<troubleshooting>

The <troubleshooting> element is the top-level element for a troubleshooting topic. Troubleshooting topics document corrective action such as troubleshooting or alarm clearing. Troubleshooting topics begin with a description of a condition that the reader might want to correct, followed by one or more cause-remedy pairs. Each cause-remedy pair is a potential solution to the trouble described in the condition.

Troubleshooting topics represent the kind of information that users typically consult to fix a problem.

Content models

See appendix for information about this element in OASIS document type shells.

Inheritance

- topic/topic troubleshooting/troubleshooting

Example

<troubleshooting id="resolve" xml:lang="en-us" >
  <title>E247 - Memory fault has occured</title>
  <shortdesc>The system has detected a problem in memory.
  </shortdesc>
  <troublebody>
    <condition>
      <p>The fault indicator flashes on the front panel, and
        the error log contains the following message:
        <msgph>E247 - Memory fault has occured</msgph></p>
    </condition>
    <troubleSolution>
      <cause>
        <p>Transient memory fault.</p>
      </cause>
      <remedy>
        <responsibleParty>System administrator
        </responsibleParty>
        <steps>
          <step>
            <cmd>Reset the alarm</cmd>
          </step>
          <step>
            <cmd>Monitor the system periodically to see whether
               the alarm recurs</cmd>
          </step>
        </steps>
      </remedy>
    </troubleSolution>
    <troubleSolution>
      <cause>
        <p>Recurring memory fault indicates possible problem
          with the system memory board. Reseating the board
          may fix the problem.</p>
      </cause>
      <remedy>
        <responsibleParty>Maintenance technician
        </responsibleParty>
        <steps
          conref="BoardReseat.dita#BoardReseatg/steps">
          <step>
            <cmd/>
          </step>
        </steps>
      </remedy>
    </troubleSolution>
    <troubleSolution>
      <cause>
        <p>Reseating the system memory board did not fix
          the problem. Replacing the board may fix the
          problem.</p>
      </cause>
      <remedy>
        <responsibleParty>Maintenance technician
        </responsibleParty>
        <steps
          conref="BoardReplace.dita#BoardReplac/steps">
          <step>
            <cmd/>
          </step>
        </steps>
      </remedy>
    </troubleSolution>
  </troublebody>
</troubleshooting>

Attributes

The following attributes are available on this element: Universal attribute group (with a narrowed definition of @id, given below), Architectural attribute group, and @outputclass.

@id (REQUIRED)
An anchor point. This ID is usually required as part of the @href or @conref syntax when cross referencing or reusing content within the topic; it also enables <topicref> elements in DITA maps to optionally reference a specific topic within a DITA document. This attribute is defined with the XML Data Type ID.

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