8-4
Stinger®
Administration Guide
Watchdogs, Alarms, and Traps
Defining alarms
By default,
watchdog-config
profiles for fantrays are enabled. You can optionally
set a name by setting a value for the watchdog-name parameter. For example:
admin>
read watchdog {fan fantray 1 }
WATCHDOG-CONFIG/{ fan fantray 1 } read
admin>
list
in WATCHDOG-CONFIG/{ fan fantray 1 }]
watchdog-index* = { fan fantray 1 }
watchdog-trap-enable = yes
watchdog-name = "Stinger fantray #1" admin>
admin>
set watchdog-name = fan1
Watchdog routines for input relays
Stinger units installed with revision 2 control modules A, B, A-J, or C can monitor
the status of up to seven devices. A Stinger MRT unit can monitor up to four remote
devices. To verify that your system supports this capability, see the
Getting Started
Guide
for your unit at
http://www.lucentdocs.com/ins
.
The watchdog config profiles for input relays have the index {
relay cm-input-relay
N
}
. On a standalone system or host Stinger unit, the value for N (the device identifier)
is 1.
A system with an ALARM RELAY connector has outputs that allow it to be
monitored remotely by another device. This connector also has inputs for monitoring
from four to seven remote devices. For information about physically connecting an
alarm relay, see the
Getting Started Guide
for your unit.
Watchdog routines for a remote shelves
For information about the watchdog routines that are available for the remote
shelves of your hosted system, see the
Stinger Compact Remote Installation And
Configuration Guide
or the
Stinger MRT Getting Started Guide
for your system.
Defining alarms
You can configure the Stinger unit to monitor itself for certain alarm conditions or
events and specify an action that it takes when it detects the alarm condition. You use
the
alarm
profile to perform the following tasks:
Configure status lights to illuminate in response to alarm conditions.
Configure alarm relays to open or close for a specified number of seconds in
response to alarm conditions.
Configure a default
alarm
profile for the entire system.
View
alarm
profiles.
View outstanding alarms.
For certain alarm conditions, you might also need to configure additional profiles to
define the thresholds for the alarm. Additionally, for the system to send a trap when
an alarm condition occurs, you will also need to configure
trap
profile for the event.
For information about setting the
trap
profile, See “Configuring SNMP traps” on
Summary of Contents for Stinger
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