HP Systems Insight Manager 7.0 Installation and Configuration Guide for Linux Abstract This document describes the installation and configuration of HP Systems Insight Manager. This document is intended for system administrators who plan to install and use HP SIM. It is helpful to have previous experience with Systems Insight Manager and a Linux operating system.
© Copyright 2004–2012 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Legal Notices Confidential computer software. Valid license from HP required for possession, use or copying. Consistent with FAR 12.211 and 12.212, Commercial Computer Software, Computer Software Documentation, and Technical Data for Commercial Items are licensed to the U.S. Government under vendor's standard commercial license. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice.
Contents 1 Installation overview and requirements..........................................................5 First time install process overview................................................................................................5 Upgrade overview....................................................................................................................5 System requirements..................................................................................................................
Implementation..................................................................................................................45 Configuring task results...........................................................................................................45 8 Troubleshooting........................................................................................47 9 Support and other resources......................................................................
1 Installation overview and requirements This chapter provides an overview of the HP Systems Insight Manager installation process, and it identifies the system requirements for a Linux CMS, a managed system, and a network client. First time install process overview Perform these steps for a first time install of HP Systems Insight Manager on your CMS: 1. Install and configure the CMS. For details, see “Installing HP SIM on the CMS for the first time” (page 23). 2.
• SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 x86, SP4 • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 AMD64/EM64T, SP4 • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 x86, SP3 • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 AMD64/EM64T, SP3 NOTE: HP SIM can run on a Linux Virtual Machine (VM) provided the following requirements are met. The VM must be hosted on an ESX 3.0.
Hardware • Any HP IA-32 AMD64 or EM64T system with the following configuration: ◦ Minimum: 1.5-GHz processor and 1 GB RAM ◦ Recommended: 2.4-GHz processor and 2 GB RAM • Any HP system with Oracle 9i installed minimum 4 GB RAM • Free disk space: ◦ 2 MB for CMS (/) ◦ 400 MB for the CMS and DTF agent (/opt) ◦ 500 MB minimum recommended for data (/var/opt) Software • General: ◦ OpenSSH version 1.0 or later ◦ ProLiant Support Pack for Linux 7.
Part 2: Managed system requirements and recommendations Operating systems 8 Installation overview and requirements
• Windows managed systems ◦ Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard, Server Core, SP1 ◦ Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise, Server Core, SP1 ◦ Windows Server 2008 Standard, Server Core, SP2 ◦ Windows Server 2008 Enterprise, Server Core, SP2 ◦ Windows Storage Server 2008 R2 Standard, SP1 ◦ Windows Storage Server 2008 R2 Enterprise, SP1 ◦ Windows Storage Server 2008 R2 Standard ◦ Windows Storage Server 2008 R2 Enterprise ◦ Windows Server 2008 Standard ◦ Windows Server 2008 Enterprise ◦ Windows S
◦ Windows Server 2008 Enterprise (x64), SP2 ◦ Windows Server 2008 Enterprise (x64) ◦ Windows Server 2008 Data Center, SP2 ◦ Windows Server 2008 Small Business Server, SP2 ◦ Windows Server 2008 Web Ed, SP2 ◦ Windows Server 2008 Itanium-based, SP2 ◦ Windows Storage Server 2008 ◦ Windows 2003 R2 Standard ◦ Windows 2003 R2 Standard (x64) ◦ Windows 2003 R2 Standard, SP2 ◦ Windows 2003 R2 Standard (x64), SP2 ◦ Windows 2003 R2 Enterprise ◦ Windows 2003 R2 Enterprise (x64) ◦ Windows 2
• • ◦ Windows 2003 Data Center (IA64), SP2 ◦ Windows 2003 Web Edition SP1 ◦ Windows 2003 Web Edition SP2 ◦ Windows Small Business Server 2011 Standard ◦ Windows Small Business Server 2011 Essentials ◦ Windows 7 (Professional/Enterprise) ◦ Windows 7 (Professional/Enterprise) (x64) ◦ Windows Vista (Business/Enterprise) SP2 ◦ Windows Vista (Business/Enterprise) (x64) SP2 HP-UX and HP NonStop Kernel managed systems ◦ HP-UX 11i v1 (11.11) ◦ HP-UX 11i v2 Update 2 (11.
◦ Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.
• ◦ SUSE Enterprise Linux 10 x86, SP4 ◦ SUSE Enterprise Linux 10 AMD64/EM64T, SP4 ◦ SUSE Enterprise Linux 10 IPF, SP3 ◦ SUSE Enterprise Linux 10 x86, SP3 ◦ SUSE Enterprise Linux 10 AMD64/EM64T, SP3 ◦ Debian 5.5 VMware managed systems ◦ VMWare ESX 5.0 ◦ VMWare ESX/ESXi 4.1 Update1 ◦ VMWare ESX/ESXi 4.1 Update2 ◦ VMWare ESXi 4.0 Update 2 ◦ VMWare ESXi 4.0 Update 3 ◦ VMWare ESX 4.0 Update3 ◦ VMWare ESXi 4.0 Update 3 ◦ VMWare ESX 3i Update 5 ◦ VMWare ESX 4.
• • • ◦ Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2 Hyper-V running guest Windows ◦ Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008 SP2 running guest Windows ◦ Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008 R2 SP1 running guest Windows ◦ Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008 R2 running guest Windows Novell managed systems ◦ Netware 6.5 ◦ Netware 6.
• WBEM/WMI • SNMP (recommended as an alternative to WBEM) For Linux: • SSH • ProLiant Support Pack for Linux 7.
3. Select the following additional libraries under Base System: • Compatibility libraries • Under Hardware Monitoring Utilities, the following must be selected ◦ • lm_sensor-3.1.1-10.el6- • Managed storage system To view the latest information regarding HP SIM support for a particular storage system, including Fibre Channel disk arrays, switches, tape libraries, or hosts (with Fibre Channel host bus adapters), see the HP SIM SMI-S Provider web page at http://www.hp.com/go/hpsim/providers.
Hardware support Table 1 Supported HP c-Class platforms Product Models Minimum Software Management firmware version BladeSystem c3000 2.00 or later BladeSystem c3000 Tower Model 2.10 or later BladeSystem c7000 1.30 or later Table 2 Supported HP e-Class platforms Product Models Minimum Software Management firmware version ProLiant BL 10e Enclosure NA Table 3 Supported HP p-Class platforms Product Models Minimum Software Management firmware version ProLiant p-Class 1U Power Enclosure 2.
Table 4 Supported c-Class Servers (continued) Product Models Minimum BIOS — System ROM required Operating Systems Supported1 Minimum ProLiant Support Pack (PSP) required Windows ProLiant BL465c G5 9/12/2008 1.70 Windows Server 2003 and 2008, Linux, Solaris, and VMWare ESX Server 8.15 ProLiant BL480c 5/1/2007 1.24 or later Windows and Linux 7.50 or later ProLiant BL490c G6 I21 2/23/09 1.75 Windows and Linux 8.20 ProLiant BL495c G6 A14 05/07/2009 1.78 Windows 2003, 8.
Table 4 Supported c-Class Servers (continued) Product Models Minimum BIOS — System ROM required Minimum Integrated Lights-Out (iLO) / iLO 2 / iLO 3 / iLO 4 firmware version required Operating Systems Supported1 Minimum ProLiant Support Pack (PSP) required Windows ProLiant BL490c G7 I28 2011/01/29 iLO 3 Microsoft Windows PSP 8.7 Server Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) Solaris VMware Citrix XenServer ProLiant BL620c G7 I25 7/9/2010 iLO 3 Microsoft Windows PSP 8.
Table 5 Supported Servers HP Consolidated Client Infrastructure (CCI) (continued) Product Models Minimum BIOS — System ROM required Minimum Integrated Lights-Out (iLO) / iLO 2 / iLO 3 / iLO 4 firmware version required Operating Systems Supported1 Minimum ProLiant Support Pack (PSP) required Windows firmware version required ProLiant BL1000 2.04 A 4.01 Rev. A2 Windows Windows XP NA Windows XP or Vista NA Windows XP or Vista NA Windows XP or Vista NA 15 Jan 2008 ProLiant BL1500 1.02 Rev.
Table 7 Supported p-Class Servers (continued) Product Models ProLiant BL20p G4 Minimum BIOS — System ROM required 2007.11.13 (A) Minimum Integrated Lights-Out (iLO) / iLO 2 / iLO 3 / iLO 4 firmware version required Operating Systems Supported1 Minimum ProLiant Support Pack (PSP) required Windows 1.24 or later Windows and Linux 7.50 or later 1.70 or later Windows and Linux 7.20 or later 1.24 or later Windows and Linux 7.60 or later 1.88 or later Windows and Linux 1.
Table 8 Supported c-Class Interconnects/Switches (continued) Product Models Minimum Software Management firmware version HP GbE2c Ethernet Blade Switch for HP 2.0.4 HP GbE2c Layer 2/3 Ethernet Blade Switch 2.0.4 HP Virtual Connect Flex-10 10Gb Ethernet Module for BladeSystem c-Class 2.25 HP Virtual Connect 8Gb Fibre Channel Module (24-port) NA Brocade 8Gb SAN Switch for HP BladeSystem c-Class NA HP NC382m Dual Port 1GbE BL-c Adapter Boot code version 4.4.14 and MBA version 4.4.
2 Installing HP SIM on the CMS for the first time Preparing the system Perform step 1 for a first time install of HP SIM on your CMS. 1. Install and configure the CMS. 2. Install and configure the required management software on the systems that will be managed by the CMS. For details, see “Setting up managed systems” (page 32). 3. Configure HP SIM for your environment. For more information, see “Configuring HP SIM” (page 35).
chmod +x HPSIM*.bin 6. Verify that the following required software dependencies are available on your system, and install any that are not already installed. a. Verify that SSH is installed by executing the following command: rpm -qa | grep ssh If SSH is not installed, the previous command does not return any results. Install SSH from your Linux operating system CD before continuing with the HP SIM installation. b.
NOTE: After installation is complete, log out of the operating system and then log back in to set all the correct file permissions and system environments. NOTE: HP Linux VCRM is automatically installed along with HP SIM, only if HP SMH is already installed on the CMS. IF HP SMH is not pre-installed, then Linux CVRM installation is skipped and the following message is displayed at the command prompt: Skipping HP Version Control Repository Manager (VCRM) installation as HPSMH is not found on the system.
c. d. Select the checkbox, save the changes, and then start the service. To start hpsmdb by using the command line, execute the following command: /etc/rc.d/init.d/hpsmdb start Or /etc/init.d/hpsmdb start • For SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 SP2 or later: a. View the status by executing the following command: /etc/init.d/postgresql status b. Configure hpsmdb to run during startup by executing the following command: chkconfig hpsmdb 345 c.
Host: Enter the IP address or host name of the Oracle server. Port [1521]: Enter the same port number, then press Enter. Database name: Enter your database name. Username: Enter the username of your database. Password: Enter the password of your database. Oracle driver jar file: Enter the full location of the Oracle jar file. Force [N]: Press Enter.
NOTE: The initialization of the upgrade is done in the background, which takes several minutes. To verify if the upgrade is 100% complete, view the file by executing the following command: more /var/opt/mx/logs/initconfig.log NOTE: After upgrading from a previous version of HP SIM, if you notice a pre-existing collection returning an unexpected result, and HP SIM has not been restarted since the upgrade, then stopping and restarting the HP SIM service should resolve this problem. 5.
6. Optional: Configure the system to send SNMP traps. NOTE: These steps might vary slightly, depending on your version of Linux. Refer to your Linux provider for details if these file paths and file names do not exist on your system. a. Verify that SNMP is installed by executing the following command: rpm -qa | grep snmp If SNMP is not installed, the previous command does not return a components list. Refer to your Linux provider for information on installing SNMP. b.
If the line is not present, enter the CMS to the read-only community manually by adding the line: rocommunity CommunityName IPaddress where CommunityName is the SNMP community string used by the CMS and IPaddress is the IP address of the CMS. iii. Save the changes to the file. To save and close this file using the vi editor, press the Esc key, enter :wq!, and press the Enter key. f. Start the SNMP daemon by executing the following command: /etc/init.d/snmpd start g.
Linux VCRM is a non-interactive RPM. Instead of prompting for a user input, it only prints a message instructing users on how to configure it. To configure HP Linux VCRM, run the vcrepositoryconfig.sh script as a 'root' user. The script is available at the location: /opt/hp/vcrepository/etc/. Run the script with —R or —r option to enable the repository feature and set the repository folder.
3 Setting up managed systems Perform step 2 to install and configure the required management software. 1. Install and configure the CMS. For more information, see “Installing HP SIM on the CMS for the first time” (page 23). 2. Install and configure the required Insight Management Agent on the systems that will be managed by the CMS. 3. Configure HP SIM for your environment. For more information, see “Configuring HP SIM” (page 35).
Configuring SMI-S providers Occasionally, it might be necessary to modify an SMI-S provider's port number or password. Use the provider documentation to perform these modifications. For example, if two CIMOMs exist on the same host, you must configure them to use different ports to communicate with the CMS.
• libXcursor-1.1.10-2.el6.i686.rpm • fontconfig-2.8.0-3.el6.i686.rpm • expat-2.0.1-9.1.el6.i686.rpm • expect-5.44.1.15-2.el6..rpm • zlib-1.2.3-25.el6.i686.rpm • libstdc++-4.4.4-13.el6.i686.rpm • net-snmp-5.5-27.el6..rpm In addition, the build directory for RPMs built from source has changed depending on the name of the user building them. Under RHEL 6, the directory is /root/rpmbuild/RPMS/, if the user is logged in as root.
4 Configuring HP SIM Perform step 3 to configure HP SIM for your environment. 1. Install and configure the CMS. For more information, see “Installing HP SIM on the CMS for the first time” (page 23). 2. Install and configure the required Insight Management Agent on the systems that will be managed by the CMS. For more information, see “Setting up managed systems” (page 32). 3. Configure HP SIM for your environment.
• Configure Managed Systems Configure managed systems as they are discovered, by configuring WBEM and WMI, SNMP, SSH access, and trust relationship. • WBEM/WMI Mapper Proxy To retrieve managed system information on Windows systems, enter the mapper proxy system host name and port number. NOTE: • This page only appears if you selected to manage a Windows operating system.
It is important that you plan which systems each user is going to manage and which specific set of tools the users are authorized to execute against the managed systems. A user with no toolbox authorizations on a system cannot view or manage that system. Authorizations are additive. If a user is authorized on Toolbox1 on a system and is also authorized for Toolbox2 on the same system, the user is authorized for all tools in both Toolbox1 and Toolbox2 on that system.
2. Optional: Configure the system to send SNMP traps. NOTE: These steps might vary slightly, depending on your version of Linux. See your Linux provider for details if these file paths and file names do not exist on your system. a. Verify that SNMP is installed: rpm -qa | grep snmp If it is not installed, see your Linux provider for information on installing SNMP. b.
5 Upgrading from HP SIM This chapter provides the steps to upgrade HP SIM 5.3.1 and later. Before beginning the HP SIM upgrade, verify that your user name and password to access to the database are valid. When you perform and upgrade, HP SIM checks for a previous installation of HP SIM, stops HP SIM and all related services and daemons, overwrites or copies files to the appropriate locations on the CMS, and then restarts HP SIM and all related services.
c. d. Select the checkbox, save the changes, and then start the service. To start hpsmdb by using the command line, execute the following command: /etc/rc.d/init.d/hpsmdb start Or /etc/init.d/hpsmdb start • For SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 SP2 or later: a. View the status by executing the following command: /etc/init.d/postgresql status b. Configure hpsmdb to run during startup by executing the following command: chkconfig hpsmdb 345 c.
7. Complete the upgrade by restarting the HP SIM daemons using mxstop and mxstart. HP SIM is now installed and initialized on the CMS. To browse to HP SIM, start the HP SIM graphical user interface (GUI) using Firefox, or Internet Explorer at http://:280/. 8. After upgrading to HP SIM 5.x, sign in to HP SIM, and run the Daily Device Identification task to ensure that all your associations are updated correctly.
6 Uninstalling HP SIM Uninstalling HP SIM from a Linux system CAUTION: Removing HP SIM permanently deletes the information in the database unless you back it up before removing the software. Procedure 6 Removing HP SIM 1. Stop the HP SIM daemons: /opt/mx/bin/mxstop 2. Verify that the daemons are no longer running: ps -ef | grep mx If any of the HP SIM daemons are running, record the PID and kill the process: kill -9 pid where pid is the PID of the daemon. For example, kill -9 3456 3.
7 Configuration options Several configurable parameters in HP SIM that are not available from the GUI. These parameters can only be configured by editing a configuration file on the CMS. NOTE: All HP SIM parameters have been set to predefined values that are appropriate for most situations. These parameters should only be changed if you are experiencing issues with the default values. There are two main default locations where configuration files are stored.
Monitor time-out policy The monitor time-out policy keeps sessions alive, provided the user has a web browser window open displaying the Systems Insight Manager GUI. Closing the browser or navigating to another web page starts the timer for the time-out period. The default time-out period is 20 minutes. Users must use some other means to protect an unattended session from illegal use, such as password-protected screen savers.
Implementation Changes made to the log.properties file do not take effect until the log manager daemon or service is restarted. Restart the Systems Insight Manager service. CAUTION: The queue size should be changed only with extreme care. If the queue is set too high, the log manager consumes too much system memory. NOTE: When the Audit Log file reaches the maximum file size, the log is renamed with MX_LOGROLLFILEEXT extension and a new file is started.
Tools in this category have no task output, have task output that is saved outside of Systems Insight Manager, or have task results that are unlikely to be of long-term interest. Tasks for all other tools are considered long-term. Frequently scheduled tasks Task results can also be removed from the Task Results Page if a certain number of task results for a scheduled task accumulate. This setting defaults to 10 instances of a single task.
8 Troubleshooting Q Q Q Q Q & & & & & A A A A A 8.1 “Browser issues” 8.2 “GUI issues” 8.3 “Installation issues” 8.4 “Sign in issues” 8.5 “GUI issues” 8.1 Browser issues 8.8.1.1 Accessing some of the menu items on a Linux CMS causes the page to go blank. Solution: If using Firefox and this happens, click back on the displayed page, and the menus will be refreshed. 8.2 GUI issues 8.8.2.1 8.8.2.
Starting PostgreSQLpg_ctl: postmaster does not start...failed No PostgreSQL RPM Solution: Manually start the PostgreSQL service by performing the following steps: Procedure 9 Manually starting the PostgreSQL service 1. Navigate to the /etc/init.d directory and execute the following command: ./postgresql stop 2. 3. Log in as user postgres (su postgres). Execute the following command: postmaster -D /usr/local/pgsql/data The postmaster and PostgreSQL start. 4. Run mxinitconfig -a.
and click the Connections tab. Click LAN Settings, and if you are configured to use a proxy server, click Advanced. In the Exceptions list, you can specify a list of addresses that should bypass the proxy server. These addresses are no longer in the Internet Zone and are not affected by the privacy settings policy. Solution 2B: (Not Recommended) Change the browser privacy security policy setting. From the Internet Explorer browser menu, select Tools→Internet Options, and click the Privacy tab.
9 Support and other resources Information to collect before contacting HP Be sure to have the following information available before you contact HP: • Software product name • Hardware product model number • Operating system type and version • Applicable error message • Third-party hardware or software • Technical support registration number (if applicable) How to contact HP Use the following methods to contact HP technical support: • In the United States, see the Customer Service / Contact HP U
HP authorized resellers For the name of the nearest HP authorized reseller, see the following sources: • In the United States, see the HP U.S. service locator web site: http://www.hp.com/service_locator • In other locations, see the Contact HP worldwide web site: http://welcome.hp.com/country/us/en/wwcontact.html Documentation feedback HP welcomes your feedback. To make comments and suggestions about product documentation, send a message to:docsfeedback@hp.
computer output Text displayed by the computer. Enter The name of a keyboard key. Note that Return and Enter both refer to the same key. A sequence such as Ctrl+A indicates that you must hold down the key labeled Ctrl while pressing the A key. term Defined use of an important word or phrase. variable The name of an environment variable, for example PATH or errno. value A value that you may replace in a command or function, or information in a display that represents several possible values.
Glossary A administrative rights user A user who is authorized for the All Tools toolbox on all systems, including the Central Management Server. This type of user has been given special privileges to administer the HP Systems Insight Manager software. administrator A user who manages users, resource pools, and self-service requests through infrastructure orchestration console. agent A program that regularly gathers information or performs some other service without the user's immediate presence.
central processing unit polling rate The rate for how often the Cluster Monitor CPU Resource checks CPU utilization as reported by Insight Management Agent on monitored systems. certificate An electronic document that contains a subject's public key and identifying information about the subject. The certificate is signed by a certificate authority (CA) to bind the key and subject identification together. See also certificate authority.
critical status A state generated when HP Systems Insight Manager can no longer communicate with a managed system. custom tools Custom tools are tools that can be created by the user to run on the Central Management Server or on target systems. For example: • Remote tool A tool that runs on selected target systems. It might copy files to the target systems or run specific X-Window applications on the target systems. You can schedule this tool. • CMS tool A tool that runs on the CMS.
edit collection To modify existing collections to add or remove search criteria. enclosure A physical container for a set of server blades. It consists of a backplane that routes power and communication signals and additional hardware for cabling and thermal issues. It also hosts the CPU or server power supplies. event Information sent to certain users that something in the managed environment has changed. Events are generated from SNMP traps.
performance management, and workload management enable systems administrators to pick the value added software required to deliver complete lifecycle management of their hardware assets. HP Insight Control database The database that stores vital information about HP Systems Insight Manager, including users, systems, and toolboxes. HP Insight Control performance management A software solution that detects, analyzes, and explains hardware bottlenecks on HP ProLiant servers.
infrastructure service A running configuration of infrastructure resources that is designed to run a business application such as a multi-tier web application. It is also referred to as a service or service instance.
manual discovery techniques Processes that enable you to bypass a full discovery for the following tasks: • Adding a single system • Editing the system • Creating or importing an HP Systems Insight Manager database hosts file • Creating or importing generic hosts files Microsoft Clustering Service status page A page that summarizes cluster status as defined by Microsoft Cluster Server and lists the status and values of MSCS-defined cluster attributes.
provisioning The process of creating a service from a template. Through the Insight Orchestration Self-Service Portal or the Insight Orchestration console, a user submits a request to create the service and Insight Orchestration controller searches its inventory allocating the computing resources to all logical resource definitions in the template. R rack A set of components cabled together to communicate between themselves. A rack is a container for an enclosure.
server, so clients can be assured they are communicating with the server it claims to be. It is application protocol independent. secure task execution A feature of HP Systems Insight Manager that securely executes a task from a managed system. STE ensures that the user requesting the task has the appropriate rights to perform the task, and encrypts the request to protect data from snooping.
SMI-S provider An industry-standard WBEM provider that implements a well defined interface for storage management. The manufacturers of host bus adapters (HBAs), switches, tape libraries, and storage arrays can integrate SMI-S providers with their systems, or provide them as separate software packages. See also Web Based Enterprise Management. SNMP communication setting Default SNMP community string used when communicating with systems supporting SNMP communications.
system health status This is aggregate status all of the status sources (which can be SNMP, WBEM, and HTTP) that are supported on a target system, with the most critical status being displayed. The following are the different system health statuses that can be displayed: • Critical HP Systems Insight Manager can no longer communicate with the system. The system was previously discovered but cannot be pinged.
number in a column is a hyperlink to a more detailed list of systems, which displays the systems that correspond to the number in the overview. system properties properties can be set for a single system or for multiple systems at the same time and include options such as system name, system type, system sub-type, operating system version, asset number, contact information, and whether or not the system properties can be changed or updated by the discovery process.
type The classification of a system, which identifies it as a standard system type. The system types are client, cluster, portable, printer, remote access device, repeater, router, server, switch, unknown, workstation, and other. U uncleared event status Events that have a Critical, Major, Minor, Normal, or Informational severity and have not been cleared or deleted from the database. Events can be cleared without being deleted from the database by using the Clear events menu option. • Critical.
Web Based Enterprise Management This industry initiative provides management of systems, networks, users, and applications across multiple vendor environments. WBEM simplifies system management, providing better access to software and hardware data that is readable by WBEM client applications. Web-Based Enterprise Services A tool suite that is aimed at preventing or reducing the downtime of a system. Web-launch aware A run type for tools that are launched in a web browser using a web server.
Index A active time-out, 43 audit log configure, 44 C Central Management Server Linux system preparation, 23 central management server installing HP SIM on Linux, 24 requirements, 5 configuration audit log, 44 data collection CPU utilization, 43 lifetimes for Task Result entries, 45 managed system, 32 time-out policy, 43 configuration options, 43 configuring first time wizard, 35 HP Systems Insight Manager, 35 managed systems, 35 CPU utilization, 43 customization options, 43 D data collection performance,
U Uninstall Central Management Server removing HP SIM on Linux, 42 upgrading HP SIM overview, 39 process, 39 68 Index