Preface
- Organization of this preface
■ What you can do with JP1 network management products
Network management is essential for providing stable environments and services, but as networks continue to become larger and more complex each day, the workload of administrators also increases.
If you have encountered any of the problems shown below, take a look at your current system for network management and operation problems, and consider installing JP1 network management products. By doing so, you can efficiently monitor the status of the network to rapidly identify and solve failures.
JP1 network management products provide various windows from which you can get an intuitive understanding of the configuration of networks and the statuses of resources, and provide support for the day-to-day tasks of network administrators.
The following figure shows the basic system configuration of JP1 network management products.
- JP1/Network Node Manager i (hereinafter abbreviated to NNMi)
A manager program that uses industry-standard SNMP and that enables the management of network configurations and failures. You can use this program to automatically discover nodes in an IP network and to manage the network configuration. This program can also be used to detect network failures and issue warnings to the system administrator.
- JP1/SNMP System Observer (hereinafter abbreviated to SSO)
A manager program that collects information about resources on the network devices that support SNMP. By using this program, you can perform monitoring without differentiating between the vendors of network devices.
The following table describes the main functionalities of the manager programs:
Product |
Functionality |
Description |
---|---|---|
NNMi |
Node discovery |
Automatically discovers nodes according to defined rules. Nodes can also be added manually. |
Discovery and display of topologies |
Automatically discovers the Layer 2 topology (network configuration using physical connection lines) in addition to the Layer 3 topology (logical network configuration), and then displays them in a map. |
|
Monitoring by using ICMP/SNMP polling and SNMP traps |
Monitors the statuses of objects by using ICMP and SNMP polling, and monitors failures by using SNMP traps. |
|
Root cause analysis |
Analyzes the root cause of a failure based on the Layer 2 and Layer 3 topologies that were discovered. |
|
Incident management |
Reports failures discovered through polling and SNMP traps as incidents. |
|
Automatic action |
Enables user-specified commands to be executed as automatic actions in response to certain incident statuses. |
|
SSO |
Resource collection |
Monitors various system resources including network performance information (such as line usage). |
■ What is explained in this manual
This manual describes the basic methods for configuring and operating JP1 network management products. The goal of this manual is to enable users who read this manual to perform day-to-day tasks for network management and to rapidly handle failures by using the JP1 network management products.
The operating procedures described in this manual are based on the system configuration and organizational structure shown in the following figure.
Setup procedure explained in this manual
The supervisor operator asks the system build engineer to set up an environment for the JP1 network management products.
The system build engineer prepares a server to be used as the Monitoring Manager and then sets up the Monitoring Manager environment.
The system build engineer configures the JP1 network management products.
After configuring the JP1 network management products, the system build engineer notifies the supervisor operator.
After receiving notification from the system build engineer, the supervisor operator registers an operator responsible as a user and starts operation using the JP1 network management products.
■ How to read this manual
In addition to this manual, the JP1 network management product provides multiple manuals and Help resources. To learn more about advanced functionality and operations, read these manuals and Help resources as shown below according to your purpose.
A reference to another manual is written as follows: For details about something, see topic-title in the manual-name. Using topic-title as a keyword, search for the relevant section in the target manual.
This manual assumes the use of the following environments:
- For operations performed on the Monitoring Manager
Windows: Environment where Windows Server 2019 is used
Linux: Environment where Linux 8.1 (x64) is used
- For operations performed from the Web browser
Environment where Microsoft Edge is used
Some windows in this manual might differ from the windows of your product because of improvements made without prior notice.
■ Conventions: Fonts and symbols
The following table explains the text formatting conventions used in this manual:
Text formatting |
Convention |
---|---|
Bold |
Bold characters indicate text in a window, other than the window title. Such text includes menus, menu options, buttons, radio box options, or explanatory labels. For example:
|
Italic |
Italic characters indicate a placeholder for some actual text to be provided by the user or system. For example:
Italic characters are also used for emphasis. For example:
|
Monospace |
Monospace characters indicate text that the user enters without change, or text (such as messages) output by the system. For example:
|
The following table explains the symbols used in this manual:
Symbol |
Convention |
---|---|
| |
In syntax explanations, a vertical bar separates multiple items, and has the meaning of OR. For example: A|B|C means A, or B, or C. |
{ } |
In syntax explanations, curly brackets indicate that only one of the enclosed items is to be selected. For example: {A|B|C} means only one of A, or B, or C. |
[ ] |
In syntax explanations, square brackets indicate that the enclosed item or items are optional. For example: [A] means that you can specify A or nothing. [B|C] means that you can specify B, or C, or nothing. |
... |
In coding, an ellipsis (...) indicates that one or more lines of coding have been omitted. In syntax explanations, an ellipsis indicates that the immediately preceding item can be repeated as many times as necessary. For example: A, B, B, ... means that, after you specify A, B, you can specify B as many times as necessary. |