This video clip will look a little bit at the Discovery GUI and how to discover servers. First thing is you'll see a quick start where we discover network by IP addresses and bring up the Network Discovery portal page. And once that builds out, we're going to launch the Discovery Wizard.
And there's different web parts on here that, once we have systems discovered, we'll show various reports. And we can discover via targeted network scan or via scanning network devices by ARP, and we'll just leave that as the default. And now we're going to enter a series of IP addresses of systems that we want to discover. You can enter by host name or IP range or subnet. We'll pick IP address in this case.
And start typing in our addresses. 192.168, and as a few more here. Once you enter the IP, it adds them to the table there so you can review them. And let's add a couple more here. You can also add exclude ranges if there's particular ranges of IP addresses that you want to exclude from your discovery. You can enter those as well. Or import from a file. The other two controls are the Edit and Delete icon there on the top bar.
And just add a few more. And there we go. We'll click Next and go to the third page of the wizard. All we need to do here is pick the default connection profile. The connection profile is a way that you decide you want to connect to the IP addresses that you just typed in.
It could be SNMP, WMI, and so forth. We'll use SNMP, which is the default connection profile. And here we'll just update our task name so we can watch the progress there, discovery test. And we'll just run the discovery now. You can also pick a schedule or a recurring schedule, and we'll click Finish here, and that will kick off the discovery of those devices.
The tasks will show up in the Task Run table. We'll just set auto refresh here to refresh a little more frequently. And let that go for a moment or two. And, again, it's using the protocols that were specified in the connection profile to contact those devices and to discover them and classify them.
And once those are discovered, we'll go and look at how they were classified. Looks like this task is just about complete. All right. We'll just hit refresh here and review those results. So these are just the task results here it's pulling up. Number of devices processed, total run time for the discovery, beginning and end time. All right. Looks good. And we'll close that out.
Now we're going to go to the Dell Devices, what we call the organizational view for all Dell devices. Any time you want to look at Dell Devices, you go to this window and pull up these. You can see the HA clusters, and we'll go down to servers. And here's our systems that we were -- we discovered. Categorized as a DMC computer, and there's an HA cluster at the top which we'll look at. Switches, add a band, storage devices, and that's where all those devices would go.
In this case, there's a cluster we set up, and these are the two servers in the cluster. We'll pull up this 2650 here. This is pulling up the Resource Manager, which is sort of the one-to-one view into that device. This is where you'll go also if you want to do inventory information for agent status for that server.
Back to -- set that back to the portal page. Anyway, back on the Resource Manager here, there's the alerts that are specifically filtered for this device. We don't have any alerts at this time, but for that server, those alerts would be here. And we have an agent health status web part, which we're still building out, which will show the OMSA health or the agent health of the server.
And that task status web part there, and then at the top the group health web part, which we'll do another video on. But these are just resource targets that show the various predefined groups that we defined, such as Dell servers, KVM, tape, clusters, and so forth, and that will show the roll-up health for those devices. Again, we'll have another video on those once that's built out.