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SNMP
Specifies the types of the management server's events to send notifications about by means of
Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP).
This parameter contains the following settings:
Trace State
Description:
Specifies whether to send the SNMP notifications.
Possible values:
True
or
False
Default value:
False
Trace Level
Description:
Specifies the minimum level of severity of events for sending SNMP notifications
about them. Only notifications about events of levels greater than or equal to
Trace Level
will be sent.
Possible values:
0
(Internal event),
1
(Debugging information),
2
(Information),
3
(Warning),
4
(Error), or
5
(Critical error)
Default value:
4
(only errors and critical errors will be sent—if
Trace State
is set to
True
)
SNMP Address
Description:
Specifies the network name or IP address of the SNMP server.
Possible values:
Any string 0 to 32765 characters long
Default value:
Empty string
SNMP Community
Description:
Specifies the community name for the SNMP notifications.
Possible values:
Any string 0 to 32765 characters long
Default value:
public
Synchronization
Specifies how Acronis Backup & Recovery 10 Management Server connects to registered
machines for deployment of centralized policies, retrieval of logs and backup plan states, and
similar actions—collectively called synchronization.
This parameter has the following settings:
Maximum Connections
Description:
Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous synchronization connections to
keep.
Possible values:
Any integer number between
1
and
500
Default value:
200
If the total number of online registered machines does not exceed the value in
Maximum Connections
, connections to those machines are always kept, and the
management server periodically performs synchronization with each machine.
Otherwise, it connects to a number of registered machines depending on the allotted
number of simultaneous connections. After synchronization for a machine is complete, the
management server may disconnect from that machine and use the free connection for
synchronization with another machine, and so on.
(Note: Connections to machines with high synchronization priority—see
Period-High Priority
later in this topic—are likely to be always kept.)