About Network Manager domains
A domain is a set of Network Manager processes that work together in a single group. Each domain has a unique name.
Running multiple domains enables you discover, visualize and monitor multiple network topologies. Multiple Network Manager processes can run independently of each other on the same server if they belong to different domains.
Breaking your network into domains allows you to discover your network in sections. You might want to do this for reasons of scalability: your network might be too big to be discovered in one piece. Alternatively, you might want to break the network into geographical regions, and make each region correspond to a domain.
By default, Network Manager runs on a single domain.
The domain in which a component runs is determined by the command-line argument -domain, which is compulsory for all components, with the exception of the ncp_mib process, which manages the importing of MIBs across all domains using the same Netcool® Common Inventory Model (NCIM) database.
Configuration files that are specific to a particular domain have the domain name appended to the file name. For example, the configuration file for the ncp_ctrl process running in domain NCOMS would be CtrlServicesNCOMS.cfg.
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