----- "Antonio da Silva Martins Junior" <asmartins at uem.br> escreveu: > ----- "Daniel Bird" <dbird at sgul.ac.uk> escreveu: > > > > How can I find out which port on the switch a particular server > is > > > connected to? I was hoping that this is somehow possible using > the > > > mac address and the data gathered from snmpwalk/snmpget requests > > but > > > I'm not having much luck. How would you tackle this problem? > > > > > Take a look at Netdisco. I seem to remember it's a little tricky to > > set > > up on CentOS but I wouldn't live without it now. > > > > http://www.netdisco.org/ > > > Well after following the "little tricky" :D install scripts on > this address: http://www.auburn.edu/~gouldwp/netdisco/ > > I had this error: "failed to resolve handler `netdisco::Mason': > Can't locate netdisco/Mason.pm in @INC" > on my httpd error_log file. Anyone had sucess on made netdisco running? > Hi List, Well nothing better than post an email to the list to find the solution: The install script I was using (following) from the site above, put two include lines (from netdisco_apache.conf and netdisco_apache_dir.conf) on the end of "/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf". But it generates some errors on the httpd programa, and I moved them to links on "/etc/httpd/conf.d" to the netdisco config files. The problem was "netdisco*" was load before "perl*" and then the errors. Quick solution: rename "netdisco*" to "zz_netdisco*", now the load order are OK and the WebCli are running. Thanks for the help, Antonio. -- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Antonio S. Martins Jr. - Support Analist | "Only The Shadow Knows | | Universidade Estadual de Maringá - Brasil| what evil lurks in the | | NPD - Núcleo de Processamento de Dados | Heart of Men!" | | E-Mail: asmartins at uem.br / shadow at uem.br | !!! Linux User: 52392 !!! | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ "Real Programmers donât need comments â the code is obvious." -- Esta mensagem foi verificada pelo sistema de antivírus e acredita-se estar livre de perigo.