Configuring VNMC Profiles
This chapter includes the following sections:
VNMC Profiles
Cisco VNMC profiles are configurable.
In Cisco VNMC, there is a default profile that exists. Default profiles are system generated and can be modified, but they cannot be deleted. The administrator can add syslog policies, core policies, fault policies, log policies, and the time zone. DNS and NTP policies can be created also. Configured policies can be assigned to the VNMC profile.
In the VNMC profile, there is a pre-configured DNS domain name when the system is configured at boot configuration. That domain is displayed in the Cisco VNMC instance. New DNS domains cannot be created. However the domain name description can be modified.
Cisco VNMC does not support the creation of additional VNMC profiles.
Policies in VNMC Profiles
You can create multiple policies and assign them to the VNMC profile. Policies for the VNMC profile are created and deleted on the VNMC Profile tab. Policies can be assigned to the VNMC profile. VNMC profile uses name resolution to resolve policy assignments. For details, see Name Resolution in a Multi-tenancy Environment.
The following policies created under root only, in the Device Policies area, will be visible in the VNMC profile:
-
Core file policy
-
Fault policy
-
Logging policy
-
Syslog policy
Policies created under root are visible to both the VNMC profile and the Device profile.
DNS server, NTP server and domain names can be assigned as inline policies. A time zone setting can also be assigned to the profile.
When the system boots up, the following policies already have existing default policies:
-
Fault policy
-
Logging policy
-
Syslog policy
The default policies cannot be deleted but may be modified.
Configuring Policies
Configuring a Core File Policy
Adding a Core File Policy to the VNMC Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Navigation pane, click Core File. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the Add Core File Policy link. |
Step 6 |
In the Add Core File Policy dialog box, complete the following fields:
Name |
Description |
Name field |
The name of the core file policy. This name can be between 1 and 511 alphanumeric characters. You cannot use spaces or any special characters, and you cannot change this name after the object has been created. |
Description field |
The description of the core file policy. This description can be between 1 and 256 identifier characters. You can use alphanumeric characters including hyphens, underscore, dot, and colon. You cannot change this description after it is saved. |
Admin State drop-down list |
The state of the core file policy. It can be one of the following states:
-
Enabled—Enables the core file policy. TFTP is used.
-
Disabled—Disables the core file policy.
|
Hostname field |
The hostname or IP address to connect using TFTP.
Note |
If you use a hostname rather than an IP address, you must configure a DNS server in Cisco VNMC. |
|
Port field |
The port number to send the core dump file to. |
Protocol field |
The protocol used to export the core dump file. This field cannot be edited. |
Path field |
The path to use when storing the core dump file on a remote system. The default path is /tftpboot. An example path would be /tftpboot/test, where test is the sub-folder. |
|
Step 7 |
Click OK. |
Editing a Core File Policy for VNMC Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Work pane, click the General tab. |
Step 5 |
On the General tab, click the core file policy you want to edit. |
Step 6 |
Click the Edit link. |
Step 7 |
In the Edit dialog box, modify the following fields as appropriate:
Name |
Description |
Name field |
The name of the core file policy. |
Description field |
A description of the core file policy. |
Admin State drop-down list |
A list of administrative states. This can be one of the following states:
-
enabled—Enables the core file policy.
-
disabled—Disables the core file policy.
|
Hostname field |
The hostname or IP address.
Note |
If you use a hostname rather than an IP address, you must configure a DNS server. |
|
Port field |
The port number used when exporting the core dump file. The default path is /tftpboot. To mention a sub folder under tftpboot, use, for example, /tftpboot/test. |
Protocol field |
The protocol used to export the core dump file. |
Path check box |
The path to use when storing the core dump file on the remote system. |
|
Step 8 |
Click OK. |
Deleting a Core File Policy from the VNMC Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Work pane, click the General tab. |
Step 5 |
On the General tab, click the core file policy you want to delete. |
Step 6 |
Click the Delete link. |
Step 7 |
In the Confirm dialog box, click Yes. |
Configuring a Fault Policy
Adding a Fault Policy to the VNMC Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Navigation pane, click Fault. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the Add Fault Policy link. |
Step 6 |
In the Add Fault Policy dialog box, complete the following fields:
Name |
Description |
Name field |
A user-defined name for the fault policy. This name can be between 1 and 32 identifier characters. You can use alphanumeric characters including hyphen, underscore, dot, and colon. You cannot change this name after it is saved. |
Description field |
A user-defined description of the fault policy. |
Flapping Interval spinbox |
Flapping occurs when a fault is raised and cleared several times in rapid succession. To prevent this, the system does not allow a fault to change its state until this amount of time has elapsed since the last state change. If the condition reoccurs during the flapping interval, the fault returns to the active state. If the condition does not reoccur during the flapping interval, the fault is cleared. What happens at that point depends on the setting in the Clear Faults Retention Action field. The number of hours, minutes, and seconds that should pass before the system allows a fault to change its state. The default flapping interval is 10 seconds. |
Clear Faults Retention Action drop-down list |
The state of the clear faults retention action. It can be one of the following states:
-
retain—Retains the cleared faults section.
-
delete—The system immediately deletes all fault messages as soon as they are marked as cleared.
|
Clear Faults Retention Interval radio-button |
The state of the clear faults retention interval. It can be one of the following states:
-
Forever—The system leaves all cleared fault messages regardless of how long they have been in the system.
-
Other—The system displays the dd:hh:mm:ss spinbox for selection of the number of days, hours, minutes, and seconds that should pass before the system deletes a cleared fault message.
The default retention interval is 1 hour. |
|
Step 7 |
Click OK. |
Editing a Fault Policy for a VNMC Profile
Note |
When the system boots up, a default policy already exists. The default policy cannot be deleted but may be modified.
|
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Work pane, click the General tab. |
Step 5 |
On the General tab, click the fault policy you want to edit. |
Step 6 |
In the Work pane, click the Edit link. |
Step 7 |
In the Edit dialog box, modify the appropriate fields:
Name |
Description |
Name field |
The name of the fault policy. |
Description field |
A description of the fault policy. |
Flapping Interval spinbox |
The spinbox that lists flapping intervals. Use the box to set the interval. Flapping occurs when a fault is raised and cleared several times in rapid succession. To prevent this, the system does not allow a fault to change its state until this amount of time has elapsed since the last state change. The interval is the number of hours, minutes, and seconds that should pass before the system allows a fault to change its state. If the condition reoccurs during the flapping interval, the fault returns to the active state. If the condition does not reoccur during the flapping interval, the fault is cleared. What happens at that point depends on the setting in the Clear Faults Retention Action field. The default flapping interval is 10 seconds. |
Clear Faults Retention Action drop-down list |
The list that contains fault retention actions. Use the list to set an action. This can be one of the following actions:
-
retain—The system retains fault messages.
-
delete—The system immediately deletes all fault messages as soon as they are marked as cleared.
|
Clear Faults Retention Interval radio-button |
The control that sets the retention interval. Use the control to set the interval. This can be one of the following values:
-
forever—The system leaves all cleared fault messages regardless of how long they have been in the system.
-
other—The system displays the dd:hh:mm:ss spinbox for selection of the number of days, hours, minutes, and seconds that should pass before the system deletes a cleared fault message.
The default retention interval is 1 hour. |
|
Step 8 |
Click OK. |
Deleting a Fault Policy from the VNMC Profile
Note |
When the system boots up, a default policy already exists. The default policy cannot be deleted but may be modified.
|
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Work pane, click the General tab. |
Step 5 |
On the General tab, click the fault policy you want to delete. |
Step 6 |
Click the Delete link. |
Step 7 |
In the Confirm dialog box, click OK. |
Configuring a Logging Policy
Adding a Logging Policy to the VNMC Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Navigation pane, click Log File. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the Add Logging Policy link. |
Step 6 |
In the Add Logging Policy dialog box, complete the following fields:
Name |
Description |
Name field |
The name of the logging policy. This name can be between 1 and 32 identifier characters. You can use alphanumeric characters including hyphen, underscore, dot, and colon. You cannot change this name after it is saved. |
Description field |
A description of the logging policy. |
Log Level drop-down list |
A list of logging severity levels. This can be one of the following levels:
-
debug0
-
debug1
-
debug2
-
debug3
-
debug4
-
info
-
warn
-
minor
-
major
-
crit
The default log level is info. |
Backup Files Count field |
The number of backup files that are filled before they are overwritten. The range is 1 to 9 files. The default is 2 files. |
File Size (bytes) field |
The backup file size. The range is 1MB to 100MB. The default file size is 5MB. |
|
Step 7 |
Click OK. |
Editing a Logging Policy for VNMC Profile
Note |
When the system boots up, a default policy already exists. The default policy cannot be deleted but may be modified.
|
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Work pane, click the General tab. |
Step 5 |
On the General tab, click the logging policy you want to edit. |
Step 6 |
Click the Edit link. |
Step 7 |
In the Edit dialog box, modify any of the following fields:
Name |
Description |
Name field |
The name of the logging policy. This field cannot be edited. |
Description field |
A description of the logging policy. |
Log Level drop-down list |
A list of logging levels.
This can be one of the following levels:
-
debug0
-
debug1
-
debug2
-
debug3
-
debug4
-
info
-
warn
-
minor
-
major
-
crit
The default log level is info. |
Backup Files Count field |
The number of backup files that are filled before they are overwritten. The range is 1 to 9 files. The default is 2 files. |
File Size (bytes) field |
The backup file size. The range is 1MB to 100MB. The default file size is 5MB. |
|
Step 8 |
Click OK. |
Deleting a Logging Policy from the VNMC Profile
Note |
When the system boots up, a default policy already exists. The default policy cannot be deleted but may be modified.
|
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Work pane, click the General tab. |
Step 5 |
On the General tab, click the logging policy you want to delete. |
Step 6 |
Click the Delete link. |
Step 7 |
In the Confirm dialog box, click Yes. |
Configuring Syslog Policy
Adding a Syslog Policy to the VNMC Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Navigation pane, click Syslog to view the Syslog work pane. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the Add Syslog link. |
Step 6 |
In the Add Syslog dialog box, complete the following fields:
-
In the General tab area, complete as appropriate:
Table 1 General Tab
Name |
Description |
Name field |
The name of the syslog policy. This name can be between 1 and 32 identifier characters. You can use alphanumeric characters including hyphen, underscore, dot, and colon. You cannot change this name after it is saved. |
Description field |
The description of the syslog policy. |
Port field |
The TCP or UDP port where syslog messages are sent. You cannot edit this field. |
-
In the Local Destinations tab area, complete as appropriate in the Console area, Monitor area, and File area:
Table 2 Console Area
Name |
Description |
Admin State radio button |
The administrative state of the policy. It can be one of the following states:
|
Level radio button |
The message level. It can be one of the following levels:
-
alerts
-
critical
-
emergencies
If the
Admin State is enabled, select the lowest message level that you want displayed. The system displays that level and above on the console.
|
Table 3 Monitor Area
Name |
Description |
Admin State radio button |
The administrative state of the policy. It can be one of the following states:
|
Level drop-down list |
The message levels. It can be one of the following levels:
-
emergencies (0)
-
alerts (1)
-
critical (2)
-
errors (3)
-
warnings (4)
-
notifications (5)
-
information (6)
-
debugging (7)
If the
Admin State is enabled, select the lowest message level that you want displayed. The system displays that level and above on the console.
|
Table 4 File Area
Name |
Description |
Admin State radio button |
The administrative state of the policy. It can be one of the following states:
|
Level drop-down list |
The message levels. It can be one of the following levels:
-
emergencies (0)
-
alerts (1)
-
critical (2)
-
errors (3)
-
warnings (4)
-
notifications (5)
-
information (6)
-
debugging (7)
If the
Admin State is enabled, select the lowest message level that you want displayed. The system displays that level and above on the console.
|
File Name field |
The name of the file in which messages are logged. |
Size (Bytes) field |
The maximum size, in bytes, the file can be before the system begins to over-write messages. |
|
Step 7 |
Click OK. |
Editing a Syslog Policy for VNMC Profile
Note |
When the system boots up, a default policy already exists. The default policy cannot be deleted but may be modified.
|
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
Click the Syslog Policies node. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the syslog policy you want to edit. |
Step 6 |
Click the Edit link. |
Step 7 |
In the Edit dialog box, do the following:
-
In the General tab area, edit the appropriate fields:
Name |
Description |
Name field |
The name of the syslog policy. |
Description field |
The description of the syslog policy. |
Admin State drop-down list |
The administrative state of the policy. It can be one of the following states:
|
Port field |
The TCP or UDP port where syslog messages are sent. |
-
In the Local Destinations tab area, edit the appropriate fields in the Console area:
Name |
Description |
Admin State radio button |
The administrative state of the policy. It can be one of the following states:
|
Level radio button |
The message level. It can be one of the following levels:
-
alerts
-
critical
-
emergencies
If the
Admin State is enabled, select the lowest message level that you want displayed. The system displays that level and above on the console.
|
-
In the Local Destinations tab area, edit the appropriate fields in the Monitor area:
Name |
Description |
Admin State radio button |
The administrative state of the policy. It can be one of the following states:
|
Level drop-down list |
The message levels. It can be one of the following levels:
-
emergencies (0)
-
alerts (1)
-
critical (2)
-
errors (3)
-
warnings (4)
-
notifications (5)
-
information (6)
-
debugging (7)
If the
Admin State is enabled, select the lowest message level that you want displayed. The system displays that level and above on the console.
|
-
In the Local Destinations tab area, edit the appropriate fields in the File area:
Name |
Description |
Admin State radio button |
The administrative state of the policy. It can be one of the following states:
|
Level drop-down list |
The message levels. It can be one of the following levels:
-
emergencies (0)
-
alerts (1)
-
critical (2)
-
errors (3)
-
warnings (4)
-
notifications (5)
-
information (6)
-
debugging (7)
If the
Admin State is enabled, select the lowest message level that you want displayed. The system displays that level and above on the console.
|
File Name field |
The name of the file in which messages are logged. |
Size (Bytes) field |
The maximum size, in bytes, the file can be before the system begins to over-write messages. |
|
Step 8 |
Click OK. |
Deleting a Syslog Policy from a VNMC Profile
Note |
When the system boots up, a default policy already exists. The default policy cannot be deleted but may be modified.
|
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Work pane, click the syslog policy you want to delete. |
Step 5 |
Click the Delete link. |
Step 6 |
In the Confirm dialog box, click Yes. |
Adding a Syslog Server to the VNMC Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
Click the Syslog node. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the Add Syslog link. |
Step 6 |
In the Add Syslog dialog box, click the Servers tab. |
Step 7 |
Click the Add Syslog Servers link. |
Step 8 |
In the Add Syslog Server dialog box, complete the following fields:
Name |
Description |
Server Type field |
The type of server. It can be one of the following types:
-
primary
-
secondary
-
tertiary
|
Hostname/IP address field |
The hostname or IP address where the syslog file resides. |
Severity field |
The severity level. It can be one of the following levels:
-
emergencies (0)
-
alerts (1)
-
critical (2)
-
errors (3)
-
warnings (4)
-
notifications (5)
-
information (6)
-
debugging (7)
|
Forwarding Facility field |
The forwarding facility. It can be one of the following types:
-
auth
-
authpriv
-
cron
-
daemon
-
ftp
-
kernel
-
local0
-
local1
-
local2
-
local3
-
local4
-
local5
-
local6
-
lpr
-
mail
-
news
-
syslog
-
user
-
uucp
|
Admin State field |
The administrative state of the policy. It can be one of the following states:
|
|
Step 9 |
Click OK. |
Editing a Syslog Server for VNMC Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand where you want to edit a syslog server. |
Step 4 |
In the Work pane, click the server you want to edit. |
Step 5 |
Click the Edit link. |
Step 6 |
In the Edit Syslog Server dialog box, edit the appropriate fields:
Name |
Description |
Server Type column |
The type of server. It can be one of the following types:
-
primary
-
secondary
-
tertiary
|
Hostname column |
The hostname or IP address where the syslog file resides. |
Admin State column |
The administrative state of the policy. It can be one of the following states:
|
Severity column |
The severity level. It can be one of the following levels:
-
emergencies (0)
-
alerts (1)
-
critical (2)
-
errors (3)
-
warnings (4)
-
notifications (5)
-
information (6)
-
debugging (7)
|
Forwarding Facility column |
The forwarding facility. It can be one of the following types:
-
auth
-
authpriv
-
cron
-
daemon
-
ftp
-
kernel
-
local0
-
local1
-
local2
-
local3
-
local4
-
local5
-
local6
-
lpr
-
mail
-
news
-
syslog
-
user
-
uucp
|
|
Step 7 |
Click OK. |
Deleting a Syslog Server from a VNMC Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Syslog node. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the General tab. |
Step 6 |
On the General tab, click the Add Syslog link. |
Step 7 |
In the Add Syslog dialog box, click the Servers tab. |
Step 8 |
On the Servers tab, click the syslog server you want to delete. |
Step 9 |
Click the Delete link. |
Step 10 |
In the Confirm dialog box, click Yes. |
Configuring the Default Profile
Editing the VNMC default Profile
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
Click the default profile node . |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, General tab area, change the following fields as appropriate:
Name |
Description |
Name field |
A system-defined name for this default profile. |
Description field |
A user-defined description of the profile. |
Time Zone drop-down list |
A list of time zones for user selection. |
|
Step 6 |
In the Work pane Policy tab area, do the following:
-
In the DNS Servers area, change the following fields as appropriate:
Name |
Description |
Add DNS Server link |
Opens a dialog box that allows you to specify a new DNS server. |
Delete link |
Deletes the DNS server IP address selected in the IP Address table. |
Up and Down arrows |
Changes the priority of the selected DNS Server IP address. |
IP Address table |
Contains the IP addresses for the DNS servers configured in the system. VNMC uses the DNS servers in the order they appear in the table. |
-
In the NTP Servers area, change the following fields as appropriate:
Name |
Description |
Add NTP Server link |
Opens a dialog box that allows you to specify a new NTP server. |
Delete link |
Deletes the NTP server hostname selected in the Hostname table. |
Up and Down arrows |
Changes the priority of the selected NTP Server hostname. |
Hostname table |
Contains the NTP server hostnames configured in the system. VNMC uses the NTP server hostnames in the order they appear in the table. |
-
In the DNS Domains area, change the following fields as appropriate:
Name |
Description |
Edit link |
Edits the DNS domain name selected in the DNS Domains table. The default DNS name cannot be edited. |
DNS Domains table |
Contains the default DNS domain name and domain in the system. |
-
In the Log area, change the following fields as appropriate:
Name |
Description |
Syslog area |
The syslog policies associated with this profile can be selected, added, or edited. Contains the Resolved Policy field. |
Fault area |
The fault policies associated with this profile can be selected, added, or edited. Contains the Resolved Policy field. |
Core File area |
The core file policies associated with this profile can be selected, added, or edited. Contains the Resolved Policy field. |
Log File area |
The log file policies associated with this profile can be selected, added, or edited. Contains the Resolved Policy field. |
|
Step 7 |
Click OK. |
Configuring a DNS Server
Adding a DNS Server
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Navigation pane, click default. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the Policy tab. |
Step 6 |
In the DNS Servers area, click the Add DNS Server link. |
Step 7 |
In the Add DNS Server dialog box, complete the following field:
Name |
Description |
DNS IP Address field |
The DNS server IP address. |
|
Step 8 |
In the Add DNS Server dialog box, click OK.
Note |
Up to four DNS IP addresses are accepted. |
|
Deleting a DNS Server
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Navigation pane, click default. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the Policy tab. |
Step 6 |
In the DNS Servers area, click the IP address you want to delete. |
Step 7 |
Click the Delete link. |
Step 8 |
In the Confirm dialog box, click Yes. |
Step 9 |
In the Work pane, click Save. |
Configuring an NTP Server
Adding an NTP Server
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Navigation pane, click the default profile. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the Policy tab. |
Step 6 |
In the NTP Servers area, click the Add NTP Server link. |
Step 7 |
In the Add NTP Server dialog box, complete the following field:
Name |
Description |
Host Name field |
The name of the NTP server. |
Note |
Up to four NTP server hostnames are accepted. The name on top is the primary hostname. You can use the Up and Down arrows to rearrange the names. |
|
Step 8 |
Click OK. |
Deleting an NTP Server
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Navigation pane, click default. |
Step 5 |
In the Work pane, click the Policy tab. |
Step 6 |
In the NTP Servers area, click the server that you want to delete. |
Step 7 |
In the NTP Servers area, click the Delete link. |
Step 8 |
In the Confirm dialog box, click Yes. |
Configuring a DNS Domain
Editing a DNS Domain
Caution |
Changing the DNS domain will cause connectivity loss.
|
Procedure
Step 1 |
In the Navigation pane, click the Administration tab. |
Step 2 |
In the Navigation pane, click the VNMC Profile subtab. |
Step 3 |
In the Navigation pane, expand . |
Step 4 |
In the Work pane, click the Policy tab. |
Step 5 |
In the DNS Domains area, select the DNS_Domains_name you want to edit. |
Step 6 |
Click the Edit link. |
Step 7 |
In the Edit DNS Domains dialog box, edit the description field as appropriate:
Name |
Description |
Name field |
The name of the policy.
Note |
You cannot edit the Name field for the default domain. |
|
Domain Name field |
The domain name. |
|
Step 8 |
In the Edit DNS Domains dialog box, click OK. |
Step 9 |
In the Policy tabs area, click Save. |