NMIS is a Network Management Information System, providing critical information about the IT Infrastructure, including network, firewalls, servers, UPS, sensors and basically anything which supports SNMP. NMIS is a complete network management system, the software was open sourced in 1999.
You can download NMIS and other software from Opmantek.
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Introduction
NMIS is a complete management system which collects fault, performance and basic inventory/configuration data from routers, switches, servers, firewalls, facilities (UPS, AC/CRACK, Sensors), and anything which has an SNMP agent. NMIS is highly extensible, using device models to define what is collected from devices, and how events are handled.
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To accomplish this, several timestamps are collected and saved to document and manage the current device status, and the success and/or failure of the collection process. Timestamps can be updated through polling, or by incoming events.
Timestamps used by NMIS
Any product which supports SNMP and the SNMP standards is supported by NMIS, the following table lists some of the vendors supported by NMIS, and if there is standard or extended support. NMIS has exceptional multi-vendor capabilities and can actually manage equipment from over 35,000 vendors. A more complete list of SNMP vendors is available at Network Management System NMIS Supported Vendors SNMP.Below are the important timestamps used by NMIS and their meanings.
Contact FirstWave for information on support for any vendors not listed here - it's almost 100% certain that NMIS will support the one you're wondering abouttimestamps of interest which you do not understand.
Timestamp | Purpose | When set |
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catchall.last_poll | To document the last successful poll without regard to the polling method | Following a successful query without regard to the polling method NB in versions of NMIS prior to NMIS 9.4.4 this was only for collect polls. |
catchall.last_poll_attempt | To document the last attempted poll without regard to the polling method | Following Following an attempted query whether it was successful or not and without regard to the polling method |
catchall.last_update | To document the last successful update of a Node | Following an update, either via the scheduled (usually daily) update, or through a detected change made in the configuration, or through a user command |
catchall.last_update_attempt | To document the last attempted update of a Node | Following an attempted update whether it ws successful or not |
catchall.last_poll_snmp | To document the last successful SNMP query | Following a successful SNMP query |
catchall.last_poll_snmp_attempt | To document the last attempted SNMP query | Following an attempted SNMP query whether it was successful or not |
catchall.last_poll_wmi_attempt | To document the last successful WMI query | Following a successful WMI query |
catchall.last_poll_wmi_attempt | To document the last attempted WMI query | Following an attempted WMI query whether it was successful or not |
catchall.last_node_config_update | To document the last configuration update of a Node | Following Updated any time the Node has been saved through an update, either through a detected change made in the configuration, or through a user commandcollection |
catchall.ping_successful | To document the last successful ping | Following a successful ping |
catchall.status_updated | To document an update in the status of the device | Following an update in the status of the device, whether through an event, a poll, or a ping |
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