Users Guide

Recognize an Under-Voltage Condition
If the system detects an under-voltage condition, it sends an alarm.
To recognize this condition, look for the following system message: %CHMGR-1-CARD_SHUTDOWN: Major alarm: stack unit 2
down - auto-shutdown due to under voltage.
This message indicates that the specified card is not receiving enough power. In response, the system first shuts down Power over
Ethernet (PoE). If the under-voltage condition persists, line cards are shut down, then the RPMs.
Troubleshoot an Under-Voltage Condition
To troubleshoot an under-voltage condition, check that the correct number of power supplies are installed and their Status light emitting
diodes (LEDs) are lit.
The following table lists information for SNMP traps and OIDs on the environmental monitoring hardware and hardware components.
Table 99. SNMP Traps and OIDs
OID String OID Name Description
Receiving Power
.1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.10.1.2.5.1.6 chSysPortXfpRecvPower OID displays the receiving power of the
connected optics.
Transmitting power
.1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.10.1.2.5.1.8 chSysPortXfpTxPower OID displays the transmitting power of the
connected optics.
Temperature
.1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.10.1.2.5.1.7 chSysPortXfpRecvTemp OID displays the temperature of the
connected optics.
NOTE: These OIDs only generate if
you enable the enable optic-
info-update-interval is
enabled command.
Hardware MIB Buffer Statistics
.1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.27.1.4 dellNetFpPacketBufferTable View the modular packet buffers details per
stack unit and the mode of allocation.
.1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.27.1.5 dellNetFpStatsPerPortTable View the forwarding plane statistics
containing the packet buffer usage per port
per stack unit.
.1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.27.1.6 dellNetFpStatsPerCOSTable View the forwarding plane statistics
containing the packet buffer statistics per
COS per port.
Buffer Tuning
Buffer tuning allows you to modify the way your switch allocates buffers from its available memory and helps prevent packet drops during
a temporary burst of traffic.
The application-specific integrated circuit (ASICs) implement the key functions of queuing, feature lookups, and forwarding lookups in
hardware.
Forwarding processor (FP) ASICs provide Ethernet MAC functions, queueing, and buffering, as well as store feature and forwarding tables
for hardware-based lookup and forwarding decisions. 1G and 10G interfaces use different FPs.
The following table describes the type and number of ASICs per platform.
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Debugging and Diagnostics