Sie sind auf Seite 1von 25

SEB 08-00-018 CS 2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

Carrier Voice over IP Engineering Document Date: Feb 26,2009 Document Version: 12.0.3 Document Owner: RDA13

The information contained in this release relates to certain Nortel products that have been designed by or on behalf of Nortel to conform to applicable Nortel and third party specifications and requirements, including, for example, NEBS compliance. In addition, such Nortel products are designed to be used for its intended purpose as specified in this documentation. In the event, and to the extent, that such Nortel products are used by the user for a purpose other that its intended purpose, or used with third party products that do not conform to any such applicable Nortel and third party specifications and requirements, including, for example, NEBS compliance, Nortel shall have no liability of any kind to the user for any problems which may arise, including, without limitation, any related failure of the Nortel product to perform in accordance with its specification.

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

Abstract
The Carrier Voice over IP solutions offer great flexibility. The subscribers could be either residential or enterprise customers. For residential customers, the data network access could be an end-to-end managed network provided by the carrier space, or through a managed core network connecting the residential access network (DSL, HFC, Internet) via an Access Network. For enterprise customers, the data network access would typically be for either IP Virtual Private Network service, connecting multiple enterprise sites, access to an ISP, or both.
Figure 1 Carrier Voice over IP Network
PSTN EM OAM&P Servers Clients CS 2000 USP UAS AMS MCS 5200

PVG

CS-LAN

Line H.323 CICM GWC GWC GWC

Trunk GWC

DPT GWC Media Proxy Internet

Succession Core Managed Network

CPE NAT/FW Enterprise Network IAD

Access Network CPE NAT/FW (Optional) Residential Network

Residential Network

CPE GW (e.g. H.323, Ethernet Line)

DSL Ctx IP Clients MCS Clients IAD

Ctx IP Clients

MCS Clients

The focus of this document is to provide the engineering rules monitor the CPU capacity and memory usage of the CS 2000 Compact.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

Revision Control
Date Version Revised by Remarks

2004-10-25 2004-10-29 2004-11-16 2005-02-15 2006-07-12 2007-06-04 2007-11-01 2009-02-26 2008-04-01 2008-04-20 2008-05-25 2008-06-09 2009-02-26 2008-06-18 2008-09-25 2009-02-26

8.0.0 8.0.1 8.0.2 8.0.3 9.1.1 10.0.1 10.0.2 10.0.3 11.0.1 11.0.2 11.0.3 11.0.4 11.0.5 12.0.1 12.0.2 12.0.3

Hady Abi-Aad Hady Abi-Aad Hady Abi-Aad Hady Abi-Aad R. Graman R. Graman R. Graman D. Kaya Ilhan I. Marangoz I. Marangoz I. Marangoz I. Marangoz D. Kaya Ilhan T. Cerit I. Marangoz D. Kaya Ilhan

Initial draft Added Alarms information Added internal review changes Changes to new template SN09FF update SN10 update CPCI 6115 memory update Updated section 2.2 and 3.2 CVM11 update Added internal review changes Updated review changes Table in section 2.3.2 corrected Updated section 2.2 and 3.2 CVM12 drop1 update Updated section 3.2.2 Updated section 2.2 and 3.2

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

Table of Contents
1. 2. 2.1 INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................................................... 6 CORE CALLP UTILIZATION.................................................................................................. 7 Background........................................................................................................................ 7

2.2 Capacity Engineering ........................................................................................................ 9 2.2.1 Engineered Capacity (ENGCAP) BHCA.................................................................... 10 2.2.2 Supported BHCA level based on sparing bandwidth limit ......................................... 10 2.2.3 Feature Real Time Impact ......................................................................................... 11 2.2.3.1 TCAP/LNP ............................................................................................................. 11 2.3 Monitoring Capacity ........................................................................................................ 11 2.3.1 Engineered Capacity Projection ................................................................................ 11 2.3.2 CS 2000c Software Upgrade ..................................................................................... 12 2.4 Monitoring Tools.............................................................................................................. 12 2.4.1 BRSTAT OM .............................................................................................................. 13 2.4.2 CAPCI ........................................................................................................................ 14 2.4.3 DMSMON; HIGHCAP ................................................................................................ 15 2.4.4 TPCSPOM OM .......................................................................................................... 15 3. 3.1 MEMORY USAGE................................................................................................................. 18 Background / Terminology ............................................................................................. 18

3.2 Memory Engineering ....................................................................................................... 19 3.2.1 Monitoring Memory Usage......................................................................................... 19 3.2.2 CS 2000c Software Upgrade ..................................................................................... 19 3.3 Monitoring Tools.............................................................................................................. 21 3.3.1 STORE OM................................................................................................................ 21 3.3.2 STORE ALL USAGE ................................................................................................. 22 3.3.3 Memory Alarms.......................................................................................................... 24 LIST OF ACRONYMS ................................................................................................................... 25

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

1. Introduction
This document addresses the monitoring of the CS 2000 Compact Core Utilization and Memory usage.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

2. Core CallP Utilization


2.1 Background
The Core has a fair share scheduler. 72% of the processor real time is guaranteed for call processing (CallP). The remaining time is guaranteed for other classes, such as maintenance, background, guaranteed terminal access, etc (as depicted in the figure below). CallP Utilization (CPUTIL or UTIL) is the indicator of Core processor utilization. UTIL is 100% when CallP uses all of its guaranteed 72% CPU occupancy. If needed, CallP can tap into the other classes un-use share of CPU occupancy. In that case UTIL will be > 100%.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

FORE 1% SNIP 1%
GTERM 1%

BKG 3%

OM 3%

100% CPU occupancy

DNC 3%

MAINT 8%

SCHED 8%

CALLP 72%

100% CP Utilization

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

2.2 Capacity Engineering


As of CVM12 drop1 there are three available processor options. The table below shows the processor option and the BHCA capacity at the ENGCAP or 100% Call Processing utilization level. Also shown is the Sparing bandwidth capacity of each. Sparing bandwidth is described later in this section. MCPN 765 NTRX51GZ MCPN 905 NTRX51HZ CPCI6115 NTR651HZ

Call Model
Tandem No LNP/IN, Tandem, 30% LNP/TCAP/IN, 90% AMA EO, No LNP/IN Multiple features assigned EO, 30% LNP/TCAP/IN Multiple features assigned, 100% AMA ACD/ICM/OCS/Converg ed Desktop 5 msgs/call

NA
1.3M 900K

Intl
700K 525K

NA
2.0M 1.40M

Intl
1.1M 800K

NA
2.0M 1.40M

Intl
1.1M 800K

800K

575K

1.25M

875K

1.25M

875K

525K

400K

800K

625K

800K

625K

350K

250K

550K

400K

550K

400K

Sparing Bandwidth NTRX51GZ Non-Geo 8000 Fibre Channel Geo 8000 (see Note 1) GE Channel (CS2100 Only) Memory Allocation SOS available Memory allocation in MegaBytes(MB)
6000

NTRX51HZ
6000

NTR651HZ
Non-Geo 16,000 Geo 12,000 6000

6000

NTRX51GZ
1216MB

NTRX51HZ
1152MB

NTR651HZ
1152MB

Note 1: Sparing Bandwidth (dirty pages) may limit the Compact BHCA capacity. To stay within the sparing bandwidth capacity noted in the Table, BHCA should not go above the ranges given below;
6000= 500K-600K 8000= 700K-850K 10000= 900K-1.1M 16000= 2.0M

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

These figures are planning figures, and not limits. The customer should use the OM to determine where the switch is running against the hard limit of max # dirty pages.

2.2.1

Engineered Capacity (ENGCAP) BHCA

The ENGCAP BHCA figures shown in the Table above are stated for a Tandem or End office call model that has 60% of the call attempts producing an AMA record, with no LNP or other feature activation. As features and services are added to the call mix the ENGCAP BHCA supported figures are reduced. Feature/service activations, in particular TCAP queries associated with LNP or 800 database queries add to the processor real time used per call attempt. With 100% LNP in an End office model, which is approximately 30% of the call attempts doing an LNP TCAP query, the ENGCAP is reduced from 1.35M BHCA to 950K BHCA on the MCPN765, or approximately 30%. This percentage decrease would apply to the ENGCAP values of the other processor options as well. This must be considered as part of the Compact capacity planning. ENGCAP is defined in Section 2.2.2.

2.2.2

Supported BHCA level based on sparing bandwidth limit

Capacity engineering of the MCPNxxx must also consider the sparing bandwidth capacity of the Compact. Sparing bandwidth refers to the inter core Fiber channel capacity. For the Compact Call Agents to remain in sync the number of dirty pages that can be transferred every 500 msecs is approximately 8000. Call processing, Maintenance, Audits, Office Size, and parameter settings , all contribute to the use of dirty pages. When these tasks run a peak in the number of dirty pages required can exceed 8000 at capacity, which can cause the CS2000-Compact to drop to WARM SYNC and potentially drop sync. Actual field performance will vary based on parameter datafill, line/trunk data fill, and associated features. Parameters NCCBS and NUMCALLPROCESSES in Table OFCENG can have a significant impact on the amount of sparing bandwidth required every 500 msec. Operational Measurements (OM) CP and CP2 report the High Water Mark (HWM) use of these resources. The EXT OM group should be used to monitor HWM use of various parameter settings such as NO_OF_DMS250_REC_UNITS. If sparing bandwidth capacity is nearing the Dirty Page use limit identified above, reducing oversized parameters can reduce dirty page use. Nortel recommends monitoring the dirty page use upon initial deployment, before and after line/trunk additions, Software upgrades or parameter changes to an office. Also, it is highly recommended to monitor the dirty page use in an office that is nearing the Engineered Call Attempt Capacity. The average and highest number of dirty pages used in a five minute period can be retrieved from file /var/log/3pc.statlog which is located on the inactive CCA. At this time there is not an operational measurement or log that records the number of dirty pages in use.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

10

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

2.2.3

Feature Real Time Impact

2.2.3.1 TCAP/LNP

765CCA %LNP 0% 16% 30% 60% Erosion 0% 16% 24% 34%

905/6115CCA Erosion 0% 16% 23% 34%

2.3 Monitoring Capacity


The Core should be engineered to a UTIL < 100% at the High Day Busy Hour (HDBH). It is recommended to start planning for a core upgrade when the Average Busy Season Busy Hour (ABSBH) UTIL reaches 80% as reported by the BRSTAT_BRSCAP Operational Measurement. Sparing Bandwidth use or dirty pages as described in Section 2.2 must also be monitored. 2.3.1 Engineered Capacity Projection

The Engineered Capacity (EngCap) is the Cores traffic throughput at 100% UTIL. EngCap can be measured using the CAPCI command during the Busy Hour. CAPCI is a manual CI level command. NOTE: Alternatively, EngCap can be derived using hourly OMs (OFZ and BRSTAT) during the Busy Hour: EngCap = CATMP / UTIL Where CATMP and UTIL are CATMP = (NIN2 + NORIG2) x 65536 + NIN + NORIG UTIL = BRSCAP

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

11

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

2.3.2

CS 2000c Software Upgrade

Always make sure there is sufficient capacity before upgrading the CS 2000c to a new software release. If an office planning to upgrade to a new release is not adding new ports, the following table gives an estimate of capacity erosion for a given upgrade. New_UTIL = Old_UTIL / (1 Erosion) Where, Erosion is the per release capacity erosion given in the table below. Assume 5% erosion per release for SN08 and higher. The following information is based on data obtained from Nortels lab facilities. As a result, Nortel does not guarantee the same results in a customers production environment as each scenario is unique and different from a call model and call mix perspective. Maximum 4% erosion is assumed from CVM11 to CVM12.
FROM \ TO SN07 SN08 SN09 SN09U SN10 CVM11 SN08 5% SN09 10% 5% SN09U 15% 10% 5% SN10 20% 15% 10% 5% CVM11 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% CVM12 29% 24% 19% 14% 9% 4%

Example: A SN08 office with an average busy hour of 60% UTIL is planning to upgrade to SN10. Once it upgrades to SN10 its new average busy hour UTIL will be New_UTIL = 60 / (1 0.10) = 67%

2.4 Monitoring Tools


There are Operational Measurement and CI command available to monitor capacity.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

12

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

2.4.1

BRSTAT OM

Register BRSCAP (= UTIL) of OM group BRSTAT should be used to monitor the CallP Utilization on the Core. Sample BRSTAT OM
BRSTAT CLASS: HOLDING START:2004/10/22 14:00:00 FRI; STOP: 2004/10/22 14:30:00 FRI; SLOWSAMPLES: 18 ; FASTSAMPLES: 180 ; BRSCAP BRSCMPLX BRSSCHED BRSFORE BRSMAINT BRSDNC BRSOM BRSGTERM BRSBKG BRSIDLE BRSAUXC BRSNETM BRSSNIP 0 82 0 168 54 7 0 12 3 150 0 1 0 8

NOTE: The values in the registers accumulate during accumulation periods. If there is multiple transfer periods during an accumulation period, the value of each register have to be divided by the number of transfer periods in the accumulation period.
Register BRSCAP BRSCMPLX BRSSCHED BRSFORE BRSMAINT BRSDNC BRSOM BRSGTERM BRSBKG BRSIDLE BRSAUXCP BRSNETM BRSSNIP Description Measures Call Processing class utilization. CallP is allocated 72% (including AUXCP) of CPU. Not applicable to Compact Measures Scheduler Overhead utilization. SCHED is allocated 8% of CPU. Measures Operating System Overhead (Foreground) utilization. Foreground is allocated 1% of CPU. Measures Maintenance class utilization. MAINT is allocated 8% of CPU. Measures Network Operating System File Transfer class utilization. NOSFT is allocated 3% of CPU. Measures Operational Measurement class utilization. OM is allocated 3% of CPU. Measures Guaranteed Terminal class utilization. GTERM is configured in OFCENG: GUARANTEED_TERMINAL_CPU_SHARE. Should be set to 1%. Measures Background class utilization. BKG is allocated 3% of CPU. Is pegged once for every minute that the Idle scheduler ran. Measures the Auxiliary Call Processing class utilization. AUXCP CPU share is configured in OFCENG: AUXCP_CPU_SHARE. Should be set to 1%. Measures Network Maintenance class utilization. NETM is allocated 0% (or 20% for STP offices only) of CPU. Measures Internet Protocol class utilization. SNIP is allocated 1% of CPU. BRSTAT registers.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

13

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

Operational Measurements CP and CP2 mainly monitor software resources but should also be monitored to detect any occurrences of Core Overload condition.

. OM CP CP CP2 CP2 Register ORIGDENY CPLOOVFL OVRLD INEFDENY Description Counts the denied originations by the Core Overload Controls Counts the dropped originations because of CP letter exhaustion. Is pegged every minute the Core is in Overload condition. Counts the origination/abandon pairs ignored by the Core Overload Controls

CP and CP2 Core Overload Indicators

NOTE: An office could have indications of Core Overload conditions without BRSCAP ever go over 100%. This can happen when an office experiences high traffic peaks. BRSCAP is an average of UTIL over a transfer period. The DMSMON; HIGHCAP command keeps hourly UTIL high-water-marks for the last 30 days.
OM OFZ OFZ OFZ OFZ Register NIN NIN2 NORIG NORIG2 Description Counts number of incoming trunk calls NIN extension register Counts number of originating line calls NORIG extension register

OFZ Traffic Throughput Registers.

2.4.2

CAPCI

The CAPCI command provides a real time (one minute snapshots) view of: Core utilization UTIL Indication if Core Overload Control was activated CCOVRLD EngCap: Projected Core capacity at 100% UTIL (same call mix) ENGCATMP Present hourly call rate CATMP/HR Indication if UTIL exceeded the value configured in OFCENG: cc_englevel_warning_threshold ENGLEVEL Indication if Core units are synchronized SYNC The other fields correspond to the different class utilizations as described for the BRSTAT OM.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

14

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

Sample CAPCI output


CATMP/HR UTIL ENGCATMP ENGLEVEL SYNC CCOVRLD IDLE 328440 34% 939394 BELOW YES OFF YES SCHED 161% FORE MAINT 45% 10% DNC AUXCP 0% 1% OM GTERM 16% 0% BKG 231 NETM 0% SNIP 9%

NOTE: EngCap = ENGCATMP ~ CATMP HR / UTIL 2.4.3 DMSMON; HIGHCAP

The DMSMON; HIGHCAP command provides the hourly high-water-mark UTIL for the past 30 days. It can be used to determine the Busy Hour. Sample DMSMON; HIGHCAP output
************************************** * HIGH WATER CAPACITY * ************************************** TIME DATE | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 00 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------| 09/25 | 10 8 7 6 7 6 13 33 43 42 46 48 49 50 49 40 44 42 38 30 27 25 17 14 | 09/24 | 9 9 8 7 6 6 12 19 24 31 33 34 35 34 41 42 43 42 37 31 29 26 19 13 | 09/23 | 13 12 11 10 7 6 8 9 13 19 18 20 22 23 24 23 24 29 28 27 26 23 19 13 | 09/22 | 13 18 10 7 8 7 10 14 20 26 31 33 31 32 30 31 33 31 33 31 30 27 21 18

NOTE: This sample shows only a part of a complete output. 2.4.4 TPCSPOM OM

The TPCSPOM OM group monitors traffic and utilization of CCA memory sparing rates. The calculations performed by the TPCSPOM OM group are: CCA memory sparing bandwidth utilization over a configured collection period (5, 15 or 30 minutes).

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

15

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

Peak (high water mark) CCA memory sparing bandwidth utilization, expressed as a percentage, over a configured collection period (5, 15 or 30min). Specific percentage ranges of memory pages transferred per half second intervals Sample TPCSPOM OM
CLASS: ACTIVE START:2008/04/02 07:45:00 WED; STOP: 2008/04/2 07:57:39 WED; SLOWSAMPLES: 8 ; FASTSAMPLES: 76 ; INFO (TPC_SPARING_USAGE) SP_MAX SP_AVRG SP_0030 SP_4050 SP_5060 SP_6070 SP_8085 SP_8590 SP_9095 SP_100UP 0 Dirty Page Limit is: 16 5 0 0 0 0 0 8000 1509 0 0

SP_3040 SP_7080 SP_95100

0 0 0

Register SP_MAX SP_AVRG SP_0030 SP_3040 SP_4050 SP_5060 SP_6070 SP_7080

Description Captures the peak (high water mark) CCA memory sparing bandwidth utilization Ratio of the number of pages transferred in a specific sampling interval ( eg. 500 sec ) to a Sampling interval page limit. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 0% - 30% Percentage range. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 30% - 40% Percentage range. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 40% - 50% Percentage range. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 50% - 60% Percentage range. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 60% - 70% Percentage range. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 70% - 80% Percentage range.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

16

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

Register SP_8085 SP_8590 SP_9095 SP_95100 SP_100UP

Description The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 80% - 85% Percentage range. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 85% - 90% Percentage range. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 90% - 95% Percentage range. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the 95% - 100% Percentage range. The number of pages transferred, in a half-second interval, that fall into the > 100% Percentage range.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

17

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

3. Memory Usage
3.1 Background / Terminology
Memory is divided in three different types: Program Store (PS): Memory allocated for program (executable) code. PS is allocated from Spare memory in 32 MB chunks. Data Store (DS): Memory allocated for data (tables, queues, s/w resources, etc). DS is allocated from Spare memory in 32 MB chunks. Spare: Memory not yet allocated (neither PS nor DS). Furthermore, DS memory is divided in different types. When DS is allocated it is assigned a type (DSTEMP_B, DSPROT_W, etc.) Typed DS memory: DS is allocated in chunks of 64 KB from the un-typed DS memory. If there is not enough un-typed DS memory available, then 32 MB is allocated from Spare memory. Un-typed DS memory: Memory allocated as DS but not yet assigned a type.

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

18

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

3.2 Memory Engineering


There are two types of memory cards. 1 GB card: It has 704 MB of store available. 1.5 GB card: It is the largest memory card supported as of CVM12 and is baseline starting in SN06. It has 1216 MB of store available. For additional information and details according to different card types, please refer to section 2.2 Capacity Engineering.

3.2.1

Monitoring Memory Usage

Offices equipped with the 1 GB card are recommended to upgrade to the 1.5 GB card when SPARE < 96 MB. Depending on customer order process cycle they may wish to start the upgrade process sooner. Offices equipped with the 1.5 GB card should notify PLM when SPARE is < 128 MB. You must allow for 48 MB SPARE after the upgrade to avoid a low_mem alarm. 3.2.2 CS 2000c Software Upgrade

Always make sure there is sufficient memory before upgrading the CS 2000c to a new software release. The following formula gives an estimate of the Spare memory remaining after a CS 2000c upgrade. SPARENEW = (TOTAL MEMORY) - DSTOTALNEW - PSTOTAL TOTAL MEMORY = 1152 MB PSTOTAL = 128 MB DSTOTALNEW = RND_UP_by_32{DSUSEDOLDx(1.03)N+(Nodata Increase)} Where: N is the release difference (i.e. upgrade from 08 to 10, N = 10 8 = 2). Nodata Increase is provided in MB by the following table:
FROM \ TO SN07 SN08 SN09 SN08 6.0 SN09 10.9 4.9 SN10 14.4 7.9 2.3 CVM11 16.2 9.7 4.1 CVM12 16.7 10.2 4.6

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

19

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

SN10 CVM11

1.8 -

2.3 0.5

Example: A CVM11 office equipped with a CPCI6115 card and has a DS TOTAL of 800 MB plans to upgrade to CVM12. Its SPARE memory after the upgrade will be: DSTOTALCVM12 = rnd_up_by_32 {900 x 1.03 + 0.5} = 824 SPARECVM12 = 1152 824 128 = 200 MB

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

20

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

3.3 Monitoring Tools


There are Operational Measurement, CI command and Alarms available to monitor Memory usage. 3.3.1 STORE OM

Registers SPAREMB and SPAREKB of OM group STORE should be used to monitor the unallocated (spare) Core Memory. Total Unallocated Memory (MB) = SPAREMB + SPAREKB/1024 Sample STORE OM
STORE CLASS: HOLDING START:2004/10/26 13:00:00 TUE; STOP: 2004/10/26 13:30:00 TUE; SLOWSAMPLES: 18 ; FASTSAMPLES: 180 ; DSUSEDM DSUSEDK DSAVAILM DSAVAILK FREEMB FREEKB TOTALMB TOTALKB PSUSEDM PSUSEDK PSAVAILM PSAVAILK SPAREMB SPAREKB 0 794 46 114 256 846 531 400 0 36 955 9 996 753 559

NOTE: None of the STORE OM registers accumulate during Accumulation OM classes. (I.e. do not divide the registers by the number of transfer periods in an accumulation period).

. Register DSUSEDM DSUSEDK DSAVAILM DSAVAILK FREEMB FREEKB TOTALMB Description Data Store Used in MB. Data Store Used in addition to DSUSEDMB in KB. DS Available in MB. DS Available in addition to DSAVAILM in KB. FREEMB+FREEKB=DSAVAILM+DSAVAILK+PSAVAILM+PSAVAILK FREEMB+FREEKB=DSAVAILM+DSAVAILK+PSAVAILM+PSAVAILK Total memory allocated in MB. DSUSEDM+PSUSEDM+FREEMB

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

21

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

Register TOTALKB PSUSEDM PSUSEDK PSAVAILM PSAVAILK SPAREMB SPAREKB

Description Total memory allocated in KB. DSUSEDK+PSUSEDK+FREEKB Program Store Used in MB. Program Store Used in addition to PSUSEDM in KB. PS Available in MB. PS Available in addition to PSAVAILM in KB. Spare memory in MB. Spare memory in addition to SPAREMB in KB. STORE Registers

3.3.2

STORE ALL USAGE

The STORE ALL USAGE command provides a real time view of memory usage. The fields are comparable to the STORE OM registers: TOTAL DS USED = DSUSEDM x 1024 + DSUSEDK TOTAL DS AVAIL = DSAVAILM x 1024 + DSAVAILK TOTAL PS USED = PSUSEDM x 1024 + PSUSEDK TOTAL PS AVAIL = PSAVAILM x 1024 + PSAVAILK TOTAL DS + TOTAL PS = TOTALMB x 1024 + TOTALKB SPARE = SPAREMB x 1024 + SPAREKB Sample STORE ALL USAGE output
Info based on inuse DS areas Storetype Used Free DSTEMP_B 65010Kb 4237Kb DSPROT_W 115743Kb 800Kb DSPERM_B 569000Kb 1239Kb DSSAVE_B 2031Kb 16Kb DSFPROT_W 1503Kb 352Kb DSFPERM_B 234Kb 21Kb DSPPERM_B 24Kb 39Kb DSSTACK_B 16920Kb 104Kb DSSOS_B 4397Kb 402Kb DSUNPROT_B 3650Kb 61Kb DSSCRATCH 96Kb 31Kb DSSTOR_B 1961Kb 86Kb Total % Used 69247Kb 93% 116543Kb 99% 570239Kb 99% 2047Kb 99% 1855Kb 81% 255Kb 91% 63Kb 38% 17024Kb 99% 4799Kb 91% 3711Kb 98% 127Kb 75% 2047Kb 95%

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

22

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

DSSTORPROT_W 22544Kb 47Kb 22591Kb DSTEMP_W 744Kb 24Kb 768Kb DSPROT_B 3234Kb 349Kb 3583Kb DSPERM_W 1869Kb 50Kb 1919Kb DSSOS_W 1598Kb 65Kb 1663Kb DSUNPROT_W 2Kb 62Kb 64Kb DSTEMP_M 13Kb 51Kb 64Kb DSPERM_M 3419Kb 36Kb 3455Kb DSSOS_M 84Kb 43Kb 127Kb TOTAL DS 814107Kb 8115Kb 822222Kb TOTAL BASED ON ALL DS AREAS TOTAL DS: USED = 814107Kb AVAIL = 37860Kb Info based on inuse PS areas Storetype Used Free Total % PSPROT_W 117136Kb 1903Kb 119039 FIRMWARE_DLL 4160Kb 0Kb 4160Kb TOTAL PS 121296Kb 1903Kb 123199Kb TOTAL BASED ON ALL PS AREAS TOTAL PS: USED = 121296Kb AVAIL = 9775Kb SPARE = 262144

99% 96% 90% 97% 96% 3% 20% 98% 66% 99% TOTAL = 851967Kb Used 98% 100% 95% TOTAL = 131071Kb %USED = 89% %USED = 96%

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

23

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

3.3.3

Memory Alarms

There are two memory alarms that warn of memory exhaustion. Alarms are raised when the sum of the SPARE and un-typed DS store is below a certain level. Un-typed DS store is equal to DS Available minus DS Free as displayed by the STORE ALL USAGE command. Minor alarm is raised if SPARE + un-typed DS < 48 MB Major alarm is raised if SPARE + un-typed DS < 32 MB

Example: Here is how the SPARE and un-type DS are derived from the previous sections STORE ALL USAGE output: SPARE = 262144 KB / 1024 = 256 MB Un-typed DS = DS Available DS Free = (37860 KB 8115 KB) / 1024 = 29 MB SPARE + un-typed DS = 256 + 61 = 317 MB (No memory alarm)

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

24

CS2000 Compact Performance Monitoring

List of Acronyms
CallP CPU CS 2000 CS 2000c DS OM PS STP Call Processing Central Processing Unit Call Server 2000 Call Server 2000 Compact Data Store Operational Measurement Program Store Signaling Transfer Point

NORTEL CONFIDENTIAL

25

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen