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Well we have setup the service but when
the CPU goes over 60% the node goes down (Red Icon), which we do not want. I
am wondering what other people have done. Kevin Fradley From: Michael Krygeris
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] I think what Kevin needs is the info on
how to setup the SNMP service. Kevin, Here is a link that will
explain everything. http://www.ipswitch.com/Support/WhatsUp/guide/v800/6servicesa3.html#18237 -----Original Message----- When the server goes over
50% how do you get alerted? And do you know what the CPU was for it? Kevin Fradley From: Matt
Vavra [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Here is what worked for
us. Go into Configure->Monitors and Services. You will see a list of
services. Select New, give it a name and select SNMP Monitoring for the service
type. The object id will be your OID number. Under Check it for: we used a
range of values. In our case we set the low for 0 and the high for 50. Leave
the test for option set to 1. Now when you setup you
object, go into services and add your newly created service. We setup our
trigger to 5 minutes under the alerts so if our server has been > 50%
utilization for more than 5 minutes, we get alerted. We only scan once a minute
for this. For anyone that is
interested, the OIDs we use for CPU 1 through 4 are listed below. This worked
on Dell W2K3 blade servers. Should work the same for your router but you
will need to use a different OID. 1.3.6.1.2.1.25.3.3.1.2.1 1.3.6.1.2.1.25.3.3.1.2.2 1.3.6.1.2.1.25.3.3.1.2.3 1.3.6.1.2.1.25.3.3.1.2.4 Hope this helps, Matt From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Kevin Fradley Now how do I get alerted
if the threshold I setup gets passed (over 60%)? In WUP all I see if that
the node goes in a down state, that is not what I want, any ideas?
Thanks. Kevin Fradley From: Michael
Krygeris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sure you can, It's pretty
easy to setup an SNMP monitor in WUG. You just need to find the right OID. The standard OID used for
cisco gear is 1.3.6.1.4.1.9.2.1.57.0 Try this out as an SNMP
service applied to your router. You can define triggers to do what you want it to
do. You can't get all the values for the threshold period unless you setup more
intensive CPU monitoring through WUG. -----Original Message----- Well we
have WUP/WUG cant it do it with those programs? Kevin Fradley From: Mike
Patterson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Hi
Kevin, WUP/WUG
will check it every polling interval (default = 60 seconds). If you want
to do something like 3 out of 4 polls over a 20 minute interval, you can do it
with Denika for WhatsUp: It also
provides graphical trends of the data over time. Have
fun, Michael
Patterson (207)324-8805
x222 [EMAIL PROTECTED] -----Original Message----- In WUP or WUG, what is the best way to monitor CPU
via SNMP? I want to get alerted when Cisco Router goes
over 60% for a certain period of time and have that value displayed if I could,
any ideas? Thanks. Kevin Fradley Help Desk Specialist II GCI SchoolAccess 868-5697 Direct 1-888-254-2858 Toll Free |
Title: CPU Monitoring
- [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Kevin Fradley
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Mike Patterson
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Kevin Fradley
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Michael Krygeris
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Kevin Fradley
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Matt Vavra
- Re: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Cody Jones
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Kevin Fradley
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Michael Krygeris
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Mike Patterson
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Kevin Fradley
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Matt Vavra
- RE: [WhatsUp Forum] CPU Monitoring Kevin Fradley
