
Testing the complete configuration
Installing the Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
275
December 2003
LED indicators
See the maintenance book for your system for detailed alarm and LED descriptions. If a maintenance
object begins to fail some periodic tests, the media server will generate an alarm. The media server
identifies three levels of alarms:
•
Major Alarms
—
Failures that cause critical degradation of service and require immediate
attention.
•
Minor Alarms
—
Failures that cause some degradation of service, but do not cause a critical
portion of the configuration to be inoperable. This condition requires action, but its consequences
are not immediate. Problems might be impaired service to a few trunks or stations or interfering
with one feature across the entire configuration.
•
Warning Alarms
—
Failures that cause no significant degradation of service or failures in
equipment external to the configuration. Warning alarms are not reported to the attendant console
or INADS.
Alarms are communicated to users and technicians by entries in the alarm and sys logs and the lighting of
LEDs located on the attendant console, on all circuit packs, and, optionally, on customer-designated
telephones.
More detailed information is available here for:
•
S8700 Media Server LEDs
on page 275
•
Avaya Ethernet switch LEDs
on page 277
•
Uninterruptible power supply LEDs
on page 278
•
Telephone console LEDs
on page 279
•
IP server interface LEDs
on page 280
•
Circuit pack LEDs
on page 283
•
DS1 Converter circuit pack LEDs
on page 284
•
SPAN LEDs
on page 286
S8700 Media Server LEDs
The media server has the LEDs shown in
Figure 110, LEDs on front and back of media server,
on page
276: