If you know the model or type of an optical module, you can view the section "Pluggable Modules for Interfaces" in the Hardware Description to look up parameters of the optical module, including the center wavelength, transmission distance, fiber types supported, receive optical. If you know the model or type of an optical module, you can view the section "Pluggable Modules for Interfaces" in the Hardware Description to look up parameters of the optical module, including the center wavelength, transmission distance, fiber types supported, receive optical. Digital Optical Monitoring (DOM) is a feature that allows for the real-time monitoring of various physical and operational parameters of fiber optic transceivers, such as transmit power, receive power, temperature, laser bias current, and voltage. DOM is supported on MS120, MS125, MS130, MS210. Monitoring the optical power of SFP (Small Form-factor Pluggable) modules is a critical step in maintaining stable network links. Even if an interface appears up, degraded Tx/Rx levels can cause intermittent flapping, packet loss, or err-disabled states. Checking optical power helps pinpoint issues. If you run fiber or copper uplinks in a small office, home lab, or data closet, SFPs (and SFP+) are the little parts that keep your links alive. This guide gives a practical, CLI-focused workflow for checking SFP health and diagnostics on Cisco switches, shows the exact commands you'll use. This article provides instructions on how to view the Optical Module Status on your switch through the Command Line Interface (CLI). They connect switches, routers, and servers through fiber-optic or copper links, ensuring reliable communication between infrastructure layers. By checking module. When optical modules operate on a switch, it is usually necessary to read the module's internal information to understand its working status—such as connection status and real-time metrics like optical power and temperature. Additionally, identifying module information helps detect coding.