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Configuring rmon, Overview, Rmon groups – H3C Technologies H3C S6300 Series Switches User Manual

Page 116: Statistics group, History group

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Configuring RMON

Overview

Remote Network Monitoring (RMON) is an enhancement to SNMP. It enables proactive remote

monitoring and management of network devices and subnets. An RMON monitor periodically or
continuously collects traffic statistics for the network attached to a port on the managed device. The

managed device can automatically send a notification when a statistic crosses an alarm threshold, so the

NMS does not need to constantly poll MIB variables and compare the results.
RMON uses SNMP notifications to notify NMSs of various alarm conditions such as broadcast traffic
threshold exceeded. In contrast, SNMP reports function and interface operating status changes such as

link up, link down, and module failure. For more information about SNMP notifications, see "

Configuring

SNMP

."

H3C devices provide an embedded RMON agent as the RMON monitor. An NMS can perform basic
SNMP operations to access the RMON MIB.

RMON groups

Among standard RMON groups, H3C implements the statistics group, history group, event group, alarm
group, probe configuration group, and user history group. H3C also implements a private alarm group,

which enhances the standard alarm group. The probe configuration group and user history group are

not configurable from the CLI. To configure these two groups, you must access the MIB.

Statistics group

The statistics group samples traffic statistics for monitored Ethernet interfaces and stores the statistics in
the Ethernet statistics table (ethernetStatsTable). The statistics include:

Number of collisions.

CRC alignment errors.

Number of undersize or oversize packets.

Number of broadcasts.

Number of multicasts.

Number of bytes received.

Number of packets received.

The statistics in the Ethernet statistics table are cumulative sums.

History group

The history group periodically samples traffic statistics on interfaces and saves the history samples in the

history table (etherHistoryTable). The statistics include:

Bandwidth utilization.

Number of error packets.

Total number of packets.