Discover multiple IP range in a single discovery schedule

Anupriya1
Kilo Expert

Hello Community,

We are implementing discovery for windows servers in our environment and we are defining discovery schedules per location.

We have data centers as well which includes different IP ranges for the same location. When I started discovery for different IP ranges in a single discovery schedule, it ended with the scanning of only the first range set provided. Rest all it ignored.

I am struggling in finding that how I can run a discovery schedule for different IP ranges.

Any clues will be really appreciated.

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Hi Anupriya,

 

Add all the IP Ranges in the "Discovery IP Ranges" and schedule Discovery.

 

if you have followed any other process revert back to the comment

 

Mark it as helpful/Correct if my answer helps you

 

 

View solution in original post

11 REPLIES 11

Hi Anupriya,

 

Add all the IP Ranges in the "Discovery IP Ranges" and schedule Discovery.

 

if you have followed any other process revert back to the comment

 

Mark it as helpful/Correct if my answer helps you

 

 

Monali Patil
Kilo Guru

Hi Anupriya,

How you given IP addresses of all devices??Please elaborate.

You simply give starting IP address and Ending Ip address in IP ranges(Related list of Discovery Schedule)

Or If there are random Ips then you can give IP address in quick ranges.and run a discovery  so all devices are discovered.

 

Mark answer as correct/helpful if you find any response.

 

Regards,

Monali Patil

Developer

Hi Monali,

We have given the IP ranges as below:

10.5.24.1-10.5.24.255

10.5.25.1-10.5.24.255

10.5.29.1-10.5.24.255

 

From the above IP ranges it is discovering the devices present in the first IP range provided.

Hi Anupriya,

Try This 

Quick ranges allow administrators to define IP addresses to scan in a single comma-delimited string without creating separate records. You can enter IP addresses in one of the following formats.

  • An IP range defined by a slash and the number of bits in the subnetwork. For example, the string 10.10.10.0/24 scans 24 bits of IP addresses from 10.10.10.0 to 10.10.10.254.
  • An IP range defined by a dash. For example, the string 10.10.11.0-10.10.11.165 scans the IP addresses from 10.10.11.0 to 10.10.11.165.
  • A comma-separated list of specific IP addresses. For example the string 10.10.11.200,10.10.11.235 scans the IP addresses 10.10.11.200 and 10.10.11.235.

Hope it will help you.

 

Mark answer as correct/helpful if you find any response.

 

Regards,

Monali Patil

Developer

VaranAwesomenow
Mega Sage

You can also create multiple schedules one per IP range and run them sequentially using the 'run after' option of the schedule