Table Of Contents
Release Notes for Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2
Contents
Introduction
What's New in This Release
Creating Configuration Templates
Idle Timeout Settings
Standard Discovery
CAAM Features
Data Synchronization between LMS and CAAM
Managing Policy Groups
Managing Policy Profile
Fixing Profile Violation
Compliance Data Collection
CAAM Offline Update
CAAM Online Update
Import Contracts
CAAM Reports
Hardware Configuration-based MIB Objects Polling
Poller Management Enhancements
Troubleshooting Workflow Changes
Fault Management Generic Device Package Support and Traps Support
Enhancement in Unused POE Report
Enhancement in Custom Inventory Report
Enhancement in TrustSec
EnergyWise Enhancement
Report Designer Enhancement
VLAN Fetch Support for SCP and RCP
Template Center Enhancement
Third-Party Software and Tool Changes
Time Zone and Offset Settings
Operating System Upgrade
Cross Platform Data Migration Support
Server and Client Requirements
Bugs
Using Bug Toolkit
Search Bugs
Export to Spreadsheet
Open Bugs for Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2
Open Bugs Related to Administration in LMS 4.2
Open Bugs Related to Configuration in LMS 4.2
Open Bugs Related to Dashboard and Portlets in LMS 4.2
Open Bugs Related to Discovery, Device Management and Grouping Services in LMS 4.2
Open Bugs Related to Installation in LMS 4.2
Open Bugs Related to Monitoring and Troubleshooting in LMS 4.2
Open Bugs Related to Network Topology, Layer 2 Services and User Tracking in LMS 4.2
Open Bugs Related to UII in LMS 4.2
Resolved Bugs in Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2
Product Documentation
Obtaining Documentation, Obtaining Support, and Security Guidelines
Notices
OpenSSL/Open SSL Project
License Issues
Release Notes for Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2
Revised: February 2012, OL-25950-01
Contents
This Release Notes is for Cisco Prime LMS 4.2 on Solaris, Soft Appliance, and Windows platforms.
This document has the following sections:
•
Introduction
•
What's New in This Release
•
Time Zone and Offset Settings
•
Operating System Upgrade
•
Cross Platform Data Migration Support
•
Server and Client Requirements
•
Bugs
•
Product Documentation
•
Obtaining Documentation, Obtaining Support, and Security Guidelines
•
Notices
Introduction
LMS 4.2 provides you with powerful features that enable you to configure, monitor, troubleshoot, and administer Cisco networks.
Cisco Prime LMS 4.2 has options for the following underlying core functions:
•
Monitoring
•
Inventory Management
•
Configuration
•
Reporting
•
Administration
•
Work Center Management
What's New in This Release
This section explains the new features in LMS 4.2.
See the Online help of LMS 4.2 applications for a detailed explanation of the new features in LMS 4.2.
This section contains the following:
•
Creating Configuration Templates
•
Idle Timeout Settings
•
Standard Discovery
•
CAAM Features
•
Hardware Configuration-based MIB Objects Polling
•
Poller Management Enhancements
•
Troubleshooting Workflow Changes
•
Fault Management Generic Device Package Support and Traps Support
•
Enhancement in Unused POE Report
•
Enhancement in Custom Inventory Report
•
Enhancement in TrustSec
•
EnergyWise Enhancement
•
Report Designer Enhancement
•
VLAN Fetch Support for SCP and RCP
•
Template Center Enhancement
•
Third-Party Software and Tool Changes
Note
The supported screen resolution for LMS 4.2 is 1024x768 pixels. We recommend you not to use browser zoom in and zoom out features in LMS 4.2.
Creating Configuration Templates
CLI templates are user-defined templates that are created based on your own parameters. CLI templates allow you to choose the elements in the configurations. LMS provides variables that you replace with actual values and logic statements.
For more information, see Creating Configuration Templates in Configuration Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Idle Timeout Settings
If UI is kept idle for the set time period then a pop-up redirecting the page to idle page will be displayed. You can click cancel to avoid redirecting to the idle page.
If you are redirected to the idle page then click click here link to return to your previous page. The default idle timeout is 120 minutes.
Standard Discovery
Standard Discovery allows you to discovery devices with minimum settings.
For configuring Standard Discovery, you need to provide the input for Seed Devices and SNMP
Credentials.
Inputs for seed device can be given as follows:
•
Using default gateway as seed, this option is chosen by default
•
Using Seed devices from DCR, it will not show the count of devices in DCR
•
Providing Seed devices manually in TextArea separated by space
Inputs for SNMP credentials can be given as follows:
•
Use Policy Configuration
•
Custom Policy Configuration
•
Default set credentials
•
Provide Credentials Manually
For more information, see Inventory Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
CAAM Features
LMS 4.2 supports the following Compliance and Audit Manager (CAAM) features:
•
Data Synchronization between LMS and CAAM
•
Managing Policy Groups
•
Managing Policy Profile
•
Fixing Profile Violation
•
Compliance Data Collection
•
Import Contracts
•
CAAM Reports
•
CAAM Offline Update
•
CAAM Online Update
Data Synchronization between LMS and CAAM
CAAM database should always be in sync with LMS database. When a new device is added to LMS or an unmanaged device is managed, and if the CAAMServer process is down, the device will not be added to CAAM database. When the CAAMServer process comes up, the device will be added to CAAM database but the device details such as Inventory, Config and Show Commands will not be updated in CAAM database. You have to manually perform Inventory, Config, and Show Commands collection to update the CAAM database.
For more information, see Using Compliance and Audit Manager Feature in Configuration Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Managing Policy Groups
Policy Group is a collection of Policies. Policies are defined by a set of rules. LMS 4.2 supports 293 policies. In addition to the system-defined Policy Groups, you can create your own Policy Groups by selecting a set of system-defined policies. LMS allows you to add, clone, edit, and delete policy groups.
For more information, see Using Compliance and Audit Manager Feature in Configuration Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Managing Policy Profile
Policy Profile is a set of Policy Groups where each Policy Groups are mapped with set of devices/device groups. LMS allows you to add, clone, edit, and delete policy profile. It also allows you to run the compliance check and view the job history.
For more information, see Using Compliance and Audit Manager Feature in Configuration Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Fixing Profile Violation
The Profile Violations Fix Report lists all the devices that do not comply with a defined user profile. A profile is defined as a policy or a set of policies applied on either a device or a set of devices. LMS provides configuration commands for fixing the violation.
For more information, see Using Compliance and Audit Manager Feature in Configuration Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Compliance Data Collection
This feature allows you to schedule the Compliance Data Collection System Job. The Compliance Data Collection job runs daily by default.
For more information, see Compliance and Audit Settings in Administration of Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
CAAM Offline Update
This feature allows you to download and install the patches related to CAAM Server manually.
For more information, see Compliance and Audit Settings in Administration of Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
CAAM Online Update
Enables you to download and install the patches related to CAAM Server online.
For more information, see Compliance and Audit Settings in Administration of Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Import Contracts
This feature enables you to import customer contracts into the CAAM Database.
For more information, see Compliance and Audit Settings in Administration of Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
CAAM Reports
CAAM reports provide compliance status of the network, lifecycle and contract information about network devices, security advisory, and service reports based on device and software capabilities, and the services that are enabled.
Using CAAM, the following reports can be generated and viewed in the reports job browser:
•
Service Reports
•
Life Cycle Management Reports
•
Compliance Reports
For more information, see Compliance and Audit in Reports Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Service Reports
Service reports provide information about the status of all the services on network nodes. These reports also include a Capability Report section that provides information on what a user needs to do like upgrading the software or hardware for supporting a given service.
Life Cycle Management Reports
Life Cycle Management Reports provide information about the lifecycle state of the network. This report includes End of Life and Contract Management Reports.
Compliance Reports
The Compliance Reports provide information about the compliance state of the network for specific compliance requirements.
Compliance Reports include the following device reports:
•
HIPAA Compliance Reports
•
SOX (COBIT) Compliance Report
•
ISO/IEC 27002 Compliance Reports
•
NSA Compliance Reports
•
PCI DSS Compliance Reports
•
DHS Checklist Reports
•
DISA Checklists Report
•
CIS Benchmarks
•
Vendor Advisory Reports
Hardware Configuration-based MIB Objects Polling
When LMS server with specific hardware configuration polls MIB objects more than the recommended number, a warning message is displayed.
For more information, see Hardware Configuration-based MIB Object Polling Support in Monitoring and Troubleshooting with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Poller Management Enhancements
In this release, Poller Management UI displays the polling preference types namely, Poll All Instances, Poll by Pattern, and Poll by User Selection. Poll by Pattern is a new polling preference type introduced in this release.
For more information, see Creating a Poller in Monitoring and Troubleshooting with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Troubleshooting Workflow Changes
Device Information portlet in the Device Troubleshooting workflow is enhanced and it displays additional information such as CPU Utilization, Memory Utilization and so on.
For more information, see Device Information in Monitoring and Troubleshooting with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Fault Management Generic Device Package Support and Traps Support
In this release, LMS Fault Management functionality supports unknown devices and non-Cisco devices with limited functionalities.
Unknown devices here refer to Cisco devices for which device package updates are not installed and available on LMS server.
Unknown devices and non-Cisco devices together referred as Generic devices in LMS.
For more information, see Understanding the Detailed Device View in Monitoring and Troubleshooting with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
In this release, Trap support is provided for SNMPv3 configured devices, SNMPv2 configured devices, unknown devices, and non-Cisco devices.
For more information, see Configuring SNMP Trap Receiving and Forwarding in Monitoring and Troubleshooting with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Enhancement in Unused POE Report
You can view an unused PoE report with detailed information of PoE-enabled devices managed by LMS along with the information of the ports that are not connected to the end points.
For more information, see Generating an Unused PoE Report in Reports Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Enhancement in Custom Inventory Report
New Inventory Groups are added and few attributes have been added to the existing Inventory Groups.
Inventory Group
|
Attribute
|
Bridge
|
Base Bridge Address
Number of Ports
Bridge Type
|
Container
|
Container Model Name
Container Vendor Type
Description
Manufacturer Name
Physical Entity Name
|
Interface
|
interface index
|
Memory pool
|
Lowest Free Block (MB)
|
Module
|
Slot Number
|
Port
|
Port Index
Port Description
Port Vendor Type
|
System
|
Management Type
OSI Layer Services
|
For more information, see Creating an Inventory Custom Report Template in Reports Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Enhancement in TrustSec
Till LMS 4.1, Identity was a separate feature. In LMS 4.2, Identity, which is now called as 802.1x, and Secured Group Access Configuration (SXP, SGT, and SGACL) are grouped under a common feature called TrustSec.
TrustSec Version
When you launch the Getting Started/Readiness Assessment page from Work Centers > TrustSec > Getting Started/Readiness Assessment for the first time, you will be guided to select the TrustSec version (TrustSec 1.99 and TrustSec 2.0) inorder to list the TrustSec-capable devices. By default TrustSec 2.0 is selected.
TrustSec Limited Compatibility Devices
In the TrustSec Getting Started/Readiness Assessment page, the pie chart is enhanced with TrustSec Limited Compatibility Devices. If devices are running with minimum supported image version for the selected TrustSec version and if the devices are not having the required modules installed then those devices will be known as TrustSec Limited Compatibility devices.
For more information, see TrustSec Readiness Assessment in Technology Work Centers in Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Secured Group Access Configuration
Secured Group Access Configuration cross-launches the Template Center page, where you can select the template and deploy configuration.
This can be done in two ways:
•
Go to Work Centers > TrustSec > Getting Started or Readiness Assessment, select the devices from the TrustSec-capable devices pie or TrustSec Limited Compatibility pie and click SXP, SGT, or SGACL Configure options.
or
•
Go to Work Centers > TrustSec > Secured Group Access Configuration select the devices and click SXP, SGT, or SGACL Configure options.
For more information, see Secured Group Access Configuration in Technology Work Centers in Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
EnergyWise Enhancement
In the EnergyWise Policy Override portlet, Wake the host option is newly added.
In the Current Power Consumption portlet, a new field "Category" has been added.
In the Work Center > EnergyWise > Configure > Manage Endpoint Groups flow, a new field "Category" has been added.
For more information, see Technology Work Centers in Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Report Designer Enhancement
Earlier, Syslog and Inventory Custom Report templates were combined as a single workflow. In LMS 4.2, Syslog and Inventory Custom Report are available as two separate flows.
For more information, see Report Designer in Reports Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
In the Inventory Custom Report template, Report Attributes and Rules for Attributes are available as two different sections, where the generated report will display only the attributes selected under Report Attributes section.
For more information, see Creating Inventory Custom Reports in Reports Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
VLAN Fetch Support for SCP and RCP
You can set the protocol order for Configuration Management features such as Archive Management, Config Editor, and NetConfig jobs to download configurations and to fetch configurations. For NetShow and VLAN Fetch, you can set the protocol order to download configurations.
For more information, see Configuring Transport Protocols in Administration of Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Template Center Enhancement
In LMS 4.2, you can create Configuration templates using IF and FOREACH statements.
For more information, see Guidelines for Creating Configuration Templates Using IF and FOREACH Statements in Configuration Management with Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
Third-Party Software and Tool Changes
The following are the changes in the third-party software and tools in this release:
•
Support for Windows 2008 Standard Edition and Enterprise Edition on server and client systems
•
Support for Windows 2008 R2 Standard Edition and Enterprise Edition on server and client systems
•
WinPcap upgrade to 4.0.2
•
Daylight Savings Timezone tool upgrade to 1.3.45-b01
•
Firefox 8.0 and 9.0 support on client systems
•
Java Plug-in version 1.6.0_24 or later update versions only
•
Apache upgrade to 2.2.17
•
Java Runtime Environment (JRE) 1.6.0_24
Time Zone and Offset Settings
LMS supports many time zones. However, applications that have scheduling and reporting functions, and applications that produce or use time stamps vary based on:
•
Server and client—Time stamps can differ between server and client if they are located in different time zones.
•
Platforms—Windows and UNIX servers support different time zones and are not synchronized.
Table 1 shows time zone acronyms supported in the Cisco Prime applications that use the time zone feature.
•
Column 1—Lists the area covered by the time zone.
•
Column 2—Lists the supported Cisco Prime time zone acronyms. Change Audit reports may display time zone information differently.
•
Column 3—Lists the spelled out time zone definition.
•
Column 4—Lists the column's offsets from Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
If you generate reports, the output will vary depending on whether the data has been processed through Perl or Java.
To ensure that time zones are translated correctly—especially when your devices, servers, and clients are in different time zones—follow these guidelines:
•
While configuring time zones on managed devices, use the acronyms listed in the Time Zone Acronym Setting on Device column. To set time zones on devices, use the command described in the device-specific Command Reference documentation.
•
The device should be configured to send Syslogs with the appropriate time zone acronym that indicates whether daylight savings is in effect at the time of sending the Syslog. This is to ensure that the Syslog analyzer or Essentials uses the correct acronym for time conversion.
Changes made to the system time zone from outside Cisco Prime applications might not be reflected in already-running Cisco Prime applications. After changing the time zone, restart all Cisco Prime applications.
Table 1 Supported Server Time Zones
List of Supported Time Zone Values (Area Covered)
|
Time Zone Acronym Setting on Device
|
Definition
|
Offset from GMT
|
Brazil / DeNoronha
|
FNT
|
Fernando de Noronha Time
|
-2:00
|
Brazil / West
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Brazil/Acre
|
AMT
|
Amazon Time
|
-4:00
|
Brazil/East
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-3:00
|
GMT0
|
AZOST
|
Azores Summer Time
|
-1:00
|
Iceland
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
0:00
|
EET
|
EET
|
Eastern European Time
|
+2:00
|
United States / Pacific
|
PST
|
Pacific Standard Time
|
-8:00
|
US/Indiana-Starke
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
US/Samoa
|
SST
|
Samoa Standard Time
|
-11:00
|
US/Arizona
|
MST
|
Mountain Standard Time
|
-7:00
|
US/East-Indiana
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
US/Central
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
US/Eastern
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
US/Mountain
|
MST
|
Mountain Standard Time
|
-7:00
|
US/Alaska
|
AST
|
Alaska Standard Time
|
-9:00
|
US/Hawaii
|
HAST
|
Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time
|
-10:00
|
US/Aleutian
|
HAST
|
Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time
|
-10:00
|
US/Michigan
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
MST
|
MST
|
Mountain Standard Time
|
-7:00
|
CET
|
CET
|
Central Europian Time
|
+1:00
|
Asia/Chungking
|
CST
|
China Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Bangkok
|
ICT
|
Indochina Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Kashgar
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Macao
|
CST
|
China Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Yakutsk
|
YAKT
|
Yakutsk Time
|
+9:00
|
Asia/Riyadh
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Makassar
|
WITA
|
Central Indonesian Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Shanghai
|
CCT
|
China Taiwan Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Kuala_Lumpur
|
MYT
|
Malaysia Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Hovd
|
HOVT
|
Hovd Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Qyzylorda
|
QYZT
|
Qyzylorda Time
|
+6:00
|
Asia/Harbin
|
CST
|
China Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Tel_Aviv
|
IDT
|
Israel Daylight Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Anadyr
|
MAGST
|
Magadan Summer Time
|
+12:00
|
Asia/Istanbul
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Asia/Jakarta
|
WIT
|
Western Indonesian Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Aqtobe
|
AQTT
|
Aqtobe Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Aden
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Kuwait
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Manila
|
PHT
|
Philippine Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Yerevan
|
AST
|
Armenia Summer Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Seoul
|
KST
|
Korea Standard Time
|
+9:00
|
Asia/Taipei
|
CST
|
China Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Bahrain
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Jerusalem
|
IDT
|
Israel Daylight Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Riyadh89
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Ho_Chi_Minh
|
ICT
|
Indochina Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Saigon
|
ICT
|
Indochina Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Dubai
|
GST
|
Gulf Standard Time
|
+4:00
|
Asia/Tokyo
|
JST
|
Japan Standard Time
|
+9:00
|
Asia/Omsk
|
OMSST
|
Omsk Summer Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Calcutta
|
IST
|
India Summer Time
|
+5:30
|
Asia/Kabul
|
AFT
|
Afghanistan Time
|
+4:30
|
Asia/Karachi
|
PKT
|
Pakistan Standard Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Damascus
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Asia/Singapore
|
SGT
|
Singapore Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Samarkand
|
UZT
|
Uzbekistan Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Dili
|
TLT
|
East Timor Time
|
+9:00
|
Asia/Dhaka
|
BST
|
Bangladesh Standard Time
|
+6:00
|
Asia/Vientiane
|
ICT
|
Indochina Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Aqtau
|
AQTT
|
Aqtobe Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Thimbu
|
BTT
|
Bhutan Time
|
+6:00
|
Asia/Ashkhabad
|
TMT
|
Turkmenistan Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Yekaterinburg
|
YEKST
|
Yekaterinburg Summer Time
|
+6:00
|
Asia/Kamchatka
|
PETST
|
Kamchatka Summer Time
|
+12:00
|
Asia/Macau
|
CST
|
Chinsa Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Oral
|
ORAT
|
ORAT
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Ashgabat
|
TMT
|
Turkmenistan Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Novosibirsk
|
NOVST
|
Novosibirsk Summer Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Thimphu
|
BTT
|
Bhutan Time
|
+6:00
|
Asia/Ulan_Bator
|
IRKST
|
Irkutsk Summer Time
|
+9:00
|
Asia/Nicosia
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Asia/Phnom_Penh
|
ICT
|
Indochina Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Irkutsk
|
IRKST
|
Irkutsk Summer Time
|
+9:00
|
Asia/Urumqi
|
CST
|
Chinsa Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Kuching
|
MYT
|
Malaysia Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Kolkata
|
IST
|
India Standard Time
|
+5:30
|
Asia/Vladivostok
|
VLAST
|
Vladivostok Summer Time
|
+11:00
|
Asia/Dacca
|
BST
|
Bangladesh Standard Time
|
+6:00
|
Asia/Baku
|
AZST
|
Azerbaijan Summer Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Tashkent
|
UZT
|
Uzbekistan Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Rangoon
|
MMT
|
Myanmar Time
|
+6:30
|
Asia/Dushanbe
|
TJT
|
Tajikistan Time
|
+5:00
|
Asia/Hong_Kong
|
HKT
|
Hong Kong Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Magadan
|
MAGST
|
Magadan Summer Time
|
+12:00
|
Asia/Krasnoyarsk
|
KRAST
|
Krasnoyarsk Summer Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Katmandu
|
NPT
|
Nepal Time
|
+5:45
|
Asia/Gaza
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Asia/Brunei
|
BNT
|
Brunei Darussalam Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Pyongyang
|
KST
|
Korea Standard Time
|
+9:00
|
Asia/Colombo
|
IST
|
India Standard Time
|
+5:30
|
Asia/Choibalsan
|
ULAT
|
Ulaanbaatar Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Bishkek
|
KGT
|
Kyrgyzstan Time
|
+6:00
|
Asia/Baghdad
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Tehran
|
IRDT
|
Iran Daylight Time
|
+4:30
|
Asia/Chongqing
|
CST
|
China Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Tbilisi
|
GET
|
Georgia Standard Time
|
+4:00
|
Asia/Amman
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Asia/Ujung_Pandang
|
WITA
|
Central Indonesian Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Riyadh
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Pontianak
|
WIB
|
Western Indonesian Time
|
+7:00
|
Asia/Muscat
|
GST
|
Gulf Standard Time
|
+4:00
|
Asia/Sakhalin
|
SAST
|
South Africa Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Asia/Beirut
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Asia/Qatar
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Ulaanbaatar
|
ULAT
|
Ulaanbaatar Time
|
+8:00
|
Asia/Kathmandu
|
NPT
|
Nepal Time
|
+5:45
|
Asia/Almaty
|
ALMT
|
Alma-Ata Time
|
+6:00
|
Asia/Riyadh87
|
AST
|
Arab Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Asia/Jayapura
|
WIT
|
Eastern Indonesian Time
|
+9:00
|
PRC
|
MST
|
Mountain Standard Time
|
-7:00
|
Japan
|
JST
|
Japan Standard Time
|
+9:00
|
Antarctica/DumontDUrville
|
DDUT
|
Dumont-d`Urville Time
|
+10:00
|
Antarctica/Palmer
|
NZST
|
New Zealand Standard Time
|
+12:00
|
Antarctica/Mawson
|
MAWT
|
Mawson Time
|
+5:00
|
Antarctica/Vostok
|
VOST
|
Vostok Time
|
+6:00
|
Antarctica/Casey
|
CAST
|
Casey Time
|
+8:00
|
Antarctica/Syowa
|
SYOT
|
Syowa Time Time Zone
|
+3:00
|
Antarctica/McMurdo
|
NZST
|
New Zealand Standard Time
|
+12:00
|
Antarctica/Rothera
|
ROTT
|
Rothera Time
|
-3:00
|
Antarctica/Davis
|
DAVT
|
Davis Time
|
+7:00
|
Antarctica/South_Pole
|
NZST
|
New Zealand Standard Time
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Tarawa
|
GILT
|
Gilbert Island Time
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Gambier
|
GAMT
|
Gambier Time
|
+9:00
|
Pacific/Port_Moresby
|
PGT
|
Papua New Guinea Time
|
+10:00
|
Pacific/Kiritimati
|
LINT
|
Line Islands Time
|
+14:00
|
Pacific/Nauru
|
NRT
|
Nauru Time Zone
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Rarotonga
|
CKT
|
Cook Island Time
|
-10:00
|
Pacific/Galapagos
|
GALT
|
Galapagos Time
|
-6:00
|
Pacific/Yap
|
YAPT
|
Yap Time
|
+10:00
|
Pacific/Wake
|
WAKT
|
Wake Iland Time Zone
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Auckland
|
NZST
|
New Zealand Standard Time
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Samoa
|
SST
|
Samoa Standard Time
|
-11:00
|
Pacific/Apia
|
WST
|
West Samoa Time
|
-11:00
|
Pacific/Majuro
|
MHT
|
Marshall Islands Time
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Efate
|
VUT
|
Vanuata Time
|
+11:00
|
Pacific/Guam
|
ChST
|
Chamorro Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Pacific/Chatham
|
CHAST
|
Chatham Island Standard Time
|
+12:45
|
Pacific/Honolulu
|
HAST
|
Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time
|
-10:00
|
Pacific/Pago_Pago
|
SST
|
Samoa Standard Time
|
-11:00
|
Pacific/Kwajalein
|
MHT
|
Marshall Islands Time
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Wallis
|
WFT
|
Wallis and Futuna Time
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Norfolk
|
NFT
|
Norfolk Time
|
+11:30
|
Pacific/Niue
|
NUT
|
Niue Time
|
-11:00
|
Pacific/Kosrae
|
KOST
|
Kosrae Standard Time
|
+11:00
|
Pacific/Pitcairn
|
PST
|
Pitcairn Standard Time
|
-8:00
|
Pacific/Midway
|
SST
|
Samoa Standard Time
|
-11:00
|
Pacific/Funafuti
|
TVT
|
Tuvalu Time
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Saipan
|
ChST
|
Chamorro Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Pacific/Marquesas
|
MART
|
Marquesas Time
|
-9:30
|
Pacific/Tongatapu
|
TOST
|
Tongatapu Standard Time
|
+13:00
|
Pacific/Easter
|
EAST
|
Easter Island Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
Pacific/Noumea
|
NCT
|
New Caledonia Time
|
+11:00
|
Pacific/Ponape
|
PONT
|
Pohnpei Standard Time
|
+11:00
|
Pacific/Guadalcanal
|
SBT
|
Solomon Island Time
|
+11:00
|
Pacific/Fakaofo
|
TKT
|
Tokelau Time
|
-10:00
|
Pacific/Tahiti
|
TAHT
|
Tahiti Time
|
-10:00
|
Pacific/Palau
|
PWT
|
Palau Time
|
+9:00
|
Pacific/Johnston
|
HDT
|
Hawaiian Daylight Time
|
-9:30
|
Pacific/Enderbury
|
PHOT
|
Phoenix Island Time
|
+13:00
|
Pacific/Fiji
|
FJT
|
Fiji Time
|
+12:00
|
Pacific/Truk
|
TRUT
|
Truk Time
|
+10:00
|
PST8PDT
|
PDT
|
Pacific Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
Hongkong
|
HKT
|
Hong Kong Time
|
+8:00
|
EST5EDT
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
GMT
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Mideast/Riyadh88
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Mideast/Riyadh89
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
Mideast/Riyadh87
|
AST
|
Arabia Standard Time
|
+3:00
|
W-SU
|
MSD
|
Mascow Daylight Time
|
+3:00
|
Navajo
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
GB
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
NZ
|
NZST
|
New Zealand Standard Time
|
+12:00
|
UCT
|
UCT
|
Universal Time
|
+0:00
|
CST6CDT
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
Jamaica
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
Universal
|
UCT
|
Universal Time
|
+0:00
|
Portugal
|
WEST
|
Western European Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Cuba
|
CDT
|
Cuba Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
Arctic/Longyearbyen
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Turkey
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
GB-Eire
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
HST
|
HAST
|
Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time
|
-10:00
|
UTC
|
Universal
|
Universal
|
+0:00
|
Egypt
|
EET
|
Eastern European Time
|
+2:00
|
Singapore
|
SGT
|
Singapore Time
|
+8:00
|
Eire
|
IST
|
Irish Standard Time
|
+1:00
|
America/Yellowknife
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Yakutat
|
YDT
|
Yukon Daylight Time
|
-8:00
|
America/Belem
|
BRT
|
Brasília time
|
-3:00
|
America/Eirunepe
|
ACST
|
Australian Central Standard Time
|
+9:30
|
America/Nipigon
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Managua
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Rankin_Inlet
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Fort_Wayne
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Santiago
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Port-au-Prince
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Lima
|
PET
|
Peru Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Merida
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Cambridge_Bay
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Buenos_Aires
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Aruba
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Ensenada
|
PDT
|
Pacific Daylight Time
|
-8:00
|
America/Winnipeg
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Hermosillo
|
MST
|
Mountain Standard Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Curacao
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Jamaica
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Grand_Turk
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Rosario
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/North_Dakota/Center
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/North_Dakota/New_Salem
|
PDT
|
Pacific Daylight Time
|
-8:00
|
America/Catamarca
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Campo_Grande
|
AMT
|
Amazon Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Toronto
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Coral_Harbour
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Glace_Bay
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Montreal
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/St_Johns
|
NDT
|
Newfoundland Daylight Time
|
-3:30
|
America/Montserrat
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Antigua
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Godthab
|
WGST
|
Western Greenland Summer Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Nassau
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Shiprock
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Indianapolis
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Cayenne
|
GFT
|
French Guiana Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Manaus
|
AMT
|
Amazon Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Dawson
|
MST
|
Mountain Standard Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Panama
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Swift_Current
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/El_Salvador
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Noronha
|
FNT
|
Fernando de Noronha Time
|
-2:00
|
America/St_Vincent
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Juneau
|
AKDT
|
Alaska Daylight Time
|
-9:00
|
America/Sao_Paulo
|
BRT
|
Brasilla Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Marigot
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Resolute
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Caracas
|
VET
|
Venezuelan Standard Time
|
-4:30
|
America/Rio_Branco
|
AMT
|
Amazon Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Los_Angeles
|
PDT
|
Pacific Daylight Time
|
-8:00
|
America/Regina
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Porto_Acre
|
AMT
|
Amazon Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Bogota
|
COT
|
Columbia Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Anguilla
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Mazatlan
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Tortola
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Mendoza
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Atikokan
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-500
|
America/Boise
|
MDT
|
Moutain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Cayman
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Fortaleza
|
BRT
|
Brasilia Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Port_of_Spain
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Montevideo
|
UYT
|
Uruguay Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Mexico_City
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Argentina/Ushuaia
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/Jujuy
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/San_Luis
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/ComodRivadavia
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/Buenos_Aires
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/Tucuman
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/Rio_Gallegos
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/Catamarca
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/La_Rioja
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/San_Juan
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/Mendoza
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/Salta
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Argentina/Cordoba
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Iqaluit
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Tijuana
|
PDT
|
Pacific Daylight Time
|
-8:00
|
America/Cordoba
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Whitehorse
|
PDT
|
Pacific Daylight Time
|
-8:00
|
America/Porto_Velho
|
AMT
|
Amazon Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Asuncion
|
PYT
|
Paraguay Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Menominee
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Araguaina
|
BRT
|
Brasilia Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Dominica
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/St_Lucia
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Havana
|
CDT
|
Cuba Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Anchorage
|
AKDT
|
Alaska Daylight Time
|
-9:00
|
America/Virgin
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Paramaribo
|
SRT
|
Suriname Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Rainy_River
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Blanc-Sablon
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Thule
|
ADT
|
Atlantic Daylight Time
|
-3:00
|
America/New_York
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Tegucigalpa
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
America/St_Thomas
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Indiana/Vevay
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Indiana/Winamac
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Indiana/ Indianapolis
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Indiana/Marengo
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Indiana/ Petersburg
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Indiana/Knox
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Indiana/ Vincennes
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Indiana/Tell_City
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Denver
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Costa_Rica
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Cuiaba
|
AMT
|
Amazon Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Boa_Vista
|
AMT
|
Amazon Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Recife
|
BRT
|
Brasilia Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Vancouver
|
PDT
|
Pacific Daylight Time
|
-8:00
|
America/Dawson_Creek
|
MST
|
Mountain Standard Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Atka
|
HADT
|
Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Time
|
-9:00
|
America/Adak
|
HADT
|
Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Time
|
-10:00
|
America/Belize
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Louisville
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Miquelon
|
PMDT
|
Pierre & Miquelon Daylight Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Detroit
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Thunder_Bay
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Guadeloupe
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Guyana
|
GYT
|
Guyana Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Martinique
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Nome
|
AKDT
|
Alaska Daylight Time
|
-9:00
|
America/Santarem
|
BRT
|
Brasilia Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Moncton
|
ADT
|
Atlantic Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Maceio
|
BRT
|
Brasilia Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Inuvik
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Cancun
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Halifax
|
ADT
|
Atlantic Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Edmonton
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Kentucky/Monticello
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Kentucky/Louisville
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Monterrey
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Guatemala
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Chicago
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
MET
|
MEST
|
Middle European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Factory
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Indian/Mahe
|
IST
|
India Standard Time
|
+5:30
|
Indian/Maldives
|
MVT
|
Maldives Time
|
+5:00
|
Indian/Mauritius
|
MUT
|
Mauritius Time
|
+4:00
|
Indian/Chagos
|
IOT
|
Indian Chagos Time
|
+6:00
|
Indian/Cocos
|
CCT
|
Cocos Islands Time
|
+6:30
|
Indian/Reunion
|
RET
|
Reunion Time
|
+4:00
|
Indian/Comoro
|
EAT
|
East Africa Time
|
+3:00`
|
Indian/Antananarivo
|
EAT
|
East Africa Time
|
+3:00`
|
Indian/Christmas
|
CXT
|
Christmas Island Time
|
+7:00
|
Indian/Kerguelen
|
TFT
|
French Southern and Antartic Time
|
+5:00
|
Indian/Mayotte
|
EAT
|
East Africa Time
|
+3:00`
|
Canada/Pacific
|
PDT
|
Pacific Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
Canada/East-Saskatchewan
|
CST
|
Cenntral Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
Canada/Newfoundland
|
NDT
|
Newfoundland Daylight Time
|
-2:30
|
Canada/Central
|
CDT
|
Central Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
Canada/Eastern
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
Canada/Mountain
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-7:00
|
Canada/Saskatchewan
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-6:00
|
Canada/Atlantic
|
ADT
|
Atlantic Daylight Time
|
-3:00
|
Canada/Yukon
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-5:00
|
ROC
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Greenwich
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
Zulu
|
Universal
|
Universal Time
|
+0:00
|
Poland
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
MST7MDT
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
Australia/Tasmania
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/West
|
WST
|
Western Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Australia/Darwin
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
+9:30
|
Australia/Yancowinna
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
+9:30
|
Australia/Brisbane
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:30
|
Australia/Lord_Howe
|
LHST
|
Lord Howe Standard Time
|
+10:30
|
Australia/Currie
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/Adelaide
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
+9:30
|
Australia/Perth
|
WST
|
Western Standard Time
|
+8:00
|
Australia/Hobart
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/ACT
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/North
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
+9:30
|
Australia/Eucla
|
CWST
|
Central Western Summer Time
|
+8:45
|
Australia/NSW
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/Victoria
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/South
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
+9:30
|
Australia/Canberra
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/LHI
|
LHST
|
Lord Howe Standard Time
|
+10:30
|
Australia/Queensland
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/Melbourne
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/Sydney
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
+10:00
|
Australia/Broken_Hill
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
+9:30
|
Atlantic/Stanley
|
FKST
|
Falkland Islands Summer Time
|
-3:00
|
Atlantic/Faroe
|
WEST
|
Western European Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Atlantic/Canary
|
WEST
|
Western European Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Atlantic/Azores
|
AZOST
|
Azores Summer Time
|
+0:00
|
Atlantic/South_Georgia
|
GST
|
Guam Standard Time
|
-2:00
|
Atlantic/St_Helena
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Atlantic/Cape_Verde
|
CVT
|
Current Cape Verde Time
|
-1:00
|
Atlantic/Jan_Mayen
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Atlantic/Reykjavik
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Atlantic/Faeroe
|
WEST
|
Western European Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Atlantic/Madeira
|
WEST
|
Western European Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Atlantic/Bermuda
|
ADT
|
Atlantic Daylight Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Grenada
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Phoenix
|
MST
|
Mountain Standard Time
|
-7:00
|
America/Chihuahua
|
MDT
|
Mountain Daylight Time
|
-6:00
|
America/Goose_Bay
|
ADT
|
Atlantic Daylight Time
|
-3:00
|
America/St_Kitts
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/La_Paz
|
BOT
|
Bolivia Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Santo_Domingo
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Guayaquil
|
ECT
|
Ecuador Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Pangnirtung
|
EDT
|
Eastern Daylight Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Barbados
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Jujuy
|
ART
|
Argentina Time
|
-3:00
|
America/Bahia
|
BRT
|
Brasilia Time
|
-3:00
|
America/St_Barthelemy
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Puerto_Rico
|
AST
|
Atlantic Standard Time
|
-4:00
|
America/Danmarkshavn
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
America/Knox_IN
|
CST
|
Central Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
America/Scoresbysund
|
EGST
|
Eastern Greenland Summer Time
|
+0:00
|
Kwajalein
|
MHT
|
Marshall Islands Time
|
+12:00
|
Iran/Tehran
|
IRDT
|
Iran Daylight Time
|
+4:30
|
Iran/Tehran
|
IRST
|
Iran Standard Time
|
+3:30
|
Europe/Berlin
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Simferopol
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Andorra
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Samara
|
KUYT
|
Kuybyshev Time
|
+4:00
|
Europe/Dublin
|
IST
|
Irish Standard Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Guernsey
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Riga
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Monaco
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Tirana
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/San Marino
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Istanbul
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Athens
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Zurich
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Belgrade
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Sarajevo
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Tallinn
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Podgorica
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Bratislava
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Jersey
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Isle_of_Man
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Copenhagen
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Volgograd
|
MSD
|
Moscow Daylight Time
|
+4:00
|
Europe/Gibraltar
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Vatican
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Belfast
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Brussels
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Amsterdam
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Bucharest
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Helsinki
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/London
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Moscow
|
MSD
|
Moscow Daylight Time
|
+4:00
|
Europe/Madrid
|
CET
|
Central European Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Budapest
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Vaduz
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Prague
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Luxembourg
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Vienna
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Rome
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Mariehamn
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Nicosia
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Lisbon
|
WEST
|
Western European Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Kiev
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Sofia
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Malta
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Chisinau
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Tiraspol
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Paris
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Warsaw
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Oslo
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Stockholm
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Skopje
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Ljubljana
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Zagreb
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Vilnius
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Zaporozhye
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Uzhgorod
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Minsk
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Kaliningrad
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
EST
|
EST
|
Eastern Standard Time
|
-5:00
|
Africa/Ouagadougou
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Maseru
|
SAST
|
South Africa Standard Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Conakry
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Niamey
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Blantyre
|
CAT
|
Central Africa Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Nouakchott
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Johannesburg
|
SAST
|
South Africa Standard Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Asmera
|
EAT
|
Eastern Africa Time
|
+3:00
|
Africa/Windhoek
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Ndjamena
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Abidjan
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Malabo
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Maputo
|
CAT
|
Central Africa Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Lome
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Khartoum
|
EAT
|
Eastern Africa Time
|
+3:00
|
Africa/Harare
|
CAT
|
Central Africa Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Bamako
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Asmara
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Porto-Novo
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Douala
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Mbabane
|
SAST
|
Eastern Africa Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Kampala
|
EAT
|
Eastern Africa Time
|
+3:00
|
Africa/Lusaka
|
CAT
|
Central Africa Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Tunis
|
CET
|
Central European Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Addis_Ababa
|
EAT
|
Eastern Africa Time
|
+3:00
|
Africa/Lubumbashi
|
CAT
|
Central Africa Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Ceuta
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Freetown
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Mogadishu
|
EAT
|
Eastern Africa Time
|
+3:00
|
Africa/Banjul
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Luanda
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Bangui
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Lagos
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Brazzaville
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Nairobi
|
EAT
|
Eastern Africa Time
|
+3:00
|
Africa/Algiers
|
CET
|
Central European Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Dar_es_Salaam
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Dakar
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Accra
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Tripoli
|
EET
|
Eastern European Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Djibouti
|
EAT
|
Eastern Africa Time
|
+3:00
|
Africa/Libreville
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/Kinshasa
|
WAT
|
West Africa Time
|
+1:00
|
Africa/El_Aaiun
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Cairo
|
EET
|
Eastern European Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Timbuktu
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Sao_Tome
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Monrovia
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Bissau
|
GMT
|
Greenwich Mean Time
|
+0:00
|
Africa/Bujumbura
|
CAT
|
Central Africa Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Gaborone
|
CAT
|
Central Africa Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Kigali
|
CAT
|
Central Africa Time
|
+2:00
|
Africa/Casablanca
|
WEST
|
Western European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Iran/Tehran
|
IRDT
|
Iran Daylight Time
|
+4:30
|
Iran/Tehran
|
IRST
|
Iran Standard Time
|
+3:30
|
Europe/Berlin
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Simferopol
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Andorra
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Samara
|
KUYT
|
Kuybyshev Time
|
+4:00
|
Europe/Dublin
|
IST
|
Irish Standard Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Guernsey
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Riga
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Monaco
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Tirana
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/San Marino
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Istanbul
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Athens
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Zurich
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Belgrade
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Sarajevo
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Tallinn
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Podgorica
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Bratislava
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Jersey
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Isle_of_Man
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Copenhagen
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Volgograd
|
MSD
|
Moscow Daylight Time
|
+4:00
|
Europe/Gibraltar
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Vatican
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Belfast
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Brussels
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Amsterdam
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Bucharest
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Helsinki
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/London
|
BST
|
British Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Moscow
|
MSD
|
Moscow Daylight Time
|
+4:00
|
Europe/Madrid
|
CET
|
Central European Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Budapest
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Vaduz
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Prague
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Luxembourg
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Vienna
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Rome
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Europe/Mariehamn
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Nicosia
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Lisbon
|
WEST
|
Western European Summer Time
|
+1:00
|
Europe/Kiev
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Sofia
|
EEST
|
Eastern European Summer Time
|
+3:00
|
Europe/Malta
|
CEST
|
Central European Summer Time
|
+2:00
|
Operating System Upgrade
While installing Cisco Prime LMS 4.2, the installation process checks for required patches. You must install:
•
Any missing required patches, recommended patches, and cluster patches on Solaris systems.
•
Required service packs on Windows systems.
For a list of prerequisites, see Chapter 2 of Installing and Migrating to Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2 at:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/net_mgmt/ciscoworks_lan_management_solution/4.2/install/guide/
install.html
If Cisco Prime does not operate properly after you install all necessary patches or service packs, check the permissions in the directory install-directory\objects\dmgt\ready. Local administrators group and casusers group must have full access.
If the permissions are incorrect, stop the Daemon Manager, change the permissions, and start the Daemon Manager again.
Caution 
If
LMS is running without the required service packs or patches, it will not function properly.
Cross Platform Data Migration Support
Cross platform data migration in Linux does not support restoration of 32-bit backup from any platforms supported by LMS to 64-bit Linux machine.
Server and Client Requirements
For information on server and client requirements for the system and browser, see Chapter 2 of Installing and Migrating to Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2 at:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/net_mgmt/ciscoworks_lan_management_solution/4.2/install/guide/
install.html
Bugs
This section explains:
•
Using Bug Toolkit
•
Open Bugs for Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2
•
Resolved Bugs in Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2
Using Bug Toolkit
In CiscoWorks LMS 4.0 and later, use the Bug ToolKit to view the list of outstanding and resolved bugs in a release. This section explains how to use the Bug ToolKit through the following subsections:
•
Search Bugs
•
Export to Spreadsheet
Search Bugs
This section explains how to use the Bug ToolKit to search for a specific bug or to search for all the bugs in a specified release.
Step 1
Go to http://www.cisco.com/pcgi-bin/Support/Bugtool/launch_bugtool.pl.
You will be prompted to log into Cisco.com. After you login, the Bug Toolkit page opens.
Step 2
Click Launch Bug Toolkit.
Step 3
To search for a specific bug, enter the bug ID in the Search for Bug ID field and click Go in the Search Bugs tab.
To search for all the bugs in a specified release, enter the following search criteria in the Search Bugs tab:
•
Select Product Category—Select Network Management and Automation.
•
Select Products—Select CiscoWorks LAN Management Solution 4.0 and later from the list.
•
Software Version—Select 4.2 to view the list of outstanding and resolved bugs in
Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2.
•
Search for Keyword(s)—Separate search phrases with boolean expressions (AND, NOT, OR) to search within the bug title and details.
•
Advanced Options—You can either perform a search using the default search criteria or define custom criteria for an advanced search. To customize the advanced search, select Use custom settings for severity, status, and others and provide the following information:
–
Severity—Select the severity level.
–
Status—Select Open, Fixed, or Terminated.
Select Open to view all the open bugs. To filter the open bugs, clear the Open checkbox and select the appropriate sub-options that appear below the Open checkbox. The sub-options are New, Held, More, Open, Waiting, Assigned, Forwarded, Postponed, Submitted, and Information Required. For example, if you want to view only new bugs in Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2, select New.
Select Fixed to view fixed bugs. To filter fixed bugs, clear the Fixed checkbox and select the appropriate sub-options that appear below the fixed checkbox. The sub-options are Resolved or Verified.
Select Terminated to view terminated bugs. To filter terminated bugs, clear the Terminated checkbox and select the appropriate sub-options that appear below the terminated checkbox. The sub-options are Closed, Junked, and Unreproducible. Select multiple options as required.
–
Advanced—Select the Show only bugs containing bug details checkbox to view only those bugs that contain detailed information, such as symptoms and workarounds.
–
Modified Date—Select this option if you want to filter bugs based on the date on which the bugs were last modified.
–
Results Displayed Per Page—Select the appropriate option from the list to restrict the number of results that appear per page.
Step 4
Click Search. The Bug Toolkit displays the list of bugs based on the specified search criteria.
Export to Spreadsheet
The Bug ToolKit provides the following options to export bugs to a spreadsheet:
•
Click Export All to Spreadsheet link in the Search Results page under the Search Bugs tab. Specify file name and folder name to save the spreadsheet. All the bugs retrieved by the search will be exported.
•
Click Export All to Spreadsheet link in the My Notifications tab. Specify file name and folder name to save the spreadsheet. All the saved bugs in all the groups will be exported.
If you are unable to export the spreadsheet, log into the Technical Support Website at
http://www.cisco.com/cisco/web/support/index.html for more information or call Cisco TAC (1-800-553-2447).
Open Bugs for Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2
The open bugs describe possible unexpected behavior in Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2 release. These bugs may also be open in previous releases.
Refer Using Bug Toolkit for querying and searching bug details.
This section contains:
•
Open Bugs Related to Administration in LMS 4.2
•
Open Bugs Related to Configuration in LMS 4.2
•
Open Bugs Related to Dashboard and Portlets in LMS 4.2
•
Open Bugs Related to Discovery, Device Management and Grouping Services in LMS 4.2
•
Open Bugs Related to Installation in LMS 4.2
•
Open Bugs Related to Monitoring and Troubleshooting in LMS 4.2
•
Open Bugs Related to Network Topology, Layer 2 Services and User Tracking in LMS 4.2
•
Open Bugs Related to UII in LMS 4.2
Open Bugs Related to Administration in LMS 4.2
Table 2 lists the open bugs related to Administration in LMS 4.2.
Table 2 Open Bugs Related to Administration in LMS 4.2
Identifier
|
Summary
|
Explanation
|
CSCts55260
|
Some issues occurred during the execution of CARS CLI command.
|
CARS-CLI Commands are not working as expected.
This issue occurs when executing the some of the CARS-CLI commands.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtx08080
|
"Password Recovery" option is not working in Virtual Appliance.
|
"Password Recovery" option is not working as expected.
When the ISO image is mounted and the option "Recover administrator password" is chosen for password recovery, an error message"Failed to mount drive partition" appears instead of the password recovery window.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtz24562
|
In some Soft Appliance platform, startup of DbEngines and responding to connections is consuming more time.
|
DbEngine startup and responding to connections is taking a long time. But other syslog logging from devices and Daemons Manager, which uses local0, has no issues.
Workaround:
Change "-s local0" to "-s none" in the dmgtd.conf file for the DB engine processes and restart the daemons.
|
Open Bugs Related to Configuration in LMS 4.2
Table 3 lists the open bugs related to Configuration in LMS 4.2.
Table 3 Open Bugs Related to Configuration in LMS 4.2
Identifier
|
Summary
|
Explanation
|
CSCtw86891
|
In Profile Execution Report page, SNMP strings are shown as clear text.
|
When fixing the violations in Profile Execution Report page, SNMP strings are shown as clear text.
This occurs under the following condition:
1. Select the rule "check writeable string are not configured in a device" when you create a rule for the selected policy.
2. Configure SNMP Write in device, and then run compliance check job.
3. When you view the "violation with fix", SNMP strings are shown as clear text.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtx19732
|
No details are displayed for CAAM Jobs in Admin Job Browser.
|
Admin job browser for jobs related to CAAM display "No details" Pop-up when you click the job IDs.
Workaround:
See the job details in the respective Job Browser.
|
CSCtx26377
|
Helpdesk Users are unable to access or view CAAM Report.
|
Users with Helpdesk role are not able to access or view the CAAM Reports because Report view permissions are not given for Helpdesk users.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtg35678
|
Ports are not filtered in Identity configuration flow.
|
If you select any port group in Identity configuration flow, all ports including VLAN links ports are also listed.
Workaround:
Create a port group that do not have these ports or excludes these ports during job creation.
|
CSCti16034
|
Image distribution through SCP failed in Mixedstack.
|
This occurs when you try image distribution through SCP protocol.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtj59461
|
The associated ports for a particular Identity mode are not sorted in logical order.
|
In the Identity work center enable and edit flow, the sorting of ports are not in the logical order.
The Port selection is not working properly after it is sorted. If you sort and select the first item in the grid, it takes the first item that was there before sorting.
Workaround:
Select the devices and port without sorting.
|
CSCts52554
|
Port Groups are not shown for Network Operator and User-defined role
|
This issue occurs in the Template Center Port and Module flow, and Netconfig flow under the following condition:
1. Create a User-defined role or a Network Operator role by selecting the View, Create, Configure, Deploy, or Import and Adhoc Configuration-Template Center tasks.
2. Login to LMS as a Network Operator role or a User-defined role.
3. In the Template Center deploy Port and Module flow and in the Net Config Port and Module flow, the port selector port groups and module selector module groups are not displayed.
Workaround:
In the Template Center Port and Module flow and NetConfig Port and Module flow, login into LMS as a user other than network operator or newly created user, the group selector groups are displayed.
|
CSCtt46555
|
Issue with Global commands in Module-based templates.
|
The following issues are identified:
• When you create a module-based template and import the template, the same global commands are displayed multiple times in the preview CLI window during job scheduling. This issues occurs in the Template Center Module-based template. If the capable device has multiple modules, the preview CLI displays the global commands multiple times.
• For Module based global parameters, syntax is not validated.
Workaround:
You must ensure that the correct value is entered as mentioned in the Global Parameter page.
|
CSCtu21015
|
NME module device is not able to fetch the result of the ShComplnceReportCmndset commandset.
|
When you select the NME module device and "Show Compliance Report Commands Info" commandset, and click on the Next button, the following pop-up message appears: "NS0036: None of the device(s) have applicable commands."
This issue is specific to Module devices only.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtu10003
|
"Bridge: Base Bridge Address" attribute operators need to be enhanced.
|
In the Inventory Custom Template, the Bridge: Base Bridge Address and System :OSI Layer Service attributes need to be enhanced for the "contains","startswith","endswith" operators under the following conditions:
• The validation present for the attribute Bridge: Base Bridge Address in rule creation, does not allow to enter partial value. If you try to create a rule with the operator, "startswith" and the value, 00:0b, it will not be accepted as a valid input.
• For the System: OSI Layer Service attribute, the "contains", "startswith", and "endswith" operators need to be enhanced as comma-separated attribute values.
• If rule is provides as System: OSI Layer Service startswith Datalink, the only device that has 'Datalink' service alone is filtered. The device that has any other service supported along with 'Datalink' is not getting displayed in report.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtu26759
|
In Inventory Custom Template, report generation failed during some scenarios.
|
A blank screen is displayed in the report when you create an Inventory custom template with the following attributes:
• Device Type: Category attribute.
• Create a rule with Bridge attributes or with Memory pool set to "Lowest free block or System: Management Type".
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtv10861
|
Issue with combination of new and old attributes in Inventory Custom Template.
|
When you create an Inventory Custom Template using the attributes, such as Bridge and Memory: size, the report that is generated does not filter the records based on the rules mentioned in the custom template:
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtv11780
|
Failed to generate report with System: Management Type attribute.
|
An error message "Report could not found" is displayed when you generate a report using:
• System: Management Type in the Report Attributes column, and
• any other attributes, such as Location from System Inventory Group in the Rules for Attributes column.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw69740
|
Issue with SGA Core template deployment.
|
SGA core template deployment fails for the device of type 6506 switch.
The SGA core template has the CLI command, "cts sxp connection peer <<peer ip>> source <<Source ip>> password required cisco mode speaker". For this template during the deploy flow, the device of type 6506 switch is filtered in the device selector. But the device does not have the above CLI command. So the deploy job fails.
The connection password option in the SGA core template CLI is "required". But in the device of type 6506 switch, only "default and not required" option is available.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw92725
|
In CAAM, enhancement is required for Terminal Access policy.
|
For the rule "Check for incoming connections" in Terminal Access policy, it checks for both Telnet and SSH separately and data is displayed is displayed as failed for both Telnet and SSH in all CAAM reports. If either Telnet or SSH passes, the data is not displayed as passed in the report. Only the failed result is displayed, which can cause confusion. Hence, enhancement is required so that the successful results are also displayed in all CAAM reports for Terminal Access policy.
This issue occurs when the user launches any report that has Terminal Access rules.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtx34710
|
In CAAM, Inventory, Config, and Show commands need to be collected while synchronization.
|
After the data synchronization is completed, the synched up devices are added to CAAM database without the device details such as inventory, configuration, and show commands.
This issue occurs after CAAM server is synched with LMS.
Workaround:
Collect the inventory, configuration, and show commands details and update the CAAM database manually.
|
CSCtx52176
|
Issue with contract reports when contract file is not imported.
|
If device contract summary and module contract summary reports are generated without importing a contract file, the error message, "contract file is not imported" does not appear.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtu29692
|
Ipv6 devices are not supported for CAAM features.
|
In the current version, IPv6 support is not provided for the CAAM compliance data collection feature.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtu33149
|
Purge functionality must be implemented for CAAM Jobs.
|
Purge functionality for CAAM feature jobs are not available.
Workaround:
User has to manually delete the jobs from the job browser.
|
CSCtx18996
|
In CAAM feature, job approval needs to be implemented.
|
Job approval needs to be implemented for jobs related to CAAM features.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtu09665
|
Issue when adding attributes for Bridge, System, MemPool group in Inventory Custom Report.
|
AND rule association displays N/A for unmatched rules, for the following attributes:
• System: Management Type
• Memory Pool: Lowest Free Block (MB)
• Bridge: Base Bridge Address, Number of ports, and Bridge type.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw58985
|
General enhancements are required for CAAM Report generation.
|
The following enhancements are required for CAAM report generation:
• Before you generate a report, check the CAAM Server status. If the server is down, the message must appear as a pop-up instead of displaying a report page.
• When there are no records for immediate report, a pop-up must appear instead of generating a new page with no records.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw59013
|
Enhancements are required for CAAM Report formatting.
|
The following report formatting enhancements must be completed:
• When the report data is large, the report page must be blurred and the processing icon must be displayed.
• For reports with Multi-rows-for-device attribute is set as true, we need to provide a drop-down list box option so that when user selects the device from the drop-down list box, the section pertaining to the data for that device is displayed.
• For the device summary displayed in each report, if the number of devices without data is large, the text "Devices without report data" appears in the centre. This text must appear at the top of the report.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw61686
|
Enhancements required in CAAM feature.
|
The following enhancements are required in CAAM feature:
• Entire page is refreshed after you Save or do a Save As. The entire page must not be refreshed.
• Interface Group pop-up error message must be displayed as part of (i) Icon.
• A confirmation message must appear when a user navigates to other Policy Groups without saving the current policy.
• Filter feature does not work for both Policy Groups and policies object selector.
• System-defined group description is missing.
These issues occur when a user tries to create a Policy Group.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw58384
|
In the Profile Execution Report, separate columns are required for fixable and nonfixable violation count.
|
We must have separate columns in violation grid, which will list the count of fixable violation and nonfixable violation. This helps the user to know that both the violations exist.
This issue occurs under the following conditions:
1. Schedule a compliance job for policy profile.
2. Launch the profile execution report after the job is completed successfully.
3. The policies grid in the report page must have extra column that display the count of fixable and non fixable violations.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtx57088
|
There are dynamic UI validation issues in CAAM Policy Group.
|
The following issues are identified:
• Validation fails for some policies when the user moves from one policy to another or when a policy is saved.
• When the validation fails, the error message appears but the radio button selection moves to the next selection.
• In some rare scenarios, the radio button selection moves to the next policy even if the rules present in the dynamic UI are invalid or out of range.
• In HTTP policy, the out of range message appears inconsistently along with a yellow color highlighted text box. This needs to be tracked through xwt forum.
Workaround:
None. This issue is inconsistent. The yellow color appearing is the behavior of the widget.
|
CSCtt34316
|
Report generated is not satisfying the rules in Inventory Custom Template.
|
Create an Inventory Custom Template using the attributes from different inventory groups for rule and report. When you generate a report using this template, the data is not filtered across the inventory groups.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtl76351
|
'More' command is seen in the latest archived running configuration for GSS device.
|
'More' command is seen in the latest archived running configuration for the GSS device.
This occurs after you configure the GSS device with terminal width as 10, schedule a configuration fetch job, and successful completion of the job.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtq53879
|
Cache issue in Template Center Port related template on Preview CLI command.
|
This issue occurs under the following condition:
1. Go to Configuration > Tools > Template Center > Deploy.
2. Select two ports and navigate to the preview CLI pane.
3. Go back to the Template Center deploy page and select one more port.
4. Navigate to the preview CLI pane. CLI commands are generated only for the first selected two ports.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtr10934
|
Pick list for software versions must include IOS information for the ASR.
|
Currently, when viewing the pick list for software images, the ASR line only shows the IOS XE version information versus the resulting IOS Release information.
Workaround:
Research the IOS XE to IOS version information to select the correct software update path.
|
CSCti77485
|
Software update page link is missing in Remote Syslog Analyzer and Collector (RSAC) server.
|
Link for software update page is missing in the RSAC server.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw64274
|
Cross platform migration: Configuration archives are not restored if Custom archive location is used.
|
Custom archives are not restored when you choose the LMS installed drive as the archive drive. For example, if you install LMS in custom drive and after restore, you collect archives in the custom path, archives are not restored in LINUX server.
Note You can install LMS in D drive and collect archives in C drive or any other drive (if exists) other than the D drive in which LMS is installed.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw51607
|
Device under NAT environment is not collected in EnergyWise
|
The device maintained under NAT environment and managed with public IP is shown in all the technology workcenter except EnergyWise. In LMS, EnergyWise needs subnet details of a device, which is done through MIB polling. Hence, if the device is managed with NATed IP address then EnergyWise collection fails.
Workaround:
None.
|
Open Bugs Related to Dashboard and Portlets in LMS 4.2
Table 4 lists the open bugs related to Dashboards and Portlets in LMS 4.2.
Table 4 Open Bugs Related to Dashboard and Portlets in LMS 4.2
Identifier
|
Summary
|
Explanation
|
CSCtw76726
|
Undeployed portlet is available in 32SP public dashboard that is migrated from 32SP migration.
|
Undeployed portlet is available in the public dashboard- 32SP, which is getting migrated from LMS 32SP.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw56101
|
Identity DB name is retained for restore backup of LMS 401.
|
Identity DB name is retained for restore backup of LMS 401.
Workaround:
None.
|
Open Bugs Related to Discovery, Device Management and Grouping Services in LMS 4.2
Table 5 lists the open bugs related to Discovery, Device Management and Grouping Services in LMS 4.2.
Table 5 Open Bugs Related to Discovery, Device Management and Grouping Services in LMS 4.2
Identifier
|
Summary
|
Explanation
|
CSCtx37339
|
Default Credential set not working for cluster updated devices.
|
Default Credential set is not applied for updated cluster devices from discovery. Select cluster module in custom discovery settings and select default credential set option and run discovery.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtx50661
|
Unable to stop the running discovery instance error message in discovery.
|
When the running discovery instance is stopped inconsistently the following error message appears: "unable to stop the running discovery instance"
The discovery instance is stopped. No issues due to this pop-up message.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw81578
|
GS page is in loading state for more than 15 minutes in the inline server.
|
Unable to open the Getting started page in the inline upgrade server. It takes more than 20 minutes to load the GS page.
This issue occurs when the inline upgrade servers get the psu thread blocked in the tomcat thread.
Workaround:
None.
|
Open Bugs Related to Installation in LMS 4.2
Table 6 lists the open bugs related to Installation in LMS 4.2.
Table 6 Open Bugs Related to Installation in LMS 4.2
Identifier
|
Summary
|
Explanation
|
CSCty42710
|
While upgarding LMS 4.1 to LMS 4.2 , CiscoView old packages get uninstalled and only left with the device packages that are new/changed in LMS 4.2
|
CiscoView does not launch for most of the devices . while upgrading LMS 4.1 to LMS 4.2.
Workaround:
• Stop daemons.
• Copy all device packages from NMSROOT\www\classpath\com\cisco\nm\xms\psu\pkgs\cvw to NMSROOT\MDC\tomcat\webapps\CVng\WEB-INF\classes\com\cisco\nm\cvw.
• Start daemons.
|
Open Bugs Related to Monitoring and Troubleshooting in LMS 4.2
Table 7 lists the open bugs related to Monitoring and Troubleshooting in LMS 4.2.
Table 7 Open Bugs Related to Monitoring and Troubleshooting in LMS 4.2
Identifier
|
Summary
|
Explanation
|
CSCtx34228
|
Identity needs to be changed as TrustSec in technology details portlet.
|
TrustSec is displayed as identity in troubleshooting technology details portlet.
This issue occurs when you launch the troubleshooting reports for the identity enabled device.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtx34369
|
TrustSec status values to be changed accordingly in technology details.
|
TrustSec status values are not displayed properly.
This issue occurs when you launch the troubleshooting reports for the TrustSec enabled device.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtw52350
|
Fault customized groups are lost after editing as private.
|
Customized groups are missing under Fault device group administration page.
When you edit a customized group under fault device group management page, mark the visibility scope as private, and complete the edit flow, the edited customized group is not displayed under the tree.
Workaround:
DFM DB's (dfmInv, dfmEpm, dfmFh) has to be reinitialized to get back the customizable groups. However, the previously edited changes will not reflect.
|
CSCtn68202
|
Issue in hum when entPhysicalDescr names are same for different instance.
|
When you try to poll for EnergyWise port power usage and CPU utilization templates, the poller screen displays the same instance names. In live graph and histograph, the portlets display HTTP 500 error.
This issue occurs when the entPhysicalDescr name is same for many instances.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCua14145
|
IPSLA Monitoring graph will not be displayed correctly in IE8.
|
Under Monitor > Performance Settings > IPSLA > Collectors when choosing the collector and click on monitor, the graph will be displayed, but when scrolling the graph will not be displayed correctly.
Workaround:
You can use Firefox 8.
|
Open Bugs Related to Network Topology, Layer 2 Services and User Tracking in LMS 4.2
Table 8 lists the open bugs related to Network Topology, Layer 2 Services and User Tracking in LMS 4.2.
Table 8 Open Bugs Related to Network Topology, Layer 2 Services and User Tracking in LMS 4.2
Identifier
|
Summary
|
Explanation
|
CSCtx11751
|
Issue in Dual IPV6 Configuration device.
|
IPv6 details are not shown in IPv6 addresses list in Topology.
This issue is specific to 4500 device. It does not return any value for the mib cIpAddressEntry.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtl96069
|
Cloud color is not updated when Topology receives an add event.
|
Cloud color is not updated when add event is received by topology. When you add a device to LMS, either using Device Management (DCR) or using groups, the corresponding user-defined groups do not appear in the Topology. Moreover, the color of the group is incorrect.
Workaround:
Restart the Topology.
|
CSCtn42049
|
Deleted user-defined groups do not get deleted from Topology Services.
|
The Topology cloud does not change to red if any device in this group goes down. Also, if the device is unmanaged in UDM, the Topology cloud does not change to green.
This issue occurs under the following condition:
1. Create a user-defined group.
2. Delete the user-defined group.
3. Create a new user-defined group.
4. Launch the Topology Services. You can view the deleted user-defined group in the Topology cloud.
Workaround:
None.
|
Open Bugs Related to UII in LMS 4.2
Table 9 lists the open bugs related to UII in LMS 4.2.
Table 9 Open Bugs Related to UII in LMS 4.2
Identifier
|
Summary
|
Explanation
|
CSCtu19996
|
Stop Custom Discovery button is missing in GS.
|
In the Getting Started > Device addition page, in Step 3: Add Devices, for the Summary tab, after the discovery is started, the Start discovery button is not changing to Stop discovery.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtx11799
|
Exception on Admin > Getting Started > Device Management > Device Addition.
|
Exception occurs inconsistently.
Workaround:
None.
|
CSCtx21602
|
The Delete option is missing for the job in Software and Device update in GS.
|
In the Admin > Getting Started > Software and Device Update page, Delete option is missing for the Software and Device Update jobs.
Workaround:
Go to Admin > System > Software Center > Scheduled Job Details page and delete the jobs.
|
CSCtx75981
|
Default Backup Directory must be empty in GS for fresh install.
|
In the Admin > Getting Started > System Settings page, the following issues are identified:
• Default backup directory is not empty in GS for fresh install.
• Wrong field is displayed for daily backup schedule.
• Configuring system settings with improper backup directory, displays an error message. Message confirming that the rest of the settings are saved, does not appear.
• Mail settings do not validate SMTP server in the Systems Settings page.
Workaround:
None.
|
Resolved Bugs in Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2
Table 10 contains the bugs resolved in LMS 4.2.
Refer Using Bug Toolkit for querying and searching bug details.
Table 10 Bugs Resolved in Cisco Prime LMS 4.2
Identifier
|
Headline
|
Administration
|
CSCtu15535
|
Unable to add the SMTP servicemen when SMTP is working.
|
CSCtu00804
|
Errors during.ova deployment.
|
CSCtr50453
|
RAM Value needs to be hard reserved for all set of SKU in OVA deployment.
|
CSCtq64619
|
Entering shell with short password displays wrong error message.
|
CSCtw65668
|
Local hosts file entry causes unexpected side effects.
|
CSCtq53583
|
Default credential set doesn't validate the data by clicking the Next button.
|
CSCtt26201
|
No updates in daemons.log for more than 3 days.
|
CSCtw49793
|
ESS server created Out of Memory.
|
CSCtx14294
|
ActiveMQ thread going to parked state.
|
CSCto08276
|
HTTP 503 error in the LMS41 Solaris Endurance server.
|
CSCth20366
|
In 5K SKU, job browser, "Daemon manager not responding" status appears.
|
CSCts75806
|
System Requirements fails, showing '-' value in available space for 2 TB.
|
CSCts81263
|
Issues found in CSCtr18162 Apache Patch 2.2.17.
|
CSCts82530
|
Incorrect time zone in GMT Casablanca time zone on Windows 2008.
|
CSCts95764
|
Tomcat vulnerability CVE-2011-3190 in 5.5.x.
|
CSCtt25225
|
LMS 3.2.1 Http error 500.
|
CSCtu18693
|
CS - HTTP response splitting in autoliogin.jsp.
|
CSCtu93448
|
Serviceability: PSU not showing proper dependency package information.
|
CSCtv14636
|
SNMP RO showing as filed in Troubleshooting work flow.
|
CSCty05610
|
DNS resolution for syslog messages to be disabled by default in LMS OVFs.
|
Backup Restore
|
CSCtq04407
|
Backup got failed in the Solaris 5k server.
|
CSCtu15729
|
backup-restore and hostnamechange.pl should change LOCALHOST property.
|
Configuration
|
CSCts11531
|
Syslog messages may not seen reports or the event monitor.
|
CSCts13593
|
Inventory collection fails due to Version API code.
|
CSCtr78398
|
SWIM Purge job shows failed if there are no jobs available to purge.
|
CSCts07181
|
WLC Inventory Collection will not collect Image should be documented.
|
CSCtx04460
|
Netconfig CONFIG_CDL1031 error.
|
CSCtr08200
|
Upgrade Analysis is not showing hyperlink for 3560-CG.
|
CSCts66783
|
RME 4.3.1 Lanbase in Software Repository Download unavailable.
|
CSCsl34066
|
Contract Connection doesn't work with high number of "device types"
|
CSCtr11975
|
Scheduled Inventory Collection Purge Jobs are not working.
|
CSCtr55870
|
Interactive commands may fail on an ASA firewall.
|
CSCts07203
|
Energywise job is failing for 4K devices.
|
CSCtr92919
|
Energywise collection information is not available in online help.
|
CSCsz66704
|
RME should support other protocols for vlan.dat transfer.
|
CSCtr87633
|
Config Templates do not support saving the running config to startup.
|
CSCtr59770
|
LMS 3.2 RME Compliance Report PDF format issues.
|
CSCts41862
|
LMS3.2/RME4.3 Change Audit Report error references nonexistent director.
|
CSCtr25369
|
RME Change Audit Usernames, Host Names and Conn Modes may be incorrect.
|
CSCts30411
|
Bug Toolkit is sending wrong URL to CCO.
|
CSCtw91086
|
ConfigUtilityService runs out of memory due to WebUI files in tar images.
|
CSCtw63761
|
Scheduled reports are not available from the GUI under report archives.
|
CSCtx38716
|
TimeZone.lst should include all the timezones in the file.
|
CSCtr92933
|
Custom location shouldn't allow CSCOpx folder.
|
CSCts24745
|
VPN device password is printed in log as plain text.
|
CSCts42721
|
LMS 4.0.1 Baseline Compliance Report csv export is wrong.
|
CSCtx02219
|
EOS/ EOL hardware report doesn't identify all supervisors.
|
CSCsr12119
|
Not all devices have a list of config exclude commands.
|
CSCtw63794
|
Scheduled Severity Level Summary Report takes hours to complete.
|
CSCtr63016
|
Read-only database views contain sensitive information.
|
CSCtt26380
|
LMS 4.1 portal device status counters for Inventory/Archive inconsistent.
|
CSCtw57101
|
Chassis model name is not displayed in the DDR report.
|
CSCsz48654
|
RME does not track serial number for ports.
|
CSCtw60064
|
LMS 4.1: not able to copy current running image to LMS software reposit.
|
CSCtv98691
|
Configuration of LWA feature via LMS fails.
|
CSCtw99987
|
"no dot1x system-auth-control" should not be part of disable identity.
|
CSCti16034
|
In LMS 4.0, image distribution through SCP failed in Mixedstack.
|
CSCtx95454
|
SWIM image upgrade fails for 2960 device.
|
Discovery, Device Management and Grouping Services
|
CSCts72706
|
PSU Device Update not working in LMS 4.1.
|
CSCtq67391
|
Default Credential set is not applied for updated devices from discovery.
|
Installation
|
CSCtt96317
|
LMS 4.1 install removes inherited rights when settings ACLs on CSCOpx.
|
CSCtq31470
|
Issue in vendor & version type in Linux installation.
|
Monitoring and Troubleshooting
|
CSCto47054
|
Issue in Energywise monitoring when the secrets are changed for a domain.
|
CSCtq56640
|
Issue in if description in live and histograph it portlets.
|
CSCtr00200
|
Issues in FM and EM page.
|
CSCtr21972
|
Inconsistency in LMS 4.0 snmpv3 password length.
|
CSCts23868
|
Name Service Monitor process is not working correctly in Win 5K.
|
Network Topology, Layer 2 Services and User Tracking
|
CSCtf51757
|
Add the ability to configure a voice (aux) VLAN on a port.
|
CSCtr51668
|
Tracking Acquisition Settings Define Rogue MAC table overflow.
|
CSCtr67151
|
CM 5.2.2 - Highlight color for links in Topology is not auto refreshed.
|
CSCtt26311
|
Campus discrepancy report link duplex auto detect vs full duplex.
|
CSCtu16487
|
Campus Docs should reflect that UT custom layouts are defined per user.
|
CSCtu16598
|
UT: quick end host report hits error with special char in phone number.
|
Product Documentation
Table 11 describes the product documentation that is available.

Note
We sometimes update the printed and electronic documentation after original publication. Therefore, you should also review the documentation on Cisco.com for any updates.
Obtaining Documentation, Obtaining Support, and Security Guidelines
For information on obtaining documentation, submitting a service request, and gathering additional information, see the monthly What's New in Cisco Product Documentation, which also lists all new and revised Cisco technical documentation, at:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/general/whatsnew/whatsnew.html
Subscribe to the What's New in Cisco Product Documentation as a Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feed and set content to be delivered directly to your desktop using a reader application. The RSS feeds are a free service and Cisco currently supports RSS version 2.0.
Notices
The following notices pertain to this software license.
OpenSSL/Open SSL Project
This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit (http://www.openssl.org/).
This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com).
This product includes software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com).
License Issues
The OpenSSL toolkit stays under a dual license, i.e. both the conditions of the OpenSSL License and the original SSLeay license apply to the toolkit. See below for the actual license texts. Actually both licenses are BSD-style Open Source licenses. In case of any license issues related to OpenSSL please contact openssl-core@openssl.org.
OpenSSL License:
Copyright © 1998-2007 The OpenSSL Project. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
1.
Redistributions of source code must retain the copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2.
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions, and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3.
All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software must display the following acknowledgment: "This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit (http://www.openssl.org/)."
4.
The names "OpenSSL Toolkit" and "OpenSSL Project" must not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without prior written permission. For written permission, please contact openssl-core@openssl.org.
5.
Products derived from this software may not be called "OpenSSL" nor may "OpenSSL" appear in their names without prior written permission of the OpenSSL Project.
6.
Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the following acknowledgment:
"This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit (http://www.openssl.org/)."
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE OpenSSL PROJECT "AS IS"' AND ANY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE OpenSSL PROJECT OR ITS CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com). This product includes software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com).
Original SSLeay License:
Copyright © 1995-1998 Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com). All rights reserved.
This package is an SSL implementation written by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com).
The implementation was written so as to conform with Netscapes SSL.
This library is free for commercial and non-commercial use as long as the following conditions are adhered to. The following conditions apply to all code found in this distribution, be it the RC4, RSA, lhash, DES, etc., code; not just the SSL code. The SSL documentation included with this distribution is covered by the same copyright terms except that the holder is Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com).
Copyright remains Eric Young's, and as such any Copyright notices in the code are not to be removed. If this package is used in a product, Eric Young should be given attribution as the author of the parts of the library used. This can be in the form of a textual message at program startup or in documentation (online or textual) provided with the package.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
1.
Redistributions of source code must retain the copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2.
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3.
All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software must display the following acknowledgement:
"This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com)".
The word `cryptographic' can be left out if the routines from the library being used are not cryptography-related.
4.
If you include any Windows specific code (or a derivative thereof) from the apps directory (application code) you must include an acknowledgement: "This product includes software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com)".
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ERIC YOUNG "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
The license and distribution terms for any publicly available version or derivative of this code cannot be changed. i.e. this code cannot simply be copied and put under another distribution license [including the GNU Public License].
CCDE, CCSI, CCENT, Cisco Eos, Cisco HealthPresence, the Cisco logo, Cisco Lumin, Cisco Nexus, Cisco Nurse Connect, Cisco Stackpower, Cisco StadiumVision, Cisco TelePresence, Cisco WebEx, DCE, and Welcome to the Human Network are trademarks; Changing the Way We Work, Live, Play, and Learn and Cisco Store are service marks; and Access Registrar, Aironet, AsyncOS, Bringing the Meeting To You, Catalyst, CCDA, CCDP, CCIE, CCIP, CCNA, CCNP, CCSP, CCVP, Cisco, the Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert logo, Cisco IOS, Cisco Press, Cisco Systems, Cisco Systems Capital, the Cisco Systems logo, Cisco Unity, Collaboration Without Limitation, EtherFast, EtherSwitch, Event Center, Fast Step, Follow Me Browsing, FormShare, GigaDrive, HomeLink, Internet Quotient, IOS, iPhone, iQuick Study, IronPort, the IronPort logo, LightStream, Linksys, MediaTone, MeetingPlace, MeetingPlace Chime Sound, MGX, Networkers, Networking Academy, Network Registrar, PCNow, PIX, PowerPanels, ProConnect, ScriptShare, SenderBase, SMARTnet, Spectrum Expert, StackWise, The Fastest Way to Increase Your Internet Quotient, TransPath, WebEx, and the WebEx logo are registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and certain other countries.
Cisco and the Cisco logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Cisco and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and other countries. To view a list of Cisco trademarks, go to this URL: www.cisco.com/go/trademarks. Third-party trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership relationship between Cisco and any other company. (1110R)
Any Internet Protocol (IP) addresses used in this document are not intended to be actual addresses. Any examples, command display output, and figures included in the document are shown for illustrative purposes only. Any use of actual IP addresses in illustrative content is unintentional and coincidental.
Release Notes for Cisco Prime LAN Management Solution 4.2
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