| .\" -*- nroff -*- |
| .\" Portions of this file are subject to the following copyright. See |
| .\" the Net-SNMP COPYING file for more details and other copyrights |
| .\" that may apply: |
| .\"/*********************************************************** |
| .\" Copyright 1988, 1989 by Carnegie Mellon University |
| .\" |
| .\" All Rights Reserved |
| .\" |
| .\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its |
| .\" documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, |
| .\" provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that |
| .\" both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in |
| .\" supporting documentation, and that the name of CMU not be |
| .\" used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the |
| .\" software without specific, written prior permission. |
| .\" |
| .\" CMU DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING |
| .\" ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL |
| .\" CMU BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR |
| .\" ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, |
| .\" WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, |
| .\" ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS |
| .\" SOFTWARE. |
| .\" ******************************************************************/ |
| .\" Portions of this file are copyrighted by: |
| .\" Copyright Copyright 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. |
| .\" Use is subject to license terms specified in the COPYING file |
| .\" distributed with the Net-SNMP package. |
| .\" ******************************************************************/ |
| .TH SNMPCMD 1 "20 Jul 2010" VVERSIONINFO "Net-SNMP" |
| .SH NAME |
| snmpcmd - options and behaviour common to most of the Net-SNMP command-line tools |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .B snmpcmd |
| [OPTIONS] AGENT [PARAMETERS] |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| This manual page describes the common options for the SNMP commands: |
| .BR snmpbulkget ", " snmpbulkwalk ", " snmpdelta ", " snmpget ", " |
| .BR snmpgetnext ", " snmpnetstat ", " snmpset ", " snmpstatus ", " |
| .BR snmptable ", " snmptest ", " snmptrap ", |
| .BR " snmpdf", " snmpusm ", " snmpwalk ". " |
| The command line applications use the SNMP protocol to communicate |
| with an SNMP capable network entity, an agent. Individual |
| applications typically (but not necessarily) take additional |
| parameters that are given after the agent specification. These |
| parameters are documented in the manual pages for each application. |
| .SH COMMAND-LINE CONFIG OPTIONS |
| In addition to the options described in this manual page, all of the |
| tokens described in the \fIsnmp.conf\fR and other .conf manual pages |
| can be used on the command line of Net-SNMP applications as well by |
| prefixing them with "\-\-". EG, specifying |
| \fI\-\-dontLoadHostConfig=true\fR on the command line will turn of |
| loading of the host specific configuration files. |
| .PP |
| The snmp.conf file settings and the double-dash arguments over-ride |
| the single-dash arguments. So it's important to note that if |
| single-dash arguments aren't working because you have settings in the |
| \fIsnmp.conf\fR file that conflict with them then you'll need to use |
| the longer-form double-dash arguments to successfully trump the |
| \fIsnmp.conf\fR file settings. |
| .SH Generic Options |
| Thes options control how the Net-SNMP commands behave regardless of |
| what version of SNMP you are using. See further below for options |
| that control specific versions or sub-modules of the SNMP protocol. |
| .TP |
| .B \-d |
| Dump (in hexadecimal) the raw SNMP packets sent and received. |
| .TP |
| .B \-D\fI[TOKEN[,...]] |
| Turn on debugging output for the given |
| .IR "TOKEN" "(s)." |
| Try |
| .IR ALL |
| for extremely verbose output. |
| .TP |
| .TP |
| .B \-h, \-\-help |
| Display a brief usage message and then exit. |
| .TP |
| .B \-H |
| Display a list of configuration file directives understood by the |
| command and then exit. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-I " [brRhu]" |
| Specifies input parsing options. See |
| .B INPUT OPTIONS |
| below. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-L " [eEfFoOsS]" |
| Specifies output logging options. See |
| .B LOGGING OPTIONS |
| below. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-m " MIBLIST" |
| Specifies a colon separated list of MIB modules (not files) to load for |
| this application. This overrides (or augments) the environment variable |
| MIBS, the \fIsnmp.conf\fR directive \fImibs\fR, and the list of MIBs |
| hardcoded into the Net-SNMP library. |
| .IP |
| If |
| .I MIBLIST |
| has a leading '\-' or '+' character, then the MIB modules listed are |
| loaded in addition to the default list, coming before or after |
| this list respectively. |
| Otherwise, the specified MIBs are loaded \fIinstead\fR of this |
| default list. |
| .IP |
| The special keyword |
| .I ALL |
| is used to load all MIB modules in the MIB directory search list. |
| Every file whose name does not begin with "." will be parsed as |
| if it were a MIB file. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-M " DIRLIST" |
| Specifies a colon separated list of directories to search for MIBs. |
| This overrides (or augments) the environment variable MIBDIRS, |
| the \fIsnmp.conf\fR directive \fImibdirs\fR, and the default |
| directory hardcoded into the Net-SNMP library |
| (DATADIR/snmp/mibs). |
| .IP |
| If |
| .I DIRLIST |
| has a leading '\-' or '+' character, then the given directories are |
| added to the default list, being searched before or after the |
| directories on this list respectively. |
| Otherwise, the specified directories are searched \fIinstead\fR |
| of this default list. |
| |
| Note that the directories appearing later in the list have |
| have precedence over earlier ones. |
| .\" |
| .\" XXX - Say a bit more about what precedence means |
| .\" |
| To avoid searching any MIB directories, set the MIBDIRS |
| environment variable to the empty string (""). |
| .\" |
| .\" XXX - or \-M "" ?? |
| .\" |
| |
| Note that MIBs specified using the \-m option or the \fImibs\fR |
| configuration directive will be loaded from one of the directories |
| listed by the \-M option (or equivalents). |
| The \fImibfile\fR directive takes a full path to the specified MIB |
| file, so this does not need to be in the MIB directory search list. |
| .TP |
| .B \-v \fI1\fR | \fI2c\fR | \fI3 |
| Specifies the protocol version to use: 1 (RFCs 1155-1157), 2c (RFCs 1901-1908), |
| or 3 (RFCs 2571-2574). The default is typically version 3. |
| Overrides the \fIdefVersion\fR token in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. |
| .BI \-O " [abeEfnqQsStTuUvxX]" |
| Specifies output printing options. See |
| .B OUTPUT OPTIONS |
| below. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-P " [cdeRuwW]" |
| Specifies MIB parsing options. See |
| .B MIB PARSING OPTIONS |
| below. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-r " retries" |
| Specifies the number of retries to be used in the requests. The default |
| is 5. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-t " timeout" |
| Specifies the timeout in seconds between retries. The default is 1. |
| Floating point numbers can be used to specify fractions of seconds. |
| .TP |
| .B \-V, \-\-version |
| Display version information for the application and then exit. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-Y "name"="value" |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\- "name"="value" |
| Allows one to specify any token ("name") supported in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file and sets its value to "value". Overrides the corresponding token in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. See |
| .I snmp.conf(5) |
| for the full list of tokens. |
| |
| |
| .SH SNMPv3 Options |
| The following options are generic to all forms of SNMPv3, regardless |
| of whether it's the original SNMPv3 with USM or the newer SNMPv3 over |
| (D)TLS support. |
| |
| .TP |
| .BI \-l " secLevel" |
| Set the securityLevel used for SNMPv3 messages |
| (noAuthNoPriv|authNoPriv|authPriv). Appropriate pass phrase(s) must |
| provided when using any level higher than noAuthNoPriv. |
| Overrides the \fIdefSecurityLevel\fR token in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-n " contextName" |
| Set the contextName used for SNMPv3 messages. The default |
| contextName is the empty string "". Overrides the \fIdefContext\fR token |
| in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. |
| |
| .SH SNMPv3 over TLS Options |
| These options pass transport-specific parameters to the TLS layer. If |
| you're using SNMP over TLS or DTLS you'll need to pass a combination |
| of these either through these command line options or through |
| snmp.conf configuration tokens. |
| .PP |
| A note about |
| .I "<certificate-specifier>s": |
| Net-SNMP looks for X.509 certificates in each of the normal SNMP |
| configuration directory search paths under a "tls" subdirectory. IE, |
| it will look in ~/.snmp/tls and in /usr/local/share/snmp/tls for |
| certificates. The certificate components (eg, the public and private |
| halves) are stored in sub-directories underneath this root set of |
| directories. See the net\-snmp\-cert tool for help in importing, |
| creating and managing Net-SNMP certificates. |
| .I "<certificate-specifier>s" |
| can reference either a fingerprint of the certificate to use (the |
| net\-snmp\-cert tool can help you figure out the certificates) or the |
| filename's prefix can be used. For example, if you had a "snmpd.crt" |
| certificate file then you could simply refer to the certificate via |
| the "snmpd" specifier. |
| .TP |
| .BI "\-T localCert=<certificate-specifier>" |
| Indicates to the transport which key should be used to initiate (D)TLS |
| client connections. This would typically be a certificate found using |
| the certificate fingerprint, the application name (eg snmpd, snmptrapd, perl, python) or |
| genericized name "snmpapp" if using one of the generic applications |
| (snmpget, snmpwalk, etc). This can also be set using the |
| localCert specifier in a snmp.conf configuration file. |
| .TP |
| .BI "\-T peerCert=<certificate-specifier>" |
| If you expect a particular certificate to be presented by the other |
| side then you can use this specifier to indicate the certificate it |
| should present. If it fails to present the expected certificate the |
| client will refuse to open the connection (because doing otherwise |
| could lead to man-in-the-middle attacks). This can also be set using |
| the peerCert specifier in a snmp.conf configuration file. |
| .TP |
| .BI "\-T trust_cert=<certificate-specifier>" |
| If you have a trusted CA certificate you wish to anchor trust with, |
| you can use this flag to load a given certificate as a trust anchor. |
| A copy of the certificate must exist within the Net-SNMP certificate |
| storage system or this must point to a complete path name. Also see |
| the "trustCert" snmp.conf configuration token. |
| .TP |
| .BI "\-T their_hostname=<name>" |
| If the server's presented certificate can be validating using a trust |
| anchor then their hostname will be checked to ensure their presented |
| hostname matches one that is expected (you don't want to connect to |
| goodhost.example.com and accept a certificate presented by |
| badhost.example.com do you?). This token can specify the exact host |
| name expected to be presented by the remote side, either in a |
| subjectAltName field or in the CommonName field of the server's X.509 |
| certificate. |
| .SH SNMPv3 with USM Options |
| These options are specific to using SNMPv3 with the original |
| User-based Security Model (USM). |
| .TP |
| .BI "\-3[MmKk] 0xHEXKEY" |
| Sets the keys to be used for SNMPv3 transactions. These options allow |
| you to set the master authentication and encryption keys (\-3m and \-3M |
| respectively) or set the localized authentication and encryption keys |
| (\-3k and \-3K respectively). SNMPv3 keys can be either passed in by |
| hand using these flags, or by the use of keys generated from passwords |
| using the \-A and \-X flags discussed below. For further details on |
| SNMPv3 and its usage of keying information, see the Net-SNMP tutorial |
| web site ( http://www.Net\-SNMP.org/tutorial\-5/commands/ ). |
| Overrides the defAuthMasterKey (\-3m), defPrivMasterKey (\-3M), |
| defAuthLocalizedKey (\-3k) or defPrivLocalizedKey (\-3K) tokens, respectively, |
| in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file, see |
| .I snmp.conf(5). |
| .TP |
| .BI \-a " authProtocol" |
| Set the authentication protocol (MD5 or SHA) used for authenticated SNMPv3 |
| messages. Overrides the \fIdefAuthType\fR token in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-A " authPassword" |
| Set the authentication pass phrase used for authenticated SNMPv3 |
| messages. Overrides the \fIdefAuthPassphrase\fR token in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. It is insecure to specify pass phrases on the command line, |
| see |
| .I snmp.conf(5). |
| .TP |
| .BI \-e " engineID" |
| Set the authoritative (security) engineID used for SNMPv3 REQUEST |
| messages, given as a hexadecimal string (optionally prefixed by "0x"). |
| It is typically not necessary to specify this engine ID, as it will |
| usually be discovered automatically. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-E " engineID" |
| Set the context engineID used for SNMPv3 REQUEST messages scopedPdu, |
| given as a hexadecimal string. |
| If not specified, this will default to the authoritative engineID. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-u " secName" |
| Set the securityName used for authenticated SNMPv3 messages. |
| Overrides the \fIdefSecurityName\fR token in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-x " privProtocol" |
| Set the privacy protocol (DES or AES) used for encrypted SNMPv3 messages. |
| Overrides the \fIdefPrivType\fR token in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. This option is only valid if the Net-SNMP software was build |
| to use OpenSSL. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-X " privPassword" |
| Set the privacy pass phrase used for encrypted SNMPv3 messages. |
| Overrides the \fIdefPrivPassphrase\fR token in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. |
| It is insecure to specify pass phrases on the command line, see |
| .I snmp.conf(5). |
| .TP |
| .BI \-Z " boots,time" |
| Set the engineBoots and engineTime used for authenticated SNMPv3 |
| messages. This will initialize the local notion of the agents |
| boots/time with an authenticated value stored in the LCD. |
| It is typically not necessary to specify this option, as these values |
| will usually be discovered automatically. |
| |
| |
| .SH SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c Options |
| .TP |
| .BI \-c " community" |
| Set the community string for SNMPv1/v2c transactions. |
| Overrides the \fIdefCommunity\fR token in the |
| .I snmp.conf |
| file. |
| |
| .SH AGENT SPECIFICATION |
| .PP |
| The string |
| .I AGENT |
| in the |
| .B SYNOPSIS |
| above specifies the remote SNMP entity with which to communicate. |
| This specification takes the form: |
| .IP |
| [<transport-specifier>:]<transport-address> |
| .PP |
| At its simplest, the |
| .I AGENT |
| specification may consist of a hostname, or an IPv4 address in the |
| standard "dotted quad" notation. In this case, communication will be |
| attempted using UDP/IPv4 to port 161 of the given host. Otherwise, |
| the <transport-address> part of the specification is parsed according |
| to the following table: |
| .RS 4 |
| .TP 28 |
| .BR "<transport-specifier>" |
| .BR "<transport-address> format" |
| .IP "udp" 28 |
| hostname[:port] |
| .I or |
| IPv4-address[:port] |
| .IP "tcp" 28 |
| hostname[:port] |
| .I or |
| IPv4-address[:port] |
| .IP "unix" 28 |
| pathname |
| .IP "ipx" 28 |
| [network]:node[/port] |
| .TP 28 |
| .IR "" "aal5pvc " or " pvc" |
| [interface.][VPI.]VCI |
| .IP "udp6 or udpv6 or udpipv6" 28 |
| hostname[:port] |
| .I or |
| IPv6-address:port |
| .I or |
| '['IPv6-address']'[:port] |
| .IP "tcp6 or tcpv6 or tcpipv6" |
| hostname[:port] |
| .I or |
| IPv6-address:port |
| .I or |
| '['IPv6-address']'[:port] |
| .RE |
| .PP |
| Note that <transport-specifier> strings are case-insensitive so that, |
| for example, "tcp" and "TCP" are equivalent. Here are some examples, |
| along with their interpretation: |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "hostname:161" |
| perform query using UDP/IPv4 datagrams to |
| .I hostname |
| on port |
| .IR 161 . |
| The ":161" is redundant here since that is the default SNMP port in |
| any case. |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "udp:hostname" |
| identical to the previous specification. The "udp:" is redundant here |
| since UDP/IPv4 is the default transport. |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "TCP:hostname:1161" |
| connect to |
| .I hostname |
| on port |
| .I 1161 |
| using TCP/IPv4 and perform query over that connection. |
| .IR "udp6:hostname:10161" |
| perform the query using UDP/IPv6 datagrams to port |
| .I 10161 |
| on |
| .I hostname |
| (which will be looked up as an AAAA record). |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "UDP6:[fe80::2d0:b7ff:fe21:c6c0]" |
| perform the query using UDP/IPv6 datagrams to port 161 at address |
| .IR fe80::2d0:b7ff:fe21:c6c0 . |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "tcpipv6:[::1]:1611" |
| connect to port 1611 on the local host |
| .IR "" ( ::1 |
| in IPv6 parlance) using TCP/IPv6 and perform query over that connection. |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "tls:hostname:10161" |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "dtls:hostname:10161" |
| Connects using SNMP over DTLS or TLS as documented by the ISMS working |
| group (RFCs not yet published as of this date). This will require |
| (and automatically ensures) that the TSM security model is in use. |
| You'll also need to set up trust paths for the certificates presented |
| by the server (see above for descriptions of this). |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "ssh:hostname:22" |
| Connects using SNMP over SSH as documented by the ISMS working group |
| (RFCs not yet published as of this date). This will require that the |
| TSM security model is in use (\-\-defSecurityModel=tsm). |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "ipx::00D0B7AAE308" |
| perform query using IPX datagrams to node number |
| .I 00D0B7AAE308 |
| on the default network, and using the default IPX port of 36879 (900F |
| hexadecimal), as suggested in RFC 1906. |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "ipx:0AE43409:00D0B721C6C0/1161" |
| perform query using IPX datagrams to port |
| .I 1161 |
| on node number |
| .I 00D0B721C6C0 |
| on network number |
| .IR 0AE43409 . |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "unix:/tmp/local\-agent" |
| connect to the Unix domain socket |
| .IR /tmp/local\-agent , |
| and perform the query over that connection. |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "/tmp/local\-agent" |
| identical to the previous specification, since the Unix domain is the |
| default transport iff the first character of the <transport-address> |
| is a '/'. |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "alias:myname" |
| perform a connection to the |
| .I myname |
| alias which needs to be defined in the snmp.conf file using a line |
| like " |
| .I "alias myname udp:127.0.0.1:9161" |
| ". Any type of transport definition can be used as the alias expansion |
| parameter. Aliases are particularly useful for using repeated complex |
| transport strings. |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "AAL5PVC:100" |
| perform the query using AAL5 PDUs sent on the permanent virtual |
| circuit with VPI=0 and VCI=100 (decimal) on the first ATM adapter in the |
| machine. |
| .TP 24 |
| .IR "PVC:1.10.32" |
| perform the query using AAL5 PDUs sent on the permanent virtual |
| circuit with VPI=10 (decimal) and VCI=32 (decimal) on the second ATM |
| adapter in the machine. Note that "PVC" is a synonym for "AAL5PVC". |
| .PP |
| Note that not all the transport domains listed above will always be |
| available; for instance, hosts with no IPv6 support will not be able |
| to use udp6 transport addresses, and attempts to do so will result in |
| the error "Unknown host". Likewise, since AAL5 PVC support is only |
| currently available on Linux, it will fail with the same error on |
| other platforms. |
| .SH "MIB PARSING OPTIONS" |
| The Net-SNMP MIB parser mostly adheres to the Structure of Management |
| Information (SMI). As that specification has changed through time, and |
| in recognition of the (ahem) diversity in compliance expressed in MIB |
| files, additional options provide more flexibility in reading MIB files. |
| .TP |
| .B "\-Pc" |
| Toggles whether ASN.1 comments should extend to the end of the MIB |
| source line. |
| Strictly speaking, a second appearance of "\-\-" should terminate the |
| comment, but this breaks some MIB files. |
| The default behaviour (to interpret comments correctly) can also |
| be set with the configuration token \fIcommentToEOL\fR. |
| .TP |
| .B "\-Pd" |
| Disables the loading of MIB object DESCRIPTIONs when parsing MIB files. |
| This reduces the amount of memory used by the running application. |
| .TP |
| .B "\-Pe" |
| Toggles whether to show errors encountered when parsing MIB files. |
| These include |
| references to IMPORTed modules and MIB objects that cannot be |
| located in the MIB directory search list. |
| The default behaviour can also be set with the configuration token \fIshowMibErrors\fR. |
| .TP |
| .B "\-PR" |
| If the same MIB object (parent name and sub-identifier) appears multiple |
| times in the list of MIB definitions loaded, use the last version to be |
| read in. By default, the first version will be used, and any duplicates |
| discarded. |
| This behaviour can also be set with the configuration token \fImibReplaceWithLatest\fR. |
| |
| Such ordering is normally only relevant if there are two MIB files with |
| conflicting object definitions for the same OID (or different revisions |
| of the same basic MIB object). |
| .\" .B WARNING: |
| .\" Setting this option may result in an incorrect hierarchy. |
| .\" XXX - Why? |
| .TP |
| .B "\-Pu" |
| Toggles whether to allow the underline character in MIB object names |
| and other symbols. |
| Strictly speaking, this is not valid SMI syntax, but some vendor MIB |
| files define such names. |
| The default behaviour can also be set with the configuration token \fImibAllowUnderline\fR. |
| .TP |
| .B "\-Pw" |
| Show various warning messages in parsing MIB files and building |
| the overall OID tree. |
| This can also be set with the configuration directive |
| \fImibWarningLevel 1\fR |
| .TP |
| .B "\-PW" |
| Show some additional warning messages, mostly relating to parsing |
| individual MIB objects. |
| This can also be set with the configuration directive |
| \fImibWarningLevel 2\fR |
| |
| .SH "OUTPUT OPTIONS" |
| The format of the output from SNMP commands can be controlled using |
| various parameters of the \fB\-O\fR flag. |
| The effects of these sub-options can be seen by comparison with |
| the following default output (unless otherwise specified): |
| .RS |
| .nf |
| \fC$ snmpget \-c public \-v 1 localhost sysUpTime.0 |
| SNMPv2\-MIB::sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63\fR |
| .fi |
| .RE |
| |
| .TP |
| .B \-Oa |
| Display string values as ASCII strings (unless there is a |
| \fCDISPLAY\-HINT\fR defined for the corresponding MIB object). |
| By default, the library attempts to determine whether the value is |
| a printable or binary string, and displays it accordingly. |
| |
| This option does not affect objects that \fIdo\fR have a Display Hint. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Ob |
| Display table indexes numerically, rather than trying to interpret |
| the instance subidentifiers as string or OID values: |
| .RS |
| .nf |
| \fC $ snmpgetnext \-c public \-v 1 localhost vacmSecurityModel |
| SNMP\-VIEW\-BASED\-ACM\-MIB::vacmSecurityModel.0."wes" = xxx |
| $ snmpgetnext \-c public \-v 1 \fB\-Ob\fP localhost vacmSecurityModel |
| SNMP\-VIEW\-BASED\-ACM\-MIB::vacmSecurityModel.0.3.119.101.115 = xxx\fR |
| .fi |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .B \-Oe |
| Removes the symbolic labels from enumeration values: |
| .RS |
| .nf |
| \fC $ snmpget \-c public \-v 1 localhost ipForwarding.0 |
| IP\-MIB::ipForwarding.0 = INTEGER: forwarding(1) |
| \fC $ snmpget \-c public \-v 1 \fB\-Oe\fP localhost ipForwarding.0 |
| IP\-MIB::ipForwarding.0 = INTEGER: 1\fR |
| .fi |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .B \-OE |
| Modifies index strings to escape the quote characters: |
| .RS |
| .nf |
| \fC $ snmpgetnext \-c public \-v 1 localhost vacmSecurityModel |
| SNMP\-VIEW\-BASED\-ACM\-MIB::vacmSecurityModel.0."wes" = xxx |
| $ snmpgetnext \-c public \-v 1 \fB\-OE\fP localhost vacmSecurityModel |
| SNMP\-VIEW\-BASED\-ACM\-MIB::vacmSecurityModel.0.\\"wes\\" = xxx\fR |
| .fi |
| .RE |
| .IP |
| This allows the output to be reused in shell commands. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Of |
| Include the full list of MIB objects when displaying an OID: |
| .RS |
| \fC .iso.org.dod.internet.mgmt.mib\-2.system.sysUpTime.0 =\fR |
| .RS |
| \fC Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63\fR |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .B \-On |
| Displays the OID numerically: |
| .br |
| \fC .1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63\fR |
| .TP |
| .B \-Oq |
| Removes the equal sign and type information when displaying varbind values: |
| .br |
| \fC SNMPv2\-MIB::sysUpTime.0 1:15:09:27.63\fR |
| .TP |
| .B \-OQ |
| Removes the type information when displaying varbind values: |
| .br |
| \fC SNMPv2\-MIB::sysUpTime.0 = 1:15:09:27.63\fR |
| .TP |
| .B \-Os |
| Display the MIB object name (plus any instance or other subidentifiers): |
| .br |
| \fC sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63\fR |
| .TP |
| .B \-OS |
| Display the name of the MIB, as well as the object name: |
| .br |
| \fC SNMPv2\-MIB::sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63\fR |
| .IP |
| This is the default OID output format. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Ot |
| Display \fCTimeTicks\fR values as raw numbers: |
| .br |
| \fC SNMPv2\-MIB::sysUpTime.0 = 14096763\fR |
| .TP |
| .B \-OT |
| If values are printed as Hex strings, |
| display a printable version as well. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Ou |
| Display the OID in the traditional UCD-style (inherited from the original |
| CMU code). |
| That means removing a series of "standard" prefixes from the OID, |
| and displaying the remaining list of MIB object names |
| (plus any other subidentifiers): |
| .br |
| \fC system.sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63\fR |
| .TP |
| .B \-OU |
| Do not print the UNITS suffix at the end of the value. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Ov |
| Display the varbind value only, not the OID: |
| .RS |
| .nf |
| \fC $ snmpget \-c public \-v 1 \fB\-Ov\fP localhost ipForwarding.0 |
| INTEGER: forwarding(1)\fR |
| .fi |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .B \-Ox |
| Display string values as Hex strings (unless there is a |
| \fCDISPLAY\-HINT\fR defined for the corresponding MIB object). |
| By default, the library attempts to determine whether the value is |
| a printable or binary string, and displays it accordingly. |
| |
| This option does not affect objects that \fIdo\fR have a Display Hint. |
| .TP |
| .B \-OX |
| Display table indexes in a more "program like" output, imitating |
| a traditional array-style index format: |
| .RS |
| .nf |
| \fC $ snmpgetnext \-c public \-v 1 localhost ipv6RouteTable |
| IPv6\-MIB::ipv6RouteIfIndex.63.254.1.0.255.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.64.1 = INTEGER: 2 |
| $ snmpgetnext \-c public \-v 1 \fB\-OX\fP localhost ipv6RouteTable |
| IPv6\-MIB::ipv6RouteIfIndex[3ffe:100:ff00:0:0:0:0:0][64][1] = INTEGER: 2 |
| .fi |
| .RE |
| .PP |
| Most of these options can also be configured via configuration tokens. |
| See the |
| .I snmp.conf(5) |
| manual page for details. |
| |
| .SH "LOGGING OPTIONS" |
| The mechanism and destination to use for logging of warning and error |
| messages can be controlled by passing various parameters to the |
| .B \-L |
| flag. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Le |
| Log messages to the standard error stream. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Lf FILE |
| Log messages to the specified file. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Lo |
| Log messages to the standard output stream. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Ls FACILITY |
| Log messages via syslog, using the specified facility |
| ('d' for LOG_DAEMON, 'u' for LOG_USER, |
| or '0'-'7' for LOG_LOCAL0 through LOG_LOCAL7). |
| .PP |
| |
| There are also "upper case" versions of each of these options, which |
| allow the corresponding logging mechanism to be restricted to certain |
| priorities of message. Using standard error logging as an example: |
| .TP |
| .B \-LE pri |
| will log messages of priority 'pri' and above to standard error. |
| .TP |
| .B \-LE p1\-p2 |
| will log messages with priority between 'p1' and 'p2' (inclusive) to |
| standard error. |
| .PP |
| For |
| .B \-LF |
| and |
| .B \-LS |
| the priority specification comes before the file or facility token. |
| The priorities recognised are: |
| .IP |
| .B 0 |
| or |
| .B ! |
| for LOG_EMERG, |
| .br |
| .B 1 |
| or |
| .B a |
| for LOG_ALERT, |
| .br |
| .B 2 |
| or |
| .B c |
| for LOG_CRIT, |
| .br |
| .B 3 |
| or |
| .B e |
| for LOG_ERR, |
| .br |
| .B 4 |
| or |
| .B w |
| for LOG_WARNING, |
| .br |
| .B 5 |
| or |
| .B n |
| for LOG_NOTICE, |
| .br |
| .B 6 |
| or |
| .B i |
| for LOG_INFO, and |
| .br |
| .B 7 |
| or |
| .B d |
| for LOG_DEBUG. |
| .PP |
| Normal output is (or will be!) logged at a priority level of |
| .B LOG_NOTICE |
| |
| .SH "INPUT OPTIONS" |
| The interpretation of input object names and the values to be assigned |
| can be controlled using various parameters of the \fB\-I\fR flag. |
| The default behaviour will be described at the end of this section. |
| .TP |
| .B \-Ib |
| specifies that the given name should be regarded as a regular expression, |
| to match (case-insensitively) against object names in the MIB tree. |
| The "best" match will be used - calculated as the one that matches the |
| closest to the beginning of the node name and the highest in the tree. |
| .\" |
| .\" XXX - This is not a particularly clear description. |
| .\" Need to check the code and/or experiment to |
| .\" discover exactly what Wes means by this! |
| For example, the MIB object \fCvacmSecurityModel\fR could be matched by |
| the expression \fCvacmsecuritymodel\fR (full name, but different case), |
| or \fCvacm.*model\fR (regexp pattern). |
| |
| Note that '.' is a special character in regular expression patterns, |
| so the expression cannot specify instance subidentifiers or more than |
| one object name. A "best match" expression will only be applied |
| against single MIB object names. |
| For example, the expression \fIsys*ontact.0\fR would not match the |
| instance \fCsysContact.0\fR (although \fIsys*ontact\fR would match |
| \fCsysContact\fR). |
| Similarly, specifying a MIB module name will not succeed |
| (so \fISNMPv2\-MIB::sys.*ontact\fR would not match either). |
| .TP |
| .B \-Ih |
| disables the use of DISPLAY\-HINT information when assigning values. |
| This would then require providing the raw value: |
| .br |
| \fC snmpset ... HOST\-RESOURCES\-MIB::hrSystemDate.0 |
| .br |
| x "07 D2 0C 0A 02 04 06 08"\fR |
| .br |
| instead of a formatted version: |
| .br |
| \fC snmpset ... HOST\-RESOURCES\-MIB::hrSystemDate.0 |
| .br |
| = 2002\-12\-10,2:4:6.8\fR |
| .TP |
| .B \-Ir |
| disables checking table indexes and the value to be assigned against the |
| relevant MIB definitions. This will (hopefully) result in the remote |
| agent reporting an invalid request, rather than checking (and rejecting) |
| this before it is sent to the remote agent. |
| |
| Local checks are more efficient (and the diagnostics provided also |
| tend to be more precise), but disabling this behaviour is particularly |
| useful when testing the remote agent. |
| .TP |
| .B \-IR |
| enables "random access" lookup of MIB names. |
| Rather than providing a full OID path to the desired MIB object |
| (or qualifying this object with an explicit MIB module name), |
| the MIB tree will be searched for the matching object name. |
| Thus \fC.iso.org.dod.internet.mib\-2.system.sysDescr.0\fR |
| (or \fCSNMPv2\-MIB::sysDescr.0\fR) can be specified simply |
| as \fCsysDescr.0\fR. |
| .RS |
| .IP "Warning:" |
| Since MIB object names are not globally unique, this approach |
| may return a different MIB object depending on which MIB files |
| have been loaded. |
| .RE |
| .IP |
| The \fIMIB\-MODULE::objectName\fR syntax has |
| the advantage of uniquely identifying a particular MIB object, |
| as well as being slightly more efficient (and automatically |
| loading the necessary MIB file if necessary). |
| .TP |
| .B \-Is SUFFIX |
| adds the specified suffix to each textual OID given on the command line. |
| This can be used to retrieve multiple objects from the same row of |
| a table, by specifying a common index value. |
| .TP |
| .B \-IS PREFIX |
| adds the specified prefix to each textual OID given on the command line. |
| This can be used to specify an explicit MIB module name for all objects |
| being retrieved (or for incurably lazy typists). |
| .TP |
| .B \-Iu |
| enables the traditional UCD-style approach to interpreting input OIDs. |
| This assumes that OIDs are rooted at the 'mib\-2' point in the tree |
| (unless they start with an explicit '.' or include a MIB module name). |
| So the \fCsysDescr\fR instance above would be referenced as |
| \fCsystem.sysDescr.0\fR. |
| |
| .PP |
| Object names specified with a leading '.' are always interpreted as |
| "fully qualified" OIDs, listing the sequence of MIB objects from the |
| root of the MIB tree. Such objects and those qualified by an explicit |
| MIB module name are unaffected by the \fB\-Ib\fR, \fB\-IR\fR and \fB\-Iu\fR flags. |
| |
| Otherwise, if none of the above input options are specified, the |
| default behaviour for a "relative" OID is to try and interpret it |
| as an (implicitly) fully qualified OID, |
| then apply "random access" lookup (\fB\-IR\fR), |
| followed by "best match" pattern matching (\fB\-Ib\fR). |
| |
| .SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" |
| .IP PREFIX |
| The standard prefix for object identifiers (when using UCD-style output). |
| Defaults to .iso.org.dod.internet.mgmt.mib\-2 |
| .IP MIBS |
| The list of MIBs to load. Defaults to |
| SNMPv2\-TC:SNMPv2\-MIB:IF\-MIB:IP\-MIB:TCP\-MIB:UDP\-MIB:SNMP\-VACM\-MIB. |
| Overridden by the |
| .B \-m |
| option. |
| .IP MIBDIRS |
| The list of directories to search for MIBs. Defaults to DATADIR/snmp/mibs. |
| Overridden by the |
| .B \-M |
| option. |
| |
| .SH FILES |
| .IP SYSCONFDIR/snmp/snmpd.conf |
| Agent configuration file. See |
| .IR snmpd.conf(5) . |
| .IP SYSCONFDIR/snmp/snmp.conf |
| .IP ~/.snmp/snmp.conf |
| Application configuration files. See |
| .IR snmp.conf(5) . |
| |
| .SH "SEE ALSO" |
| snmpget(1), snmpgetnext(1), snmpset(1), |
| snmpbulkget(1), snmpbulkwalk(1), snmpwalk(1), |
| snmptable(1), snmpnetstat(1), snmpdelta(1), snmptrap(1), snmpinform(1), |
| snmpusm(1), snmpstatus(1), snmptest(1), |
| snmp.conf(5). |
| |