From: Michael S. <mi...@sc...> - 2015-03-24 14:55:12
|
Am Dienstag, 24. März 2015, 10:39:08 schrieben Sie: > Michael, > > > On Mar 24, 2015, at 10:26 AM, Michael Schwartzkopff > > <mi...@sc...> wrote: > > > > If capsd is disabled, where can I configure data collection now? > > Capsd has nothing to do with data collection, it is an unrelated feature. In > other words, the existence of Capsd is irrelevant for Collectd, the daemon > responsible for data collection. > > Capsd was the old way to manage the inventory, and it has been replaced with > Provisiond. > > To learn more about Provisiond: > > http://www.opennms.org/wiki/Tutorial_Capability_Scanning > <http://www.opennms.org/wiki/Tutorial_Capability_Scanning> > http://www.opennms.org/w/images/c/ca/ProvisioningUsersGuide.pdf > <http://www.opennms.org/w/images/c/ca/ProvisioningUsersGuide.pdf> > > To learn more about data collection: > > http://www.opennms.org/wiki/Tutorial_Data_Collection > <http://www.opennms.org/wiki/Tutorial_Data_Collection> > http://www.opennms.org/wiki/SNMP_Data_Collection_Tutorial > <http://www.opennms.org/wiki/SNMP_Data_Collection_Tutorial> > http://www.opennms.org/wiki/Data_Collection_Configuration_How-To > <http://www.opennms.org/wiki/Data_Collection_Configuration_How-To> > > Alejandro. thank for the clarification. But I do not want to graph the values that opennms collected but I just want to compare it with thresholds. As far as I interstood, that is what the pollerd does, isn't it? So I added <service name="Cisco-PowerSupply-Monitor" interval="300000" user- defined="false" status="on"> <parameter key="retry" value="3" /> <parameter key="timeout" value="3000" /> <parameter key="port" value="161" /> <parameter key="oid" value=".1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.13.1.5.1.3" /> <parameter key="walk" value="true" /> <parameter key="operator" value="=" /> <parameter key="operand" value="1" /> <parameter key="match-all" value="true" /> <parameter key="reason-template" value="A problem with Cisco power supplies detected. \ The state should be normal(${operand}) but actual value is ${observedValue}. \ Syntax: normal(1), warning(2), critical(3), shutdown(4), notPresent(5), notFunctioning(6)" /> </service> to the poller-configuraion.xml and a <monitor service="Cisco-PowerSupply-Monitor" class- name="org.opennms.netmgt.poller.monitors.SnmpMonitor"/> in the end. Now back to my original question: Can I see the values (last value) that opennms (pollerd) gathered from my node to check if everything is OK? Greetings, -- Dr. Michael Schwartzkopff Guardinistr. 63 81375 München Tel: (0162) 1650044 Fax: (089) 620 304 13 |