PRTG Network Monitor User Manual © 2012 Paessler AG All rights reserved No parts of this work may be reproduced in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, or information storage and retrieval systems—without the written permission of the publisher Products that are referred to in this document may be either trademarks and/or registered trademarks of the respective owners The publisher and the author make no claim to these trademarks While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this document, the publisher and the author assume no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of information contained in this document or from the use of programs and source code that may accompany it In no event shall the publisher and the author be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damage caused or alleged to have been caused directly or indirectly by this document Printed: Januar 2012 in Nuremberg Contents Table of Contents 12 Part I Welcome to PRTG Network Monitor About this Document Key Features New in Version Available Licenses System Requirements Detailed System Requirements 13 14 15 16 18 20 28 Part II Quick Start Guide ONE—Download, Installation, and First Login TWO—Auto-Discover Your Network 30 33 38 Part III Installing the Software Download PRTG Update From Previous Versions Install a PRTG Core Server Setup Wizard Welcome Wizard Install a PRTG Cluster Enter a License Key Activate the Product Install a PRTG Remote Probe Install the Enterprise Console Uninstall PRTG Products 39 41 44 45 48 56 59 62 64 69 74 78 Part IV Understanding Basic Concepts 10 11 Architecture Clustering Object Hierarchy Inheritance of Settings Tags Dependencies Scheduling Notifying Data Reporting User Access Rights IPv6 79 82 83 87 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 98 Part V Ajax Web Interface—Basic Procedures Login SSL Certificate Warning 100 103 Contents 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 General Layout Sensor States Review Monitoring Data Object Settings Alarms Logs Historic Data Reports ToDos Working with Table Lists Object Selector Priority and Favorites Pause Context Menus Hover Popup Main Menu Structure 106 115 118 122 124 126 128 132 134 136 138 139 140 148 149 160 Part VI Ajax Web Interface—Device and Sensor Setup Auto-Discovery Create Objects Manually Add a Group Add a Device Add a Sensor Manage Device Tree Root Group Settings Probe Settings Group Settings Device Settings Sensor Settings List of Available Sensor Types Active Directory Replication Errors Sensor ADO SQL Sensor Amazon CloudWatch Sensor Cisco IP SLA Sensor Cluster Probe Health Sensor Core/Probe Health Sensor DHCP Sensor DNS Sensor Event Log (Windows API) Sensor EXE/Script Sensor EXE/Script Advanced Sensor File Sensor File Content Sensor Folder Sensor FTP Sensor FTP Server File Count Sensor HDD Health Sensor HTTP Sensor HTTP Advanced Sensor 162 173 174 179 186 187 189 200 211 226 240 241 251 257 264 270 275 279 283 288 293 299 306 313 319 325 331 336 342 347 353 Contents HTTP Content Sensor HTTP Full Web Page Sensor HTTP SSL Certificate Expiry Sensor HTTP Transaction Sensor HTTP XML/REST Value Sensor Hyper-V Host Server Sensor Hyper-V Virtual Machine Sensor Hyper-V Virtual Network Adapter Sensor Hyper-V Virtual Storage Device Sensor IMAP Sensor INI File Content Check Sensor IP on DNS Blacklist Sensor jFlow V5 Sensor jFlow V5 (Custom) Sensor LDAP Sensor Microsoft SQL Sensor MySQL Sensor NetFlow V5 Sensor NetFlow V5 (Custom) Sensor NetFlow V9 Sensor NetFlow V9 (Custom) Sensor Oracle SQL Sensor Packet Sniffer Sensor Packet Sniffer (Custom) Sensor Ping Sensor Ping Jitter Sensor Pingdom Sensor POP3 Sensor POP3 Email Count Sensor Port Sensor QoS (Quality of Service) One Way Sensor QoS (Quality of Service) Round Trip Sensor RADIUS Sensor RDP (Remote Desktop) Sensor Sensor Factory Sensor sFlow Sensor sFlow (Custom) Sensor Share Disk Free Sensor SMTP Sensor SMTP&IMAP Round Trip Sensor SMTP&POP3 Round Trip Sensor SNMP APC Hardware Sensor SNMP Custom Sensor SNMP Custom String Sensor SNMP Dell Hardware Sensor SNMP HP LaserJet Hardware Sensor SNMP Library Sensor SNMP Linux Disk Free Sensor SNMP Linux Load Average Sensor SNMP Linux Meminfo Sensor SNMP System Uptime Sensor 362 369 374 379 387 395 399 405 411 415 420 426 431 438 445 449 456 462 469 476 483 490 496 503 509 515 520 525 531 537 543 548 553 558 562 576 583 589 595 601 608 615 620 626 632 637 642 650 655 660 665 Contents SNMP Traffic Sensor SNMP Trap Receiver Sensor SNTP Sensor SSH Disk Free Sensor SSH INodes Free Sensor SSH Load Average Sensor SSH Meminfo Sensor SSH VMWare ESX(i) Disk Sensor Syslog Receiver Sensor TFTP Sensor Traceroute Hop Count Sensor Virtuozzo Container Disk Sensor Virtuozzo Container Network Sensor VMware Host Hardware (WBEM) VMware Host Server (SOAP) Sensor VMware Virtual Machine (SOAP) Sensor WBEM Custom Sensor Windows Last Update Sensor Windows Logged In Users Sensor Windows MSMQ Queue Length Sensor Windows Print Queue Sensor Windows Registry Sensor Windows Scheduled Task Sensor WMI CPU Load Sensor WMI Custom Sensor WMI Event Log Sensor WMI Exchange Server Sensor WMI File Sensor WMI Free Disk Space (Multi Drive) Sensor WMI IIS 6.0 SMTP Received Sensor WMI IIS 6.0 SMTP Sent Sensor WMI Logical Disk Sensor WMI Memory Sensor WMI Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Sensor WMI Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Sensor WMI Network Card Sensor WMI Pagefile Sensor WMI Physical Disk Sensor WMI Process Sensor WMI Security Center Sensor WMI Service Sensor WMI Share Sensor WMI System Uptime Sensor WMI Terminal Services (Windows 2008) Sensor WMI Terminal Services (Windows XP/Vista/2003) Sensor WMI UTC Time Sensor WMI Vital System Data (V2) Sensor WMI Volume Sensor WMI Windows Version Sensor WSUS Statistics Sensor Xen Virtual Machine Sensor 669 676 682 686 691 697 702 707 712 718 723 728 733 738 743 749 756 761 766 771 778 783 790 797 802 809 816 823 829 837 842 847 853 858 864 870 876 880 886 891 896 901 907 911 915 919 923 929 935 941 948 Contents 10 11 Additional Sensor Types (Custom Sensors) Sensor Channels Settings Sensor Notifications Settings 953 956 961 972 Part VII Ajax Web Interface—Advanced Procedures 10 11 12 13 Toplists Arrange Objects Clone Object Multi-Edit Lists Create Device Template Compare Sensors Show Dependencies Geo Maps Notifications Libraries Libraries Step By Step Management Libraries and Node Settings Context Menus Reports Reports Step By Step View and Run Reports Reports Settings Maps Maps Step By Step Maps Designer Maps Settings Setup Account Settings—My Account Account Settings—Notifications Account Settings—Schedules System Administration—System and Website System Administration—Notification Delivery System Administration—Probes System Administration—Cluster System Administration—User Accounts System Administration—User Groups PRTG Status—System Status PRTG Status—Cluster Status PRTG Status—Activation Status Software Auto-Update Downloads / Add-Ons Chrome Desktop Notifications 973 978 979 981 986 989 991 993 996 998 1001 1005 1008 1013 1015 1018 1021 1024 1033 1036 1038 1045 1049 1051 1055 1064 1068 1075 1080 1082 1084 1089 1092 1102 1103 1104 1106 1108 1112 Part VIII Enterprise Console First Start General Layout Menu Tabs and Page Content 1114 1115 1118 Contents Devices Libraries Sensors Alarms Maps Reports Logs ToDos Setup Search Results PRTG Servers Options Windows Menu Structure Context Menus Shortcuts Overview 1119 1125 1127 1129 1131 1133 1135 1137 1139 1141 1142 1145 1151 1155 1156 1158 Part IX Other User Interfaces Mobile Web GUI Smartphone Apps 1159 1163 1166 Part X Sensor Technologies Monitoring via SNMP Monitoring via WMI Monitoring Bandwidth via Packet Sniffing Monitoring Bandwidth via Flows Bandwidth Monitoring Comparison Monitoring Quality of Service Monitoring Email Round Trip 1167 1171 1173 1175 1178 1181 1185 1188 Part XI System Administration Tools PRTG Server Administrator PRTG Probe Administrator 1189 1206 1218 Part XII Advanced Topics Active Directory Integration Application Programming Interface (API) Definition Filter Rules for xFlow and Packet Sniffer Sensors Channel Definitions for xFlow and Packet Sniffer Sensors Define IP Ranges Regular Expressions Add Remote Probe Remote Probes and Multiple Probes Remote Probe Setup Data Storage Calculating Percentiles Part XIII Appendix 1219 1221 1222 1226 1228 1229 1230 1231 1234 1239 1240 1242 Contents Index Glossary List of Abbreviations Support and Troubleshooting Legal Notices 1243 1247 1250 1251 1253 Part XIII: Appendix 13.1 Glossary This section explains special words used in the context of PRTG Network Monitor Note: Here, only explanations are given For information on where to find detailed instructions for a specific key word, please see the Index section Channel The monitoring data of a sensor 1246 is shown in sensor channels For example, for sensors that measure network traffic, there is one channel each for traffic in and traffic out You can set various triggers for each channel, enabling you to set sensor status changes or notifications based on the monitoring data received Cluster PRTG can be configured as a failover cluster for fail-safe monitoring In a cluster, one or more core servers 1243 work together in one configuration Every node can monitor all devices in a network for gapless monitoring, additionally enabling you to compare monitoring results measured from different perspectives Cluster Node Sometimes used as synonym for Node 1245 Cluster Probe When running PRTG in cluster mode, a cluster probe is automatically created All objects 1245 created on the cluster probe, or below it in the device tree 1244 , are monitored by all nodes in the cluster Create or move objects 1245 there to monitor them fail-safely If one node fails, the other nodes will continue to monitor them You can add groups 1244 and devices 1244 to the probe On a PRTG installation, the cluster probe runs as part of this installation's local probe 1244 Remote probes 1245 cannot be connected to a cluster probe, but only to one local probe of one PRTG installation Core Server The central unit of PRTG It receives monitoring data from the probe(s) 1245 and handles reporting and notifications, provides the web server for the user interfaces, and many other things In a cluster 1243 , one core server is installed on every node Dashboard In the Home menu of the web interface there are several pre-configured dashboards available which show a quick overview of the overall status of your monitoring configuration Custom dashboards can be created using the Maps 1245 function 2011-10-12 1243 Part XIII: Appendix Device A device in PRTG represents a physical device in the network For an easily understandable tree structure, you usually create one PRTG device for each physical device you want to monitor (exceptions apply to some sensors that can only be created on the local probe 1244 device, and for sensor types that are not bound to a certain device, such as HTTP sensors, which are also usually created on the local probe) You can add one or more sensors 1246 on every device Device Tree PRTG's configuration is represented in a hierarchical tree structure, called device tree, containing all objects 1245 While building the tree, you can relate to your network's topology to make your monitoring setup easy to understand Failover Master (Node) If the primary master 1245 node fails, a failover node 1244 is promoted to current failover master and takes over the master role until the primary master node re-joins the cluster 1243 Failover Node In a cluster 1243 a failover node monitors all sensors 1246 on the cluster probe 1243 , providing monitoring data for the core server 1243 Additionally, it serves as a backup in case the master node 1245 fails Group A group is an organizational unit in your PRTG tree structure that helps to arrange your devices To existing groups, you can add devices, or additional sub-groups This way you can model your physical network's topology within the PRTG configuration Library Libraries are a way to show parts of your device tree 1244 in a different layout or with different filters enabled There is an editor available that allows creating libraries directly in your browser Local Probe The local probe is installed together with the core server 1243 All objects 1245 created on the local probe, or below it in the device tree 1244 , are monitored by the local core system You can add groups 1244 and devices 1244 to the probe 1244 2011-10-12 Part XIII: Appendix Map Maps (sometimes referred to as "dashboard 1243 ") are a way to present monitoring the way you want to arrange it There is an editor available that allows creating maps directly in your browser Master Node In a cluster 1243 , the master node controls the settings and cluster management It also takes over notifications All changes to the monitoring configuration are made on the master node Node In a cluster 1243 there is one master node 1245 and one or more failover nodes 1244 On each node, one PRTG core server 1243 installation is running independently All nodes are connected to each other, exchanging configuration and monitoring data Object All different items in the device tree 1244 are generally referred to as objects An object can be a probe 1245 , a group 1244 , a device 1244 , or a sensor 1246 Primary Master (Node) The primary master node in a cluster 1243 is the node 1245 that is master by configuration Only if it fails, one of the failover nodes 1244 becomes failover master 1244 and takes over the master role until the primary master node re-joins the cluster Probe On a probe, the actual monitoring takes place A probe can run as local probe 1244 on the local system where the core server 1243 is installed There are also cluster probes 1243 and remote probes 1245 Remote Probe A remote probe is a small piece of software installed on a computer in the local or remote network It scans the network from there and sends monitoring results to the core server 1243 Once the connection is established, the remote probe is shown in the PRTG tree structure All objects 1245 created on the remote probe, or below it in the device tree 1244 , are monitored by the remote system running the remote probe You can add groups 1244 and devices 1244 to the probe In cluster 1243 , remote probes can only be connected to the master node 1245 , not to one of the failover nodes 1244 2011-10-12 1245 Part XIII: Appendix Sensor A sensor monitors one aspect of a device 1244 For example, monitoring if a device responds to a Ping request is done by one sensor Monitoring the traffic of one ethernet port of a router device is done by another sensor For monitoring the CPU load of the local system yet another sensor is set up, and so on A sensor's data is shown in channels 1243 Sensor Tree Sometimes used as synonym for device tree 1244 ToDo ToDos are created by the system and contain important messages or action steps to take for the administrator Every ToDo should be acknowledged You can access the list of ToDos from the main menu xFlow Paessler designates all kinds of flow protocols as xFlow Currently, PRTG supports NetFlow V5 and V9, sFlow V5, and jFlow V5 1246 2011-10-12 Part XIII: Appendix 13.2 List of Abbreviations ADO: ActiveX Data Objects (ADO) AJAX: Asynchronous Java Script and XML (AJAX) API: Application Programming Interface (API) CoS: Class of Service (CoS) CSV: Comma Seperated Values (CSV) DHCP: Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) DMZ: Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) DSCP: Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) DNS: Domain Name Service (DNS) GUI: Graphical User Interface (GUI) GUID: Globally Unique Identifier (GUID) HTTP: Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) ICMP: Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) IMAP: Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) JSON: JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) LAN: Local Area Network (LAN) LDAP: Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) MoID: Managed Object ID (MoID) MIB: Management Information Base (MIB) MOS: Mean Opinion Score (MOS) NAT: Network Address Translation (NAT) PDF: Portable Document Format (PDF) PDV: Packet Delay Variation (PDV) 2012-01-13 1247 Part XIII: Appendix POP3: Post Office Protocol version (POP3) QoS: Quality of Service (QoS) RADIUS: Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) REST: Representational State Transfer (REST) RPC: Remote Procedure Call (RPC) SASL: Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) SLA: Service Level Agreement (SLA) SMB: Server Message Block (SMB) SMTP: Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) SNMP: Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) SNTP: Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) SOAP: Simple Object Access Protocol SPAN: Switched Port Analyzer (SPAN) SQL: Structured Query Language (SQL) SSH: Secure Shell (SSH) SSL: Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) TFTP: Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) UNC: Uniform Naming Convention (UNC) UUID: Universally Unique Identifier (UUID) VoIP: Voice over IP (VoIP) VPN: Virtual Private Network (VPN) WAN: Wide Area Network (WAN) WBEM: Web-Based Enterprise Management (WBEM) WMI: Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) 1248 2012-01-13 Part XIII: Appendix WQL: Windows Management Instrumentation Query Language (WQL) XML: Extensible Markup Language (XML) WSUS: Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) 2012-01-13 1249 Part XIII: Appendix 13.3 Support and Troubleshooting Need help with PRTG? There are several ways to get support and trouble shooting Video Tutorials A video says more than a thousand words—watch tutorials for PRTG from Paessler and other PRTG users § http://www.paessler.com/support/video_tutorials Paessler Knowledge Base In the Knowledge Base you can search in hundreds of articles about PRTG You can post your own questions and answers, too! § http://www.paessler.com/knowledgebase/ Open a Support Ticket Users that have purchased a license can open support tickets which will usually be answered by Paessler's staff in less than 24 hours on business days § https://service.paessler.com/en/openticket/ 1250 2011-04-18 Part XIII: Appendix 13.4 Legal Notices Build using Indy Internet Direct (http://www.indyproject.org/) This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com) Uses the net-SNMP library, see "netsnmp-license.txt" Uses the DelphiZip library distributed under the GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE (http://www.delphizip.net/) Uses FastMM ( http://sourceforge.net/projects/fastmm/), TPLockBox ( http://sourceforge.net/projects/tplockbox) and Delphi Chromium Embedded ( http://code.google.com/p/delphichromiumembedded/) under the Mozilla Public License 1.1 (MPL 1.1, available from http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/MPL-1.1.html) Soundfiles from http://www.soundsnap.com Uses Public Domain regional maps from the "CIA World Factbook" webpage of the CIA ( https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/docs/refmaps.html) Uses the "wkhtmltopdf" (http://code.google.com/p/wkhtmltopdf/) library distributed under the GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE (see wkhtmltopdf_lgpl-3.0.txt) Icons from http://www.androidicons.com All trademarks and names mentioned herein belong to their respective owners Last manual export: Mittwoch, 25 Januar 2012 12:22:28 2011-10-21 1251 Index Index Billing Tool 1106 Bulk edit 981 -C-22 days tab 118 -330 days tab 118 365 days tab 118 -AAccount Settings 1051, 1084 Account Type 1051 Add Device 179 Group 174 Sensor 186 Ajax Web Interface 98 Alarm Acknowledge 1129 List 1129 Alarms 149 Android App PRTGdroid 1163 API 1221 Architecture Basic Concept 79 Audible Alarms 1051 Auto-Discovery Quick Start 33 Settings 162 Automatic Folding 1051 Refresh 1051 Restart Options (Probe System) 1206 Automatic Software Update 1104 Averaging 128, 1015 -BBandwidth Monitoring Overview Basic Concepts 78 1178 Change Trigger 961 Chrome Desktop Notifications 1108 Cluster Basic Concept 82 Maintenance Mode 1092 Status 1092 Cluster Connection 1082 Configure Cluster 56, 1082 Dependencies 90 Device 226 Geographical Map 993 Group 211 Map 1033 Notification 996, 1055 Notification Delivery 1075 Notification Trigger 961 Object Arrangement 978 Probe 64, 200, 1080, 1206 PRTG Server 48, 1189 Reboot (automatic) 1206 Report 1015 Root Group 189 Schedule 1064 Sensor 240 Sensor Channel 956 System 1049, 1068 User Account 1051, 1084 User Group 1089 Website 1068 Continuous (Percentiles) 1240 Create Objects 173 -DData Folder 1239 Reporting 93 Storage 1239 Data Purging 1068 Date Format 1051 1253 Index Decimal Places 956 Dependencies 90 Device add 179 arrange 978 clone 979 Multi-Edit 981 Template 986 Devices 149 Discrete (Percentiles) 1240 Down 115 Down (Acknowledged) 115 Down (Partial) 115 Downloads Add-Ons 1106 Apps for iOS & Android 1106 Billing Tool 1106 Google Chrome 1106 Remote Probe Installer 1106 Windows Enterprise Console 1106 -E- Hash 1051 Header 106 Help Center 149 Home 149 Homepage 1051 HTML GUI 1159 HTTP Proxy 1075 ICMP Echo 509 Inheritance of Settings Intervals 1068 iPhone App iPRTG 1163 1226 -GGeneral Web Interface Layout Geo Map Type 1068 Geographical Map 993 Google 87 -L- -F- 1254 -H- -I- Edit 140 Email Address 1051 Email Round Trip Technology 1185 Email Templates 1068 Enterprise Console 1112 Error Limit 956 Escalation 961 Flow Channel Definitions Filter Rules 1222 IP Ranges 1228 Technology 1175 Toplists 973 Chrome Desktop Notifications Code 953 Maps 993 Graph Settings 1068 Type 1068 Group add 174 arrange 978 clone 979 106 Latency 961 Libraries 998 Context Menus 1013 Management 1005 Multi-Edit 981 Node 1008 Settings 1008 Limits Error 956 Warning 956 Line Color 956 Width 956 Live Data tab 118 Login Name 1051 Logout 149 1108 Index Logs 149 -MMaintenance Mode 1092 Management Tab 187 Maps 149, 1033 audible alert 1038 automatic rotation 1033 Designer 1038 edit 1038 Line Color 1038 Multi-Edit 981 Mini HTML 1159 Monitoring Data 1239 Move 140 Multi-Edit 981 -NNone 115 Notification 996, 1055 Delivery 1075 Escalation 961 Multi-Edit 981 Trigger 961 Notifications Chrome Desktop 1108 Notifying 92 -OObject Hierarchy 83 Off Notification 961 OK 115 On Notification 961 Overview tab 118 -PPacket Sniffer Channel Definitions IP Ranges 1228 Packet Sniffing Filter Rules 1222 Technology 1173 1226 Toplists 973 Passhash 1051 Password 1051 Pause 140 Paused 115 Peak Filter (Spike Filter) 956 Percentile 1240 Percentiles 128, 1015 Performance Strategy 1068 Probe arrange 978 Probe Administrator 1206 Probe Connection 1080 Probes IP Ranges 1228 -RRefresh 149, 1051 Registry Data 1239 Remote Probe 1230 Remote Registry 761 Reports 149, 1015 Data 93 Multi-Edit 981 Restart Options (Probe System) 1206 -SSchedule 1064 Multi-Edit 981 Scheduled Reboot (Probe System) Scheduling 91 Search Box 149 Sensor add 186 arrange 978 Behavior 115 Channel Settings 956 clone 979 compare 989 Dependencies 991 Multi-Edit 981 Notification Trigger 961 Settings 240 Status 115 1206 1255 Index Sensor Type 241 Sensors 149 Server Administrator 1189 Session Expiry 1068 Setup 45, 48, 149 Shift 1038 Smart Phone Apps iPRTG 1163 PRTGdroid 1163 SMS Delivery 1075 SMTP Delivery 1075 SNMP Technology 1167 Sound Alarms 1051 Speed Trigger 961 Spike Filter 956 State Trigger 961 System Status 1092 -TTags 89 Threshold Trigger 961 Timezone 1051 ToDo Email Address 1068 ToDos 149 Toplists 973 Tree View Zoom 106 Trigger Change 961 Latency 961 Speed 961 State 961 Threshold 961 Volume 961 -UUnknown 115 Unusual 115 Unusual Detection Uptime Threshold User Access Rights Username 1051 1256 1068 1068 94 -VVertical Axis Scaling 956 VoIP Technology 1181 Volume Trigger 961 -WWarning 115 Warning Limit 956 Web Interface 98 Web Server IP Address 1068 Port 1068 Windows GUI 1112 Menu Structure 1151 Menu Tab 1118 Options 1145 WMI Technology 1171 Last change to this manual (YYYY-MM-DD): 2012-01-25 1899-12-30 1257 ... Group Add a Device Add a Sensor Manage Device Tree Root Group Settings Probe Settings Group Settings Device Settings Sensor Settings List of Available Sensor Types Active Directory Replication... Node Settings Context Menus Reports Reports Step By Step View and Run Reports Reports Settings Maps Maps Step By Step Maps Designer Maps Settings Setup Account Settings—My Account Account Settings—Notifications... 941 948 Contents 10 11 Additional Sensor Types (Custom Sensors) Sensor Channels Settings Sensor Notifications Settings 953 956 961 972 Part VII Ajax Web Interface—Advanced Procedures 10 11 12 13