61-3
Software Configuration Guide—Release 15.0(2)SG
OL-23818-01
Chapter 61 Configuring RMON Configuring RMON
Alarm (RMON group 3)—Monitors a specific MIB object for a specified interval, triggers an alarm
at a specified value (rising threshold), and resets the alarm at another value (falling threshold).
Alarms can be used with events; the alarm triggers an event, which can generate a log entry or an
SNMP trap.
Event (RMON group 9)—Determines the action to take when an event is triggered by an alarm. The
action can be to generate a log entry or an SNMP trap.
Because switches supported by Cisco IOS Release 12.2(31)SG use hardware counters for RMON data
processing, the monitoring is more efficient, and little processing power is required.
Configuring RMON
This section describes how to configure RMON on your switch. It contains this configuration
information:
Default RMON Configuration, page 61-3
Configuring RMON Alarms and Events, page 61-3
Configuring RMON Collection on an Interface, page 61-5

Default RMON Configuration

RMON is disabled by default; no alarms or events are configured.
Only RMON 1 is supported on the switch.

Configuring RMON Alarms and Events

You can configure your switch for RMON by using the command-line interface (CLI) or an
SNMP-compatible network management station. We recommend that you use a generic RMON console
application on the network management station (NMS) to take advantage of RMON’s network
management capabilities. You must also configure SNMP on the switch to access RMON MIB objects.
For more information, see Chapter 54, “Configuring SNMP.