RAM-6021 Wired Router
114
Chapter 6 Appendices
Appendix
A:
Red_Lion
‐
RAM.MIB
Contents
Refers
to:
3.5.10
SNMP
Agent:
RED_Lion
‐
RAM.MIB
Contents
Please
note
that
the
RAM
‐
6021
Wired
Router
will
not
return
any
values
for
Wireless
specific
fields.
The
following
MIBs
are
cellular
specific.
It
is
to
be
noted
that
all
of
the
following
can
be
retrieved
on
the
SN
firmware
version
of
Red
Lion's
routers,
the
A,
M,
and
R
Series
routers
are
dependent
on
the
cellular
module/
aircard
installed/inserted
into
the
router.
Some
manufacturers
allow
for
more
information
to
be
retrieved
from
the
module/aircard
than
others.
unitDescription
STRING
Router
Model
Name
unitSerialNumber
STRING
Serial
Number
of
Router
unitFirmwareVer
‐
sion
STRING
Firmware
Version
Number
of
Router
mdn
STRING
Mobile
Directory
Number,
the
actual
phone
number
of
the
device.
minIMEI
STRING
Mobile
Identification
Number,
the
number
given
to
a
service
plan
pro
‐
vided
by
the
carrier.
International
Mobile
Equipment
Ind
entity,
number
used
by
the
GSM
network
to
identify
valid
devices.
nai
STRING
Network
Access
Identifier,
a
standard
way
of
identifying
users
who
request
access
to
a
network.
sipUser
INTEGER
Session
Initiation
Protocol,
used
to
establish
sessions
between
multiple
parties
in
a
location
‐
independent
manner.
Typically
voice
sessions.
sid
INTEGER
System
ID,
a
unique
5
‐
digit
number
assigned
to
each
carrier
by
the
FCC.
nid
INTEGER
Network
ID,
used
to
divide
SIDs
into
smaller
areas.
prl
INTEGER
Preferred
Roaming
List,
a
list
of
information
that
resides
in
the
memory
of
the
module/aircard.
It
lists
the
radio
frequencies
the
module/aircard
can
use
in
various
geographic
areas.
The
part
of
the
list
for
each
area
is
ordered
by
the
bands
the
module/air
‐
card
should
try
to
use
first.
Therefore
it's
a
kind
of
priority
list
for
which
towers
the
module/aircard
should
use.
The
PRL
helps
determine
which
home
‐
network
towers
to
use,
and
also
which
towers
belonging
to
other
networks
to
use
in
roaming
situations
(areas
where
the
home
network
has
no
coverage.)
When
roaming,
the
PRL
may
instruct
the
module/aircard
to
use
the
network
with
the
best
roaming
rate
for
the
carrier,
rather
than
the
one
with
the
strongest
signal
at
the
moment.
Since
a
PRL
tells
the
module/aircard
“where”
to
search
for
a
signal,
as
carrier
networks
change
over
time,
an
updated
PRL
may
be
required
for
a
module/aircard
to
“see”
all
of
the
coverage
that
it
should,
both
with
the
home
network
and
for
roaming.
activated
INTEGER
Determines
if
the
module/aircard
is
authorized
onto
the
carrier's
net
‐
work.
Values
are
Unknown(
‐
1),
No(0),
Yes(1).