Cisco MCS-7825-H3-IPC1 Service Guide - Page 208
RequestsOverflow, RequestsAborted, and RequestsInProgress., Table 5-38, Cisco TFTP Server continued
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Performance Monitoring in RTMT Chapter 5 Cisco Unified Real-Time Monitoring Tool Tracing, PerfMon Counters, and Alerts Table 5-38 Cisco TFTP Server (continued) Counters BuildUnitCount ChangeNotifications DeviceChangeNotifications DialruleChangeNotifications EncryptCount GKFoundCount GKNotFoundCount HeartBeat HttpConnectRequests HttpRequests HttpRequestsAborted HttpRequestsNotFound HttpRequestsOverflow Counter Description This counter represents the number of gateways that were processed in the last build of all the configuration files. This counter also updates while processing unit change notifications. The counter increases when a new gateway is added and decreases when an existing gateway is deleted. This counter represents the total number of all the Cisco Unified Communications Manager database change notifications that the TFTP server received. Each time that a device configuration is updated in Cisco Unified Communications Manager Administration, the TFTP server gets sent a database change notification to rebuild the XML file for the updated device. This counter represents the number of times that the TFTP server received database change notification to create, update, or delete configuration files for devices. This counter represents the number of times that the TFTP server received database change notification to create, update, or delete configuration files for dial rules. This counter represents the number of configuration files that were encrypted. This counter gets updated each time a configuration file is successfully encrypted This counter represents the number of GK files that were found in the cache. This counter gets updated each time a GK file is found in the cache This counter represents the number of GK files that were not found in the cache. This counter gets updated each time a request to get a GK file results in the cache not finding it This counter represents the heartbeat of the TFTP server. This incremental count indicates that the TFTP server is up and running. If the count does not increase, this means that the TFTP server is down. This counter represents the number of clients that are currently requesting the HTTP GET file request. This counter represents the total number of file requests (such as requests for XML configuration files, phone firmware files, audio files, and so on.) that the HTTP server handled. This counter represents the sum total of the following counters since the HTTP service started: RequestsProcessed, RequestsNotFound, RequestsOverflow, RequestsAborted, and RequestsInProgress. This counter represents the total number of HTTP requests that the HTTP server. canceled (aborted) unexpectedly. Requests could get aborted if the requesting device cannot be reached (for instance, the device lost power) or if the file transfer was interrupted due to network connectivity problems. This counter represents the total number of HTTP requests where the requested file was not found. When the HTTP server does not find the requested file, a message gets sent to the requesting device. This counter represents the total number of HTTP requests that were rejected when the maximum number of allowable client connections was reached. The requests may have arrived while the TFTP server was building the configuration files or because of some other resource limitation. The Cisco TFTP advanced service parameter, Maximum Serving Count, sets the maximum number of allowable connections. 5-54 Cisco Unified Communications Manager Managed Services Guide OL-22523-01