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READ ME The 2290 Remote Access Gateway runs on open system communications servers. This flexibility requires a sophisticated installation process and an attentive installer. Please review the contents of Chapters 2 through 5 before you remove the hardware from the box. Use Chapter 2 to determine information specific to your T1 trunk. Use Chapter 3 to prepare for use one of the recommended PCs. Use Chapter 4 to prepare for use all other PCs. Use Chapter 5 to set the switches on the hardware and install it in your server.

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READ METhe 2290 Remote Access Gateway runs on open system communicationsservers. This flexibility requires a sophisticated installation process and anattentive installer.

Please review the contents of Chapters 2 through 5 before you remove thehardware from the box.

� Use Chapter 2 to determine information specific to your T1 trunk.

� Use Chapter 3 to prepare for use one of the recommended PCs.

� Use Chapter 4 to prepare for use all other PCs.

� Use Chapter 5 to set the switches on the hardware and install it in yourserver.

READ METhe 2290 Remote Access Gateway runs on open system communicationsservers. This flexibility requires a sophisticated installation process and anattentive installer.

Please review the contents of Chapters 2 through 5 before you remove thehardware from the box.

� Use Chapter 2 to determine information specific to your T1 trunk.

� Use Chapter 3 to prepare for use one of the recommended PCs.

� Use Chapter 4 to prepare for use all other PCs.

� Use Chapter 5 to set the switches on the hardware and install it in yourserver.

Printed on recycled paper

2290 Remote Access Gatewayfor Windows NT

User’s Guide

Document No. 2290-A2-GB20-00

September 1996

Getting Started
To browse the 2290 Remote Access Gateway for Windows NT User's Guide: 1. Move the cursor over the bookmark (topics listed to the left of the screen) or a linked area (Chapter/Section titles highlighted in red). The cursor changes into the pointing finger icon. 2. Click to jump to the linked page. The Acrobat Reader program provides a number of ways to browse a document. For more information, click Help on the Menu bar.

A 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Copyright � 1996 Paradyne Corporation.All rights reserved.Printed in U.S.A.

Notice

This publication is protected by federal copyright law. No part of this publication may be copied or distributed,transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any human or computer language in any formor by any means, electronic, mechanical, magnetic, manual or otherwise, or disclosed to third parties without theexpress written permission of Paradyne Corporation, 8545 126th Avenue North, P.O. Box 2826, Largo,Florida 33779-2826.

Paradyne Corporation makes no representation or warranties with respect to the contents hereof and specificallydisclaims any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. Further, Paradyne Corporationreserves the right to revise this publication and to make changes from time to time in the contents hereof withoutobligation of Paradyne Corporation to notify any person of such revision or changes.

Changes and enhancements to the product and to the information herein will be documented and issued as a newrelease to this manual.

Trademarks

All products and services mentioned herein are the trademarks, service marks, registered trademarks or registeredservice marks of their respective owners.

Warranty

Paradyne provides a limited warranty to this product. Refer to the warranty card for more information.

i2290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Contents

Preface� About This Document v. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Chapter Summary v. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Related Documents vi. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� World Wide Web Uniform Resource Locators vi. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

1 The 2290 Remote Access Gateway� Components 1-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Features and Capabilities 1-4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Installation Overview 1-5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2 Preparation: T1 Service� Preparation Checklist 2-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� T1 Ordering Information 2-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

T1-PRI Service 2-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

T1-RBS Service 2-3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Completing the Trunk Configuration Worksheet 2-4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

3 Preparation: Setting Up Recommended PCs� Preparation Checklist 3-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Installing Windows NT 3-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Using the Readme File 3-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Preparing the PC BIOS 3-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

4 Preparation: Setting Up Other PCs� Preparation Checklist 4-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Selecting a Server PC 4-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Installing Windows NT 4-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Using the Readme File 4-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Using Windows NT Diagnostics 4-3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Completing the Card Configuration Worksheet 4-6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Preparing the PC BIOS 4-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Contents

ii 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

5 Installing the Cards� Card Installation Checklist 5-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Read First 5-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Preparing the PC Hardware 5-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Verifying the T1 Card Switch Settings 5-3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Inserting the T1 Card 5-6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Verifying the OCD Card Switch Settings 5-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Setting the I/O Base Address Switches 5-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Setting the IRQ Switches 5-13. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Setting the Bus Termination Switches 5-15. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Inserting the OCD Card 5-16. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Connecting the MVIP Cable 5-17. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Reassembly and Cabling 5-18. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Troubleshooting Procedure 5-19. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

6 Installing and Configuring the Software� Software Installation Checklist 6-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Installing the 2290 Remote Access Gateway Software 6-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Configuration Utility 6-3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Adapter I/O Configuration 6-4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

RAM Windows Configuration 6-6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

T1 Card Configuration 6-7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Channel Usage Configuration 6-9. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Phone Configuration 6-10. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

OCD Cards Configuration 6-11. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Configuration Utility Completion 6-11. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� RAS Configuration 6-12. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Diagnostic Transport Driver Installation 6-13. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Running a Full System Test 6-15. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Installing a Second Adapter 6-15. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

7 2290 Administration� Administration Utility 7-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Resource Selection 7-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Resource Information 7-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Current Status 7-3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Test Results 7-4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Latest Statistics 7-5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Contents

iii2290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

� Administration Actions 7-6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Enable/Disable 7-6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Busy Out/UnBusy 7-7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Hang Up 7-7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Test 7-7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Abort Test 7-7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Clear/Get Statistics 7-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Clear Results 7-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Performance Monitor 7-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Ending the Administration Utility 7-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

8 2290 Online Status Monitor� Starting the Status Monitor 8-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� T1 Card Status 8-3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Trunk Status 8-3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� OCD Card Status 8-4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� T1 Port Status 8-5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Online Status Display Refresh Rate 8-6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

9 Tests and Diagnostics� OCD Card Components 9-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Administration Utility OCD Tests 9-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

CD Test 9-3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Paired CD Test 9-4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Comprehensive OCD Test 9-5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Full System Test 9-6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� T1 Card Status Indicators 9-7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� T1 Card Power-Up and Initialization 9-7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� T1 Card Diagnostic Utilities 9-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Connecting a Terminal 9-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Viewing the Diagnostics Menu 9-9. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

10 Maintenance Procedures� Upgrading Software 10-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Removing an Adapter 10-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Removing or Replacing a Card 10-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Contents

iv 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

A Windows NT Event Log

B Pin Assignments� T1 Card Interfaces B-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Bus Interfaces B-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

ISA Bus B-2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

MVIP Bus B-4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Network Interfaces B-5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

� Diagnostic Port B-6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

C Recommended PCs� Characteristics of Recommended PCs C-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

D AT Command Summary� AT Commands D-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

E Worksheets� Extra Worksheets E-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Glossary

Index

v2290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Preface

About This Document

This guide contains information about the installation and operation of the 2290 Remote Access Gateway.

Chapter Summary

Section Description

Chapter 1 The 2290 Remote Access Gateway. Provides anoverview of the product and its features.

Chapter 2 Preparation: T1 Service. Describes how to orderT1-PRI or T1-RBS service, and how to record yoursetup on a Trunk Configuration worksheet.

Chapter 3 Preparation: Setting Up Recommended PCs. Explainsthe preparation required for server PCs recommendedfor use with the 2290 Remote Access Gateway.

Chapter 4 Preparation: Setting Up Other PCs. Explains thepreparation required for any server PC that canaccommodate the 2290 Remote Access Gateway.

Chapter 5 Installing the Cards. Explains how to install andconfigure the hardware.

Chapter 6 Installing and Configuring the Software. Explains howto install and configure the software.

Chapter 7 2290 Administration. Describes the Administrationdialog.

Chapter 8 2290 Online Status Monitor. Describes the OnlineStatus Monitor.

Chapter 9 Tests and Diagnostics. Describes the tests anddiagnostics.

Preface

vi 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Section Description

Chapter 10 Maintenance Procedures. Explains how to upgradesoftware, remove an adapter, and replace a card.

Appendix A Windows NT Event Log. Lists the entries that the 2290 Remote Access Gateway can put in the Windows NT Event Log.

Appendix B Pin Assignments. Provides pin assignments for the T1 card interfaces.

Appendix C Recommended PCs. Lists server PCs recommendedfor use with the 2290 Remote Access Gateway.

Appendix D AT Command Summary. Lists the AT commandssupported by the 2290 Remote Access Gateway.

Appendix E Worksheets. Provides extra copies of blank CardConfiguration and Trunk Configuration Worksheets.

Glossary Defines acronyms and terms used in this guide.

Related Documents

Document Number Document Title

2290-A2-GX40 Octal Communications Device Safety, Regulatory,and Equipment Return Information

2290-A2-GX41 PRI-ATTP-2T-CSU T1/ISDN Controller Safety,Regulatory, and Equipment Return Information

Call your sales representative to order additional product documentation.

World Wide Web Uniform Resource Locators

World Wide Web URL Location

http://www.paradyne.com/ Home page of Paradyne. Use to access productinformation, training schedules, and coursedescriptions.

http://www.mvip.org/ Home page of GO-MVIP, Inc. Use to joinGO-MVIP or to order specifications.

1-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

The 2290 Remote AccessGateway

1Components

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway is designed for open system communicationsservers running Microsoft Windows NT. It consists of:

� One or more T1 cards

� One or more Octal Communications Device (OCD) cards for ISDN andV-series operation, each card capable of eight simultaneous communicationfunctions

� An MVIP cable to connect the T1 and OCD cards

� Device driver software

� Configuration software

� Administration software

� Online Status Monitor software

� User documentation

Each T1 card can accommodate two T1 lines.

Each OCD card comprises eight Communications Devices (CDs).

Each T1 and OCD card set is defined as a single adapter to Windows NT RemoteAccess Service (RAS).

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway

1-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

The following table and the illustration on the facing page show threeconfigurations of the 2290 Remote Access Gateway.

Number ofCards

Numberof T1Trunks

AdapterName* Card Designations

1 T1 card, 3 OCD cards

1 RAG-x T1-1, OCD1, OCD2, OCD3

1 T1 card, 6 OCD cards

2 RAG-x T1-1, OCD1, OCD2, OCD3, OCD4, OCD5, OCD6

2 T1 cards, 9 OCD cards

3 RAG-xRAG-y

T1-1 , OCD1, OCD2, OCD3, OCD4, OCD5, OCD6T1-2, OCD7, OCD8, OCD9

*Numbers in adapter names (shown as x and y here) are assigned by the system.

Use the following order numbers for complete 2290 Remote Access Gatewayadapters (T1 card, OCD cards, MVIP cable, software, and documentation):

Adapter Order Number

2290 Remote Access Gateway, 24 ports 2290-F1-311

2290 Remote Access Gateway, 48 ports 2290-F1-612

Components of the 2290 Remote Access Gateway can also be orderedindividually:

Component Order Number

T1 Card 2290-F1-901

OCD Card 2290-B1-001

MVIP Cable, 4-ConnectorMVIP Cable, 7-Connector

2290-F1-5042290-F1-507

Software (diskettes) and User’s Guide 2290-M1-001

User’s Guide 2290-A2-GB20

T1 Card Safety and Regulatory Information 2290-A2-GX41

OCD Card Safety and Regulatory Information 2290-A2-GX40

You must supply the T1 cable or cables. See Appendix B.

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway

1-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

496 -15105

1 T1 Card3 OCD Cards (24 CDs)1 T1 Trunk

1 T1 Card6 OCD Cards (48 CDs)2 T1 Trunks

2 T1 Cards9 OCD Cards (72 CDs)3 T1 Trunks

2290-F1-311

2290-F1-612

2290-F1-311

2290-F1-612

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway

1-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Features and Capabilities

The following table shows some of the features and capabilities of the 2290Remote Access Gateway.

Attribute Supported Features

Telephone Service Type PSTN and ISDN

Network Interface T1-PRI, T1-RBS, and Fractional T1-RBS

Modem Modulation ITU-T V.34 (plus 33,600 and 31,200 bps data rates),V.32bis, V.32, V.22bis. V.22, V.21, Bell 212A, and Bell 103J

Modem Compression MNP 5 and V.42bis

Error Correction MNP 2, MNP 3, MNP 4, and V.42

Remote Access Protocol PPP

Network Protocol Compatibility TCP/IP, IPX, Appletalk, TN3270, LAT, telnet, andrlogin

NMS Capabilities Configuration tracking, diagnostics, and call statistics

Security Application-level PAP and CHAP

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway

1-52290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Installation Overview

The next chapters describe how to install the 2290 Remote Access Gateway. Themajor steps are listed below. If you are installing two adapters, install the firstadapter and the 2290 software before you install the second adapter.

Chapter 2 — T1 Service

� Order T1 service

� Complete the Trunk Configuration Worksheet

Chapter 3 — Setup for Recommended PCs

� Install Windows NT

� Check the readme file

� Set up the BIOS of your PC

Chapter 4 — Setup for Other PCs

� Install Windows NT

� Check the readme file

� Identify free IRQs, I/O addresses, and memory addresses

� Complete the Card Configuration Worksheet

� Set up the BIOS of your PC

Chapter 5 — Hardware Installation

� Shut down and open your PC

� Take standard precautions against electrostatic discharge

� Set the I/O address switches on the T1 card and insert it

� Set the I/O address, IRQ, and termination switches on the OCD cards andinsert them

� Connect the cards to each other

� Connect the T1 card to the trunk

Chapter 6 — Software Installation

� Copy the software from the installation disks

� Configure the 2290 software

� Configure RAS

� Install the Diagnostic Transport Driver

2-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Preparation: T1 Service

2Preparation Checklist

Preparation for the installation of the 2290 Remote Access Gateway involves thefollowing steps, which are described in this chapter:

� Order T1 service

� Complete the Trunk Configuration Worksheet

T1 Ordering Information

Ordering T1 service from your service provider requires providing your dataservice requirements. The service offered by the service provider depends on theprotocols and switch types available.

In most cases, to order T1 service you need to call the appropriate telephonecompany, commonly known as a Regional Bell Operating Company (RBOC), foryour area. To determine your RBOC, call the business office of your localtelephone company. T1 service providers and their telephone numbers are listedbelow. Order T1-PRI or T1-RBS service.

Preparation: T1 Service

2-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Service ProviderTelephone Number forT1-PRI

Telephone Number forT1-RBS

Ameritech 1-(800) 832-6328 1-(800) 832-6328

Bell Atlantic 1-(800) 570-4736 1-(800) 843-2255

Bellcore 1-(800) 992-4736 Call your local businessoffice

BellSouth 1-(800) 428-4736 1-(800) 648-0248

Cincinnati Bell 1-(513) 566-3282 1-(513) 566-3282

GTE 1-(800) 888-8799 1-(800) 483-4926

Nevada Bell 1-(702) 333-4811 1-(702) 688-7100

NYNEX 1-(800) 438-4736 1-(800) 343-4343

Pacific Bell 1-(800) 472-4736 Contact your accountrepresentative

Rochester Telephone 1-(716) 777-1234 1-(716) 777-1234

Southern New England Telephone 1-(800) 430-4736 1-(800) 447-6386

Stentor Canada 1-(800) 578-4736 Call your provincialphone company

Southwestern Bell 1-(800) 992-4736 Call your local businessoffice

US West 1-(800) 246-5226 Call your local businessoffice

T1-PRI Service

PRI ISDN service is defined as twenty-three B-channels and one D-channel. (The2290 Remote Access Gateway does not support associated D-channelsignaling.) Specify that the B-channels be configured for circuit switched data.The D-channel is used by the telephone company and ISDN equipment forsignaling and network management.

Specify a Universal Service Order Code of 6.0F.

You can also order PRI ISDN Service directly from a long distance carrier such asAT&T, MCI, or SPRINT.

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2-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

When you place the order:

The RBOC provides the . . . Which is . . .

Service order number The RBOC’s reference number for your installation.

Due date The scheduled date for your installation.

Directory ID Your Billing Telephone Number (BTN).

Circuit ID The number that identifies the circuit between your location andthe CO. This is provided at the time of installation.

Switch type The model of the switching equipment used by your localtelephone company.

Variant The set of standards used in association with the switch type.

Phone number type The ITU-T-defined calling party phone number type.

Phone number plan The ITU-T-defined calling party phone number plan.

Record this information on a Trunk Configuration worksheet. Extra copies arecontained in Appendix E.

T1-RBS Service

Order full DS1 service, defined as twenty-four channels carrying 64 kbps each, orfractional DS1 service, which provides use of some smaller number of channels.

When you place the order:

The RBOC provides the . . . Which is . . .

Framing type The structure of data frames.

Line Coding type The way the data is encoded for transmission.

Line Build Out value A transmit level used to compensate for distance.

In-Start type A signaling mode.

Out-Start type A signaling mode.

Performance monitor The standard for collection of statistics.

Local phone number The number users dial to access your 2290 Remote AccessGateway.

Phone number type The ITU-T-defined calling party phone number type.

Phone number plan The ITU-T-defined calling party phone number plan.

Some features of the service may be negotiable between you and the RBOC;some features may be unavailable. Record the information on a TrunkConfiguration worksheet. Extra copies are contained in Appendix E.

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2-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Completing the Trunk Configuration Worksheet

Your service provider gives you the information necessary to configure your trunkwhen you order your service.

If you prefer not to write in this section, use one of the extra worksheets inAppendix E. Circle or fill in the correct selections, guided by your service provider.

If you install two adapters using three trunks, use a separate worksheet forTrunk C. (See Chapter 1 for information about the relationships of adapters,trunks, and cards.)

Default values are the first entry in each list of settings, or the number inparentheses. Settings are explained following the worksheet.

Trunk Configuration Worksheet (1 of 2)

Setting Trunk A Trunk B

Framing ESFSF

ESFSF

Line Coding B8ZSAMI

B8ZSAMI

Line Build Out 0.0 dB–7.5 dB

–15.0 dB–22.5 dB

0.0 dB–7.5 dB

–15.0 dB–22.5 dB

Trunk Type T1-RBST1-PRI

T1-RBST1-PRI

Switch Type (T1-PRI only) AT&T 5ESSAT&T 4ESSNorthern Telecom DMS-100Northern Telecom DMS-250Ericsson MD-110 T1Siemens

AT&T 5ESSAT&T 4ESSNorthern Telecom DMS-100Northern Telecom DMS-250Ericsson MD-110 T1Siemens

In-Start (T1-RBS only)

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

Out-Start (T1-RBS only)

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

Q931 Variant (T1-PRI only)

AT&T CustomNorthern TelecomBellcore National (ISDN-2)

AT&T CustomNorthern TelecomBellcore National (ISDN-2)

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Trunk Configuration Worksheet (2 of 2)

Setting Trunk BTrunk A

Performance Monitor (T1-RBS only)

OffAT&TBellcore

OffAT&TBellcore

Clock Source Trunk ATrunk BInternal

No Accept Timeout _____ seconds

(30–60; default 30)

No Answer Timeout _____ seconds

(5–120; default 30)

No Connect Timeout_____ seconds(5–60; default 30)

No Close Call Timeout_____ seconds(5–30; default 10)

Channel Usage 1 7 13 192 8 14 203 9 15 214 10 16 225 11 17 236 12 18 24

(default 1–24)

1 7 13 192 8 14 203 9 15 214 10 16 225 11 17 236 12 18 24

(default 1–24)

Local Phone Number(T1-PRI only) — —

Phone Number Type(T1 PRI only)

NationalInternationalAbbreviatedSubscriberUnknown

NationalInternationalAbbreviatedSubscriberUnknown

Phone Number Plan(T1 PRI only)

ISDNTelephonyPrivateUnknown

ISDNTelephonyPrivateUnknown

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2-6 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Use the following instructions and information from your service provider to fill inthe Trunk Configuration Worksheet.

� Procedure

1. Select the Framing structure used on the trunk line:

— ESF (Extended Super Frame)

— SF (Super Frame)

The default is ESF.

2. Select the Line Coding supported by the trunk:

— B8ZS (Bipolar 8 Zero Substitution)

— AMI (Alternate Mark Inversion)

The default is B8ZS.

3. Line Build Out adjusts the amount of equalization needed on the T1interface to compensate for line loss, based on the distance between theadapter and the cross-connect point. Select:

— 0.0 dB

— –7.5 dB

— –15.0 dB

— –22.5 dB

The default is 0.0 dB.

4. Select the Trunk Type :

— T1-RBS

— T1-PRI

The default is T1-RBS.

5. Switch Type is the physical switching equipment that supplies your line. ForT1-PRI lines, select:

— AT&T 5ESS

— AT&T 4ESS

— Northern Telecom DMS-100

— Northern Telecom DMS-250

— Ericsson MD-110 T1

— Siemens

The default is AT&T 5ESS.

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6. In-Start is the trunk start option for incoming calls. For T1-RBS trunks, select:

— Wink

— Immediate

— Loop

— Ground

— Loop-FXO

— Ground-FXO

The default is Wink.

7. Out-Start is the trunk start option for outgoing calls. For T1-RBS trunks,select:

— Wink

— Immediate

— Loop

— Ground

— Loop-FXO

— Ground-FXO

The default is Wink.

8. Specify the Q931 Variant (the implementation of the ITU-T Q.931recommendation used on the line). It usually follows the Switch Type. ForT1-PRI trunks, select:

— AT&T Custom (PUB 41449)

— Northern Telecom (NIS A211-1)

— Bellcore National ISDN-2 (TR-NWT-001268)

The default is AT&T Custom.

9. Specify the type of Performance Monitor the T1 card is to comply with.When enabled, the card maintains statistics that can be retrieved by thenetwork service provider and the server. Performance monitoring is availableonly on a T1-RBS trunk when ESF framing is used. Select:

— Off

— AT&T (TR-54016)

— Bellcore (ANSI T1.403-1989)

The default is Off.

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10. Specify the Clock Source used to transmit data and drive the MVIP bus. TheClock Source is used by both trunks. Select:

— Trunk A

— Trunk B

— Internal

The default is Trunk A.

11. No Accept Timeout is the amount of time the driver will wait for a call to beaccepted after arrival. Enter a value from 30 to 60 seconds. The default valueof 30 seconds is suitable for most environments.

12. No Answer Timeout is the amount of time the driver will wait for an outgoingcall to be answered. Enter a value from 5 to 120 seconds. The default valueof 30 seconds is suitable for most environments.

13. No Connect Timeout is the amount of time the driver will wait for a call to beconnected. Enter a value from 5 to 60 seconds. The default value of 30 seconds is suitable for most environments.

14. No Close Call Timeout is the amount of time the driver will wait for thesystem to close a call after hangup. Enter a value from 5 to 30 seconds. Thedefault value of 10 seconds is suitable for most environments.

15. Specify Channel Usage , the channels to be assigned to the 2290 RemoteAccess Gateway. The default is all 24 channels. (For T1-PRI, Channel 24 isalways used for D channel signaling.)

16. For T1-PRI trunks, Local Phone Number is the ITU-T calling party phonenumber, supplied to the network when the system places a call.

17. Phone Number Type is the ITU-T calling party number type, supplied to thenetwork when the system places a call. For T1-PRI trunks, select:

— National

— International

— Abbreviated

— Subscriber

— Unknown

The default is National (North American).

18. Phone Number Plan is the ITU-T calling party number plan, supplied to thenetwork when the system places a call. For T1-PRI trunks, select:

— ISDN

— Telephony

— Private

— Unknown

The default is ISDN.

3-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Preparation: Setting UpRecommended PCs

3Preparation Checklist

See Appendix C for a list of recommended PCs. If you are not using arecommended PC, or you have installed hardware in it that changed its defaultconfiguration, proceed to Chapter 4, Preparation: Setting Up Other PCs.

Your PC must have a monitor with a resolution of at least 800 x 600 pixels.

Preparation for the installation of the 2290 Remote Access Gateway inrecommended PCs involves the following steps, which are described in thischapter:

� Install Windows NT

� View or print the readme file

� Set up the BIOS of your PC

Installing Windows NT

Install Windows NT before installing the 2290 Remote Access Gateway. The2290 Remote Access Gateway requires Microsoft Windows NT Server Version3.51. If it is not yet installed, do not install RAS (Remote Access Service) now.RAS will be installed in the course of installing and configuring the 2290 RemoteAccess Gateway software.

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Using the Readme File

A “readme” text file with device-specific installation information is included withthe 2290 Remote Access Gateway. It may include information necessary toprepare your PC.

To view the readme file before software installation, follow these steps.

� Procedure

1. Insert the first 2290 Remote Access Gateway installation disk.

2. Double-click on the Notepad icon in the Accessories program group.

3. From the File menu, select Open. In the File Name field, type:

a:\readme.txt

Click on OK.

4. Print the file, if desired, by selecting Print from the File menu.

5. Scan the file for information relevant to your installation.

The readme file also is available as an icon in the 2290 Remote Access Gatewayprogram group after software installation.

Preparing the PC BIOS

Depending on the type and settings of your Basic Input/Output System (BIOS),portions of PC memory may be read from a high-speed CPU cache instead ofdirectly. This feature must be disabled for the address ranges used by theT1 and OCD cards.

To determine whether you need to change the BIOS of a recommended PC, seethe readme file.

If you are using a recommended PC, proceed with Chapter 5 , Installing theCards.

4-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Preparation: Setting UpOther PCs

4Preparation Checklist

See Appendix C for a list of recommended PCs. If you are using one of therecommended PCs and have installed no hardware in it yet that would change itsdefault configuration, then skip this chapter and proceed with Chapter 5, Installingthe Cards.

Preparation for the installation of the 2290 Remote Access Gateway in other PCsinvolves the following steps, which are described in this chapter:

� Select a PC

� Install Windows NT

� View or print the readme file

� Identify free IRQs, I/O addresses, and memory addresses

� Complete the Card Configuration Worksheet

� Set up the BIOS of your PC

Selecting a Server PC

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway can be installed on a UL-listed, CSA-certifiedPC on the Microsoft Windows NT Version 3.5 Hardware Compatibility List thatcan accommodate full-size (13-inch) ISA cards. It must have the followingcharacteristics.

� The PC must have enough free 16-bit full-size ISA slots on a single bus forthe number of T1 and OCD cards you plan to install.

� The monitor must have a resolution of at least 800 x 600 pixels.

� The power supply must provide 4 amps of 5-volt current for each OCD card,and 2 amps of 5-volt current for each T1 card. The maximum configuration(nine OCDs and two T1 cards) requires 40 amps.

Appendix C shows the characteristics of recommended PCs.

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4-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Installing Windows NT

Install Windows NT before installing the 2290 Remote Access Gateway. The2290 Remote Access Gateway requires Microsoft Windows NT Server Version3.51. If it is not yet installed, do not install RAS (Remote Access Service) now.RAS will be installed in the course of installing and configuring the 2290 RemoteAccess Gateway software.

Using the Readme File

A “readme” text file with device-specific installation information is included withthe 2290 Remote Access Gateway. It may include information necessary toprepare your PC.

To view the readme file before software installation, follow these steps.

� Procedure

1. Insert the first 2290 Remote Access Gateway installation disk.

2. Double-click on the Notepad icon in the Accessories program group.

3. From the File menu, select Open. In the File Name field, type:

a:\readme.txt

Click on OK.

4. Print the file, if desired, by selecting Print from the File menu.

5. Scan the file for information relevant to your installation.

The readme file also is available as an icon in the 2290 Remote Access Gatewayprogram group after software installation.

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4-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Using Windows NT Diagnostics

If you are using one of the recommended PCs listed in Appendix C, and haveinstalled no hardware in it that would alter its default configuration, then skip thischapter and proceed with Chapter 5, Installing the Cards.

If you already know what IRQs, I/O addresses, and memory addresses areavailable on your PC, proceed with Completing the Card ConfigurationWorksheet on page 4-6.

Windows NT Diagnostics can help you locate free IRQs and I/O and memoryaddresses on your PC. If you prefer not to write in this section, use one of theextra worksheets in Appendix E.

CAUTION:The use of some I/O addresses may not be detected by Windows NTDiagnostics. If you are not using a recommended PC, ask themanufacturer of your PC whether any I/O addresses are restricted foruse.

� Procedure

1. Double-click on the Administrative Tools program group to open it.Double-click on the Windows NT Diagnostics icon.

2. From the File menu, select Print Report.

3. From the list of report areas, select Devices and DMA/Memory.

4. If you do not have a printer available, you can display Device Details andDMA/Memory on your screen.

If you have a printer, click on OK to print the report.

5. On the Microsoft Diagnostics Report (or your your screen), check for Vectornumbers in the Interrupt section. A Vector is the IRQ of the device. If there isa Vector number of 10, 11, 12, 14, or 15 shown, cross off that number in thetable below. Do this for each Vector number shown.

IRQs (Vectors)

10 11 12 14 15

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4-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

6. Check for addresses in the Port section of the report (or your screen). ThePhysical Address and Length columns represent the I/O addresses in use.(An x or 0x prefix means the values are in hexadecimal.)

Add the Length value to the Physical Address value to determine the nextavailable address. If the device’s I/O address matches or overlaps anyaddress in the table below, cross off that address. Addresses that are invalidfor the 2290 Remote Access Gateway are already crossed off.

Port Physical Addresses

16-Byte Address Ranges Used for T1 Card I/O Addresses

32-Byte Address Ranges Used forOCD Card I/O Addresses

0x100 – 0x10F 0x200 – 0x21F

0x110 – 0x11F 0x220 – 0x23F

0x120 – 0x12F 0x240 – 0x25F

0x130 – 0x13F 0x260 – 0x27F

0x140 – 0x14F 0x280 – 0x29F

0x150 – 0x15F 0x2A0 – 0x2BF

0x160 – 0x16F 0x2C0 – 0x2DF

0x170 – 0x17F 0x2E0 – 0x2FF

0x180 – 0x18F 0x300 – 0x31F

0x190 – 0x19F 0x320 – 0x33F

0x1A0 – 0x1AF 0x340 – 0x35F

0x1B0 – 0x1BF 0x360 – 0x37F

0x1C0 – 0x1CF 0x380 – 0x39F

0x1D0 – 0x1DF 0x3A0 – 0x3BF

0x1E0 – 0x1EF 0x3C0 – 0x3DF

— 0x3E0 – 0x3FF

— 0x400 – 0x41F

— 0x420 – 0x43F

— 0x440 – 0x45F

— 0x460 – 0x47F

— 0x480 – 0x49F

— 0x4A0 – 0x4BF

— 0x4C0 – 0x4DF

— 0x4E0 – 0x4FF

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4-52290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Repeat for each address in the Port section. (If you are looking at a screenyou may have to scroll down to see all the related addresses.)

7. Check all devices and cross off the IRQs and I/O addresses they use.

8. Locate the DMA/Memory Report (or click on the DMA/Memory button).

9. Determine free memory addresses by adding the Length and PhysicalAddress values.

Where addresses in the Memory window match or overlap the DMA/MemoryPhysical Addresses in the table below, cross off those addresses.

DMA/Memory Physical AddressesUsed for RAM Windows Base Addresses

0xA0000 –0xA3FFF

0xB0000 –0xB3FFF

0xC0000 –0xC3FFF

0xD0000 –0xD3FFF

0xE0000 –0xE3FFF

0xF0000 –0xF3FFF

0xA4000 –0xA7FFF

0xB4000 –0xB7FFF

0xC4000 –0xC7FFF

0xD4000 –0xD7FFF

0xE4000 –0xE7FFF

0xF4000 –0xF7FFF

0xA8000 –0xABFFF

0xB8000 –0xBBFFF

0xC8000 –0xCBFFF

0xD8000 –0xDBFFF

0xE8000 –0xEBFFF

0xF8000 –0xFBFFF

0xAC000 –0xAFFFF

0xBC000 –0xBFFFF

0xCC000 –0xCFFFF

0xDC000 –0xDFFFF

0xEC000 –0xEFFFF

0xFC000 –0xFFFFF

10. Click on OK, then exit the program.

IRQs and addresses that you have not crossed off are free for use in completingthe Card Configuration Worksheet.

For more information about Window NT Diagnostics, see the documentation thatcame with Windows NT.

Preparation: Setting Up Other PCs

4-6 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Completing the Card Configuration Worksheet

If you are using one of the recommended PCs listed in Appendix C, and haveinstalled no hardware in it that would alter its default configuration, then skip thischapter and proceed with Chapter 5, Installing the Cards.

If you prefer not to write in this section, write your choices in one of the extraworksheets in Appendix E.

Hexadecimal numbers in this guide are identified by the prefix 0x.

Card Configuration Worksheet

Card ID IRQI/O BaseAddress

I/OBlockSize(bytes)

RAM WindowBase

MemoryBlockSize(bytes) Required for

T1-1 16 16 k First T1 card

OCD1 � 32 — — CDs 1 – 8, Trunk A

OCD2 � 32 — — CDs 9 – 16, Trunk A

OCD3 � 32 — — CDs 17 – 24, Trunk A

OCD4 � 32 — — CDs 25 – 32, Trunk B

OCD5 � 32 — — CDs 33 – 40, Trunk B

OCD6 � 32 — — CDs 41 – 48, Trunk B

(OCD1–6) — — — 32 k OCD cards

T1-2 16 16 k Second T1 card

OCD7 � 32 — — CDs 49 – 56, Trunk C

OCD8 � 32 — — CDs 57 – 64, Trunk C

OCD9 � 32 — — CDs 65 – 72, Trunk C

(OCD7–9) — — — 32 k OCD cards

If you are not using a recommended PC, follow these steps to fill in the CardConfiguration Worksheet.

� Procedure

1. Determine the IRQ that will be associated with each adapter. Each adapterrequires a unique IRQ, which is used by all OCD cards under the adapter.You can use Windows NT Diagnostics to help you find a free IRQ. See UsingWindows NT Diagnostics on page 4-3.

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2. Identify a free I/O space range for each T1 and OCD card. Each cardrequires a unique range.

For each T1 card the I/O base address must be the start of 16 contiguousbytes on a 16-byte (0x10) boundary. The default is 0x1E0. The address:

— Must be 0x100, 0x110, 0x120, 0x130, 0x140, 0x150, 0x160, 0x180,0x190, 0x1A0, 0x1B0, 0x1C0, 0x1D0, or 0x1E0

— Must be unique for each T1 card

— Must be a lower number for the first T1 card than for the second T1 card,if installed

For each OCD card the I/O base address must be the start of 32 contiguousbytes on a 32-byte (0x20) boundary. The default is 0x300. The address:

— Must be 0x200, 0x240, 0x280, 0x2A0, 0x2C0, 0x300, 0x320, 0x340,0x380, 0x400, 0x420, 0x440, 0x460, 0x480, 0x4A0, or 0x4E0

— Must be unique for each OCD card

— Must be a lower number for OCD1 than for any other OCD cards, ifinstalled

NOTE:The I/O base address assigned to a card must not conflict with any otherdevice in the PC. You can use Windows NT Diagnostics to help you findfree I/O addresses. See Using Windows NT Diagnostics on page 4-3.

The I/O base address you select determines the address of the I/O registers.

3. Identify a free space in upper memory (0xA0000 through 0xFFFFF) wherethe RAM windows will be allocated. These windows map the dual-port RAMdevices on the T1 and OCD cards to the PC’s memory map. They must notconflict with other peripherals, and they must not overlap. You can useWindows NT Diagnostics to help you find free I/O addresses. See UsingWindows NT Diagnostics on page 4-3.

— Allocate a 16-kilobyte (16 kB) block for each T1 card. The address mustbe on a 16 kB (0x4000) boundary.

The default address is 0xC8000.

— Allocate a 32 kB block for each adapter to be shared by its OCD cards.The address must be on a 32 kB (0x8000) boundary.

The default address is 0xD0000.

Preparation: Setting Up Other PCs

4-8 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Preparing the PC BIOS

A readme file provided with the 2290 Remote Access Gateway software explainsthe BIOS setup for the recommended PCs listed in Appendix C. Use the followinginstructions for other PCs.

Depending on the type and settings of your Basic Input/Output System (BIOS),portions of PC memory may be read from a high-speed CPU cache instead ofdirectly. This feature must be disabled for the address ranges used by theT1 and OCD cards.

Just after the power-on self-test of your PC, an instruction may be displayedshowing how to start your BIOS setup program. On some PCs it looks like this:

Press <F2> to enter SETUP

Immediately press the key or combination of keys specified. Then check yourBIOS settings.

Instead, or in addition, you may be able to enter the Setup program at any timeusing a special key combination, such as Control+Alt+S. See the documentationfor your BIOS setup program (usually found in your PC user reference).

The name of the memory feature and the way it can be disabled depends on yourBIOS. For example:

I f your BIOS has a feature called . . . Then ensure that it is . . .

Memory Shadow or Shadow RAM orMemory Caching

Disabled for the address range youselected to be used by the T1 and OCDcards.

ISA Shared Memory Not specified or enabled for the addressrange you selected to be used by the T1and OCD cards.

Depending on the BIOS, address ranges may be specified as a start address andend address, or as a start address and a length. See your PC user reference, orcall your PC’s manufacturer.

5-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Installing the Cards

5Card Installation Checklist

If you use a PC other than one of the recommended PCs listed inAppendix C, you need to know the IRQ for the T1 cards and the I/O baseaddresses for the T1 cards and OCD cards before you install the cards.See Chapter 4, Preparation: Setting Up Other PCs.

Installation of the 2290 Remote Access Gateway hardware involves the followingsteps, which are described in this chapter:

� Shut down and open your PC

� Set the I/O address switches on the T1 card and insert it

� Set the I/O address switches, IRQ switches, and termination switches on theOCD cards and insert them

� Connect the cards to each other

� Connect the T1 card to the trunk

Read First

Read the following before you install the cards.

� When specific PCs are mentioned in this guide, the PCs are presumed to benew and unmodified standard models. Install the 2290 Remote AccessGateway in the PC before you install any other hardware that uses IRQs orI/O addresses (including Plug and Play devices, whose use of suchresources might be hidden).

� For any PC, verify that the PC starts up and runs Windows NT normallybefore you install the 2290 Remote Access Gateway. Do not install RAS(Remote Access Service) now.

� An adapter comprises a T1 card and its associated OCD cards. If you areinstalling more than one adapter, install the first adapter and install andconfigure the software before you install a second adapter.

Installing the Cards

5-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Preparing the PC Hardware

Prepare your server PC using the following procedure.

� Procedure

1. Use only a UL-listed, CSA-certified PC.

2. Be sure your computer system is turned off until you have completed theentire hardware installation process.

CAUTION:Turning on the system during card installation could result in anelectrical shock to you or cause damage to your computer system’scomponents.

3. Disconnect all cables from the PC.

4. After waiting at least one minute, open the computer and touch the metal PCframe to discharge any static electricity that might be on your clothes or body.

! HANDLING PRECAUTIONS FORSTATIC-SENSITIVE DEVICESParadyne products are designed to protect sensitive components fromdamage due to electrostatic discharge (ESD) during normal operation.When performing installation procedures, however, take proper staticcontrol precautions to prevent damage to equipment. If you are not sureof the proper static control precautions, contact your nearest sales orservice representative.

496-15104

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Verifying the T1 Card Switch Settings

SW1

496-14916

1ON

23

45

67

89

10

Before installing the T1 card, verify that the switch settings are correct.

The card contains a single switch bank (SW1) that is used to assign the card’sI/O base address. The 10 switch positions represent I/O address bits 4 through13, and enable you to assign the card to an I/O address.

If you would like to keep a record of the switch settings you use for this adapter,mark the switch positions on a Switch Configuration Worksheet in Appendix E.

Installing the Cards

5-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

A switch in the up or Off position represents a binary 1; a switch in the down orON position represents a binary 0. The following illustration shows the position ofthe switches for the default T1 card I/O base address, 0x1E0.

496-14917

6 7 8 9 10ON

1 2 3 4 5

8 7 6 5910111213

x = 0 y = 1 z = EFixed

0

4AddressBits

SW1

For the Compaq ProSignia 300 or the Compaq ProLiant 4500, set the T1 cardswitches according to the following table.

Compaq ProSignia 300 and Compaq ProLiant 4500 T1 Card SW1 Settings

T1 Card SW1 Settings

I/O Address 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

0x1E0 ON ON ON ON ON Off Off Off Off ON

For the Texas Microsystems 3220 or the ICS 7520-44H, set the T1 card switchesaccording to the following table.

Texas Microsystems 3220, ICS 7520-44H T1 Card SW1 Settings

T1 Card SW1 Settings

T1 Card I/O Address 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

First or only 0x120 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON

Second 0x1E0 ON ON ON ON ON Off Off Off Off ON

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5-52290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

For other PCs, set the switches to the desired address using the following tableand the Card Configuration Worksheet you filled in. If a second T1 card will beinstalled, always set the first T1 card to a lower I/O address than the secondT1 card.

T1 Card SW1 Settings

I/O Address 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

0x100 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON ON

0x110 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON Off

0x120 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON

0x130 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off Off

0x140 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON ON

0x150 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON Off

0x160 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off Off ON

0x170 (Do not use — reserved by system)

0x180 ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON ON ON

0x190 ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON ON Off

0x1A0 ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON Off ON

0x1B0 ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON Off Off

0x1C0 ON ON ON ON ON Off Off Off ON ON

0x1D0 ON ON ON ON ON Off Off Off ON Off

0x1E0 ON ON ON ON ON Off Off Off Off ON

NOTE:The configuration software limits I/O addresses for the T1 card to values inthe range 0x100–0x1E0, excluding 0x170, on 0x10 boundaries. The factorydefault switch setting is 0x1E0.

Installing the Cards

5-6 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Inserting the T1 Card

Windows NT must be installed and running properly on your serverbefore you install the 2290 Remote Access Gateway hardware.

� Procedure

1. Locate the ISA slots in your PC. Turn the PC on its side if it makes the slotseasier to access.

2. Choose a 16-bit expansion slot that has a sufficient number of open slots onone side of it (on the same bus) for the number of associated OCD cards youare installing.

Select a slot that permits easy access to the T1 port and diagnostic portconnectors when they are installed. The readme file may contain guidelinesfor your PC.

The following illustration shows typical slot assignments for a 2290 RemoteAccess Gateway with one T1 card and three OCD cards.

496-15018

OCD1 OCD2 OCD3T1-1

ISA Slots

3. Unscrew and remove the slot cover panel, if present.

4. Verify that the switches are set to the proper address.

Installing the Cards

5-72290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

5. Insert the card into the expansion slot:

— Pick up the card by the edges or the top corners. Be careful not to touchthe contacts on the bottom of the card.

— Align the connector on the bottom of the card directly over the slot. Placeone hand along the top edge of the card, directly over the connectorarea, and push down firmly but gently until the connector is fully seated.Do not apply pressure to the switches.

— To see if the card is properly seated, gently try to lift the card.

16-Bit ISA Expansion Card Slot

8-Bit ISA Expansion Card Slot(Do not use) 496-14918

6. Secure the card to the chassis using a bracket screw.

7. Repeat Steps 1 through 5 if you are installing a second T1 card. Do notinstall the T1 cards in adjacent slots. Leave a sufficient number of slotsopen for the OCD cards to be installed for the first adapter.

Installing the Cards

5-8 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Verifying the OCD Card Switch Settings

496-14902

SW4

1ON

2

SW3

1ON

23

45

6

1ON

23

45

SW1SW2

Before installing the OCD cards, verify that the I/O address, IRQ, and terminationswitch settings are correct. There are four different switch banks on the OCDcard.

Setting the I/O Base Address Switches

Switch bank SW1 (6-position) and SW2 (5-position) are used to assign the OCDcard’s I/O base address. The 11 total switch positions represent address bits 5through 15, and enable you to assign the card to an I/O address.

Each OCD card must have a unique switch setting for its I/O address.

Installing the Cards

5-92290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

A switch in the up or Off position represents a binary 1; a switch in the down orON position represents a binary 0. The following illustration shows the position ofthe switches for the default I/O base address, 0x300.

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

10 9 8 7 6 51112131415 X

X = 0 Y = 3 Z = 0

Fixed0

496 -14903

SW2 SW1

If you would like to keep a record of the switch settings you use for this adapter,mark the switch positions on a Switch Configuration Worksheet in Appendix E.

Installing the Cards

5-10 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

For the Compaq ProSignia 300, set the switches according to the following table.Then go to Setting the IRQ Switches on page 5-13.

Compaq ProSignia 300

I/OOCD Card SW2 Settings OCD SW1 Settings

OCD CardI/OAddress 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 6

First or only 0x200 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON ON

Second 0x240 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON

Third 0x280 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON ON

For the Compaq ProLiant 4500, set the switches according to the following table.Then go to Setting the IRQ Switches on page 5-13.

Compaq ProLiant 4500

I/OOCD Card SW2 Settings OCD SW1 Settings

OCD CardI/OAddress 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 6

First or only 0x200 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON ON

Second 0x240 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON

Third 0x280 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON ON

Fourth 0x2A0 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON Off

Fifth 0x2C0 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off Off ON

Sixth 0x300 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON ON ON

Installing the Cards

5-112290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

For the Texas Microsystems 3220, set the switches according to the followingtable. Then go to Setting the IRQ Switches on page 5-13.

Texas Microsystems 3220 ISA Rackmount

I/OOCD Card SW2 Settings OCD SW1 Settings

OCD CardI/OAddress 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 6

First or only 0x200 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON ON

Second 0x240 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON

Third 0x280 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON ON

Fourth 0x2A0 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON Off

Fifth 0x320 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON ON Off

Sixth 0x340 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON Off ON

Seventh 0x380 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off Off ON ON

Eighth 0x440 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON Off ON

Ninth 0x480 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON ON

For the ICS 7520-44H, set the switches according to the following table. Then goto Setting the IRQ Switches on page 5-13.

ICS 7520-44H

I/OOCD Card SW2 Settings OCD SW1 Settings

OCD CardI/OAddress 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 6

First or only 0x240 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON

Second 0x280 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON ON

Third 0x2A0 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON Off

Fourth 0x320 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON ON Off

Fifth 0x340 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON Off ON

Sixth 0x380 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off Off ON ON

Seventh 0x440 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON Off ON

Eighth 0x480 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON ON

Ninth 0x4E0 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off Off Off

Installing the Cards

5-12 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

For other PCs, set the switches to the desired address using the following tableand the Card Configuration Worksheet. Then go to Setting the IRQ Switches onpage 5-13.

OCD Card SW2 Settings OCD SW1 Settings

I/O Address 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 6

0x200 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON ON

0x220 (Do not use — reserved by system)

0x240 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON

0x260 (Do not use — reserved by system)

0x280 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON ON

0x2A0 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off ON Off

0x2C0 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off ON Off Off ON

0x2E0 (Do not use — reserved by system)

0x300 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON ON ON

0x320 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON ON Off

0x340 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off ON Off ON

0x360 (Do not use — reserved by system)

0x380 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off Off ON ON

0x3A0 (Do not use — reserved by system)

0x3C0 ON ON ON ON ON ON Off Off Off Off ON

0x3E0 (Do not use — reserved by system)

0x400 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON ON ON

0x420 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON ON Off

0x440 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON Off ON

0x460 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON ON Off Off

0x480 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON ON

0x4A0 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off ON Off

0x4C0 (Do not use — reserved by system)

0x4E0 ON ON ON ON ON Off ON ON Off Off Off

NOTE:The configuration software limits I/O addresses for an OCD card to values inthe range 0x200–0x4E0, excluding 0x220, 0x260, 0x2E0, 0x360, 0x3A0,0x3E0, and 0x4C0, on 0x20 boundaries. The factory default switch setting is0x300.

Installing the Cards

5-132290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Setting the IRQ Switches

Switches SW4-1 through SW4-5 are used to select an IRQ. (SW4-6 is used forISA bus termination and is described in the next section.) The IRQ is shared byall the cards associated with the adapter.

A switch in the ON position selects the IRQ associated with that switch. All otherswitches between SW4-1 through SW4-5 must be Off. For example, if SW4-1 isON, and SW4-2 through SW4-5 are Off, IRQ 15 is selected.

Set the switches so that the desired IRQ is selected. The factory default switchsetting is IRQ 11. See the tables on the next page.

Bottom of Card

496-14915

SW4

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

IRQ 15 12 1110 14

Installing the Cards

5-14 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

For all recommended PCs, set the IRQs using the following table. Then go toSetting the Bus Termination Swtiches on page 5-15.

All Recommended PCs

Adapter that OCDOCD Card SW4 Settings

Adapter that OCDcard is part of IRQ 1 2 3 4 5 6*

First or only 11 Off Off ON Off Off —

Second 10 Off Off Off ON Off —

* SW4-6 is used for ISA bus termination and is described in the next section.

For other PCs, set the IRQs using the following table and the Card ConfigurationWorksheet you filled in. Then go to Setting the Bus Termination Swtiches onpage 5-15.

OCD Card SW4 Settings

IRQ 1 2 3 4 5 6*

10 Off Off Off ON Off —

11 Off Off ON Off Off —

12 Off ON Off Off Off —

14 Off Off Off Off ON —

15 ON Off Off Off Off —

*SW4-6 is used for ISA bus termination and is described in the next section.

If you would like to keep a record of the switch settings you use for this adapter,mark the switch positions on a Switch Configuration Worksheet in Appendix E.

Installing the Cards

5-152290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Setting the Bus Termination Switches

You must set switches on the last OCD card to terminate the MVIP bus and theISA bus interrupt request line.

� The two switches of SW3 should be Off for all OCD cards except the onewhich will be farthest from the associated T1 card. On this last (or only) OCDcard, the switches must be ON.

This terminates the MVIP bus.

� Switch SW4-6 should be Off for all OCD cards except the one which will befarthest from the associated T1 card. On this last (or only) OCD card, theswitch must be ON.

This terminates the ISA bus interrupt request line.

ON 1 2

SW3

ON 1 2

SW3 SW3

1st OCD

2nd OCD Last OCD

T1 Card

496-14901

ON 1 2

ON6ON6

1st OCD Last OCDSW4-6

2nd OCDSW4-6SW4-6

ON6

If you would like to keep a record of the switch settings you use for this adapter,mark the switch positions on a Switch Configuration Worksheet in Appendix E.

Installing the Cards

5-16 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Inserting the OCD Card

Verify that you have set all switches properly. Switch bank SW4 isinaccessible once you have installed the OCD card.

� Procedure

1. Choose the expansion slot in which you would like to install the card. The firstOCD card must be adjacent to the T1 card it is associated with. SubsequentOCD cards must be adjacent to each other.

2. Unscrew and remove the slot cover panel, if present.

3. If this is the OCD card installed farthest from its associated T1 card, verifythat it has switches SW3-1, SW3-2, and SW4-6 set to ON. Otherwise, verifythat the three switches are set to Off.

4. Insert the card into the expansion slot:

— Pick up the card by the edges or the top corners. Be careful not to touchthe pins on the bottom of the card.

— Align the connector on the bottom of the card directly over the slot. Placeone hand along the top edge of the card, directly over the connectorarea, and push down firmly but gently until the connector is fully seated.Do not apply pressure to the switches.

— To see if the card is properly seated, try gently to lift the card.

5. Secure the card to the chassis using a bracket screw.

6. If you have another OCD card to install, return to page 5-8.

Installing the Cards

5-172290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Connecting the MVIP Cable

Use a four-connector MVIP cable for an adapter with one to three OCD cards,and a seven-connector MVIP cable for an adapter with up to six OCD cards.

� Procedure

1. Take either end of the MVIP ribbon cable and press it onto the 40-positionMVIP connector on the top edge of the T1 card.

2. Press the next connector on the MVIP cable onto the 40-position MVIPconnector of the OCD card adjacent to the T1 card. Ensure that theconnector is seated on both rows of pins. Failure to install this cablecorrectly will result in call connection problems and may damage thehardware.

3. Continue connecting other OCD cards associated with this adapter.

Do not use this MVIP cable to connect to T1 or OCD cards associated with adifferent adapter.

12

496 -14904

12

124-Connector

or 7-ConnectorMVIP Cable

1 - 6OCD Cards

T1 Card

The cable can be installed in either direction, but one end must start at theT1 card.

An adapter comprises a T1 card and its associated OCD cards. If you have asecond adapter, do not install it now. Verify the installation of the first adapter andinstall the software before you install a second adapter.

Installing the Cards

5-18 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Reassembly and Cabling

� Procedure

1. Once all cards are installed, reconnect the monitor, mouse, and keyboard,and plug in the cables you removed. Replace the cover on your PC. Do notbolt on the cover until the new hardware has been tested.

2. Plug the end of an RJ48C modular cable into the T1 card port labeled Port A (the middle connector). Plug the other end of the cable into your T1 interface receptacle.

3. If you are using two ports, plug the end of an RJ48C modular cable into the T1 card port labeled Port B (the top connector). Plug the other end of the cable into your T1 interface receptacle.

4. When you use a separate DTE for T1 card diagnostics, plug the end of an 8-position RS-232 modular cable into the T1 card port labeled DIAG (the bottom connector). Plug the other end of the cable into your DTE’s serial port.

5. Turn on your PC.

Because the T1 card has not had its software downloaded, the status of the LEDs on the card does not yet have any meaning.

For information about the T1 card’s electrical interfaces, see Appendix B.

A B

RUN FAIL

PORT B

PORT A

DIAG

496-15083

Second T1 Connection

First T1Connection

Installing the Cards

5-192290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Troubleshooting Procedure

If Windows NT comes up and operates normally after you have installed the 2290Remote Access Gateway hardware, proceed with Chapter 6, Installing andConfiguring the Software.

If Windows NT does not come up or does not operate normally, use the followingprocedure to determine which component is at fault.

� Procedure

1. Open your PC. Taking precautions against electrostatic discharge, check allswitches on the T1 card and OCD cards.

— Verify that SW1 on the T1 card is set for a unique I/O address. Seepage 5-4 (for recommended PCs) or page 5-5 (for other PCs).

— Verify that SW1 and SW2 on each OCD card are set for a unique I/Oaddress. See pages 5-10 through 5-12.

— Verify that SW4 on each OCD card is set for the correct IRQ. Seepage 5-14.

2. If all the settings are correct, proceed with Step 4.

3. If you change any switch settings, reinstall the cards and the MVIP cable, andboot your PC.

If Windows NT comes up and operates normally, proceed with Chapter 6,Installing and Configuring the Software.

4. Turn off your PC. Remove the MVIP cable and all OCD cards, but leave theT1 card installed.

5. Verify that the T1 card is seated properly, and its bracket screw is tightened.

6. Boot your PC with just the T1 card installed. If Windows NT comes up andoperates normally, proceed with Step 8.

7. Change the I/O address setting using SW1 on the T1 card and the table onpage 5-5. Start with the lowest address available, and, if you repeat thisstep, work your way down the list of addresses.

When you have set a new address, return to Step 6.

If you have tried all available I/O addresses without success, the T1 card maybe damaged. Contact your service representative.

8. Take the OCD card that was originally installed farthest from the T1 card.SW3-1, SW3-2, and SW4-6 should be ON, as shown on page 5-15.

9. Install the OCD card next to the T1 card, and fasten its bracket screw. Installthe MVIP cable.

10. Boot your PC. If Windows NT comes up and operates normally, proceed withStep 13. If Windows NT does not come up, skip to Step 12.

Installing the Cards

5-20 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

11. If Windows NT comes up but you discover a problem such as the keyboardor mouse not working properly, you may have an IRQ conflict. Use the tableof IRQs on page 5-14 to change the OCD card’s IRQ setting to a differentIRQ. Return to Step 9.

If you have tried all available IRQs without success, the OCD card may bedamaged. Contact your service representative.

12. Change the I/O address setting using SW1 and SW2 on the last OCD cardand the table on page 5-12. Start with the lowest address available, and, ifyou repeat this step, work your way down the list of addresses.

When you have set a new address, return to Step 9.

If you have tried all available I/O addresses without success, the OCD cardmay be damaged. Contact your service representative.

13. If all cards are installed, proceed with Chapter 6, Installing and Configuringthe Software.

14. If you have another OCD card, remove the MVIP cable from the installedcards. Move the last OCD card away from the T1 card to open the nextavailable slot.

Check the OCD card you are about to insert. SW3-1, SW3-2, and SW4-6should be Off, as shown on page 5-15.

If you changed the IRQ of the first OCD card in an earlier step, change thisOCD card to match it. If you changed the I/O address of another OCD card ina previous step, ensure that you do not use the same address for this one.

Install the card between the T1 card and the last OCD card and fasten itsbracket screw. Install the MVIP cable.

15. Boot your PC. If Windows NT comes up and operates normally, return to Step 13.

16. Change the I/O address setting using SW1 and SW2 on the OCD card andthe table on pages 5-10 through 5-12. Start with the lowest address available,and, if you repeat this step, work your way down the list of addresses.

When you have set a new address, return to Step 13.

If you have tried all available I/O addresses without success, the OCD cardmay be damaged. Contact your service representative.

6-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Installing and Configuringthe Software

6Software Installation Checklist

If you use a PC other than one of the recommended PCs listed inAppendix C, you need to establish RAM window base addresses for theT1 card and OCD cards when you configure the software. See Chapter 2,Preparation.

Installation of the 2290 Remote Access Gateway software involves the followingsteps, which are described in this chapter:

� Copy the software from the installation disks

� Configure the software

� Configure RAS

� Install the Diagnostic Transport Driver

When specific PCs are mentioned in this guide, the PCs are presumed to be newand unmodified standard models. Install the 2290 Remote Access Gateway in thePC before you install any other hardware that uses RAM.

Installing the 2290 Remote Access Gateway Software

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway software is installed using standardInstallShield protocol.

� Procedure

1. Start Windows NT on your server PC and log on to an account withAdministrator privilege.

2. Load the first 2290 Remote Access Gateway disk (Vol. 1) into your disk drive.

3. Select File then Run from the Program Manager and in the Command Linefield, type:

a:\setup.exe

Installing and Configuring the Software

6-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Press Enter or click on OK.

The following window appears.

4. When InstallShield setup is complete, the Welcome panel is displayed.

Click on Next to continue.

5. From the Choose Destination Location panel, follow the instructionsdisplayed to accept or change the default directory name for the 2290Remote Access Gateway software. The default is:

drive:\2290RAGW

where drive is the letter of the drive where Windows NT is installed. Click onNext to continue.

6. From the Select Program Folder panel, follow the instructions displayed toaccept or change the default program group for the 2290 Remote AccessGateway programs. The default is:

2290 Gateway Utilities

Click on Next to continue.

7. Setup now copies files to the directory on your server PC. When the SetupNeeds The Next Disk panel is displayed, remove the disk from your diskdrive, insert the next disk, and click on OK.

Installing and Configuring the Software

6-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

When the files are copied to your PC, the following window appears.

Click on OK to continue. Remove the last disk from your disk drive.

8. A “readme” file icon is installed in the 2290 Server Utilities program group. Itmay contain information necessary to install the 2290 Remote AccessGateway on your PC. Read this file by double-clicking on its icon.

Do not install RAS now. You will install RAS following 2290 Remote AccessGateway configuration.

Configuration Utility

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway Configuration utility is accessed through theNetwork applet of the Windows NT Control Panel. You must be logged on with apassword that has Administrator authority.

� Procedure

1. From the Main program group, double-click on Control Panel.

2. Double-click on the Network icon.

3. Click on Add Adapter.

The Network applet presents a list of installed adapters.

4. From the Network Adapter Card List, select<Other> requires disk from manufacturer . Click on Continue.

Do not insert a diskette. You have already loaded the software to your harddisk.

5. When Control Panel instructs you to insert the disk, enter the directory namewhere you installed the 2290 Remote Access Gateway software. If you usedthe default name and the C: drive, the directory name is:

C:\2290RAGW

Press Enter or click on OK.

6. When Control Panel asks you to select a network adapter driver, selectParadyne 2290 Remote Access Adapter . Click on OK.

It may take several seconds before the next screen is displayed.

Installing and Configuring the Software

6-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

7. A Bus Location selection panel may be displayed. If your system has morethan one ISA bus (shown as EISA on this screen), specify the ISA bus onwhich you have installed the adapter.

None of the recommended PCs has more than one ISA bus. Click on OK.

If you are installing a second adapter, the system warns you that there isalready a network card of this type installed in the system. Click on OK.

Control Panel now presents the 2290 Configuration dialog box.

Using the 2290 Configuration dialog box, you configure:

� Adapter IRQs and I/O Base Addresses

� RAM Windows Base Addresses

� T1 Card Timeouts and Options

� Channel Usage

� Phone Number Settings (used for ISDN only)

� OCD Card AT Commands

Clicking on OK terminates the Configuration utility. Do not click on OK unlessyou wish to complete the configuration process and have the system verify that itcan communicate with the adapter using your settings. Normally this is not untilyou have viewed all the Configuration screens. Click on the tabs at the top ofthe Configuration screens to move from screen to screen.

Sample screens in the following sections may contain settings invalid for yourenvironment. The meanings of the variable fields of the Configuration utilityscreens are described in detail following the Trunk Configuration Worksheet inChapter 2 and the Card Configuration Worksheet in Chapter 4. (If you are usingone of the recommended PCs, you do not need to use the Card ConfigurationWorksheet.)

Adapter I/O Configuration

The first configuration screen displayed is Adapter I/O, with selection boxesappropriate to the installed hardware. The IRQ and I/O addresses displayed arethe ones you set with switches on the cards.

Verify that all the cards you installed are displayed on this screen. If all cards forthe adapter are not shown, you may have set switches on different cards toidentical I/O addresses. Check the settings of T1 card switch bank SW1, andOCD card switch banks SW1 and SW2.

The IRQ and addresses shown in this example are not correct for all systems.The example shows a system with one T1 card and six OCD cards.

Installing and Configuring the Software

6-52290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Tab to or click on each field, then, using your Card Configuration Worksheet,verify that each field is set to the desired value.

Field Selection

Card selection boxes The check boxes represent installed cards. To configure a cardnot yet installed, click on its empty check box. OCD cards mustbe activated from the top down, and deactivated from thebottom up. For example, OCD Card – CDs 33–40 must bedeactivated (the X in the check box removed) before OCD Card – CDs 25–32 can be deactivated.

IRQ The IRQ you selected is initially displayed. The pull-down listshows you the IRQ numbers that are supported and arecurrently unused.

Base Addresses The I/O addresses you selected are initially displayed. Thepull-down lists show you the I/O addresses that are supportedand are currently unused.

The OCD Common I/O area is shared among all OCD cards.Its address is assigned by the system.

Shutdown Option When the 2290 Remote Access Gateway must close down aT1 port due to an external system event, it puts the port into thestate you specify here: Busy or No Answer. The default is No Answer. External system events include Windows NTshutdown (in which case all T1 ports are affected), and theclosing of a port by RAS.

Do not click on OK. Click on the RAM Windows tab.

Installing and Configuring the Software

6-6 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

RAM Windows Configuration

When you click on its tab, the RAM Windows configuration screen appears, withselection boxes appropriate to the installed hardware.

The addresses shown in this example are not correct for all systems.

Use this screen to verify the RAM Window Base Addresses selected by theConfiguration utility. Do not change the addresses unless you have determinedthat the addresses shown will not work properly in your server.

Tab to or click on each field, then set each field to the desired value. If you areusing a recommended PC listed in Appendix C, use the RAM Windows forRecommended PCs table on Page 6-7 to verify RAM Windows base addresses.For other PCs, use the Card Configuration Worksheet you filled in.

Field Selection

T1 Card RAM WindowBase Address

Use the pull-down list to select the RAM window base address.

OCD Card RAMWindow Base Address

Use the pull-down list to select the RAM window base address.The OCD Card RAM Window Base Address is shared amongall OCD cards associated with this adapter.

Installing and Configuring the Software

6-72290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

RAM Windows for Recommended PCs

RAM Window Owner

CompaqProSignia300

CompaqProLiant4500

TexasMicrosystems3220

ICS7520-44H

First or only T1 Card 0xC8000 0xC8000 0xCC000 0xC8000

First Adapter* OCD Cards

0xD0000 0xD0000 0xD0000 0xCC000

Second T1 Card — — 0xD8000 0xD0000

Second Adapter* OCD Cards

— — 0xE0000 0xD8000

* An adapter consists of a T1 card and its associated OCD cards.

Do not click on OK. Click on the T1 Card tab.

T1 Card Configuration

Tab to or click on each field, then, using your Trunk Configuration Worksheet, seteach field to the desired value for each trunk.

Ignore fields for the trunk type other than yours.

Installing and Configuring the Software

6-8 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Field Selection

Framing Use the pull-down list to select ESF or SF.

Line Coding Use the pull-down list to select B8ZS or AMI.

Line Build Out Use the pull-down list to select a value from 0.0 dB to –22.5 dB.

Trunk Type Use the pull-down list to select T1-RBS or T1-PRI.

Trunk Use This is always set to Line.

Switch Type (T1-PRI only)

Use the pull-down list to select AT&T 5ESS, AT&T 4ESS,Northern Telecom DMS-100, Northern Telecom DMS-250,Ericsson MD-110, or Siemens.

In-Start(T1-RBS only)

Use the pull-down list to select Wink, Immediate, Loop, Ground,Loop-FXO, or Ground-FXO.

Out-Start(T1-RBS only)

Use the pull-down list to select Wink, Immediate, Loop, Ground,Loop-FXO, or Ground-FXO.

Q.931 Variant(T1-PRI only)

Use the pull-down list to select AT&T Custom, NorthernTelecom, or Bellcore National (NI-2).

Performance Monitor(T1-RBS and ESFFraming only)

Use the pull-down list to select Off, AT&T, or Bellcore.

Clock Source Use the pull-down list to select Trunk A, Trunk B, or Internal.

No Accept Timeout Select or enter a value from 30 to 60 seconds. The default is 30 seconds.

No Answer Timeout Select or enter a value from 5 to 120 seconds. The default is 30 seconds.

No Connect Timeout Select or enter a value from 5 to 60 seconds. The default is 30 seconds.

No Close Call Timeout Select or enter a value from 5 to 30 seconds. The default is 10 seconds.

Do not click on OK. Click on the Channel Usage tab.

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6-92290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Channel Usage Configuration

Using your Trunk Configuration Worksheet, set each field to the desired value foreach trunk. There is no second trunk for a second adapter. If you are configuringa second adapter, select channels only for Trunk A.

NOTE:For T1-PRI, Channel 24 is used for D channel signaling and cannot beselected.

Field Selection

Channel 1 throughChannel 24

Initially no channels are selected. Click on a check box to add achannel for use by the 2290 Remote Access Gateway.

Click on the next trunk in the pull-down list and repeat.

Channels are mapped to RAS ports consecutively:

Channels 1–24 of . . . Are mapped to RAS ports . . .

Trunk A (first adapter) RAGmacISDN1 – RAGmacISDN24*

Trunk B (first adapter) RAGmacISDN25 – RAGmacISDN48

Trunk C (second adapter) RAGmacISDN49 – RAGmacISDN72

*RAS ports are named RAGmacISDNx for either T1-PRI or T1-RBS trunks.

Do not click on OK. If you are configuring a T1-PRI trunk, click on the Phonetab. If you are configuring a T1-RBS trunk, click on the OCD Cards tab.

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Phone Configuration

The Phone configuration screen is used only for ISDN (T1-PRI) and should beskipped for T1-RBS configuration. It determines the information the systemsupplies when it places a call.

Complete a Phone configuration screen for each trunk.

Using your Trunk Configuration Worksheet, set each field to the desired value foreach trunk.

Field Selection

Local Phone Number Type in the local phone number for the trunk.

Type Use the pull-down list to select National, International,Abbreviated, Subscriber, or Unknown.

Plan Use the pull-down list to select ISDN, Telephony, Private, orUnknown.

Click on the next trunk in the pull-down list and repeat.

When you have configured all trunks, do not click on OK. Click on the OCDCards tab.

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OCD Cards Configuration

Do not complete OCD Cards configuration screens during initial installation.Review the purpose of the screen, then proceed to the next section. Your servicerepresentative may wish to use the OCD Cards configuration screen fortroubleshooting later.

The OCD Cards configuration screen permits you to send AT commands to eachCD on an OCD card. The AT commands are sent to the CD before the CD isdirected to answer or originate a call.

Set the AT command field for each CD as advised by your service representative.See Appendix D for AT commands supported by the 2290 Remote AccessGateway. To automatically insert the same AT commands for all CDs, type thecommands in the CD 1 area, then click on Copy to all. The commands will beinserted in the command areas for CD 2 through CD 8.

Click on the next OCD in the pull-down list and repeat for all OCDs. A separatescreen must be filled in for each OCD card.

Configuration Utility Completion

Click on OK.

When you click on OK in the Configuration utility, the Network applet attempts tocommunicate with the adapter using the I/O settings you have chosen. If theNetwork applet reports an error, return to the Configuration utility (by selectingCancel) to correct your settings.

Upon first-time installation, it is normal to receive the message that yourfirmware is out of date and that new firmware will be downloaded at thenext system startup.

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RAS Configuration

When the Network applet verifies the configuration, it displays the message thatthe Paradyne adapter setup is complete, and you must now invoke RemoteAccess Service (RAS). Click on OK to invoke Windows NT RAS configuration.

When prompted, enter the location of the Windows NT distribution files and clickon OK. When installation is complete, the Remote Access Setup window isdisplayed.

If RAS was already installed, invoke Remote Access Setup by selecting RemoteAccess Service from the Network applet of Control Panel.

� Procedure

1. If the Add Port window is not displayed, click on Add in the Remote AccessSetup window.

2. The Add Port window appears with a COM port displayed. Scroll to and clickon the first 2290 Remote Access Gateway port for this adapter (portRAGmacISDN1 for the first adapter).

2290 Remote Access Gateway RAS ports are named RAGmacISDNn (evenon T1-RBS trunks), where n is a number from 1 to 72 representing the T1port number assigned to the RAS port:

— RAGmacISDN1 through RAGmacISDN24 are channels 1–24 of Trunk A

— RAGmacISDN25 through RAGmacISDN48 are channels 1–24 of Trunk B

— RAGmacISDN49 through RAGmacISDN72 are channels 1–24 of Trunk C

3. Configure the port for Receive Calls only. Then click on OK.

Once you have added and configured one port, you can click on theClone button of the Remote Access Setup window to add consecutively-numbered ports with similar characteristics.

Add ports for all existing trunks and channels selected for use on the ChannelUsage screen.

4. Click on Continue. (Do not click on Cancel unless you wish to end RASconfiguration.)

5. Using your Windows NT reference documents, configure each port accordingto your network requirements and protocols.

— Apply your changes to your computer or to the whole network.

— For all ports to provide remote access, specify IP addresses in theRemote Access TCP/IP Settings window.

— For T1-PRI lines, select Enable Negotiation in the ISDN Line Settingswindow.

6. Click on OK when you receive the confirmation that RAS has been installed.Click on OK in the Network Settings window to save your changes.

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7. Do not restart the system when prompted. Proceed with the diagnostictransport driver installation described in the next section. You will turn off andturn on your computer following that installation.

If you restarted your PC after RAS configuration, go to the Main program group,and double-click on Control Panel. Double-click on the Network icon.

Diagnostic Transport Driver Installation

Install the driver software using the Network applet.

� Procedure

1. From the Network Settings panel, select Add Software.

2. Select <Other> Requires disk from manufacturer . Click on Continue.

Do not insert a diskette. You have already loaded the software to your harddisk.

3. When Control Panel instructs you to insert the disk, enter the directory namewhere you installed the 2290 Remote Access Gateway software. If you usedthe default name and the C: drive, the directory name is:

C:\2290RAGW

Click on OK.

4. Select Paradyne 2290 Diagnostic Transport Driver .

5. Click on OK. Control Panel displays one or more messages as it installs thedriver.

6. Control Panel concludes by giving you the option of rebooting the systembecause network settings have changed. Do not restart now.

Instead, exit all programs and shut down Windows NT. When you receive themessage “It is now safe to turn off your computer,” turn off your computer.

NOTE:Whenever you add or configure 2290 Remote Access Gateway software,turn off and turn on your PC to reset the cards.

7. Turn on your computer.

Remember that the first system restart after installation takes longerthan usual since new firmware must be downloaded to the cards.

A B

RUN FAIL

PORT B

PORT A

DIAG

PORT BSYSFAIL

PORT ARUN

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8. When the system comes up, check the diagnostic LEDs on the T1 card.

The T1 card has four LEDs (three yellow and one green) that indicate theprogress of a diagnostic test whenever you supply power to the card. It istherefore normal for the LEDs to flash on and off when the server is firstturned on. The following table shows what the LEDs indicate after thediagnostic test is complete.

Name Color LED is . . . Indicating . . .

Port A Yellow Off

ON

Normal operation.

Carrier failure (Red Alarm) on Port A trunk.

Port B Yellow Off

ON

Normal operation.

Carrier failure (Red Alarm) on Port B trunk.

RUN Green Off

ON

Card failure.

Microprocessor activity.

SYSFAIL Yellow Off

ON

Normal operation.

Card failure.

9. Check the diagnostic LEDs on the OCD cards.

An OCD card has one green LED. This flashes when there is normalmicroprocessor activity. If the LED is solidly on or off, the card may havefailed.

If any component of the 2290 Remote Access Gateway fails to initialize properlywhen the system restarts, a dialog box is presented indicating this. Check theWindows NT System Log and Application Log for more information.

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Running a Full System Test

Installation is complete. You should now run a full system test to check thehardware.

The full system test takes about ten minutes for each OCD card installed. Youcan abort the test at any time by clicking on the Abort Test button of theAdministration utility screen.

� Procedure

1. Start the 2290 Remote Access Gateway Administration utility from theWindows NT Program Manager. If it is minimized to an icon, double-click onthe 2290 Remote Access Gateway Utilities program group icon to open it.Then double-click on the Administration utility icon to start it.

2. Select each OCD card and click on Disable.

3. Click on the Test button.

4. Click on the box next to Full System Test, then click on Start Test.

5. Test results are stored in the Application Log and displayed in the TestResults panel. Remember to enable the OCD cards when the test iscomplete.

While the test is running, you should familiarize yourself with the functions of the2290 Remote Access Gateway applications, and with maintenance proceduresyou may require later.

� Chapter 7, 2290 Administration, explains how to use the Administration utilityyou use to initiate tests.

� Chapter 8, 2290 Online Status Monitor, describes the monitor displayprogram that should be running at all times when you use the 2290 RemoteAccess Gateway.

� Chapter 9, Tests and Diagnostics, describes what components are tested andwhat information the tests store in the Event Log.

� Chapter 10, Maintenance Procedures, explains how to upgrade software,remove an adapter, and replace a card.

Installing a Second Adapter

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway detects one new adapter at a time. If you areinstalling more than one adapter, follow this procedure.

� Procedure

1. Install the first adapter hardware as described in Chapter 5, Installing theCards.

2. Install and configure the software as described in this chapter.

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3. Turn off and turn on your PC, and test the first adapter.

4. Install the second adapter hardware.

5. Configure the software as described in the Configuration Utility and RASConfiguration sections on pages 6-3 through 6-12.

6. Turn off and turn on your PC, and test both adapters.

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2290 Administration

7Administration Utility

The Administration utility allows you to:

� Enable and disable devices

� Put T1 ports in a Busy state

� Hang up calls

� Test devices and view test results

� View statistics

Start the 2290 Administration utility from the Windows NT Program Manager. If itis minimized to an icon, double-click on the 2290 Gateway Utilities program groupicon to open it. Then double-click on the Administration utility icon to start it.

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Resource Selection

You can select a resource from:

� The Resource drop-down list

� The configuration tree window

The Resource drop-down list shows every adapter, T1 card, trunk, OCD, and CDin the system.

The configuration tree window can be expanded and collapsed to show all or partof the system.

In the configuration tree window,

Click on . . . To . . .

The buttonExpand a resource (show its components).

The buttonCollapse a resource (hide its components).

A resource name Select it for administration.

Resource Information

For the selected resource, the Administration utility shows:

� Current Status

� Test Results

� Latest Statistics

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Current Status

The following table shows what Current Status messages are possible for eachkind of resource.

Resource Name Status Additional Information

Adapter (RAG-x) is enabled.

T1 Card n (1 or 2) is enabled.

is disabled.

Trunk a (A, B, or C) is enabled and active.and has been made busy.and is receiving a BLUE alarm.*and is receiving a RED alarm.and is receiving a YELLOW alarm.and is sending a YELLOW alarm.

is disabled.

RAGmacISDNnn (1–72) is enabled and idle.and establishing a connection.and has an active call on CDnn.and has been made busy.

is disabled.

OCDn (1–9) is enabled and idle.and is under test.

is disabled[.] and has failed.

CDnn (1–72) is enabled and idle.and has an active call on

RAS port RAGmacISDNnn.and is under test.

is disabled[.] and has failed.

*Blue, Red, and Yellow alarms are described in Chapter 8 under Trunk Status.

For example:

Note that there is no fixed correlation between a CD number and a RAS portnumber. When administering RAS you use port numbers exclusively. The RASport number actually corresponds to a DS0 slot number on a trunk line. However,when you are dealing with the hardware (during fault-finding, testing or hardwarereplacement) you use card ID numbers and CD numbers to identify hardware.

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Test Results

The Test Results section of the Administration utility screen:

Is titled . . . If . . .

Test Results A test is in progress.

Final Test Results A test is complete.

While a test is in progress for a selected CD, interim results are displayed in theTest Results panel, and a test status window is displayed. The test status windowcan be moved and resized. The last action of the ongoing test is represented bythe last line in the window.

If a CD is selected, final results are displayed in the Test Results panel when atest is complete.

Contents of the Test Results section vary according to the test performed. SeeChapter 9, Tests and Diagnostics.

Test results are deleted when you end the Administration task (by clicking on theEnd Task button or closing the window).

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Latest Statistics

The Latest Statistics section of the Administration utility screen contains T1-RBSperformance statistics from the Registry. If the selected resource is a T1 trunkwith performance monitoring enabled, this section shows statistics appropriate tothe protocol selected. The protocol is displayed in the Performance Monitorwindow.

See the related specification (AT&T TR-54016 or ANSI T1.403-1989) fordefinitions of the statistics.

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Administration Actions

The Actions area of the Administration utility screen consists of several actionbuttons. The following table shows which resources each action is applicable to.

Action Button Applicable Resource

Disable T1 CardTrunkOCD cardCDPort

Busy Out T1 CardTrunkPort

Hang Up T1 CardTrunkPort

Test OCD cardCD

Abort Test OCD cardCD

Clear/Get Statistics Trunk (T1-RBS only)

Clear Results OCD cardCD

Performance Monitor drop-down list

Trunk (T1-RBS only)

Enable/Disable

This dual-function button allows you to enable and disable resources. It readsEnable for a resource that is disabled, and Disable for a resource that is enabled.

The Enable or Disable state is persistent across system restarts.

The Disable action should be used judiciously, since it can affect other resources:

Disabling a . . . Does this . . .

Port Causes a Ring, No Answer or a Busycondition when that port receives a call(depending on what was specified on theAdapter I/O Configuration utility screen).

CD Disables its associated T1 port.

T1 card or OCD card Disables all the resources attached to it.

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Busy Out/UnBusy

This dual-function button allows you to place a resource into a Busy state so thatit will not answer calls (Busy Out), or to reverse the condition so that the resourcewill answer calls (UnBusy).

The Busy Out or UnBusy state is persistent across system restarts.

The resource can be a trunk, a port, or a T1 card. If the resource is a T1 card, allT1 ports on the card are affected by the Busy Out or UnBusy action.

You can use this action to perform a graceful shutdown of the 2290 RemoteAccess Gateway by putting the T1 card or cards in a Busy state. As current callsare completed, no further calls are accepted; when the Online Status Monitorshows all ports are Busy, it is safe to stop RAS and shut down the server.

Hang Up

This button causes a resource to hang up and terminate one or more calls. If theresource is a T1 card, the action applies to all T1 ports with active calls.

You can use this action to perform an immediate shutdown of the 2290 RemoteAccess Gateway by putting the T1 card or cards in a Busy state, then sending aHang Up request. Current calls are terminated, and no further calls are accepted;when the Online Status Monitor shows all ports are Busy, it is safe to stop RASand shut down the server.

Test

This button displays the Test Selection dialog for the highlighted resource. SeeChapter 9, Tests and Diagnostics. The Test button is unavailable for use unlessthe resource is disabled.

Abort Test

This button terminates any ongoing test for the highlighted resource.

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Clear/Get Statistics

This dual-function button affects statistics gathered if performance monitoring isenabled.

The button reads . . . If . . .

Get Statistics There are no new statistics for the selected resource.

Clear Statistics Statistics are displayed for the selected resource.

When you click on Get Statistics, the Administration utility obtains the statistics ifavailable, displays them in the Latest Statistics area of the screen, and updatesthe Registry.

When you click on Clear Statistics, the Administration utility clears the LatestStatistics area. Clear Statistics does not delete statistics from the Registry.

Statistics are not available until about 15 minutes after a T1 card is reset.

Clear Results

Test results are saved in the Windows NT Registry and in memory. When youclick on Clear Results, the Administration utility clears the Test Results memoryarea. The Clear Results button does not delete test results from the Registry.

Performance Monitor

When a T1-RBS trunk is selected, the Performance Monitor window shows thetype of statistics being collected. You selected the default value when youconfigured the trunk. If the type is changed to AT&T or Bellcore, statistics of thattype begin to be collected.

To change the Performance Monitor type, click on the arrow next to thePerformance Monitor window until your selection is displayed, then click on theselection. You can select from:

� None

� AT&T

� Bellcore

Ending the Administration Utility

Click on the End Task button to stop the Administration utility.

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2290 Online Status Monitor

8Starting the Status Monitor

The 2290 Online Status Monitor should be kept running at all times so that OnlineStatus Monitor events are recorded in the Application Log and can be viewed withthe Windows NT Event Viewer. See Table A-3 in Appendix A.

The events are a useful troubleshooting tool.

Start the Online Status Monitor from the Windows NT Program Manager.

� Procedure

1. If it is minimized to an icon, double-click on the 2290 Gateway Utilitiesprogram group icon to open it.

2. Double-click on the Online Status Monitor icon to start it.

The Online Status Monitor shows the status of a system containing up to threetrunks, two T1 cards, and nine OCD cards. If the whole screen is not visible, useWindows Control Panel to change your monitor to 800 x 600 pixels resolution.

This is the Online Status Monitor for a system with three OCD cards:

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8-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

This is the Online Status Monitor with six OCD cards:

This is the Online Status Monitor with nine OCD cards:

2290 Online Status Monitor

8-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Although the Online Status Monitor is normally kept running at all times, it may beminimized like any other Windows NT application. To stop the Online StatusMonitor, click on the Cancel button.

For events logged by the Online Status Monitor, see Appendix A.

T1 Card Status

The status of each T1 card is shown by one of the following:

Status Indicator Meaning

OK The T1 card is installed and operational.

Disabled The T1 card has been manually disabled using theAdministration utility, and is not available for use.

Failed The T1 card has failed and is not operational.

Busy The T1 card has been manually made busy and willnot answer calls.

Trunk Status

The status of each trunk is shown by a list of state boxes which are in color if thestate exists, and in gray if it does not. The first box shows a status of OK,Disabled, Failed, Busy, or Alarm, followed, if applicable, by specific alarms:

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8-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

State Box Meaning

OK The T1 trunk is installed and operational.

Disabled The T1 trunk has been manually disabled using theAdministration utility, and is not available for use.

Failed The T1 trunk has failed and is not operational.

Busy The T1 trunk has been manually made busy and willnot answer calls.

Alarm One or more of the following alarm conditions exists.

Rx Red The trunk is receiving a red alarm, which indicates acarrier failure (loss of synchronization).

Rx Blue The trunk is receiving a blue alarm. An AlarmIndication Signal is being sent by the remote endbecause it has lost its data source.

Rx Yellow The trunk is receiving a yellow alarm. A Remote AlarmSignal is being sent by the remote end because itcannot synchronize the received signal.

Tx Yellow The trunk is sending a yellow alarm because it cannotsynchronize the signal it is receiving from the remoteend.

OCD Card Status

The status of each OCD card is shown by one of the following:

Status Indicator Meaning

OK The OCD card is installed and operational.

Disabled The OCD card has been manually disabled using theAdministration utility, and is not available for use.

Failed The OCD card has failed and is not operational.

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T1 Port Status

T1 ports RAGmacISDN1 through RAGmacISDN72 are shown with the namesRAG-01 through RAG-72. Each T1 port in the system is shown with a label and astatus icon:

Icon Description

Idle means the port is ready and available to answer a call.

Ringing means the port has recognized an incoming call and hasinformed the system.

Call Back means the RAS port is configured for Call Back Security andRAS has placed the call.

Active with an analog symbol means a modem call is active.

Active with a digital symbol means an ISDN call is active.

Busy Out means the port has been manually placed in a busy state andwill not answer a call.

Disabled means the port has been manually disabled and is not availablefor use.

A blank status icon means the T1 port is unconfigured.

You can obtain more information about the current status of a port by placing thecursor on the port’s status icon. A pop-up window displays the status:

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Online Status Display Refresh Rate

The Online Status Monitor normally refreshes its display asynchronously everytime an event is reported by the hardware. You can request a timed refresh byentering a value from 1 to 60 in the

section of the Online Status Monitor screen. Entering 0 (zero) in the field returnsthe refresh feature to asynchronous mode.

To override this value at any time and force the Online Status Monitor to refreshits display, click on Refresh Now.

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Tests and Diagnostics

9OCD Card Components

The following shows the relationship of the components of an OCD card. EachOCD card comprises:

� A Main Control Processor (MCP) that communicates with the host PC overthe Industry Standard Architecture (ISA) bus

� Eight Communications Devices (CDs) that each comprise

— A Secondary Control Processor (SCP)

— A Digital Signal Processor (DSP)

� A Flexible Multi-vendor Integration Circuit (FMIC) that communicates with theT1 card over the Multi-Vendor Integration Protocol (MVIP) bus

SCP DSP

SCP DSP

SCP DSP

SCP DSP

SCP DSP

SCP DSP

SCP DSP

SCP DSP

FMICMCP

MVIPBus

To/FromHost

ISABus

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These components can be tested using the 2290 Administration utility. (SeeChapter 7, 2290 Administration, for information about starting and using theutility.)

Tests and Diagnostics

9-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

The following table shows what hardware is tested in each test, and how long thetest takes. The durations are approximate.

Test MCP SCP DSP FMIC Duration

CD Test Yes Yes Yes No 1.5 minutes

Paired CD Test Yes Yes Yes Yes 3.5 minutes

Comprehensive OCD Test

Both oncard

All oncard

All oncard

Yes 10 minutes

Full System Test All All All All 10 minutesper OCD

Administration Utility OCD Tests

To test 2290 Remote Access Gateway components, select a resource from:

� The Resource drop-down list

� The configuration tree window

Click on the Test button on the Administration utility screen. The followingselection box appears.

Click on . . . To perform a disruptive test of . . .

CD Test The selected CD. If the selected resource is not a CD,this test is not available.

Paired CD Test Two CDs. The first CD is the one selected; select thesecond CD using the CD # drop-down list in the TestSelection box. If the selected resource is not a CD, thistest is not available.

Comprehensive OCD Test The selected OCD card.

Full System Test All OCD cards in the system. All CDs are disabled andthe system is not usable during this test.

Click on Start Test to begin. Tests end automatically unless they are terminatedby clicking on the Abort Test button of the Administration utility screen.

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CD Test

The CD test loops a pattern of data through the CD for 30 seconds, whileanalyzing the data for errors. It tests the MCP, SCP, and DSP associated with theCD.

While a CD test is running, the T1 port associated with the CD is set to a Busystate and is not available for calls.

When the test is complete, the following appears in the Application Log:

CD SelfTest on CDx Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

The result is Pass or Fail.

Individual CD test results are also displayed in the Test Results area of theAdministration utility screen when the CD is selected.

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Paired CD Test

The Paired CD test performs a full test of two cooperating CDs. It tests the MCP,SCP, DSP, and FMIC associated with each CD.

When the test is finished, the following appears in the Application Log:

Paired CD Test - CDx and CDy started.

CD SelfTest on CDx Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD SelfTest on CDy Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD FMIC loopback on CDx Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD FMIC loopback on CDy Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD Pattern Test on CDx Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD Pattern Test on CDy Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

Paired CD Test - CDx and CDy ended.

The result is Pass or Fail.

Individual CD test results are also displayed in the Test Results area of theAdministration utility screen when the CD is selected.

Tests and Diagnostics

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Comprehensive OCD Test

The Comprehensive OCD test performs a full test of an OCD card and its CDs. Ittests the MCP and the FMIC of the OCD card, the SCPs and DSPs of all the CDson the card.

The OCD card must be disabled before the test can begin.

If any CD reports a failure, the CD is taken out of service and the failure is loggedin the Registry.

When the test is finished, the following appears in the Application Log:

Comprehensive OCD Test - OCDx started.

Paired CD Test - CD1 and CD2 started.

CD SelfTest on CD1 Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD SelfTest on CD2 Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD FMIC loopback on CD1 Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD FMIC loopback on CD1...•••

Paired CD Test - CD1 and CD2 ended.

Paired CD Test - CD3 and CD4 started...•••

Paired CD Test - CD7 and CD8 ended.

Comprehensive OCD Test - OCDx ended.

The result is Pass or Fail. Test results are the same as those shown for thePaired CD test.

Individual CD test results are also displayed in the Test Results area of theAdministration utility screen when the CD is selected.

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Full System Test

The Full System Test performs a Comprehensive OCD test of all OCD cards ofthe selected adapter. All OCD cards must be disabled to start the test.

The Full System Test takes about 10 minutes per OCD card.

If any CD reports a failure, the CD is taken out of service and the failure is loggedin the Registry.

When the test is finished, the following appears in the Application Log:

Full System Test started.

Comprehensive OCD Test - OCD1 started.

Paired CD Test - CD1 and CD2 started.

CD SelfTest on CD1 Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD SelfTest on CD2 Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD FMIC loopback on CD1 Test State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlock Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

CD FMIC loopback on CD2...•••

Comprehensive OCD Test - OCD1 ended.

Comprehensive OCD Test - OCD2 started...•••

Comprehensive OCD Test - OCDn ended.

The result is Pass or Fail. Test results are the same as those shown for thePaired CD test.

Individual CD test results are also displayed in the Test Results area of theAdministration utility when the CD is selected.

A B

RUN FAIL

PORT B

PORT A

DIAG

PORT BSYSFAIL

PORT ARUN

496-15021

Tests and Diagnostics

9-72290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

T1 Card Status Indicators

T1 cards contain four LEDs that can be viewed through the rear bracket. Thefollowing table lists the name, color, and meaning of each LED after software isdownloaded to the T1 card.

Name Color LED is . . . Indicating . . .

Port A Yellow Off

ON

Normal operation.

Carrier failure (Red Alarm) on Port A trunk.

Port B Yellow Off

ON

Normal operation.

Carrier failure (Red Alarm) on Port B trunk.

RUN Green Off

ON

Microprocessor inactivity.

Microprocessor activity.

SYSFAIL Yellow Off

ON

Normal operation.

Board failure.

T1 Card Power-Up and Initialization

When power is applied to the ISA bus, the T1 card resets itself and remains inthis state until taken out of reset by the host. After the T1 card is removed fromreset by the host, the card runs internal diagnostics. The internal diagnosticscheck all card components, and verify the data paths.

If the diagnostics . . . Then the T1 card . . .

Fail Logs an error in dual ported memory in theinterrupt status block.

Pass Waits for the host to download its software.

The T1 card reports to the host whether the download succeeded or failed. If thedownload was successful, the card is in its operational state with all datachannels disabled, and is ready to respond to messages from the host.

Use the Windows NT Event Viewer to look at T1 card error events in the SystemLog. See Appendix A.

Tests and Diagnostics

9-8 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

T1 Card Diagnostic Utilities

After the T1 card’s Run indicator LED turns green, a set of onboard diagnosticutilities can be accessed using the serial diagnostic port. These utilities allow youto display memory areas on the card and trace ISDN messages on T1 trunks.

Connecting a Terminal

To access these utilities, connect an asynchronous terminal to the serialdiagnostic port on the T1 card’s rear bracket. The T1 card uses standard RS-232signals and acts as a DCE termination. (See Appendix B for pinout information.)Configure the terminal with the following communication parameters:

� 4800 bps

� 8 bits

� No parity

� 1 stop bit

� No software flow control (XON and XOFF are ignored)

All keyboard entries must be in lowercase characters; uppercase characters areignored. If the diagnostic terminal is connected when the T1 card is reset, thescreen displays a version string indicating the release of software downloaded tothe T1 card. The following is an example:

Instant ISDN PRII48D Rev5.1.0 95Oct09

Copyright 1990–1995

NOTE:T1 cards must be downloaded before these diagnostic tools can beaccessed.

Tests and Diagnostics

9-92290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Viewing the Diagnostics Menu

To view the diagnostics menu, press ? or h at any > prompt; the menu appearsas shown below.

? – help information

d [addr] [len] – display buffer

h – help information

l 0:1:2 – set link trace level

rb addr – read a byte

rw addr – read a word

rl addr – read a long

wb addr val – write a byte

ww addr val – write a word

wl addr val – write a long

CAUTION:Do not use the read and write options under this menu (rb addr,rw addr, rl addr, wb addr val, ww addr val, and wl addr val). Theseoptions are intended for development use only and can adversely affectT1 card operation if not used properly.

The diagnostics menu offers two user functions:

Function Use to . . .

Display buffer Display an area of the T1 card’s memory.

Set link trace level Trace Layer 2 and Layer 3 ISDN messageactivity on active PRI trunks.

Use the diagnostic utilities only under the guidance of technical supportpersonnel.

10-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Maintenance Procedures

10Upgrading Software

Upgrades to the 2290 Remote Access Gateway software are provided on disk.To upgrade your software, follow these steps.

� Procedure

1. Double-click on Control Panel, then double-click on Network.

2. Select the Paradyne Remote Access Interface Driver or the ParadyneDiagnostic Transport Driver from the Installed Network Software listaccording to which driver you want to upgrade. Click on Update.

3. When the system prompts you for the OEMSETUP.INF file, insert theupgrade disk in your a: drive. Click on Continue.

NOTE:Whenever you add or configure 2290 Remote Access Gateway software,turn off and turn on your PC to reset the cards.

Remember that the first system restart after an upgrade takes longer than usualsince new firmware must be downloaded to the cards.

Removing an Adapter

If the 2290 Remote Access Gateway must be removed from your PC, followthese steps.

� Procedure

1. Double-click on Control Panel, then double-click on Network.

2. Select the Paradyne Remote Access Adapter from the list of InstalledAdapter Cards.

3. Click on Remove.

Maintenance Procedures

10-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

The system warns you that this will permanently remove the adapter and thatyou will need to restart the system if you want to re-install it. Click on Yes.

4. If your system has more than one ISA (EISA) bus, select the one the 2290Remote Access Gateway is installed on. Click on OK.

5. If you are removing two adapters, repeat Steps 2 through 4.

6. Select the Paradyne Diagnostic Transport Driver from the Installed NetworkSoftware list.

7. Click on Remove, then click Yes when the warning message is displayed.

8. Click on OK to save your changes, then click OK on the Setup message.RAS is removed from your system. Do not restart your system whenprompted; you will restart your PC in a later step.

9. In Program Manager, activate the 2290 Remote Access Gateway programgroup, then double-click on the unInstallShield icon. Click on Yes to start thedeletion.

UnInstallShield removes the 2290 Remote Access Gateway applicationprograms and program group from Program Manager. Click on OK whendeletion is complete. Shut down Windows NT.

10. Turn off and open your PC. Remove the MVIP cable and cards for theadapter. Replace the cover of your PC and power it on.

11. If an adapter remains in your PC, proceed with Chapter 6, Installing andConfiguring the Software.

Removing or Replacing a Card

If you need to remove or replace a T1 card or OCD card, follow these steps.

� Procedure

1. Uninstall the software as described above in the Removing an Adaptersection, Steps 1 through 9.

2. Turn off and open your PC. Remove the MVIP cable, and pull out the cardyou are removing or replacing.

3. If you are replacing the card, verify that the switch settings on the new cardare the same as on the card you are replacing. Then insert the new card andreplace the MVIP cable.

If you are removing a card that will not be replaced, shift over any remainingOCD cards so that they are adjacent to the T1 card.

If you are removing and not replacing the OCD card farthest from the T1card, you must set the termination switches for the OCD card that is now theone farthest from the T1 card. See Setting the Bus Termination Switches inChapter 5.

4. Replace the MVIP cable. Replace the cover of your PC and power it on.

5. Proceed with Chapter 6, Installing and Configuring the Software.

A-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Windows NT Event Log

AThe 2290 Remote Access Gateway records fault conditions, call connections, calldisconnections, test results, manual actions, and T1 performance statistics in theWindows NT System and Application Event Logs. Use the Windows NT EventViewer (available in the Administrative Tools program group) to look at theseevents.

Device Driver Events (Table A-1) are recorded in the System Log. CommonApplication Events, Online Status Monitor Events, Manual Events, and TestEvents (Tables A-2 through A-5) are recorded in the Application Log.

To print a log, use the Event Viewer to copy the log to a text file. Then use a textviewer or editor such as Notepad to print the file.

Where a resource is shown in the tables, it has the following format:

RAG-x A 2290 Remote Access Gateway System Adapter

Trunkx A T1 Trunk, where x = A or B or C

OCDx An OCD on the adapter, where x = 0–5

CDx A CD on the OCD card, where x = 0–7

RAGmacISDNx A RAS Port, where x = 1–72

resource Any one of the above resources

The variables appname and testname shown in this appendix are replaced by theactual names of the application and test in the Application Log. The variableresult is replaced by Pass or Fail.

Windows NT Event Log

A-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Table A-1 shows the events the 2290 Remote Access Gateway driver places inthe System Log.

View the data in Words format (not Bytes format) to best relate what you seedisplayed by the Event Viewer to the descriptions in the table. Only the last 1–5doublewords (four-byte groupings) are shown in the table; these always arepreceded by variable-length system data in the Event Log.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Table A-1. Device Driver Events (1 of 6)

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event IDÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Type ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁDescription ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁData

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5001 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Error ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAG-x: Could not allocate the resources necessary foroperation.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not map the successfully opened boot file inmemory space.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD Number0x00000003ÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not map the successfully opened MCP SRecordsfile in memory space.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD Number0x00000005

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Not enough host memory to perform OCD bootdownload operation.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD Number0x00000006

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not map the successfully opened T1 card boot filein memory space.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status Code0x0000000B

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Failed to allocate host memory space. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeAllocation Size0x0000000F

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Not enough host memory to allocate.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeAdapter Size0x00000014

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not map the T1 card at the configured I/OAddress.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeI/O Address0x00000019ÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not map the RAM Window configured for the T1card.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeRAM Window Base Address0x0000001A

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not map the OCD Card at the configured I/OAddress.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeI/O AddressOCD Number0x0000001BÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Failed to allocate memory for processing of OCDcontroller to host messages.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberNDIS Status Code0x00000025

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

There were no CDs available for allocation to eitheranswer or make a call.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

0x00000029

Windows NT Event Log

A-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Table A-1. Device Driver Events (2 of 6)ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

DataÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁDescription

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

TypeÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event IDÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5002

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The miniport driver received a fatal error message fromthe OCD controller.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeMCP Error CodeOCD Number0x00000016

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The miniport driver received a non-fatal error messagefrom the OCD controller.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeMCP Error StringOCD Number0x00000017 or 0x00000024

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The miniport driver received a fatal error message fromthe CD controller indicating an SCP communicationsfailure.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status Code“SCP#X COMMUNICA”OCD NumberCD Number0x00000023

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host received a Fatal Error from the T1 controller. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

T1 Card Fatal Error Reason Code0x0000002D

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Attempt to Send message from Host to SCP failed. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodePort NumberOCD NumberCD NumberSCP Command ID0x00000037

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5003ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAG-x: Could not find an adapter.The miniport driver read back a value from the OCDcard that does not match with the Common I/O Addressthat was successfully mapped earlier.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Common I/O Address Value ReadNDIS Status Code0x00000001

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5004 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Error ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAG-x: Could not connect to the interrupt numbersupplied.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Error CodeIRQ Number0x0000001D

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5007ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAG-x: Timed out during an operation.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host timed out waiting for the T1 card to boot. ValidT1 Card States are:

0 – Idle state1 – Card not found2 – Waiting to boot3 – Card is being downloaded4 – Card downloaded and started5 – Card is running6 – Card has a serious problem

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeT1 Card State0x00000009

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host timed out waiting for an acknowledgementfrom the T1 card controller upon issuing a Config InstantISDN command.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status Code0x00000010

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host received an L3L4Error message from the T1controller.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

T1 Card Error Reason Code0x0000002E

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host’s No Accept Timeout expired. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CD NumberPort Number0x0000003D

Windows NT Event Log

A-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Table A-1. Device Driver Events (3 of 6)ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

DataÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁDescription

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

TypeÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event IDÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5007,continued

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host’s No Answer Timeout expired.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CD NumberPort Number0x0000003E

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host’s No Connect Timeout expired. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CD NumberPort Number0x0000003F

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host’s No Close Call Timeout expired. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CD NumberPort Number0x00000040

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host timed out waiting for a response from the MCPafter sending a MCP command.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD NumberMCP Command ID0x00000041ÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host queried the OCD for the health of the CDs andthe OCD reported that the CD was not in the runningstate at this moment.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CD NumberOCD Number0x00000043

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host detected an invalid write or invalid read pointeror both in the MCP control area of the DPRAM.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberInvalid Read PointerInvalid Write Pointer0x00000044

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host detected an invalid write or invalid read pointeror both in the SCP control area of the DPRAM.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CD NumberOCD NumberInvalid Read PointerInvalid Write Pointer0x00000045

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host detected an invalid write or invalid read pointeror both in the SCP data area of the DPRAM.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CD NumberOCD NumberInvalid Read PointerInvalid Write Pointer0x00000046

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host detected an invalid packet count in the MCPcontrol area of the DPRAM.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberInvalid Packet Count0x00000048

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host detected an invalid packet count in the SCPcontrol area of the DPRAM.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberCD NumberInvalid Packet Count0x00000049

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host detected an invalid packet count in the SCPdata area of the DPRAM.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberCD NumberInvalid Packet Count0x0000004A

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host failed to download the Mxxyyzz.HEX firmwarecode into the OCD and timed out while in the statedenoted by the Failure Reason Code.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Failure Reason CodeOCD Number0x0000004B

Windows NT Event Log

A-52290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Table A-1. Device Driver Events (4 of 6)ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

DataÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁDescription

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

TypeÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event IDÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5007,continued

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host failed to download the Sxxyyzz.ODF firmwarecode into the OCD and timed out while in the statedenoted by the Failure Reason Code.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Failure Reason CodeOCD NumberCD Number0x0000004C

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host timed out waiting for an AT response from theCD.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodePort Number (if applicable)OCD NumberCD Number0x0000004DÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5009ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAG-x: Does not support the configuration supplied.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Invalid Registry parameter for this host or hardwareconfiguration.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status FailureRegistry Parameter Value0x00000011

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The miniport driver cannot find a media type in the arrayof media types provided by the wrapper.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeMaximum Media Array Size0x00000012

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Failed to open Registry.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeNDIS Configuration Context0x00000013

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The number of line devices configured using the 2290Configuration utility does not match with the number ofCDs configured.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Number of Line Devices ConfiguredNumber of CDs Configured0x00000027

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5010

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAG-x: The adapter has returned an invalid value to thedriver.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The T1 card is not located in the memory where thedriver has been configured to expect it.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeDevice ID BaseCard Probe ID0x00000007ÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Attempted to write 0xAA55AA55 and read it back fromthe DPRAM; failure indicates that DPRAM might becached.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Test Value Read0x00000008

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not map the RAM Window for the OCD card.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberRAM Base Address0x0000001C

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The driver failed to received any OCD start-upmessages.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberWAIT_TIME0x0000001F

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD card failed to initialize.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberNDIS Status Code0x00000021

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD Ram Window test failed. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD Number0x0000AA55Value Read from OCD DPRAM0x00000022

Windows NT Event Log

A-6 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Table A-1. Device Driver Events (5 of 6)ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

DataÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁDescription

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

TypeÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event IDÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5010,continued

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host received a start-up message from the CDeither from the CD controller firmware (Base Mode = 0)or from the boot application (Base Mode = 1) with anindication of bad firmware code on the controller.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberCD NumberBase ModeChecksum Failure Bit Mask0x00000026

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The OCD controller firmware (Mnnnnnnn.HEX) found inthe configuration does not match the version reportedby the controller. The driver will download theappropriate version.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD Number0x0000002B

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The CD controller firmware (Snnnnnnn.ODF) found inthe configuration does not match the version reportedby the controller. The driver will download theappropriate version.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberCD Number0x0000002C

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The miniport driver received a non fatal error messagefrom the OCD controller with an invalid CD number.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD NumberCD Number0x0000002F

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The CD restarted after reporting a possible fatal error.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeLast Fatal Error Received StringOCD NumberCD Number0x00000030

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Attempt to initialize FMIC failed after a number ofretries.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberNumber of Retries0x00000031

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Attempt to release MCP reset failed. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD Number0x00000032ÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

MCP Download failed. The host aborts the downloadoperation if the Number of Attempts is 3.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Number of AttemptsOCD Number0x00000033

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Common I/O Port Access Failed.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD Number0x00000034

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Attempt to Map the DPRAM using Common I/O failed.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD Number0x00000035

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Attempt to map the interrupt bit positions using CommonI/O failed.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD Number0x00000036

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

SCP DownLoad Failed. The host aborts the downloadoperation if the Number of Attempts is 3.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Number of AttemptsOCD Number0x00000038

Windows NT Event Log

A-72290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Table A-1. Device Driver Events (6 of 6)ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

DataÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁDescription

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

TypeÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event IDÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5010,continued

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not open SecondStage Boot file.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD Number0x00000039

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not map SecondStage Boot file into memory. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD Number0x0000003A

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not open SCP Flash file. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD Number0x0000003B

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not map SCP Flash file into memory.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD Number0x0000003C

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5011 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Error ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAG-x: A required parameter is missing from theRegistry.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

A mandatory Registry parameter is missing. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status Code0x0000000E

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5013 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

WarningÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAG-x: The adapter is configured such that the receivespace is smaller than the maximum packet size. Somepackets may be lost.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberCD NumberPort Number0x0000004E

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5014

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Error ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The adapter is disabled. The driver cannot open theadapter.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The host’s first attempt to communicate to the OCDcontroller firmware (MCP) failed or timed out. Thisresulted in failure to verify the firmware version.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD Number0x00000028

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

After a successful download of new SCP firmware, thehost’s attempt to restart the SCP application by sendingthe Toggle Reset command to the MCP failed.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD Number0xFF0x00000042

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The driver could not restart a failed CD due to MCPcommand failure.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCD NumberCD Number0x00000047

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

5020

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Error ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAG-x: The download file is invalid. The driver is unableto load.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The Miniport driver could not open the OCD boot filewith the file name obtained from the registry.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD Number0x00000002

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Could not open the MCP SRecords file with the filename obtained from the registry

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status CodeOCD Number0x00000004

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The Miniport driver could not open the T1 card boot filewith the file name obtained from the registry.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

NDIS Status Code0x0000000B

Windows NT Event Log

A-8 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Tables A-2 through A-5 show the events the 2290 Remote Access Gatewayutilities place in the Application Log.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Table A-2. Common Application Events

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event ID ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Type ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

DescriptionÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

10000ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway appnamestarted successfully.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

10100ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The 2290 Remote Access Gateway appnamestopped.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

10001ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The appname could not locate any Remote AccessInterface adapters.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

10002 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Error ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The appname could not open adapter RAG-x.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

10003ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The appname could not send a packet to adapterRAG-x.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

10004ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The appname could not receive a packet fromadapter RAG-x.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

10005ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The appname received error code XX on a systemcall.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

10006ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

The appname could not write to the registry.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Table A-3. Online Status Monitor Events

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event ID ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Type ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Description

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11001 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Trunkx is receiving a RED alarm.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11002ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Trunkx is receiving a BLUE alarm.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11003ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Trunkx is receiving a YELLOW alarm.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11004 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Trunkx is sending a YELLOW alarm.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11005ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Trunkx is no longer receiving a RED alarm.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11006ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Trunkx is no longer receiving a BLUE alarm.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11007 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Trunkx is no longer receiving a YELLOW alarm.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11008 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Trunkx is no longer sending a YELLOW alarm.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11009ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

(Reserved for future use)ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11010ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ErrorÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

OCDx reported a fatal error.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

11011 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Error ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CDx reported a fatal error.

Windows NT Event Log

A-92290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Table A-4. Manual EventsÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event IDÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

TypeÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Description

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

12001 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Resource resource Enabled.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

12002 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Resource resource Disabled.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ12003

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁInformation

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁRAGmacISDNx made busy.ÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

12004ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAGmacISDNx BusyOut cleared.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

12005 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

RAS HangUp sent for RAGmacISDNx.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

12006ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Disconnect sent to CDxx.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

12007ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

[ATT | Bellcore] Performance Monitoring Started onTrunkx.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ12008

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁInformation

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁPerformance Monitoring Stopped on Trunkx.ÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

12009ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Statistics for resource resource retrieved.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

12010 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Statistics for resource resource cleared.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

12011 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Test Results for resource resource cleared.

Table A-5. Test EventsÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Event IDÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

TypeÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

DescriptionÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

13001ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CD testname on CDxTest State - No Test RunningTest Progress - Test resultBlocks Received: nnnnnnErrored Blocks: nnnnnnTest Duration (seconds): nnnnnnErrored Seconds: nnnnnn

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

13002 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Paired CD Test CDx and CDy started.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

13003 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

CDx MVIP loopback connected at nnnnn bps.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ13004

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁInformation

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁPaired CD Test failed to connect.ÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

13005ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Paired CD Test CDx and CDy ended.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

13006 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Comprehensive OCD Test OCDx started.

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

13007 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Information ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Comprehensive OCD Test OCDx ended.ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ13008

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁInformation

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁFull System Test started.ÁÁÁÁÁÁ

ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

13009ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

InformationÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ

Full System Test ended.

B-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Pin Assignments

BT1 Card Interfaces

This appendix describes the following interfaces on the T1 card:

� Bus interfaces

— ISA bus

— MVIP bus

� T1 network ports (for two spans, A and B)

� Diagnostic port

Figure B-1 shows the connector locations.

A B

RUNFAIL

PORT B

PORT A

DIAG

496-14978

MVIP Bus Interface

T1 Port B

T1 Port A

Diagnostic Port

ISA Bus Interface

Figure B-1. Connector Locations

Pin Assignments

B-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Bus Interfaces

ISA Bus

A T1 card can be inserted into any standard 16-bit expansion slot on a PCbackplane. The connector signals conform to the Intel ISA Bus Specification andApplication Notes dated January 30, 1990. Pin assignments for the ISAconnectors are listed in Table B-1.

Table B-1. ISA Connectors Pin Assignments (1 of 2)

Pin Signal Pin Signal

B01 0V A01 IOCHCHK*

B02 RESDRV A02 SD7

B03 +5V A03 SD6

B04 IRQ9 A04 SD5

B05 –5V A05 SD4

B06 DRQ2 A06 SD3

B07 –12V A07 SD2

B08 SRDY* A08 SD1

B09 +12V A09 SD0

B10 0V A10 IOCHRDY

B11 SMEMW* A11 AEN

B12 SMEMR* A12 SA19

B13 IOW* A13 SA18

B14 IOR* A14 SA17

B15 DACK3* A15 SA16

B16 DRQ3 A16 SA15

B17 DACK1* A17 SA14

B18 DRQ1 A18 SA13

B19 REFRESH* A19 SA12

B20 SYSCLK A20 SA11

B21 IRQ7 A21 SA10

B22 IRQ6 A22 SA9

* Indicates the signal is asserted low.

Pin Assignments

B-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Table B-1. ISA Connectors Pin Assignments (2 of 2)

Pin SignalPinSignal

B23 IRQ5 A23 SA8

B24 IRQ4 A24 SA7

B25 IRQ3 A25 SA6

B26 DACK2* A26 SA5

B27 TC A27 SA4

B28 BALE A28 SA3

B29 +5V A29 SA2

B30 OSC A30 SA1

B31 0V A31 SA0

D01 MEMCS16* C01 SBHE*

D02 IOCS16* C02 LA23

D03 IRQ10 C03 LA22

D04 IRQ11 C04 LA21

D05 IRQ12 C05 LA20

D06 IRQ13 C06 LA19

D07 IRQ14 C07 LA18

D08 DACK0* C08 LA17

D09 DRQ0 C09 MEMR*

D10 DACK5* C10 MEMW*

D11 DRQ5 C11 SD8

D12 DACK6* C12 SD9

D13 DRQ6 C13 SD10

D14 DACK7* C14 SD11

D15 DRQ7 C15 SD12

D16 +5V C16 SD13

D17 MASTER* C17 SD14

D18 0V C18 SD15

* Indicates the signal is asserted low.

Pin 1 Pin 2

Pin 39 Pin 40

496-15034

Pin Assignments

B-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

MVIP Bus

The T1 card supports MVIP bus connections that adhere to the MVIP-90standard. The MVIP bus consists of sixteen serial lines that provide eightseparate bidirectional data streams. Each 2.048 Mbps data stream can carry 32 channels of 64 kbps. The MVIP bus signals are passed from card to cardusing a 40-pin ribbon cable. Signal names and pin assignments for the 40-pinmale MVIP connector are listed in Table B-2.

NOTE:The maximum length for an MVIP ribbon cable is 22 inches.

Table B-2. MVIP Connector Pin Assignments

Pin Signal Pin Signal

1 Reserved 2 Reserved

3 Reserved 4 Reserved

5 Reserved 6 Reserved

7 DSo0 8 DSi0

9 DSo1 10 DSi1

11 DSo2 12 DSi2

13 DSo3 14 DSi3

15 DSo4 16 DSi4

17 DSo5 18 DSi5

19 DSo6 20 DSi6

21 DSo7 22 DSi7

23 Reserved 24 Reserved

25 Reserved 26 Reserved

27 Reserved 28 Reserved

29 Reserved 30 Ground

31 /C4 32 Ground

33 /F0 34 Ground

35 C2 36 Ground

37 SEC8K 38 Ground

39 C8192 40 Reserved

NOTE: C8192 is a smoothed 8.192 MHz clocksignal that is driven by the selected MVIPclock source; this signal is not standard toMVIP buses.

Pin Assignments

B-52290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

The bidirectional MVIP bus data streams are divided into eight outgoing (DSo)and eight incoming (DSi) timeslots. Bus clocking can be derived from acombination of the /C4, /F0 and C2 master clock signals, or by the SEC8Ksecondary clock signal.

For complete information on the MVIP-90 standard, refer to the Multi-VendorIntegration Protocol Reference Manual available by calling 1-800-NOW-MVIP.

Network Interfaces

The T1 card contains two 8-pin modular connectors on the card’s rear bracket.Table B-3 lists the pin assignments for each T1 connector.

NOTE:When connecting a single T1 span to a T1 card, use Port B.

Table B-3. T1 Port Pin Assignments

Pin Signal Name

1 Receive Ring

2 Receive Tip

3 no connection

4 Transmit Ring

5 Transmit Tip

6 no connection

7 no connection

8 no connection

Pin Assignments

B-6 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Diagnostic Port

An 8-pin modular connector on the rear bracket of the T1 card provides access tothe onboard diagnostic utilities. The connector uses standard RS-232 signals andacts as a DCE termination. Pinouts for the diagnostic port are listed in Table B-4.

Table B-4. Diagnostic Port Pin Assignments

Pin Signal Name

1 no connection

2 no connection

3 no connection

4 GND

5 RXD

6 TXD

7 no connection

8 no connection

C-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Recommended PCs

CCharacteristics of Recommended PCs

The PCs in the following table are recommended for use with the 2290 RemoteAccess Gateway. However, other UL-listed, CSA-certified PCs with the samegeneral characteristics can also be used.

Manufacturer ModelProcessorType

RecommendedRAM

PowerSupply Configurations Supported

Compaq ProSignia 300 Pentium 120 MHz

32 MB 200 watts One adapter (14 amps @ 5 volts): 1 T1 card and up to3 OCD cards

Compaq ProLiant 4500 Pentium 166 MHz

64 MB Dual-rated:488 watts@ 115volts540 watts@ 230volts

One adapter (26 amps @ 5 volts):1 T1 card and up to 6 OCD cards

TexasMicrosystems

3220 ISARackmount

Pentium133 MHz

64 MB 350 watts One adapter (26 amps @ 5 volts):1 T1 card and up to 6 OCD cards, or

Two adapters (40 amps @ 5 volts):2 T1 cards and up to 9 OCD cards

ICS (IntegratedComputerSolutions, Inc.)

7520-44H Pentium133 MHz

64 MB 400 watts One adapter (26 amps @ 5 volts):1 T1 card and up to 6 OCD cards, or

Two adapters (40 amps @ 5 volts):2 T1 cards and up to 9 OCD cards

A readme file is provided with the 2290 Remote Access Gateway software thatmay include tips on how to set up your PC. View the file by double-clicking on itsicon in the 2290 Gateway Utilities program group.

D-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

AT Command Summary

DAT Commands

The following are the AT commands supported by the 2290 Remote AccessGateway. Factory defaults are shown in boldface type with an arrow (→). Allcommands must be preceded by the prefix AT.

A Answer

Bn CCITT/Bell Mode StrapB0 CCITT Mode (V22 and V21)

→ B1 Bell Mode (Bell 212 and Bell 103)B2 CCITT Mode (V23 at 75/1200)B3 CCITT Mode (V23 at 1200/75)

Dn Dial a number. The number can include:0–9, *, #, A–D DTMF numbers to dialW Wait for dial tone, (comma) Pause; (semicolon) Return to command state

DL Redial last number dialed

En Command Character Echo StrapE0 Echo Off

→ E1 Echo On

Hn Switch hook controlH0 Go on-hook (Disconnect, Talk Mode)H1 Go off-hook (Make Busy)

AT Command Summary

D-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

In IdentificationI0 Display 3-digit identifier (value set via the ATI10 command)I1 Return Firmware Release number (3 decimal digits)I2 Verify Flash EPROM ChecksumI3 Display modem serial numberI4 Display Model NumberI5 Hardware Part NumberI6 Software Part NumberI9 Return Firmware Release Number (3 digits)I10=x Set the value that is returned by the ATI0 command

→ x=0 (144), 1 (240), 2 (480), 3 (960), 4 (120)I11 Return PROM Checksum number (8 hexadecimal digits)I12 Return time and date of build, who built it,

and directory where builtI13 Return version number of the DSP firmwareI17 Return a string describing the last fatal error which occurredI19 Return full firmware revision number

On Return to Online ModeO0,O1 Return to online mode

Qn Result Codes Strap→ Q0 Enable

Q1 DisableQ2 Enable in Originate Only

Sn=x Set S register n to value x

Sn? View the contents of S register n

Vn Result Code Format StrapV0 Numbers 1

→ V1 WordsV2 Numbers 2

Xn Extended Result Code, Dial Tone Detect, Busy Tone Detect StrapsX0 Basic Result CodesX1 Extended Result Codes (add line speed to CONNECT message)X2 Extended Result Codes, Enable Dial Tone DetectX3 Extended Result Codes, Enable Busy Tone Detect

→ X4 Extended Result Codes, Enable Busy Tone and Dial Tone DetectX5 Same as X4, but append “/REL”X6 Same as X4, but append “/V42”, etc.X7 Same as X4, but show DTE rate instead of line rate

AT Command Summary

D-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Yn Long Space Disconnect StrapY0 Disable

→ Y1 Enable

&Cn LSD Control Strap&C0 Force On

→ &C1 Standard RS232&C2 Wink When Disconnect&C3 Follows DTR&C4 Simulated Control Carrier&C5 =DTR/Disconnect Off

&Dn DTR Control Strap&D0 Ignore DTR&D1 Go to command state when DTR OFF

→ &D2 Standard RS232&D3 Reload Options on DTR Off and Standard RS232&D4 Controls on-hook

&Fn Select Factory Default Profile Straps&F0 Async Dial

&Gn V22bis Guard Tone Strap→ &G0 Disable

&G1 550 Hz&G2 1800 Hz

&In Dial Transmit Level&I12 –12dBm to to

→ &I15 –15dBm to to&I25 –25dBm

&Mn Async/Sync Mode and DTE Dialer Straps→ &M0 Async, AT Command Set

&Qn Async/Sync Mode and DTE Dialer Straps→ &Q0 same as &M0

&Rn RTS Action Strap&R0 Standard RS232

→ &R1 Ignore RTS&R2 Simulated Control Carrier

AT Command Summary

D-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

&Sn DSR Control Strap→ &S0 Forced On

&S1 Standard RS232&S2 Wink When Disc&S3 Follows DTR&S4 On Early&S5 Delay to data

&Tn Tests&T0 Abort Test&T1 Local Analog Loopback&T2 Pattern&T3 Local Digital Loopback

→ &T4 Receive Remote Loop Strap=Enable&T5 Receive Remote Loop Strap=Disable&T6 Remote Digital Loopback&T7 RL with Pattern&T8 LL with Pattern&T9 Self Test

&Vn View Straps&V0 View Active Operating&V1 View User Strap bank that is valid on reset&V2 View User 0&V3 View User 1&V4 View Directory&V8 View miscellaneous modem status information

\An Maximum MNP and V.42 Frame Size\A0=64\A1=128\A2=192

→ \A3= 256\A4=32\A5=16

\Cn EC Negotiate Buffer Strap→ \C0 Disable

\C1 Enable\C2 Disable and Switch

\Dn CTS Control Strap→ \D0 Forced On

\D1 Standard RS232\D2 Wink When Disc\D3 Follows DTR

AT Command Summary

D-52290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

\Gn Modem to modem flow control→ \G0 Disable modem to modem flow control

\G1 Enable modem to modem flow control

\Kn Straps: Break Command State, Break Buffer Control, Break Send Control\K0 Escape to Command Mode, Send Break First,

Discard Buffered Data\K1 Send Break First, Discard Buffered Data\K2 Escape to Command Mode, Send Break First\K3 Send Break First\K4 Escape to Command Mode, Send Data First

→ \K5 Send Data First

\Nn Error Control Mode Strap\N0 Buffer Mode (No EC)\N1 Direct Mode (No EC)\N2 MNP or Disconnect\N3 MNP or Buffer\N4 LAPM or Disconnect\N5 LAPM or Buffer\N6 V42/MNP or Disconnect

→ \N7 V42/MNP or Buffer

\Qn Flow Control of DTE; Flow Control of Mdm Straps→ \Q0 Flow Control of DTE=Disable, of Modem=Disable

\Q1 Flow Control of DTE=XON/XOFF, of Modem=XON/XOFF\Q2 Flow Control of DTE=CTS, of Modem=Disable\Q3 Flow Control of DTE=CTS, of Modem=RTS\Q4 Flow Control of DTE=XON/XOFF, of Modem=Disable\Q5 Flow Control of DTE=Disable, of Modem=XON/XOFF\Q6 Flow Control of DTE=Disable, of Modem=RTS

\Tn No Data Disconnect Timer Strap (n=0 to 255 minutes)

\Xn XON/XOFF Passthrough Strap→ \X0 Disable

\X1 Enable

AT Command Summary

D-6 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

%An EC Fallback Character Strap

%Bn Maximum Modem Modulation/Raten=300, 1200, 2400, 7200, 9600, 12000, → 14400

%Cn V42bis and MNP5 Compression Strap%C0 Disable

→ %C1 Enable

E-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Worksheets

EExtra Worksheets

Use the worksheets in this appendix as extra copies to tear out, or to keep in theguide as a record of settings for different server types and trunk types in yournetworks.

Worksheets

E-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Trunk Configuration Worksheet

Site

Server

Date Installer

Trunk Configuration Worksheet (1 of 2)

Setting Trunk A Trunk B

Framing ESFSF

ESFSF

Line Coding B8ZSAMI

B8ZSAMI

Line Build Out 0.0 dB–7.5 dB

–15.0 dB–22.5 dB

0.0 dB–7.5 dB

–15.0 dB–22.5 dB

Trunk Type T1-RBST1-PRI

T1-RBST1-PRI

Switch Type (T1-PRI only) AT&T 5ESSAT&T 4ESSNorthern Telecom DMS-100Northern Telecom DMS-250Ericsson MD-110 T1Siemens

AT&T 5ESSAT&T 4ESSNorthern Telecom DMS-100Northern Telecom DMS-250Ericsson MD-110 T1Siemens

In-Start (T1-RBS only)

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

Out-Start (T1-RBS only)

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

Q931 Variant (T1-PRI only)

AT&T CustomNorthern TelecomBellcore National (ISDN-2)

AT&T CustomNorthern TelecomBellcore National (ISDN-2)

Performance Monitor (T1-RBS only)

OffAT&TBellcore

OffAT&TBellcore

Worksheets

E-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Trunk Configuration Worksheet (2 of 2)

Setting Trunk BTrunk A

Clock Source Trunk ATrunk BInternal

No Accept Timeout _____ seconds

(30–60; default 30)

No Answer Timeout _____ seconds

(5–120; default 30)

No Connect Timeout_____ seconds(5–60; default 30)

No Close Call Timeout_____ seconds(5–30; default 10)

Channel Usage 1 7 13 192 8 14 203 9 15 214 10 16 225 11 17 236 12 18 24

(default 1–24)

1 7 13 192 8 14 203 9 15 214 10 16 225 11 17 236 12 18 24

(default 1–24)

Local Phone Number(T1-PRI only) — —

Phone Number Type(T1 PRI only)

NationalInternationalAbbreviatedSubscriberUnknown

NationalInternationalAbbreviatedSubscriberUnknown

Phone Number Plan(T1 PRI only)

ISDNTelephonyPrivateUnknown

ISDNTelephonyPrivateUnknown

Worksheets

E-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Trunk Configuration Worksheet

Site

Server

Date Installer

Trunk Configuration Worksheet (1 of 2)

Setting Trunk A Trunk B

Framing ESFSF

ESFSF

Line Coding B8ZSAMI

B8ZSAMI

Line Build Out 0.0 dB–7.5 dB

–15.0 dB–22.5 dB

0.0 dB–7.5 dB

–15.0 dB–22.5 dB

Trunk Type T1-RBST1-PRI

T1-RBST1-PRI

Switch Type (T1-PRI only) AT&T 5ESSAT&T 4ESSNorthern Telecom DMS-100Northern Telecom DMS-250Ericsson MD-110 T1Siemens

AT&T 5ESSAT&T 4ESSNorthern Telecom DMS-100Northern Telecom DMS-250Ericsson MD-110 T1Siemens

In-Start (T1-RBS only)

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

Out-Start (T1-RBS only)

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

WinkImmediateLoopGroundLoop-FXOGround-FXO

Q931 Variant (T1-PRI only)

AT&T CustomNorthern TelecomBellcore National (ISDN-2)

AT&T CustomNorthern TelecomBellcore National (ISDN-2)

Performance Monitor (T1-RBS only)

OffAT&TBellcore

OffAT&TBellcore

Worksheets

E-52290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Trunk Configuration Worksheet (2 of 2)

Setting Trunk BTrunk A

Clock Source Trunk ATrunk BInternal

No Accept Timeout _____ seconds

(30–60; default 30)

No Answer Timeout _____ seconds

(5–120; default 30)

No Connect Timeout_____ seconds(5–60; default 30)

No Close Call Timeout_____ seconds(5–30; default 10)

Channel Usage 1 7 13 192 8 14 203 9 15 214 10 16 225 11 17 236 12 18 24

(default 1–24)

1 7 13 192 8 14 203 9 15 214 10 16 225 11 17 236 12 18 24

(default 1–24)

Local Phone Number(T1-PRI only) — —

Phone Number Type(T1 PRI only)

NationalInternationalAbbreviatedSubscriberUnknown

NationalInternationalAbbreviatedSubscriberUnknown

Phone Number Plan(T1 PRI only)

ISDNTelephonyPrivateUnknown

ISDNTelephonyPrivateUnknown

Worksheets

E-6 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Windows NT Diagnostics Worksheet

Site

Server

Date Installer

1. On the Microsoft Diagnostics Report, check for Vector numbers in theInterrupt section. A Vector is the IRQ of the device. If there is a Vectornumber of 10, 11, 12, 14, or 15 shown, cross off that number in the tablebelow. Do this for each Vector number shown.

IRQs (Vectors)

10 11 12 14 15

2. Check for addresses in the Port section of the report. The Physical Addressand Length columns represent the I/O addresses in use. (An x or 0x prefixmeans the values are in hexadecimal.)

Add the Length value to the Physical Address value to determine the nextavailable address. If the device’s I/O address matches or overlaps anyaddress in the table below, cross off that address. Addresses that are invalidfor the 2290 Remote Access Gateway are already crossed off.

Port Physical Addresses

16-Byte Address Ranges Used for T1 Card I/O Addresses

32-Byte Address Ranges Used forOCD Card I/O Addresses

0x100 – 0x10F 0x200 – 0x21F

0x110 – 0x11F 0x220 – 0x23F

0x120 – 0x12F 0x240 – 0x25F

0x130 – 0x13F 0x260 – 0x27F

0x140 – 0x14F 0x280 – 0x29F

0x150 – 0x15F 0x2A0 – 0x2BF

0x160 – 0x16F 0x2C0 – 0x2DF

0x170 – 0x17F 0x2E0 – 0x2FF

0x180 – 0x18F 0x300 – 0x31F

0x190 – 0x19F 0x320 – 0x33F

0x1A0 – 0x1AF 0x340 – 0x35F

Worksheets

E-72290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Port Physical Addresses, continued

16-Byte Address Ranges Used for T1 Card I/O Addresses

32-Byte Address Ranges Used forOCD Card I/O Addresses

0x1B0 – 0x1BF 0x360 – 0x37F

0x1C0 – 0x1CF 0x380 – 0x39F

0x1D0 – 0x1DF 0x3A0 – 0x3BF

0x1E0 – 0x1EF 0x3C0 – 0x3DF

— 0x3E0 – 0x3FF

— 0x400 – 0x41F

— 0x420 – 0x43F

— 0x440 – 0x45F

— 0x460 – 0x47F

— 0x480 – 0x49F

— 0x4A0 – 0x4BF

— 0x4C0 – 0x4DF

— 0x4E0 – 0x4FF

Repeat for each address in the Port section.

3. Check all devices and cross off the IRQs and I/O addresses they use.

4. Locate the DMA/Memory Report.

5. Determine free memory addresses by adding the Length and PhysicalAddress values.

Where addresses in the Memory window match or overlap the DMA/MemoryPhysical Addresses in the table below, cross off those addresses.

DMA/Memory Physical AddressesUsed for RAM Windows Base Addresses

0xA0000 –0xA3FFF

0xB0000 –0xB3FFF

0xC0000 –0xC3FFF

0xD0000 –0xD3FFF

0xE0000 –0xE3FFF

0xF0000 –0xF3FFF

0xA4000 –0xA7FFF

0xB4000 –0xB7FFF

0xC4000 –0xC7FFF

0xD4000 –0xD7FFF

0xE4000 –0xE7FFF

0xF4000 –0xF7FFF

0xA8000 –0xABFFF

0xB8000 –0xBBFFF

0xC8000 –0xCBFFF

0xD8000 –0xDBFFF

0xE8000 –0xEBFFF

0xF8000 –0xFBFFF

0xAC000 –0xAFFFF

0xBC000 –0xBFFFF

0xCC000 –0xCFFFF

0xDC000 –0xDFFFF

0xEC000 –0xEFFFF

0xFC000 –0xFFFFF

Worksheets

E-8 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Windows NT Diagnostics Worksheet

Site

Server

Date Installer

1. On the Microsoft Diagnostics Report, check for Vector numbers in theInterrupt section. A Vector is the IRQ of the device. If there is a Vectornumber of 10, 11, 12, 14, or 15 shown, cross off that number in the tablebelow. Do this for each Vector number shown.

IRQs (Vectors)

10 11 12 14 15

2. Check for addresses in the Port section of the report. The Physical Addressand Length columns represent the I/O addresses in use. (An x or 0x prefixmeans the values are in hexadecimal.)

Add the Length value to the Physical Address value to determine the nextavailable address. If the device’s I/O address matches or overlaps anyaddress in the table below, cross off that address. Addresses that are invalidfor the 2290 Remote Access Gateway are already crossed off.

Port Physical Addresses

16-Byte Address Ranges Used for T1 Card I/O Addresses

32-Byte Address Ranges Used forOCD Card I/O Addresses

0x100 – 0x10F 0x200 – 0x21F

0x110 – 0x11F 0x220 – 0x23F

0x120 – 0x12F 0x240 – 0x25F

0x130 – 0x13F 0x260 – 0x27F

0x140 – 0x14F 0x280 – 0x29F

0x150 – 0x15F 0x2A0 – 0x2BF

0x160 – 0x16F 0x2C0 – 0x2DF

0x170 – 0x17F 0x2E0 – 0x2FF

0x180 – 0x18F 0x300 – 0x31F

0x190 – 0x19F 0x320 – 0x33F

0x1A0 – 0x1AF 0x340 – 0x35F

Worksheets

E-92290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Port Physical Addresses, continued

16-Byte Address Ranges Used for T1 Card I/O Addresses

32-Byte Address Ranges Used forOCD Card I/O Addresses

0x1B0 – 0x1BF 0x360 – 0x37F

0x1C0 – 0x1CF 0x380 – 0x39F

0x1D0 – 0x1DF 0x3A0 – 0x3BF

0x1E0 – 0x1EF 0x3C0 – 0x3DF

— 0x3E0 – 0x3FF

— 0x400 – 0x41F

— 0x420 – 0x43F

— 0x440 – 0x45F

— 0x460 – 0x47F

— 0x480 – 0x49F

— 0x4A0 – 0x4BF

— 0x4C0 – 0x4DF

— 0x4E0 – 0x4FF

Repeat for each address in the Port section.

3. Check all devices and cross off the IRQs and I/O addresses they use.

4. Locate the DMA/Memory Report.

5. Determine free memory addresses by adding the Length and PhysicalAddress values.

Where addresses in the Memory window match or overlap the DMA/MemoryPhysical Addresses in the table below, cross off those addresses.

DMA/Memory Physical AddressesUsed for RAM Windows Base Addresses

0xA0000 –0xA3FFF

0xB0000 –0xB3FFF

0xC0000 –0xC3FFF

0xD0000 –0xD3FFF

0xE0000 –0xE3FFF

0xF0000 –0xF3FFF

0xA4000 –0xA7FFF

0xB4000 –0xB7FFF

0xC4000 –0xC7FFF

0xD4000 –0xD7FFF

0xE4000 –0xE7FFF

0xF4000 –0xF7FFF

0xA8000 –0xABFFF

0xB8000 –0xBBFFF

0xC8000 –0xCBFFF

0xD8000 –0xDBFFF

0xE8000 –0xEBFFF

0xF8000 –0xFBFFF

0xAC000 –0xAFFFF

0xBC000 –0xBFFFF

0xCC000 –0xCFFFF

0xDC000 –0xDFFFF

0xEC000 –0xEFFFF

0xFC000 –0xFFFFF

Worksheets

E-10 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Card Configuration Worksheet

Site

Server

Date Installer

Card Configuration Worksheet

Card ID IRQI/O BaseAddress

I/OBlockSize(bytes)

RAM WindowBase

MemoryBlockSize(bytes) Required for

T1-1 16 16 k First T1 card

OCD1 � 32 — — CDs 1 – 8, Trunk A

OCD2 � 32 — — CDs 9 – 16, Trunk A

OCD3 � 32 — — CDs 17 – 24, Trunk A

OCD4 � 32 — — CDs 25 – 32, Trunk B

OCD5 � 32 — — CDs 33 – 40, Trunk B

OCD6 � 32 — — CDs 41 – 48, Trunk B

(OCD1–6) — — — 32 k OCD cards

T1-2 16 16 k Second T1 card

OCD7 � 32 — — CDs 49 – 56, Trunk C

OCD8 � 32 — — CDs 57 – 64, Trunk C

OCD9 � 32 — — CDs 65 – 72, Trunk C

(OCD7–9) — — — 32 k OCD cards

Worksheets

E-112290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Card Configuration Worksheet

Site

Server

Date Installer

Card Configuration Worksheet

Card ID IRQI/O BaseAddress

I/OBlockSize(bytes)

RAM WindowBase

MemoryBlockSize(bytes) Required for

T1-1 16 16 k First T1 card

OCD1 � 32 — — CDs 1 – 8, Trunk A

OCD2 � 32 — — CDs 9 – 16, Trunk A

OCD3 � 32 — — CDs 17 – 24, Trunk A

OCD4 � 32 — — CDs 25 – 32, Trunk B

OCD5 � 32 — — CDs 33 – 40, Trunk B

OCD6 � 32 — — CDs 41 – 48, Trunk B

(OCD1–6) — — — 32 k OCD cards

T1-2 16 16 k Second T1 card

OCD7 � 32 — — CDs 49 – 56, Trunk C

OCD8 � 32 — — CDs 57 – 64, Trunk C

OCD9 � 32 — — CDs 65 – 72, Trunk C

(OCD7–9) — — — 32 k OCD cards

Worksheets

E-12 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Switch Configuration WorksheetMark the switch positions you have set for each card in your system.

496 -15106

T1-1 SW16 7 8 9 10

ON1 2 3 4 5

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 7

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 8

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 9

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

T1-2 SW16 7 8 9 10

ON1 2 3 4 5

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 1

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 2

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 3

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 4

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 5

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 6

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

Worksheets

E-132290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Switch Configuration WorksheetMark the switch positions you have set for each card in your system.

496 -15106

T1-1 SW16 7 8 9 10

ON1 2 3 4 5

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 7

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 8

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 9

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

T1-2 SW16 7 8 9 10

ON1 2 3 4 5

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 1

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 2

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 3

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 4

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 5

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2 3 4 5

SW2 SW1OCD 6

SW3 SW4 ON1 2 3 4 5 6

ON1 2

GL-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Glossary

Hardware that provides some transitional function between two or more devices. In the2290 Remote Access Gateway, an adapter is a T1 card and its associated OCD cards.

A signal transmitted instead of the normal signal to continue transmission continuity and toindicate to the receiving terminal that a transmission fault exists at either the transmittingterminal or upstream of the transmitting signal. Sometimes referred to as Blue Alarm.

Alternate Mark Inversion. A line encoding technique and a bipolar return-to-zero signal.

American Standard Code for Information Interchange. A 7-bit code that establishescompatibility between data services. ASCII is the standard for data transmission overtelephone lines. The ASCII code consists of 32 control characters (nondisplayed) and96 displayed characters.

Basic Input/Output System. The program interface between the hardware and theoperating system of a PC.

Binary digit. The smallest unit of data, a bit has a value of 0 or 1.

Bits per second. Indicates the speed at which bits are transmitted across a dataconnection.

A temporary storage area used to compensate for differences in data flow rate whentransmitting data from one device to another.

An assembly of conductors that carries signals to and from devices along its path.

The state of a communications device when it is occupied with processing a call, or hasbeen made to appear that way. A device appears busy when its Tip and Ring signals arejoined together.

A small group of bits (usually 8) that is handled as a unit of data.

Bipolar 8 Zero Substitution. Encoding scheme for transmitting clear channel signals over aT1 line.

International Consultative Committee on Telecommunications and Telegraphy. The bodychanged its name to ITU-T in March 1993.

Communications Device. In the 2290 Remote Access Gateway, one of eight DCEs on anOCD card, each capable of data communication over PSTN and ISDN lines.

A bidirectional DS0, voice, or data path, for electrical transmission between two or morepoints. Also called a circuit, line, link, path, or facility.

Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol. A security technique that allows a userpassword to be encrypted for transmission.

Central Office.

Customer Premises Equipment attached to a network.

Central Processing Unit. The main or only computing device in a data processing system.

Canadian Standards Association.

adapter

Alarm IndicationSignal

AMI

ASCII

BIOS

bit

bps

buffer

bus

busy

byte

B8ZS

CCITT

CD

channel

CHAP

CO

CPE

CPU

CSA

Glossary

GL-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

Data Communications Equipment. The equipment that provides the functions required toestablish, maintain, and end a connection. It also provides the signal conversion requiredfor communication between the DTE and the network.

Canadian Department of Communication.

A pair of contiguous words. In microcomputers, a doubleword is four bytes long andusually begins at an address evenly divisible by four.

A software module that controls an input/output port or external device. The 2290 RemoteAccess Gateway includes drivers for its T1 and OCD cards.

Digital Signal Processor. The microprocessor that handles line signaling in a modem.

Digital signal level 0 (zero). A 64 kbps digital telecommunications signal or channel.

Digital signal level 1 (one). A 1.544 Mbps digital telecommunications signal or channel.

Data Terminal Equipment. The equipment, such as computers and printers, that providesor creates data in the form of digital signals for transmission.

A performance measurement reported during Digital Test or Transmit Test Pattern that isdefined as a second in which at least one error has been detected.

Electrostatic Discharge. Static electricity.

Extended Superframe. The T1 transmission standard that specifies 24 frames as anextended superframe to be used for frame synchronization and to locate signaling bits.

Federal Communications Commission. Board of Commissioners that regulates all U.S.interstate, intrastate, and foreign electrical communication systems that originate from theUnited States.

Flexible MVIP Interface Circuit. An integrated circuit on the OCD card.

Foreign Exchange Office.

A supervisory signaling technique in which the CPE signals the CO that it is off-hook bycreating a zero-voltage condition.

An ITU-T recommendation for pulse-coded modulation of an audio signal for transmission.

Input/Output. The act or capability of reading or writing data.

Interrupt Request. An event that causes a computer to halt normal execution and start aninterrupt handler routine to service an I/O request.

Industry Standard Architecture. A standard for connections among a CPU, memory, andI/O devices on a single computer chassis.

Integrated Services Digital Network. A set of standards for digital voice and datacommunication over the telephone network.

International Telecommunications Union Telecommunications Standardization Sector. Anadvisory committee established by the United Nations to recommend communicationsstandards and policies and allocate transmission frequencies. Before March, 1993, it wascalled CCITT.

Kilobyte or kilobytes. One kilobyte is 1,024 bytes.

Kilobits per second. One kilobit is 1,024 bits.

Light Emitting Diode. A light or status indicator that glows in response to the presence of acertain condition (e.g., an alarm).

DCE

DOC

doubleword

driver

DSP

DS0

DS1

DTE

errored second

ESD

ESF

FCC

FMIC

FXO

ground start

G.711

I/O

IRQ

ISA

ISDN

ITU-T

kB

kbps

LED

Glossary

GL-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

A supervisory signaling technique in which the CPE signals the CO that it is off-hook byclosing a relay at the CO.

Megabits per second. One megabit is 1,048,576 (10242) bits.

Main Control Processor. The CPU on an OCD card that communicates with the host PC.

Microcom Networking Protocol. Levels 2–4 of this protocol, similar to ITU-T V.42, detectand correct data errors caused by poor telephone line conditions. Level 5, similar to ITU-TV.42bis, includes data compression.

MOdulator/DEModulator. A device used to convert data from a digital signal to an analogsignal so that data can be transmitted over a telephone line. Once the data is received, theanalog signal is converted back into a digital signal.

The process of varying some characteristics (usually amplitude, frequency, and/or phase)of a carrier wave to form data transmissions.

Mu-law. A mathematical function used to encode audio for transmission.

Multi-Vendor Integration Protocol. MVIP is a standard for using a variety of devices on asingle computer chassis.

Network Driver Interface Specification. Developed by 3Com and Microsoft, NDIS is aprogramming interface for shared network services.

Octal Communications Device. A full-sized PC card containing eight CDs, each capable ofdata communication over PSTN or ISDN lines.

Password Authentication Protocol. A security technique that requires a user password foraccess to a system.

Personal Computer.

An access point for data entry or exit.

A test that checks most hardware components when power is applied to the device or areset is initiated.

Point-to-Point Protocol, as defined in Internet RFC 1661.

See T1-PRI.

A set of rules that determines the behavior of functional units in achieving communication.

Public Switched Telephone Network. A network shared among many users who can usetelephones to establish connections between two points.

The name RAS assigns to 2290 Remote Access Gateway ports, where x is a number 1 to72. “ RAGmac” stands for Remote Access Gateway Media Access Control. “ISDN” is partof the prefix even for non-ISDN (T1-RBS) ports.

Random-Access Memory. Read/write memory that is volatile and loses its contents whenpower is removed.

Remote Access Service. This is the feature of Windows NT that permits the remoteconnection to a server using ISDN, X.25, or standard telephone lines.

Regional Bell Operating Company. A Bell Operating Company in a particular geographicarea.

In Windows NT, the repository of information about users, applications, and computers.The Registry replaces the .INI files used in earlier versions of Windows.

Secondary Control Processor. The CPU that performs error correction and datacompression for a CD.

loop start

Mbps

MCP

MNP

modem

modulation

µlaw

MVIP

NDIS

OCD

PAP

PC

port

power-up self-test

PPP

PRI

protocol

PSTN

RAGmacISDNx

RAM

RAS

RBOC

Registry

SCP

Glossary

GL-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

A computer that provides services to a network.

Superframe. Also known as D4 framing, the T1 transmission standard that specifies12 frames to be used for frame synchronization and to locate signaling bits.

Implementation of the PPP link layer data transparency, framing, and error checking in aCD.

Simultaneous Voice and Data. A digital or analog data transmission technique whichpermits the simultaneous transport of voice and data over a single telephone channel.

Data transmission that is synchronized by timing signals. Characters are sent at a fixedrate.

Transmission Control Protocol. An Internet standard transport layer protocol defined inInternet RFC 793. It is connection-oriented and stream-oriented.

Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol. The dominant protocol in the worldwideInternet.

A digital carrier facility used to transmit a DS1 formatted digital signal at 1.544 Mbps.

T1 Primary Rate Interface. A DS1 configured for 23 bearer channels and one controlchannel. Usually associated with ISDN, its bearer DS0s are suitable for audio, ITU-T V.xx-series modulations, and clear channel synchronous data.

T1 Robbed Bit Signaling. A DS1 configured for 24 bearer channels using robbed bitsignaling. Its DS0s are suitable for µlaw transport of audio and ITU-T V.xx-seriesmodulations. Called “DS1 service” by some RBOCs.

An ITU-T standard for modems operating full-duplex with asynchronous or synchronousdata at 300 bps over dial telephone lines.

An ITU-T standard for modems operating full-duplex with asynchronous or synchronousdata at 1200 bps over dial telephone lines.

An ITU-T standard for modems operating full-duplex with asynchronous or synchronousdata at 2400 or 1200 bps over dial telephone lines.

An ITU-T standard for modems operating full-duplex with asynchronous or synchronousdata at 9600 or 4800 bps over dial or leased telephone lines.

An ITU-T standard for modems operating full-duplex with asynchronous or synchronousdata over dial or leased telephone lines at 14,400, 12,000, 9600, 7200, or 4800 bps.

An ITU-T standard for modems operating full-duplex with asynchronous or synchronousdata over dial networks (PSTN) or two-wire leased lines at 28,800, 26,400, 24,000,21,600, 19,200, 16,800, 14,400, 12,000, 9600, 7200, 4800, or 2400 bps.

An ITU-T standard for error control protocol.

An ITU-T standard for data compression.

A supervisory signaling technique in which the CPE signals the CO that it is off-hook bysending a momentary pulse to the CO.

In microcomputers, two contiguous bytes treated as a datum, usually beginning at anaddress evenly divisible by two.

An outgoing signal transmitted when a DS1 terminal has determined that it has lost theincoming signal.

server

SF

split PPP

SVD

synchronous data

TCP

TCP/IP

T1

T1-PRI

T1-RBS

V.21

V.22

V.22bis

V.32

V.32bis

V.34

V.42

V.42bis

wink start

word

Yellow Alarm

IN-12290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

Index

Numbers2290 Remote Access Gateway

administration, 7-1components, 1-1features, 1-4hardware installation, 5-1software installation, 6-1

Aabort test, 7-7adapter, removing, 10-1Adapter I/O configuration, 6-4Administration

actions, 7-6resource information, 7-2

Administration utility, 7-1Application Log

Common Application events, A-8Manual events, A-9Online Status Monitor events, A-8Test events, A-9

BBIOS configuration

other PCs, 4-8recommended PCs, 3-2

bus interfaces, B-2Busy Out, 7-7

Ccabling

DTE to diagnostic port, 9-8MVIP, 5-17ordering information, 1-2T1 card, 5-18

Card Configuration Worksheet, 4-6card installation

OCD card, 5-16T1 card, 5-6

CD number and RAS port number, 7-3

CD test, 9-3channel

usage, 2-8usage configuration, 6-9

circuit ID, 2-3clear statistics, 7-8clear test results, 7-8clock signals, B-5clock source, 2-8components, 1-1comprehensive OCD test, 9-5configuration

Adapter I/O, 6-4Channel Usage, 6-9OCD card, 6-11phone, 6-10RAM Windows, 6-6T1 card, 6-7tree window, 7-2

Configuration utility, 6-3configuration worksheet

card, 4-6trunk, 2-4Windows NT Diagnostics, 4-3

connector locations, B-1current status, 7-3

Ddeleting software, 10-1diagnostic port, 9-8, B-6Diagnostic Transport Driver, installation, 6-13diagnostic utilities

connecting a terminal, 9-8general, 9-8viewing the diagnostics menu, 9-9

directory ID, 2-3disabling a resource, 7-6documents

Hardware Compatibility List, 4-1ordering information, viperformance monitoring, 2-7Q.931, 2-7

Index

IN-2 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

related, vidriver

events in Event Log, A-2installation, 6-1, 6-13

DS1 service, ordering, 2-3DTE, T1 card diagnostics, 9-8

EEISA, bus selection, 6-3enabling a resource, 7-6equalization, 2-6equipment list, 1-2Event Log entries, A-1

common application events, A-8device driver events, A-2manual events, A-9Online Status Monitor events, A-8test results, A-9

FFAIL LED, 6-14, 9-7features, 1-4firmware out of date, 6-11flow control, 9-8framing, 2-6full system test, 9-6

Gget statistics, 7-8

HHang Up, 7-7hardware

installing, 5-2PC preparation, 5-2replacing, 10-2

II/O addresses, choosing, 4-3I/O base address, 4-7In-Start, 2-7installation

driver, 6-13DTE cable, 5-18hardware, 5-2

MVIP cable, 5-17OCD card, 5-16software, 6-1software upgrade, 10-1T1 cables, 5-18T1 card, 5-6

installing a second adapter, 6-15interfaces, B-1IRQ, 4-6IRQs, choosing, 4-3ISA bus

compliance standard, B-2connector pin assignments, B-2

ISDNordering, 2-2service providers, 2-2

Llatest statistics, 7-5LEDs, 6-14, 9-7line build out, 2-6line coding, 2-6local phone number, 2-8

Mmanual events, A-9memory

caching, 4-8I/O base address, 4-7RAM window base address, 4-7shadow, 4-8shared, 4-8

modulations supported, 1-4monitoring status of

OCD card, 8-4T1 card, 8-3T1 port, 8-5trunk, 8-3

Multi-Vendor Integration Protocol (MVIP)bus, B-4, B-5cable, 5-17, B-4

NNetwork applet, 6-3, 6-11network protocols supported, 1-4No Accept Timeout, 2-8No Answer Timeout, 2-8

Index

IN-32290-A2-GB20-00 September 1996

No Close Call Timeout, 2-8No Connect Timeout, 2-8

OOCD card

bus termination switches, 5-15cabling, 5-17comprehensive test, 9-5configuration, 6-11I/O base address, 4-7, 5-8installation, 5-16IRQ switches, 5-13preparation, 5-8RAM window base address, 4-7removing, 10-2status, 8-4strapping, 5-8, 5-13, 5-15tests, 9-2

OEMSETUP.INF, 10-1Online Status Monitor, 8-1

events in Event Log, A-8starting, 8-1

order numbers, 1-2ordering manuals, viordering T1-PRI service (ISDN), 2-2ordering T1-RBS service (DS1), 2-3Out-Start, 2-7overview

components, 1-1hardware installation, 5-1installation, 1-5site preparation, 2-1, 3-1, 4-1software installation and configuration, 6-1

PPaired CD test, 9-4paired CDs, 9-4parity, 9-8part numbers, 1-2parts list, 1-1PC

assembly, 5-18BIOS setup (other PCs), 4-8BIOS setup (recommended PCs), 3-2cabling, 5-18hardware preparation, 5-2requirements, 4-1

PCs recommended, C-1Performance Monitor, 2-7

drop-down list, 7-8latest statistics, 7-5types of statistics, 2-7

phone number configuration, 6-10phone number plan, 2-8phone number to network, 2-8phone number type, 2-8pin assignments

diagnostic port, B-6ISA connectors, B-2MVIP connector, B-4T1 ports, B-5

QQ.931 variant, 2-7

RRAM window base address, 4-7RAM Windows configuration, 6-6RAS configuration, 6-12RAS port number, 7-3RBOC, phone numbers, 2-2readme file, 6-3, C-1recommended PCs, C-1refresh rate, Online Status Monitor, 8-6Regional Bell Operating Center (RBOC), 2-1Remote Access Service (RAS), 6-12removing a card, 10-2removing an adapter, 10-1replacing cards, 10-2resource

enabling and disabling, 7-6making busy, 7-7selection, 7-2

RUN LED, 6-14, 9-7

SSEC8K secondary clock, B-5second adapter, 6-15servers recommended, C-1service order number, 2-3service providers, 2-2shadow RAM, 4-8shared memory, 4-8

Index

IN-4 2290-A2-GB20-00September 1996

softwaredeleting, 10-1installation, 6-1, 6-13upgrade, 10-1

statistics, 7-5clearing, 7-8

status information, 7-2status LEDs, 6-14status monitoring

OCD card, 8-4T1 card, 8-3T1 port, 8-5trunk, 8-3

switch type, 2-3, 2-6SYSFAIL LED, 6-14, 9-7system description, 1-1System Log, A-2system test, 9-6

TT1 A LED, 6-14, 9-7T1 B LED, 6-14, 9-7T1 card

cabling, 5-17, 5-18configuration, 6-7connecting terminal to, 9-8diagnostic utilities, 9-8diagnostics menu, 9-9I/O base address, 4-7installing, 5-6interfaces, B-1LEDs, 6-14ports, 5-18power-up and initialization, 9-7preparation, 5-3RAM window base address, 4-7removing, 10-2status, 8-3status indicators, 6-14strapping, 5-3

T1 port status, 8-5T1-PRI

ordering, 2-2service providers, 2-2

T1-RBSordering, 2-3service providers, 2-2

technical specifications, 1-4

terminal parameters for diagnostic port, 9-8test results, 7-4

in Event Log, A-9test status window, 7-4tests, 7-7

CD, 9-3clear results, 7-8comprehensive OCD, 9-5descriptions, 9-2durations, 9-2full system, 9-6Paired CD, 9-4

troubleshootinghardware, 5-19with event logs, A-1with Online Status Monitor, 8-1

trunkstart option, incoming, 2-7start option, outgoing, 2-7status, 8-3type, 2-6

Trunk Configuration Worksheet, 2-4two adapters, installing, 6-15

UUnBusy, 7-7uninstalling, 10-1, 10-2Universal Service Ordering Code (USOC), 2-2upgrading software, 10-1

VVariant, 2-3

WWindows NT

Diagnostics, 4-3Event Log, A-1InstallShield, 6-1Network applet, 6-3, 6-11Remote Access Service (RAS), 6-12version required, 3-1, 4-2

worksheetsCard Configuration, 4-6extra copies, E-1Switch Configuration, E-15Trunk Configuration, 2-4Windows NT Diagnostics, 4-3