Cisco 9134 - MDS Multilayer Fabric Switch Troubleshooting Manual page 536

Mds 9000 family
Hide thumbs Also See for 9134 - MDS Multilayer Fabric Switch:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Using Cisco MDS 9000 Family Tools
S e n d d o c u m e n t a t i o n c o m m e n t s t o m d s f e e d b a c k - d o c @ c i s c o . c o m
During initial configuration of your switch, the system prompts you to define SNMP v1 or V2
Note
community strings and to create a SNMP v3 username and password.
Cisco MDS 9000 Family switches support over 50 different MIBs, which can be divided into the
following six categories:
IETF Standards-based Entity MIBs (for example, RFC273 ENTITY-MIB)
These MIBs are used to report information on the physical devices themselves in terms of physical
attributes etc.
Cisco-Proprietary Entity MIBs (for example, CISCO-ENTITY-FRU-CONTROL-MIB)
These MIBs are used to report additional physical device information about Cisco-only devices such
as their configuration.
IETF IP Transport-oriented MIBs (for example, RFC2013 UDP-MIB)
These MIBs are used to report transport-oriented statistics on such protocols as IP, TCP, and UDP.
These transports are used in the management of the Cisco MDS 9000 Family through the OOB
Ethernet interface on the Supervisor module.
Cisco-Proprietary Storage and Storage Network MIBs (for example, NAME-SERVER-MIB)
management applications not connected to the fabric itself. In addition to exposing configuration
details for features like zoning and Virtual SANs (VSANs) via MIBs, discovered information from
sources like the FC-GS-3 Name Server can be pulled via a MIB. Additionally, MIBs are provided
to configure/enable features within the Cisco MDS 9000 Family. There are over 20 new MIBs
provided by Cisco for this information and configuration capability.
IETF IP Storage Working Group MIBs (for example, ISCSI-MIB)
protocols such as iSCSI and Fibre Channel-over-IP (FCIP) to be standardized within the IETF.
Miscellaneous MIBs (for example, SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB)
defining the SNMP framework or creating SNMP partitioned views.
You can use SNMPv3 to assign different SNMP capabilities to specific roles.
Cisco MDS 9000 Family switches also support Remote Monitoring (RMON) for Fibre Channel. RMON
provides a standard method to monitor the basic operations of network protocols providing connectivity
between SNMP management stations and monitoring agents. RMON also provides a powerful alarm and
event mechanism for setting thresholds and sending notifications based on changes in network behavior.
The RMON groups that have been adapted for use with Fibre Channel include the AlarmGroup and the
EventGroup. The AlarmGroup provides services to set alarms. Alarms can be set on one or multiple
parameters within a device. For example, you can set an RMON alarm for a specific level of CPU
utilization or crossbar utilization on a switch. The EventGroup lets you configure events that are actions
to be taken based on an alarm condition. The types of events that are supported include logging, SNMP
traps, and log-and-trap.
To configure events within an RMON group, use the Events > Threshold Manager option from Device
Note
Manager. See the
Cisco MDS 9000 Family Troubleshooting Guide, Release 3.x
B-20
These MIBs were written by Cisco to help expose information that is discovered within a fabric to
While many of these MIBs are still work-in-progress, Cisco is helping to draft such MIBs for
There are several other MIBs provided in the Cisco MDS 9000 Family switches for tasks such as
"Device Manager: RMON Threshold Manager" section on page
Appendix B
Troubleshooting Tools and Methodology
B-17.
OL-9285-05

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents

Troubleshooting

loading

Table of Contents