SNMP
539
Displaying Community Strings
You can display the current SNMP community strings that are assigned.
Configuring Community Strings
A community string is an octet string, included in each SNMP message,
that controls access to system information. The system SNMP agents
internally maintain two community strings that you can configure:
■
Read-only
community strings with the default
public
■
Read-write
community strings with the default
private
When an SNMP agent receives an SNMP request, the agent compares the
community string in the request with the community strings that are
configured for the agent:
■
SNMP
get
,
get-next
, and
set
requests are valid if the community string
in the request matches the agent’s
read-write
community.
■
SNMP
get
and
get-next
requests are valid if the community string in
the request matches the agent’s
read-only
community string or
read-write community string.
Community string
length
When you set a community string, you can specify any value up to
48 characters long.
Administering SNMP Trap Reporting
For network management applications, you can use the Administration
Console to manually administer the trap reporting address information.
■
Displaying Trap Reporting Information
— When you display the
trap reporting information, the system displays the various SNMP traps
and their currently configured destinations
.
■
Configuring Trap Reporting
— You can add new trap reporting
destination configurations and modify existing configurations. You
can define up to 10 destination addresses and the set of traps that are
sent to each destination address.
The trap numbers that you enter tell the system to send the
corresponding traps to the destination address when the events occur. No
unlisted traps are transmitted.
Summary of Contents for CoreBuilder 3500
Page 44: ...44 CHAPTER 2 MANAGEMENT ACCESS ...
Page 58: ...58 CHAPTER 3 SYSTEM PARAMETERS ...
Page 86: ...86 CHAPTER 5 ETHERNET ...
Page 112: ...112 CHAPTER 6 FIBER DISTRIBUTED DATA INTERFACE FDDI ...
Page 208: ...208 CHAPTER 9 VIRTUAL LANS ...
Page 256: ...256 CHAPTER 10 PACKET FILTERING ...
Page 330: ...330 CHAPTER 12 VIRTUAL ROUTER REDUNDANCY PROTOCOL VRRP ...
Page 356: ...356 CHAPTER 13 IP MULTICAST ROUTING ...
Page 418: ...418 CHAPTER 14 OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST OSPF ...
Page 519: ...RSVP 519 Figure 94 Sample RSVP Configuration Source station End stations Routers ...
Page 566: ...566 CHAPTER 18 DEVICE MONITORING ...
Page 572: ...572 APPENDIX A TECHNICAL SUPPORT ...
Page 592: ...592 INDEX ...