Difference between revisions of "TUT:snmpgetnext"
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Revision as of 19:33, 23 January 2007
Contents
snmpgetnext
The snmpgetnext command, which is similar in usage to the snmpget command, is used to retrieve the next oid in the mib tree of data. Instead of returing the data you requested, it returns the next OID in the tree and its value:
% snmpgetnext -v 2c -c demopublic test.net-snmp.org system.sysUpTime.0 system.sysContact.0 = Wes Hardaker wjhardaker@ucdavis.edu
You could use the snmpgetnext command to manually walk down the mib tree in the remote host, by always specifying the last OID that you saw on the command line for the next command:
% snmpgetnext -v 2c -c demopublic test.net-snmp.org system.sysUpTime.0 system.sysContact.0 = Wes Hardaker wjhardaker@ucdavis.edu
% snmpgetnext -v 2c -c demopublic test.net-snmp.org system.sysContact.0 system.sysName.0 = net-snmp
% snmpgetnext -v 2c -c demopublic test.net-snmp.org system.sysName.0 system.sysLocation.0 = UCDavis
In fact, the snmpwalk command described in the next section, implements exactly this but in one command! Unlike the snmpget command, the snmpgetnext command does return data for a OID which is too short or is missing the index part of the OID. For instance, if you remember from the last snmpget discussion, if you left off the .0 on the end of the OID you were requesting on a snmpget command, you were issued an error. With snmpgetnext, you're still issued an answer, because you will always get the next value in the tree, regardless of weather or not you specified a valid OID for a variable or not:
% snmpgetnext -v 2c -c demopublic test.net-snmp.org system.sysUpTime system.sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (586978184) 67 days, 22:29:41.84
% snmpgetnext -v 2c -c demopublic test.net-snmp.org system system.sysDescr.0 = HP-UX net-snmp B.10.20 A 9000/715
% snmpgetnext -v 2c -c demopublic test.net-snmp.org .1.3.6 system.sysDescr.0 = HP-UX net-snmp B.10.20 A 9000/715
Tutorial Sections
About the SNMP Protocol
These tutorial links talk about SNMP generically and how the protocol itself works. They are good introductory reading material and the concepts are important to understand before diving into the later tutorials about Net-SNMP itself.
- How SNMP Works: About the protocol itself (GETs, GETNEXTs, etc)
- What data is in SNMP: All about SNMP Management Information Bases (MIBs)
- Securing SNMP: How to use the SNMP protocol securely
Net-SNMP Command Line Applications
These tutorial pages discuss the command line tools provided in the Net-SNMP suite of tools. Nearly all the example commands in these tutorials works if you try it yourself, as they're all examples that talk to our online Net-SNMP test agent. Given them a shot!
- snmptranslate: learning about the MIB tree.
- snmpget: retrieving data from a host.
- snmpgetnext: retrieving unknown indexed data.
- snmpwalk: retrieving lots of data at once!
- snmptable: displaying a table.
- snmpset: peforming write operations.
- snmpbulkget: communicates with a network entity using SNMP GETBULK request
- snmpbulkwalk: retrieve a sub-tree of management values using SNMP GETBULK requests.
- snmptrap: Sending and receiving traps, and acting upon them.
- Traps/informs with SNMPv3/USM: Sending and receiving SNMPv3/USM TRAPs and INFORMs
- Sending Traps/Informs via AgentX: Sending notifications from the command line through snmpd
- Common command line options:
- Writing mib2c config files
Application Configuration
All of our applications support configuration to allow you to customize how they behave.
Net-SNMP Daemons
Net-SNMP comes with two long-running daemons: a SNMP agent (snmpd) for responding to management requests and a notification receiver (snmptrapd) for receiving SNMP notifications.
- SNMP Agent (snmpd) Configuration
- SNMP Notification Receiver (snmptrapd)
- Agent Monitoring
Coding Tutorials
Net-SNMP comes with a highly flexible and extensible API. The API allows you to create your own commands, add extensions to the agent to support your own MIBs and perform specialized processing of notifications.
- Client / Manager Coding Tutorials
- Agent Coding Tutorials
- The Agent Architecture page might be worth reading before or after the agent coding tutorials, and describes how the Agent Helpers work under the hood.
- Writing a mib module to serve information described by an SNMP MIB, and how to compile it into the net-snmp snmpd agent.
- Writing a Dynamically Loadable Object that can be loaded into the SNMP agent.
- Writing a Subagent that can be run to attach to the snmpd master agent.
- Writing a perl plugin to extend the agent using the NetSNMP::agent module.
- Writing shell scripts to extend the agent
- Using mib2c to help write an agent code template for you
- Header files and autoconf
Debugging SNMP Applications and Agents
All our tools and applications have extensive debugging output. These tutorials talk about how the debugging system works and how you can add your own debugging statements to you code:
- Debugging output printed using the -D command line option
- Using -Ddump to display packet breakdowns
- Debugging using GDB
Operating System Specific Tutorials
- Building With Visual Studio 2005 Express
- Building Net-SNMP 64-bit with Visual C++ 2010 Express
- Net-Snmp on Ubuntu
- Net-SNMP and lm-sensors on Ubuntu 10.04
- Net-SNMP for windows: