HP (Hewlett-Packard) B6960-90078 Computer Drive User Manual


 
Integrations with Other Applications
Access Points for System and Management Applications
Chapter 13652
Command-Line Interface, Graphical User Interface and Web
Reporting Interface
The Data Protector CLI provides comparable functionality as it is
provided in Data Protector GUI. Using the Data Protector CLI you can:
Start the Data Protector GUI and sub-GUIs. For a list of the Data
Protector sub-GUIs, refer to “Graphical User Interface” on page 6.
Configure and start Data Protector actions such as backup, restore
and IDB purge. For a list of possible Data Protector actions, refer to
Appendix, “Data Protector Commands,” on page A-7.
Configure and start Data Protector reports using the Data Protector
omnirpt CLI command. For more information about reporting, refer
to “Data Protector Reporting” on page 315.
Start the Java user interface to configure and start Data Protector
reports. For more information about web reporting, refer to
“Configuring Reports and Notifications on the Web” on page 353.
You can use Data Protector commands for scripts that provide the input
data to System and Application Management application.
Data Protector Log Files
Some System and Application Management applications, such as HP
OpenView Vantage Point Operations, allow you to specify when and
which log files should be monitored for a specific log entry. If the
specified entry is detected in the file, an action can be specified. In VPO
this is called Log file encapsulation.
You can configure such a System and Application Management
application to monitor Data Protector log files for specific log entries
(Data Protector events) and define an action that is to be executed in
case a particular Data Protector event is detected.
For more information on Data Protector log files refer to “Data Protector
Log Files” on page 550. Note that there is no log files formatting
specification provided. For Data Protector log files exemplary entries,
refer to Appendix, “Data Protector Log Files Example Entries,” on page
A-44.
Windows Application Log
Some System and Application Management applications, such as
ManageX, monitor the Windows Application Log.