Beta Draft Confidential
F-61/19/05 ATM Services Configuration Guide for CBX 3500, CBX 500, GX 550, and B-STDX 9000
Reliable Scalable Circuit
Circuit Delete Errors
Circuit Delete Errors
Table F-3 describes error messages and lists choice buttons for typical SNMP set 
failures encountered during attempts to delete an existing circuit.
Standard PVC – Circuit not 
present on 1st switch
(lower-numbered node)
Redirect PVC – Circuit not 
present on the Primary or 
Secondary switch
There is no such variable name 
in this MIB; possibly the card is 
down or not present (specific 
endpoint not identified).
Abort – Discontinue attempt to modify 
circuit (NMS database unmodified). 
Retry – Attempt to modify the circuit again. 
Standard PVC – Circuit not 
present on 2nd switch
(higher-numbered node)
Redirect PVC – Circuit not 
present on the Pivot switch
There is no such variable name 
in this MIB; possibly the card is 
down or not present (specific 
endpoint not identified).
Abort – Discontinue attempt to modify 
circuit (NMS database unmodified, circuit 
dangling on 1st [or Primary or Secondary] 
switch; nothing marked out-of-sync). 
PRAM sync of endpoint cards will remove 
circuit modification.
Retry – Attempt to modify the circuit again. 
Begin with 1st (or Primary or Secondary) 
switch, where dangling circuit modification 
will not interfere with the Retry.
Table F-2. Errors Encountered During Circuit Modify Procedure (Continued)
Type of Failure SNMP Set Failure Reason Available Choices
Note  – For a standard Circuit Delete, the SNMP set command is first sent to the 
higher-numbered node (switch circuit endpoint), not the lower numbered node as is 
done with a Circuit Add or Modify operation.
For a redirect Circuit Delete, the SNMP set commands are sent in the order of Pivot, 
Primary, and Secondary endpoints, not in the order of Primary, Secondary, and 
Pivot as is done with a Circuit Add or Modify operation.