6: Basic Parameters
SLCâ„¢ 8000 Advanced Console Manager User Guide 106
To manage or view status for a Performance Monitoring probe:
1. Click the Network tab and select the Perf Monitoring option. The following page displays.
Figure 6-10 Network > Perf Monitoring
2. In the upper section of the page, modify the global Performance Monitoring settings:
Number of operations
kept for each probe
Specifies the number of operation set files to keep for each probe. The limit for
Local storage is 50 sets. The limit for external (USB or SD card) is 200 sets. While
a probe is running, the operation set files will be automatically culled to remove
the oldest operation set files.
Repository for
operations
The repository where the operation set files will be kept - Local storage, a USB
thumb drive inserted in the upper USB Port U1 or lower USB Port U2, or the SD
card slot. The data is stored in individual directories under a directory called
"perfmon". Once probes have been run and operation set files have been
generated, changing the repository will cause all of the existing files to be moved
from the old repository directory to the new repository directory. It is
recommended that the repository only be changed when probes are not actively
running. If external storage is used for the repository, it is recommended that the
external storage device not be removed from the SLC while probes are actively
running.
UDP Jitter Responder Starts the UDP Jitter responder to reply to UDP jitter or UDP jitter VoIP packets.
The responder will listen on UDP port 1967 for control messages requesting to
start individual responders on a specific UDP port. The SLC UDP jitter responder
can support up to 15 UDP jitter senders.
UDP Echo Responder Starts the UDP Echo responder on the port configured in UDP Port to reply to
UDP echo packets. The SLC UDP Echo responder supports one UDP echo
sender.
When the UDP Echo responder is enabled, the SLC will verify that the responder
UDP port is not being used by any other SLC processes, including port 1967
which is reserved for the UDP Jitter responder.