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Cisco SRST SNMP MIB Release 3.4 Guide
OL-7959-01
Preface
Syntax Conventions
Conventions used in the Cisco SRST system (such as in CLI commands) are shown in
Table 3
.
Note
Hexadecimal and integer fields in files may have different widths (number of characters) for column
alignment.
Angle brackets (< >)
Nonprinting characters such
as passwords.
Exclamation point (!) at the
beginning of a line
A comment line.
Comments are sometimes displayed by
the Cisco IOS software.
Table 2
Conventions (continued)
Convention
Meaning
Description / Comments
Table 3
Data Types
Data Type
Definition
Example
Integer
A series of decimal digits from the set of 0 through 9 that
represents a positive integer. An integer may have one or
more leading zero digits (0) added to the left side to align
the columns. Leading zeros are always valid as long as
the number of digits is less than or equal to ten digits.
Values of this type have a range of zero through
4294967295.
123
000123
4200000000
Signed
integer
This data type has the same basic format as the integer
but can be either positive or negative. When negative, it
is preceded by the sign character (-). As with the integer
data type, this data type can be as many as ten digits in
length, not including the sign character. The value of this
type has a range of 0 minus 2147483647 through
2147483647.
123
-000123
-2100000000l
Hexadecimal A series of 16-based digits from the set of 0 through 9, a
through f, or A through F. The hexadecimal number may
have one or more leading zeros (0) added to the left side.
For all hexadecimal values, the maximum size is
0xffffffff (eight hexadecimal digits).
1f3
01f3000
Text
A series of alphanumeric characters from the ASCII
character set, where defined. Tab, space, and double
quote (
“ ”
) characters cannot be used. Text can be as many
as 255 characters; however, it is recommended that you
limit the text to no more than 32 characters for
readability.
EntityID
LineSES_Threshold999
String
A series of alphanumeric characters and white-space
characters. A string is surrounded by double quotes (
“ ”
).
Strings can be as many as 255 characters; however, it is
recommended that you limit the strings to no more than
80 characters for readability.
“This is a descriptive
string.”