H3C Technologies H3C Intelligent Management Center User Manual

Page 227

Advertising
background image

213

Super/Manager Password, No Username + No Password, and Username + No Password.

The following parameters to be configured vary with authentication modes.

Username—Enter the Telnet username. The user must have the Linux administrator's
privilege.

Password—Enter the password of the Telnet user.

Super Password—Enter the super password with which a Telnet user can elevate privileges
after login.

Timeout (1-60 seconds)—Enter the maximum time period that APM waits for a Telnet
response from Linux. The value range is 1 to 60 seconds and the default is 4 seconds. If no

Telnet response is received from Linux within the timeout time, APM considers that the

interaction has failed.

SNMP parameters

Edit SNMP Parameters—Select this option if you want to manually configure SNMP
parameters for APM. Make sure the SNMP settings are the same as those on Linux.

Select an Existing Template—Select this option if you want to select an existing SNMP
template for APM. For information about setting SNMP parameter templates, see H3C IMC
Base Platform Administrator Guide
.

Parameter Type—Select the SNMP parameter type. Options include SNMPv1, SNMPv2c,
and SNMPv3 Template. The SNMPv3 Template option is available only when Select an

Existing Template is selected.

Read-Only Community String—Enter the SNMP read-only community string, with which
APM can read MIB variables from the Linux host.

Read-Write Community String—Enter the read-write SNMP community string, with which
APM can read MIB variables from or write MIB variables to the Linux host.

Timeout (1-60 seconds)—Enter the maximum time period that APM waits for an SNMP
response from Linux. The value range is 1 to 60 seconds and the default is 4 seconds. If no
SNMP response is received from Linux within the timeout time, APM considers that the

interaction has failed.

Retries (1-20)—Enter how many times APM retries to send SNMP packets to the Linux host.

{

Contact—Modify the contact information, such as name, email address, and telephone
number.

{

Related Applications—Modify the application that Linux depends on. Enter the complete or
part of the application monitor name in the Search field at the top of the window, and click

Search. Select the applications that Linux depends on, and then click OK.
Operating system applications, such as Windows, AIX, SCO UNIX, FreeBSD, OpenBSD,

HP-UX, Solaris, Mac OS, and Linux, cannot be selected. Operators can view all dependencies
of the application in the dependency topology.
To remove the relationship between Linux and the specified application, select the application
in the Related Applications field, and then click Delete.

{

Detect Application—Select this parameter if you want to enable application detection.
Application detection enables APM to verify connection to the application by using the previous

parameter settings, and to determine whether to modify the application monitor based on the

verification result. APM modifies the application monitor only when it can connect to the
application. When this parameter is not selected, APM modifies the application monitor without

verifying the connection.

5.

Click OK.

Advertising