Rmon, About rmon – Extreme Networks 200 Series User Manual
Page 181

RMON
Summit 200 Series Switch Installation and User Guide
179
RMON
Using the Remote Monitoring (RMON) capabilities of the switch allows network administrators to
improve system efficiency and reduce the load on the network. The following sections explain more
about the RMON concept and the RMON features supported by the switch.
NOTE
You can only use the RMON features of the system if you have an RMON management application,
and have enabled RMON on the switch.
About RMON
RMON is the common abbreviation for the Remote Monitoring Management Information Base (MIB)
system defined by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) documents RFC 1271 and RFC 1757,
which allows you to monitor LANs remotely.
A typical RMON setup consists of the following two components:
config syslog delete
{
Deletes a syslog host address.
•
facility
—The syslog facility level for
local use (local0 - local7).
•
priority
—Filters the log to display
messages with the selected priority or
higher (more critical). Priorities include
critical, emergency, alert, error, warning,
notice, info, and debug. If not specified, only
critical priority messages and are sent to the
syslog host.
disable cli-config-logging
Disables configuration logging.
disable log display
Disables the log display.
disable syslog
Disables logging to a remote syslog host.
enable cli-config-logging
Enables the logging of CLI configuration
commands to the Syslog for auditing purposes.
The default setting is enabled.
enable log display
Enables the log display.
enable syslog
Enables logging to a remote syslog host.
show log {
Displays the current snapshot of the log.
Specify the
priority
option to filter the log to
display message with the selected priority or
higher (more critical). Priorities include critical,
emergency, alert, error, warning, notice, info,
and debug. If not specified, all messages are
displayed.
show log config
Displays the log configuration, including the
syslog host IP address, the priority level of
messages being logged locally, and the priority
level of messages being sent to the syslog
host.
Table 50: Logging Commands (continued)
Command
Description