Cisco Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server Wartungshandbuch
Cisco MeetingServer 5.1 System Manager’s Guide
167
Cisco Systems
March 2003
This section discusses the Alarm Table and how to use it.
About the Alarm Table
In addition to reporting abnormal events, the Alarm Table also shows you
how many times the alarm condition occurred, the date of its first and last
occurrences, the server number where the alarm occurred, and a brief
description of the alarm condition.
how many times the alarm condition occurred, the date of its first and last
occurrences, the server number where the alarm occurred, and a brief
description of the alarm condition.
When an alarm occurs, MeetingPlace assigns it an alarm code identifying the
type of alarm. If you wish to be notified in case of an alarm, configure
MeetingPlace to outdial to a specific destination.
type of alarm. If you wish to be notified in case of an alarm, configure
MeetingPlace to outdial to a specific destination.
When to Check the Alarm Table
Note: Report immediately any alarm condition that you do not
understand to your MeetingPlace support representative.
understand to your MeetingPlace support representative.
Tip: It is recommended that you check the Alarm Table
weekly. You can save the information from the Alarm Table in
a file so that you have it for future reference, and then clear the
alarms in the table. If the alarms in the table are not cleared,
the table overflows and you cannot view new alarm entries.
weekly. You can save the information from the Alarm Table in
a file so that you have it for future reference, and then clear the
alarms in the table. If the alarms in the table are not cleared,
the table overflows and you cannot view new alarm entries.
System managers may allow attendants to view alarms (but not
clear them). For more information on configuring this
functionality, see Configuring Help Desk Privileges for
Attendants in Chapter 2.
clear them). For more information on configuring this
functionality, see Configuring Help Desk Privileges for
Attendants in Chapter 2.
Alarm Types
The Alarm Table reports five types of alarms:
•
Repeated unsuccessful attempts to log in (locked profile)
•
Trunk malfunction (T1 failure)
•
Gateway malfunction (IP failure)
•
Hardware or software failures
•
System outages
As the system manager, you deal directly with only some of the alarm types.
Other alarm types require contacting your MeetingPlace support
representative.
Other alarm types require contacting your MeetingPlace support
representative.
Responding to a Login Error
Code[40728] Too many attempts to log into profile