
SNMP Commands
24-8
24
conjunction with the corresponding entries in the Notify View assigned by the
snmp-server group
command (page 24-11).
Example
Related Commands
snmp-server host (24-5)
snmp-server engine-id
This command configures an identification string for the SNMPv3 engine. Use the
no
form to restore the default.
Syntax
snmp-server engine-id
{
local
|
remote
{
ip-address
}}
engineid-string
no snmp-server engine-id
{
local
|
remote
{
ip-address
}}
•
local
- Specifies the SNMP engine on this switch.
•
remote
- Specifies an SNMP engine on a remote device.
•
ip-address
- The Internet address of the remote device.
•
engineid-string
- String identifying the engine ID.
(Range: 9-64 hexadecimal characters)
Default Setting
A unique engine ID is automatically generated by the switch based on its MAC
address.
Command Mode
Global Configuration
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
snmp-server host
on page 24-5.) The remote engine ID is used to compute
the security digest for authenticating and encrypting packets sent to 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.
• If an odd number of characters are specified, a trailing zero is added to the
value to fill in the missing octet. For example, the value “123456789” is
equivalent to “1234567890”.
Console(config)#snmp-server enable traps link-up-down
Console(config)#
Summary of Contents for ES4626F
Page 2: ......
Page 4: ...ES4626F ES4650F F1 1 0 2 E062009 R01 ST 149100000013A...
Page 6: ...ii...
Page 34: ...Getting Started...
Page 44: ...Introduction 1 10 1...
Page 62: ...Initial Configuration 2 18 2...
Page 64: ...Switch Management...
Page 76: ...Configuring the Switch 3 12 3...
Page 118: ...Basic Management Tasks 4 42 4...
Page 164: ...User Authentication 6 28 6...
Page 176: ...Access Control Lists 7 12 7...
Page 284: ...Quality of Service 14 8 14...
Page 294: ...Multicast Filtering 15 10 15...
Page 300: ...Domain Name Service 16 6 16...
Page 310: ...Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol 17 10 17...
Page 320: ...Configuring Router Redundancy 18 10 18...
Page 344: ...IP Routing 19 24 19...
Page 356: ...Unicast Routing 20 12 20 Web Click Routing Protocol RIP Statistics Figure 20 5 RIP Statistics...
Page 386: ...Unicast Routing 20 42 20...
Page 388: ...Command Line Interface...
Page 400: ...Overview of the Command Line Interface 21 12 21...
Page 466: ...SNMP Commands 24 16 24...
Page 520: ...Access Control List Commands 26 18 26...
Page 546: ...Rate Limit Commands 30 2 30...
Page 612: ...VLAN Commands 34 24 34...
Page 626: ...Class of Service Commands 35 14 35...
Page 670: ...DHCP Commands 39 16 39...
Page 716: ...IP Interface Commands 41 36 41...
Page 768: ...IP Routing Commands 42 52 42...
Page 770: ...Appendices...
Page 791: ......
Page 792: ...ES4626F ES4650F E062009 R01 ST 149100000013A...