High-performance devices on this card can get hot during operation. To remove the card, hold it by the
faceplate and bottom edge. Allow the card to cool before touching any other part of it or before placing
it in an antistatic bag.
Statement 201
Warning
Removing a card that currently carries traffic on one or more ports can cause a traffic hit. To avoid this, perform
an external switch if a switch has not already occurred. Refer to the procedures in the
Lock Initiation, and Clearing, on page 443
.
Caution
Step 2
Resend test traffic on the loopback circuit with a known-good card.
Step 3
If the test set indicates no errors, the problem was probably the defective card. Return the defective card to Cisco through
the RMA process. Contact Cisco Technical Support 1 800 553 2447.
Step 4
Clear the terminal loopback on the port before testing the next segment of the network circuit path:
a) Double-click the card in the source node with the terminal loopback.
b) Click the
Maintenance > Loopback
tabs.
c) Select
None
from the Loopback Type column for the port being tested.
d) Choose the appropriate state to place the port in service, out of service and disabled, out of service for maintenance,
or automatically in service from the Admin State column for the port being tested.
e) Click
Apply.
f)
Click
Yes
in the confirmation dialog box.
Step 5
Complete the
Create a Facility Loopback on an Intermediate-Node MXP or TXP Port, on page 15
.
Create a Facility Loopback on an Intermediate-Node MXP or TXP Port
Performing the facility loopback test on an intermediate port isolates whether this node is causing circuit
failure. In the situation shown in
Figure 5: Facility Loopback on an Intermediate-Node MXP or TXP Port,
, the test is being performed on an intermediate MXP or TXP port.
Figure 5: Facility Loopback on an Intermediate-Node MXP or TXP Port
Performing a loopback on an in-service circuit is service-affecting.
Caution
Cisco NCS 2000 series Troubleshooting Guide, Release 11.0
15
General Troubleshooting
Create a Facility Loopback on an Intermediate-Node MXP or TXP Port