Enterprise Switch Manager How to uninstall Enterprise Switch Manager from your computerThis page contains complete information on how to remove Enterprise Switch Manager for Windows. It was coded for Windows by Nortel. You can find out more on Nortel or check for application updates. Usually the Enterprise Switch Manager program is placed in the C:Program Files (x86)NortelESM folder, depending on the user's option during install. The full command line for uninstalling Enterprise Switch Manager is 'C:Program Files (x86)NortelESMUninstallerDataUninstall Enterprise Switch Manager.exe'. Note that if you will type this command in Start / Run Note you may be prompted for administrator rights. The application's main executable file is labeled Tftp Server.exe and its approximative size is 112.00 KB (114688 bytes). Software ApplicationDisclaimerThe text above is not a piece of advice to uninstall Enterprise Switch Manager by Nortel from your PC, nor are we saying that Enterprise Switch Manager by Nortel is not a good application for your PC. This page simply contains detailed instructions on how to uninstall Enterprise Switch Manager in case you want to. Here you can find registry and disk entries that other software left behind and Advanced Uninstaller PRO discovered and classified as 'leftovers' on other users' computers.
Hello,first I would like to say I really like the Enterprise Switch Manager (ESM). I think it is a very good set of Tools,that helps me with a lot of task in my daily work.Now a Im facing the situation that the ESM will not be upgraded anymore.So there are a lot of new SW releases that I can not manage with the ESMThe Now AVAYA product that replace the ESM is the Configuration and Orchestration Manager (COM)I tried an early version of the Configuration and Orchestration Manager in my LAB.On my test VM COM runs very slow. Hopefully the newest version runs faster.If anybody is using the COM already I would be very interessested in your expierence and thoughts about it.THX. I will preface this rant with a foreword that I am a supporter of just about everything Nortel ever made. In case someone from Avaya is readingbut.Nortel's NMS solutions has always been a sore spot for me.
Going all the way to back to 2003's Optivity 10.X to UCM. It always seemed to me that the product was never mature enough to be released. Littered with Bugs, Deficiencies, and broken promises on features and functionality.After 7 years of buying Optivity/ENMS, trying to use it, participating on Beta trails and making tickets, we gave up and started using CA Unicenter.
And for some specific tasks such as inventory management we just coded some custom apps using C# and Perl.I understand that Avaya will always have to offer some kind of home brew NMS solution. But I for one am extremely disappointed in the direction they have gone with ESM, CLImanager, and JDM.
IMHO I can see allot of slow adopters out there holding on to their switch releases for as long as possible so they can still use ESM, CLIman and JDM. @PaulI completly disagree with you.ESM works as a mass configuration and inventory tool very good.I think if you come to an unkown AVAYA network and have only crappy documentions, ESM brings you very fast good results with that you can start to work.It is a small tool that you can carry around installed on your Laptop.Cisco Works / LMS is one of the badest tools a I have to work with. There are so many bad thinks about Cisco works that a don´t know where to start.One of the worst thinks is the very rudimental support for all Nexus products.@MichealYes scripting is for a lot of task the best choice.Some task like VLAN configurations I prefer to make with the VLAN manager of ESM. Espacially if you have to deploy a big ammont of VLAn and change ports vlan configurations. @Dominik.Kindly read my post again, Perhaps you misunderstood me.
I never had a beef with ESM. That was one of the tools I liked and I was disappointed in the direction that Avaya was taking that tool. To the grave with CLIManager, and JDM.ESM pulled me out of the fire many times.my big beef was with parent NMS suites. Optivity, ENMS, and UCM.But we will have to agree to disagree on CiscoWorks LMS. I really enjoy working with that product, but to it's defense I stopped using it at version 2.6 and at that time we were only managing a small fleet of 400+ 2950's and 12+ 6500's.
Over the past few days I’ve been working with an Avaya Ethernet Routing Switch 4500 (v5.4.1) and an Avaya Ethernet Routing Switch 5520 (v6.2.1) which both utilize Avaya’s new Enterprise Device Manager (EDM) as opposed to the legacy Nortel Java Device Manager (JDM). As you know by now (from my previous ranting) that I personally thought JDM was a significant differentiator for Nortel/Avaya when comparing their products to other competitors. While I think they’ve done a pretty good job with EDM it has one major drawback – it’s incredibly slow. I believe that lack of speed will generally force a large majority of Avaya users to use the CLI interface which has it’s own problems and issues.In any event I tried to use the Help while I was using EDM and quickly discovered that I had to set it up. You’ll need to download the help files from Avaya’s website (I’ve included links at the bottom of this post).
And you’ll need to upload the files to a permanent TFTP server somewhere on your network. I use the word permanent because every time someone clicks on the Help box the switch will download the content via TFTP and serve it up to the user via HTTP so your TFTP server will need to be continuously running, it can’t be hosted on your laptop.I uploaded both archives to my TFTP server and then set out to configure both switches.
Avaya Ethernet Routing Switch 4500 SeriesIf you want to configure it via the CLI interface you can issue the following commands. Enableconfig tedm help-file-path ERS4500HelpEDM tftp address 192.168.1.6In the example above my TFTP server was at 192.168.1.6 and the files were stored in /tftpboot/ERS4500HelpEDM on my CentOS Linux server. If you want to configure it via the EDM interface you can go to Configuration - Edit - File System - Help File Path and enter “tftp://192.168.1.6/ERS4500HelpEDM” as the path. You should substitute the IP address above with the IP address of your TFTP server.Once you’ve configured the path you could be able to click on any of the Help links.Avaya Ethernet Routing Switch 5000 SeriesIf you want to configure it via the CLI interface you can use the following commands which are identical to the ERS 4500 with the exception of the path. Enableconfig tedm help-file-path ERS5000HelpEDM tftp address 192.168.1.6In the example above my TFTP server was at 192.168.1.6 and the files were stored in /tftpboot/ERS5000HelpEDM on my CentOS Linux server. If you want to configure it via the EDM interface you can go to Configuration - Edit - File System - Help File Path and enter “tftp://192.168.1.6/ERS4500HelpEDM” as the path (same as the ERS 4500).
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Again, you should substitute the IP address above with the IP address of your TFTP server.The process is identical on both switches with the exception of the TFTP path.Interestingly enough I get a HTTP/404 error when I clicked on the Help link (next to the Refresh button and above the path) in the figure above. The browser tried to load which results in a HTTP/404 “Not Found” error from the built-in web server on the switch.
This only happens on the Ethernet Routing Switch 5520 and it works as expected on the Ethernet Routing Switch 4500.Do you think there’s any chance Avaya will start paying users to report bugs?Cheers!References. I thought I’d pass on some clarification that I received directly from Avaya regarding Enterprise Device Manager and the complaints of its ssssslllowww response.It is critical to make the distinction between “On-Box” EDM and “Off-Box” EDM:“On-Box” EDM is basically browser-based device configuration, i.e.
You point your browser a specific device’s IP address. It sounds like within the newest releases of code, Avaya has specifically chosen to de-prioritize the web-server mechanisms that exist in the code in order to provide greater resource prioritization towards the features and functionality of the data-forwarding plane. Hence, the slow “On-Box” EDM experience.“Off-Box” EDM is what Avaya actually envisions as the replacement for JDM. However, this is supported through the “Configuration and Orchestration” module of Avaya’s “Unified Communication Management” Enterprise Management Software Suite.
(Other modules include Enterprise Policy Manager, Visualization Performance & Fault Manager, IP Flow Manager, plus others) In this method, you point your browser towards a server running this module, and enter commands and configurations. The server then relays those commands via SNMP to the device or devices specified. Thus, the performance/response time you see is far better.Of course now we have to pay for what we used to get for free. You can however, download a fully-featured evaluation copy that has a 30-90 day life. From what I have seen, this product is very compelling and a significant differentiator vs JNPR, Brocade, etc.
I’d encourage everyone to ask their Avaya Account manager to arrange for a presentation of the Unified Communications Management platform. Until then, you’ll have to read for yourself. @DaveTheRave,agreed, again with one caveat: if there aren’t any features in 45xx 5.4+ or 5xxx 6.2+ that you must have, then keep those versions on the shelf. I’d expect that 5.4 and 6.2 codes along with current JDM will remain useable for at minimum another 18-24 months.However, this situation shouldn’t be a huge shockafter all Silver Lake isn’t a charity. They coughed up about a billion $ for Nortel’s Enterprise division and they want to get their money back.
One of the contributors to Nortel’s demise was surely that they weren’t effectively “monetizing” their assets.And while it is irritating to me as someone who has to use their products on a daily basis, the industry we are in is all about change and I need to be able to evolve with it. And actually I do think that as a component of their long-run VENA strategy this shift will ultimately allow me to manage and operate my network far more effectively (and it helps that the money to pay for the UCM software products doesn’t come out of my pocket!). It seems that Avaya is much slower and bureaucratic organization than Nortel ever was.I got the old shoulder shrugging when I made the pitch around how JDM was a significant differentiator to Avaya’s data product competitors. While I got general agreement with the points I made it was as if “the captain has made his decision” and that was it. There was no offer to take the discussion further upstream. I got the notion that someone was trying to play a Jedi mind trick on me, as if the I said, “I’d like a chocolate cookie” and the sales person said, “no you don’t want chocolate you want a vanilla cookie”.I personally wouldn’t mind too much but the lack of JDM really shows the weakness of their CLI interface.Cheers!
I have been looking at COM for some time now; there are several features that I really like over ESM, BUT I don’t think it is ready for an enterprise solution. There are far too many basic problems with it. Performance is not great, the managers (such as VLAN manager etc.) do NOT support DNS, so in any network with more than just a few switches they become almost useless.I do like the fact that (unlike ESM) it is a true server based solution, which will allow user based security and multiple user access. As far as the comments about JDM vs. EDM I can understand that JDM is not very portable, and probably increasingly difficult for Avaya to manage; you have to download a platform dependent program which is getting increasingly big each time a new feature is added to any device in the portfolio.With EDM GUI configuration should be possible from virtually any network device with a browser.With respect to the issue regarding the ERS55xx and the help file (404 not found). I have just tested with v6.2.2.023 and the help system appears to work as expected. (Thanks for the post to point me on my way!).
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Using Mute Press Press Page 2 Enterprise Edge M7324N User Card º º © º appears beside an Intercom button, enter a line pool access code.If you are on a call or a line with dial tone, press Press 3. Press the memory button you want to erase. Press OK to erase the button. Page 3 Enterprise Edge M7324N User Card ƒ.‚ to check a memory or line button. Ƒ.⁄.Press here to remove the stand. Notice Page 4 Enterprise Edge M7324N User Card Page 4 Enterprise Edge M7324N User Card These telephones now conform to the latest standards in relation to the positioning of Q and Z on the number buttons.
I initially in the NT, Win2K, & XP Technical Mojo, but a regular suggested I post here instead.What tool do you use to configure & manage Nortel BayStack & BP switches?My group will be taking over management of 40 or so Nortel BayStack & Business Policy Switches installed throughout our Enterprise. I see version 6.0.8 of Nortel's Device Manager on our network & just downloaded version 6.1.6.1 from the Nortel site. I also see that there's a 'Nortel Enterprise Switch Manager' application. We will not be managing the 8600's, 3400's or other network devices, at least not initially.Dave. I have not used Nortel Switches since 2002, so I am out of date.
When I used them, both tools only showed Nortel devices.Nortel Enterprise Switch Manager is the current name of my favorite tool. It could help you find Duplex mismatches, VLAN membership mismatches, MLT mismatches, (LACP by now, I hope) and firmware version mismatches between switches. Use this for your 'big picture' network mapping as well. (not free, but often given away as a perk when buying Nortel gear)Nortel's (Free) Device Manager is the current name of the 'detail' tool, shows you what is going on internally, but lacks the links to other devices. You can look to see which port a MAC address is on, if the speed of a port is 'flapping' It integrates into the big picture tool.Very much not free, and not integrated into Nortel's offerings, Fluke's NetTool Inline will tell you a great deal about why this wire is not working as well as you would like.Yes you can do everything in text mode, but these are powerful GUIs, try them before you dismiss them.