DEFINITY Enterprise Communications Server Release 5
Maintenance and Test for R5vs/si
555-230-123
Issue 1
April 1997
Maintenance Commands and Trouble-Clearing Aids
Page 8-384status audits
8
# Cycles Fixed Data This field shows the number of times that the audit ran, in
the specified interval, and found a problem that it was
able to fix. The number ranges from 0 to 65534, if it
exceeds 65534 the string "*****" will be displayed to
indicate overflow.
# Cycles Could Not Fix Data This field shows the number of times that the audit ran, in
the specified interval, and found a problem that it was not
able to fix. The switch data being audited is left in an
inconsistent state when this happens. The number
ranges from 0 to 65534, if it exceeds 65534 the string
"*****" will be displayed to indicate overflow.
# Cycles Audit Aborted This field shows the number of times that the audit ran, in
the specified interval, and aborted due to an internal
error. The number ranges from 0 to 65534, if it exceeds
65534 the string "*****" will be displayed to indicate
overflow.
First Error This field shows the date and time that the audit first
detected any of the three types of problems (i.e. fixed
data, could not fix data, audit aborted) since the last
execution of the "clear audits cumulative" command. The
format used is: two digit month number followed by "/"
followed by the two digit day of the month followed by "/"
followed by the two digit hour in 24 hour time followed by
":" followed by the two digit minute (e.g. 03/27/14:31 for
2:31 pm, March 27th). This field appears only on the
"status audits cumulative" display.
Most Recent Error This field shows the date and time that the audit last
detected any of the three types of problems. The format
used is: two digit month number followed by "/" followed
by the two digit day of the month followed by "/" followed
by the two digit hour in 24 hour time followed by ":"
followed by the two digit minute (e.g. 03/27/14:31 for 2:31
pm, March 27th). This field appears only on the "status
audits cumulative" display.