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Full Discussion: nmon integration with BMC
Operating Systems AIX nmon integration with BMC Post 302231832 by Futura on Wednesday 3rd of September 2008 07:31:26 AM
Old 09-03-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by ross.mather
Basically BMC and NMON do the same thing. However as BMC professes to be Platform Agnostic it is not as useful as NMON for tracking down performance problems. BMC also doesn't seem to understand the consequencies of Dynamic LPARing.

I'll be honest, that most AIX locations I've seem - whether or not there is end to end monitoring by BMC Patrol or something else, the local sys admins maintain an NMON trace of the system as well anyway, as they eitehr don't have the access to BMC data when they need it - or else they don't understand it.

Also Memory Managemen Monitoring on an AIX box is always interesting as Memory is allowed to fill up on AIX and is therefore almost always 100% full. Only tools that can Monitor the vmstats can actually see what the memory is doing.
This was very useful. Thanks Smilie
 

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openipmi_conparms(7)					Connection Parameters for OpenIPMI				      openipmi_conparms(7)

NAME
openipmi_cmdparms - Connection parameters for OpenIPMI SYNOPSIS
smi smi-num lan [-U username] [-P password] [-p[2] port] [-A authtype] [-L privilege] [-s] [-Ra auth alg] [-Ri integ alg] [-Rc conf algo] [-Rl] [-Rk bmc key] [-H hackname] host [ host] DESCRIPTION
The connection parameters for OpenIPMI vary depending on the connection type. This document describes the standard connection types; oth- ers may be available from OEMs. OPTIONS
smi-num The SMI interface for the local connection. There may be more than one BMC connection on a system and they are generally numbered, like /dev/ipmi0, /dev/ipmi1, etc. -U username Use the given username for the LAN connection. If none is given, then no username is used. -P password The password to use for the connection. If none is given, the user is assumed to have an empty password -p[2] port The UCP port to connect to. This defaults to the standard 623 port, so it is not necessary unless a special port is required. Note that since you can have two connections (hosts), -p is for the first host and -p2 is for the second host. -A authtype The authentication type to use, one of rmcp+, md5, md2, straight, or none. If you don't supply this, the most secure one available is chosen, in the order given in the previous list. -L privilege The privilege to use for the connection. Lower privileges cannot execute some commands. Privileges are: callback, user, operator, admin, and oem. The default is admin. -Ra authentication algorithm Set the RMCP+ authentication algorithm to use. Options are: bmcpick, rakp_none, rakp_hmac_sha1, and rakp_hmac_md5. The bmcpick option is used by default, which means the BMC picks the algorithm it wants to use. -Ri integrity algorithm The RMCP+ integrity algorithm to use. This ensures that the data has not be altered between the sender and receiver. Valid options are: bmcpick, none, hmac_sha1, hmac_md5, and md5. The bmcpick option is used by default, which means the BMC picks the algorithm it wants to use. -Rc confidentiality algorithm The RMCP+ confidentiality (encryption) algorithm to use. This keeps eavesdroppers from seeing the data. Valid values are: bmcpick, aes_cbc_128, xrc4_128, and xrc_40. The bmcpick option is used by default, which means the BMC picks the algorithm it wants to use. -Rl If this is specified, the username is looked up using the privilege level along with the username. This allows the same name to have different passwords with different privilege levels. -Rk BMC Key If the system requires two-key lookups, this specifies the second key (the BMC key) to use. This is ignored if two-key lookups are not enabled by the BMC. -H hackname Well, it always happens. Things in the field don't work quite like they are supposed to. There was some vagueness in the first IPMI specs and different vendors interpreted RMCP+ in different ways. This allows different options to be supported. Try different hacks if your RMCP+ systems don't authenticate properly. These are: rakp3_wrong_rolem Some systems use the incorrect Role(m) field in a specific authentication message (the RAKP3 message). This is a common problem. rmcpp_integ_sik The original IPMI 2.0 spec specified the incorrect key to use for the integrity key. This forces use of the Session Initia- tion Key. The default is to use K(1) -s Make two connections to the BMC. This means the BMC has two different IP addresses/ports that are equivalent. If this is speci- fied, a second host must be supplied. This is not the same as two connections to two different BMCs. This must be a connection to the same BMC. host The IP address (either by name lookup or specified directly) to connect to. If the -s is specified, two hosts must be supplied. The -Ra, -Ri, -Rc, -Rk and -Rl options only apply to RMCP+ connections and will be ignored if the connection does not support RMCP+ or if a non-RMCP+ authentication type is specified. SEE ALSO
ipmish(8), openipmicmd(8), solterm(1) KNOWN PROBLEMS
This is excessively complicated, but the defaults should be good. AUTHOR
Corey Minyard <cminyard@mvista.org> OpenIPMI 05/13/03 openipmi_conparms(7)
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