Hello, How to monitor the Zaptel Hardware?
adamsclark 21-August-2008 08:51:39 PM

Comments


When installing Zaptel hardware (or other Asterisk-related hardware) in Linux, it is often worth checking its status from the command line.

The following commands are useful to make sure that everything is working fine.

lsmod
This command lists loaded modules in the kernel. You should expect to find the generic zaptel module and then one hardware-driver for it, like wct4xxp.

lspci -s
This command lists the boards attached to the PCI bus of the local machine. Its output may get quite long.
It is possible that your PCI adaptor is not decoded perfectly in its name, but it will surely be shown with its IRQ and its associated flags.

cat /proc/interrupts
This shows interrupt (i.e., requests for service) that your board has asked to the CPU. Make sure your boards are on an interrupt by themselves.

cat /proc/zaptel/1
By issuing this command, you'll see the status of all defined channels for span 1 of your cards. If you have more than one span (or more than one card) you can use cat /proc/zaptel/2, cat /proc/zaptel/3, etc.
Posted by sagitraz


http://astrecipes.net/index.php?from=1&q=AstRecipes/Monitoring%20Zaptel%20Hardware
Posted by adalson007



Posted: 22-August-2008 03:20:50 PM By: adalson007

http://astrecipes.net/index.php?from=1&q=AstRecipes/Monitoring%20Zaptel%20Hardware

Posted: 27-August-2008 08:04:03 AM By: sagitraz

When installing Zaptel hardware (or other Asterisk-related hardware) in Linux, it is often worth checking its status from the command line.

The following commands are useful to make sure that everything is working fine.

lsmod
This command lists loaded modules in the kernel. You should expect to find the generic zaptel module and then one hardware-driver for it, like wct4xxp.

lspci -s
This command lists the boards attached to the PCI bus of the local machine. Its output may get quite long.
It is possible that your PCI adaptor is not decoded perfectly in its name, but it will surely be shown with its IRQ and its associated flags.

cat /proc/interrupts
This shows interrupt (i.e., requests for service) that your board has asked to the CPU. Make sure your boards are on an interrupt by themselves.

cat /proc/zaptel/1
By issuing this command, you'll see the status of all defined channels for span 1 of your cards. If you have more than one span (or more than one card) you can use cat /proc/zaptel/2, cat /proc/zaptel/3, etc.