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You can specify the amount of resources the probe reserves for tracking RMON and RMON2 statistics for each DLCI interface upon boot-up. You do so by specifying values for selected RMON and RMON2 parameters. The values you specify for these parameters apply to each DLCI interface the probe creates.
For example, if you set the maximum number of DLCI network layer hosts to 4000, the probe allocates enough resources (primarily, memory) to track network-layer statistics for 4000 hosts on each DLCI interface. This means that if you automatically discover 50 DLCIs, the probe reserves enough agent resources to track statistics for 200,000 hosts. For this reason, you may want to adjust these DLCI maximums based on your monitoring needs and available probe resources.
Table 7-1 describes the DLCI RMON1 parameters you can configure.
| Select this | To configure this | Default |
|---|---|---|
| [5] Change dlci_sh_buckets | Maximum number of buckets the probe uses to store short-term history statistics | 10 |
| [6] Change dlci_lh_buckets | Maximum number of buckets the probe uses to store long-term history statistics | 10 |
| [7] Change dlci_sh_interval | Interval at which the probe gathers and stores short-term history statistics | 180 |
| [8] Change dlci_lh_interval | Interval at which the probe gathers and stores long-term history statistics | 1800 |
Table 7-2 describes the DLCI RMON2 parameters you can configure.
| Select this | To configure this | Default |
|---|---|---|
| [5] Change dlci_nl hosts | Maximum number of hosts the probe tracks network-layer statistics for | 4000 |
| [6] Change dlci_al_hosts | Maximum number of hosts the probe tracks application-layer statistics for | 8000 |
| [7] Change dlci_nl_matrix | Maximum number of conversations the probe stores network-layer statistics on | 6000 |
| [8] Change dlci_al_matrix | Maximum number of conversations the probe stores application-layer statistics on | 12000 |
Use the following procedure to configure RMON/RMON2 statistics for DLCIs:
Step 1 Access the Agent Configuration Utility.
Step 2 Select [8] Select Interface.
Step 3 Select the WAN interface you want to configure.
Step 4 Select [31] Go to Next Page.
Step 5 Do one of the following:
To configure RMON DLCI parameters, select [20] Change RMON Parameters
or
To configure RMON2 DLCI parameters, select [21] Change RMON2 Parameters
Step 6 Do one of the following:
If you selected [20] Change RMON Parameters, select the RMON parameter you want to configure as explained in Table 7-1.
or
If you selected [21] Change RMON2 Parameters, select the RMON2 parameter you want to configure as explained in Table 7-2.
Step 7 From the main menu, select [12] Reset Agent for the new settings to take effect.
SwitchProbe WAN probes provide powerful support for DLCI monitoring over a frame relay segment. You can configure the agent to monitor all DLCI packets traveling over a frame relay link, or selected DLCI numbers. A SwitchProbe detects DLCIs on your network segment based on two factors:
For each DLCI detected, the SwitchProbe creates a virtual interface consisting of both data terminal equipment (DTE) and data communications equipment (DCE) traffic. You can then monitor these virtual interfaces as individual agents using TrafficDirector.
For example, when you configure a SwitchProbe to monitor only packets with DLCI numbers of 474 and 976 and launch the TrafficDirector Frame Relay Monitor for that SwitchProbe, you see three agents in the graphical display:
You can then launch additional TrafficDirector tools for each agent such as:
You can also choose to toggle DLCI mode off in the SwitchProbe to monitor packets in terms of source and destination MAC addresses. This is especially useful in monitoring bridged frame relay segments to see the originating LAN of each DLCI packet.
A SwitchProbe learns what DLCIs are on your frame relay segment in two ways:
You can configure the SwitchProbe to automatically detect DLCIs on frame relay segments with the following LMI support:
You do so by enabling pvc_discovery found under Configure Agent Options.
Use the following procedure to configure your SwitchProbe to automatically detect DLCIs.
Step 1 Access the Agent Configuration Utility.
Step 2 Select 31 Go to Next Page.
Step 3 Select 22 Configure Agent Options.
Step 4 Select 10 Toggle enable_pvc_discovery to toggle DLCI automatic discovery feature on.
Step 5 Select 11 Go Back to Main Menu.
Step 6 Select 12 Reset Agent for the change to take effect.
You can manually configure the SwitchProbe to discover specific DLCIs by providing the number and CIR of each DLCI you want to monitor. In addition, you can also define a name for the virtual agent that the SwitchProbe creates for each DLCI number.
You might want to download this DLCI information into the SwitchProbe in order to:
There are two ways to provide the SwitchProbe with this DLCI information:
The dvftp utility requires a DLCI information file that you must pass as a parameter. You can create this file with a basic text editor and save it under a name you define. The file consists of lines in the following format:
DLCI number DLCI name CIR
For example:
474 Boston 128000 1018 New_York 56000
DLCI name and the CIR are optional fields. If these fields are not present in the file, the agent uses the DLCI number as the virtual agent name for TrafficDirector display purposes, and the speed of the WAN interface as the CIR.
Use the following command to download DLCI information into the agent:
dvftpagentname filenameDLCIINFO
The following list defines the options in the above example:
| agentname | The name defined for the agent when adding it to the client software. Note that the dvftp utility downloads the DLCI information to the interface number that you specified when adding the agent to TrafficDirector. |
| filename | The name of the DLCI information file containing the number, name, and CIR for each DLCI you want the SwitchProbe to recognize. If you do not specify a path, dvftp searches for the file in the NSHOME/usr directory. |
| DLCIINFO | Specifies the file type. |
If you are running UNIX, you can run the dvftp utility directly from NSHOME/bin; if you are running TrafficDirector for Windows, you can issue the command from the TrafficDirector shell. If you do not include a path as part of filename, the path defaults to NSHOME/usr.
Step 1 Make sure that you have added the agent to TrafficDirector specifying the number of the WAN interface connected to the frame relay segment. This is important, because when you pass the agent name as a parameter to the dvftp utility, it downloads the information to the interface specified for that agent in the NSHOME/usr/agent.lst file.
Step 2 Create the DLCI information file containing the DLCI number, DLCI name, and the CIR for each DLCI you want the SwitchProbe to monitor.
Step 3 If the DLCI automatic discovery feature in the SwitchProbe is disabled (22 Configure Agent Options/10 Toggle enable_pvc_discovery is off), then go to Step 6. Otherwise, go to Step 4.
Step 4 If you have the DLCI automatic discovery feature enabled in the agent, do one of the following:
Step 5 Access the Agent Configuration Utility and do the following in the order shown:
Step 6 Enter the following on the command line to invoke the dvftp utility:
As an alternative to using the dvftp utility for DLCI configuration, you can directly set the contents of DLCIINFO from the command line. Use the following procedure:
Step 1 Access the Agent Configuration Utility.
Step 2 Select 11 Enter Command-line mode.
Step 3 Enter the following command from the command line.
WAN interface "DLCInumber name CIR"
For example, the following command configures interface 3 to create a virtual agent for number 1018 DLCIs and to name that agent "Chicago."
Check the contents of DLCIINFO by using the get data command.
By default, DLCI mode in the SwitchProbe is enabled, so you can view packets in terms of their DLCI numbers. But when monitoring a bridged frame relay segment, you might want to view packets in terms of MAC addresses. To do so, disable DLCI mode using the following procedure:
Step 1 Access the Agent Configuration Utility.
Step 2 Enter 8, then select the WAN interface.
Step 3 Select 24 Configure Interface Options.
Step 4 Select 1 Toggle dlci_mode to set dlci_mode off.
Step 5 Select 12 Reset Agent for the new setting to take effect.
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