Actually, I think Paul meant to say put a '%' in the seedfile to poll
an address as a fake HSRP for intentional duplicates. The '^' turns
off snmp polling for those devices that were converted to snmp polling
by means other than the seedfile, such as oid_to_type entries or by
having an unnumbered serial interface.
Cordially,
Leslie A. Clark
IBM Global Services - Systems Mgmt & Networking
Detroit
*Paul <pstroud@bellsouth.net>*
Sent by: owner-nv-l-digest@lists.us.ibm.com
10/24/2003 07:17 PM
Please respond to nv-l
To: nv-l@lists.us.ibm.com
cc:
Subject: Re: [nv-l] Windows Clusters
Carlos,
No. Well, you can, but you would have to disable SNMP on those devices
and I'm
thinking that is not a desirable action.
What you can do, however, is poll the devices via SNMP instead of via
ICMP. This
is accomplished by placing a '$' in front of the device in the seedfile.
You will want
to do this for each machine in the cluster. As long as they all use
different IP
addresses, this will work fine. On some clusters, though, they will all
use the same
IP address. In that case, you could define that shared interface as an
HSRP
interface by placing a '^' in front of the ip address in the seedfile.
Hope that helps.
Paul
CMazon@commercebankfl.com wrote:
>
> Win2k/Netview 7.1.3. FP1 / SQL2000,
>
> Hi list,
>
> Maybe someone can shed some light for me. We have 3 Microsoft
> clusters with several nic cards. One nic in each server is configured
> with an ip that are not pingable (192.168.X.X) for the cluster
> heartbeat. Is there a way to prevent Netview from discovering these
> interfaces? I have them in the exclude list of the seed file and I
> tried to unmanage them, but somehow Netview continues to manage these
> interfaces on its own.
>
> Has anyone come accross this problem before?
>
> Also, is there any consultant on this list located in Miami, FL please
> email me directly. (Sorry for posting this here.)
>
> Carlos