Jason,

        Cisco does not offer a Voltage Value for graphing in the MIB I used.

Javier

Jason Humes wrote:
Hi
So I've got my Cisco devices graphing temp. OK now, with the fix listed in
this thread, but I was wondering about the voltage graphs...did you find a
fix for those as well?  Thanks.

Jason

-----Original Message-----
From: wireless [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, August 02, 2004 5:13 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Fwd: Re: [jffnms-users] Graphing environment variables]




> Chris,
> I'm glag it worked.
>
> There are not graphs for PowerSupplys or Voltage, I think there are
> no such values in the MIB.
>
> Only a flag alerting us if theres a problem (that is translated to
> an event).
>
> Javier
>
> Chris Epler wrote:
>
>> On Fri, 30 Jul 2004 18:15:41 -0300, Javier Szyszlican
>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Right, sorry, change the line 6 to:
>>>
>>> $opts_DEF = rrdtool_get_def($data,array("temp_c"=>"temperature"));
>>
>>
>>
>> Excellent, that did it! Thank you! Now, on to power supply/voltage >>
graphs...not getting graphs on those but need to verify my >> configuration
on them. (They do graph right? Cisco, voltage/power >> supply status?
Getting: Error: No Interface Graphs were returned. >> right now..) >> >


Temperature, voltage and current measurements withing a system are
problematic, but, very important. Many of the semiconductors used are
accurate enough, but, are either not correctly supported in the product's
firmware, or are monitoring at the wrong places within a given piece of
equipment. I2C busses are quite often used internally in a product, and may
be OK for temperature as it does not change that fast, but use of I2C ('I
squared C') buss in often not capable of supplying accurate(fast enough)
sensor reading data and realtime calculations of complex power states within
a systems power. None the less often they are there and somewhat useful,
even if not very accurate.

I've been custom building external hardware and sensors for those sorts of
purposes, and need to "inject data" into either a SCADA (Supervisor Control
and Data Aquisition System) or something like JFFNMS. If there is a wider
interest in accurately monitoring the power supply (target equipment' UPS
and the commercial distribution) into a package such as JFFNMS), then drop
me a line....


James








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-- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Javier Szyszlican, Project Leader, JFFNMS [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I hope JFFNMS or I were helpful to you, if you
can, please donate at http://jffnms.org/donate



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