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Need a report listing custom properties and their uses

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I need to delete a number of custom properties from my database, but I do not want to do it until I have an idea of how those CPs are being used. So, how would I create a report showing the views, groups, limitations, reports, alerts, etc where a CP is currently used?

 

Thanks for any help as I believe this will be a pretty hairy SQL job.


SolarWinds Agent using 2-3+ GB RAM

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We're noticing that the SolarWinds agent is consuming a significant amount of RAM on our servers.

In this instance, it's using over 3GB.

 

Restarting the agent does temporarily alleviate the issue. I'm thinking of running a scheduled task on all my servers to restart the agent daily, but that seems to be masking the problem.

Does anyone have any ideas on how to resolve this?

How to Copy a Canned Report Before Changing it

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rts

s copy
Hi,

 

I would like to be able to copy a canned report before I make little tweeks to it. I know there is a way, I just can't remember how. Can someone point me in the right direction?

 

Thank you - Pat

How to monitor Flow Control and MAC Pause frames on a Cisco Nexus 5000

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I have an issue on my SAN network which I believe is related to (or demonstrated by) the number of Flow Control pause frames I am seeing from our SAN. I am able to manually log into the Cisco Nexus switches and review these numbers, but I would love to use my SolarWinds environment to keep track of it for me.

 

I am looking to monitor the "Rx pause" counter from from the Show Interface command. The value is bold and in orange below:

 

HAM-C5596-01# sho int e1/15

Ethernet1/15 is up

<<<<< OUTPUT CUT >>>>>

  RX

    51558552145 unicast packets  37266133 multicast packets  1 broadcast packets

    51595818279 input packets  249281541741180 bytes

    38883830215 jumbo packets  0 storm suppression bytes

    0 runts  0 giants  2 CRC  0 no buffer

    2 input error  0 short frame  0 overrun   0 underrun  0 ignored

    0 watchdog  0 bad etype drop  0 bad proto drop  0 if down drop

    0 input with dribble  0 input discard

   1527935 Rx pause

<<<<< OUTPUT CUT >>>>>

 

Any advice on this would be helpful, thanks!

 

~Nick

Supressing Access Point (AP) Down Alert when the Controller is Down

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I have noticed for the AP's that I am monitoring via the Controller (All Cisco here), I get Down AP Alerts when the controllers goes down.

 

This comes first;

 

Device ******** (Wireless Controller) is showing Down Located at IP Address: 1.2.3.4 Alert Time: 8/25/2014 10:15:38 PM

******** (Wireless Controller) has stopped responding (Request Timed Out)

 

Then come all the AP's on that controller that do not respond, or show DOWN ... and all the AP Alerts ensue. Really All I need is the Controller down.    (Thin Wireless Access Point ABCDEFGH is Down , Alert Trigger Time : 8/25/2014 10:17:02 PM )   - comes after the controller down

How can you suppress the AP Alert when the controller goes down - when the AP's are not entered as Nodes?

So there is no Node to build the dependency. I am not seeing an option for controller is up type status on the AP Alert to squelch this.

 

As Picard would say, "Suggestions !?!"

Picard1.jpg

Monitor Cisco ISE appliance in SolarWinds

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So you wanna add your ISE appliance in SolarWInds and monitor it via SNMPv3. Sounds straight forward enough, right? Well, not so much.

 

Here’s how I got my ISE appliances added to SolarWinds.

 

First you need to access the CLI of your ISE appliance.

 

You can view SNMP info in the CLI using this command: sh run | inc snmp

 

You need to add in your SNMP if it isn’t already enabled.

Go into config mode then run:

snmp-server enable

 

Next you will need to know your ‘EngineID’. This is the EngineID in SolarWinds.

This can be found by going to your SolarWinds main server.

Open SolarWinds Database Manager

Drill down in the SolarWinds DB and look for “AllEngines”

Execute the query there and it will display your EngineID.

(Or you can run this as a SQL query: SELECT TOP 1000 * FROM [dbo].[AllEngines])

 

Once you have your EngineID you need to go back to your ISE CLI

Get back in enable mode and run:

snmp-server engineID 0x2

(this assumes your EngineID is ‘2’)

Your EngineID must be put in HEX format.

 

Next you need to enter in your SNMPv3 creds

snmp-server host [IP ADDRESS OF YOUR SW SERVER] version 3 [SNMPv3 USERNAME] 0x2 plain authpassword privpassword

(You can use hash instead of plain if you wish)

 

Also:

snmp-server user [SNMPv3 USERNAME] v3 plain authpassword privpassword

(Again, you can use hash instead of plain here)

 

So now you need to exit out of enable mode and wr mem

You may want to verify your edits by running sh run | inc snmp again

 

Once you have your creds in your ISE appliance(s), now we have to get them into SolarWinds.

 

Now, here’s the REAL trick.

Instead of manually ADDING the node into SolarWInds, you need to do a Network Discovery for your nodes.

You can run the discovery on just the IP address or range of IP’s your ISE appliances are on.

 

To do this, go to: Settings > Network Discovery

Click on ‘Add New Discovery’

Follow the wizard and do a scan on either the individual IP addresses of each node one at a time, or enter the IP subnet the appliances are on.

 

The discovery should pick up the appliances and add them as managed nodes using SNMPv3

 

I ran into this issue and had to open a ticket with Cisco TAC. We messed with this for far too long. We kept manually adding the nodes and they would fail to use SNMPv3. Once we did a network discovery, using the exact same creds, it just worked.

 

I hope this helps someone avoid the headache of getting your ISE appliances monitored by SolarWinds.

Cannot send a post JSON to elasticsearch, on a alert

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Outside of ORION,  the request is good.  We can post the same request whitout problem in a other editor (good url, good body).

 

We need to specify the header, to :" Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 ", but we don't understand how.

 

How do we set the headear parameter for a post (in the alert context)?

 

Context: When an alert occur, we want to send a post to elasticsearch.

Context: Send a message

A error occur.

An error occur

Weather Map across Different Geographical Locations

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Whether there is any Weather Map  can be inserted in dashboard across Different Geographical Locations


SolarWinds Two-Way integration with Ticketing Systems

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Hello

 

I have a couple of questions:

 

Q1:  Does Orion recommend (even unofficially) any fully automated (without manual coding) 3rd party tool that allows smooth Two-Way integration with Major Ticketing systems like :

- BMC:   Remedy

- HP:      ITSM /  HPSD / HPSM /HPSC,   etc ... ?

- CA:      IT Service Desk

 

Must guarantee closing Ticket when Node/Interface is Up without delay

 

Q2: If not, which one would you guys recommend ? Something that really works without push

 

Thank you

Group status pie charts

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Here's the source code/implementation for the pie chart version of the bullseye charts first mentioned in this discussion and later elaborated upon here.

 

Prequisites

  • You must know the Group ID of the group you wish to display in the chart. The easiest way to find this is to go to the details page for the group and get the group number from the end of the URL. E.g. if the URL is https://solarwinds.yourcompany.com/Orion/NetPerfMon/ContainerDetails.aspx?NetObject=C:69, the group ID is 69.
  • SQL Server 2012 or newer. If you have an older version of SQL Server, see the note about "Older versions of SQL Server" at the end of this document.

 

Installation

  1. Download and unzip the attached archive.
  2. Copy GroupMemberAggregateStatus.aspx and GroupMemberAggregateStatus.aspx.cs to <Solarwinds install volume>\InetPub\SolarWinds\Orion\NetPerfMon\ .

 

Implementation

  1. On your Solarwinds NOC view page, click "Customize Page" in the page's upper right corner.
  2. Add a new Custom HTML resource and save your changes.
  3. Find the new Custom HTML resource on the page and click the "EDIT" box in the resource's upper right corner.
  4. Fill in the Title and Subtitle fields as you wish and check the "Use synchronous loading" box.
  5. Copy and paste the HTML below into the (unlabeled) URL field.

    <iframe scrollbars="none" height="170px" width="100%" src="/Orion/NetPerfMon/GroupMemberAggregateStatus.aspx?ContainerID=GROUPID" ></iframe>

    Replace GROUPID in the URL with the ID number of the group you want to display. Your resource, when completely filled in, will look similar to this:
  6. Click "Submit" to save your changes.

 

Example of a single chart

Older versions of SQL Server

If your installation uses a version of SQL Server older than SQL Server 2012, you must edit GroupMemberAggregateStatus.aspx.cs. Find both instances of the string

concat('/Orion/NetPerfMon/ContainerDetails.aspx?NetObject=C:',C.ContainerID)

and replace it with

'/Orion/NetPerfMon/ContainerDetails.aspx?NetObject=C:'+cast(C.ContainerID as varchar)

This will continue to work after you upgrade to SQL Server 2012.

How does one create Advanced Dynamic alerts that report "confidence" about the state of a device or circuit that leverage routers' latency, loss of BGP Neighbor, Bandwidth utilization, etc.?

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I'd like to learn how to create alerts for when any remote router's latency reaches or exceeds 20% higher than its average latency.

 

It would be nice if the alert could be dynamic enough to only includes nodes whose names include certain characters (e.g.:  Node Name Contains "FRED" or "WILMA" or "PEBBLES").

 

I'm not finding a custom Dynamic alert building solution, but I believe one is present.  Can you help me with the basic steps?

 

 

 

If that was easy for you, let's get more advanced!  It would be excellent to discover more information and make it part of the alert to give it context and veracity.  Such an advanced alert should include:

  • BGP Neighbor information from the router on the other end of the circuit.  IF we have high latency, we might not have have BGP Neighbor loss.  Including that information in the alert seems like it's possible.  Is there a way for NPM to query logs on the near router and see if it has an entry about a BGP neighbor loss on the circuit facing the remote router?  IF it sees that loss, then one type of alert should go out.  If it DOESN'T see that loss, then a different kind of alert should go out.
  • The alert should be acknowledged within ten minutes.  If it's not acknowledged then it must be forwarded to a higher team member or supervisor or Manager.   I know I've seen this functionality in older versions of NPM.  Where does one find this option in the 12.2 or higher line?
  • How can we tie this into our LANDesk Service Desk (Web Help Desk) app to automatically create a new ticket and assign it to the right person or team via an API?
    • I have a backdoor method that leverages an e-mail sent to our Help Desk app.
    • If the alert sent an e-mail there, a ticket would automatically be created.  But it wouldn't be escalated there automatically, and it's not new and improved like using an API.  I'd like to learn that and make it part of the solution!
  • How can we tie bandwidth utilization into this, too?  If a pipe is full, the router won't lose BGP neighbor, and traffic's flowing, but ICMP may experience significant loss.
  • The alert should generate a NetPath or Traceroute output when latency is high so we can discover intermediary hops with problems.  It would be awesome if a map were included in the alert that highlights hops with signficant latency changes!

 

I searched through Thwack for the topic, but never found anything quite this advanced.  And yet it doesn't seem quite so advanced that it's out of the realm of NPM's capabilities.

 

This seems like NPM or VNQM or something in the SW product line should be able to do it.  Are there some folks with experience doing these things that can offer advice?  adatole, ding, serena, sqlrockstar either know how to do this, or they know who I can reach out to for guidance to get this done efficiently, I bet . . .

"Supported" Device

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What does it mean when a device is supported?

Example -
Check Point Software Technologies Ltd CheckPoint 15400 is now on the supported device list.
Will I get the same information as I would with a Cisco device
CPU, Memory Disk are the norm, but what about Model - Serial Number - Multiple CPUs

 

We have many device that are not Cisco but the basic information of those device is not available with out costume pollers via UnDP.

 

So again what does "supported" mean?

Getting an error while clicking on Edit Node.

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Hi,

I am getting an error when clicking on edit node " " Unexpected Website Error

The formatter threw an exception while trying to deserialize the message: There was an error while trying to deserialize parameter http://schemas.solarwinds.com/2008/Core:GetNodeWithOptionsResult. The InnerException message was 'Member '_compareInfo' was not found.'. Please see InnerException for more details"

I have traced the https packets and it is getting aborted. Can you please let me know what can be the reason for the same?

 

APE Error while editing Nodes Properties -The formatter threw an exception while trying to deserialize the message: There was an error while trying to deserialize parameter http://schemas.solarwinds.com/2008/Core:GetNodesByIdsResult. The InnerException me

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Hi team,

 

Need your help with the below mentioned error. It is popping up when editing nodes of Additional Poller.

 

The formatter threw an exception while trying to deserialize the message: There was an error while trying to deserialize parameter http://schemas.solarwinds.com/2008/Core:GetNodesByIdsResult. The InnerException message was 'Member '_compareInfo' was not found.'. Please see InnerException for more details

Orion Platform 2018.2 Improvements - Chapter Two - Intelligent Mapping

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As aLTeReGo mentioned in Orion Platform 2018.2 Improvements - Chapter One , we have lots of exciting things packed into this release.  It is my pleasure to present to you, the first step in the next generation of Orion mapping.  Now let me begin by prefacing that this is a MASSIVE project.  The functionality that you see here is an iteration of a new generation of mapping technology, and is not intended to be feature by feature replacement of any of our tools that provide mapping functionality today, for example, Network Atlas.  Our goal as we take on this endeavor is to find methods for building upon our dream of one mapping tool to rule them all, but provide you significant chunks of value along the way.  We need to first build the framework to accomplish this goal, yet we don't want to hold back something you may find useful in the interim.

 

 

Intelligent Mapping - What is it?

As environments grow in complexity, identifying a problem's root cause and impact tends to be just as complex.  Many of you are looking for a more intuitive way to aggregate and visualize that data in a simple manner that is meaningful for your environmentA function such as intelligent mapping in a monitoring tool can help alleviate much of the pain derived from combing through pages of data, and reviewing the details provided through individual resources piece by piece.  Understanding your needs and the problems you are trying to solve is fundamental in everything we do.  A major theme that emerged from our community is that everyone loves the idea of maps and sleek visualizations, the problem was, maintaining them.  Spending time in Network Atlas can yield some significant results, but time is not a luxury that many of us have.  If something changes, which it does constantly, you are forced to set aside more time to go mimic those changes in the map.  This presents and interesting challenge for SolarWinds, but also gave us a potential entry point....

 

With this project, we needed to first conceptualize what will be needed across all iterations, and where our starting point should be.  As alluded to before, tons of functionality exists today in tools like Network Atlas, the WorldMaps widget, and even through AppStack, that allow users to "visualize" their environments.  While these tools all have their unique capabilities inside the platform, we want to begin down the path of advancing those capabilities even further, and allow the power of the platform to shine.

 

The first step that needed to be taken was to obviously visualize the entities within Orion.  When I say entities, I am referring to any object monitored by Orion such as network devices, servers, interfaces, volumes, and so on...  The second similarly important factor is that we needed to visualize the connections between those entities.  Whether these connections are based on physical or logical relationships, this data is just as critical to quickly reflecting points of concern in your environment.

 

Orion Intelligent Mapping is an advanced troubleshooting tool that provides a contextual and graphical portrayal of an entity and its critical relationships.  In other words, this functionality will be available out-of-the-box for entities like your routers, switches, servers, interfaces, volumes, and even groups.  It visualizes the physical and logical relationships between them, leveraging data from Network Performance Monitor's Topology, Server & Application Monitor's Application Dependencies, and other relationship information, to quickly isolate and identify critical health and performance issues.

 

In this version, maps are made available by drilling into an entity details page as shown below.  What this means, is that when you upgrade to any product containing the 2018.2 Core, and drill into an entity details page, there will be a sub-view that is provided for you called "Map".  Clicking on that view will obviously generate... wait for it... a map!

 

 

 

Our number one goal was that maps require absolutely no user intervention, and are updated automatically as changes are made in the Orion environment.  The list of entities that are supported for this version are as follows: Nodes, Interfaces, Volumes, Virtual Machine, Virtual Host, Virtual Clusters, Virtual Datacenter, VCenter, Hyper-V Hosts, Hyper-V Cluster, WPM Step, WPM Transaction, WPM Player Location, and Groups.

 

Map Canvas

There are two key components to this feature.  The section that contains the visualization and the actual graph is what we refer to as the canvas.  In the example provided, selecting an entity's map view pulls up a detailed graphical representation, with the map centered on the "seed" object (see Figure 1).  Everything else drawn on the map, stems from that seed.  Anything not immediately connected to the seed entity is opaqued in order to differentiate and provide a point of focus.  This comes in especially handy with larger maps that could have excessive elements on them.  The goal here is to draw attention to problems associated to the entity you are investigating, but also extend that investigation to related connections or neighboring devices(Figure 2).

 

Figure 1Figure 2

 

We needed to incorporate some creative design strategies as well.  For example, at times there may be multiple connections between two entities.  Whether those represent a simple relationship or actual data flow, we have to be conscious of the way that data is represented in the map.  Too much data, and the map becomes unusable.  Too little, and it doesn't really prove to be the powerful troubleshooting aid intended.  Any entity or connection that has breached a threshold will be automatically surfaced in the context of the map.  This way you are not sifting through data to identify areas of concern.

 

This is also the area that allows you to interact with the map through controls such as zoom and pan options.  You may also target specific areas of the map through hovering, or selecting a device or connection.  In the bottom right hand corner, we do provide controls so that you can toggle layouts, click to zoom in or zoom out, center the map on a selected entity, or even launch into full screen mode to have as much real estate as possible for viewing the map.

 

 

 

The Inspector Panel

The second core component of the map is what we refer to as the inspector panel.  The inspector panel is like a mini data warehouse for the entities and connections on the map.  In this version, selecting an entity such as a node will pop open the inspector panel from the right, which will show the name of the device, IP, Vendor, and Machine Type, along with a list of all that entity's "children" or "decedents".  The list generated will be in context to the entity selected.  For example, a server may have interfaces, volumes, and applications that would be considered children/decedent's of this node.  If drilling into the application however, its children or decedents would be the components that make up that application.  This list has controls such as "Sort" that allows you to control ascending and descending formatting of the list either via status or name, and "Show" which provides filters based on entity type such as hardware or interface.  We also provide a "type ahead" search feature for those long lists that extend beyond a single view-able page.

Selecting a connection between entities on the canvas will provide you an inherently different view of the inspector panel.  As previously mentioned, there are obviously multiple types of connections which could be represented and we need to ensure this is easily interpreted through our tool.  In order to provide you the ability to distinguish between these distinct types of connections, we have managed to include unique behavior for each connection type.  The following connection types will be visible in the map sub-view.

 

Orion Dependency Connection

The dependency connections do not represent any kind of data traversing between the two entities, but rather easily convey that a relationship exists between them.  It could be an administratively defined dependency, or perhaps a dependency identified through its ancestry.  In the screenshot below I selected a virtual machine, and can see this VM has a relationship to its host, which has a relationship to its cluster, to the datacenter, and the finally, the VCenter.

The inspector panel view of these connections would look as follows:

 

 

Application Dependency Connection

For those of you unfamiliar with the ADM Connections, this was a feature introduced in Server & Application Monitor 6.6 which allows you to quickly see which applications or systems are communicating to each other.  You can learn more about that feature here Announcing General Availability of Server & Application (SAM) 6.6.  Since Orion Maps is a feature of the platform, we don't want to leave anyone out, so of course this type of communication is captured and also mapped automatically as a distinct connection type.  There are two possible visualizations you may notice depending on how you adjusted Application Connection Settings.  With Connection Quality Polling enabled, the connections will highlight additional data pertaining to TCP latency and packet loss between the two entities.

 

Selecting an ADM Connection will provide a list of the processes communicating between the two systems and allow for additional detail by drilling into the Connection Details page.

 

 

If you have not enabled Connection Quality polling, we will represent the relationship on the canvas by a light blue line with no metric pill.  This connection is still automatically identified, and therefore mapped within the canvas.  You will also have access to the Connection Details page.

 

 

Topology Connection

Topology Connections are generated through NPM's topology engine and meant to provide a unique representation of your network infrastructure.  Emanating from community feedback, the design illustrates how a ton of detail can be depicted in a single, simple connection, and even has a Network Weather-map type feel.  First, the width of the topology connections will be based on interface bandwidth.  This means whether you have a 10 GB link, a 1 GB link, or a 100 Mb link, you should easily be able to determine differences across the map.  This is useful for quickly identifying if bandwidth is properly set and distributed across the environment.  Hovering over a topology connection will provide a tool-tip for the metric pills similar to what you see in the screenshot.

By default, the metric pills highlight outbound traffic and utilization details on either side of the connection.  Based on thresholds set in NPM, these links will change to yellow for warning, or red to critical, if a threshold is breached.  The link may also change to highlight something else entirely.  Below you can see a specific interface which has hit a critical threshold for errors & discards.

The inspector panel will contain all the connections between two entities.  In the example below, the map is surfacing the problem link and indicating a threshold has been met, while the inspector panel displays all the data between each connection.  On either side of the panel will be the interfaces, which can be associated to the parent device situated above.  In an easy to read table, all the most recent polled data for traffic, errors & discards, utilization, and the maximum bandwidth will be presented.

 

 

 

Maps in Groups

The new map sub-view is also automatically generated within groups.  Groups are treated as an entity just like an interface, volume, node, or any other object in Orion.  However, behavior of maps within groups is slightly different.  When creating groups, you are specifying particular members that are the focus for that group.  In this context, we don't want to show "related" entities on a group map, or conversely roll entities up to a parent, if that was not your overall intent.  Therefore, drilling into a map sub-view for a group will show group members only and any connections that exist between the member objects in the group.  This allows a bit of control in this version, as here you have the opportunity to decide what objects are included in a map.  Many of you may already leverage groups today in unique ways, and this could provide some additional visibility for those views.  The great thing is that you could leverage dynamic queries to speed up the building of groups, which will then auto-add new members to the map.  This means there is little to no maintenance for the maps being built through this process.  Guess I am going to have to retire my post for how to do this today:  Custom Maps for Group Details Page

 

Here is an example in which I mapped out the entire virtual infrastructure in my lab.

 

 

We are excited to take this step and anxious to hear your feedback.  We feel that this tool will allow you to see massive amounts of data in a single comprehensive view, and mitigate having to jump from page to page to isolate problems.  The best part is that you don't have to do anything!  We hope to continue to build on this within the platform as we have a very long list of feature requests from our community, and I promise we are listening.  Stay tuned for more.  serena still has more great things from the platform in her post:  Orion Platform 2018.2 Improvements - Chapter Three

 

I am very excited to announce a NEW VERSION of ORION MAPS:  Orion Platform Improvements - Intelligent Mapping Enhancements


Allied Telesis

Use a SWQL custom query to show Interface Percent Usage like Top 10 charts

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Hi All,

 

I setup a quick SWQL Custom Query (below) to show certain Network Interfaces with the InPercentUtil and OutPercentUtil numbers, but I would rather display the numbers as they are shown in the Top 20 Interfaces by Percent Utilization (shown in snippet). Any help would be appreciated.

 

Capture.PNG

 

select

i.NodeID AS NODEID,

n.NodeName AS NODE,

i.Caption AS Interface,

i.InPercentUtil AS RECEIVE,

i.OutPercentUtil AS TRANSMIT

FROM

Orion.NPM.Interfaces as i

LEFT JOIN Orion.Nodes as n ON n.NodeID=i.NodeID

WHERE

(i.InterfaceIndex = 6 and i.InterfaceName LIKE 'Se%') OR

i.InterfaceName LIKE 'Ten-GigabitEthernet1/3/0/4[234]' OR

i.InterfaceName LIKE 'Bridge-Aggregation36' OR

i.InterfaceName LIKE 'Bridge-Aggregation6'

ORDER BY

n.NodeName, i.Caption

Bandwidth report of specific application

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Hello,

 

I am trying to create a report in order to have the bandwidth utilization of a specific application ( as sip,sap,sharepoint)

 

I have already enabled NBAR and can see top nbar applications

 

Thanks

Report on all enabled parameters of the device being monitored

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I think, it has been a request to all who manage Solarwinds Monitoring. Each tower would like to know the parameters enabled for monitoring of their devices/servers. I don't think we can get them in a single report.

 

When it comes to all parameters enabled for monitoring, shold include the List of Resources enabled (only) and components enabled via Application Templates and any otherway enabled for monitoring along with their threshold values (if exists).

 

Need a report for device, what are all the parameters Solarwinds can monitor and all the monitoring parameters enabled and not enabled. Need help, to provide the report, because, it is a daily request from different teams now-a-days.

 

adatole, aLTeReGo, Geek Speak, CourtesyIT<-- Including Geeks and experts to get an answer.

Internet connection required for offline installer

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When I am trying to install the SAM 6.6 (solarwinds-orion-sam-6.6-offlineinstaller) in a new server without any internet connection I get the error stating that there is no internet connection

Given that I am using the OFFLINE installer I would have thought that the requirement to connect to the internet would be obviously NOT needed.

 

I have read in other discussions that this is a known issue with other installers. I am just wondering why this same issue is reoccurring all the time.

Not all networks allow their servers to have internet connections and that is why we use the offline variant.

I have tried to install just some of the other components that are available and am getting the same result. It does not matter if I run as local admin, administrator or my domain account the check always fails

I am going to download the solarwinds-orion-offlineinstaller to see if that installs without any internet connection. I expect it to fail as well though

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