BDCOM OLT ONU Offline Fix (Step-by-Step Troubleshooting Guide 2026)
Contents
- 1 Common Causes of BDCOM ONU Offline
- 2 How to Check ONU Offline Status — BDCOM CLI Commands
- 3 Step-by-Step BDCOM OLT ONU Offline Fix
- 4 ONU Offline vs Dying Gasp — Key Differences Explained
- 5 Preventing Future BDCOM ONU Offline Issues
- 6 Frequently Asked Questions — BDCOM ONU Offline Troubleshooting
- 7 BDCOM ONU Offline — Quick Reference Command Cheat Sheet
- 8 Conclusion
If you’re an ISP engineer or fiber technician staring at an offline ONU on your BDCOM OLT dashboard, you’re in the right place. ONU offline issues are one of the most common — and most frustrating — problems in GPON networks. Whether it’s a sudden fiber cut, a power loss, an authentication mismatch, or a bad splitter, this guide walks you through every possible cause and fix with real CLI commands you can run right now.
When a BDCOM ONU goes offline, your customer loses internet, phone, or IPTV service instantly. The OLT registers the ONU as “inactive” or “deregistered,” and without the right diagnostic approach, you can waste hours chasing the wrong problem. This step-by-step BDCOM OLT ONU offline fix guide is built from real-world ISP engineer experience, official BDCOM documentation, and GPON community troubleshooting knowledge — updated for 2026.
Let’s start by understanding what “ONU Offline” actually means and then systematically work through every fix.
In a BDCOM GPON network, an ONU (Optical Network Unit) goes “offline” when the OLT can no longer communicate with it. The ONU disappears from the active ONU list and is shown as inactive, deregistered, or with a deactivation reason such as
LOSI (Loss of Signal Indication) or Dying Gasp. This breaks the subscriber’s service entirely.Common Causes of BDCOM ONU Offline
Before running a single command, it helps to know why ONUs go offline. In our experience, most BDCOM GPON ONU offline events fall into one of these categories:
| # | Cause | Deactive Reason Shown | Likely Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fiber cut or breakage | LOSI | Splice / replace fiber |
| 2 | ONU power failure | Dying Gasp | Restore ONU power supply |
| 3 | High fiber attenuation | LOSI | Check dBm, clean connectors |
| 4 | Authentication mismatch (SN/password) | Auth Fail | Re-register ONU with correct SN |
| 5 | ONU deregistered (manual/auto) | Deregistered | Re-bind ONU on OLT interface |
| 6 | PON port issue / SFP module fault | LOSI | Reseat SFP, check PON port |
| 7 | Dirty or damaged fiber connector | LOSI | Clean connector, replace patch cord |
| 8 | Splitter port failure | LOSI | Test each splitter port individually |
| 9 | Wrong VLAN or service profile config | Config Error | Verify ONU profile & VLAN binding |
| 10 | OLT firmware bug | Intermittent | Upgrade OLT firmware |
show gpon interface gpON 0/X:Y onu basic-info. LOSI = physical fiber problem. Dying Gasp = power-side problem. This single distinction saves you 30 minutes of wrong-path troubleshooting every time.How to Check ONU Offline Status — BDCOM CLI Commands
These are the essential BDCOM OLT commands for diagnosing any BDCOM ONU offline troubleshooting scenario. Run them in order for a complete picture.
1. View All ONU Status (Active + Inactive)
The Status column immediately tells you which ONUs are down. Auth: FAIL points to a serial number or password mismatch.
2. Check a Specific ONU’s Deactivation Reason
Key deactivation reasons and their meanings:
| Deactive Reason | Meaning | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
losi | No optical signal received — fiber cut | Inspect fiber path, splitter, connectors |
dying-gasp | ONU sent power-off notification — ONU lost power | Check ONU power supply |
deregistered | ONU was manually or automatically removed | Re-register ONU on OLT |
auth-fail | Serial number / password doesn’t match | Correct ONU SN in OLT config |
lost-omci | OMCI management channel lost | Reboot ONU, check firmware |
3. Check Optical Power Levels
4. Check PON Port Interface Status
5. Check Active Alarms
6. Find ONU by MAC Address
7. Check Full OLT Running Config
Step-by-Step BDCOM OLT ONU Offline Fix
Follow these steps in order. Each step builds on the last — don’t skip ahead. This is how experienced ISP engineers fix BDCOM GPON ONU offline issues systematically.
Check ONU Power Supply
The simplest cause is often a power failure at the ONU. Check if the ONU has power (LEDs lit), the adapter is working, and the power outlet is functional. If Dying Gasp is shown in the deactivation reason, this is your answer.
Check LOS / PON LED on ONU
A solid or blinking red LOS (Loss of Signal) LED on the ONU means it’s not receiving an optical signal from the OLT. This points to a physical fiber problem — not a configuration issue. Proceed to Step 3.
| ONU LED State | Meaning | Next Action |
|---|---|---|
| LOS = Red (solid) | No optical signal | Check fiber path, splitter |
| PON = Blinking green | Trying to register | Check auth/SN config |
| PON = Solid green | Registered successfully | Check VLAN/service config |
| All LEDs off | No power | Check power supply |
Inspect the Fiber Cable Path
Physically trace the fiber route from the ONU to the OLT. Look for sharp bends (minimum bend radius is 30mm for standard single-mode fiber), crushed or pinched sections, rodent damage, and loose connections at patch panels and splice boxes.
Clean Fiber Connectors
Dirty connectors are responsible for more than 30% of optical link problems in the field. Even microscopic dust on an SC/APC or SC/UPC connector can cause 1–3 dB of signal loss, pushing you past the -27 dBm threshold.
Connector cleaning procedure:
- Use a fiber inspection microscope or endface camera to view the connector face
- If dirty, use a one-click cleaner (Fujikura, Cletop, or equivalent) for SC connectors
- For patch panel adapters, use a cassette cleaner stick
- Re-inspect after cleaning before reconnecting
- Reconnect firmly — SC connectors should click into place
Verify ONU Authentication (Serial Number)
If the fiber is physically fine but the ONU still won’t come online, check authentication. The ONU serial number (SN) registered on the OLT must exactly match the physical ONU’s SN label.
Re-register the ONU
If the ONU was deregistered or the SN doesn’t match, you need to re-bind the ONU on the correct GPON interface. This is the most common fix ONU offline BDCOM OLT procedure for authentication-related issues.
Restart the ONU Remotely
Sometimes the ONU needs a remote reboot to clear a stuck state, recover from a firmware hang, or re-negotiate the GPON handshake. BDCOM OLT allows you to reboot individual ONUs without a physical site visit.
Check Optical Power Levels (dBm)
If the ONU keeps dropping offline intermittently, weak optical signal is the likely culprit. Use these commands to check the exact RX power levels and compare against acceptable thresholds.
| Power Level | Range | Status | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| ONU RX (acceptable) | -8 to -27 dBm | Normal | No action needed |
| ONU RX (marginal) | -25 to -27 dBm | Warning | Clean connectors, check splitter |
| ONU RX (critical) | Below -27 dBm | Critical | ONU will go offline — fix fiber path |
| OLT TX power | +1.5 to +5 dBm | Normal | No action needed |
| OLT TX power (low) | Below +1.5 dBm | SFP issue | Replace OLT SFP module |
Check Splitter Faults
A faulty splitter port is one of the trickiest problems to diagnose because it affects only specific ONUs while others on the same PON port remain online. If only a subset of ONUs on one PON port are offline, suspect the splitter first.
Splitter troubleshooting logic:
- 1 ONU offline, rest OK → Check that ONU’s drop fiber and connector
- Group of ONUs offline → Check the 2nd-stage splitter serving that group
- All ONUs on a PON port offline → Check feeder fiber or 1st-stage splitter
- All PON ports affected → Check OLT uplink, power, or chassis issue
Upgrade OLT Firmware (If Intermittent/Unexplained)
If ONUs keep dropping offline without any clear physical or configuration cause — especially after a recent change — a firmware bug on the OLT may be responsible. BDCOM regularly releases firmware updates that fix ONU management and stability issues.
ONU Offline vs Dying Gasp — Key Differences Explained
This is one of the most misunderstood distinctions in BDCOM GPON troubleshooting. Getting this right saves enormous time.
| Feature | Dying Gasp | LOSI (ONU Offline) |
|---|---|---|
| BDCOM Deactive Reason | dying-gasp | losi |
| What happened | ONU sent a power-off notification before going offline | OLT received no signal at all — abrupt disconnection |
| Fiber Status | Fiber is intact ✓ | Fiber likely cut or signal lost ✗ |
| ONU Status | ONU powered off (intentional or power failure) | ONU may be powered on but receiving no signal |
| Root Cause | Power outage, adapter failure, ONU shutdown | Fiber cut, dirty connector, weak signal, splitter fault |
| First Action | Check ONU power supply and adapter | Check fiber path, measure optical power |
| Standard defined | ITU-T G.984 (GPON standard) | ITU-T G.984 LOSi alarm |
Dying Gasp = “ONU said goodbye” → Power problem → Check electrical supply
LOSI = “ONU disappeared silently” → Fiber/signal problem → Check physical path
Preventing Future BDCOM ONU Offline Issues
A proactive approach to network maintenance dramatically reduces BDCOM ONU offline incidents. Here’s what field engineers recommend:
Network Monitoring & Documentation
- Enable SNMP traps on your BDCOM OLT to get instant alerts when an ONU goes offline — don’t wait for customer complaints
- Document every ONU’s installed location, SN, and PON port ID in a spreadsheet or NMS system
- Set optical power baseline readings when ONUs are first installed — this gives you a reference for future comparisons
- Use a Network Management System (NMS) to track ONU uptime history and identify repeat offenders
Physical Infrastructure Best Practices
- Schedule connector cleaning every 6–12 months, especially in dusty or industrial environments
- Use SC/APC connectors (green) for GPON — they outperform SC/UPC in back-reflection performance
- Protect outdoor fiber with proper weatherproof enclosures and figure-8 messenger wire
- Maintain a minimum bend radius of 30mm — never kink or loop fiber tightly
- Keep spare patch cords, splitter modules, and ONU units on-site for fast replacement
OLT Configuration Best Practices
Frequently Asked Questions — BDCOM ONU Offline Troubleshooting
show gpon optical-transceiver-diagnosis interface gPON 0/1:X and compare power levels across multiple times of day. If they fluctuate, you have a physical problem.gpon onu sn [SERIAL_NUMBER] to bind it → assign the appropriate VLAN profile → save with wr all. See Step 6 above for the complete command sequence with examples.show gpon optical-transceiver-diagnosis interface gPON 0/1:X to check.Switch# show gpon interface gpON 0/1:2 onu basic-info — this shows the ONU SN registered on the OLT. To find newly discovered but unregistered ONUs (auto-detected by the OLT), use: Switch# show gpon onu-information interface gpON 0/1 and look for entries with “unauthorized” or no binding. You can also find the SN on a sticker on the physical ONU device.Switch_config_gpon0/1:2# gpon onu reboot from within the specific GPON interface in config mode. For EPON models, the command is epon onu reboot onu-id [X]. Wait 60–90 seconds after the reboot command before checking ONU status. This only works if the ONU still has power and a valid fiber connection — it won’t work if LOSI is active.BDCOM ONU Offline — Quick Reference Command Cheat Sheet
| Task | BDCOM CLI Command |
|---|---|
| View all ONUs on a PON port | show gpon onu-information interface gpON 0/1 |
| Check specific ONU state & deactive reason | show gpon interface gpON 0/1:2 onu basic-info |
| Check ONU optical RX/TX power | show gpon optical-transceiver-diagnosis interface gPON 0/1:2 |
| Check all ONU power on a PON | show gpon onu-optical-transceiver-diagnosis interface gpON 0/1 |
| Check PON port optical module (OLT side) | show gpon optical-transceiver-diagnosis interface gPON 0/1 |
| Find ONU by MAC address | show mac address-table | include [LAST4MAC] |
| Reboot ONU remotely | gpon onu reboot (in interface config mode) |
| Register ONU by serial number | gpon onu sn BDCMXXXXXXXX (in interface config mode) |
| Check active alarms | show alarm |
| Check OLT firmware version | show version |
| Save configuration | wr all |
| View running config | show running-config |
| Check PON port interface status | show interface gpON 0/1 |
| Check ONU image/firmware info | show gpon onu-image-information interface GPON0/1:2 |
Conclusion
Fixing a BDCOM OLT ONU offline issue doesn’t have to be a mystery. With a systematic approach — checking the deactivation reason first, then working from power → fiber → optics → authentication → configuration — you can diagnose and resolve 95% of ONU offline issues without escalating to vendor support.
The two most important commands in your arsenal are show gpon interface gpON 0/X:Y onu basic-info to identify the root cause, and show gpon optical-transceiver-diagnosis to assess the physical link quality. Everything else flows from those two diagnostics.
Bookmark this guide and share it with your team. If you found it helpful or have additional troubleshooting scenarios to add, drop a comment below — real field experience from ISP engineers is what makes guides like this genuinely useful.
