Alerts And Logging - Dell EMC ML3 User Manual

Emc ml3 series tape library
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Table 15. Differences between CPF and DPF (continued)
Characteristic
Device driver required
Supported operating systems
Order feature to obtain license
Notes:
1. SMC = SCSI-3 Medium Changer Specification (library)
2. SSC = SCSI-3 Stream Commands (drive)
3. LUN = logical unit number
4. See "Host connectivity" on page 20 for details.
5. Load balancing is not supported on Windows
6. Full-height tape drives only

Alerts and logging

The library sends alerts about the library and attached tape drives, and offers audit-logging to track user
actions.
v TapeAlert Support: The tape library is compatible with TapeAlert technology, which provides error
and diagnostic information about the drives and the library to the host application. The library
provides this error and diagnostic information as TapeAlert flags that are reported to the application by
the SCSI LOG SENSE command. See "TapeAlert flags" on page 95.
v Email (SMTP - Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) Notifications: The library can configure email
notification of library events. The library must have network access to an SMTP server. See "Locating
Management functions" on page 63.
v Remote Logging (rsyslog): The library can send syslog (system log) notifications to a configured
remote (rsyslog) server. When system events occur, the ML3 tape library creates a log of these events.
With this notification feature configured, the library sends a notification of the event to the syslog
server. The syslog server keeps its own log of system events. (The syslog server is a customer-provided
server.) See "Locating Management functions" on page 63.
v SNMP Support: The Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) allows the library to send alerts
over a LAN network to a monitoring server.
Occasionally, the library might encounter situations that you want to know about. These situations can
be conditions that affect the library performance, such as an open door that causes the library to stop.
You might also want to log user actions, such as a cartridge move or export that is initiated from the
Management GUI. SNMP messages can alert you of these conditions.
The library provides a standard TCP/IP protocol that is called SNMP to send alerts about conditions
over a TCP/IP LAN network to an SNMP monitoring server. These alerts are called SNMP traps.
Using the information that is supplied in each SNMP trap, the monitoring server (together with
customer-supplied software) can alert operations staff of possible problems or operator interventions
that occur. Many monitoring servers can be used to send email or pager notifications when they
receive an SNMP alert. See the manual for your network management application.
The monitoring server must be loaded with systems management software that can receive and process
the trap. SNMP supports a get and get-response mechanism for an operator to gather more information
about a problem or query the library about its status. Through a monitoring server, the operator enters
a "get" using SNMP to request information about the library. A get-response is the information that is
provided in response to the get. This type of support generally requires an up-to-date library
Management Information Base (MIB). The SNMP server's MIB contains units of information that
specifically describe an aspect of a system, such as the system name, hardware number, or
communications configuration.
SNMP Notification Levels
CPF
Yes
4
®
AIX
, SuSE Linux, Red Hat
Enterprise Linux, Solaris, Windows
Yes
DPF and Load Balancing
Yes
AIX, SuSE Linux, Red Hat Enterprise
5
Linux, Solaris, Windows
(DPF only)
Yes
Overview
19

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