Руководство По Установке для Cisco Cisco Prime Central 1.1

Скачать
Страница из 53
4
   
Additional Requirements
All PCs must have access to the Prime Central server hostname.
Clocks must be synchronized on Prime Central and all attached domain manager servers.
Upgrade from Prime Central Fault Management 1.0 
to 1.1:
The server must have at least (size of the current 
installation directory
 + 5 GB) of free space in the 
folder where Prime Central Fault Management 1.0 is 
installed.
Example: If Prime Central Fault Management 1.0 is installed in the 
/opt/primecentral/faultmgmt folder and that folder is 15 GB, you must 
have at least 20 GB of free space in the /opt/primecentral folder before 
upgrading.
64-Bit Operating System Platform
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 with x86_64 bit
Prime Central Fault Management requires the kernel-headers OS 
library. When installing RHEL, choose the Software Development 
option to ensure that the kernel-headers library is installed.
Hardware
One of the following:
Unified Computing System (UCS) B-series blade 
or C-series rackmountable server, bare metal or 
with VMware ESXi 4.1
Equivalent third-party vendor hardware platform
Use the following minimum hardware resources for the individual 
Prime Central and Fault Management servers:
16 GB of RAM
2 CPUs
100 GB hard disk space
Note
Before installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 or ESXi 4.1 for 
Prime Central, verify your hardware compatibility. See the 
UCS hardware compatibility list at 
.
Red Hat RPM Packages 
For Prime Central Fault Management, the installer 
automatically installs the Red Hat RPM Package 
Manager (RPM) packages listed in 
.
If any of the RPM packages are missing, the Fault Management 
installer automatically installs them. No user intervention is required.
For Prime Central, the following packages must be 
present in the system path:
perl 5.8.6 or later
top
unzip
Red Hat Services and Components
The following Red Hat services and components 
(usually present as part of the Red Hat installation) 
are required:
/usr/bin/scp—Secure copy tool.
/usr/sbin/sshd—SSH daemon.
/usr/bin/ssh—SSH.
/usr/bin/ssh-keygen—Tool to generate, manage, 
and convert authentication keys.
Table 1
Database, OS, and Hardware Requirements (continued)
Minimum Requirement
Notes