The View Summary Status, Interchange Servers, Busy Out Server, and Release Server screens show detailed status information about the server or servers in your system. The information appears in the following two categories:
Duplication status appears near the top of the screen:
Duplicated. This field indicates whether or not the server is part of a two-processor, duplicated system. It displays a yes or no value.
Standby Busied. This field indicates whether or not the standby server is prevented from going active. It displays a yes or no value.
Standby Refreshed. This field indicates whether or not the standby server is synchronized with the active server and can therefore go active without dropping calls. It displays a yes or no value.
Standby Shadowing. This field indicates whether the data shadowing between servers is on or off.
Duplication Link. This field indicates the status of the duplication link, based on the duplication manager, which runs a process on each server and is responsible for data shadowing between the servers. It can have any of the following values:
Up. This value indicates that the duplication manager processes on both servers have established a link in both directions.
Half. This value indicates that the duplication manager communication has been established in one, but not both, directions.
Init. This value indicates that neither side knows yet if it is capable of contacting the other side.
Down. This value indicates that no attempt is currently being made to establish a connection between duplication managers.
Elapsed Time since Init/Interchange. This field displays the days, hours, minutes, and seconds since the last known system initialization or interchange occurred.
If you see a "curbs in"
message to the right of the elapsed time, it indicates that anti-thrashing
curbs are being used. These curbs block interchanges from occurring, even
if the standby server is refreshed and seems to have a better state of
health than the active server.
Information about the server's overall state of health appears in the bottom part of the screen. Information about the local server displays on the left, and information about the remote server displays on the right.
Mode. This field indicates the server's mode, as follows:
Not ready. This mode displays during initialization of the server or when the server is down.
Standby. Indicates the server is in service but is not the active server.
Busy out. Indicates that the server is out of service.
Active. Indicates that the server is running Avaya Call Processing (ACP) software.
Major Alarms. This field indicates whether or not there are any outstanding major server alarms. It displays a yes or no value.
See View Current Alarms for details about outstanding
alarms on the server.
Minor Alarms. This field indicates whether or not there are any outstanding minor server alarms. It displays a yes or no value.
Control Network. This field shows an X/Y value, where X is the number of IPSI-connected port networks currently controlled by the server, and Y is the number of IPSI-connected port networks the server should be controlling.
This field is blank if it
has not yet been determined whether or not there are any connection problems.
Server Hardware. This field indicates the hardware's state of health, as follows:
Okay. No hardware failures have been found.
Degraded. Hardware failures have been found.
Blank. The system has not yet determined whether or not there are any hardware failures.
Processes. This field indicates the state of health for server processes, as follows:
Okay. None of the processes watched by the watchdog process have become incapable of being restarted.
acp_fail. The ACP process has failed.
srv_fail. A non-ACP platform process has failed.
crit_os. A critical operating system service has failed.
Blank. The watchdog process is not running.
If you need more detailed
information about the processes running on the server, go to the View Process Status
screen.