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This post might get a bit long, but it shows how powerful NCM and compliance rules can be. However, in order to run a compliance rule, it kind of has to be in the configuration, right? Well, lets say "yes" and "no"?! With most Cisco IOS devices, and possibly other devices, they removed the SNMP users from the configuration…
Is there a way to pass variables (i.e. custom properties for the node) into the string matching section (similar to what you can do in NCM scripting ${Custom_Property_Name}? We want to be able to check for site specific routes on core switches and it seems this feature is lacking in the string matching section.
Friends, Is there a way to do a compliance check on things that are not in a configuration file? For instance on Cisco I need to see that the SNMPv3 user is set up, so I run a command "show snmp user" and look for specific output. Also, I need to make sure the RSA key modulus is 2048 so I have to run (depending on version)…
I am currently trying to create a Rule, Policy, and Report/ OR a job that will scan for all ports in access mode to have cdp disabled. I have tried many options on the "Rule" tab and I cant seem to get anything to work properly when testing it against a config that I have configured to have 1 interface with cdp enabled…
Hi, It would be helpful to not list rules in the 'all policy rules' list if they have already been added to the 'assigned policy rules' list. Reasons for this are: - You can't 'add' it again, so why list it there? - Removing it would ensure that under each folder you only see unassigned rules that you can now assign. This…
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