User manual
Table Of Contents
- NMS300 Network Management System Application
- Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Get Started
- 3 Discover and Manage Resources
- Discovery concepts
- Use quick discovery to discover devices on your network
- Use a discovery profile to discover devices on your network
- View and manage the wired and wireless devices on your network
- View device information
- View wireless device information only
- Modify the name, location information, and contact information
- Remove device information
- Synchronize a network device
- Log in to a device
- Ping, perform a traceroute, or reboot a device
- Use the SNMP MIB browser
- View and export the Inventory table and Interface List table
- Manage device groups
- Search for the switch to which a host is connected
- 4 Monitor Devices and the Network
- Monitor the network
- Monitor the top 10 widgets for all devices
- Customize the top 10 page
- View the wireless summary and monitor the top 10 widgets for wireless devices
- View device details and interface details
- Monitor wireless clients and view client details
- Manage the configuration monitors
- Customize the optional network dashboard
- View and export audit logs
- View firmware version information
- View the NMS300 server information
- View application notifications
- 5 Manage Configurations and Firmware
- 6 Manage Alarms and Logs
- 7 Manage Maps and Topologies
- 8 Manage sFlow
- 9 Generate and View Reports
- 10 Manage Jobs
- 11 Manage Users and Security Profiles
- 12 Manage Global Settings and Backups
- 13 Manage Licenses
- 14 Register Devices
- A Technical Specifications
- B Device Details
- 1 Index
NMS300 Network Management System Application
Discover and Manage Resources User Manual34
Discovery concepts
You can discover devices on your network by using the following methods:
• Quick discovery. Discovers devices without using a discovery profile.
This method is a
quick and easy discovery method but gives you limited control over the discovery
process.
• Regular discovery. Filters the devices on your network through a discovery profile that
you must configure first.
This method gives you more control than the quick discovery
method but is a bit more complicated.
With both methods, the application can discover wired devices, wireless devices, NETGEAR
devices, and third-party devices that support standard SNMP MIBs.
The application can discover and monitor NETGEAR firewalls over the WAN. Firewalls can
use a static W
AN IP address, dynamic WAN IP address, or WAN host name. If a firewall uses
a WAN host name, the firewall must also use DNS.
Note: By default, the application lets you discover up to 200 devices. For
information about discovering more than 200 devices, contact your
NETGEAR sales contact.
For wireless access points (APs), the nature of the AP determines whether the application
can discover the
AP:
• Standalone AP. An AP that is not controlled by another device and that operates in
standalone mode. This type of AP is also referred to as a Fat AP. The application can
discover and manage standalone APs just like any other network device that the
application supports.
• Controller-managed AP.
An AP that a NETGEAR WC7520 or WC9500 wireless
controller manages. This type of AP is also referred to as a Fit AP. After the application
discovers a wireless controller, it displays the controller-managed APs in the device table.
In this indirect way, the application can discover the controller-managed APs but cannot
manage them. You cannot back up or restore the configuration, upgrade the firmware, or
delete the access points from the application. Controller-managed APs are not subtracted
from the number of devices that the license of the application supports. The license of the
application ignores the controller-managed APs.