- 1. Find then unmanage (score: 1)
- Author: Paul Vize <paul_vize AT IE.IBM DOT COM>
- Date: Thu, 3 Feb 2000 11:33:53 +0000
- Hi, Another discovery question. I want to have my seedfile listed with all possible ranges of addresses we have (16000) to discover all nodes within these addresses but then unmanage all nodes that d
- /usr/local/webapp/mharc-adsm.org/html/nv-l/2000-02/msg00091.html (11,012 bytes)
- 2. Re: Find then unmanage (score: 1)
- Author: James Shanks <James_Shanks AT TIVOLI DOT COM>
- Date: Thu, 3 Feb 2000 07:05:40 -0500
- Your thinking is fine but there is no command line way to unmamge anything once it has been discovered. That is a map operation, done on a per map basis. When the object is unmanaged in all maps, the
- /usr/local/webapp/mharc-adsm.org/html/nv-l/2000-02/msg00092.html (11,627 bytes)
- 3. Re: Find then unmanage (score: 1)
- Author: "Owens, Blaine C" <bowens AT EASTMAN DOT COM>
- Date: Thu, 3 Feb 2000 09:14:12 -0500
- Paul, as James Shanks said there is no command line method to unmanage nodes. However you can exercise some control over what is discovered "unmanaged" if they are non-SNMP devices or if they are SNM
- /usr/local/webapp/mharc-adsm.org/html/nv-l/2000-02/msg00098.html (12,199 bytes)
- 4. Re: Find then unmanage (score: 1)
- Author: Leslie Clark <lclark AT US.IBM DOT COM>
- Date: Thu, 3 Feb 2000 09:21:05 -0500
- Given the constraint that James describes, there are still a couple of things you can do to make it easier to unmanage those things you want to discover but do not want to manage. 1) You can discover
- /usr/local/webapp/mharc-adsm.org/html/nv-l/2000-02/msg00100.html (13,074 bytes)
This search system is powered by
Namazu