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LEDs

This document provides descriptions of LED indicators for various Avaya Aura® Communication Manager hardware components, detailing their meanings during installation, maintenance, and troubleshooting. It outlines different license types for software usage, warranty information, and legal disclaimers. Additionally, it includes specific LED behavior for components like attendant consoles, circuit packs, and servers, along with guidance on reporting toll fraud and security vulnerabilities.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views66 pages

LEDs

This document provides descriptions of LED indicators for various Avaya Aura® Communication Manager hardware components, detailing their meanings during installation, maintenance, and troubleshooting. It outlines different license types for software usage, warranty information, and legal disclaimers. Additionally, it includes specific LED behavior for components like attendant consoles, circuit packs, and servers, along with guidance on reporting toll fraud and security vulnerabilities.

Uploaded by

konri75
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LED Descriptions for Avaya Aura®

Communication Manager Hardware


Components

03-602804
Issue 3
July 2012
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Contents

Attendant console LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8


Circuit pack LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Avaya Ethernet Switch LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
UPS LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
IPSI LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
TN2501 LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
650A Power Supply LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
655A Power Supply LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Duplication Memory Board LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Server LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Media module LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
G250 LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
G350 LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
G430 LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
G450 LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
G700 LEDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59

5 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Contents

6 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

LEDs are important status indicators during on-site installation, maintenance, troubleshooting,
and repair. A number of Avaya Aura® Communication Manager system components use LEDs.
This document describes what the LEDS indicate on the following topics:
• Attendant console LEDs
• Circuit pack LEDs
• Expansion interface circuit pack LEDs
• Maintenance circuit pack LEDs
• DS1/UDS1 (TN767/TN464) circuit pack LEDs
• DS1C (TN574/TN1654) circuit pack LEDs
• Switch Node Interface LEDs
• Tone-Clock circuit pack LEDs
• Maintenance/Test circuit pack LEDs
• Avaya Ethernet Switch LEDs
• UPS LEDs
• IPSI LEDs
• TN2501 LEDs
• 650A Power Supply LEDs
• 655A Power Supply LEDs
• Duplication Memory Board LEDs
• S8800 server LEDs
• HP DL 360 G7 server LEDs
• Dell R610 server LEDs
• S8300D server LEDs
• S8510 server LEDs
• Media module LEDs
• G350 LEDs
• G430 LEDs
• G450 LEDs
• G700 LEDs

7 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Attendant console LEDs


The attendant console has two red LEDs, ALM and ACK. When the switch cabinet has a major
or minor alarm, the system turns on the ALM LED. If the alarm is successfully reported, the ACK
LED shows a steady light. If the system is unable to report the alarm, the LED flashes. A
flashing LED is a signal to the attendant to call the Avaya alarm receiving system and report the
alarm.

Circuit pack LEDs


Typically, each circuit pack has three LEDs that you can see on the front of the carrier. Some
circuit packs are exceptions, for example, the DS1 and IPSI circuit packs. Table 1 : LED
indicators explains the meaning of different LEDS when lit up. Exceptions to these indications
are explained in subsequent sections.

Table 1: LED indicators

LED State Interpretation


Color

Red Alarm The system detects a fault on this circuit pack. The alarm log must either
contain an on-board alarm for this circuit pack or one of the maintenance
objects associated with the alarm log. The red LED also lights up briefly
when you insert or reset a circuit pack. If the circuit pack passes the
initialization tests, the LED remains in the turned off state. If the system
detects a fault, the LED remains lit.
Green Testing The system is currently running tests on this circuit pack as part of
background maintenance or demand testing. This LED also lights up briefly
during initialization tests when you insert or reset a circuit pack.
Yellow Busy The circuit pack is currently in use by the system.

LED alarms without alarm log entry or with Error Type 1


When you insert or reset a circuit pack, the red and green LEDs briefly turn on. When you turn
the power on, the LEDs might remain lit until the system administers the circuit pack. Ignore
these alarms until administration is completed.
Boards with a P suffix have downloadable firmware. Lit up green and yellow LEDs on a P board
indicate that a download is in progress, and the system does not appear to recognize the board.

8 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Circuit pack LEDs

• If for any reason you believe you have a bad board, reseat the board and watch the LEDs.
• If after 15 seconds you notice that only the red LED is lit, return the board.
• If you notice the red and green LEDs are lit, wait for 30 seconds.
• If after a total of 45 seconds the red and green LEDs are still on ( with temporarily blinking
off during this period), the board is requesting a firmware download.
• Use change circuit pack to add the board to the port network, if necessary.
• Use test firmware download to clear any firmware download alarms.
• Use change firmware download to download the board and status firmware
download to monitor the status of the download. Do not reseat or reset until status
firmware download indicates that the download is aborted, failed, or completed.
When the download is complete, the board should be recognized by the system.
To verify this condition, enter the SAT: status firmware download or
status firmware download last command.
After a circuit pack has been initialized, a red LED associates an alarm in the alarm log. A single
fault can sometimes trigger alarm LEDs on several circuit packs. Some examples are:
• A TDM bus problem: Causes several port circuit packs to display red LEDs.
• A Maintenance circuit pack: Prevents an Expansion Interface (EI) circuit pack from
initializing.
• Extensive interactions in the Center Stage Switch (CSS): Causes multiple alarms from
single faults in DS1C, SNI and SNC circuit packs and fiber links.
• Tone-Clock or ipserver-interface problems : Causes other circuit packs to report alarms.
• Optical fiber cables which are not connected correctly : Causes several circuit packs to
alarm.
• Packet bus faults: Causes several port circuit packs to display red LEDs.
• More than five minutes delay in initializing the circuit pack: Causes loss of communication
between the circuit pack and the system. In such cases, the red LED is lit without any
associated alarm in the alarm log.
• Error Type 1 logged against a successfully administered circuit pack : Causes several port
circuit packs to display red LEDs.
To determine the fault that triggered alarm LEDs on circuit packs:
1. Enter the list configuration board location command. If the system fails to
detect the circuit pack, the system displays one of the following status:
identifier not assigned
no board
If the documentation associated with the maintenance object does not include special
instructions for this situation, proceed to the Step 2.

9 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

2. To check the hardware error log for TONE-BD or TDM-BUS errors, enter the display
errors command . If the board has a P suffix, execute the reset board location
command. Otherwise, execute the test tdm, test tone-clock, test
ipserver-interface command. Use the appropriate maintenance procedures to
resolve any identified faults. If this step does not resolve the problem, proceed to the step 3.
3. Reset the suspect circuit pack.

! CAUTION:
CAUTION: Resetting the circuit pack can cause a partial or total service outage. Before you
proceed, see the documentation associated with the maintenance object and
note any suggested precautions and procedures.
4. Check the backplane connectors for bent pins.
5. If the system functions correctly but the circuit pack in question does not communicate with
the system, replace the circuit pack.

Expansion interface circuit pack LEDs


The Expansion interface (EI) TN570 circuit pack consists of the standard red, green, and yellow
LEDs. The red LED indicates an alarm condition, the green LED indicates testing in progress,
and the yellow LED displays various flashing patterns. These patterns provide status
information for isolating faults in the fiber link and other components connected to the fiber link.
Table 2: Expansion Interface yellow LED flashing codes on page 10 illustrates the the flashing
codes of the EI yellow LED.

Table 2: Expansion Interface yellow LED flashing codes 1 of 2

LED LED Condition


on off

0.1 sec 0.1 sec Fiber Out-of-Frame:Indicates a failure of Test #989.


Cause of this state: Absence of an opposite end EI or Switch Node
Interface (SNI), a broken or missing fiber, or a missing lightwave
transceiver on either endpoint.
0.5 sec 0.5 sec In Frame — No Neighbor. Indicates a failure of Test
#237.
Cause:A failure of this EI or of the EI or SNI at the other end of the fiber.
2 sec 0.2 sec EI Active: Indicates the normal state of an active EI that is an archangel of
an EPN.
solid on EI Active:Indicates the normal state of an active EI that is not an EPN
archangel. This condition includes EPN EIs connected to other EPN EIs
in direct connect configurations and EIs located in the processor port
network.

10 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Circuit pack LEDs

Table 2: Expansion Interface yellow LED flashing codes 2 of 2

LED LED Condition


on off

solid off EI Standby:Indicates the normal state of a standby EI in systems with a


duplication option.

Maintenance circuit pack LEDs


TN775D PN maintenance circuit packs have seven LEDs on their front panels.
• The first group of top three LEDs are the standard group of red, green, and yellow LEDs
that indicate the status of the circuit pack. The green LED on TN775Ds blinks faintly once
per second, indicating continual self testing.
• The second group of three LEDs, labeled ALARMS, displays the maintenance conditions
of the system. These LEDs also display the alarms generated for other components.
Table 3 provides the interpretation of the Maintenance circuit pack LEDs:
Table 3: Maintenance circuit pack LED interpretation

LED State Level/ Interpretation


Color Function

Red flashing MAJOR Major alarm for a component in the same cabinet.
solid MAJOR Major alarm for a component in another cabinet.
solid MINOR Minor alarm for a component in another cabinet.
flashing MINOR Minor alarm for a component in the same cabinet.
Yellow flashing WARNING Warning alarm for a component in the same cabinet.
solid WARNING Warning alarm for a component in another cabinet.
Green on ACK Acknowledged. The alarm has been reported.
Red on EMERGENCY Emergency transfer has been invoked. The red light
TRANSFER turns on when power is turned on or during disabling
failures.

Figure 1 displays the location of the circuit pack LEDs on the faceplate.

11 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Figure 1: TN775 circuit pack LEDs on the faceplate

Figure notes:

1. Red - Alarm LED 4. Latch pin


2. Green - Test LED 5. Locking lever
3. Yellow - Busy LED

DS1/UDS1 (TN767/TN464) circuit pack LEDs


The DS1 (TN767) and UDS1 (TN464) circuit packs have four status LEDs on the faceplate in
addition to the three standard faceplate LEDs. These four status LEDs are associated with the
120A Channel Service Unit (CSU) Module. You can connect the 120A Channel Service Unit
(CSU) Module to the TN767 or TN464 circuit pack through the I/O connector panel on the back
of the port carrier.
The TN464 circuit pack, combined with the 120A CSU module or the 401A T1 sync splitter,
forms an Integrated CSU (I-CSU).
Figure 2 displays the DS1/UDS1 circuit pack LEDs.
.

12 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Circuit pack LEDs

Figure 2: TN767/TN464 LEDs

Test 1 Failure: Solid red on only this LED indicates faulty DS1 board.

Test 2 Failure: Flashing red on status 1 LED indicates either


faulty DS1 board, faulty wiring between the
DS1 board and the 120A, or a faulty 120A.

Test 3 Failure: Flashing red on status 2 LED indicates faulty 120A.

S 1
T Steady green on status 3 LED indicates all tests passed.
2
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Table 4 provides the interpretation of the TN767/TN464 circuit pack LEDs. In the table, DS1
refers to both DS1 and UDS1.
Note:
Note: The LEDs on the TN767/TN464 circuit pack faceplate indicate the status of both
the loopback and the alarms. However, the loopback indications take priority over
the alarm indications. When the loopback indications are active, you must
disregard the alarm indications. For example, if the status 2 LED is yellow,
indicating a loopback problem, disregard status 3 and status 4 alarm indications.

Table 4: TN767/TN464 circuit pack LED interpretation 1 of 3

LED Color Condition Notes

Solid red only Red Faulty DS1 circuit pack


on top circuit
pack LED
STATUS 1 Green Far-end line loopback A line loopback initiated by a
(LLB) active near-end DS1 circuit
pack is active at the far end CSU.
Yellow Bit error rate (BER) Error rate from the network
alarm active exceeds 10-4.
1 of 3

13 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Table 4: TN767/TN464 circuit pack LED interpretation 2 of 3

Solid red Loss of signal (LOS) If the DS1 circuit pack fails to send
from DS1 circuit pack a signal to the CSU module, the top
LED on the circuit pack turns red.
Steady Failed equipment Flash rate is .5 seconds on and off.
flashing red loopback (ELB) test This status indicates either a bad
DS1 circuit pack or a bad CSU
model. The problem arises
between the circuit pack loopback
and the edge of the circuit pack due
to bad wiring between the DS1 and
the CSU module.
Off Normal operation
STATUS 2 Green CSU repeater loopback
RLB or ELB active
Yellow Near end CSU module
LLB or PLB active
Solid or Span alarm indicated by
randomly STATUS 3 or STATUS 4
flashing red is active
Flashing Failed RLB test Flash rate is .5 seconds on and off.
red Replace the 120A.
Off Normal operation
STATUS 3 Green Pulses present If this LED is off, the STATUS 4
LED is red, indicating LFA or LOS
from the span. STATUS 3 or
STATUS 4 is always on if 120A is
present. If the pulses from the
span are intermittent, the LED can
go off for several seconds, then
turn back on. During the time the
LED is off, other status LEDs
indicate alarms.
Yellow Bipolar violation (BPV) This LED flashes each time the
received from span system recieves a BPV from the
network. B8ZS BPVs are not
reported.
Red CRC or frame bit error This LED flashes each time the
from span system recieves a CRC or bit error
from the network.
Off No pulses Triggers the STATUS 4 red LED.
2 of 3

14 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Circuit pack LEDs

Table 4: TN767/TN464 circuit pack LED interpretation 3 of 3

STATUS 4 Green Alarm indication signal A green alarm indicates that the
(AIS) received from equipment is down on the far end.
span
Yellow Remote frame alarm A yellow LED indicates that the far
(RFA) received from end cannot frame on the DS1
span circuit pack signal.

Red Loss of frame alignment


(LFA) from span
Off Normal operation
3 of 3

Table 5: Facility Alarms, describes the facility alarms indicated by the LEDs.

Table 5: Facility Alarms 1 of 2

Alarm Description

Cyclic Redundancy Check Occurs by marginal or faulty line repeaters, network circuit
(CRC) Errors terminating equipment (NCTE), noise on the transmission
line, circuitry that generates the framing pattern, or CRC at the
transmit end. You can detect bit errors in a DS-1 signal
through CRC errors when you use Extended Super Frame
(ESF) .
Loss of Frame (LOF) Alarm, Occurs when the near-end interface cannot frame up on the
Red Alarm DS-1’s signal. A red LED lights on D4-channel banks when
this alarm is on. A frequent cause is an incorrect setting of the
framing option at one end of the transmission facility or within
the network. This scenario will cause LFA at both ends of the
transmission link. Other possible causes are an intermittent
cable, broken cable, and a rain-attenuated signal with
microwave transmission facilities.

This alarm trips after detecting a continuous loss of framing,


and clears after restoring the in-frame condition. The end of
the span with the LFA sends an RFA to the other end to
indicate that the LFA cannot frame on the other signal.
Remote Frame Alarm (RFA) Occurs when the far end is unable to frame up on the signal
Yellow Alarm sent by the near end. The far-end interface is in an LFA state.
If there is a fault with the part of the transmission facility that
transmits the DS1’s signal from the near end to the far end, a
yellow LED is lit on D4-channel banks. The cause of this
problem is a broken conductor in the transmission cable
wiring or within the network.
1 of 2

15 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Table 5: Facility Alarms 2 of 2

Loss of Signal (LOS) Alarm Occurs when there is no bipolar signal at the receiver input.
Occurs in parallel with the LFA alarm. The cause can be
cable-related problems such as a broken pair inside a cable,
an intermittent cable at a cross-connect point, or a cable
connector that is not completely seated.
AIS, Blue Alarm Occurs when the maintenance activities are in progress and
the out-of-service condition exists for the DS1 facility. You can
recognize the alarm as a continuous stream of 1s with no
framing bit.

This alarm condition may be treated differently depending on


the particular network circuit terminating equipment (NCTE)
used. It may result in the NCTE automatically looping the
signal back to the switch. If the looped facility is providing
synchronization, then the synchronization subsystem must
detect that the facility is looped and deal with that condition.
Otherwise, synchronization problems will occur.
2 of 2

DS1C (TN574/TN1654) circuit pack LEDs


The TN574 and the TN1654 LEDs provide an indication of the state of the DS1 converter and
facilities.
Note:
Note: DS1 converters are used exclusively with a Center Stage Switch (CSS).

TN574 circuit pack LEDs


Seven LEDs indicate the state of the DS1 converter (DS1C-BD) TN574 circuit pack and the
DS1 facilities. The top group has the standard red, green, and yellow LEDs. The red and green
LEDs have the traditional meaning, where red indicates an alarm condition and green indicates
testing in progress. The four green LEDs on the bottom indicate the status of the DS1 facilities
which is explained in the following section.
The yellow LED indicates the state of the fiber interface, the fiber channel, and the DS1 channel
as listed in Table 6: DS1C yellow LED flashing states in order of priority.

Table 6: DS1C yellow LED flashing states

LED LED Condition


on off

0.1 sec 0.1 sec Fiber Out-of-Frame or Fiber Loss of Signal

16 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Circuit pack LEDs

Table 6: DS1C yellow LED flashing states

LED LED Condition


on off

0.5 sec 0.5 sec In Frame, fiber channel down. The fiber channel communicating between
the DS1C and the other fiber endpoint (EI or SNI) is down.
1 sec 1 sec In Frame, DS1 channel down. The channel between the two DS1Cs in the
DS1C complex is down.
2 sec 0.2 sec No response from the server. The server is not acknowledging messages
from the DS1C or the communications link to the server is down.
solid on DS1C active. This is the normal state for an active DS1C.
solid off DS1C standby. This is the normal state for a standby DS1C in
critical-reliability systems (duplicated PNC).

DS1 facility LEDs


The four green LEDs below the three standard LEDs on the DS1C circuit pack indicate whether
a receive signal is present for each of the four DS1 facilities. Figure 3: TN574 DS1 Converter
circuit pack LEDs shows which facility corresponds to each LED. The facility can be A, B, C, or
D. If a green LED is off, there is a Loss of Signal condition on the DS1 facility associated with
that LED. The presence of a signal does not guarantee that the signal is using the correct
framing format or line coding. An Alarm Indication Signal indicating that the opposite end of the
DS1C complex is out of service may be present.

17 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Figure 3: TN574 DS1 Converter circuit pack LEDs

Figure notes:

1. Alarm LED if Red 4. STATUS LEDs


2. Test LED if Green 5. SPAN LEDs
3. Busy LED if Yellow

TN1654 circuit pack LEDs


The TN1654 DS1C circuit pack has 11 LEDs on its faceplate as shown in Figure 4: TN1654
DS1C circuit pack on page 20.
The top three LEDs have the traditional meaning, where red indicates an alarm condition and
green indicates testing in progress. The red and green LEDs are also turned on during circuit
pack initialization.When the control link to the circuit pack is lost, the red LED turns on to
indicate an alarm condition.

18 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Circuit pack LEDs

The yellow LED indicates the state of the physical fiber interface, the Fiber Channel that is a link
to EI or SNI, the DS1 Control Channel that is a link to the opposite DS1C circuit pack, and the
server communications link in the following manner and order of priority. The yellow LED
remains on for longer periods of time as the DS1C complex comes closer to becoming fully
operational.
1. If the fiber is Out-of-Frame or a Fiber Loss of Signal condition exists, the yellow LED flickers
at a 5-Hz rate. The yellow LED remains on for 100 ms and off for 100 ms.
2. If the fiber channel is nonfunctional between the DS1 Converter circuit pack or the fiber
endpoint communications, the yellow LED flashes at a 1-Hz rate (on for 500 ms, off for 500
ms).
3. If the DS1 control channel is down between the two DS1Cs in the DS1C complex, the
yellow LED pulse is at 0.5-Hz rate (on for 1 second, off for 1 second).
4. If the server communications link is down, the yellow LED winks off every 2 seconds for
200ms (2 sec on, 200 msec off).
5. If all is well with the fiber interface and every communications channel, the yellow LED
remains on continuously in a standard-reliability or high-reliability system configuration. In
critical-reliability systems (duplicated PNC), an active DS1C circuit pack has its yellow LED
on continuously, and a standby DS1C circuit pack has its yellow LED off.
The next four LEDs on the TN1654 DS1C circuit pack are labeled STATUS LEDs and are for
future use. These LEDs are not lit up.
The bottom four LEDs on the TN1654 board are labeled SPAN LEDs. These LEDs indicate
whether a receive signal is present for each DS1 facility. If the facility is not administered, the
LED is not lit. The LED is lit amber if the facility is running alarm free. If the facility detects a red
alarm (loss-of-signal or loss-of-frame), a yellow alarm (remote frame alarm) or a blue alarm (AIS
signal), the red LED lits up. The SPAN SELECT switch on the TN1654 faceplate is for future
use. Pushing the switch has no effect on the board. See Figure 4: TN1654 DS1C circuit
pack on page 20 for a view of the faceplate on the TN1654 DS1C circuit pack.

19 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Figure 4: TN1654 DS1C circuit pack


.

INSET

0015_0 RBP 052396

Switch Node Interface LEDs


The Switch Node Interface (SNI) TN573 circuit pack has the standard red, green, and yellow
LEDs. The red and green LEDs have the traditional meaning where red indicates an alarm
condition and green indicates testing in progress.
The yellow LED displays various flashing patterns to provide status information useful in
isolating faults in the fiber link and other components connected to the fiber link.

20 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Circuit pack LEDs

Table 7: Switch Node Interface (SNI) yellow LED flashing states illustrates the SNI yellow LED
states.

Table 7: Switch Node Interface (SNI) yellow LED flashing states

LED LED Condition


on off

0.1 sec 0.1 sec Fiber Out-of-Frame. This state indicates a failure of Test #238, which may
be caused by the absence of the opposite end EI or Switch Node
Interface, a broken or missing fiber, or a missing lightwave transceiver on
either endpoint.
0.5 sec 0.5 sec In Frame — No Neighbor. This state corresponds to a failure of test #237,
usually due to a failure of this SNI, or the EI or SNI at the opposite of the
fiber. This condition may also be due to a faulty Switch Node Clock
(SNC).
solid SNI Active. This is the normal state for an active SNI.
on
solid SNI Standby. This is the normal state for a standby SNI in systems with a
off duplication option.

Tone-Clock circuit pack LEDs


The Tone-Clock circuit packs found in non-IPSI connected port networks have the standard red,
green, and yellow LEDs. The red LED has the traditional meaning. The yellow and green LEDs
flash in specific patterns to indicate the status of the circuit pack. The standby status applies
only to systems with the duplication option.

Maintenance/Test circuit pack LEDs


The TN771DP maintenance/test circuit pack has the standard red, green, and yellow LEDs. The
red and green LEDs have the traditional meaning where red indicates an alarm condition, and
green indicates testing in progress.
The yellow LED can be off, on continuously, or flashing, depending on the mode of operation of
the TN771DP and whether or not the circuit pack has detected errors. The yellow LED is on
steady when the TN771DP’s analog test port or digital test ports are being used to test trunks or
line circuits. The yellow LED is also used to indicate packet bus status. Table 8: TN771DP
Maintenance/Test Yellow LED States illustrates the yellow LED states when the yellow LEDs
indicate the packet bus activity.

21 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Table 8: TN771DP Maintenance/Test Yellow LED States

LED State1 TN771DP Condition


Mode

Solid off Normal The Maintenance/Test circuit pack detects no packet bus
faults.
Solid on2 Normal The Maintenance/Test packet bus port has successfully
reconfigured the packet bus around a fault.
Flashing (1 Hz) Normal The Maintenance/Test packet bus port is unable to
reconfigure the packet bus around a fault.
Solid off Standalone3 The Maintenance/Test detects no packet bus faults.
Solid on Standalone This condition doesnot normally occur. The LED is
always either off or blinking in standalone mode.
Flashing (1 Hz) Standalone The Maintenance/Test packet bus port detects a packet
bus fault.
1. The yellow LED takes 5 to 10 seconds to respond to a change in the state of the packet bus.
2. When the digital and analog test ports on the circuit pack are in use, the yellow LED on the Maintenance/
Test circuit pack can also be steady. To know the exact interpretation of the yellow LED, the technician
must busy out the analog and digital test ports or examine the error and alarm logs for PKT-BUS errors and
alarms.
3. Standalone refers to the TN771DPs capability to operate autonomously as a troubleshooting aid.

22 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Avaya Ethernet Switch LEDs

Avaya Ethernet Switch LEDs


Figure 5 displays the Avaya Ethernet switch LEDs .

Figure 5: Avaya Ethernet switch LEDs

51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Cajun P333T Switch
EXPANSION
SLOT
59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24

FIV LNK COL Tx Rx FDX FC Hspd LAG SYS OPR PWR

LAG LAG LAG


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

CONSOLE

13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24

51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
EXPANSION
SLOT
1
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
2
59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 21 22 23 24

FIV LNK COL Tx Rx FDX FC Hspd LAG SYS OPR PWR

ledl333t KLC 030602 3


4

Figure notes:

1. Ports in use 3. Power


2. CPU boot status 4. Lights if this module is the Avaya P33x stack master

The following three LEDs are the primary indicators:


• SYS shows whether this module is the Avaya P330 stack master or not.
• OPR shows CPU boot status.
• PWR is lit when power is on.
For all other LEDs, refer to the quick start guide and user guide that came with the Avaya
Ethernet switch.

23 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

UPS LEDs
All Ethernet hubs and Uninterruptible Power Supplies (UPSs) have LEDs to indicate the
swiched on or off status. A lighted LED indicates that the device is switched on.
Figure 6 displays the Powerware front panel LEDs.

Figure 6: UPS LEDs

ledlups KLC 030102

1
2

4 5 6

Figure notes:

1. Normal mode indicator 5. Off button


2. Battery mode indicator 6. On button
3. Bypass mode indicator 7. Bar graph indicators
4. Test/Alarm reset button 8. Alarm indicators

When the Normal mode LED is steady green, the UPS has power. If the LED is flashing, the
UPS is in standby mode.
For information on the other LEDs, see the UPS user’s guide that came with the Powerware
UPS unit.

24 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
IPSI LEDs

IPSI LEDs
The TN2312AP IP server Interface (IPSI) faceplate has four LEDs, and the TN2312BP IPSI and
TN8412AP SIPI faceplates have five LEDs. The top three are the standard LEDs found on most
TN circuit packs. The fourth LED indicates that the Tone/Clock function is active and imitates
the TN2182B Tone-Clock’s amber LED. The archangel flashes the yellow LED when active, 2
seconds on and 200 ms off. In addition, the TN2312BP and TN8412AP have a fifth LED that
displays the emergency transfer control status.
Table 9: TN2312 IPSI LED States describes the LED status on an IPSI circuit pack.

Table 9: TN2312 IPSI LED States

LED Color State Condition

Red ON Power turn on/Failure


Amber ON Circuit pack is in use
Green ON Maintenance diagnostics/testing
Amber ON Clock function active
Red ON TN2312BP/TN8412AP - Emergency Transfer invoked

Figure 7: IPSI display with static address shows the display on a TN2312AP IPSI circuit pack
which is using a static IP address.

25 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Figure 7: IPSI display with static address

1 CLK

S
E
R
2 V
I
C
E

N
E
T
W
O
R
K

ledlip1 KLC 030502


Figure notes:

1. IPSI using DHCP 2. IPSI has connectivity and a static IP address

Figure 8: IPSI Board Display using DHCP addressing shows the display on a TN2312AP IPSI
circuit pack which is using Dynamic Host Control Protocol (DHCP). This protocol dynamically
assigns TCP/IP addresses for use in an IP network and reduces the total number of IP
addresses required in enterprises.

26 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
IPSI LEDs

Figure 8: IPSI Board Display using DHCP addressing

1
CLK

S
E
R

3 V
I
C
E

N
E
T
W
O
R
K

ledsa01 KLC 030502


Figure notes:

1. Switch identifier 3. IPSI has connectivity and a DHCP


2. Cabinet number address

Figure 9: IPSI display connectivity status explains the different connectivity states of an IPSI
circuit pack which is using DHCP.

27 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Figure 9: IPSI display connectivity status

1 2 3 4 5

ledlipsi KLC 030502

Figure notes:

Connectivity status 1 2 3 4 5

IPSI is connected to an Avaya Ethernet no yes yes yes yes


switch
IPSI has an IP address no no yes yes no
Laptop computer is connected to IPSI no no no yes yes
services port

TN2501 LEDs
The Voice Announcements over the LAN (VAL) TN2501AP provides per-pack announcement
storage time of up to one hour, up to 31 playback ports. VAL also offers announcement file
portability over a LAN. The VAL circuit pack can also be used for LAN backup and restore of
announcement files and the use of user-provided (.WAV) files. The circuit pack also provides
the ability to download new versions of the firmware to itself.
Figure 10: TN2501AP faceplate LEDs HV1-HV11 shows the nine LEDs on the TN2501AP
faceplate for hardware versions HV1 - HV11.
Figure 11: TN2501AP faceplate LEDs HV12 and later shows the seven LEDs on the
TN2501AP faceplate for hardware versions HV12 and greater.

28 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
TN2501 LEDs

Figure 10: TN2501AP faceplate LEDs HV1-HV11

AVAYA

LINK
TRMT
RCV
100M
FDX
COL

fpdfval LJK 032101

29 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Figure 11: TN2501AP faceplate LEDs HV12 and later

Table 10: TN2501AP LEDs lists the TN2501AP faceplate LEDs, the type of behavior (on, off,
flashing, or intermittent), and a description of the condition.

Table 10: TN2501AP LEDs 1 of 2

LED Behavior Description

Red On solid Circuit pack failure or a major or minor on-board alarm


Green On solid Power turned on self testing in progress, firmware is
self-downloading to the circuit pack, or testing in progress.
1 of 2

30 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
TN2501 LEDs

Table 10: TN2501AP LEDs 2 of 2

LED Behavior Description

Amber On solid Firmware is self-downloading to the circuit pack.


! CAUTION:
CAUTION: You can lose the resident firmware image file if you
reset the circuit pack during firmware download. If
the reset happens, a new firmware FTP image file is
added to the VAL circuit pack and the Firmware
download procedure is performed again.
Amber Fast flash Occurs during circuit pack insertion or circuit pack reset when the
(100 ms on/ announcement files are being copied from FLASH to RAM. If you
100 ms off) reset the circuit pack during this time, your announcement files
remain intact.
Amber Slow flash Flashes during autosave while copying announcement files from
(200 ms on/ RAM to FLASH.
200 ms off)
! CAUTION:
CAUTION: You can lose the announcements on the circuit pack
if you reset it during an autosave.
LINK On/off Active Ethernet link
TRMT Intermittent Transmitting data
RCV Intermittent Receiving data
100M On/off Off = 10-Mbps Ethernet connection
or
100bT On = 100-Mbps Ethernet connection

FDX On/off Off = half-duplex connection


On = full-duplex connection
COL On/off Off = no collisions detected
On = collisions detected
2 of 2

31 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

650A Power Supply LEDs


Table 11: LED and alarm conditions shows the LED and alarm conditions for the 650A Power
Supply. Ring voltage and neon bus output do not activate alarm status.

Table 11: LED and alarm conditions

Condition LED Alarm Fan alarm


status state

Normal Red off Open Normal


Yellow on
No input power Red off Closed No input power
Yellow off
DC output not present (except Neon) Red on Closed DC output not present
Yellow off (except Neon)
Fan alarm Red on Closed Fan alarm
Yellow on

655A Power Supply LEDs


The gateway normally has two 655A power supplies. Each has a set of five LEDs, the function
of which is indicated in Table 12: 655A Power Supply LEDs.

Table 12: 655A Power Supply LEDs

LED Color Function


1 Red Failure of power supply or fan
2 Yellow Status of power supply OK
3 Green AC input voltage applied
4 Green DC input voltage applied
5 Green Power supply providing ring voltage

Normally, the ring voltage LED (#5) on the left power supply is ON and the ring voltage LED on
the right power supply is OFF. This changes momentarily when the ringer interchange test is
run. The ring voltage LED only remains lit on the right power supply during a power supply
failure or removal of the left hand supply.

32 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Duplication Memory Board LEDs

LED indicators of serial bus commands to the power supply


Operation of the 655A power supply LED indicators for visual indication of serial bus commands
to the power supply involve power supply shutdown and ringing shutdown.

Power supply shutdown


You can shutdown the power supply of 655A for resetting the G650 chassis remotely. The 655A
power supply can be shut for a period of time selectable from 1 to 255 seconds. The yellow LED
indicating correct operation of the 655A power supply is on for normal power supply operation.
When the power supply is commanded off, the yellow LED blinks at a rate of 1 second on and
100ms off, indicating that the power supply is operational but commanded off by the serial bus.

Ringing shutdown
The left hand power supply in the G650 cabinet is the master ringer. If the master ringer fails,
ringing is transferred to the redundant power supply, if present. The red LED on the left hand
power supply turns on and the yellow LED turns off, indicating failure of the power supply.
The serial bus can command the ringer off for a period of 1 to 255 seconds. The purpose of this
command is to verify redundant ringer operation through the serial bus remotely from the G650
chassis. The red LED blinks at a rate of 1 second on and 100ms off, indicating that the power
supply is operational but commanded off by the serial bus.
A second command relating to ringer operation is the command to turn off the master ringer.
This command shuts down the master ringer and transfers control to the redundant power
supply. This command is used to permanently transfer ring voltage to the redundant power
supply through the serial bus, to resolve a problem with the master ringer. The red LED blinks at
a rate of 1 second on and 100ms off, indicating that the power supply is operational but
commanded off by the serial bus.

Duplication Memory Board LEDs


! WARNING:
WARNING: The DAJ1, DAL1, and DAL2 Duplication Memory boards are not
interchangeable. The DAJ1 only functions in the S8700 server. The DAL1
functions in an S8710 server and an S8720 server with standard configuration.
The DAL2 functions in an S8720 server running Communication Manager 4.0 or
later with the extra large configuration.

33 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

The Duplication Memory Board is a circuit board that plugs into the processor. You cannot insert
the memory board from the maintenance perspective. There are no SAT screens or Linux
commands for administration of this board.
The Duplication Memory board has four LEDs which indicate the state of the fiber link and the
mode (transmit or receive) that the Duplication Memory board is currently programmed as. The
faceplate also has a cutout for the fiber optic transceiver.
Figure 12: DAJ1 Faceplate shows the DAJ1 faceplate and LEDs.
Figure 13: DAL1/DAL2 Faceplate shows the DAL1/DAL2 faceplate and LEDs. DALX refers to
DAL1 and DAL2. Bothe DAL1 and DAL 2 have the same faceplate except for the DAL
designation.

Figure 12: DAJ1 Faceplate

LINE

RECEIVE

TRANS

LINK
STATUS

DAJ-1
DUP
MEMORY
fpcmdaj1 LAO 082306

The DAJ1 LED functions are:


• Line: Indicates the On or Off line status of the server. Green indicates an online status.
• Receive: Indicates green when transceiver is in receive mode.

34 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Duplication Memory Board LEDs

• Trans: Indicates a bi-color, red or green, where the red LED is turned on at reset or when
power is turned on, and the green LED is turned on when the transceiver is in the transmit
mode.
• Link Status: Indicates green when a light signal is sensed on the fiber.
On the active server, the Trans LED is green and the Receive LED is dark. On the standby
server, the Receive is green and the Trans LED ise dark.

Figure 13: DAL1/DAL2 Faceplate

TRANS
MODE

RECEIVE
MODE

LINK
SYNC

LINK
ACTIVE

DALX
DUP
MEMORY
fpcmdalx LAO 082306

The DAL1/DAL2 LED functions are:


• Trans Mode: Indicates green when you enable the Duplication Memory board to transmit.
• Receive Mode: Indicates green when you enable the Duplication Memory to receive.
• Link Sync: Indicates green when the LED recieves characters.
• Link Active: Indicates green when the LED senses a light signal on the fiber.

35 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

On the active server, the Trans Mode LED will be green and the Receive Mode LED will be
dark. On the standby server, the Receive Mode will be green and the Trans Mode LED will be
dark.
All server and Duplication Memory board LEDs are in the “off” state but still powered “on” when
the server is shut down.

Testing the Duplication Memory board LEDs


When testing the LEDs, the Duplication Memory board LED must blink according to the
following pattern:
1 second red on, 1 second red off, 1 second green on, 1 second green off
and so on for a total of one minute.
An LED that shows any of the following flashing patterns indicates an abnormal condition.
Table 13: Duplication Memory Board abnormal LED conditions describes the condition and the
recommend actions to resolve the condition.

Table 13: Duplication Memory Board abnormal LED conditions

LED Behavior Indication Resolution


Color

Red Flashes on 1 second, The green element Replace the server.


off 3 seconds is burned out
in a repeating pattern
Green Flashes on 1 second, The red element is Replace the server.
off 3 seconds, burned out
in a repeating pattern
LED remains off The Duplication If the server hangs, the server must
continuously Memory board is automatically reboot. If the server
not getting power, does not reboot, reboot manually.
or the server is
hung
Green or Flashed continuously The server is hung If the server hangs, the server must
Red automatically reboot. If the server
does not reboot, reboot manually.

36 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Server LEDs

Server LEDs
Systems running Communication Manager Release 5.2.1 and later require the following
servers:

S8800 server LEDs


For information on the LED description for S8800 server, see Maintaining the Avaya S8800
server for Avaya Aura® Communication Manager at http://support.avaya.com.

HP DL 360 G7 server LEDs


For information on the LED descriptions for the HP DL 360 G7 server, see Installing the HP
DL360 G7 server at http://support.avaya.com.

Dell R610 server LEDs


For more information on the LED descriptions for the Dell R610 server, see Installing the Dell™
PowerEdge™ R610 server at http://support.avaya.com.

S8300D server LEDs


The S8300D server is a replacement for the S8300C server and provides a Services Ethernet
port, three USB ports, 4 LEDs (Alarm, Application up/Test, Active, OK-to-Remove), and a Shut
Down button.

ALM S8300C
APP
C_V1
ACT
SHUT DOWN
OK TO
REMOVE SERVICES USB 1 USB 2 USB 3

8300cfrt LAO 080307

37 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Table 14: S8300D LEDs describes the meanings and functions of the LEDs.

Table 14: S8300D LEDs

LED COLOR DESCRIPTION

ALM RED ON when power is turned on or when a major alarm is


present
APP Green ON when Communication Manager is running or a test
is in progress.
ACT Yellow ON when a gateway, an IP station, or an IP console
registers with the S8300D. It turns off when none of the
IP endpoints are registered with the S8300D.
OK TO REMOVE Green FLASH when shutdown is in progress
ON when shutdown complete and you can remove
S8300D server.
Compact Flash in Use Yellow ON when compact flash is in use
(only if CF slot is
implemented)
Services Ethernet Green ONwhen data rate is 10 MB
(RJ45 jack, left side) Yellow ON when data rate is 100 MB
Services Ethernet Green FLASHING when data is being transmitted or received
(RJ45 jack, right side) over the Ethernet link

S8510 server LEDs


The S8510 is a replacement for the S8500C server. The S8510 server is supported by
Communication Manager Release 5.1 and later.
Figure 16: S8510 server (drive status or activity) describes the LEDs on the front of the S8510
server.
Figure 17: S8510 server (back) describes the LEDs on the back of the S8510 server.
Figure 16: S8510 server (drive status or activity) shows the drive status/activity LEDs.
Table 15: S8510 LED indicator conditions describes the LED indicator patterns, functions, and
conditions.

38 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Server LEDs

Figure 14: S8510 server (front)

1 2 3 4 5 6

III

0 1

8 7
hw8510fn LAO 020108

Figure notes:

1. Power turned on LED 5. USB ports


2. NMI button (not used) 6. Video connector (not used)
3. System ID button 7. Hard disk drives
4. LCD display 8. Optical DVD/CD drive

Figure 15: S8510 server (back)

13 12 11 10

Gb 1 Gb 2

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
hw8510bn LAO 021208

Figure notes:

1. Remote access controller (not 8. System ID button


used)
2. Serial connector (not used) 9. System Status LED
3. Video connector (not used) 10. Bay for optional redundant power
supply
4. USB ports (not used) 11. Power supply
5. NIC-1 (Eth0) 12. Dual NIC
6. Services port - NIC-2 (Eth1) 13. Remote maintenance board (SAMP)
7. Services status indicator connector

39 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Figure 16: S8510 server (drive status or activity)

III

0 1

hw85dled LAO 021008

Figure notes:

1. Drive status 2. Drive activity

Figure 17: S8510 server (back)

Gb 1 Gb 2

hw85pled LAO 021008

Figure notes:

1. Power supply status 3. AC line status


2. Power supply fault

Table 15: S8510 LED indicator conditions 1 of 2

LED Indicator/Pattern Function/Condition

Power status On System has power and is operational


Off System has no power.

40 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Media module LEDs

Table 15: S8510 LED indicator conditions 2 of 2

LED Indicator/Pattern Function/Condition

Power supply Green Power supply is operational.


Amber Power supply has problems.
AC line status Green Power supply is connected to a valid AC
power source.
Drive status Steady green Drive online.
Blinks green, then Drive predicted failure.
amber, then off
Blinks amber 4 times Drive failed.
per second
Blinks green 2 times Identify drive or prepare for removal.
per second
LED off Drive ready for insertion or removal.
Blinks green slowly Drive rebuilding.
Blinks green for 3 Rebuild aborted.
seconds, blinks
amber for 3 seconds,
off for 6 seconds

Media module LEDs


For an interpretation of the media module LEDS, click the associated link in the following table:

Media Module LED Description

MM710 MM710 E1/T1 media module LEDs


MM710B Same as the MM710. See MM710 E1/T1 media module
LEDs
MM711 Standard media module LEDs
MM712 Standard media module LEDs
MM714 Standard media module LEDs

41 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

MM714B MM714B analog media module


MM716 Standard media module LEDs
MM717 Standard media module LEDs
MM720 MM720 BRI media module LEDs
MM722 Standard media module LEDs
MM760 Standard media module LEDs
MM312 Standard media module LEDs
MM314 MM314 LAN media module LEDs
MM316 MM316 LAN media module LEDs
MM340 MM340 E1/T1 data WAN media module LEDs
MM342 MM342 USP Data WAN media module LEDs

Standard media module LEDs

Name Color Description

ALM Red When turned ON, this LED indicates a media module failure or
media module mismatch. This LED is also turned ON when the
media module is inserted. It turns OFF after the media module
passes initialization tests.
TST Green This LED turns ON when power is turned on during self-testing
and maintenance testing.
ACT Yellow This LED is turned ON when the media module or one or more
ports on the media module are in use.

42 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Media module LEDs

MM714B analog media module

The MM714B analog media module provides all the features of the MM714. See Standard
media module LEDs. The MM714B also provides an emergency transfer relay (ETR). In the
event of a system failure, the MM714B provides ETR services by connecting trunk port 5 and
line port 4.

MM710 E1/T1 media module LEDs

The MM710 E1/T1 Media Module has four LEDs on its faceplate.

Name Color Description

ALM RED This LED indicates a media module failure or mismatch, a loss of
signal, or a nonfuctional D-Channel. This LED is also turned ON when
the media module is inserted and turns OFF after initialization.
TST GREEN This LED is turned on during start up, self-testing, and maintenance
testing.
1 of 2

43 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Name Color Description

ACT YELLOW This LED indicates that the clock is synchronized with a source,
usually the Central Office. The LED blinks ON for 2.8 seconds and
OFF for 300ms.This is the most common condition.

The opposite blinking of the yellow LED is 300 ms ON and 2.8


seconds OFF. This is an error condition, and indicates that the MM710
T1/E1 media module is not synchronized with a clock.

The LED is ON steadily. This is an infrequent occurrence. This


indicates in-use activity only when clock synchronization is set to
local.
SIG GREEN This LED indicates the presence of a valid signal on the T1/E1 line.
2 of 2

For ISDN operation, the yellow ACT LED turns on if ANY port has an active TDM connection
including the D-channel.

Synchronization
The yellow ACT LED displays the synchronization status of the MM710 media module.
• If the ACT LED is solidly ON or OFF, the ACT LED is not been defined as a
synchronization source. If the ACT LED is ON, at least one channel is active. If the facility
is an ISDN facility, the D-Channel will count as an active channel and will cause the ACT
LED to be ON.
• When the MM710 is driving a clock sync source line to the main clock, the ACT indicates
that the MM710 is the sync source by flashing a regular 3-second sequence:
- If the MM710 has been specified as a sync source and is receiving a signal that meets
the minimum requirements for the interface, the ACT LED will flash ON for 2.8 seconds
and will be OFF for 300 ms.
- If the MM710 has been specified as a sync source and is not receiving a signal, or is
receiving a signal that does not meet minimum requirements for the interface, the ACT
LED will be OFF for 2.8 seconds and will flash ON for 300 ms.

E1/T1 initialization
The MM710 E1/T1 media module LEDs function in the following manner during initialization:
• The yellow ACT LED is OFF while the red ALM and green TST LEDs remain ON during
the entire initialization sequence.
• If only the red ALM LED turns ON when power is turned on or reset, either the media
module processor is dead or the media module is being held permanently in reset.

44 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Media module LEDs

• The green TST LED turns OFF on completion of the diagnostic and initialization
sequences.
• If the initialization tests fail, the red ALM LED remains ON.
• If the tests all pass, then all LEDs are turned OFFuntil Communication Manager starts
using the media module.

MM720 BRI media module LEDs

Name Color Description


ALM Red This LED indicates a media module failure, an incorrect media
module in the slot, or the B-Channel is down. This LED is also
turned ON when the media module is inserted and must turn OFF
after the media module initializes.
TST Green This LED is turned ON when power is turned on, self-testing, and
maintenance testing.
ACT Yellow This LED is turned ON when one or more ports are in use on the
media module.

MM314 LAN media module LEDs

MM314 alarm LED


A MM314 media module alarm (ALM) LED that is ON indicates a problem with the power supply
or that the media module is initializing. The ALM LED turns off after diagnostic tests are
complete and the power supply is active. A MM314 media module ALM LED that is BLINKING
indicates that Communication Manager has the slot administered for a voice media module.
BLINKING indicates is a mismatch between Communication Manager and this media module.

45 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

MM314 port LEDs


The MM314 front panel has numbered LEDs which correspond to each of the network ports.
Underneath these LEDs is a row of LEDs that indicate particular functions. The function LED
that is lit indicates which function the network port LEDs are reporting. For example, if the LNK
LED is lit, the port LEDs indicate whether the network links for the specific ports are functioning
properly.
To the right of the function LEDs are two push buttons. Use these buttons to select which
function the port LEDs must report. For example, if the COL LED is lit, all the port LEDs are
reporting the Collision status of their respective port. Table 16: MM314 Port LEDs describes
each of these functions:

Table 16: MM314 Port LEDs

LED Name Meaning

LNK Link status ON: System enables the port and the link starts working
.
COL Collision OFF: No collision on line. If this LED is flashes, collisions
occurr.
TX Transmit to line ON: System transmitts data.
RX Receive from line ON: System receives data from the line.
FDX Full Duplex ON: Full-duplex mode
FC Flow Control ON: Port is in Full Duplex and in Flow Control mode.
OFF: System disbales the Port Flow Control mode or
the Port Flow Control mode operates in half duplex
mode.
HSPD High Speed ON: Port is operate at the higher possible speeds.
LAG Link Aggregation ON: Port is a member of a LAG.
PoE Power over Ethernet ON: Port is operating in PoE mode.

MM316 LAN media module LEDs


The MM316 media module has the following LEDs:
• A red ALM LED
• 40 dual-colored (yellow/green) faceplate port LEDs, one for each port
• A yellow LED for the 100/1000 Base-T Ethernet Port (LED 51)

46 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
Media module LEDs

The blinking rate is proportional to the traffic rate. All LEDs are turned on during a reset.

Name Color Description

ALM Red OFF: Initialization tests are successfull.


ON: A problem is detected.
BLINKING: An administration mismatch between
Communication Manager and this Media Module.
Port LED Green ON: Link is up, port is enabled, no traffic, PoE delivered.
BLINK: Ethernet traffic with PoE being delivered
Port LED Yellow ON: Link is up, port is enabled, no traffic, no PoE delivered.
BLINK: Ethernet traffic without PoE being delivered.
51 Yellow ON: Link is up, port is enabled, no traffic, no PoE delivered.
BLINK: Ethernet traffic without PoE delivered.

MM340 E1/T1 data WAN media module LEDs

LED Name Color Description

ALM Alarm Red ON: The media module is initializing, an alarm exists on
an interface, or there is an administration mismatch
between Communication Manager and this media
module. The media module is inserted in a slot
administered for a voice media module.
OFF: Successful media module initialization, media
module functioning properly, no alarm conditions on an
interface.
TST Test Green ON: Port is being initialized or loopback is active.
OFF: Port initialization complete and loopback is not
active.

47 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

LED Name Color Description

ACT Active Yellow ON: At least one PPP/Frame Relay session is active.
OFF: No active PPP/Frame Relay session.
SIG Signal Green ON: A signal is detected on the port.
OFF: No signal is detected on the port.

MM342 USP Data WAN media module LEDs

LED Name Color Description

ALM Alarm Red ON: Indicates that the media module is initializing, an
alarm exists on an interface, or an administration
mismatch occurred between Communication Manager
and this media module, that is, this media module is
inserted in a slot administered for a voice media
module..
OFF: Indicates successful media module initialization
and functioning and absence of alarm conditions on an
interface.
TST Loop Green ON: Indicates that there is a local or remote loop signal
in connector (RL/LL).
ACT Active Yellow ON: Indicates PPP or FR is defined on this interface.
OFF: Indicates PPP or FR is not defined on this
interface.
CON Connection Green ON: Indicates interface is up.
OFF:Indicates interface is shutdown.

Note:
Note: The production of the MM342 USP Data WAN media module is discontinued.

48 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
G250 LEDs

G250 LEDs
The G250 LEDs are explained in the following sections. Follow the links in the Figure Notes to
see the explanation of the LEDs on a particular G250 Branch Gateway. The G250 only supports
the S8300D server and the WAN media modules (MM340 and MM342).
• G250-Analog : Includes four analog trunk ports, two analog line ports, a Fast Ethernet
WAN port, and eight PoE LAN ports.
• G250-BRI: Includes two ISDN BRI trunk ports, one analog trunk port, two analog line
ports, a Fast Ethernet WAN port, and eight PoE LAN ports.
• G250-DCP: Provides twelve DCP (Digital Communications Protocol) ports, four analog
trunk ports, two analog line ports, a Fast Ethernet WAN port, and two LAN ports.
• G250-DS1: Provides a T1/E1 and a PRI trunk port, enabling support of fractional T1/E1
and PRI. It also includes one analog trunk port, two analog line ports, a Fast Ethernet
WAN port, and eight PoE LAN ports.

G250-Analog
Figure 18: G250-Analog Branch Gateway Chassis

1 2
6 7 8
3 4 5 9 10
12
11 13

Figure notes:
1. V1 — ICC/Survivable Remote 8. USB port
server slot 9. Contact Closure (CCA) port
2. V2 — WAN Media Module Slot 10. Ethernet WAN (ETH WAN) port
3. Analog Port LEDs 11. PoE LAN (ETH LAN PoE) ports
4. Analog trunks 12. Reset (RST) button
5. Analog line ports 13. Alternate Software Bank (ASB) button
6. System LEDs
7. Console port

49 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

G250-BRI
Figure 19: G250-BRI Branch Gateway Chassis

1 2
4 5 8 9 11 12
6 7
14
3 13
15
10
Figure notes:
1. V1 — ICC/Survivable Remote 9. Console port
server slot 10. USB port
2. V2 — WAN Media Module Slot 11. Contact Closure (CCA) port
3. Analog Port LEDs 12. Ethernet WAN (ETH WAN) port
4. Analog trunk 13. PoE LAN (ETH LAN PoE) ports
5. Analog line ports 14. Reset (RST) button
6. ISDN BRI LEDs 15. Alternate Software Bank (ASB) button
7. ISDN BRI trunks
8. System LEDs

G250-DCP
Figure 20: G250-DCP Branch Gateway Chassis

1 2
6 9 10 13
4 5
3 12
7 8 11
Figure notes:
1. V1 — ICC/Survivable Remote 7. Console port
server slot 8. USB port
2. V2 — WAN Media Module Slot 9. Contact Closure (CCA) port
3. Analog Port LEDs 10. Ethernet WAN (ETH WAN) port
4. Analog trunks 11. ETH LAN port
5. Analog line ports 12. DCP ports
6. System LEDs 13. DCP port LEDs

50 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
G250 LEDs

G250-DS1
Figure 21: G250-DS1 Branch Gateway Chassis

1 2
4
3 6 9 10 11 12 13
5 7 8
15
14
16

Figure notes:
1. V1 — ICC/Survivable Remote 9. System LEDs
server slot 10. Console port
2. V2 — WAN Media Module Slot 11. USB port
3. Analog Port LEDs 12. Contact Closure (CCA) port
4. Analog trunk 13. Ethernet WAN (ETH WAN) port
5. Analog line ports 14. PoE LAN (ETH LAN PoE) ports
6. T1/E1/PRI trunk interface 15. Reset (RST) button
LEDs 16. Alternate Software Bank (ASB) button
7. T1/E1 interface
8. Service

Analog port LEDs


The analog ports are standard RJ-45 telephone network ports.
• The TRUNK ports are analog trunk ports.
• The LINE ports are analog telephone ports.

51 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

An analog relay provides Emergency Transfer Relay. The analog port LEDs show the status of
the ports. The following table describes the meaning of lighted analog LEDs:

Table 17: Analog Port LEDs

LED Name Color Meaning

ETR Emergency Transfer Green ON: Indicates that the Emergency Transfer
Relay (ETR) is active and no connection to
any call controller is present.
ALM Alarm Red ON: Indicates initialization is in process, the
presence of a problem, or an external
compact flash is removed from the G450
gateway that has the enable
announcement-board field set to y on SAT.
OFF: Indicates that self-tests are complete.
The alarm turns off also after you replace or
de-administer the compact flash within a set
interval of at least 30 seconds.
TST Test Green ON: Indicates a test is in progress.
ACT Activity Yellow ON: Indicates a call is in progress.

System LEDs
The system LEDs show the status of the gateway.

Table 18: System LEDs 1 of 2

LED Name Color Meaning

MDM Modem Detected Green ON - A modem (either serial or USB-modem)


detected and modem initialization has passed
without errors.
ALM General Alarm Red ON - The gateway lost connection to an
external call controller (Communication
Manager or ICC). In survivability mode, it will be
turned ON as it is in Ssurvivable remote server
mode.
1 of 2

52 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
G250 LEDs

Table 18: System LEDs 2 of 2

LED Name Color Meaning

CPU CPU Operation Green OFF — CPU is in boot operation or is running


power-up built-in tests.

ON — Normal operation

BLINKING - Self test failed, gateway is in error


mode.
PWR Power Green OFF — Power is off or power supply unit is
Management broken.

BLINKING — Problem with power. With one


PSU, the LED will blink when any of the
DC-to-DC circuits fails. If the system is running
with two PSUs, one good and one bad, the
PWR LED blinks indicating that one of the
PSUs is bad.

ON — Normal operation.
2 of 2

ISDN BRI LEDs


These LEDs represent the status of the integrated BRI circuitry.

LED Name Color Description

ALM Alarm Red There is a problem with the ISDN BRI


trunk.
TST Test Green This LED is turned on during power-up
self-testing and maintenance testing of the
ISDN BRI trunk.
ACT Activity Yellow A call is in progress

53 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

DCP port LEDs


These LEDS represent the status of the integrated DCP circuitry.

LED Name Color Description

ALM Alarm Red This LED is turned ON during boot-up


and turned OFF after self-tests pass. It is
turned ON when an alarm is present.
TST Test Green This LED is turned ON during power-up
self-testing and maintenance testing.
ACT Activity Yellow ON - One or more ports are in use.

T1/E1/PRI trunk interface LEDs


These LEDs represent the status of the integrated E1/T1 circuitry.

LED Name Color Description

ALM Alarm Red ON - Indicates a DS1 failure.


TST Test Green This LED is turned ON during power-up
self-testing and maintenance testing.
ACT Sync/ Yellow ON - at least one call or ISDN signaling
Activity D-channel is active and the DS1 port is
not a synchronization source clock (i.e.,
source is local).
BLINK - the DS1 port is a
synchronization source clock for the
G250. The flashing rate indicates the
status of the recovered clock: longer ON
period indicates a good clock while
longer OFF period indicates bad
received clock quality (inadequate as
acting as clock source).
SIG Signal Green ON indicates the presence of a signal on
the T1/E1 line.

54 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
G250 LEDs

PoE LAN (ETH LAN PoE) ports


Each Ethernet RJ45 jack of a PoE 10/100 port has one LED located below the RJ45 connector.
The blinking rate is proportional to the traffic rate. Note that PoE fault scenarios do not have
special LED indications but simply indicate as no PoE delivered.

Color State Description

Green STEADY ON Link is up, port is enabled, no traffic, PoE delivered.


Green BLINKING Ethernet traffic with PoE being delivered.
Yellow STEADY ON Link is up, port is enabled, no traffic, no PoE delivered.
Yellow BLINKING Ethernet traffic without PoE being delivered.

Ethernet WAN (ETH WAN) port


The ETH WAN10/100 port has one LED located below the RJ45 connector. The blinking rate is
proportional to the traffic rate.

Color State Description

Yellow STEADY ON Link is up, port is enabled, no traffic.


Yellow BLINKING Ethernet traffic.

ETH LAN port


The Ethernet LAN port has one LED located below the RJ45 connector.The blinking rate is
proportional to the traffic rate.

Color State Description

Yellow STEADY ON Link is up, port is enabled, no traffic.


Yellow BLINKING Ethernet traffic.

55 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

G350 LEDs
Follow the links in the Figure Notes of Figure 22: G350 Branch Gateway Chassis for an
explanation of the LEDs on a G350 Branch Gateway.

Figure 22: G350 Branch Gateway Chassis

2 3

4 5
8 11 12 13 14
10 16 17
7 15 6
9
Figure notes:
1. V6 - High-density media module slot 9. Analog line ports
2. V2 - Standard media module slot 10. Contact Closure (CCA) port
3. V5 - Standard media module slot 11. Ethernet WAN (ETH WAN) port
4. V1 - Slot for standard media module 12. ETH LAN port
or S8300D server 13. System LEDs
5. V4 - Standard media module slot 14. Console port
6. V3 - Standard media module slot 15. USB port
7. Analog Port LEDs 16. Reset (RST) button
8. Analog trunk 17. Alternate Software Bank (ASB) button

56 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
G430 LEDs

G430 LEDs
Follow the links in the Figure Notes of Figure 23: G430 Branch Gateway front panel ports,
slots, and LEDs for the explanation of the LEDs on a G450 Branch Gateway.

Figure 23: G430 Branch Gateway front panel ports, slots, and LEDs

12 13 1

11 2

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
Figure notes:
1. V2 - standard media module slot 8. USB ports
2. V3 - standard media module slot 9. ASB (Alternate Software Bank) button
3. Compact Flash CARD IN USE LED 10. System LEDs
4. Compact Flash slot 11. RST (Reset) button
5. ETH LAN port 12. Ethernet WAN (ETH WAN) ports
6. Services port 13. V1 - slot for standard media module
7. Contact Closure (CCA) port or S8300D server

The LED lighting sequence for the G430 is as follows:


1. The PWR LED on the front panel turns on, indicating the status of the power supply unit.
2. The CPU LED turns on if the firmware is running.
3. At least one LED on each media module turns on, then turns off after about 20 seconds.
The yellow Card In Use LED indicates the status of the flash card:
• If the LED is flashing, the Compact Flash is in use.

! WARNING:
WARNING: To prevent corruption of data on the Compact Flash, Avaya recommends that you
do not remove the Compact Flash when a backup of the G430 announcements
files is in progress. Doing so may corrupt the data on the Compact Flash.
• If the LED is OFF, no Compact Flash is inserted
• If the LED is flashing, do not remove the Compact Flash.

57 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

G450 LEDs
Follow the links in the Figure Notes of Figure 24: G450 Branch Gateway version 1.x front panel
ports, slots, and LEDs and Figure 25: G450 Branch Gateway version 2.x front panel ports,
slots, and LEDs for the explanation of the LEDs on a G450 Branch Gateway.
Note:
Note: G450 has two hardware versions: G450 1.x with hardware suffix 1 and G450 2.x.
with hardware suffix 2. The hardware suffix of the G450 is printed on the label
displayed on the rear of the G450 chassis. The port and LED functions are
identical unless otherwise indicated.

Figure 24: G450 Branch Gateway version 1.x front panel ports, slots, and LEDs

Figure 25: G450 Branch Gateway version 2.x front panel ports, slots, and LEDs

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

11

12 16

13 17

14 18

15 19

58 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
G700 LEDs

Figure notes:
1. System LEDs 11. ASB (Alternate Software Bank) button
2. USB ports 12. V1 - slot for standard media module
3. Console port or S8300D server
4. Services port 13. V2 - standard media module slot
5. Compact Flash slot 14. V3 - standard media module slot
6. ETR (Emergency Transfer Relay) 15. V4 - standard media module slot
port 16. V5 - standard media module slot
7. CCA (Contact Closure) port 17. V6 - standard media module slot
8. Ethernet WAN (ETH WAN) ports 18. V7 - standard media module slot
9. ETH LAN ports 19. V8 - standard media module slot
10. RST (Reset) button

The LED lighting sequence for the G450 is as follows:


1. The PWR LED on the front panel turns on, indicating the status of the power supply unit.
2. The CPU LED turns on if the firmware is running.
3. At least one LED on each media module turns on, then turns off after about 20 seconds.
The yellow Card In Use LED indicates the status of the flash card:
• If the LED is ON steady, the Compact Flash is inserted but is not being used.
• If the LED is flashing, the Compact Flash is in use.

! WARNING:
WARNING: Do not remove the Compact Flash when the backup of the G450 announcements
files is in progress. Doing so may corrupt the data on the Compact Flash.
• If the LED is OFF, no Compact Flash is inserted or you can remove the Compact Flash
(G450 2.x only).
• If the LED is OFF or ON steady, you can remove the Compact Flash (G450 1.x only).
• If the LED is flashing, do not remove the Compact Flash.

G700 LEDs
The G700 LEDs are the same as those on the Avaya P333T, with the following exceptions:
• Slight modifications to two of the LEDs (OPR and SYS)
• Addition of the Alarm LED to the LED Panel to display prominently any error condition
For a complete listing of the Avaya P330 LEDs, see Table 3.1: Avaya P333T LED Description in
User’s Guide for the Avaya P333T Stackable Switch Software Version 3.12.

59 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

LED panel location on the G700


As shown in Figure 26: G700 LED Panel Location, the LED panel is located on the top left
corner of the G700. Media module slot V1 is directly below the LED panel. Any type of media
module can fill this slot. However, the S8300D server can reside only in this particular slot
because of height restrictions. For a specific discussion of the S8300D LEDs, see For
information on the LED description for S8800 server, see Maintaining the Avaya S8800 server
for Avaya Aura® Communication Manager at http://support.avaya.com..

Figure 26: G700 LED Panel Location

3 6
51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58
V2 ALM SO EI SM EM SI EO
ALM PWR CPU MSTR LNK COL Tx Rx FDX FC Hspd LAG EXT 1 EXT 2 TST
ACT
SIG
59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66
E1/T1 EIA 530A DCE
V1 ALM V3 ALM
TST
ACT
OK TO
SHUT DOWN 2
TST
ACT 7
1 REMOVE SERVICES USB 1 USB 2

V4 ALM
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

TST
ACT
EXT 1 EXT 2 CONSOLE

4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

9
5
msdcs830 KLC 031402
8

Figure notes:

1. Media module Slot #1 (V1) 5. 10/100 BaseT Ethernet Ports


2. S8300D Services Port. This (EXT1, EXT2)
port is used with cross-over 6. Media module Slot #2 (V2)
ethernet cable. 7. Media module Slot #3 (V3)
3. S8300D USB Series Modem 8. Media module Slot #4 (V4)
connection 9. Console Interface. Use this with
4. Avaya Expansion Module Slot serial cable.

Figure 27: G700 LED Panel shows an expanded view of the G700 LED panel.

Figure 27: G700 LED Panel

51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58
ALM PWR CPU MSTR LNK COL Tx Rx FDX FC Hspd LAG EXT 1 EXT 2

59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66

51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58
V2 ALM SO EI SM EM SI EO
ALM PWR CPU MSTR LNK COL Tx Rx FDX FC Hspd LAG EXT 1 EXT 2 TST
ACT
SIG
59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66
E1/T1 EIA 530A DCE
V1 ALM V3 ALM
TST TST
ACT ACT
SHUT DOWN
OK TO
REMOVE SERVICES USB 1 USB 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
V4 ALM
TST
ACT
EXT 1 EXT 2 CONSOLE
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

msdcled2 KLC 031402

60 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
G700 LEDs

G700 front panel LEDs


The front panel includes the following LEDs as shown in Figure 28: G700 Front Panel LEDs:
• Four LEDs in the Voice or Data Module zone: ALM, PWR, CPU, MSTR.
• 16 LEDs representing the Data Ports associated with the Personality Module or Data
Expansion Ports
• Eight LEDs in the Data Function zone: LNK, COL, Tx, Rx, FDX, FC, Hspd, LAG.
• 2 LEDs for two 10/100 Mb data ports on the chassis. The LEDs are EXT 1 and EXT 2

Figure 28: G700 Front Panel LEDs

51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58
ALM PWR CPU MSTR LNK COL Tx Rx FDX FC Hspd LAG EXT 1 EXT 2

59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66

ledcled KLC 031402

The bottom G700 in a stack of ten G700s with the same version firmware is always elected
master, therefore, its MSTR LED is lit. If the firmware versions are not the same, the G700 with
the latest firmware version is elected master and its MSTR LED is lit. If there is only one G700 in
a stack, its MSTR LED is always lit.

61 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

Navigating using the front panel LEDs


Navigation using the front panel LEDs on the G700 is the same as that of the Avaya P330
series. For more information, see Table 3.2: Avaya P330 <--> Select buttons, in the User’s
Guide for the Avaya P333T Stackable Switch Software Version 3.12. For example, arrow keys
can be used to move left and right between the LEDs to check the following:
• LNK (link)
• Col (collision)
• Tx (send)
• Rx (receive)
In addition, the status of the ports can be queried using 51-66 in the LED panel.
Use the push buttons provided on the right and left of data mode LEDs for selecting the function
to be reported simultaneously by all 16 of the Port data expansion LEDs. The function selected
is indicated by a lit LED in that Function zone. Each time the right or left push button is pressed,
the function currently lit moves by one position to the right or to the left accordingly.
For example, if the COL LED is lit, all 16 Ports associated with the data expansion module LEDs
report the collision status of their respective port. To select the LAG function, press 6 times on
the right push-button. Afterwards, to select the Rx function, press 4 times on the left
push-button.
For the G700, the LEDs display the information of ports 2 External 10/100Base-T Ethernet links
and data expansion ports 51-66. When power is turned on, the LEDs indicate the Link status of
ports 51-66, EXT 1, and EXT 2. Push the right button once to move the indication to Collision
status of ports 51-66, EXT 1, and EXT 2. Push the left button to move the indication backwards.
Note:
Note: Eight pushes in one direction complete a full cycle of display.
If the right and the left push buttons are pushed simultaneously for:
• 1.5 seconds: The module resets the Layer 2 Switching Processor but not the gateway
Processor.
• 4 seconds: The whole stack resets and performs slot renumbering.
• 18 seconds: The module enters the debug mode and the module is disabled for data
traffic.
Note:
Note: Currently, there is no physical button or sequence of button presses defined to
reset the gateway Processor or G700. Perform software resets by using the
Command Line Interface (CLI) for the Device Manager of the G700.

62 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
G700 LEDs

Red ALM or alarm LED


The red ALM or Alarm LED is in the top left corner of the LED panel next to other important
system LEDs such as PWR, CPU, MSTR, as shown in Figure 28: G700 Front Panel LEDs. The
presence of this red ALM LED is primarily for on-site service technicians or dispatches. Most
major G700 components that the motherboard controls can cause the failure, for example, the
VoIP Media Module but not other media modules.
Note:
Note: The red ALM LED lights for motherboard problems only. Check for a red ALM
LED for problematic G700s. Also check all of the media module LEDs for any
media module-specific red ALM LEDs.
Note:
Note: If the red ALM LED is lit on a non-VoIP media module, check the G700 alarm
screens and the Communication Manager alarm screens to determine to
determine the source of the fault.
The red ALM LED indicates indicates the condition of the G700 by turning on under two distinct
circumstances:
• G700 hardware failure
- Impaired functions of the Layer 2 Switching Processor, gateway processor, or VoIP
engine
- Power supply voltage out of bounds
- Unit overheating
• The G700 communication failure
The following are a few examples:
• The red ALM LED is lit when two or more fans have failed.
Various warnings, alarms, and a graceful shutdown are performed based on the fan and
thermal sensor conditions.
• The red ALM LED is lit from the time power is applied until diagnostics end.
• The red ALM LED turns “OFF” when:
- Physical conditions such as temperature are rectified and return to normal or acceptable
operating ranges.
- The alarm is cleared manually.

EXT 1 LED
EXT 1 LED is displayed on the LED Panel (Figure 28: G700 Front Panel LEDs), which reports
the status of the first 10/100 MB/sec port. These LEDs report the 8 different functional statuses
dictated by the left and right arrow buttons.

63 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

EXT 2 LED
EXT 2 LED is displayed on the LED Panel (Figure 28: G700 Front Panel LEDs), which reports
the status of the second 10/100 MB/sec port. These LEDs report the 8 different functional
statuses dictated by the left and right arrow buttons.

G700 LED panel definitions


Table 19: LED Definitions illustrates the LED definitions for the G700 LED Panel.

Table 19: LED Definitions 1 of 2

No. LED name Description LED States


1 ALM Alarm Status OFF: No alarms exist.
RED ON: Alarm exists on the chassis itself.
2 PWR Power Status OFF : Power is down.
GREEN ON : Power is up.
Blinking : Every 1.2 seconds (400ms on, 800ms off)
when 5 volts power is not available to the riser
board and the media modules..
3 CPU CPU Operation OFF: CPU is in boot operation or is running BIST
GREEN ON: CPU boot operation and BIST completed.
4 MSTR Master/Slave OFF: Slave box of the stack.
Status ON: Master of the stack and redundant cable is not
GREEN present or not active.
One Blink every 1.5 sec: Master of the stack and
active redundant cable..
5 a LNK port Port Status OFF: Port disabled or not existent. At phase 1, or
51-66, Ext GREEN link fail of Giga ports.
1-2 ON: Port is enabled and link is OK.
1 Blink every 1.5 sec: Link test fail (of 10/100M
ports only at phase 1)
2 Blinks every 1.5 sec : Partition.
b COL Collision OFF: No collision or FDX port.
Port 51-66, GREEN ON: Collision occurred on line.
Ext 1-2
c Tx Transmit to line OFF: No transmit activity.
Port 51-66, GREEN ON: Data transmitted on line.
Ext 1-2
d Rx Receive from OFF: To receive activity.
Port 55-66, line ON: Data received from the line.
Ext 1-2 GREEN
1 of 2

64 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
G700 LEDs

Table 19: LED Definitions 2 of 2

No. LED name Description LED States


e FDX Half/Full OFF: Half Duplex mode of operation.
Port 51-66, Duplex ON :Full Duplex mode of operation, or for 10/
Ext 1-2 GREEN 100Base-T ports when link test fail with
auto-negotiation enabled.
f FC* Symmetric OFF: Port is in Asymmetric Flow control mode, or in
Port 51-66, Flow Control Flow Control mode disabled, or it is in half duplex.
Ext 1-2 GREEN ON :Port is in full duplex and in a symmetric Flow
Control mode.
g HSpd High Speed OFF: 10Base-T or for an expansion port that does
Port 51-66, GREEN not exist.
Ext 1-2 ON: 100Base-T, 100Base-F, 1000Base-X, and
OC-12, or for 10/100Base-T ports when link test fail
with auto-negotiation enabled.
h LAG Link OFF: No LAG defined with this port.
Port 51-66, Aggregation ON: Port belongs to a LAG.
Ext 1-2 Trunking
GREEN
6 Data 16 data OFF: See notes on No. 5 a-h.
expansion ports ON : See notes on No. 5 a-h.
51-66
GREEN
7 EXT 1 RJ 45 to OFF: See notes on No. 5 a-h.
Non-Avaya ON: See notes on No. 5 a-h.
equipment
GREEN
8 EXT 2 RJ 45 to OFF: See notes on No. 5 a-h.
Non-Avaya ON : See notes on No. 5 a-h.
equipment
GREEN

* For Giga ports, when auto-negotiation is enabled and the link is down, FC LED reflects the last mode
If the user resets the module or stack, all LEDs of the modules or stacks turn on the test lamp for 150 ms.
The COL, Tx, and Rx LED signals must be on for at least 150 ms.

2 of 2

65 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012
LED descriptions

66 LED Descriptions for Communication Manager Hardware Components Issue 3 July 2012

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