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Acceso Internacional
INGENIERIA DE DISEO




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3096 RC capabilities:





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Alarm Trap Manager 1 through 4 (alarmTrapIp0alarmTrapIp3)
Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) trap daemons are a tool for managing
TCP/IP networks, they are a simple method of alerting a management host of a
problem with a device or application. The Alarm TrapManager parameter is the IP
address of a host running the SNMP trap daemon that will be receiving messages
sent from the T-DAC. Upon the occurrence of an alarm, the T-DAC sends an SNMP



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trap message to the host system (or a management station) defined by this
parameter.
The Alarm Trap Manager requires that an IP address be entered. If you do not want the
T-DAC to send SNMP trap messages,entering an address of 0.0.0.0 disables SNMP trap
message sending.


Management web page indicationThe Alarms section (see figure 14) of the Alarm
System Overview window
(see figure 13 on page 50) uses color-coded highlighting to indicate which alarms are
active and the
severity levels of active alarms.
- RED: indicates that one or more CRITICAL (severity 4) alarms are active. When
active, critical alarm
notifications also appear as red highlighting on the HOME window (see figure 4 on
page 38) and as a
flashing red star (see figure 137 on page 252) on the System Status window (see
figure 136 on page 252).
- ORANGE: indicates that one or more MAJOR (severity 5) alarms are active. When
active, major alarm notifications
also appear as orange highlighting on the HOME window (see figure 4 on page 38)
and as an orange
exclamation mark (see figure 137 on page 252) on the System Status window (see
figure 136 on page 252).
- YELLOW: indicates that one or more MINOR (severity 6) alarms are active. When
active, minor alarm
notifications also appear as yellow highlighting on the HOME window (see figure 4 on
page 38) and as a



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yellow triangle (see figure 137 on page 252) on the System Status window (see figure
136 on page 252).
- BLUE: indicates that one or more INFORMATIONAL (severity 7) alarms are active.
Being informational
in nature, these alarms only appear on the Alarm System main window to indicate that
an event has
occurred, they do not generate alarm indications anywhere else.
External host indicationFor external notification, the T-DAC can be configured to
send a Syslog event
notification or an SNMP trap message (or both) to an external alarms management
host. To configure the
T-DAC to send SNMP traps or Syslog messages in response to alarm conditions,
click on the Modify
Parameters hyperlink (see figure 14 on page 51) to open the Alarm System
ConfigurationAlarm Response
Outputs window (refer to section Alarm System Configuration window on page 52).
In addition to viewing current alarm status, you can force the T-DAC to generate an
alarm as a test by clickingon the Generate Alarm button for the desired alarm. Click
on the Clear Alarm button to clear the alarmwhen the test is concluded.





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Record Current Configuration (storeConfig(1))
Clicking the button labelled Record Current Configuration causes the T-DAC to
save the current configuration
in permanent Flash memory. In other words, configuration changes made in the
subsystem web windows
become permanent when you click Record Current Configuration.
Configuration changes in the T-DAC are made by clicking a button labelled Submit
Query on any of the subsystem
window. When you click Submit Query, the T-DAC stores the parameter values in
volatile DRAM
(dynamic RAM) only. Since the Submit Query changes take immediate effect, the
administrator can test different
configuration parameters without needing to change the Flash configuration each
time.
Without clicking on Record Current Configuration, all configuration changes will be
lost if the power is
recycled. After doing the Record Current Configuration save, the current
configuration of the T-DAC will
not be lost when The T-DAC is powered down.




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Import/Export
Introduction
The Import/Export function enables you to make a backup (or exported) copy of your
T-DACs configuration
parameters. By exporting the configurations, the saved files can quickly be loaded, or
imported, into a replacement
T-DACgreatly speeding up the installation process should a T-DAC need replacing.

Export current Flash configuration
To export the Flash configuration, click on the Export Flash link on the Import/Export
main window. The TDAC
will display text configuration information resembling that shown in figure 11.

To save the displayed data as a text file, select the Save option on your browser (see
figure 12). For example,
under Netscape, select File > Save As. A dialog box will display enabling you to save
the contents of the export
parameters to a text file. Select the location where you want the file stored, type a file
name, and click Save.

Import Flash configuration from file
To import a configuration file into the T-DAC, type the complete path and filename for
the configuration file
you wish to load or click on the Browse button to select the desired file, then click
on the Submit Query
button (see figure 10 on page 45).



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Upon successfully importing the file, the T-DAC will display Configuration Load
Complete, indicating that the
new operating parameters have been loaded into Flash memory.
Click on HOME under the Configuration Menu, then click on the Hard Reset button
under Operator Actions.
Note Do not select Record Current Configuration after importing configuration
parameters.

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