We have a network of Lucent BSTDX9000 switches for fiber and wireless links in the United States and Costa Rica. I was dragging a BSTDX9000 icon in my Naviscore NMS and it disappeared.
All of my trunks are still up but I can't figure out how to get the icon back. I'm screwed if something happens in that switch and I can't get into it.
If you or somebody you know can help, it would be greatly appreciated
I'm willing to pay whatever it takes and we can set someone up to remotely log in.
You can also contact me on my cell. 602-370-9750
Hi,
I am using
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 (x86_64), PATCHLEVEL = 0 as NIS server.
All client is having SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 11 (x86_64), PATCHLEVEL = 0.
All system are configured to work in GUI.
When NIS user say 'a' locks system, and user 'b' wants to login to the same system... (1 Reply)
hi,
how to access console of a switch having rj45 on switch side to db 9 female on pc side console cable which needs to be connected to one console server having rj11 on its side and db 9 female on other end.i.e. on switch side,console cable has rj45 and db 9 pin female connector on other side of... (1 Reply)
Guys,
I need to copy files from source to destination with datetime preserved
I did it with cp -p <source>/file <destinaltion>/file
But when I do stat command on copied file , it seems the copied file has "change time" modified.
Please guide me in understanding (2 Replies)
We have a network of Lucent BSTDX9000 switches for fiber and wireless links in the United States and Costa Rica. I was dragging a BSTDX9000 switch icon in my Naviscore NMS and it disappeared.
All of my trunks and circuits are still fuctioning properly but I can't figure out how to get the icon... (3 Replies)
Hello there,
I wanted to know the members' opinion about the best open source network management software which uses a web browser to show its interface and results.
I am interested in the software for both windows and Linux OSs.
Thanks. (4 Replies)
Im running mandrake 9.0 and i just got a Lucent/orinoco PC24E-H-FC. I beleive it was originaly made by lucent but then made by Orinoco.. But anyways i just cant get connected. Ive tried 3 differemt drivers. My wireless access point router is a Linksys. I just cant figure this out ive talked on... (3 Replies)
hi,
i am try to run following script in c-shell, using switch command.
#!/bin/csh
choice=0
while
do
echo "system monitor"
echo "
1) system paging
2) system file inf.
3) system disk inf.
9) exit
"
echo "select an option: \c"
read choice
case $choice in
1)... (3 Replies)
snmpd(8n)snmpd(8n)Name
snmpd - Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) Agent for ULTRIX gateways and hosts
Syntax
/etc/snmpd [ -d debuglevel logfile ]
Description
The SNMP Agent, performs SNMP operations on an ULTRIX gateway or host. The daemon, which is started up by an entry in the file, sits in
the background and listens on SNMP port 161. When the daemon receives an SNMP packet from a Network Management Station (NMS), the daemon
performs SNMP operations on the packet and returns a valid response to the NMS.
The daemon extracts much of its information from kernel memory. Static variables whose values are not available in the kernel take values
from the SNMP configuration file,
SNMP Trap Support
The cold start and authentication failure trap types are supported by
The cold start trap type is generated by when is restarted. The authentication failure trap type is generated when an attempt at using a
community fails. The attempt fails when an unauthorized client tries to use or the community is used in a way that the community type does
not allow.
The daemon sends traps to all communities specified in the configuration file with a community type
The default is for the daemon to generate authentication failure traps. However, if the following clause is specified somewhere in the
file, authentication failure traps are not generated:
no_authen_traps
SNMP Sets
When the daemon receives a set-request packet, it processes the variables in the packet and verifies that they are valid read-write vari-
ables. While performing this verification, the daemon constructs a linked list of the set requests. After it has completed the verifica-
tion, it performs the actual set operations on the variables, as if they were being performed simultaneously. If any actual set operation
fails, all of the previous set variables from the set-request packet are restored to their old values.
SNMP Supported Variables
For a complete listing of the SNMP Management Information Base (MIB) variables that are supported, see the Guide to Networking.
Options
By default, the daemon uses the command to record its error messages. However, you can obtain certain debugging and trace information by
specifying the flag, the appropriate debug level, and a log file for the output on the command line.
-d debuglevel logfile
Outputs debugging and trace information.
You can specify any one of the following debug levels with the flag:
1 Print the version number, start time, and exit time of Also print out when an SNMP packet is received, the address of the sender, and
the packet size in bytes.
2 Print out what the daemon has read from the file.
3 Dump the SNMP packet that the daemon has just received and is about to process. Also print out the route and interface address that
the daemon is currently looking up. This debug level also dumps the SNMP packet that the server is sending back in response to a
received SNMP message.
4 Dump the variable tree. Also print out the static bootstrap array of tree information.
The output for a debug level includes the information for all levels including and below the level that you specify. For example, if you
specify a debug level of 3, your output includes debug information for levels 3, 2, and 1.
If no debug levels are set, detaches itself from the controlling terminal and executes in the background.
Restrictions
Not all of the MIB variables are supported.
Only the variable is settable.
Files
SNMP configuration file
See Alsosnmpext(3n), snmpd.conf(5n), snmpsetup(8n)
RFC 1066--Management Information Base for Network Management of TCP/IP-based Internets
RFC 1067--A Simple Network Management Protocol
Guide to Networking
snmpd(8n)