Cisco 678, CISCO675 - 675 Router, CISCO678 - 678 Router, 600 Series Installation And Operation Manual

Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
July 2000
Corporate Headquarters
Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA http://www.cisco.com Tel:
Fax: 408 526-4100
Customer Order Number: DOC-7811190= Text Part Number: 78-11190-01
THE SPECIFICATIONS AND INFORMATION REGARDING THE PRODUCTS IN THIS MANUAL ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL STATEMENTS, INFORMATION, AND RECOMMENDATIONS IN THIS MANUAL ARE BELIEVED TO BE ACCURATE BUT ARE PRESENTED WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. USERS MUST TAKE FULL RESPONSIBILITY FOR THEIR APPLICATION OF ANY PRODUCTS.
THE SOFTWARE LICENSE AND LIMITED WARRANTY FOR THE ACCOMPANYING PRODUCT ARE SET FORTH IN THE INFORMATION PACKET THAT SHIPPED WITH THE PRODUCT AND ARE INCORPORATED HEREIN BY THIS REFERENCE. IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO LOCATE THE SOFTWARE LICENSE OR LIMITED WARRANTY, CONTACT YOUR CISCO REPRESENTATIVE FOR A COPY.
The following information is for FCC compliance of Class A devices: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio-frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference, in which case users will be required to correct the interference at their own expense.
The following information is for FCC compliance of Class B devices: The equipment described in this manual generates and may radiate radio-frequency energy. If it is not installed in accordance with Cisco’s installation instructions, it may cause interference with radio and television reception. This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device in accordance with the specifications in part 15 of the FCC rules. These specifications are designed to provide reasonable protection against such interference in a residential installation. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation.
Modifying the equipment without Cisco’s written authorization may result in the equipment no longer complying with FCC requirements for Class A or Class B digital devices. In that event, your right to use the equipment may be limited by FCC regulations, and you may be required to correct any interference to radio or television communications at your own expense.
You can determine whether your equipment is causing interference by turning it off. If the interference stops, it was probably caused by the Cisco equipment or one of its peripheral devices. If the equipment causes interference to radio or television reception, try to correct the interference by using one or more of the following measures:
• Turn the television or radio antenna until the interference stops.
• Move the equipment to one side or the other of the television or radio.
• Move the equipment farther away from the television or radio.
• Plug the equipment into an outlet that is on a different circuit from the television or radio. (That is, make certain the equipment and the television or radio are on circuits controlled by different circuit breakers or fuses.)
Modifications to this product not authorized by Cisco Systems, Inc. could void the FCC approval and negate your authority to operate the product.
The Cisco implementation of TCP header compression is an adaptation of a program developed by the University of California, Berkeley (UCB) as part of UCB’s public domain version of the UNIX operating system. All rights reserved. Copyright © 1981, Regents of the University of California.
NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER WARRANTY HEREIN, ALL DOCUMENT FILES AND SOFTWARE OF THESE SUPPLIERS ARE PROVIDED “AS IS” WITH ALL FAULTS. CISCO AND THE ABOVE-NAMED SUPPLIERS DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THOSE OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT OR ARISING FROM A COURSE OF DEALING, USAGE, OR TRADE PRACTICE.
IN NO EVENT SHALL CISCO OR ITS SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY INDIRECT, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, LOST PROFITS OR LOSS OR DAMAGE TO DATA ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THIS MANUAL, EVEN IF CISCO OR ITS SUPPLIERS HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAM AGES .
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ASIST, BPX, Catalyst, Cisco, Cisco IOS, the Cisco IOS logo, Cisco Systems, the Cisco Systems logo, the Cisco Systems Cisco Press logo, CollisionFree, Enterprise/Solver, EtherChannel, EtherSwitch, FastHub, FastLink, FastPAD, FastSwitch, GeoTel, IOS, IP/TV, IPX, LightStream, LightSwitch, MICA, NetRanger, Post-Routing, Pre-Routing, Registrar, StrataView Plus, Stratm, TeleRouter, and VCO are registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. or its affiliates in the U.S. and certain other countries. All other trademarks mentioned in this document are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership relationship between Cisco and any other company. (0005R)
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
Copyright © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
About This Manual xvii
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
Document Objectives
Document Organization
Document Conventions
Obtaining Documentation
World Wide Web
Documentation CD-ROM
Ordering Documentation
Obtaining Technical Assistance
Cisco Connection Online
Technical Assistance Center
Documentation Feedback
1
Overview of the Cisco 600 Series
Purpose
1-1
xvii
xvii
xviii
xx
xx
xx
xxi
xxi
xxi
xxii
xxiii
1-1
Product Description
System Features
System Memory
Environmental Constraints
Network Management and Security Applications
CHAPTER
2
Installation Procedures
Installation Checklist
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1-2
1-3
1-7
1-7
1-7
2-1
2-1
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
v
Contents
CHAPTER
Unpack the Shipping Carton
Hardware Requirements
Set Up the Hardware Environment
Connect the Management Port to the PC’s COM Port
Configure the PC’s COM Port
Possible Configurations
Connect Cables to the CPE
Power On the CPE
Next Step
2-19
2-18
Warnings and Cautions
3
Configuration Procedures for the Cisco 627
Introduction
3-1
Configuration Checklist
2-2
2-3
2-3
2-4
2-5
2-5
2-13
2-19
3-1
3-1
Log On to the Cisco Broadband Operating System
Determine the CBOS Version
Operation Modes
3-2
3-2
Configure Management Virtual Connections
Using Telnet
3-6
3-2
3-3
Connecting from a Windows NT or Windows 95 Machine
Connecting from a UNIX Machine
3-9
How to Keep Telnet from Timing Out During Your Session
Using a Trivial File Transfer Protocol Server
Using TFTP from a UNIX Machine
Using TFTP from a Windows NT Machine
Upgrade Software through Serial Download
Configure Line Coding
3-13
3-10
3-10
3-11
3-12
3-6
3-9
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Contents
CHAPTER
Update the CBOS Prompt
Set Passwords
3-19
Save Configuration Changes
Evaluate System Activity and Performance
Retrieve Statistics
Interpret Statistics
4
Configuration Procedures for the Cisco 633
Introduction
Checklist
4-1
4-1
3-20
3-21
Log on to Cisco Broadband Operating System
Determine the CBOS Version
Operation Modes
Configure Interworking
3-18
3-19
3-20
4-1
4-2
4-2
4-3
4-3
CHAPTER
Configure the Cisco 633 for Remote Management
Configuring External Routers
4-6
Upgrade Software through Serial Download
Update the CBOS Prompt
Set Passwords
4-8
Save Configuration Changes
5
Configuration Procedures for the Cisco 67x CPE Devices
Introduction
5-1
Configuration Checklist
4-8
4-9
5-1
Log On to the Cisco Broadband Operating System
Determine the CBOS Version
Operation Modes
5-4
5-3
4-4
4-6
5-1
5-3
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Contents
Select a Connection Mode
Bridging Mode Procedures
Routing Mode Procedures
PPP Routing
5-8
RFC 1483 Routing
Configure the Ethernet Port (eth0)
5-5
5-5
5-8
5-10
5-11
Configure the WAN Ports and ATM Virtual Connections
Set ScalaRate for wan0-x
Create Routing Tables
Enable IP Filtering
5-17
Configure Applications
DHCP Client
DHCP Server
NAT
5-20
5-18
5-19
5-15
5-16
5-18
5-12
RADIUS Client
SNMP
5-22
SYSLOG Client
Telnet
5-24
TFTP Server
Web Server
5-20
5-23
5-27
5-30
Configure Timeout Values (Cisco 675, Cisco 678 in CAP mode only)
Configure Line Coding (Cisco 677 and Cisco 678 only)
Configure for CAP
Configure for DMT
Configure for G.Lite
Configure for DMT2
Configure for G.DMT
5-31
5-34
5-36
5-38
5-40
5-31
5-30
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Contents
CHAPTER
Upgrade Software through Serial Download
Configure Static NAT
5-43
Configure Multiple PCs Connected to the CPE
Configure PPP over ATM with NAT
Update the CBOS Prompt
Set Passwords
5-47
Save Configuration Changes
5-46
5-48
5-45
Evaluate System Activity and Performance
Retrieve Statistics
Interpret Statistics
6
Troubleshooting
WAN Link and Power-Up Issues
Web Interface Password Lengths
5-49
5-49
7-1
7-1
7-2
5-42
5-44
5-48
Web Browser Compatibility
Serial Buffer Overflow
RADIUS Password and Username Lengths
Computers Running Linux Without term/termcap
Clearing PC Cache with ARP
RIP and Idle Timeouts
ADSL Parameters for the set interface command
7-2
7-2
7-3
7-3
7-3
7-3
7-4
Frequently Asked Questions about the WAN LNK LED
BERT Testing (Cisco 675, Cisco 675e and Cisco 676 only)
HP Test Set Configuration
Transmitting BERT Data
Receiving BERT Data
Cisco 600 Series CPE Configuration
7-9
7-10
7-11
7-11
7-4
7-9
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Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
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Contents
APPENDIX
APPENDIX
A
Connectors
Rear Panel Connectors
B
Specifications
Physical Specifications
Interface Specifications
A-1
A-1
Serial Interface (Cisco 633)
LAN Interface
Management Interface
A-5
A-7
ADSL/SDSL Port Interface
Phone Port Interface
B-1
A-10
B-1
B-1
Serial Interface (Cisco 633)
LAN Interface
Management Interface
B-2
B-2
A-3
A-9
B-1
ADSL/SDSL Interface
B-3
Phone/Microfilter Interface (Cisco 675 and Cisco 678)
Software Upgrade
Power and Operating Requirements
B-3
B-3
SDSL 2B1Q Transmission Specifications (Cisco 633 and Cisco 673)
B-4
CAP RADSL Transmission Specifications (Cisco 675, Cisco 675e and Cisco 678)
B-4
DMT Issue 1 Transmission Specifications (Cisco 676)
B-5
DMT Issue 2 Transmission Specifications (Cisco 627, Cisco 677 and Cisco 678)
B-5
B-3
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
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Contents
APPENDIX
GLOSSARY
INDEX
C
EZ-DSL Microfilter Specifications
Introduction
Specifications
In-Line Microfilter
C-1
C-1
C-2
Wall-Mount Microfilter
Regulatory Approvals
C-5
C-1
C-3
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Contents
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
xii
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FIGURES
Figure 1-1 Cisco 600 series CPEs
Figure 2-1 Management Cable
Figure 2-2 Cisco 600 series CPE Management Port Cabling
Figure 2-3 Cisco 627 Connected through an Internal POTS Splitter
Figure 2-4 Cisco 633 Connected through an Internal POTS Splitter
Figure 2-5 Cisco 67x Connected through an Internal POTS Splitter
Figure 2-6 Cisco 627 Splitterless Configuration
Figure 2-7 Cisco 675 Splitterless Configuration
Figure 2-8 Cisco 675e, Cisco 676, Cisco 677 Splitterless Configuration
Figure 2-9 Cisco 678 Splitterless Configuration
Figure 2-10 Rear Panel Cabling for the Cisco 633
Figure 2-11 Rear Panel Cabling for the Cisco 627
1-3
2-3
2-4
2-7
2-8
2-9
2-10
2-11
2-12
2-13
2-14
2-15
Figure 2-12 Rear Panel Cabling for the Cisco 673, Cisco 675e, Cisco 676, and Cisco 677
Figure 2-13 Rear Panel Cabling for the Cisco 675 and Cisco 678
2-17
2-16
Figure 3-1 Remote System List Box
Figure 3-2 Telnet Preferences
Figure 3-3 Terminal Preferences
Figure 5-1 Remote System List Box
Figure 5-2 Telnet Preferences
Figure 5-3 Telnet Preferences
Figure A-1 Rear View of the Cisco 633
Figure A-2 Rear View of the Cisco 627
Figure A-3 Rear View of the Cisco 673, Cisco 675e, Cisco 676 and Cisco 677
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3-7
3-8
3-8
5-25
5-26
5-26
A-1
A-2
A-2
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
xiii
Figures
Figure A-4 Rear View of the Cisco 675 and Cisco 678
Figure A-5 Front View of Serial Connector
Figure A-6 Front View of Ethernet Connector
Figure A-7 Front View of ATM25 Connector
A-5
A-6
A-7
Figure A-8 Front View of RJ-45 End of the Serial Cable
Figure A-9 Front View of DB-9 End of the Serial Cable
Figure A-10 Front View of ADSL/SDSL Connector
Figure A-11 Front View of Phone Connector
Figure C-1 In-Line Microfilter and Cable
Figure C-2 Wall Mount Microfilter
C-2
C-4
A-10
A-11
A-2
A-8
A-9
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TABLES
Table 1 Font Conventions
Table 2 Command Syntax Conventions
xix
xix
Table 3 Note, Timesaver, Tip, Caution, and Warning Conventions
Table 1-1 Maximum Receive and Transmit Rates (kbps)
Table 1-2 Cisco 600 Series CPE Hardware Features
Table 1-3 Standards Compliance
Table 1-4 Management Methods
Table 2-1 Installation Checklist
Table 2-2 Standard Shipment Contents
Table 2-3 Standard Cables Shipped
Table 2-4 Network Configurations
Table 3-1 Checklist for Configuration
Table 3-2 Status LEDs
3-20
Table 4-1 Checklist for Configuration
1-5
1-6
2-1
2-2
2-2
2-5
3-1
4-1
1-2
1-4
xx
Table 5-1 Checklist for Router Configuration
Table 5-2 VPI/VCI Address Ranges
Table 5-3 Status LEDs
Table 6-1 WAN Link LED Blink Patterns
Table 6-2 BERT Header Bit Map
Table A-1 Rear Panel Connector
Table A-2 12-in-1 to 5-in-1 Connector Pinouts
Table A-3 Ethernet Connector Pinouts
Table A-4 ATM25 Connector Pinouts
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5-1
5-13
5-48
7-5
7-12
A-3
A-4
A-5
A-6
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Tables
Table A-5 Management Connector Pinouts
Table A-6 ADSL/SDSL Connector Pinouts
Table A-7 Phone Connector Pinouts
A-10
A-7
A-9
Table B-1 SDSL 2B1Q Transmission Specifications
Table B-2 CAP RADSL Transmission Specifications
Table B-3 DMT Issue 1 Transmission Specifications
Table B-4 DMT Issue 2 Transmission Specifications
Table C-1 In-Line Microfilter Pinouts
Table C-2 Wall Mount Microfilter Pinouts
Table C-3 Jack Labeling and Wire Color Codes
C-2
C-4
C-5
B-4
B-4
B-5
B-5
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
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About This Manual
This manual, developed for system managers and network managers, contains information about installing, configuring, and operating the Cisco 600 series customer premises equipment (CPE) devices.
Document Objectives
The objectives of this manual are to describe all initial hardware installation and basic configuration procedures for the Cisco 600 series CPE devices.
Document Organization
This guide is organized into the following chapters and appendixes:
Chapter/ Appendix Title Topics Covered
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
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Overview of the Cisco 600 Series
Installation Procedures Describes the installation procedures for the Cisco 600
Provides information on functions and features of the Cisco 600 series CPEs.
series CPEs.
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
xvii
Document Conventions
Chapter/ Appendix Title Topics Covered
About This Manual
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Appendix A
Appendix B
Configuration Procedures for the Cisco 627
Describes the steps for configuring the Cisco 627 for operation. This chapter also describes in detail how Cisco has implemented the Telnet, and Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) general applications for the Cisco 627.
Configuration Procedures for the Cisco 633
Describes the steps for configuring the Cisco 633 for operation. This chapter also describes in detail how Cisco has implemented the Telnet, Syslog, and TFTP general applications for the Cisco 633.
Configuration Procedures for the Cisco 67x CPE Devices
Describes the steps for configuring the Cisco 67x routers for operation. This chapter also describes in detail how Cisco has implemented the Telnet, Syslog, Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS), and TFTP general applications for these CPEs. This applies to the Cisco 673, Cisco 675, Cisco 675e, Cisco 676, Cisco 677, and Cisco 678.
Troubleshooting Contains information about known issues and how to
resolve them.
Connectors Provides details on the cables and connectors.
Specifications Contains a list of physical, interface and operating
specifications.
Appendix C
EZ-DSL Microfilter Specifications
Glossary Provides ADSL technology definitions.
Document Conventions
This publication uses the document conventions listed in Table 1, Table 2, and Tab le 3.
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xviii
Provides details on the EZ-DSL microfilter. This applies to the Cisco 627, Cisco 675, Cisco 675e, Cisco 676, Cisco 677, and Cisco 678 only.
78-11190-01
About This Manual
Table 1 Font Conventions
Convention Definition Sample
Document Conventions
Times bold
Text body font used for arguments, commands, keywords, and punctuation that is
This is similar to the UNIX
command. part of a command that the user enters in text and command environments.
Times italic
Text body font used for publication names and
for emphasis.
Refer to the
Cisco Broadband
Operating System UserGuide
further details.
courier
Example font used for screen displays,
Are you ready to continue? [Y]
prompts, and scripts.
courier bold
Example font used to indicate what the user
Login:
root
enters in examples of command environments.
Table 2 Command Syntax Conventions
Convention Definition Sample
vertical bars ( | ) Separate alternative, mutually exclusive elements
square brackets ([ ]) Indicate optional elements [no]
offset-list {in
offset-list {in
offset
|
route
out
for
}
offset
|
out
}
braces ({ }) Indicate a required choice
braces within square brackets ([{ }])
boldface
Indicate a required choice within an optional element
Indicates commands and keywords that are entered literally as shown
italics
78-11190-01
Indicate arguments for which you supply values
Note
In contexts that do not allow italics, arguments are enclosed in angle brackets (< >).
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
offset-list {in
[{
letter/number
[no]
offset-list {in
offset
offset-list {in
|
|
}
out
}
Enter
|
}
out
offset
]
}
out
offset
xix
Obtaining Documentation
Table 3 Note, Timesaver, Tip, Caution, and Warning Conventions
Convention Description
About This Manual
Note
Timesaver
Caution
Warning
Means
Means
Means material not covered in the manual.
Means action described in the paragraph.
result in equipment damage or loss of data.
work on any equipment, you must be aware of the hazards involved with electrical circuitry and familiar with standard practices for preventing accidents. To see translated versions of warnings, refer to the
Compliance and Safety Information
reader take note
the described action saves time
reader be careful
danger
. You are in a situation that could cause bodily injury. Before you
. Notes contain helpful suggestions or references to
. In this situation, you might do something that could
Obtaining Documentation
. You can save time by performing the
Regulatory
document that accompanied the device.
World Wide Web
You can access the most current Cisco documentation on the World Wide Web at http://www.cisco.com, http://www-china.cisco.com, or http://www-europe.cisco.com.
Documentation CD-ROM
Cisco documentation and additional literature are available in a CD-ROM package, which ships with your product. The Documentation CD-ROM is updated monthly. Therefore, it is probably more current than printed documentation. The CD-ROM package is available as a single unit or as an annual subscription.
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
xx
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About This Manual
Ordering Documentation
Registered CCO users can order the Documentation CD-ROM and other Cisco Product documentation through our online Subscription Services at http://www.cisco.com/cgi-bin/subcat/kaojump.cgi.
Nonregistered CCO users can order documentation through a local account representative by calling Cisco’s corporate headquarters (California, USA) at 408 526-4000 or, in North America, call 800 553-NETS (6387).
Obtaining Technical Assistance
Cisco provides Cisco Connection Online (CCO) as a starting point for all technical assistance. Warranty or maintenance contract customers can use the Technical Assistance Center. All customers can submit technical feedback on Cisco documentation using the web, e-mail, a self-addressed stamped response card included in many printed docs, or by sending mail to Cisco.
Obtaining Technical Assistance
Cisco Connection Online
Cisco continues to revolutionize how business is done on the Internet. Cisco Connection Online is the foundation of a suite of interactive, networked services that provides immediate, open access to Cisco information and resources at anytime, from anywhere in the world. This highly integrated Internet application is a powerful, easy-to-use tool for doing business with Cisco.
CCO’s broad range of features and services helps customers and partners to streamline business processes and improve productivity. Through CCO, you will find information about Cisco and our networking solutions, services, and programs. In addition, you can resolve technical issues with online support services, download and test software packages, and order Cisco learning materials and merchandise. Valuable online skill assessment, training, and certification programs are also available.
Customers and partners can self-register on CCO to obtain additional personalized information and services. Registered users may order products, check on the status of an order and view benefits specific to their relationships with Cisco.
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Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
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Obtaining Technical Assistance
You can access CCO in the following ways:
WWW: www.cisco.com
Telnet: cco.cisco.com
Modem using standard connection rates and the following terminal settings:
VT100 emulation; 8 data bits; no parity; and 1 stop bit.
From North America, call 408 526-8070
From Europe, call 33 1 64 46 40 82
You can e-mail questions about using CCO to cco-team@cisco.com.
Technical Assistance Center
The Cisco Technical Assistance Center (TAC) is available to warranty or maintenance contract customers who need technical assistance with a Cisco product that is under warranty or covered by a maintenance contract.
About This Manual
To display the TAC web site that includes links to technical support information and software upgrades and for requesting TAC support, use www.cisco.com/techsupport.
To contact by e-mail, use one of the following:
Language E-mail Address
English tac@cisco.com
Hanzi (Chinese) chinese-tac@cisco.com
Kanji (Japanese) japan-tac@cisco.com
Hangul (Korean) korea-tac@cisco.com
Spanish tac@cisco.com
Thai thai-tac@cisco.com
In North America, TAC can be reached at 800 553-2447 or 408 526-7209. For other telephone numbers and TAC e-mail addresses worldwide, consult the following web site: http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/687/Directory/DirTAC.shtml.
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
xxii
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About This Manual
Documentation Feedback
If you are reading Cisco product documentation on the World Wide Web, you can submit technical comments electronically. Click select Cisco.
You can e-mail your comments to bug-doc@cisco.com.
To submit your comments by mail, for your convenience many documents contain a response card behind the front cover. Otherwise, you can mail your comments to the following address:
Cisco Systems, Inc. Document Resource Connection 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-9883
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. After you complete the form, click
in the toolbar and
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to send it to
We appreciate and value your comments.
78-11190-01
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
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Obtaining Technical Assistance
About This Manual
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
xxiv
78-11190-01
Purpose
CHAPTER
1
Overview of the Cisco 600 Series
This chapter provides an overview of the Cisco 600 series customer premises equipment (CPE) devices including the following CPE models:
Cisco 627
Cisco 633
Cisco 673
Cisco 675
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Note
Cisco 675e
Cisco 676
Cisco 677
Cisco 678
This chapter also describes the general applications available with the Cisco 600 series CPEs.
This chapter documents general product features available in the Cisco 600 series CPEs. Please refer to the
Cisco Broadband Operating System
list of upgraded software features.
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
available on CCO for a current
Release Notes for the
1-1
Product Description
Product Description
The Cisco 600 series CPEs provide home connectivity to a digital subscriber line (DSL) service provider network over a DSL/ATM physical layer. Table 1-1 shows the maximum receive and transmit rates for the Cisco 600 series CPEs:
Table 1-1 Maximum Receive and Transmit Rates (kbps)
CPE Model/Encoding Receive (Downstream) Transmit (Upstream)
Cisco 627
1
DMT
G.Lite 1536 512
G.DMT 8032 864
Cisco 633 1168 1168
Chapter 1 Overview of the Cisco 600 Series
8032 864
Cisco 673 1168 1168
Cisco 675 7168 1088
Cisco 675e 7168 1088
Cisco 676 9200 832
Cisco 677
DMT 8032 864
G.Lite 1536 512
G.DMT 8032 864
Cisco 678
DMT 8032 864
CAP
2
7168 1088
G.Lite 1536 512
1
Discrete Multi-Tone
2
Carrierless Amplitude and Phase modulation
Cisco 600 Series Installation and Operation Guide
1-2
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Chapter 1 Overview of the Cisco 600 Series
Product Description
Note
Despite the maximum transmission rates listed above, the actual maximum operative rate is determined by the service provider’s central office (CO) equipment. Line length and line conditions can also have a great effect on transmission rate.
Figure 1-1 shows a front view of the generic Cisco 600 series CPEs.
Figure 1-1 Cisco 600 series CPEs
Cisco 6xx
POWER
ALARM
LNK
ACT
LAN
ACT
LNK
WAN
35266
System Features
Hardware Features
Table 1-2 summarizes the hardware features of the Cisco 600 series CPEs.
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Product Description
Chapter 1 Overview of the Cisco 600 Series
Table 1-2 Cisco 600 Series CPE Hardware Features
Feature 627 633 673 675 675e 676 677 678
1
DMT Issue 1
-based ADSL
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physical layer
DMT Issue 22 (T1.413), G.Lite (G.992.2)-based ADSL physical layer
SDSL3 interface with 2B1Q line code
CAP ADSL4 interface
G.DMT-based ADSL physical layer
Serial interface with Frame Relay encapsulation
ATM25 interface
ATM cell delineation adherent to ITU-T I.432
Supports ATM Forum-compliant PVCs)
Autonegotiating 10BaseT or 100BaseTX Ethernet interface, compliant with IEEE 802.3 and 802.3u Fast Ethernet
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Status LEDs indicating ATM25/Ethernet/Serial and ADSL/SDSL activity
1
Discrete Multi-Tone Issue 1
2
Discrete Multi-Tone Issue 2
3
Symmetrical digital subscriber line
4
Asymmetric digital subscriber line
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Chapter 1 Overview of the Cisco 600 Series
Software Features
Table 1-3 summarizes the software standards supported by the Cisco 600 series CPEs.
Standards Compliance
Table 1-3 Standards Compliance
Standard 627 633 673 675 675e 676 677 678
Product Description
DMT (ANSI T1.413) Issue 1
DMT (ANSI T1.413) Issue 2
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)
Multiprotocol Encapsulation over ATM Adaptation Layer 5
RFC 1483)
(
ATM Forum UNI Version 3.1 PVC
IEEE 802.3 and 802.3u 10BaseT and 100BaseTX Physical Layer Specification
IEEE 802.1d Transparent Learning Bridging
PPP Bridging Control Protocol (BCP)
Splitterless ADSL Transceivers G.992.2
(RFC 1661)
(RFC 1638)
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1
American National Standards Institute
Routing Support (Cisco 67x)
Internet Protocol
User Datagram Protocol
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(RFC 791)
(RFC 768)
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Product Description
Chapter 1 Overview of the Cisco 600 Series
Bridging Support
Management
Internet Control Message Protocol
Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol
RIP version 1 updating of routing tables
Static routing
Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) Security and Accounting
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) client and server
Network Address Translation (NAT)
Transparent learning bridge:
Multiprotocol Encapsulation over ATM Adaptation Layer 5 (
PPP (Bridging Control Protocol)
Management channel support for remote configuration/management
(RFC 2058, RFC 2059)
(RFC 792)
(RFC 826)
(RFC 1638)
RFC 1483)
Table 1-4 summarizes the management methods supported by the Cisco 600 series CPEs.
Table 1-4 Management Methods
Management method 627 633 673 675 675e 676 677 678
HTML browser interface
Command-line interface
Telnet support
1
TFTP
SNMP2 MIB3 support
Multilevel password protection
Enables different logins
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through serial management port
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