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·
If the alarm input generates an active-high signal,
switching to Reversed operation means
the NetGuardian will declare an alarm in the absence of the active-high signal, creating the practical
equivalent of an active-low alarm.
·
If the alarm input generates an active-low signal,
switching to Reversed operation means the
NetGuardian will declare an alarm in the absence of the active-low signal, creating the practical
equivalent of an active-high alarm.
·
If the alarm input is normally open,
switching to Reversed operation converts it to a normally
closed alarm point.
·
If the alarm input is normally closed,
switching to Reversed operation converts it to a normally
open alarm point.
Q. I'm unsure if the voltage of my power supply is within the specified range. How to I test the
voltage?
A.
Connect the black common lead of a voltmeter to the ground terminal of the battery. Connect the red
lead of the voltmeter to the batter's VCD terminal. The voltmeter should read b12 and
+30VDC.
SNMP FAQs
17.2
Q. Which version of SNMP is supported by the SNMP agent on the NetGuardian?
A.
SNMP v1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3.
Q. How do I configure the NetGuardian to send traps to an SNMP manager? Is there a separate
MIB for the NetGuardian? How many SNMP managers can the agent send traps to? And how
do I set the IP address of the SNMP manager and the community string to be used when
sending traps?
A.
The NetGuardian begins sending traps as soon as the SNMP managers are defined. The
NetGuardian MIB can be found on the DPS Telecom website. The MIB should be compiled on your
SNMP manager. (
Note:
MIB versions may change in the future.) The unit supports 2 SNMP
managers, which are configured by entering its IP address in the Trap Address field of Ethernet Port
Setup. To configure the community strings, choose SNMP from the Edit menu, and enter
appropriate values in the Get, Set, and Trap fields.
Q. Does the NetGuardian support MIB-2 and/or any other standard MIBs?
A.
The NetGuardian supports the bulk of MIB-2.
Q. Does the NetGuardian SNMP agent support both NetGuardian and T/MonXM variables?
A.
The NetGuardian SNMP agent manages an embedded MIB that supports only the NetGuardian's
RTU variables. The T/MonXM variables are included in the distributed MIB only to provide SNMP
managers with a single MIB for all DPS Telecom products.
Q. How many traps are triggered when a single point is set or cleared? The MIB defines traps
like "major alarm set/cleared," "RTU point set," and a lot of granular traps, which could imply
that more than one trap is sent when a change of state occurs on one point.
A.
Generally, a single change of state generates a single trap.
Q. What does "point map" mean?
A.
A point map is a single MIB leaf that presents the current status of a 64-alarm-point display in an
ASCII-readable form, where a "." represents a clear and an "x" represents an alarm.
Q. The NetGuardian manual talks about control relay outputs. How do I control these from my
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