Hi there,
I have Raisecom OLT switches installed in our POP's.
Each interface has a fibre connection to a 64 splitter. And each of the splitter ports goes to one of our clients on our network. So in theory, each PON interface can have up to 64 clients connected.
I need to be able to monitor the bandwidth and speed of each GPON ONT/ONU on the client premises.
The problem I have is that on PRTG, I am only able to monitor the 4 OLT interfaces and not each of the 64 splitter fibers that connect to the GPON ONU/OLT at the client.
How can I get PRTG to pick these client ONU/OLT. Is there custom OID or mibs that I can add to PRTG to allow it to monitor these devices?
Regards
Article Comments
Hello,
if your OLT is exposing this metric via SNMP then PRTG can surely monitor that.
Your vendor should be able to provide you with a MIB for your OLT that acts as a translation table between the values and their respective uses.
To have vendors MIBs available in PRTG, please use our MIB Importer utility to convert it into an OID Library. With the MIB Importer you also get a tree view for the OIDs where you can see whats included.
As the splitters for GPON are passive we won't be able to retrieve data from them. If the ONTs you use as the CPE support SNMP and are accessible to a probe host (e.g. through a management VLAN) you could also monitor them directly.
Kind regards,
Johannes Beyerlein, Technical Support Team
Feb, 2023 - Permalink
Hello,
if your OLT is exposing this metric via SNMP then PRTG can surely monitor that.
Your vendor should be able to provide you with a MIB for your OLT that acts as a translation table between the values and their respective uses.
To have vendors MIBs available in PRTG, please use our MIB Importer utility to convert it into an OID Library. With the MIB Importer you also get a tree view for the OIDs where you can see whats included.
As the splitters for GPON are passive we won't be able to retrieve data from them. If the ONTs you use as the CPE support SNMP and are accessible to a probe host (e.g. through a management VLAN) you could also monitor them directly.
Kind regards,
Johannes Beyerlein, Technical Support Team
Feb, 2023 - Permalink