Your problem isn't with location.conf, it's with the way NetView is
figuring out your subnetting. For some reason, Netview thinks
10.130.x.x isn't a unique subnet. Does your IP map have a network
called 10.130? Check the router interface with the 10.130 address and
see what mask is reported. You might want to check and see if you have
a plain 10 network. If so, see what's in it. If there's a non-snmp
device that's supposed to be SNMP managed, check the community name
Generally, manually adding objects, you first have to create the
network, then a segment, then add the object to the segment map. I
don't think you should be able to add devices to a location map without
the network being there first.
Whatever it is, I think it's got something to do with discovery and SNMP
polling, and the location.conf for 10.130 entry doesn't work because of
that, not the other way around.
"Chance, Larry" wrote:
>
> Netview for NT v6
>
> I'm using the 'location.conf' file and it's working out for my multiple
> states,
> however there's one location that I'm having difficulty with IP discovery.
>
> In this scenario, Netview's not discovering the subnet below,
> RemoteLocationSubnet130,
> which I know to be functional. All the others are discovered fine.
>
> RemoteLocation 0 State
> RemoteLocationSubnet128 10.128 State RemoteLocation
> RemoteLocationSubnet129 10.129 State RemoteLocation
> RemoteLocationSubnet130 10.130 State RemoteLocation
> RemoteLocationSubnet131 10.131 State RemoteLocation
> .
> .
> .
>
> If I try to manually add any Objects to RemoteLocationSubnet130 I
> consistently get the messages:
> IPMap will not recognize a node on this submap. Press cancel to
> continue.
> or
> IPMap will not recognize a network on this submap. Press cancel to
> continue.
>
> Anyone else experiencing IP discovery problems with 'location.conf' submaps?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Larry
>
>
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