Nortel DMS-100 Series User guide

BASE09 and up Standard 11.04 June 1998
297-1001-330
DMS-100 Family
Switch Performance
Monitoring System
Application Guide


DMS-100 Family Switch Performance Monitoring System Application Guide BASE09 and up
DMS-100 Family
Switch Performance Monitoring System
Application Guide
1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 Northern Telecom
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
NORTHERN TELECOM CONFIDENTIAL: The information contained in this document is the property of Northern
Telecom. Except as specifically authorized in writing by Northern Telecom, the holder of this document shall keep the
information contained herein confidential and shall protect same in whole or in part from disclosure and dissemination to third
parties and use same for evaluation, operation, and maintenance purposes only.
Information is subject to change without notice. Northern Telecom reserves the right to make changes in design or components
as progress in engineering and manufacturing may warrant.
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC
Rules, and the radio interference regulations of the Canadian Department of Communications. These limits are designed to
provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This
equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the in-
struction manual, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential area is
likely to cause harmful interference in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at the user’s own
expense. Allowing this equipment to be operated in such a manner as to not provide for proper answer supervision is a viola-
tion of Part 68 of FCC Rules, Docket No. 89-114, 55FR46066. This equipment is capable of providing users with access to
interstate providers of operator services through the use of equal access codes. Modifications by aggregators to alter these
capabilities is a violation of the Telephone Operator Consumer Service Improvement Act of 1990 and Part 68 of the FCC Rules.
DMS
,
DMS SuperNode
,
MAP, and
NT are trademarks of Northern Telecom.
Publication number: 297-1001-330
Product release: BASE09 and up
Document release: Standard 11.04
Date: June 1998


DMS-100 Family Switch Performance Monitoring System Application Guide BASE09 and up
iii
Publication history
June 1998 BASE09 Standard 11.04
•Technical review changes based on ProStar 80807.
February 1998BASE09 Standard 11.03
•Added indices AOPSPERF, APUFLT, ARUDAAV, ARUFLT,
DAMSGFLT, VSNFLT, and VSNLKFLT to the Operator Position
Performance (OPPOSPF) aggregate index.
•Revised the diagnostics description for basic index C7TRKCFL:
references to ISUP105, ISUP106, and ISUP107 logs changed to
C7UP105, C7UP106, and C7107 logs.
December 1997
BASE09 Standard 11.02
Revised to indicate which indices are supported in the DMS-100G switch.
August 1997 BASE09 Standard 11.01
Revised Chapter 2 to incorporate feature YR2006 (two-digit to four-digit
year for year 2000 transition)
May 1997 BCS36 Standard 10.06
•Technical review changes to Chapter 2
•Editing changes
March 1997 BCS36 Standard 10.05
Editing changes
November 1996
BCS36 Standard 10.04

iv Publication history
297-1001-330 Standard 11.04 June 1998
Revisions associated with PRS BY38912 and PRS BY43417
November 1995
BCS36 Standard 10.03
Added information on CONF60VF using the sum of CF6P measurement
CF6OVFL.
December 1993
BCS36 Standard 10.02
Added a note about the SPMS R95 and R80 values
September 1993
BCS36 Preliminary 10.01
updated aggregate indices XPMPERF, LMPERF, and LCMPERF
July 1992 BCS33 Standard 09.02
•added aggregate index SLMPERF and the following basic indices to the
terminals (TERMNALS) index of the maintenance performance
(MTCEPERF) index:
— SLMFAULT
— SLMSOUT
— SLMMOUT
•deleted basic index METERERR and replaced it with basic index
METERPF
•added names of OM groups to the measurement list section of the ENET
indices
•changed names of the OM group and registers associated with aggregate
index SMNMPF and basic indices SMTOERR, SMTOFLT, and
SMNOSYNC
•added and deleted indexes, added OM groups and changed names of OM
groups and register.
•changed names of the of aggregate index SMNMPF and basic indices
SMTOERR, SMTOFLT, and SMNOSYNC to APNMPF, APTOERR,
APTOFLT, and APNOSYNC

Publication history v
DMS-100 Family Switch Performance Monitoring System Application Guide BASE09 and up
•expanded the list of terms to include definitions
October 1991 BCS33 Standard 09.01
•modified startup procedures to include detailed information
•included the procedure to assign the OMRS report to table LOGCLASS
•included the explanation of the fields in table LOGCLASS
•added the procedure for defining the printer in order to print an
automatic SPMS report
•documented the aggregate index SMNMPF and the following basic
indices:
— SMTOERR
— SMTOFLT
— SMNOSYNC
March 1991 BCS32 Standard 08.01
•provided diagnostic information for the NETBLK and INTEGFL indices
•changed the output of the DISPLAY command to display ENET indices,
in offices equipped with ENET
•added CCS7 and ENET indices.
February 1990BCS30 Standard 07.01
•added procedure for automatically-generated SPMS reports
•added SETREP subcommand
•replaced outage indices with system-outage indices and manual-outage
indices


DMS-100 Family Switch Performance Monitoring System Application Guide BASE09 and up
vii
Contents
About this document xv
When to use this document xv
How to check the version and issue of this document xv
What precautionary messages mean xv
How commands, parameters, and responses are represented xvii
Input prompt (>) xvii
Commands and fixed parameters xvii
Variables xvii
Responses xvii
What is the switch performance monitoring system? 1-1
What can the switch performance monitoring system do for operating
companies? 1-1
Startup procedures 2-1
Setting the day of the month 2-1
SPMS automatic report setup 2-1
Assigning OMRS report to table LOGCLASS 2-4
Explanation of table LOGCLASS fields 2-5
Defining a printer 2-6
The SETREP subcommand 2-10
The SET subcommand 2-12
The DISPLAY subcommand 2-16
The DESCRIBE subcommand 2-19
The EXCEPTION subcommand 2-20
The indexing hierarchy 3-1
SPMS structure for DMS-100 3-2
SPMS structure for SuperNode 3-6
SPMS structure for ENET 3-10
SPMS structure for DMS-100G Switch 3-14
How to interpret SPMS reports 4-1
Daily and report month results 4-2
Demand reports 4-3
Operation in abnormal circumstances 4-4
Date changes 4-5
SPMS SERVICE index descriptions 5-1
Where to find an index 5-1

viii Contents
297-1001-330 Standard 11.04 June 1998
How the indices are presented 5-1
Aggregate index SERVICE 5-3
Aggregate index MTCESERV 5-4
Basic index OUTSIGFL 5-5
Aggregate index MTCACCS 5-6
Basic index CCRESET 5-7
Basic index ORGLNOUT 5-8
Basic index ORGPMBLK 5-9
Aggregate index INSIGFL 5-10
Basic index TINSIGFL 5-11
Basic index LINSIGFL 5-12
Basic index MISCFL 5-13
Aggregate index MTCCMPL 5-14
Aggergate index SPCHBLK 5-15
Basic index NETBLK 5-16
Basic index TRMPMBLK 5-18
Aggergate index LINOUTFL 5-19
Basic index TLINOUT 5-20
Basic index RNGFL 5-21
Aggregate index CUTOFFS 5-22
Aggergate index CTLCTO 5-23
Basic index CCCTO 5-24
Basic index PMCTO 5-25
Basic index INTEGFL 5-26
Aggregate index C7MSUPF 5-27
Basic index C7MSUFL 5-28
Basic index C7SCCPMP 5-29
Aggregate index PROVSERV 5-30
Aggregate index PROVACCS 5-31
Basic index DTSR 5-32
Basic index PMDNY 5-33
Basic index MISCDNY 5-34
Basic index MISCBLK 5-35
Aggregate index TRKPROV 5-36
Basic index NWMBLK 5-37
Basic index FINALBSY 5-38
Aggregate index INTFEATR 5-39
Basic index ICONFOVF 5-40
Basic index ICWTOVFL 5-41
Basic index IFDLOVFL 5-42
Basic index IWUCOVFL 5-43
Basic index C7GTWERR 5-44
SPMS MTCEPERF index descriptions 6-1
Where to find an index 6-1
How the indices are presented 6-1
Aggregate index MTCEPERF 6-3
Aggregate index Control 6-4
Aggregate index CCPERF 6-5
Basic index CCERRINT 6-6
Basic index CCFLT 6-7

Contents ix
DMS-100 Family Switch Performance Monitoring System Application Guide BASE09 and up
Basic index CCNOSYNC 6-8
Aggregate index CMCPERF 6-9
Basic index CMCERR 6-10
Basic index CMCFLT 6-11
Basic index CMCUSOUT 6-12
Basic index CMCUMOUT 6-13
Aggregate index IOCPERF 6-14
Basic index IOCERR 6-15
Basic index IOCFLT 6-16
Basic index IOCUSOUT 6-17
Basic index IOCUMOUT 6-18
Aggregate index EIOCPERF 6-19
Basic index EIOCERR 6-20
Basic index EIOCFLT 6-21
Basic index EIOCUSOU 6-22
Basic index EIOCUMOU 6-23
Aggregate index NMCPERF 6-24
Basic index NMCERR 6-25
Basic index NMCFLT 6-26
Basic index NMCUSOUT 6-27
Basic index NMCUMOUT 6-28
Aggregate index CMPERF for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-29
Basic index CMERRINT for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-30
Basic index CMFLT for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-31
Basic index CMNOSYNC for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-32
Aggregate index MSPERF for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-33
Basic index MSERR for SuperNode CONROL components 6-34
Basic index MSFLT for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-35
Basic index MSUSOUT for NETWORK INDEX components 6-36
Basic index MSUMOUT for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-37
Aggregate index MSCDPERF for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-38
Basic index MSCDERR for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-39
Basic index MSCDFLT for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-40
Basic index MSCDSOUT for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-41
Basic index MSCDMOUT for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-42
Aggregate index ENETPERF for ENET CONTROL components 6-43
Basic index ENETERR for ENET CONTROL components 6-44
Basic index ENETFLT for ENET CONTROL components 6-45
Basic index ENTSOUT for ENET CONTROL components 6-46
Basic index ENETSOUT 6-46
Basic index ENETMOUT for ENET CONTROL components 6-47
Aggregate index PMPERF 6-48
Aggregate index PMTOTPF 6-49
Basic index PMTOTERR 6-50
Basic index PMTOTFLT 6-51
Basic index PMTOUSOU 6-52
Basic index PMTOUMOU 6-53
Aggregate index APMPF for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-57
Basic index APTOERR for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-58
Basic index APTOFLT for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-59

x Contents
297-1001-330 Standard 11.04 June 1998
Basic index APNOSYNC for SuperNode CONTROL components 6-60
Aggregate index SOSPMPF 6-61
Basic index SOSPMERR 6-62
Basic index SOSPMFLT 6-63
Basic index SOSPMMOU 6-64
Basic index SOSPMSOU 6-65
Aggregate index TMPERF 6-66
Basic index TMERR 6-67
Basic index TMFLT 6-68
Basic index TMUSOUT 6-69
Basic index TMUMOUT 6-70
Aggregate index DCMPERF 6-71
Basic index DCMERR 6-72
Basic index DCMFLT 6-73
Basic index DCMUSOUT 6-74
Basic index DCMUMOUT 6-75
Aggregate index XPMPERF 6-76
Basic index XPMERR 6-77
Basic index XPMFLT 6-78
Basic index XPMUSOUT 6-79
Basic index XPMUMOUT 6-80
Aggregate index LMPERF 6-81
Basic index LMERR 6-82
Basic index LMFLT 6-83
Basic index LMUSOUT 6-84
Basic index LMUMOUT 6-85
Aggregate index LCMPERF 6-86
Basic index LCMERR 6-87
Basic index LCMFLT 6-88
Basic index LCMUSOUT 6-89
Basic index LCMUMOUT 6-90
Aggregate index SWINTEG 6-91
Aggregate index PMSWINTG 6-92
Basic index PMSWERR 6-93
Basic index PMTRAP 6-94
Aggregate index CCSWINTG 6-98
Basic index CCSWERR 6-99
Aggregate index TRAPS 6-100
Basic index NONCPTRP 6-101
Basic index CPTRAPS 6-102
Basic index CPUICDS 6-103
Aggregate index CCINT 6-104
Basic index CCWINIT 6-105
Basic index CCCINIT 6-106
Aggregate index BILLPERF 6-107
Basic index METERPF 6-108
Basic index AMADEVFL 6-109
Aggregate index LINKPERF 6-110
Aggregate index CMCLNKPF 6-111
Basic index CMCLNKER 6-112

Contents xi
DMS-100 Family Switch Performance Monitoring System Application Guide BASE09 and up
Basic index CMCLKSOU 6-113
Basic index CMCLKMUO 6-114
Aggregate index IOCLNKPF 6-115
Basic index IOCLNKER 6-116
Basic index IOCLKSUO 6-117
Basic index IOCLKMUO 6-118
Aggregate index MSLNKPF for SuperNode LINKPERF components 6-119
Basic index MSLNKERR for SuperNode LINKPERF components 6-120
Basic index MSLNKFLT for SuperNode LINKPERF components 6-121
Basic index MSLNKSUO for SuperNode LINKPERF components 6-122
Basic index MSLNKMUO for SuperNode LINKPERF components 6-123
Aggregate index NMLNKPF 6-124
Aggregate index NMMSGLPF 6-125
Basic index NMMSGLER 6-126
Basic index NMMSGLFL 6-127
Basic index NMSPCHER 6-129
Basic index NMSPCHFL 6-130
Basic index NMPTSOUT 6-131
Basic index NMPTMOUT 6-132
Basic index NMJCTSOU 6-133
Basic index NMJCTMOU 6-134
Aggregate index ENLKPERF for ENET LINKPERF components 6-135
Basic index ENLKERR for ENET LINKPERF components 6-136
Basic index ENLKFLT for ENET LINKPERF components 6-137
Basic index ENLKSOUT for ENET LINKPERF components 6-138
Basic index ENLKMOUT for ENET LINKPERF components 6-139
Basic index ENLKINAC for ENET LINKPERF components 6-140
Basic index ENLKISOL for ENET LINKPERF 6-141
Aggregate index PMLNKPF 6-142
Basic index PMLNKERR 6-143
Basic index PMLNKFLT 6-144
Basic index PMLKSUOU 6-145
Basic index PMLKMUOU 6-146
Aggregate index C7LNKPF 6-150
Aggregate index C7LINK 6-151
Basic index C7LNKSFL 6-152
Basic index C7LNKOUT 6-153
Basic index C7LSOUT 6-154
Aggregate index TERMNALS 6-155
Aggregate index IODEV 6-156
Aggregate index MTUPERF 6-157
Basic index MTUERR 6-158
Basic index MTUFLT 6-159
Basic index MTUSOUT 6-160
Basic index MTUMOUT 6-161
Aggregate index DDUPERF 6-162
Basic index DDUERR 6-163
Basic index DDUFLT 6-164
Basic index DDUSOUT 6-165
Basic index DDUMOUT 6-166

xii Contents
297-1001-330 Standard 11.04 June 1998
Aggregate index CONSOLPF 6-167
Basic index CSLERR 6-168
Basic index CSLSOUT 6-169
Basic index CSLMOUT 6-170
Aggregate index SRVCCTPF 6-171
Aggregate index CONFPERF 6-172
Basic index CNF3PERF 6-173
Basic index CNF6PERF 6-174
Basic index ANNSTNPF 6-175
Basic index ESUPPERF 6-176
Basic index RCVRPERF 6-177
Basic index SPECSVPF 6-178
Aggregate index OPPOSPF 6-179
Aggregate index TOPSPERF 6-180
Basic index TPOSFLT 6-181
Basic index TPOSOUT 6-182
Basic index VIRTCFL 6-183
Basic index CPOSPERF 6-184
Aggregate index AOSSPERF 6-185
Basic index AOSSPFLT 6-186
Basic index AOSSPOUT 6-187
Aggregate index ATTCONPF 6-188
Basic index ATTCNERR 6-189
Basic index ATTCNFLT 6-190
Aggregate index AOPSPERF 6-191
Basic index VSNFLT 6-192
Basic index VSNLKFLT 6-193
Basic index VPSCFLT 6-194
Basic index APUFLT 6-195
Basic Index DAMSGFLT 6-196
Basic index ARUFLT 6-197
Basic index ARUDAAV 6-198
Aggregate index SLMPERF 6-199
Basic index SLMFAULT 6-200
Basic index SLMSOUT 6-201
Basic index SLMMOUT 6-202
Aggregate index LINEPERF 6-203
Basic index LINEFLT 6-204
Basic index LINEOUT 6-205
Aggregate index TRKPERF 6-206
Basic index TRKFLT 6-207
Basic index INTRKSOU 6-208
Basic index INTRKMOU 6-209
Basic index OGTRKSOU 6-210
Basic index OGTRKMOU 6-211
Basic index C7TRKCFL 6-212
Aggregate index CARRPERF 6-213
Basic index CARRERR 6-214
Basic index CARRFLT 6-215
Basic index CARRSOUT 6-216

Contents xiii
DMS-100 Family Switch Performance Monitoring System Application Guide BASE09 and up
Basic index CARRMOUT 6-217
Aggregate index C7RTPERF 6-218
Aggregate index C7ROUTE 6-219
Basic index C7RTDEGR 6-220
Basic index C7RTOUT 6-221
Aggregate index C7RTSET 6-222
Basic index C7RTSTCO 6-223
Basic index C7RTSTOU 6-224
SPMS PROVRES index descriptions 7-1
Where to find an index 7-1
How the indices are presented 7-1
Aggregate PROVRES 7-3
Aggregate index CPRES 7-4
Basic index CCOCCUP 7-5
Basic index CCBOVFL 7-6
Basic index CPMAXBSY 7-7
Basic index CPLOVFL 7-8
Basic index OUTBOVFL 7-9
Basic index MULTBOVF 7-10
Basic index WAKEOVFL 7-11
Basic index ECCBOVFL 7-12
Aggregate index FIRQRES 7-13
Basic index FQAGOVFL 7-14
Basic index FQ0WOVFL 7-15
Basic index FQ2WOVFL 7-16
Basic index FQ4WOVFL 7-17
Basic index FQ8WOVFL 7-18
Basic index FQ16WOVFL 7-19
Basic index FQ32WOVFL 7-20
Aggregate index EXTBLKS 7-21
Aggregate index FTREXT 7-22
Aggregate index BILLEXT 7-25
Aggregate index SRVCTRES 7-27
Basic index ANNOVFL 7-28
Basic index STNOVFL 7-29
Basic index UTROVFL 7-30
Basic index ESUPOVFL 7-31
Basic index SPSVOVFL 7-32
Aggregate index CONFRES 7-33
Basic index CONF3OVF 7-34
Basic index CONF6OVF 7-35
Aggregate index RCVRES 7-36
Aggregate index CHANRES 7-44
Basic index NETCHOVF 7-45
Basic index LPMCHAN 7-46
The relationships of OMs to SPMS 8-1
Multiple tuple OM groups used in SPMS 8-1
Other OM groups used in SPMS 8-3

xiv Contents
297-1001-330 Standard 11.04 June 1998
How SPMS index values are calculated 9-1
Basic indices 9-1
Aggregate indices 9-1
Calculating basic indices 9-1
Calculating aggregate indices 9-3
List of terms 10-1

DMS-100 Family Switch Performance Monitoring System Application Guide BASE09 and up
xv
About this document
When to use this document
This document provides information and index descriptions for the switch
performance monitoring system (SPMS). It is intended for use by operating
companies with feature package NTX738AB.
How to check the version and issue of this document
The version and issue of the document are indicated by numbers, for
example, 01.01.
The first two digits indicate the version. The version number increases each
time the document is updated to support a new software release. For
example, the first release of a document is 01.01. In the next software
release cycle, the first release of the same document is 02.01.
The second two digits indicate the issue. The issue number increases each
time the document is revised but rereleased in the same software release
cycle. For example, the second release of a document in the same software
release cycle is 01.02.
To determine which version of this document applies to the software in your
office and how documentation for your product is organized, check the
release information in Product Documentation Directory, 297-8991-001.
This document is written for all DMS-100 Family offices. More than one
version of this document may exist. To determine whether you have the
latest version of this document and how documentation for your product is
organized, check the release information in Product Documentation
Directory, 297-8991-001.
What precautionary messages mean
The types of precautionary messages used in NT documents include
attention boxes and danger, warning, and caution messages.
An attention box identifies information that is necessary for the proper
performance of a procedure or task or the correct interpretation of

xvi About this document
297-1001-330 Standard 11.04 June 1998
information or data. Danger, warning, and caution messages indicate
possible risks.
Examples of the precautionary messages follow.
ATTENTION Information needed to perform a task
ATTENTION
If the unused DS-3 ports are not deprovisioned before a DS-1/VT
Mapper is installed, the DS-1 traffic will not be carried through the
DS-1/VT Mapper, even though the DS-1/VT Mapper is properly
provisioned.
DANGER Possibility of personal injury
DANGER
Risk of electrocution
Do not open the front panel of the inverter unless fuses
F1, F2, and F3 have been removed. The inverter contains
high-voltage lines. Until the fuses are removed, the
high-voltage lines are active, and you risk being
electrocuted.
WARNING Possibility of equipment damage
WARNING
Damage to the backplane connector pins
Align the card before seating it, to avoid bending the
backplane connector pins. Use light thumb pressure to
align the card with the connectors. Next, use the levers on
the card to seat the card into the connectors.
CAUTION Possibility of service interruption or degradation
CAUTION
Possible loss of service
Before continuing, confirm that you are removing the card
from the inactive unit of the peripheral module.
Subscriber service will be lost if you remove a card from
the active unit.

About this document xvii
DMS-100 Family Switch Performance Monitoring System Application Guide BASE09 and up
How commands, parameters, and responses are represented
Commands, parameters, and responses in this document conform to the
following conventions.
Input prompt (>)
An input prompt (>) indicates that the information that follows is a
command:
>BSY
Commands and fixed parameters
Commands and fixed parameters that are entered at a MAP terminal are
shown in uppercase letters:
>BSY CTRL
Variables
Variables are shown in lowercase letters:
>BSY CTRL ctrl_no
The letters or numbers that the variable represents must be entered. Each
variable is explained in a list that follows the command string.
Responses
Responses correspond to the MAP display and are shown in a different type:
FP 3 Busy CTRL 0: Command request has been submitted.
FP 3 Busy CTRL 0: Command passed.
The following excerpt from a procedure shows the command syntax used in
this document:
Manually busy the CTRL on the inactive plane by typing
>BSY CTRL ctrl_no
and pressing the Enter key.
where
ctrl_no is the number of the CTRL (0 or 1)
Example of a MAP response
:
FP 3 Busy CTRL 0: Command request has been submitted.
FP 3 Busy CTRL 0: Command passed.
1

Other manuals for DMS-100 Series
19
Table of contents