Port probes
Summarize
Summary of Port Probes
Port probes are essential components in the Discovery process of IT Operations Management, utilized by the Shazzam probe to detect protocol activity on open ports of devices. These probes determine which classification probe to launch based on their priority when a protocol is detected.
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Key Features
- Protocol Detection: The port probes prioritize common protocols: WMI, SSH, SNMP, and HTTP.
- Sequential Launching: The WMI probe is always attempted first; if it fails, SSH is tried next, followed by SNMP and HTTP.
- Port Probe Form: Accessible via Discovery Definition > Port Probes, allowing for configuration of multiple classification probes linked to a port probe.
- Customizable Settings: Fields include Name, Description, Scanner, Active status, CIs, IPs, Triggered services, Use classification, Classification priority, Supplementary, Conditional, and Script.
Key Outcomes
By configuring port probes effectively, customers can enhance Discovery performance, ensuring accurate classification of devices even when multiple protocols are in use. The ability to set priorities and manage active probes allows for optimized discovery processes across network devices.
Port probes are used in Discovery by the Shazzam probe to detect protocol activity on open ports on devices it encounters.
When a port probe encounters a protocol in use, the Shazzam sensor checks the port probe record to determine which classification probe to launch. The common protocols WMI, SSH, SNMP, and HTTP in the base system have priority numbers that control the order in which they are launched.
The priority is as follows:
- 1 - WMI
- 2 - SSH
- 3 - SNMP
- 4 - HTTP
In the base system, the WMI probe is always launched first, and if it is successful on a device, no other port probes are launched for that device. If the WMI probe is not successful, then the SSH probe is launched to gather information on the device. If it is not successful, the SNMP probe is launched. This method allows Discovery to classify a device correctly if the device is running more than one protocol (for example, SSH, SNMP, and HTTP).
Discovery Port Probe form
To access the Port Probe form, navigate to .
| Field | Input Value |
|---|---|
| Name | Simple name for the port probe that reflects its function (for example, SNMP). |
| Description | Definition of the acronym for the protocol. (For example, SSH is Secure Shell login). |
| Scanner | Shazzam techniques for exploring a port. Some of these are protocol-specific, and others are generic. For example, a WMI port probe uses a Scanner value of Generic TCP, and the SNMP port probe uses a value of SNMP. |
| Active | Indicates whether this port probe is enabled or disabled. |
| CIs | Indicates whether this port probe is enabled or disabled for discovering Configuration Items. |
| IPs | Indicates whether this port probe is enabled or disabled for discovering IP addresses. |
| Triggered by services | Indicates which services define the port usage. Use this setting to define non-standard port usage and pair the port number with the protocol. |
| Use classification | Names the appropriate classification table, based on the protocol being explored. |
| Classification priority | Establishes the priority in which this port probe runs. If the first port probe fails, then the next probe runs on the device, and so forth, until the correct data is returned. This allows for the proper classification of a device that has two running protocols, such as SSH and SNMP. The default priorities for the Discovery protocols are:
|
| Supplementary | Launches supplementary classifications after a higher-priority identification succeeds, in order of priority. |
| Conditional | Runs this port probe if any one of the non-conditional probes returns an open port. The conditional port probes in the base system attempt to resolve the names of Windows devices and DNS names. These ports probes take additional resources and are not used unless activity is detected on open ports. |
| Script | Script to run. |