Zhone Hotwire 5446 Guide de l'utilisateur

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AREA CODE CHANGE
Please note that the area code for
Paradyne Corporation in Largo, Florida
has changed from 813 to 727.
For any Paradyne telephone number that
appears in this manual with an 813 area
code, dial 727 instead.
Vue de la page 0
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Résumé du contenu

Page 1 - AREA CODE CHANGE

AREA CODE CHANGEPlease note that the area code forParadyne Corporation in Largo, Floridahas changed from 813 to 727.For any Paradyne telephone number

Page 2 - ACCESS MULTIPLEXER

About This Guide vii8000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Product-Related DocumentsDocument Number Document Title5020-A2-GN10HotWire POTS Splitter Central Office In

Page 3 - Printed on recycled paper

GlossaryGL-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Integrated Services Digital Network.Internet Service Provider.Local Area Network. Any physical network technology

Page 4 - Contents

GlossaryGL-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997A table that stores information about possible destinations for packets being routedthrough the HotWire DSLAM and

Page 5 - 7 IP Filtering

IN-18000-A2-GB21-10 June 1997IndexNumbers10BaseT interface on the MCC and DSL cards (e1a),5-15446 RTUconfiguring the management domain IP addresses,A-

Page 6 - 9 Packet Walk-Throughs

IndexIN-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997destination–based routing, 6-1directed broadcasts, 2-2discovering devices on the network, 4-6discovery, 4-6docume

Page 7 - Glossary

IndexIN-38000-A2-GB21-10 June 1997tFTP client, 3-3MCC cardassigning an IP address to the MCC card, A-2description, 1-4proxy ARP, 4-7resetting the

Page 8 - About This Guide

IndexIN-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997static routes, 6-1, A-17structured subnet addressing, 5-3subnet broadcasts, 2-2subnet route address, 6-1summariz

Page 9 - Document Summary

1-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Introduction to the HotWireDSLAM1What is the HotWire DSLAM?The HotWire Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer (DSLAM)

Page 10 - Product-Related Documents

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997DSLCARDDSLAMCentral Office (CO)97-15490Customer Premises (CP)COSwitchRouterEthernetRTUHot

Page 11 - Introduction to the HotWire

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997ACINPUTAC48VDC CLASS 2 ORLIMITED PWR SOURCERTN48VAAB BT5ALAN/WAN SLOT246AB...3.12POSITION

Page 12 - HotWire DSLAM Components

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997MCC CardThe MCC card is a single resource in the HotWire DSLAM that providesconsolidated

Page 13 - -48V (B)

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-58000-A2-GB21-10June 1997What is the HotWire 5446 RTU?The HotWire 5446 RTU resides at the customer premises and is

Page 14 - DSL Cards

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-68000-A2-GB21-10June 1997RTU10BaseT97-15456HUB...10BaseTEnd-userSystem 1End-userSystem 2End-userSystem 32POTS/DSLP

Page 15 - What is the HotWire 5446 RTU?

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-78000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Overview of the HotWire DSLAM Network ModelThe HotWire DSLAM and the HotWire 5446 RTU pro

Page 16 - Instructions

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-88000-A2-GB21-10June 1997The following illustration shows a detailed view of the network model:97-15499-01RTUNetwo

Page 17 - Network Model

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-98000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Typically, the NAP network is organized into three components:— Wiring centerThe wiring c

Page 18 - June 1997

HOTWIREDIGITAL SUBSCRIBER LINEACCESS MULTIPLEXER(DSLAM)NETWORK CONFIGURATION GUIDEDocument No. 8000-A2-GB21-10

Page 19 - IP Routing

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-108000-A2-GB21-10June 1997— Packets flowing from the NSP network to the subscribers are routedwithin the NAP netwo

Page 20 - Domain Features

Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM 1-118000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Understanding the Domain TypesFunctionally, the HotWire DSLAM network model can be divid

Page 21

2-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Customer Domain Features2OverviewThis chapter describes the following features that are supported in the customerdomain:

Page 22 - Customer Domain Features

Customer Domain Features 2-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997The following are the maximum upstream and downstream data rates withstandard #26 AWG wiring, and

Page 23 - Protocols

Customer Domain Features 2-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Proxy ARP (Theory of Operation)An Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) request is used to dynamically

Page 24 - Scenario 1: Without Proxy ARP

Customer Domain Features 2-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Scenario 2: With Proxy ARPIn this scenario, a router is running the proxy ARP software, and WS2 an

Page 25 - Scenario 2: With Proxy ARP

Customer Domain Features 2-58000-A2-GB21-10June 1997FilteringBy default, filtering is disabled on the HotWire DSLAM system, but you canenable filterin

Page 26 - Filtering

3-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Management Domain Features3OverviewThis chapter describes the following features that are supported in themanagement domai

Page 27 - Management Domain Features

Management Domain Features 3-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997These SNMP capabilities provided by Paradyne’s DCE Manager provide accessto MIB II, Entity MIB,

Page 28 - Applications for Management

Management Domain Features 3-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997tFTP ClientThe MCC card and DSL card each provide client trivial File Transfer Protocol(tFTP) ap

Page 29

Printed on recycled paper A8000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Copyright  1997 Paradyne Corporation.All rights reserved.Printed in U.S.A.NoticeThis publication i

Page 30 - Components of the Network

4-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Components of the NetworkModel4OverviewThe customer and management domains logically comprise the network model.This chapt

Page 31 - Address Allocation

Components of the Network Model 4-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997The following illustration shows another internetworking configuration. Thisconfiguration h

Page 32 - Proxy ARP

Components of the Network Model 4-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997When your HotWire DSLAM system is maximally configured, more users can besupported. With a

Page 33 - (DSLAM) User’s Guide

Components of the Network Model 4-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997In this illustration: The local router does an ARP request for the ES. The DSL card recei

Page 34 - Management Domain Components

Components of the Network Model 4-58000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Management Domain ComponentsThe following illustration shows the components of the network

Page 35 - RTU RTU RTU RTU RTU RTU

Components of the Network Model 4-68000-A2-GB21-10June 1997In other words, the router’s interface to the MCC must be multihomed. This isnecessary to s

Page 36 - MCC Card Proxy ARP

Components of the Network Model 4-78000-A2-GB21-10June 1997MCC Card Proxy ARPProxy ARP is also supported by the MCC card. In a HotWire DSLAM networkco

Page 37 - IP Address Allocation

5-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997IP Address Allocation5OverviewIP addresses are assigned throughout the network model for componentscomprising both the cus

Page 38 - Assigning IP Addresses

IP Address Allocation 5-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997The following illustrates the logical interface naming convention.97-15467DSL Card 1s1cs1ds1es1fs1bDS

Page 39 - Structured Subnet Addressing

IP Address Allocation 5-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997The following illustration is an example of host addressing.97-15501-01DSL CardDSL Port 1DSL Port 2DS

Page 40

i8000-A2-GB21-10June 1997ContentsAbout This Guide Document Purpose and Intended Audience v. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  Docum

Page 41

IP Address Allocation 5-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997To understand why this subnetting scheme works, you may want to consider theIP addresses and subnet m

Page 42

IP Address Allocation 5-58000-A2-GB21-10June 199797-15475-01DCE Manager Routerb1: 135.1.3.254/24b2: 135.1.2.1/24DCE ManagerServerMCC Carde1a: 135.1.2.

Page 43 - Peer IP Addresses

IP Address Allocation 5-68000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Management IP Address AllocationThe primary functionality of the management domain is monitoring andc

Page 44

IP Address Allocation 5-78000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Peer IP AddressesSynchronous ports are configured with peer IP addresses. Peer IP addressesare used t

Page 45 - IP Address Requirement

IP Address Allocation 5-88000-A2-GB21-10June 1997The following illustration shows the DSL card with four RTUs connected to itsDSL ports. The peer addr

Page 46 - HotWire Digital

IP Address Allocation 5-98000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Customer IP Address AllocationEach ISP allocates IP addresses for the components in each customer’s n

Page 47

IP Address Allocation 5-108000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Recording Your Configuration SettingsIt is recommended that you keep a record of your configuration

Page 48

6-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997IP Routing6OverviewThis chapter presents information regarding the theory behind the configurationof static routes on the

Page 49 - MCC Card Static Route Example

IP Routing 6-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997If a match is found for more than one destination address, the order ofprecedence is:1. Host route2. Subnet rout

Page 50 - DSL Card Static Route Example

IP Routing 6-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997MCC Card Static Route ExampleThe following illustration shows an example of the MCC card routing table.97-15478-

Page 51 - Source-Based Routing

Contents ii8000-A2-GB21-10June 19974 Components of the Network Model Overview 4-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 52

IP Routing 6-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997DSL Card Static Route ExampleThe following illustration shows an example of how static routes configured on aDSL

Page 53

IP Routing 6-58000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Source-Based RoutingIn addition to destination-based routing, the HotWire DSLAM system alsosupports source-based

Page 54 - IP Filtering

IP Routing 6-68000-A2-GB21-10June 199797-15473-01Router155.1.3.1DSL Cards1cRTU 1135.1.3.3155.1.3.4ES1s1dRTU 2135.1.3.4155.1.3.5ES2Packet Flowe1a155.1.

Page 55 - IP Router Filters

IP Routing 6-78000-A2-GB21-10June 1997The following illustration shows the packet flow when ES1 sends to ES3, ES1and ES3 are in different customer dom

Page 56 - Security Advantages

7-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997IP Filtering7OverviewA filter is a useful mechanism. It can be used to secure a network byimplementing security rules (pol

Page 57

IP Filtering 7-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997NOTE:You can specify an input filter for one interface and an output filter for anotherinterface. Do not, howe

Page 58 - ES1’s address

IP Filtering 7-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Security AdvantagesFiltering provides security advantages on LANs as described in the followingsubsections.NOT

Page 59 - SNMP Agent

IP Filtering 7-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997The following illustration is an example of this type of filtering:97-15491End-userSystem 1RTUDSL CardXEnd-use

Page 60 - Supported Traps

IP Filtering 7-58000-A2-GB21-10June 1997In the following illustration, ES2 spoofs ES1’s IP address (that is, ES2 assumesES1’s IP address of 155.1.3.4)

Page 61 - Worksheets

8-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997SNMP Agent8OverviewThe Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) is an application-levelprotocol used in network managemen

Page 62 - Packet Walk-Throughs

Contents iii8000-A2-GB21-10June 19978 SNMP Agent Overview 8-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 63 - 97-15474-01

SNMP Agent 8-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997The HotWire DSLAM supports the following MIBs: MIB II — System Group (described in RFC 1213) MIB II — ICMP Gro

Page 64

SNMP Agent 8-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997 authenticationFailure(4). The sending SNMP agent has received an SNMPmessage specifying a community name which

Page 65

9-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Packet Walk-Throughs9OverviewThis chapter provides examples of how data packets are routed through thecustomer and managem

Page 66 - Network Configuration

Packet Walk-Throughs 9-28000-A2-GB21-10June 199797-15474-01Router155.1.2.1155.1.3.1ISP1155.1.2.2DSL Card155.1.3.2RTU135.1.3.3155.1.3.4UnnumberedDSLInt

Page 67

Packet Walk-Throughs 9-38000-A2-GB21-10June 19977. The DSL card then forwards the packet over the DSL port to that RTU.8. Upon receiving the packet, t

Page 68

Packet Walk-Throughs 9-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997When WS1 pings a HotWire 5446 RTU:1. The packet addressed to 135.1.3.4 is routed to the router by norm

Page 69 - IP Network

A-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Network ConfigurationWorksheetsAOverviewThis appendix summarizes the mandatory minimum configuration steps andprovides wor

Page 70 - Address

Network Configuration Worksheets A-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Management Domain Configuration WorksheetsFor the management domain, configure the MCC car

Page 71

Network Configuration Worksheets A-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Who Am I ScreenPrompt Your Configuration Setting1. Enter the IP address to the MCC card(e1

Page 72

Network Configuration Worksheets A-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Assign an IP Address to the Backplane (s1b)On the IP Network screen, assign an IP address

Page 73

Contents iv8000-A2-GB21-10June 1997C SNMP Configuration Worksheets Overview C-1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 74 - Reset the MCC Card

Network Configuration Worksheets A-58000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Assign IP Addresses to the DSL CardsOn the Configure DSL IP Addr screen, assign an IP addr

Page 75

Network Configuration Worksheets A-68000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Configure DSL IP Addr Screen

Page 76

Network Configuration Worksheets A-78000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Create a Default RouteOn the Static Routes screen, create a default route to the managemen

Page 77

Network Configuration Worksheets A-88000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Static Routes Screen

Page 78

Network Configuration Worksheets A-98000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Reset the MCC CardAfter configuring the MCC card for the management domain, reset the card

Page 79

Network Configuration Worksheets A-108000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Configure the HotWire 5446 RTU Management Domain IP AddressesOn the IP Network screen, co

Page 80

Network Configuration Worksheets A-118000-A2-GB21-10June 1997IP Network Screen

Page 81

Network Configuration Worksheets A-128000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Static Routes Screen

Page 82

Network Configuration Worksheets A-138000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Static Routes Screen

Page 83

Network Configuration Worksheets A-148000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Customer Domain Configuration WorksheetsFor the customer domain, select the DSL card you

Page 84

v8000-A2-GB21-10June 1997About This GuideDocument Purpose and Intended AudienceThis guide describes the HotWire Digital Subscriber Line Access Multip

Page 85 - Reset the DSL Card

Network Configuration Worksheets A-158000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Assign IP Addresses to the DSL Card LANOn the IP Network screen, assign IP addresses to t

Page 86 - IP Filtering Configuration

Network Configuration Worksheets A-168000-A2-GB21-10June 1997IP Network Screen

Page 87 - 8000-A2-GB21-10June 1997

Network Configuration Worksheets A-178000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Create Static Routes to End-User SystemsOn the Static Routes screen, create a static rout

Page 88

Network Configuration Worksheets A-188000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Static Routes Screen

Page 89

Network Configuration Worksheets A-198000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Static Routes Screen

Page 90

Network Configuration Worksheets A-208000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Static Routes Screen

Page 91

B-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997IP Filtering ConfigurationWorksheetsBOverviewThis appendix provides worksheets to assist you in creating filters for yourH

Page 92

IP Filtering Configuration Worksheets B-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997NOTE:For each DSL card, the HotWire DSLAM provides the following defaultfilter names:

Page 93 - SNMP Configuration Worksheets

IP Filtering Configuration Worksheets B-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Filtering Configuration WorksheetsThe following sections provide worksheets for confi

Page 94

IP Filtering Configuration Worksheets B-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997IP Filter Configuration

Page 95 - SNMP Communities/Traps

About This Guide vi8000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Document SummarySection DescriptionChapter 1Introduction to the HotWire DSLAM. Provides anoverview of the H

Page 96

IP Filtering Configuration Worksheets B-58000-A2-GB21-10June 1997IP Filter Configuration

Page 97

IP Filtering Configuration Worksheets B-68000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Binding the FilterOn the IP Network screen, indicate whether you want to use the filt

Page 98 -  IP Address =

IP Filtering Configuration Worksheets B-78000-A2-GB21-10June 1997IP Network Screen

Page 99

C-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997SNMP Configuration WorksheetsCOverviewThis appendix provides worksheets to assist you in setting up general SNMPconfigurat

Page 100

SNMP Configuration Worksheets C-28000-A2-GB21-10June 1997SNMP Agent Configuration WorksheetsThe following sections provide worksheets for configuring

Page 101

SNMP Configuration Worksheets C-38000-A2-GB21-10June 1997SNMP Communities/TrapsPrompt Your Configuration Setting1. Determine whether you want to enabl

Page 102

SNMP Configuration Worksheets C-48000-A2-GB21-10June 1997SNMP Communities/TrapsPrompt Your Configuration Setting3. For each community name, you canent

Page 103

SNMP Configuration Worksheets C-58000-A2-GB21-10June 1997Preventing Unauthorized AccessUse the SNMP Security screen to enable SNMP security (i.e., pre

Page 104

SNMP Configuration Worksheets C-68000-A2-GB21-10June 1997SNMP SecurityPrompt Your Configuration Setting1. Determine whether you want to enableor disab

Page 105

GL-18000-A2-GB21-10June 1997GlossaryThe technical term for twisted-pair Ethernet.See Subnet Address Mask.Address Resolution Protocol. The TCP/IP proto

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