T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1673.1 | Operator alert, no - query alarm, yes | GRANMA::JPARKER | | Sat Oct 19 1991 20:11 | 5 |
| The IMPM and/or FCL (& mail) notification is automatic. With IMPM you
then invoke a pop-up (MB2??) to display any alarms that have fired.
regards,
Jeff.
|
1673.2 | Clarification needed ... | CENPCS::BIRMINGHAM | G.W. Birmingham, Carolinas District | Sun Oct 20 1991 13:46 | 12 |
| Jeff,
If I understand your response, the customer would have to first
determine that he/she had an alarm by detecting a color change on the map,
or discover that mail had arrived, correct ? Then he/she would have to
press MB2 to get the pop-up window, is that correct ? What the customer
is looking for is a window to pop-up when the alarm occurs so that
constant map scanning is not required, or having to check for mail
periodically. Is this possible ?
George
|
1673.3 | Yes, it can be done. | NAVIA::MARTIN | Jos� Luis Mart�n - E.I.S. Spain | Mon Oct 21 1991 07:28 | 19 |
| Hi,
as I know, it's not a "feature" of DECmcc but, of course, you can
achieve this based on the "command procedure" mechanism.
In fact, I did the same thing (only as a "demo") in a customer site. I
modified the sample "mail sender" procedure to run a little program
which displays a window requesting "acknowledge" of the alarm.
This little program was an example included in DCM or TCW to give the
same functionality you are requesting.
The only problem could be that the "command procedure" runs in batch,
and you must specify in it the name of the target display (using the
command $define DECW$DISPLAY ...).
I hope this help,
regards.
Jos� Luis.
|
1673.4 | Thanks, and a note to the developers | CENPCS::BIRMINGHAM | G.W. Birmingham, Carolinas District | Mon Oct 21 1991 13:51 | 18 |
| Jose Luis,
Thanks for the information. That's the approach I had considered,
but wasn't sure if it was already part of the IMPM. I'll use your
suggestion. Thanks for taking time to reply.
Best regards,
George
Note to developers:
The pop-up window alarm notification has been requested during two
DECmcc demo situations. If it is not planned for the product, it should
be, and should not have to be implemented as a command procedure
initiated operation.
Thanks,
George
|
1673.5 | /more | GRANMA::JPARKER | | Tue Oct 22 1991 00:05 | 23 |
| Hi,
RE: .2
Yes. That's the sequence. User must manually invoke the pop-up after an
alarm has fired.
As for the user 'scanning the map(s)', if this means 'looking into'
several domains to find the entity in question, then the only real
requirement is to have the highest level map displayed. Alarms 'bubble up'
from thier originating domain. Scanning, as such, is not required.
In my case, with 5 Domain icons over a backdrop of the U.S., (1) a Domain
icon changes color; (2) the pop-up is invoked to see exactly what alarm
happend on which entity; (3) using the 'Find' option & naming that entity,
(or via the Navigation window) the operator 'zooms' directly to the map
section containing the entity.
In any case, I see your point. Jose Luis' outline is great. You may
want to consider the system resource/overhead impact for larger nets
and/or burst of errors.
Regards,
Jeff.
|
1673.6 | POP is beter from the Big K not the slow BATCH | CLARID::PATEL | We'll get it right on the night | Tue Oct 22 1991 13:21 | 12 |
| Re -.1
as an operator of a network I may well be looking at node counters etc,
even isolating the cause of a previous alarm.. which is away from the
entity which is sending in another alarm.
I want to continue working on the current place in the map, but want to
know know the nature of the alarm coming in ....
Why is having a POP UP with a forced or automated ack such a big deal !?
Amrit
|
1673.7 | hope you like 1.2 new functions.... | TOOK::CALLANDER | MCC = My Constant Companion | Tue Oct 29 1991 16:48 | 13 |
| without taking too much time to get into it. V1.2 will provide a
significant amount of NEW notification functions to the user. These
functions range from the notification window which displays textually a
brief message (color coded) as new events come in. A mechanism to
request events as well as alarms from the IM PM; mechamisms to target
events from one entity to another (or change severity); filter the
events that are returned to the display; pause and resume notification
on per domain (not per hierarchy, but specific domain) basis. These are
on ly the tip of the iceberg. More information as we get into field
test.
jill
|
1673.8 | Tell me only what I care about. | BEAGLE::WLODEK | Network pathologist. | Thu Dec 05 1991 05:45 | 48 |
|
While running a network operation for a medium size network I came
across yet another alarming notification need.
Lets say you have a domain with banks in NYC. 30-40 banks.
Any alarm in this domain is a priority 1 problem.
A bank goes down, it's domain icon and icons above it go red.
Next bank go down, well domains are already red... you have missed it
if you have counted on MB2 ( which is not our case).
But the basic problem is that one cannot know how many red guys are
there in a domain. In our case, we try to structure domains by problem
priority rather then just location. This helps operators to assess
impact of failures and take right actions.
I see to solutions to the problem :
1. display a number of components at fault in the middle or at a side
of the domain icon. This number will increment when next bank goes
down.
2. have a window ( one per call priority), and icons for components at
fault would pop up in this window. Thus operator does not need zooming
or walking domain trees and just gets to what counts.
I see it as a real improvement of operator efficiency in the networks with
extreme service levels ( as our one...).
This probably could be the only screen ( except the pop-up alarm
window) that operator should care about. Priority screens or priority
portion of the screen is also necessary as a mean to structure
operators work.
And if one could have an integrated trouble ticket system, that would
move the red icon to another, "we are working on it " screen once a call
is placed, operators would be very happy.
In other words, DECmcc would have a clear marketing edge if it could
extend more into being a "decision support"/"structuring work" tool for
operators rather then just a network management tool.
wlodek
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1673.9 | V1.2 Notification Services PM | BSYBEE::EGOLF | John C. Egolf LKG2-2/T02 x226-7874 | Thu Dec 05 1991 08:02 | 7 |
| For internal use....
Copy the V1.2 kits just announced in note 3.* and take a look
at the Notification Services PM (Window). I think it will
solve some/most of your needs.
JCE
|
1673.10 | You might also be interested by PNMP alarm handling | TAEC::FLAUW | | Thu Dec 05 1991 09:35 | 21 |
| re :.8
Wlodlek,
You might also be interested by PNMP Alarm Handling capabilities,
allowing the operator to have different alarming views of his network
called Operation Contexts with different filtering criterias and to
handle (ack/terminate/associate with Trouble ticket) alarms.
PNMP has also an Trouble ticket FM integrated with PNMP Alarm Handling,
as well as an Event Logging capability.
The algorithm to chnage the colors on the map takes into account the
fact that the alarm has been associated or not with a Trouble Ticket.
You can find more information in the notefile TAEC::PNMP
Happy reading,
Best regards,
Marc.
|
1673.11 | V1.2 - how to notify | TOOK::CALLANDER | MCC = My Constant Companion | Tue Jan 14 1992 08:45 | 18 |
| re: .8 .9
John is talking about using the notification filters window to setup a
view of notification to meet your needs. Use the "Applications" menu
to select the notification application. From the notification window
that is brought up, select the Filters button to bring up the filter
window. This will allow you to control the data displayed in the
notificataion window. Please note though that if you delete (this is
different than filtering or hiding) a notification in the notification
window then the appropriate action will be taken to remove the visual
impact (associated color change) from the map as well.
I would be interested in knowing if you have tried out the EFT kit and
have any input on enhancements/bugs in the notification displays.
thanks
jill callander
|