
Chapter 11
| Interface Commands
Transceiver Threshold Configuration
– 412 –
Example
The following example sets alarm thresholds for the transceiver current at port 25.
Console(config)interface ethernet 1/25
Console(config-if)#transceiver-threshold current low-alarm 100
Console(config-if)#transceiver-threshold rx-power high-alarm 700
Console#
transceiver-threshold
rx-power
This command sets thresholds for the transceiver power level of the received signal
which can be used to trigger an alarm or warning message.
Syntax
transceiver-threshold rx-power
{
high-alarm
|
high-warning
|
low-alarm
|
low-warning
}
threshold-value
high-alarm
– Sets the high power threshold for an alarm message.
high-warning
– Sets the high power threshold for a warning message.
low-alarm
– Sets the low power threshold for an alarm message.
low-warning
– Sets the low power threshold for a warning message.
threshold-value
– The power threshold of the received signal.
(Range: -4000 - 820 in units of 0.01 dBm)
Default Setting
High Alarm:
-3.00 dBm
HIgh Warning: -3.50 dBm
Low Warning: -21.00 dBm
Low Alarm:
-21.50 dBm
Command Mode
Interface Configuration (ECS4120-28F SFP+ Ports 25-28
14
,
Other models: SFP/SFP+ Ports)
Command Usage
◆
The threshold value is the power ratio in decibels (dB) of the measured power
referenced to one milliwatt (mW).
◆
Refer to the Command Usage section under the
command for more information on configuring transceiver thresholds.
◆
Trap messages enabled by the
command are sent to any
management station configured by the
command.
14. Due to a chip limitation, transceiver data cannot be configured on ports 1-20 on the
ECS4120-28F. Default settings are used for these ports.
Summary of Contents for ECS4120-28F
Page 36: ...Contents 36...
Page 38: ...Figures 38...
Page 46: ...Section I Getting Started 46...
Page 70: ...Chapter 1 Initial Switch Configuration Setting the System Clock 70...
Page 86: ...Chapter 2 Using the Command Line Interface CLI Command Groups 86...
Page 202: ...Chapter 5 SNMP Commands Additional Trap Commands 202...
Page 210: ...Chapter 6 Remote Monitoring Commands 210...
Page 216: ...Chapter 7 Flow Sampling Commands 216...
Page 278: ...Chapter 8 Authentication Commands PPPoE Intermediate Agent 278...
Page 360: ...Chapter 9 General Security Measures Port based Traffic Segmentation 360...
Page 384: ...Chapter 10 Access Control Lists ACL Information 384...
Page 424: ...Chapter 11 Interface Commands Power Savings 424...
Page 446: ...Chapter 13 Power over Ethernet Commands 446...
Page 456: ...Chapter 14 Port Mirroring Commands RSPAN Mirroring Commands 456...
Page 488: ...Chapter 17 UniDirectional Link Detection Commands 488...
Page 494: ...Chapter 18 Address Table Commands 494...
Page 554: ...Chapter 20 ERPS Commands 554...
Page 620: ...Chapter 22 Class of Service Commands Priority Commands Layer 3 and 4 620...
Page 638: ...Chapter 23 Quality of Service Commands 638...
Page 772: ...Chapter 25 LLDP Commands 772...
Page 814: ...Chapter 26 CFM Commands Delay Measure Operations 814...
Page 836: ...Chapter 28 Domain Name Service Commands 836...
Page 848: ...Chapter 29 DHCP Commands DHCP Relay Option 82 848...
Page 902: ...Section III Appendices 902...
Page 916: ...Glossary 916...
Page 926: ...CLI Commands 926...
Page 937: ......
Page 938: ...E092017 CS R02...