1 opening network ports on managed systems, 2 resolving host names on the cms – HP Insight Control Software for Linux User Manual

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8.3.1 Opening network ports on managed systems

The network ports listed in

Table 12

are used for communication between the managed systems

and the CMS. These ports must be open to network traffic.

If you used Insight Control for Linux to install an OS and you used a configuration derived from a
supported template, the firewall is enabled by default and Insight Control for Linux opens the ports
listed in

Table 12

automatically. If you do not use a supported template for the OS configuration,

the firewall is not opened automatically.

You must follow the instructions in the vendor-supplied documentation for your OS to open the
required ports that are not already open if you did not use Insight Control for Linux to install the
OS on a managed system.

Table 12 Open ports on managed systems

Inbound or outbond

Protocol

Service

Port number

Inbound

TCP

ssh

22

Inbound

TCP

http

80

Inbound

TCP/UDP

SNMP

161

Outbound

UDP

SNMP trap listener

162

Inbound

TCP

Server location

427

Inbound

UDP

syslog-ng

514

Inbound

TCP

cpq-webm

2301

Inbound

TCP

compaq-https

2381

Inbound

TCP

mond

2709

Inbound

TCP

nrpe

5666

Both

TCP

WBEM

5989

Inbound

TCP

Default Insight Control for Linux repository web
server

1

60000

1

If you changed the default port during installation, you must open that port instead, and you must update the associated
configuration files.
The port designated for the repository web server must be opened on managed systems that run VMware ESX.

In addition to the standard ports, Insight Control for Linux also opens a few more ports dynamically
for outgoing traffic. Because the outbound ports are chosen at the start of the agents, the ports
might vary between instances, and thus the exact port numbers differ.

8.3.2 Resolving host names on the CMS

To ensure proper Nagios notification of syslog reported problems, the syslog-ng service
running on the CMS must be able to recognize the managed systems that posted the syslog
event.

The syslog or syslog-ng services on each managed system uses the /bin/hostname command
output to identify itself in the syslog entry. If the CMS cannot resolve the

host name

in the syslog

entry, syslog-ng cannot identify which managed system generated the syslog event.

As a result of not being able to resolve the host name, syslog-ng logs the event in the consolidated
log as belonging to localhost/localhost. Because localhost does not match the host
name known by HP SIM, Nagios does not send out syslog notifications for this managed system.

To ensure that the CMS can resolve the host name that is appended to all syslog events that
originate from managed systems, follow these steps:
1.

Determine the managed system's name by running the hostname command on the system:

8.3 Setting up managed systems for monitoring

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