Administrator Guide

Table Of Contents
786 | SNMP Private MIB, SNMP Traps, System Events,
Error Codes
Dell Networking W-ClearPass Policy Manager 6.6 | User Guide
SNMP Trap Description and OID
n <cppmClusterServerIp> indicates the IP address of the
disabled node.
l OID: .1.3.6.1.4.1.14823.1.6.1.1.200.1009
cppmClusterNodeNSyncNotification l Indicates the W-ClearPass node in the cluster that is in the out-
of-sync state.
n <cppmClusterServerIp> indicates the IP address of the out-
of-sync node.
n <cppmClusterOutOfSyncMinutes> indicates the number of
minutes that the node has been out-of-sync.
l OID: .1.3.6.1.4.1.14823.1.6.1.1.200.1010
cppmClusterPwdChangedNotification l Indicates that the cluster password has been changed.
l OID: .1.3.6.1.4.1.14823.1.6.1.1.200.1011
cppmConfigReset l Indicates that the W-ClearPass node's configuration has been
reset.
l OID: .1.3.6.1.4.1.14823.1.6.1.1.200.1012
cppmConfigRestore l Indicates that the W-ClearPass node's configuration has been
restored.
l OID: .1.3.6.1.4.1.14823.1.6.1.1.200.1013
cppmUpdateNotification l Indicates that the CPPM node's installation has been updated.
l OID: .1.3.6.1.4.1.14823.1.6.1.1.200.1014
cppmUpgradeNotification l Indicates that the CPPM node's installation has been upgraded.
l OID: .1.3.6.1.4.1.14823.1.6.1.1.200.1015
cppmClusterLicenseUsage l Indicates the W-ClearPass cluster license utilization details.
n <clearpassServerApplicationName> indicates the name of
the application.
n <clearpassClusterLicenseTotalCount> indicates the
application's total cluster-wide license count.
n <clearpassClusterLicenseUsageCount> indicates the count of
the application's used cluster-wide licenses.
l OID: .1.3.6.1.4.1.14823.1.6.1.1.200.1016
Table 433: SNMP Traps Supported by the SNMP Private MIB (Continued)
SNMP Trap Details
W-ClearPass Policy Manager leverages native SNMP support from the UC Davis ‘net-SNMP’ MIB package to
send trap notifications for the following events.
In these trap OIDs, the value of X varies from 1 through N, depending on the number of process states that are
being checked. Details about specific OIDs associated with the processes are listed in this section.
For more information, see:
l SNMP Daemon Trap Events on page 787