Re: [nv-l] Netmon on NT
2003-12-03 18:50:06
Timeouts depend on the device or more
so the speed of the connection you would have been the device and NetView.
I would consider 20 seconds to be too long a timeout for most ethernet
devices. Generally speaking the default is satifactory - how long would
you think it takes for a ping to make it to it's destination and back again
- try it on the command line. Double it to be sage if you like, but 20
seconds would make for a slooooooow network. Of course if you are monitoring
devices on the other end of a 64k serial (eg. dial-up) link, then maybe
not.
Ping spray has nothing to do with community
names. A ping spray is only used during discovery and is basically a series
of ping tests of every valid IP address in a given subnet where it listens
for responses as a means of learning of a devices existance. Usually netmon
only pings IPs it has learnt about from the route tables (and other lists)
from devices it has already discovered and has successfully SNMP polled.
netmon can also learn of other devices via a seedfile, its own arp cache,
or its own default route.
Gareth Holl
Staff Software Engineer
gholl AT us.ibm DOT com
IBM Software Group - Tivoli Brand
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
| "Christopher J Petrina"
<cjp8 AT meadwestvaco DOT com>
Sent by: owner-nv-l AT lists.us.ibm DOT com
12/03/2003 06:23 PM
Please respond to nv-l
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To:
nv-l AT lists.us.ibm DOT com
cc:
Subject:
Re: [nv-l] Netmon on NT |
WOuld you consider 20 seconds for 1st timeout fairly long to keep them
in there. with snmp setup properly. We are not using Ping Spray.
Is Ping Spray more practical when we are not exactly sure of all
the community strings on all the devices?
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