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Guide
March 2008
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The content of this manual is provided for information only, is subject to change without
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Copyright © Actix 2008. All rights reserved. All trademarks are hereby acknowledged.
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Contents 2
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4.5.6 View data in a Workbook ......................................................................42
4.5.7 About synchronized data windows .........................................................43 2
4.6 INTEGRATING REVERSE/FORWARD LINK (UPLINK/DOWNLINK) DATA .................................44
4.7 CREATING AND USING QUERIES ..........................................................................45
4.7.1 Create a filter .....................................................................................45
4.7.2 Filter the data .....................................................................................47
4.8 GENERATING NEW REPORTS ...............................................................................48
4.9 LOADING LARGE AMOUNTS OF DATA WITH REPOSITORY MANAGER ...................................50
4.9.1 Creating a new Repository ....................................................................51
4.9.2 Opening a Repository...........................................................................52
4.9.3 Loading data into a Repository ..............................................................53
4.9.4 Displaying a list of files loaded into the Repository ...................................54
4.9.5 Closing a Repository ............................................................................54
4.9.6 Deleting a Repository...........................................................................55
4.9.7 Using the Repository Template Wizard....................................................55
6 INDEX.................................................................................................. 61
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Actix Radioplan Getting Started March 2008 Guide Getting Started with Actix Analyzer 5
For a detailed understanding of your solution, you should attend a full Actix training or
workshop session. These can be tailored exclusively to your individual or corporate
requirements.
• Feature testing
• Service validation
• Network bench-marking
• Competitive analysis
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Actix Analyzer Getting Started Guide March 2008 Getting Started with Actix Analyzer 6
The platform for Actix Solutions, Analyzer, can load network performance data from many
different sources:
2
These data sources could include field-test equipment and switch call traces, and could be
from a one-off test, or part of a planned series of samples to build up an image of overall
network performance.
Once the data is loaded, a variety of analysis tools and displays provide a clear view of
network performance for engineers, technicians or operations management staff.
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Help is available on how to use MyActix when you log on. There is an RSS feed available to
keep up to date with new resources being posted to the portal.
It is also possible to access the Actix Support Service by other means such as email and 2
telephone, but these methods are not preferred. It is more efficient and effective to submit
a case via www.myactix.com to provide all necessary information to recreate the
Customers’ case which can then be investigated.
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Actix Analyzer Getting Started Guide March 2008 Starting your solution 10
…or from the All Programs, Actix, Actix Software menu option.
After a short pause you will see the Actix loading screen:
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This guide is concerned with how to use these tools, on the principle that once you
understand how these tools work, the use of the other engineering processes will appear
very straightforward.
Checking the box at the bottom of the screen also lets you bypass this screen and go
straight to your selected engineering process. If in future you want to display this screen,
from the File menu select Start New Engineering Process.
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;#NetworkData – datafile
If you import the file using the Network Explorer, this line
is added automatically.
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2 On the toolbar, select Import, then Import From New Template to open the
Import dialog.
Select the appropriate export data file from your planning tool and click Open to
display the Custom Import Wizard.
The Import Settings page of the Custom Import Wizard is now displayed:
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For example, under Delimiters, check the Tab box. Under General Settings, for
Ignore header rows enter ‘1’. For Array (list) Separator enter ‘;’. If your file
has more than one header or uses a different array list separator, set these
2
options accordingly.
If you choose the wrong delimiter, you will see the effect in the Data Preview
window at the bottom of the dialog.
5 In most cases, the default information under General Settings and Coordinate
Information will apply. If your file has more than one header or uses a different
array list separator (the character used to separate the array values under the
'Neighbors' column in the example for step 1), adjust these settings as necessary.
6 Click Next.
The Column Settings page of the Custom Import Wizard is now displayed. This
allows you to associate a network parameter with a column of data in the text file.
Key fields You must select a field type for this field, but you
cannot set a default value.
These must be either bound to a particular type or have
Required fields
a default value set.
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You can enter a default value that takes effect if the actual
value is unknown. For example, all Beamwidths could be
set to 65 degrees. 2
9 Repeat for each of the fields in the Cell node. A description of each of these
parameters and their use is given in the appropriate technology table in the Cell
site parameters chapter .
10 Click Finish when all the columns have been assigned. The new cell information will
be added at the bottom of the existing list in the Network Element editor.
16 After closing the Network Explorer, view a new map by selecting View, Display
New Map.
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17 If cell icons do not appear on the map, right click on the map and select Zoom, Go
to Layer, <tech>_Site… to zoom the map to the appropriate location.
18 Set the cells to be labeled by an appropriate parameter for the technology (for
example, SC for UMTS).
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2 Click on File Location to select the text file containing network element data. This
file must be in the Actix 'cellrefs' format. The information from this cellrefs file
takes effect from the next time a new workspace is created.
2
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The diagram above looks at a one-second bin. The speed of travel during logging will affect
how many log files you see in a certain area.
Distance binning combines data into
bins corresponding to the distance
traveled by the test mobile.
This mode is commonly used for drive-test analyses when viewing on a map to ensure plot
points are evenly spaced.
Message binning - If the number of messages to be averaged is set to 1, each message
is placed into its own bin with the net result of no averaging of the data. Note that
message binning should be usually only set to ‘1’.
Location binning is like overlaying a spatial grid on top of the data with a user-definable
granularity. This can be used when examining several drive files crossing over the same
geographic area. This method is often used for superstreams (see the online help for more
information).
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Create, delete
or export layers
if the layer can be annotated (to 'lock' the Annotations layer from having any further
annotations added, click on the box again to clear it)
4 In the Layers box, click Add to open the Open Layer dialog.
5 Select one or more MapInfo Map (.tab) files.
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MapInfo layers are named according to the geographic location of the data (for
example, the abbreviated US state name and/or county name), and by the type of
data contained in the file. Here are some of the common abbreviations used for
2
MapInfo data types:
The top of the layer list represents the uppermost layer in this map window.
7 Click Up and Down to move 'examplemap' to the bottom and 'Annotations' to the
top.
8 Click Close and return to the map view.
In a new Actix installation, the map location defaults to 0° longitude, 0° latitude, so
you will need to arrange the map view to display the new map.
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9 Pan the map viewing area by right-clicking in the map area, then choosing Zoom,
Go to Layer and selecting the new map layer.
10 Use the Zoom and Pan controls to arrange the map as required. To zoom in to an 2
area, click Zoom In, then click and drag a rectangle around the area of interest.
To use Do this
Data Field Select the data field to be displayed as the label.
Formatted Field Set the formatted field to use as the label
displayed, depending on the layer selected in the
Layer Control dialog.
Show Check the box to show labels on the map (which
are otherwise hidden – this is recommended to
improve map load times).
Allow overlapped text Check the box to allow labels to overlap.
Hide adjacent duplicate text Uncheck the box to allow the same text to
appear for adjacent data points.
Display within range Check the box to display labels only within the
maximum and minimum zoom levels. A zoom
level is the width of the map area displayed, in
the current map units.
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To use Do this
Min Zoom Set the lowest zoom level at which labels will be
2
displayed.
Max Zoom Set the highest zoom level at which labels will
be displayed.
Max # of labels Set the maximum number of labels that can be
shown on the map.
Label Style Set the font style for the label.
Position Select the position of the label relative to the
data point.
Label X/Y offset (points) Set the offset of the label in the X or Y direction.
The offset is measured in points (as used for
fonts).
Label Style Defines the appearance of the label text in terms
of color, font, size and other effects.
4 Check Display within Zoom range and enter '0' for Min Zoom and '10' for Max
Zoom.
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Technology Attribute
CDMA PN_1stBestEcIo
GSM ServBCCH
iDEN Channel
IS_136 FACCH_CurChannel
UMTS Uu_ActiveSet_SC
6 Check that the Disable box is empty, and click OK, then Yes.
7 Click OK to close the Layer Control dialog.
8 Zoom In on data points near a cell site, and use Select to pick a data point.
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The arrangement of loaded help files and data display windows is called the current
workspace. You can save and reuse workspaces as necessary.
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An attribute
Click on the symbols to open out and explore the data in your logfile. See how your data
relates to the structure shown above.
The only objects that you actually need to recognize are filenames, data streams and data
attributes.
In the example above, the file 'MyFile1' contains a data stream called 'Qualcomm MDM
1900' (the number is the data stream number within the file, starting from zero).
The 'CDMA' group contains the 'Pilot Sets' set, which contains the 'SearcherMaxEnergy'
data attribute.
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The logical tree-view layout of the Attribute Explorer allows you to drill down and identify
all logged data. Once you have located the appropriate data attribute, you can open it in a
data window—for example, a map, chart, table or spreadsheet—to examine the data in
2
detail. You can examine data streams using the Message Browser tool.
Searching for an attribute
You may find it easier to locate attributes using the Find Attribute command, which lets
you enter all or part of the attribute's name or help description in a new Attribute Search
dialog.
Select Tools, Find Attribute (or use
the hotkey Ctrl + Shift + F) to add a
search panel is added to the Attribute
Explorer tree view pane.
Enter search criteria about the required attributes into this panel.
• Find What: Enter some text which is part of the required attribute name.
• Stream: Select which stream of data should be searched. ‘<All Streams>’ is set
by default.
• Settings:
▫ Whole Word: Check this to search only for attributes where the search text
exactly matches the whole attribute name. Otherwise, search for attributes
where the search text is contained within the attribute name.
▫ Case Sensitive: Check this to search only for attributes where the case of
the search string exactly matches the case of the attribute.
• Direction: When ‘down’ is selected, only search for attributes further down in the
attribute tree from the currently selected attribute. When ‘up’ is selected, only
search for attributes further up in the attribute tree from the currently selected
attribute.
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• Find Next: Based on the current search criteria, find the next matching attribute.
This attribute is highlighted in the All tab at the bottom of the Attribute Explorer.
2
• Find All: Based on the current search criteria, find all matching attributes in the
tree-view. The matching attributes are listed in the Search Results tab at the
bottom of the Attribute Explorer.
• Done: The search for attribute panel is closed. Search results remain visible in the
Search Results tab.
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Most analysis methods are activated in a Queries have a different set of options:
similar way, by right-clicking on an attribute
or event and selecting from the menu:
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The top pane shows a tree-view of the network structure against various statistics
produced by the application pack.
3 Use the top pane as necessary to narrow down the data in your selection.
All reports appropriate to your selection are displayed under the Suggested tab. If
you want to use another report, look under the All tab to view all reports available
within the current application pack.
A description of the reports contained within each application pack is also provided
in this window.
4 Double-click on a report icon to open the report window. This will report on all data
selected in the upper tree-view panel.
5 As required, use the buttons at the bottom of the window to Save the report as a
web-compatible HTML file set, Print the report to your printer or open the report
in Excel using Show Excel Report.
To reset thresholds for a new analysis
A number of the application pack reports use Custom Attributes. To change the thresholds
for a new analysis, you need to re-run these Custom Attributes directly from the Custom
Attribute Manager:
• Distance_Input
• EcIo_Threshold_Input
You can now re-run the application pack.
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• From the Attribute Explorer, right-click on a data stream and select Display
Message Browser.
The Message Browser combines an event panel (sequentially listing call events) with a
panel of Layer 3 messaging, allowing you to pinpoint the root causes of problems.
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Select one of the display methods to opens the appropriate data display window.
If there are no other attribute layers on this map, the new attribute layer will be
beneath the lowest site or cell layer. See the chapter Configuring your solution for
more information on map layers.
2 Click on the Pan button.
3 Click and drag the data around the map window.
4 Experiment with the Zoom buttons.
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5 In the Attribute Explorer, open up the 'Event Data' set and drag an event (in this
example the 'WeakPilotWarning' event) onto the map, which should then look
similar to this:
2
Adding events (for example 'CallDropped') to the mapped data can help you see
where problems are occurring.
6 Drag another data attribute onto the map.
The attribute information is displayed on a new map layer directly above the
previous attribute layer.
You can also change the size, symbol or color of the data, apply offsets to an
attribute or merge attributes for a multidimensional display. See the online help for
further details.
The map legend defines histogram ranges for charts.
7 To hide a data series, in the legend pane, click in the check box beside the series
name.
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Click on the Step buttons to move forwards and backwards by one message at a time.
Note that several clicks may be required before any change is visible on the Map,
depending on the binning settings.
Click on the Play buttons to move at a selectable multiple of real-time speed through the
data (if Play by Time is selected – see below). In this case, some messages may be
dropped as necessary to allow the data to be highlighted at the set speed.
The Select Options button allows you to set the replay mode:
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While examining data on a map, you can also view data attributes for the same data point
by using Forms (also called StateForms).
1 From the View menu, select Forms and select an appropriate StateForm (or, from
the Attribute Explorer, right-click on a stream name, select Display Form and
then the form name).
You can synchronize all views in other open data windows by clicking on the
timeline in Navigator-type StateForms like this.
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Other StateForms provide information for the currently selected point in the drive
test:
2
3 If you have scanner data in your logfile, start another Form window.
4 Right-click on the form and select Open File, then select a form (.axw) file for a
scanner.
5 Right-click on the form and select Stream Selector, then the scanner stream.
See the online help for details on how to create your own forms.
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You can display more than one attribute on the same chart.
2 Select a second attribute that would make a useful comparison (in this example,
the attribute 'ForwardFER') and drag it onto the existing chart.
You can also zoom into selected areas of the chart by defining a frame for the
zoom.
3 On the chart, click the upper left corner of the zooming rectangle, and drag down
to the lower right extent of the rectangle.
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Note that the zoom only operates in the X-axis, not in the
Y-axis.
5 Now return the chart its original state by dragging a box anywhere, but this time
starting from the bottom.
6 Use the right mouse button to pan and scroll around the chart window.
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Although you can scroll in the X-axis for all attributes on the chart, you can only
pan in the Y-axis for the last attribute to be displayed on the chart.
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• Filter queries
• Binned queries
• Histogram queries
• Statistical queries
• Crosstab queries
• Event queries
You can also:
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3 Click on the right-arrow of the attribute picker and select , for example, CDMA >
DownLink Measurements > ForwardFER.
2
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1 From the Workbook menu, select Open Workbook and select an appropriate
Excel template.
2 Click Open.
3 Select the data source that you want to view in the workbook report.
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You can proceed to adapt the workbook, use other Excel tools on the data, and so
on.
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Beneath each device in the Attribute Explorer, you can see the attributes and queries that
are part of that device. The structure of the devices and their attributes, queries, and
filters are defined by the template that was used to create the repository and cannot be
2
changed after the repository has been created. Sometimes each device might have a
different list of attributes and queries and sometimes some or all of the devices might have
the same lists.
When you right-click an attribute or binned query in the Attribute Explorer, you get options
to display it on the Map and other binned data viewing components and to see its
definition in the Attribute Help system.
When you right-click a crosstab or event query in the Attribute Explorer, you have the
option to open the Repository Statistics Explorer, which provides useful features for
exploring the summary views that the crosstab queries provide.
Typically an engineering process module that uses Repository Manager will retrieve
crosstab data from the repository and display it in a table or chart embedded on the task
page.
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2 Select the Template on which you want to base the repository and enter a Name
and Description.
3 Do one of the following:
▫ Click Create & Open, if you want to open the new repository after it has
been created.
▫ Click Create, if you do not want to open the new repository immediately
after it is created.
2 Select the repository you want to open and then click OK.
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1 If necessary, select the Attribute Explorer tool to open the Attribute Explorer.
2 Locate the repository in the Open Repositories folder in the Attribute Explorer.
3 Right-click the repository and from the shortcut menu, choose Load Data.
This opens the Load Data dialog. This has features that make it easy to select
individual files to load, and also to select multiple files based on their location and
file names.
4 Use the Add Files button to select individual log files to load. When you select a
file, it is automatically added to the list of files in the center of the Load Data
dialog box.
5 Use the Add Folders button to select folders that contain log files to load.
Selecting a folder automatically selects all of the files in that folder and all of its
subfolders and adds them to the list of files in the Load Data dialog box.
6 You can remove files from the list by selecting them individually or in groups
(using Shift-click and Ctrl-click) and then clicking Remove.
7 You can also remove files from the list by entering an expression into the Filter
dialog box and then clicking Apply. This removes from the list all of the files that
do not meet the filter expression.
The expression should use a combination of text and wildcard characters to specify
the name patterns of the log files that you want to include. You can include
multiple patterns using the semicolon (;) character. The following table provides
details of the valid wildcard characters.
Wildcard Description
* Matches zero or more characters.
? Matches a single character.
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*08-??-2004*.dat Only files that have a .dat filename extension and whose names
contain the characters "08-" followed by any two characters and then
followed by the characters "-2004". In practice this could be used to
select files whose names contain any date in August 2004 specified in
the American short date style.
Clicking the Apply button applies the expression to the files listed in the box
above. Note that clearing the expression and clicking Apply again does not cancel
any filtering that was applied earlier.
8 When the list reflects the files you want to load, click OK to start the loading
process.
Notes:
• Repository Manager will attempt to load all of the files in the list. If any of them
cannot be loaded, because, for example, they are not valid log files, Repository
Manager will simply move on to the next file.
• Repository Manager does not reload files that have already been loaded into the
repository.
• When the file loading process has finished, Repository Manager displays a list
showing each file and the results of the loading process. A result of OK means that
the log file was successfully processed and does not necessarily mean that any of
the data was actually loaded into the repository. For example, it is possible for a
log file to be shown as OK when in fact none of its data was loaded into the
repository because it did not meet any of the loading criteria defined for the
devices or if it did, the log file did not actually contain any of the attributes defined
for those devices nor any data that matched the queries. See Repository Template
Wizard: Define Devices in the online help for more information.
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2
6 Index
A I
Analysis Manager, 45
Index tab, online help, 7
Annotations, 20
integrating data files, 44
applications, 5
Attribute Explorer, 53
attribute help, 8 L
attributes, 26 Layer 3 messaging, 32
right-clicking on, 34 Layer Control dialog, 19
searching for, 27 lines to cells, 22
location binning, 18
B
Binned queries, 45 M
binning methods, 18 MapInfo data types, 20
message binning, 18
C Message Browser, 27, 32
cellrefs, 12 message filtering, 17
Contents tab, online help, 7 Microsoft Excel reports, 48
context help, 8 multidimensional display, 35
Create a New Filter, 45
Create Repository, 51 N
Crosstab queries, 45 Network Explorer, 12, 24
D O
data attributes, 26 online help, using the, 7
data streams, 26 Open Logfile, 26
Delete Repository, 55 Open Repository, 52
Display Message Browser, 32 Open Workbook, 48
Display on Table, 42
Display on Workbook, 42
distance binning, 18
P
panning chart windows, 40
panning map windows, 34
E Preferences dialog, 16, 17, 19
engineering process, 11 Protocol Stack Browser, 33
Excel templates, 48
R
F Replay feature, 36
Favorites tab, online help, 7 reports, 48
Favorites tab, Workspace Explorer, 25 Repository Manager, 50
filenames, 26 Repository Template Wizard, 55
Filter queries, 45 reverse and forward link data integration, 44
Find Attribute, 27 right-clicking on attributes, 34
Forms feature, 37
S
G Search tab, online help, 7
generating reports, 48 searching for attributes, 27
geographical data, 19 setting the binning method, 19
starting Actix Software, 10
H Statistical queries, 45
help, context, 8 streams, 26
Histogram queries, 45 superstreaming, 18, 44
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T W 2
tables, using, 42 WCDMA cell site parameters, 60
Template Manager, 55 workbook reports, 48
time-based binning, 18 workbooks, using, 42
workspace, 25
U
UMTS cell site parameters, 60 Z
UMTS filters, 47 zooming chart windows, 39
zooming map windows, 34
V
viewing data in charts, 39
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