateway, the Cisco 605 card, the Cisco 6100 DSLAM, and an ATM switch to aggregate Cisco 6200 traf???c.
1.2 Cisco 6200 Chassis
This section describes the chassis that houses the Cisco 6200 DSLAM.
The Cisco 6200 consists of circuitry and connections that reside within a shelf or chassis that allows modular insertion and removal of the various
1.2.1 Module Compartment
The module compartment holds all circuitry that relates to Cisco 6200 operation. The module compartment includes 14 slots that hold the modules (cards):
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Slot 1: Holds the network trunk card (NTC).
Slot 2: Holds the management processor card (MPC).
Slots 3 and 4: Unoccupied in this release of the system.
Slots 5 to 14: Hold up to ten subscriber line cards (SLCs).
All Cisco 6200 cards can be installed and removed while the rest of the system continues to operate. (However, the system cannot pass data if the NTC is removed.) The NTC, MPC, and SLCs are described later in this chapter.
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Cisco6200SERIES
1.2.2 Backplane
Located behind the module compartment, the backplane provides the following services:
???Interconnects the MPC, NTC, and SLCs
???Connects the SLCs with the subscribers (local loops) or the POTS splitter
???Distributes power, clocking, and other common signals to all the modules
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Primary (A) and Secondary (B)
The backplane???s primary and secondary
Each
???A downstream component broadcasts all cells received from the NTC interface to each SLC. (Logic on the SLC ???lters and directs cells destined for each port.)
???An upstream component provides a contention mechanism for cells received from subscriber ports to be funneled into the upstream NTC path.
Ethernet Management Bus
A
Connections to POTS Splitters or Telephone Lines
On the inner surface of the backplane, the upper and lower SLC connectors connect the SLC in the corresponding slot (5 to 14) with unshielded twisted pair (UTP) lines. These lines connect to an external POTS splitter, and from there to subscribers over telephone lines. (If a subscriber is using a telephone line for data only, the POTS splitter is not required.)
Ten
Figure
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Alarm Relay Connection
Backplane connector J39, accessible from the rear of the chassis, is the alarm relay connector. The alarm relays provide relay contact closures. The alarm relays transmit critical, major, and minor alarms to a separate, external alarm device within the CO. The alarm device uses a bell, light, or other signal to alert CO support personnel of the change in status. (The alarm relay transmits audible and visual alarms on separate circuits.) Alarms transmitted through J39 are also communicated by all of the following methods:
???Alarm LEDs (labeled Critical, Major, and Minor) on the MPC. (Some alarms also affect the TD and RD LEDs on the NTC.)
???Event messages on the console.
???Component status display of the Cisco 6200 Manager.
To turn off an audible alarm, do one of the following:
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Press the alarm
Click the ACO button in the Cisco 6200 Manager component status display
Use the alarmcutoff command (at the console or via Telnet)
Use a switch or command on your external alarm device
Cutting off an alarm has no effect on the alarm status of the system or on the indication of visual alarms. To clear an alarm, you must correct the condition that caused it. To get information about the source of an alarm, do one of the following:
???Use the Cisco 6200 Manager. (See the User Guide for the Cisco 6200 Manager for instructions.)
???Use the command show dsl alarms. (See Chapter 7, ???Troubleshooting,??? for more information on this command.)
For a pinout list and additional information on connecting alarm relays, see Appendix A, ???Pin Assignments.???
Auxiliary Port
J40, a
Power Terminals
J17, J18, J19, and J20, located at the upper right corner of the rear panel, are screw terminals for
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J17 is the
J19 is the +48V (return) terminal for power circuit A.
J18 is the
J20 is the +48V (return) terminal for power circuit B.
Power circuit A is connected to the power entry module (PEM) on the left (as you face the front of the chassis); power circuit B is connected to the PEM on the right.
Unused Connectors
The Cisco 6200 backplane contains several connectors and a jumper that are not used in the current release. See Appendix A, ???Pin Assignments,??? for a list of the unused items.
1.2.3 Fan Tray
The fan tray, located at the bottom of the chassis, houses eight fans that maintain proper temperatures inside the chassis, plus an air ???lter. The ???lter should be removed and cleaned periodically. Refer to Chapter 6, ???Preventive Maintenance,??? for complete information on cleaning the air ???lter.
Caution The Cisco 6200 cooling fans must run continuously. The system may suffer thermal damage if the fans stop for more than 10 minutes. (At ambient temperatures above 104 F(40 C),thermal damage may occur sooner.)
1.2.4 Power Entry Modules (PEMs)
One or two PEMs distribute DC power to the chassis. The Cisco 6200 needs only one active PEM to operate; if two PEMs are installed, the second PEM???s power source serves as a hot backup to the ???rst PEM???s power source.
Each PEM is connected to a single DC power source. For power redundancy, two PEMs must be installed, and two separate DC power sources must be connected to the chassis. If one power source is connected, only one PEM is required. There is no bene???t to connecting two power sources to a chassis with one PEM, or to installing two PEMs in a chassis with one power source.
The PEMs reside at the top of the Cisco 6200 chassis, and they are installed and accessed from the front. DC power
The power bay on the left is wired to power circuit A; the bay on the right is wired to power circuit B. (The circuits are identi???ed at the power terminals on the backplane.)
The following ???xtures are present on the front panel of each PEM:
???A green LED that comes on to indicate that
???A circuit breaker
Note To turn off a Cisco 6200 that has two PEMs, you must ???ip the circuit breakers on both
PEMs to OFF (0).
1.2.5 Cooling Vents
The cooling vents are located on the sides, front, and back of the Cisco 6200 chassis, as shown in Figure
Figure
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1.2.6 DSLAM Speci???cations
Table
Warning To prevent a Cisco 6200 system from overheating, do not operate it in an area that exceeds the maximum recommended ambient temperature of 131??F (55??C).
1A fully loaded chassis has 1 fan tray, 2 PEMs, 1 MPC, 1 NTC, 10 SLCs, covers, and dangler cables.
2A chassis with no cards has 1 fan tray, 2 power entry modules, covers, and dangler cables.
3The chassis can operate safely at short term operating temperatures only if all of the fans are working properly. If a fan fails in a chassis that is experiencing an ambient temperature above 104 F (40 C), thermal damage may occur.
1.3 Network Trunk Cards (NTCs)
This section describes the
1.3.1 What is the NTC
The NTC is a service interface module that concentrates the data traf???c from all Cisco 6200 subscriber ports and connects the node to a single trunk line from the
In Release 1, the trunk is a
The OC3 NTC is available in both
In the downstream direction, the OC3 NTC accepts ATM cells at the
The OC3 NTC also transmits upstream data back to the service provider via ATM on the
The Cisco 6200 uses a ???xed mapping of permanent virtual channels (PVCs) between trunk and subscriber ports. This means that no con???guration of these circuits is required.
The OC3 NTC collects ATM cell counts, which are accessible through the 6200 Management
Information Base (MIB). These cell count include:
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Number of nonidle cells transmitted upstream
Number of nonidle downstream cells received with good or correctable header checksums
Number of downstream cells received with uncorrectable header checksums
The OC3 NTC provides bidirectional adaptation between serial ATM cells within the
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Optical interface
Upstream data transfer
Downstream data transfer
Figure
Figure
Downstream data transfer
Line module
Upstream data transfer
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The optical interface performs the
The upstream data transfer unit receives data via a
The downstream data transfer unit inserts data onto the bus. This circuit inserts idle cells when a full data cell is not yet ready for transmission.
1.3.2 NTC
The NTC resides in slot 1 (the
The dual SC connectors (one for transmitting, one for receiving) for the Cisco 6200 network trunk port are recessed into the
Warning Class 1 laser product.
Warning Because invisible laser radiation may be emitted from the aperture of the port when no cable is connected, avoid exposure to laser radiation and do not stare into open apertures.
The ???ber optic communication channels in the
???Always disconnect the card from the backplane before connecting or disconnecting optical cables.
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Always keep the protective cap on the optic connector when the connector is not in use.
Never look into an optical cable or connector.
Reset Switch
The reset switch is recessed behind the faceplate to avoid accidental disturbance. It is not for customer use.
Figure
NTC
TD
A
RD
Reset switch
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LED Indicators
Table
1.3.3 NTC
Table
1.3.4 What is the NTC
The NTC
The trunk is a
NTC.
The NTC
In the downstream direction, the NTC
The NTC
The Cisco 6200 uses a ???xed mapping of permanent virtual channels (PVCs) between trunk and subscriber ports. This means that no con???guration of these circuits is required.
The NTC
Information Base (MIB). These cell count include:
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Number of nonidle cells transmitted upstream
Number of nonidle downstream cells received with good or correctable header checksums
Number of downstream cells received with uncorrectable header checksums
The NTC
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Optical interface
Upstream data transfer
Downstream data transfer
Figure
Figure
Downstream data transfer
Line module
Upstream data transfer
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The optical interface performs the
The upstream data transfer unit receives data via a
The downstream data transfer unit inserts data onto the bus. This circuit inserts idle cells when a full data cell is not yet ready for transmission.
1.3.5 NTC
The NTC resides in slot 1 (the
Trunk Port
The dual SC connectors (one for transmitting, one for receiving) for the Cisco 6200 network trunk port are recessed into the NTC faceplate to prevent the cables from protruding too far outside the faceplate.
Warning Class 1 laser product.
Warning Because invisible laser radiation may be emitted from the aperture of the port when no cable is connected, avoid exposure to laser radiation and do not stare into open apertures.
The ???ber optic communication channels in the
???Always disconnect the card from the backplane before connecting or disconnecting optical cables.
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Always keep the protective cap on the optic connector when the connector is not in use.
Never look into an optical cable or connector.
Reset Switch
The reset switch is recessed behind the faceplate to avoid accidental disturbance. It is not for customer use.
Reset switch
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LED Indicators
Table
1.3.6 NTC
Table
1.4 Management Processor Card (MPC)
The Cisco 6200 is controlled and managed by the MPC.
1.4.1 Functional Description
The MPC performs management and storage tasks for the Cisco 6200 DSLAM. The MPC provides
???The Cisco IOS command line interface (CLI) for con???guration and monitoring
???An SNMP agent for communicating between the Cisco 6200 and the PC running the Cisco 6200 Manager software
???Alarm contacts and environmental monitoring of key system resources
???Line card con???guration and fault polling
???Nonvolatile storage of con???guration information
???Two PCMCIA Flash slots for storage of software images and con???guration data
The MPC runs a version of Cisco IOS software that is designed for DSL multiplexing.
At startup, the MPC loads program software and con???guration data from NVRAM, from a server on the network, or from a Flash card in one of its PCMCIA slots. The MPC then provides boot images to the line cards. After initializing the system, the MPC provides monitoring and control services, including the CLI (available at the console and via Telnet); SNMP communication with the Cisco 6200 Manager; and critical, major, and minor alarm signals.
1.4.2 Physical Description
The MPC resides in slot 2. The MPC faceplate (see Figure
MPC
POWER
READYCard status LEDs
ACTIVE
ACO Alarm
ALARMS
CRIT
MAJAlarm LEDs
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NConsole port
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Two PCMCIA slots
PCMCIA ejection buttons
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ACO Switch
The alarm
Console Port
The console port on the MPC is a serial
PCMCIA Slots and Ejection Buttons
The MPC provides two slots for PCMCIA Flash memory cards. PCMCIA cards store system software and node con???guration information. An ejection button is located beneath each PCMCIA slot; push the button to remove the card.
Ethernet Port
The Ethernet port on the MPC is a 10BaseT port with an
Reset Switch
The reset switch, which initializes the MPC, is recessed behind the faceplate to avoid accidental disturbance.
LED Indicators
All LEDs on the MPC are described in Table
1.4.3 MPC Speci???cations
Table
1.5 Subscriber Line Card (SLC)
This section describes the CAP and DMT versions of the subscriber line card (SLC). A Cisco 6200 chassis can hold up to 10 SLC modules.
Note All the SLCs in a Cisco 6200 chassis should be of the same type. The mixture of CAP and
DMT cards in a single chassis is not supported.
1.5.1 What is the SLC 8CAP?
The CAP version of the SLC (labeled SLC 8CAP) is a
The CAP SLC transports data at speeds up to 7 Mbps downstream (from the service provider to the subscriber) and receives up to 1 Mbps upstream (from the subscriber to the service provider). The SLC supports upstream and downstream passband channels for subscriber data. Baseband POTS is unused by the SLC; data is added to this channel by the external POTS splitter.
How the SLC Handles Traf???c
In the downstream direction, the SLC receives ATM cells from the Cisco 6200 backplane bus. The cell ???lter discards cells whose virtual path/virtual channel IDs (VPI/VCIs) do not pertain to this subscriber???s channel. (Each port has a ???xed set of 31 VCIs, which are permanently assigned to VCIs on the NTC.) The traf???c controller buffers cells. Then the CAP transceiver transmits the outbound cells. The SLC sends the cells out to an external POTS splitter, which inserts baseband POTS traf???c (if any such traf???c is provided) before sending the downstream ADSL and POTS signals across standard unshielded twisted pair copper wire to the subscriber.
In the upstream direction, the SLC receives ADSL signals from a POTS splitter and demodulates the
The SLC separates the upstream and downstream data channels:
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The upstream data channel occupies a band between 30 kHz and 200 kHz.
The downstream data channel takes the band between 240 kHz and 1.5 MHz.
At the subscriber site, the DSL customer premises equipment (the Cisco 675, for example) demodulates the downstream signal and sends the data to the subscriber???s PC.
Transmission Rates and Modem Training
Two options are available with respect to transmission rates:
???You can set the subscriber ports to
???You can set transmission speeds. Upstream and downstream speeds can be set separately.
In the downstream direction, 11 rates are available ranging from 640 kbps to 7.168 Mbps. In the upstream direction, 9 rates are available, ranging from 91 kbps to 1.088 Mbps.
The modems on the CAP SLC train in sequence, ???rst downstream, then upstream. Each modem ???rst acquires the line. Then it tests the signal quality on the line by measuring the
Statistics
The SLC gathers signal quality statistics for network management purposes. It sends this information to the management system via the master SNMP agent. The SLC reports each of the following statistics to the management system for both upstream and downstream traf???c:
???Number of nonidle cells transmitted downstream
???Number of nonidle upstream cells received with valid header checksum
???Number of upstream cells received with invalid header checksum
???Number of errored seconds (this is the number of seconds in which at least one header checksum error or loss of cell delineation is observed), both upstream and downstream
Figure
Public telephone network
Cisco
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1.5.2 SLC 8CAP: Physical Description
Up to 10 SLCs can be installed in a Cisco 6200 cabinet. The cabinet slots assigned to the SLCs are slot 5 through slot 14.
The CAP SLC???s faceplate is labeled SCL 8CAP. The faceplate (Figure
Reset Switch
The reset switch is recessed behind the faceplate to avoid accidental activation. It is not for customer use.
LED Indicators
Table
Figure
SLC 8CAP
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Card status LEDs
Port status LEDs
Reset switch
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1.5.3 SLC 8CAP Speci???cations
Table
1.5.4 What is the SLC 8DMT?
The
Figure
Public telephone network
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The SLC 8DMT transports data at speeds up to 8 Mbps downstream (from the service provider to the subscriber) and receives at speeds up to 800 kbps upstream (from the subscriber to the service provider). The SLC supports upstream and downstream passband channels for subscriber data.
Baseband plain old telephone service (POTS) is unused by the SLC; voice and data are added by the external POTS splitter.
How the SLC 8DMT Handles Traf???c
In the downstream direction, the SLC receives ATM cells from the Cisco 6200 backplane bus. The cell ???lter discards cells whose virtual path/virtual channel IDs (VPI/VCIs) do not pertain to a particular subscriber???s channel. (Each port has a ???xed set of 31 VCIs, numbered 33 to 63, which are permanently assigned to VCIs on the NTC.) The cell ???lter buffers cells, and the DMT transceiver transmits the outbound cells. The SLC sends the cells out to an external POTS splitter, which inserts baseband POTS traf???c (if any such traf???c is provided) before sending the downstream ADSL and POTS signals across standard unshielded twisted pair copper wire to the subscriber.
In the upstream direction, the SLC receives ADSL signals from a POTS splitter and demodulates the
The SLC separates the upstream and downstream data channels:
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The upstream data channel occupies a band between 25.875 kHz and 138 kHz.
The downstream data channel takes the band between 138 kHz and 1.104 MHz.
At the subscriber site, the DSL customer premises equipment
Transmission Rates and Modem Training
Two modes are available for setting transmission rates:
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???Explicit rate mode: You can set SNR margins and transmission speeds explicitly. Upstream and downstream speeds can be set separately.
You can mix
Rates available for downstream traf???c range from 32 kbps to 8.032 Mbps, in increments of 32 kb (32 kbps, 64 kbps, 96 kbps, 128 kbps, and so on). Rates available for upstream traf???c start at 32 kbps and increase in
The modems on the SLC 8DMT train simultaneously in the upstream and downstream directions. Each modem ???rst tries to train at the con???gured rate at a speci???ed SNR margin. If the ???rst attempt fails in either direction but a CPE is detected, the modem tries to train at the highest rate possible (up to the con???gured rate). The modem keeps trying to train until it is successful.
Statistics
The SLC 8DMT gathers signal quality statistics for network management purposes and sends this information to the management system via SNMP. The SLC reports each of the following statistics to the management system for both upstream and downstream traf???c:
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Near and far end uncorrected blocks
Near and far end corrected blocks
Near and far end loss of signal (LOS) counter
Near end loss of frame (LOF) counter
Remote failure indication (RFI, or far end LOF)
Near and far end errored seconds
Near and far end attenuation
Near and far end SNR margin
Upstream and downstream actual rates
Number of nonidle cells transmitted downstream
Number of nonidle upstream cells received with valid header checksum
???Number of upstream cells received with invalid header checksum
???Number of errored seconds (this is the number of seconds in which at least one
In addition, the SLC 8DMT reports the following fault indications:
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Far end LPR
Near end LOS
Near end LOF
Near end loss of cell delineation (LOCD)
1.5.5 SLC 8DMT: Physical Description
Up to ten SLCs can be installed in a Cisco 6200 cabinet. The slots assigned to the SLCs are slot 5 through slot 14.
The card???s faceplate is labeled SLC 8DMT. The faceplate (Figure
SLC 8DMT
POWER
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PRIME
SEC
PORTS
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1
2
3
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5
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7
Card status LEDs
Port status LEDs
Reset switch
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Reset Switch
The reset switch is recessed behind the faceplate to avoid accidental activation. It is not for customer use.
LED Indicators
Table
1.5.6 SLC 8DMT Speci???cations
Table