HP 445 manual Managed Objects, Which protocols and services are enabled. The names

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How To Use the Network Control Language (NCL) Commands To Manage a Router

Accessing the Management Information Base

slot number depends on which slot contains the desired MIB activity information.

 

 

Managed Objects

 

 

 

 

“Managed objects”, such as ‘‘buf’’ describe varioius resources in the

 

 

router. Which managed objects currently reside in the router depends on

 

 

which protocols and services are enabled. The names of the

 

 

highest-level objects accessible through the router’s console using NCL

 

 

are listed in the “Managed Objects Table”, below. These are the heads of

 

 

branches, leading in some number of levels to single MIB variables.

 

 

 

 

N o t e

 

Most of the objects listed in the following table are available in all HP

 

 

routers. Certain objects are not available in all models. Some objects are

 

 

active only when the service to which they apply has been configured in

 

 

the router. For example, the ‘‘at’’ object for the AppleTalk routing service

 

 

is active only if AppleTalk has been configured.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Managed Objects Table

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Managed Object

Name

 

 

Alarms (uses slot #)

alarm

 

 

AppleTalk router

at

 

 

AppleTalk router MIB

atmib

 

 

Bridge

lb

 

 

Bridge address table

lbmib

 

 

Buffers (uses slot #)

buf

 

 

Chassis information base

chassis

 

 

Circuits

cct

 

 

Configuration

config

 

 

Data link services

dls

 

 

DECnet router

drs

 

 

DECnet routing table

decnet

 

 

Device drivers (uses slot #)

driver

 

 

Event log information base

log

 

 

Experimental MIB (for future use)

exmib

 

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Page 107
Image 107
HP 445 manual Managed Objects, Which protocols and services are enabled. The names