Guidelines
The current capabilities and limitations of the bulk statistics formatter are:
■ If you add %d or any numeric formatter for a string value (such as sysName),
the attribute name will be used (for instance, sysName). The opposite is also
true, except for sysUptime, which will use %s as a %u.
■ You can use %% if you want a % character to be part of the parsed name.
■ You can use the same attribute multiple times. For example, you may want a
name that has %x and %u of collectorSequence.
■ Currently, there is no control over sequence numbers, except for the guarantee
that the formatter will:
1. Use sequential values, beginning from 1
2. Persist through system reboot
■ If you need the sequential number to restart, remove and then add the bulk
statistics receiver again.
■ You can use up to 128 characters for the remote file name. Anything beyond
that is truncated when the filename is stored in nonvolatile memory, but this
truncation is not visible until the next time the system reboots.
Specifying End of Line Format
By default, the bulk statistics application generates a DOS-compatible file that contains
both a carriage return (CR) and line feed (LF) at the end of each line. The existence
of a carriage return at the end of a line may cause formatting issues with some
applications that do not ignore or remove carriage returns.
You can set up the system to remove the carriage return and leave only a line feed
at the end of each line.
bulkstats file-format endOfLine-LF
■ Use to strip the carriage return from the end of each line in the bulkstats file.
■ Example
host1(config)#bulkstats file-format endOfLine-LF
■ Use the no version to return to the default, CR and LF.
■ See bulkstats file-format endOfLine-LF.
Managing Virtual Routers
Your router supports SNMP management of virtual routers. This support is based on
an SNMP community string proxy to select particular instances of virtual routers.
The entity MIB is used to model the physical container to the logical relationship of
the virtual router implementation. See “Configuring Virtual Routers” on page 539.
238 ■ Managing Virtual Routers
JUNOSe 11.1.x System Basics Configuration Guide