In addition to enabling monitoring of your customers' computers and servers (via installed agents), Atera also enables monitoring of printers, RAIDs, routers, and other SNMP devices. This article describes the process of adding SNMP device monitoring parameters in Atera.
The first step in monitoring SNMP devices is adding the devices to Atera. Learn how to add new SNMP devices. Once your devices have been added, you can add OIDs (Object Identifiers) for the specific parameters you wish to monitor on your SNMP devices. Additionally, Atera automatically monitors some specific parameters on printers as well as Linux-based devices (see 'Automatic Monitoring' at the end of this article).
Adding OIDs for SNMP Monitoring
You can add OIDs (Object Identifiers) for the specific parameters you wish to monitor on your SNMP devices.
To add OIDs:
1. From Devices (on the side panel), click to access the specific SNMP device.
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To set up alert conditions:
1. Click Add OID, under Monitored OIDs.
The Add OID Monitor screen appears.
2. Enter the OID (or a parent of the OID) and click Discover.
The OID, and a list of the leaf OIDs under it, appear along with the alert condition fields.
3. Fill in the fields to create the alert you wish to receive, then click Add OID Monitor.
Alerts will appear when your specified conditions are matched. If you select the parent OID, an alert will appear if the value of any of the leaf OIDs under it matches the condition.
Automatic Monitoring
Atera automatically monitors some specific parameters on Linux-based devices as well as printers.
Linux-Based Device Monitoring : Atera automatically monitors OIDs on Linux-based devices (routers, firewalls, PCs etc.) for the following parameters:
- 5-minute load average (laLoad, laConfig, laErrorFlag)
- Available swap memory (memAvailSwap, memMinimumSwap, memSwapError )
- Available disk space (dskMinPercent, dskPercent, dskErrorFlag)
The actual OIDs for these parameters:
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.10.1.3.2: 5 minutes load average
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.10.1.4.2: 5 minutes load average threshold
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.10.1.100.2: Flag set to 1 when 5 minutes load average crosses the threshold.
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.4.4.0: Available or unused swap space (KB)
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.4.12.0: Available swap space threshold (KB)
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.4.100.0: Flag set to 1 when available swap space goes below threshold.
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9.1.9.1: Used disk space percentage.
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9.1.5.1: Free disk space percentage threshold.
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9.1.100.1: Flag set to 1 when disk free space goes below threshold.
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9.1.9.2: Disk #2 used space percentage.
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9.1.5.2: Disk #2 free space percentage threshold.
1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9.1.100.2: Flag set to 1 when disk #2 free space goes below threshold.
The OIDs and factory-set thresholds are pulled from the device itself. These OIDs appear within the device console, and will generate Atera alerts. If you don’t wish to receive these alerts, the OIDs can be deleted from the device console.
For each parameter, we display the factory threshold, current value, and a flag that the device sets to 1 if the current value crosses the threshold (an Atera alert is generated when that flag is set to 1).
If you’re interested, you can view a full list of OIDs for Linux-based devices.
Note: The automatic OID monitoring feature appears on Linux-based devices added to Atera after July, 27, 2020 (the feature release date). If you would like to add these OIDs to SNMP devices added prior to this date, you can manually import the OIDs from within the device console.
Printer Monitoring: Atera automatically extracts carefully selected alerts from the alerts table of the Printer MIB, and they are displayed alongside other alerts in Atera. The triggers causing alerts to display within Atera include:
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These specific alerts are extracted and displayed within Atera automatically, and can't be changed. As on other alerts, tickets can easily be created or assigned to proactively handle the issues.