- play_arrow Working With Network Director
- play_arrow About Network Director
- play_arrow Installing Network Director
- play_arrow Accessing Network Director
- play_arrow Understanding Network Director System Administration and Preferences
- play_arrow Getting Started with Network Director
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- play_arrow Working with the Dashboard
- play_arrow About the Dashboard
- play_arrow Using the Dashboard
- play_arrow Dashboard Widget Reference
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- play_arrow Working in Build Mode
- play_arrow About Build Mode
- play_arrow Discovering Devices
- play_arrow Setting Up Sites and Locations Using the Location View
- Understanding the Location View
- Setting Up the Location View
- Creating a Site
- Configuring Buildings
- Configuring Floors
- Setting Up Closets
- Assigning and Unassigning Devices to a Location
- Changing the Location of a Device
- Deleting Sites, Buildings, Floors, Wiring Closets, and Devices
- Configuring Outdoor Areas
- play_arrow Building a Topology View of the Network
- play_arrow Creating Custom Device Groups
- play_arrow Configuring Quick Templates
- play_arrow Configuring Device Settings
- play_arrow Configuring Authentication, Authorization, and Access for Your Network
- play_arrow Configuring Interfaces and VLANs
- Understanding Port Profiles
- Creating and Managing Port Profiles
- Assigning and Unassigning Port Profiles from Interfaces
- Managing Auto Assignment Policies
- Creating Auto Assignments
- Configuring Easy Config Setup
- Understanding Port Groups
- Creating and Managing Port Groups
- Understanding VLAN Profiles
- Creating and Managing VLAN Profiles
- Assigning a VLAN Profile to Devices or Ports
- play_arrow Configuring Firewall Filters (ACLs)
- play_arrow Configuring Class of Service (CoS)
- play_arrow Configuring Media Access Control Security (MACsec)
- play_arrow Configuring Link Aggregation Groups (LAGs)
- play_arrow Creating and Managing Fabrics
- Understanding Junos Fusion
- Understanding Junos Fusion Enterprise
- Software Requirements for Junos Fusion
- Creating and Managing Fusion Configuration Templates
- Managing Fusion Fabrics
- Creating and Managing Satellite Software Upgrade Groups
- Understanding Layer 3 Fabrics
- User Privileges Required for the DHCP and File Server While Using Zero Touch Provisioning
- Managing Layer 3 Fabrics
- Creating Layer 3 Fabrics
- Editing Layer 3 Fabrics
- Viewing Layer 3 Fabric Connectivity
- Performing Layer 3 Fabric Connectivity Checks
- play_arrow Configuring VRRP Profiles
- play_arrow Managing Network Devices
- Viewing the Device Inventory Page
- Physical Topology
- Viewing Profiles Assigned to a Device
- Viewing the Physical Inventory of Devices
- Viewing Licenses With Network Director
- Viewing a Device's Current Configuration from Network Director
- Assigning Devices to Logical Category
- Accessing a Device’s CLI from Network Director
- Accessing a Device’s Web-Based Interface from Network Director
- Deleting Devices
- Rebooting Devices
- Viewing Virtual Machines
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- play_arrow Working in Deploy Mode
- play_arrow About Deploy Mode
- play_arrow Deploying and Managing Device Configurations
- Deploying Configuration to Devices
- Managing Configuration Deployment Jobs
- Deploy Configuration Window
- Importing Configuration Data from Junos OS Configuration Groups
- Enabling High-Frequency Traffic Statistics Monitoring on Devices
- Configuring Network Traffic Analysis
- Approving Change Requests
- Enabling SNMP Categories and Setting Trap Destinations
- Understanding Resynchronization of Device Configuration
- Resynchronizing Device Configuration
- Managing Device Configuration Files
- Creating and Managing Baseline of Device Configuration Files
- play_arrow Deploying and Managing Software Images
- play_arrow Managing Devices
- play_arrow Setting Up Zero Touch Provisioning for Devices
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- play_arrow Monitoring Devices and Traffic
- play_arrow About Monitor Mode
- play_arrow Monitoring Traffic
- play_arrow Monitoring Client Sessions
- play_arrow Monitoring Devices
- play_arrow Monitoring and Analyzing Fabrics
- play_arrow Monitoring Virtual Networks
- play_arrow General Monitoring
- play_arrow Monitor Reference
- 802.11 Packet Errors Monitor
- Access vs. Uplink Port Utilization Trend Monitor
- Current Sessions Monitor
- Current Sessions by Type Monitor
- Error Trend Monitor
- Equipment Summary By Type Monitor
- Node Device Summary Monitor
- Port Status Monitor
- Port Status for IP Fabric Monitor
- Port Utilization Monitor
- Power Supply and Fan Status Monitor
- Resource Utilization Monitor for Switches, Routers, and Virtual Chassis
- Status Monitor for Junos Fusion Systems
- Status Monitor for Layer 3 Fabrics
- Status Monitor for Switches and Routers
- Status Monitor for Virtual Chassis
- Status Monitor for Virtual Chassis Members
- Top Talker - Wired Devices Monitor
- Traffic Trend Monitor
- Unicast vs Broadcast/Multicast Monitor
- Unicast vs Broadcast/Multicast Trend Monitor
- User Session Details Window
- Virtual Chassis Topology Monitor
- VC Equipment Summary By Type Monitor
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- play_arrow Using Fault Mode
- play_arrow About Fault Mode
- play_arrow Using Fault Mode
- play_arrow Fault Reference
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- play_arrow Working with Network Director Mobile
- play_arrow About Network Director Mobile
- play_arrow Getting Started with Network Director Mobile
- play_arrow Working in the Network Director Mobile Dashboard Mode
- play_arrow Working in the Network Director Mobile Devices Mode
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Mailing Reports
You can set up one or more electronic mail servers to send reports to e-mail addresses. These servers use the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) to forward the reports. While you can configure many servers as SMTP servers, you can only designate one as the primary mail server.
This topic describes:
How to Configure SMTP Servers
An SMTP server is responsible for sending e-mails. Network Director uses the SMTP server to send reports to users. Under most circumstances, you need only one SMTP server. However, you might want to configure more than one SMTP server if you need a server with a distinct SMTP server configuration. In this case, you would configure multiple SMTP servers and mark the server you want to use as Active.
You can set up or manage SMTP servers from the Manage SMTP Servers page in the Report mode. To access this page:
- Select Report in the Network Director banner. The Report Tasks pane opens, displaying the tasks available in the Report mode. The Generated Reports page loads in the main window.
- Select Manage SMTP Servers in the Report Tasks pane. The Manage SMTP Servers page opens in the main window, displaying all existing SMTP servers configured for Network Director.
Use the Manage SMTP Servers page to:
View existing SMTP server settings
Set up new SMTP servers
Edit existing SMTP server settings
Test the connection to a SMTP server
Set an SMTP server as the active server
Delete an SMTP configuration
See details of the SMTP configuration
Managing SMTP Servers
Use the Manage SMTP Servers page to view and manage SMTP server settings. The Manage SMTP Servers page lists any existing SMTP server settings. The fields in the Manage SMTP Server page are described in Table 1.
Field | Description | Hidden or Displayed by Default |
---|---|---|
Name | The name you are using to identify the SMTP server. | Displayed |
Host Address | The IP address or hostname of the SMTP server. | Displayed |
Port | The forwarding port number. Default port number for SMTP is 587. | Displayed |
Active | Either yes or no to indicate whether it is the active server. Only one server can be active at a time. | Displayed |
User Auth | Indicates whether SMTP authentication is required for the server. This field is either yes or no. | Displayed |
Use TLS | Indicates whether Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol is used to provide shared-secret encryption. | Displayed |
User Name | Indicates the username when user credentials are required for SMTP authentication. | Hidden |
From E-mail Address | The e-mail account that sends the report. | Hidden |
Adding or Editing SMTP Server Settings
The process of establishing a new SMTP server or to changing the values on an existing server is straightforward. Simply enter or change the values in the fields in the Add SMTP Server or Edit SMTP Server page. These fields are described in Table 2.
Field | Action |
---|---|
Server Name | Type a name for this SMTP server. |
Host Address | Type the IP address of SMTP server. |
Port Number | Type the forwarding port number. Default port number for SMTP is 587. |
From Email Address | Type the e-mail address used to send the notification. |
Set as Active Server | Checking this box sets the server as the Active server. If there is only one server, you cannot clear this box. |
Use SMTP Authentication | Checking this box requires the server to use SMTP authentication. You must provide user credentials to use SMTP Authentication. |
User Name | Type the account name accessing the server for SMTP authentication. |
Password | Type the password twice that is used for authentication. |
Use TLS | Select if you want this server to use TLS protocol on the SMTP server. |