ISIS-STD_1.3.6.1.2.1.138.0.6 isisMaxAreaAddressesMismatch

Description

ISIS-STD/2/MAXAREA_MISMATCH:OID [oid] The MaxAreaAddress field of received PDU is different from local configuration. (NotificationSysLevelIndex=[integer], PduMaxAreaAddress=[integer], CircIfIndex=[integer], PduFrag=[opaque])

The maximum number of area addresses in the received Level-1 PDU header mismatched the maximum number of area addresses supported by the local device.

Attribute

Alarm ID Alarm Severity Alarm Type

1.3.6.1.2.1.138.0.6

Major

other(1)

Parameters

Name Meaning

oid

Indicates the MIB object ID of the alarm.

NotificationSysLevelIndex

IS-IS level of a device that sends the trap

PduMaxAreaAddress

Maximum number of area addresses contained in a received PDU header

CircIfIndex

Interface index

PduFrag

64-byte PDU header

Impact on the System

1. If the trap is triggered by a hardware fault on the board, route flapping may occur and the CPU usage increases.

2. If the trap is triggered by communication between devices, neighbor relationships cannot be established, and routes cannot be learned from each other.

Possible Causes

Cause 1: The maximum number of area addresses supported by the local wireless access controller mismatched that supported by another wireless access controller.

Cause 2: The maximum area address field was modified.

Procedure

  1. Based on the IS-IS packet format defined in ISO10589, check the pdu-fragment field value (in hexadecimal) and obtain the system ID of the source wireless access controller. Check the pdu-max-area field value and determine whether the maximum number of area addresses is neither 0 nor 3.

    • If the maximum number of area addresses is neither 0 nor 3, go to Step 2.

    • If the maximum number of area addresses is 0 or 3, go to Step 3.

    Table 1 Methods of identifying system IDs and types of IS-IS packets

    Identifying the Packet Type

    Identifying the System ID

    Hello: A Hello packet is identified when the 5th byte in the pdu-fragment field is 0f, 10, or 11.

    The six consecutive bytes beginning with the 10th byte in the pdu-fragment field constitute a System ID.

    LSP: An LSP is identified when the 5th byte in the pdu-fragment field is 12 or 14.

    The six consecutive bytes beginning with the 13th byte in the pdu-fragment field constitute a System ID.

    SNP: An SNP is identified when the 5th byte in the pdu-fragment field is 18, 19, 1A, or 1B.

    The six consecutive bytes beginning with the 11th byte in the pdu-fragment field constitute a System ID.

  2. Change the maximum number of area addresses on the source wireless access controller to 3 and check whether the trap is cleared.

    • If the trap is cleared, go to Step 4.

    • If the trap is not cleared, go to Step 3.

  3. Collect alarm information and configuration information, and then contact technical support personnel.
  4. End.

Related Information

None

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