Cisco Cisco ONS 15454 SONET Multiservice Provisioning Platform (MSPP) Guida Alla Risoluzione Dei Problemi

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Upgrading XC and XCVT Cards to XC10G Cards
Document ID: 21020
Contents
Introduction
 Prerequisites
      Requirements
      Components Used
      Conventions
 Upgrade XC or XCVT Cards to XC10G Cards
 Related Information
Introduction
This document explains how to upgrade a Cross Connect (XC) or Cross Connect Virtual Tributary (XCVT)
card to a Cisco ONS 15454 XC10G card.
Note: The example in this document explains how to upgrade dual XC and XCVT cards with dual XC10G
cards in the ONS 15454−SA−ANSI with live traffic.
Prerequisites
Requirements
Cisco recommends that you have knowledge of these topics:
A Path Unequipped alarm (UNEQ−P) alarm can occur when an XC card upgrade is in progress, if you
have E100 or E1000 cards in your system. The alarm appears and clears within a few seconds.
• 
The procedure is not service−affecting. However, the upgrade causes a switch less than 50 ms in
duration. An XC or XCVT switch can cause a linear 1+1 optical carrier (OC−N) protection switch or
a bidirectional line switch ring (BLSR) protection switch. Cisco recommends a maintenance window.
However, a maintenance window is not absolutely necessary.
• 
This procedure assumes that the XC or XCVT cards are installed in the 15454−SA−ANSI shelf
(Release 3.1). You cannot perform this upgrade from shelves released earlier than 3.1, such as
15454−SA−NEBS3 or 15454−SA−NEBS3E shelves. The XC10G card requires the
15454−SA−ANSI.
• 
You need to resolve any critical or major alarms before you begin this procedure. You can identify
these alarms from the Alarms tab in Network view.
• 
Components Used
The information in this document is based on these software and hardware versions:
Cisco ONS 15454 running Cisco Transport Controller (CTC) Release 3.1 or later.
• 
Two XC or XCVT cards that are installed in the ONS 15454−SA−ANSI.
• 
Two XC10G cards that are available for installation.
• 
The information in this document was created from the devices in a specific lab environment. All of the
devices used in this document started with a cleared (default) configuration. If your network is live, make sure
that you understand the potential impact of any command.