Rtm Cli-Policy - HPE FlexNetwork 5130 HI Series Network Management And Monitoring Command Reference

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Usage guidelines
Use track event monitor policies to monitor state change of track entries. If you specify one track
entry for a policy, EAA triggers the policy when the state of the track entry changes from Positive to
Negative or from Negative to Positive. If you specify multiple track entries for a policy, EAA triggers
the policy only when the state of all the track entries changes from Positive to Negative or Negative
to Positive.
If you set a suppress time for a track event monitor policy, the timer starts when the policy is triggered.
The system does not process the messages that report the track entry positive-to-negative or
negative-to-positive state change until the timer times out.
You can configure only one event entry for a monitor policy. If the monitor policy already contains an
event entry, the new event entry replaces the old event entry.
Examples
# Create CLI-defined monitor policy test. Configure a track event for the policy that occurs when the
states of track entry 1 to track entry 8 change from Positive to Negative. Set the suppress time to 180
seconds for the policy.
<Sysname>system-view
[Sysname] rtm cli-policy test
[Sysname-rtm-test] event track 1 to 8 state negative suppress-time 180

rtm cli-policy

Use rtm cli-policy to create a CLI-defined EAA monitor policy and enter its view, or enter the view of
an existing CLI-defined EAA monitor policy.
Use undo rtm cli-policy to delete a CLI-defined monitor policy.
Syntax
rtm cli-policy policy-name
undo rtm cli-policy policy-name
Default
No CLI-defined monitor policies exist.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
policy-name: Specifies the name of a CLI-defined monitor policy, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63
characters.
Usage guidelines
You must create a CLI-defined monitor policy before you can use the CLI to configure settings in the
policy.
For a CLI-defined monitor policy to take effect, you must execute the commit command after you
complete configuring the policy.
You can execute this command multiple times to create multiple CLI-defined monitor policies. Make
sure the CLI-defined monitor policies that are executed at the same time do not have conflicting
actions. If the actions conflict, the system executes the actions randomly.
You can assign the same name to a CLI-defined policy and a Tcl-defined policy.
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