On 1/27/11 9:41 AM, Randy Baker wrote:
> (1) 01/27 09:27:34 **** Probe of device 'g4f3afb9-r6' set to
> non-polling. -Have you forgotten to import the probe? Importing the missing
> probe would restore the chart data.
>
> How do I locate the map or device g4f3afb9-r6? I have tried "Edit/Find
> device" with no luck.
>
> In regards to question 1, I found a probe in
> /var/local/InterMapper_Settings/Maps (Deleted) and in Maps (Backup) with the
> names of g4f3afb9-__0 and g4f3afb9-__1. I could not find a map with part of
> this name in the Maps directory. I cannot locate any file with the name of
> g4f3afb9-r6.
There should be a map which begins with g4f3afb9 in the Maps folder. If
you're not seeing it there, perhaps it's been moved to the Maps
(Disabled) folder for some reason?
One easy-ish way to find out what device r6 refers to is to export the
device info to a file:
To export devices:
1. In the GUI or InterMapper RemoteAccess, open the map you’re
interested in.
2. Choose File->Export->Data File...
3. In the export dialog that appears, for “Table”, choose “Devices”.
4. For “Fields”, click on Id, Name, Address, Probe Type and any other
information you feel may help you identify individual routers.
5. Click “Add” to move them to the “Field Export Order” box.
6. Grab the fields in the “Field Export Order” box and move them up or
down to change the order.
7. Once they are in the right order, click “Export”.
8. Enter a useful filename and click “Save”. If you look at the
resulting file in Excel or a similar tool, you will see name-id pairs
such as:
RT.dartware.com. g4c855b97-r74
This means that the device named “RT.dartware.com” is on the map with
the graph ID “g4c855b97” and has an ID of “r74” within that map. By
looking for r6 in the export of the appropriate map, you should be able
to determine which device it is.
An additional hint is that on the map, the device will be in the Unknown
state.
Now, I realize that you're having trouble finding the map, and that
until you do, this won't help.
> (2) 01/27 09:27:33 dbug Dell_SysMng.Rev_1_1.my: Invalid Probe Name.
> 01/27 09:27:33 dbug snmp-res.my: Invalid Probe Name.
>
> Why are these probe names invalid? I have three MIB's that end in .my and
> only two appear in the debug list. I have other MIBs with dashes and
> underscores in their name, as well as mixed case and multiple periods.
>
The message you're seeing is not saying that the file name is
invalid--it's saying that the probe file doesn't contain any
<probe_name> entry in the <header>. Any file in the Probes directory is
assumed to be a probe file.
Have you created custom probes that use these MIBs? If so, then the MIBs
go in the "MIB Files" folder. If you use the GUI to import them as MIBs,
they should go in the right place.
-- Christopher
--
=================================
Christopher L. Sweeney
Director of Software Development
Dartware, LLC
+1 603 643-9600 x104
http://dartware.com/
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