Raritan Engineering CC-SG ユーザーズマニュアル

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C
HAPTER 
12:
 ADVANCED ADMINISTRATION
 175 
 
 
 
SNMP 
Simple Network Management Protocol allows CC-SG to push SNMP traps (event notifications) 
to an existing SNMP manager on the network. Only a CC-SG Administrator trained in handling 
an SNMP infrastructure should configure CC-SG to work with SNMP. 
CC-SG also supports SNMP GET/SET operations with third-party enterprise Management 
Solutions, such as HP OpenView. To support the operations, you must provide SNMP agent 
identifier information such as these MIB-II System Group objects: sysContact, sysName, and 
sysLocation. Refer to RFC 1213 for details. These identifiers provide contact, administrative, and 
location information regarding the managed node. 
 
MIB Files 
Because CC-SG pushes its own set of Raritan traps, you must update all SNMP managers with a 
custom MIB file that contains Raritan SNMP trap definitions
This custom MIB file can be found on the CD included with your CC-SG unit and also under 
Firmware Upgrades on http://www.raritan.com/support. 
 
Configuring SNMP in CC-SG 
1.  On the Setup menu, click Configuration Manager. When the Configuration Manager 
screen appears, click on the SNMP tab. 
 
Figure 212 Configuration Settings Device Settings Screen 
2.  To identify the SNMP agent running on CC-SG to a third-party enterprise Management 
Solutions, provide agent information under Agent Configuration. Type a Port for the agent, 
default is 161.  Type a Read-Only Community string, default is public, and Read-Write 
Community
 string, default is private. Multiple community strings are allowed; separate 
them with a comma. Type a System Contact,  System Name, and System Location to 
provide information regarding the managed node. 
3.  Click Update Agent Configuration to save the SNMP agent identifier information. 
4.  Under Traps Configuration, check the box marked Enable SNMP Traps to enable sending 
SNMP traps from CC-SG to a SNMP host.  
5.  Check the box(es) before the trap(s) you want CC-SG to push to your SNMP hosts:   
Under  Trap Sources, there is a list of SNMP traps grouped into two different categories: