Table of Contents - L.1395 (07/2025) - Monitoring and control interface for power, cooling and building environment systems in telecommunication networks – Generic interface
1 Scope 2 References 3 Definitions 3.1 Terms defined elsewhere 3.2 Terms defined in this Recommendation 4 Abbreviations and acronyms 5 Conventions 6 Monitoring and control (M&C) overview 6.1 General 6.2 Infrastructure equipment management network general description 6.3 Site internal communication architecture 6.4 Infrastructure equipment monitoring and control management network example 6.5 Infrastructure equipment monitoring and control management scenario 7 Infrastructure equipment monitoring and control management interface and network architecture 7.1 General 7.2 Distributed intelligence 7.3 CU, DGU, LMA management interface 7.4 Interface and protocol diversity 7.5 Open interface and software 7.6 Interface levels 7.7 Transport control layer 7.8 Physical and network layer 7.9 Network management system upgrade 8 Infrastructure equipment monitoring and control main goals 8.1 Data in the infrastructure equipment monitoring and control network 8.2 High level application and data structure flexibility 8.3 Data interface complexity and structure 9 Infrastructure equipment monitoring and control management typical content subsets 9.1 General 9.2 DC power system 9.3 AC UPS power system 9.4 AC distribution switchboard 9.5 AC diesel back-up generator 9.6 Thermal environment and cooling system 9.7 Other utilities system Page 9.8 Remote power feeding system 9.9 Alternative power systems 9.10 AC inverter power system 9.11 Battery system with integrated control and monitoring information model 9.12 ICT equipment power, energy, and environmental parameters monitoring information model 10 Principle of power, energy, environmental parameters (PEE) measurement 10.1 General 10.2 Power and energy consumption measurement 10.3 Voltage, current measurement 10.4 Accuracy of PEE measurement 10.5 Local acquisition record 10.6 Accuracy verification 10.7 Data transmission period 10.8 Local record saving 11 Supervisor functions and performance 11.1 General 12 Data structure format for exchange between CU or DGU and LMA or RMA by infrastructure equipment monitoring & control agent 12.1 General 12.2 Standard elements of any equipment, system or subsystem 12.3 The element 12.4 The element Appendix I – Communication between LMA/RMA and infrastructure equipment monitoring and control agent using YANG/NETCONF and REST I.1 Introduction I.2 Communication initiated by the LMA/RMA I.3 Communication initiated by DGU/CU Appendix II – Data coherence and reliability for infrastructure equipment monitoring and control II.1 Introduction II.2 Data integrity, coherence and management network reliability II.3 Application data coherence and integrity II.4 Naming and data origin II.5 CU, DGU reliability II.6 LMA reliability II.7 RMA reliability II.8 Ethernet and IP network reliability II.9 Computer and OS reliability II.10 Application reliability Page Appendix III – Network element functions and software architecture and choices III.1 General description III.2 Functions of the RMA III.3 Data analysis III.4 Safety monitoring input provision III.5 Software working and development environment Appendix IV – Network capacity and timing IV.1 Introduction IV.2 Management and network capacity IV.3 Memory capacity IV.4 Timing performance Appendix V – Overview of the XML format V.1 Introduction V.2 XML V.3 XML declaration V.4 XML element, XML root element and XML child element V.5 XML document V.6 XML Attribute V.7 XML Schema V.8 XML Schema Datatypes V.9 XSL Languages V.10 XSLT V.11 XPath Appendix VI – Hints about the choice of OSI or IP models, physical network layers and intranet-Ethernet access protocols VI.1 Introduction VI.2 OSI and IP models VI.3 Details on IP layers VI.4 Internet-Ethernet access protocol PPPoE, PPPoA, PoS Maximum transmission unit Appendix VII – Common API Appendix VIII State of the art of power, energy measurement and monitoring systems VIII.1 Introduction VIII.2 Acquisition and remote metering principles VIII.3 General description of measurement Bibliography
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