Management Server Configuration

Introduction

This section covers the available settings of the Management Server.

Contents



Management Server Settings

Management Server

These settings become available when a Management Server is selected in the Topology Manager. The settings are as follows:

Name: The name of the Management Server.

Initial Health Delay (s): The time we wait when the system is starting up for anything to be considered unhealthy. After this, there must be at least one health signal from each aspect of system - if not consider to be unhealthy.

Management Server Health Delay (s): This is the initial delay to wait for a secondary management server to start reporting health.

Clear Allowance (s): The period of a time before a health alarm is automatically cleared. 

Warn Allowance (s): The time period an orange system health warning alarm will sound. 

Alarm Allowance (s): The time period a red system health warning alarm will sound. 

Module Timeout Delay (s): The time allowed between heartbeats before we report a service as being offline.

Remove Modules From Topology: If set the system will remove modules from the Topology when they are shutdown. When not set, this will cause alarms to be raised for modules that are shutdown.

Edit Lock Timeout (s): This is the length of time between starting to edit a setting and saving it, without user interaction, before the edit times out and the edit is cancelled.

Time Sync Warn Period (s): This is the tolerance allowed between the times from two separate systems before giving a Time Sync warning.

Time Sync Alarm Period (s): This is the tolerance allowed between the times from two separate systems before giving a Time Sync alarm.

Min. Logging Level: Select the type of logging level required from the drop-down list:

Trace

Audit

Debug

Info

Error

Note that the service needs to be restarted to implement a change in logging level.

Relay ID: The relay that is activated whenever the Management Server’s health has failed. Choose ‘0’ to disable.


 

Safety is everything.