Specifications

Chapter 15: Advanced Administration
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4. To identify the SNMP agent running on CC-SG to a third-party
enterprise Management Solutions, provide agent information under
Agent Configuration. Type a Port for the agent (default is 161). Type
a Read-Only Community string (default is public) and Read-Write
Community string (default is private). Multiple community strings are
allowed; separate them with a comma. Type a System Contact,
System Name, and System Location to provide information regarding
the managed node.
5. Click Update Agent Configuration to save your changes.
6. Select the Enable SNMP Traps checkbox to enable sending SNMP
traps from CC-SG to a SNMP host.
7. Type the Trap Destination Host IP address and Port number used by
SNMP hosts in the Trap Destinations section. Default port is 162.
8. Type the Community string and Version (v1 or v2) used by SNMP
hosts in the Trap Destinations section.
9. Select the checkboxes before the traps you want CC-SG to push to
your SNMP hosts: Under Trap Sources, a list of SNMP traps
grouped into two different categories: System Log traps, which
include notifications for the status of the CC unit itself, such as a
hard disk failure, and Application Log traps for notifications
generated by events in the CC application, such as modifications to
a user account. To enable traps by type, select the boxes marked
System Log and Application Log. Individual traps can be enabled or
disabled by selecting their checkboxes. Use the checkbox inside the
Selected column header to enable all traps, or deselect all
checkboxes. Refer to the MIB files for the list of SNMP traps that are
provided. See MIB Files for details.
10. Click Add to add this destination host to the list of configured hosts.
There is no limit to the number of managers that can be set in this
list.
11. Click Update Trap Configuration to save your changes.
MIB Files
Because CC-SG pushes its own set of Raritan traps, you must update all
SNMP managers with a custom MIB file that contains Raritan SNMP trap
definitions. See SNMP Traps (on page 361). The custom MIB file can be
found on on the Raritan Support web site.