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Adding Elements to Avaya Element Manager via Summary.xml file

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thomen00

Technical User
Jan 31, 2006
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After adding elements to Element Manager, the program creates an xml file called summary.xml located in the following directory - (if you used the default settings)

C:\Program Files\Nortel\BCM\BCMElementManager\bin\access

We have several different customers that are now deploying either BCM400 4.0 systems or BCM50 systems. Each customer is supplying us with a different summary.xml file with all of their sites pre-loaded. I am wondering if anybody knows of a way to either load multiple summary.xml files into element manager at the same time - or - edit the file to manually combine the information. I have been trying to edit it but it does not appear to be a standard xml file as none of the xml editors I have tried are able to open it correctly. I am sure it is somewhat 'Nortel proprietary'. Any suggestions or tips would be greatly appreciated...
 
As you wrote the xml files that the BEM generates appear to be in a proprietary format. XML should be readable by any text editor, but the summary.xml that you referenced shows nothing but gibberish when I open it in Notepad, and it won't open at all with XML-Notepad. Perhaps it's encrypted, but that aside, I don't think there's anyway to edit these files as you'd like.

Brian Cox
Georgia Telephone
 
Does it look like it's in Chinese?

I was thinking the forum had a glitch as this is an exact post from 11 years ago.


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curlycord - yes it is the same post! That's why it sounds so outdated. I never had any replies to it 11 years ago and thought I'd give it another try.

Thanks
 
Ok thanks.

The obvious would be sensitive logins need to be hidden.

-With Notepad I have Chinese text, verified by copying some characters to google translator
-I tried Encoding and Recoding with every option given in the list
-I tried Win XP and it showed in notepad with all characters as squares but when copied to Win10 is shows back to Chinese characters

I think it's a dead end unless there is some encoder platform out there.






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curlycord - I kind of figured but thought I'd try! When you have hundreds of sites to make IP changes to it would be a lot easier to edit the text! Thanks for the reply.
 
I'd say it's clear that the file is not an XML file. My personal guess would be that it is a compressed XML. The question is what compression is actually used. This could be most likely determined from the file signature (the first few bytes of the file). If it is a compressed file and if you figure out what compression was used, changing the extension from xml to the correct one could expose the contents (which would be - again my guess - one or more XML files).

If you post the first 16 or 32 bytes displayed using hexdump or shown in a hex editor, you could get some suggestions about what the file format might be.
 
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