RE: [nv-l] Windows Clusters/Router issue
2003-10-23 17:24:08
I ran it, and they have a date time
just like the example you gave me, however the TOPOLOGY POLL states MAXIMUM
TIME. These routers are Cisco 2620s. We do have a Cisco 2500
in Panama, and that particular router doesn't have this up/down issue but
is always deleting and readding the HSRP address.
What I have done to have the router
switch to SNMP poll (without rediscover) is to change the default status
polling interval. That seems to help netmon accept the changes. Can
I ask what is your default snmp poll interval? And what is your forgiving
time interval for your slow links? I am monitoring routers in Curacao,Panama,Zurich,
Houston from Miami.
Thanks.
| "Barr, Scott" <Scott_Barr AT csgsystems DOT com>
Sent by: owner-nv-l-digest AT lists.us.ibm DOT com
10/23/2003 04:24 PM
Please respond to nv-l
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To:
<nv-l AT lists.us.ibm DOT com>
cc:
<owner-nv-l-digest AT lists.us.ibm DOT com>
Subject:
RE: [nv-l] Windows Clusters |
Do an ovtopodump -rl on the router
name and look for this field:
SNMP STATUS POLL: Thu Oct 23 21:16:15
2003
If that line reads "MAXIMUM
TIME" then you are still polling with ICMP. My guess is you need to
yank it out of topology and rediscover it (once you added the $ flag to
the seed file, it doesn't automatically conver to SNMP polling - although
other folks may tell you it does, I have never seen it switch without being
rediscovered)
Assuming that you do see them
being polled with SNMP properly, then you may have to adjust the SNMP timing
(i.e. retries / time outs) if your routers are particularly heavily used,
they may take longer to respond. I work in a 99% cisco shop and we never
have issues with SNMP not responding (intermittantly). SNMP is the lowest
priority process on the router so if they are very busy, I could envision
sometimes SNMP not being responded to.
To combat this, like I said you
can adjust hte polling parameters to be a little more forgiving, or (as
I do) have a ruleset that requires two consecutive status polls fail before
I page anyone. This is especially helpful for routers on the far side of
slow/saturated links and Cisco 2500s which often lack the CPU power to
handle SNMP queries and a full T-1 circuit.
There are probably some other
ways to address/investigate this - but SNMP status polls are very reliable,
so something unusual must be going on.
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-nv-l-digest AT lists.us.ibm DOT com [mailto:owner-nv-l-digest AT lists.us.ibm DOT com]On
Behalf Of CMazon AT commercebankfl DOT com
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2003 2:56 PM
To: nv-l AT lists.us.ibm DOT com
Cc: 'nv-l AT lists.us.ibm DOT com'; owner-nv-l-digest AT lists.us.ibm DOT com
Subject: RE: [nv-l] Windows Clusters
Thank you all for you help... enabling SNMP polling on those nodes worked.
I went ahead and enabled snmp polling for everything that is configured
for SNMP as well and I now have a new problem and was wondering if you
have seen this as well. The routers that I enabled SNMP polling for are
now constantly reporting as a down node and then up repeatedly. I
checked and they do have the correct SNMP settings. When these routers
were ICMP polled, they did not have an issue. I had to exclude them
from being SNMP polled to prevent this from happening. Any insight on this?
Carlos
(Win2k/NV 7.1.3 FP 1)
| "Bursik, Scott {PBSG}"
<Scott.Bursik AT pbsg DOT com>
Sent by: owner-nv-l-digest AT lists.us.ibm DOT com
10/23/2003 02:19 PM
Please respond to nv-l
|
To: "'nv-l AT lists.us.ibm DOT com'"
<nv-l AT lists.us.ibm DOT com>
cc:
Subject: RE: [nv-l]
Windows Clusters |
We have the same exact issue here. I turned on the duplicate IP address
notification and have it write out to a log file whenever a dup IP trap
comes in and I was amazed at how many servers out there are using "private"
networks and how many of them are using 192.168.x.x for the address scheme.
It is hard to get teams to understand that these interfaces can been seen
with NetView. People process are hard to change.
Scott Bursik
Enterprise Systems Management
PepsiCo Business Solutions Group
scott.bursik AT pbsg DOT com
(972) 963-1400
________________________________________
From: Barr, Scott [mailto:Scott_Barr AT csgsystems DOT com]
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2003 1:05 PM
To: nv-l AT lists.us.ibm DOT com
Subject: RE: [nv-l] Windows Clusters
I am assuming the issue is you have is that SNMP discovery finds the second
non-pingable interface. What is probably happening is you have more than
one
server with the 192 address (based on my experience it is 192.168.254.253
-seems to pop up a lot). You unmanage the interface on one box and when
a
second box is discovered also with the 192,168 interface it deletes the
first one. The config polls suddenly find it again and delete it from the
second box and add it to hte first box again - in a managed state not
unmanaged.
I would recommend two things - first use SNMP polling not ping polling.
This
way, the status of the second interface can be obtained. Second, force
your
server administrators to put a different address on each of servers that
have one of these interfaces. I am struggling with the same thing here
with
our Dell servers.
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-nv-l-digest AT lists.us.ibm DOT com
[mailto:owner-nv-l-digest AT lists.us.ibm DOT com]On Behalf Of
CMazon AT commercebankfl DOT com
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2003 10:42 AM
To: nv-l AT lists.us.ibm DOT com
Subject: [nv-l] Windows Clusters
Win2k/Netview 7.1.3. FP1 / SQL2000,
Hi list,
Maybe someone can shed some light for me. We have 3 Microsoft clusters
with
several nic cards. One nic in each server is configured with an ip that
are
not pingable (192.168.X.X) for the cluster heartbeat. Is there a way to
prevent Netview from discovering these interfaces? I have them in
the
exclude list of the seed file and I tried to unmanage them, but somehow
Netview continues to manage these interfaces on its own.
Has anyone come accross this problem before?
Also, is there any consultant on this list located in Miami, FL please
email
me directly. (Sorry for posting this here.)
Carlos
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