Extreme Networks ISM Provision Manual de usuario Pagina 39

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ISM Provision Installation Guide 1-35
Solaris Platform
Using ISM Provision under Solaris
Information about using ISM Provision can be found in the document Network
Infrastructure Manager User Guide. You will find the document in the help subdirectory
of the ISM Provision installation directory. The PDF file, imclient.pdf, contains the user
guide and can be viewed and printed with the Adobe Acrobat Reader, or other PDF
applications. You can also access the document by selecting Help Topics from the Help
menu in the NIM client.
To use ISM Provision, you will start the ISM Provision server and device communicator,
and then launch the NIM client. Once it has connected to the ISM Provision server, you
can begin adding your existing network devices to the system as described in the user
guide.
Starting the ISM Provision Server and Device Communicator
When the ISM Provision server is installed, it is set up by default to start automatically
when you boot the system. If you have not rebooted since you installed the server, you
will need to start it manually. Login to the host machine for the ISM Provision server
and open or launch a command line window. From the command line you will run the
ISM Provision server script. You will pass the parameter start to the script, named
ismp in the /etc/init.d directory. So, you will type the following:
/etc/init.d/ismp start
to start the server and device communicator (if installed together). To verify that the
server has started, type the following command:
ps -e | grep server
If the server is running, this command will return output similar to the following:
5827 pts/6 0:00 server
showing that the process called server is currently running. If the server is not
running, then the command will return no output.
Use a similar process to check if the device communicator process, called devcomm,
is currently running. Type the following command:
ps -e | grep devcomm
and look for output similar to this:
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