The most recent content from our members.
Hi Team, Good Evening! I have noticed a hardware health issue on a few nodes. Please refer to the screenshot for one of the nodes. Could you please advise me on how to verify the set threshold value for this sensor? This means I want to know how it works and what parameters it checks before giving any status, like Critical…
I'm trying to setup a widget on the modern dashboard that includes hardware health sensors but can't figure out how to build the query since the hardware health data for sensors doesn't appear to be as easy to add in or set direct monitors for. Suggestions?
Hello all, We have a mostly HP server environment and I have Hardware sensors enabled on our C7000 series enclosures which is giving me lots of great data including ambient, cpu and memory temperature. I am attempting to create a Custom Graph with ambient temperature readings from the enclosures. I can see the data in the…
Overview New for NPM 11.0 is the exciting Quality of Experience (QoE) dashboard. The QoE dashboard uses deep packet inspection to provide the ability to easily determine whether a performance issue stems from application server slowness, or an issue with the underlying network. The two key metrics we surface in QoE to help…
Hi! I read several discussions about those devices. Can somebody assist me with clear enough instructions to define various sensors, the "right" way? I'm writing here after few tries to define various sensors (Temperature, Humidity, Open doors, Etc..) and view their values continuously, on "Node Details" page. I failed to…
Has anyone use NPM to monitor a PDU? Is it possible to shutdown a PDU that uses SNMP remotely by running a script prior to receiving a SNMP message?
We have three EM01B "Esensors" environment sensors that we need to pull data from over port 80. These devices are very simple and just use a character-delimited format. An example of the text displayed when browsing to the sensor: EN15 ý=1TF: 68.8HU:40.5%IL 32.6 Nagios would parse this as 68.8 Fahrenheit, 40.5% Humidity,…
It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.