Configuring rmon, Overview, Working mechanism – H3C Technologies H3C SecPath F1000-E User Manual

Page 134: Rmon groups, Ethernet statistics group

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Configuring RMON

This chapter provides an overview of the Remote Monitoring (RMON) and guides you through the

configuration procedure.

NOTE:

The RMON configuration is available only at the CLI.

Overview

RMON is an enhancement to SNMP for remote device management and traffic monitoring. An RMON

monitor, typically the RMON agent embedded in a network device, periodically or continuously collects
traffic statistics for the network attached to a port, and when a statistic crosses a threshold, logs the

crossing event and sends a trap to the management station.
RMON uses SNMP traps to notify NMSs of exceptional conditions. RMON SNMP traps report various

events, including traffic events such as broadcast traffic threshold exceeded. In contrast, SNMP standard
traps report device operating status changes such as link up, link down, and module failure.
RMON enables proactive monitoring and management of remote network devices and subnets. The

managed device can automatically send a trap when a statistic crosses an alarm threshold, and the

NMS does not need to constantly poll MIB variables and compare the results. As a result, network traffic
is reduced.

Working mechanism

RMON monitors typically take one of the following forms:

Dedicated RMON probes. NMSs can obtain management information from RMON probes directly
and control network resources. In this approach, NMSs can obtain all RMON MIB information.

RMON agents embedded in network devices. NMSs exchange data with RMON agents by using
basic SNMP operations to gather network management information. Because this approach is

resource intensive, most RMON agent implementations provide only four groups of MIB information:

alarm, event, history, and statistics.

H3C devices provide the embedded RMON agent function. You can configure your device to collect and

report traffic statistics, error statistics, and performance statistics.

RMON groups

Among the RFC 2819 defined RMON groups, H3C implements the statistics group, history group, event

group, and alarm group supported by the public MIB. H3C also implements a private alarm group,

which enhances the standard alarm group.

Ethernet statistics group

The statistics group defines that the system collects various traffic statistics on an interface (only Ethernet
interfaces are supported), and saves the statistics in the Ethernet statistics table (ethernetStatsTable) for

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