
Chapter 5
| SNMP Commands
SNMPv3 Commands
– 191 –
Command Usage
◆
An SNMP engine is an independent SNMP agent that resides either on this
switch or on a remote device. This engine protects against message replay,
delay, and redirection. The engine ID is also used in combination with user
passwords to generate the security keys for authenticating and encrypting
SNMPv3 packets.
◆
A remote engine ID is required when using SNMPv3 informs. (See the
command.) The remote engine ID is used to compute the security
digest for authentication and encryption of packets passed between the switch
and a user on the remote host. SNMP passwords are localized using the engine
ID of the authoritative agent. For informs, the authoritative SNMP agent is the
remote agent. You therefore need to configure the remote agent’s SNMP
engine ID before you can send proxy requests or informs to it.
◆
Trailing zeroes need not be entered to uniquely specify a engine ID. In other
words, the value “0123456789” is equivalent to “0123456789” followed by 16
zeroes for a local engine ID.
◆
A local engine ID is automatically generated that is unique to the switch. This is
referred to as the default engine ID. If the local engine ID is deleted or changed,
all SNMP users will be cleared. You will need to reconfigure all existing users
(
).
Example
Console(config)#snmp-server engine-id local 1234567890
Console(config)#snmp-server engineID remote 9876543210 192.168.1.19
Console(config)#
Related Commands
)
snmp-server group
This command adds an SNMP group, mapping SNMP users to SNMP views. Use the
no
form to remove an SNMP group.
Syntax
snmp-server group
groupname
{
v1
|
v2c
|
v3
{
auth
|
noauth
|
priv
}}
[
read
readview
] [
write
writeview
] [
notify
notifyview
]
no snmp-server group
groupname
groupname
- Name of an SNMP group. A maximum of 22 groups can be
configured. (Range: 1-32 characters)
v1
|
v2c
|
v3
- Use SNMP version 1, 2c or 3.
Summary of Contents for AS5700-54X
Page 42: ...Contents 42...
Page 44: ...Figures 44...
Page 52: ...Tables 52...
Page 54: ...Section I Getting Started 54...
Page 80: ...Chapter 1 Initial Switch Configuration Setting the System Clock 80...
Page 210: ...Chapter 6 Remote Monitoring Commands 210...
Page 358: ...Chapter 9 Access Control Lists ACL Information 358...
Page 418: ...Chapter 12 Port Mirroring Commands RSPAN Mirroring Commands 418...
Page 436: ...Chapter 15 UniDirectional Link Detection Commands 436...
Page 442: ...Chapter 16 Address Table Commands 442...
Page 506: ...Chapter 18 VLAN Commands Configuring VXLAN Tunneling 506...
Page 526: ...Chapter 19 Class of Service Commands Priority Commands Layer 3 and 4 526...
Page 544: ...Chapter 20 Quality of Service Commands 544...
Page 652: ...Chapter 22 Multicast Filtering Commands MLD Proxy Routing 652...
Page 680: ...Chapter 23 LLDP Commands 680...
Page 722: ...Chapter 24 CFM Commands Delay Measure Operations 722...
Page 732: ...Chapter 25 Domain Name Service Commands 732...
Page 790: ...Chapter 27 IP Interface Commands ND Snooping 790...
Page 1072: ...Section III Appendices 1072...
Page 1102: ...List of CLI Commands 1102...
Page 1115: ......
Page 1116: ...AS5700 54X AS6700 32X E032016 ST R02 149100000198A...