Physical device recipe
The following example of an IBM Tivoli Network Manager environment accessed through IBM Cloud Pak® for AIOps provides insights into any environment that uses physical network devices.
Network physical devices
The following figure depicts two physical devices, 172.20.1.104 and 172.20.1.1, which are connected to each other.
Server 172.20.1.1 has 3 Gigabit Ethernet ports on the same card, one of which has a subinterface with an ifName
of 'ge-1/1/3.0'. That subinterface shares the MAC address as its physical parent and has two IPv6 addresses and one
IPv4 address associated with it.

Outline pattern
The topology service has an edge type of partOf
, which is a member of the composition edge label family. For more information, see Edge labels.
The following image illustrates how this relationship is used to tie the card, interfaces, and network addresses to the hosting device.

The partOf
relationship is not shown as an explicit edge in the topology UI. However, it is used to determine which resources should be hidden in the host-to-host view, which in the context of this scenario would show just the hosts
172.20.1.104 and 172.20.1.1. It would also show the connectedTo
edge between them, as depicted in the following part of the image.
{: caption="Figure. Figure that shows
partOf
relationship" caption-side="bottom"}
Host example JSON
The following JSON extract is an example of the properties that you might choose to include when creating a host vertex. The properties that start with an underscore character are aliases for some of the read-only generic properties. They
also include a few read/write generic properties, such as name
and uniqueId
. However, most of the properties in this example are free from 'User' properties.
{
"uniqueId": "NCOMS:172.20.1.1",
"name": "172.20.1.1",
"entityTypes": [
"host"
],
"_createdAt": "2017-03-03T16:02:40.845Z",
"_observedAt": "2017-03-03T16:04:18.636Z",
"_id": "y7EXOKrHud21CWySCyMsBg",
"_href": "/1.0/topology/resources/y7EXOKrHud21CWySCyMsBg",
"_nodeType": "resource",
"_executionTime": 4,
"_modifiedAt": "2017-03-03T16:02:40.845Z",
"matchTokens": [
"sbk-pe1-jrmx80.southbank.eu.test.lab"
],
"sysObjectId": "1.3.6.1.4.1.2636.1.1.1.2.90",
"entityChangeTime": "2017-03-03T14:13:17.000Z",
"className": "JuniperMSeries",
"services": "datalink(2) network(3)",
"_startedAt": "2017-03-03T16:02:40.845Z",
"manual": 0,
"cdmAdminState": 0,
"cdmType": 2,
"sysDescription": "Juniper Networks, Inc. mx5-t internet router, kernel JUNOS 15.1F4.15, Build date: 2015-12-23 20:50:37 UTC Copyright (c) 1996-2015 Juniper Networks, Inc.",
"sysName": "sbk-pe1-jrmx80.southbank.eu.test.lab",
"sysLocation": "The Mad Hatter Hotel 3-7 Stamford St London SE1 9NY UK,-0.10499474,51.50711477",
"interfaceCount": 73,
"entityCreateTime": "2017-03-03T14:13:17.000Z",
"isIpForwarding": "forwarding",
"accessIPAddress": "172.20.1.1",
"entityDiscoveryTime": "2017-03-03T14:11:09.000Z",
"sysContact": "williamking@uk.ibm.com",
"_tenantIds": [
"Moa1dcmKHfx3dlyJnGm6JQ"
],
"accessProtocol": "IPv4"
}
Note: Some of the generic properties in this example are:
- The
uniqueId
in this case is a string, which uniquely identifies this resource to IBM Tivoli Network Manager. - The
name
is the name of the host and will be used in the UI. - The
entityType
is set to 'host'. - The
matchTokens
contains the FQDN name of the host.
Network interface example JSON
{
"uniqueId": "NCOMS:172.20.1.1[ ge-1/1/3.0 ]",
"name": "[ ge-1/1/3.0 ]",
"entityTypes": [
"networkinterface"
],
"_createdAt": "2017-03-03T16:03:03.889Z",
"_observedAt": "2017-03-03T16:03:03.939Z",
"_id": "v8aFVG6JoigYxTrlFSDkLw",
"_href": "/1.0/topology/resources/v8aFVG6JoigYxTrlFSDkLw",
"_nodeType": "resource",
"_executionTime": 5,
"operationalStatus": "started",
"ifIndex": 537,
"ifAdminStatus": "up",
"_modifiedAt": "2017-03-03T16:03:03.940Z",
"ifType": 53,
"matchTokens": [
"ge-1/1/3.0",
"ifEntry.537"
],
"ifName": "ge-1/1/3.0",
"ifTypeString": "propVirtual",
"connectorPresent": "false",
"_startedAt": "2017-03-03T16:03:03.939Z",
"speed": 1000000000,
"mtu": 1500,
"accessIpAddress": "172.20.2.46",
"operationalDuplex": "FullDuplex",
"promiscuous": false,
"physicalAddress": "F8:C0:01:1D:B0:13",
"ifDescription": "ge-1/1/3.0",
"ifOperStatus": "up",
"_tenantIds": [
"Moa1dcmKHfx3dlyJnGm6JQ"
],
"accessProtocol": "IPv4"
}
Note: Some of the generic properties in this example are the following:
- The
uniqueId
in this case is a string, which uniquely identifies this resource to IBM Tivoli Network Manager. - The
name
is the name of the host and will be used in the UI. - The
entityType
is set tonetworkinterface
. - The
matchTokens
contains both theifName
and a string denoting theifIndex
in theifEntry
table.