Documentation, Support, and Training
Understanding Switch Specifications
Understanding InfiniBand Cabling
Verify Shipping Carton Contents
Install the Switch in the Rack
Verifying the InfiniBand Fabric
Understanding Administrative Commands
Monitoring the InfiniBand Fabric
Controlling the InfiniBand Fabric
Controlling the Subnet Manager
Understanding Oracle ILOM on the Switch
Understanding Oracle ILOM Targets
Installing the Oracle ILOM Firmware
Acquire the Oracle ILOM Firmware Version 1.1.3
Install the Oracle ILOM Firmware Version 1.1.3
Administering Oracle ILOM (CLI)
Accessing Oracle ILOM From the CLI
Switching Between the Oracle ILOM Shell and the Linux Shell
Monitoring Oracle ILOM Targets (CLI)
Controlling Oracle ILOM Targets (CLI)
Upgrading the Switch Firmware Through Oracle ILOM (CLI)
Administering Oracle ILOM (Web)
Access Oracle ILOM From the Web Interface
Monitoring Oracle ILOM Targets (Web)
Controlling Oracle ILOM Targets (Web)
Upgrading the Switch Firmware Through Oracle ILOM (Web)
Accessing the Rear Panel Diagram
Accessing Status Pane Information
Monitoring Parameters and Status
Administering Oracle ILOM (SNMP)
Monitoring Oracle ILOM Targets (SNMP)
Display the Date and Time (SNMP)
Display the Aggregate Sensors State (SNMP)
Display Power Supply Status (SNMP)
Display Board-Level Voltages (SNMP)
Display Internal Temperatures (SNMP)
Display the Sensor Alarm State (SNMP)
Display Oracle ILOM Sessions (SNMP)
Display the Oracle ILOM Event Log (SNMP)
Checking the Status of Services (SNMP)
Display the HTTP Service Status (SNMP)
Display the HTTPS Service Status (SNMP)
Display the SMTP Client Status (SNMP)
Display the NTP Servers (SNMP)
Verifying Other Aspects With Oracle ILOM (SNMP)
Display the Alert Properties (SNMP)
Display Oracle ILOM User Accounts (SNMP)
Display the Remote Log Hosts (SNMP)
Display the Network Management Configuration (SNMP)
Display Power Supply FRU ID (SNMP)
Display the System Components (SNMP)
Display the Additional System Component Information (SNMP)
Display the Firmware Version (SNMP)
Display System Identifier (SNMP)
Controlling Oracle ILOM Targets (SNMP)
Performing General Tasks (SNMP)
Set the Network Time Protocol State (SNMP)
Set the Network Time Protocol Servers (SNMP)
Clear the Oracle ILOM Event Log (SNMP)
Set the Remote Log Hosts (SNMP)
Configure the SMTP Client (SNMP)
Set the Network Parameters (SNMP)
Set the System Identifier (SNMP)
Add an Oracle ILOM User Account (SNMP)
Delete an Oracle ILOM User Account (SNMP)
Managing Other Aspects With Oracle ILOM (SNMP)
Set the HTTP Service State (SNMP)
Set the HTTPS Service State (SNMP)
Enable Alerts to Send SNMP Traps (SNMP)
Enable Alerts to Send PETs (SNMP)
Enable Alerts to Send Email Alerts (SNMP)
Modify Alert SNMP Version (SNMP)
Display the Sensors' State (IPMI)
Display the Sensor Information (IPMI)
Display the System Event Log (IPMI)
Display FRU ID Information (IPMI)
Display Switch Status LED States (IPMI)
Disable the Locator LED (IPMI)
Understanding Oracle ILOM Commands
Understanding Hardware Commands
Linux Shells for Hardware Commands
Understanding InfiniBand Commands
Linux Shells for InfiniBand Commands
Understanding the SUN-DCS-MIB MIB OIDs
Understanding the SUN-ILOM-CONTROL-MIB MIB OIDs
Understanding the SUN-PLATFORM-MIB MIB OIDs
The majority of SNMP command examples provided in this domain use the V2c protocol for ease of demonstration. For the user to perform the examples, it is assumed that the v2c protocol and sets properties are enabled in the Oracle ILOM SNMP service and that the SNMP community public has rw permission. See the following tasks for instructions how to configure these parameters:
The command format for both the V1 and V2c protocols is as follows:
$ command -v1|-v2c -c public mc_IP MIB_name::object_id argument
where:
command is one of the commands described in SNMP Commands.
mc_IP is the IP address of the management controller.
MIB_name is the name of the MIB.
object_id is the object identifier.
argument is a combination of options and variables that support the object identifier.
Note - When the SNMP command example uses the V2c protocol, the management controller IP address variable mc_IP is not defined, as this is different for each switch installation.
For example:
$ snmpset -v2c -c public mc_IP SUN-ILOM-CONTROL-MIB::ilomCtrlTimezone.0 s "GMT"
While simple in execution, the command and returned information is not encrypted or secure.