Sponsored Content
Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications Infrastructure Monitoring Configuration of snmpv3 in AIX Post 302360744 by bakunin on Saturday 10th of October 2009 05:51:34 AM
Old 10-10-2009
SNMPv3 is provided in AIX only since v5.2 and is controlled by two configuration files: /etc/snmpdv3.conf for the agent and /etc/clsnmp.conf for the SNMP manager. You might want to read the article SNMP for network management at IBMs AIX documentation web site.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

AIX Hardware Configuration *I'm very new*

I'd like to start by saying how extremely new I am to any UNIX OS, although I've been dealing with Linux systems off and on for roughly a year now, and am trained primarily on Windows Servers. Our company has an old AIX system, running AIX version 4. The server we are using is more then 10... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: webers
6 Replies

2. AIX

AIX SAN configuration problems/oddity

Hi, I have a strange problem. we're trying to connect an IBM pseries, to a Brocade switch, for SAN acess, using a badged emulex card, (IBM FC6239) WE can configure the device to see the fabric. The only problem we have is that the Brocade sees the HBA as storage, and not as a HBA. We've zoned... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: praxis22
1 Replies

3. AIX

send mail configuration in AIX server

Hi All, How to configure sendmail service in AIX server ? Please tell me what all changes has to be made in sendmail.conf file. Please help in this issue to configure it. Thanks jack (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jack00423
1 Replies

4. AIX

AIX sendmail configuration

I want to configure sendmail on AIX 4 and 5 to send emails to a windows SMTP proxy server for distribution. Mail would be going from AIX to Windows but any return emails would be sent not AIX but to a default Windows return address. What variables in the AIX sendmail.cf file would need to be... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rahe
1 Replies

5. AIX

AIX /etc/host configuration

hi, i need to configurate a new ip range, for example 18.76.104.1 to 18.76.104.254. in the host file. i'd like to know if i have to do this manually or there is another way to do it automatically?? I'll Apreciate any help OS AIX 5.3 (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: fdeivis
1 Replies

6. AIX

DNS configuration on AIX 6.1

Hello All, I want to install ORACLE RAC on AIX 6.1. In the installation guide. the below two points were mentioned: Each node must have at least two network adapters or network interface cards (NICs): one for the public network interface, and one for the private network interface (the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: beayni33
2 Replies

7. AIX

SNMPv3 error - Help please!

Hello everyone: I'm still relatively new to AIX administration and learning every day. I need to configure SNMPv3 in several servers. I tried first on a "test environment" server, no firewalls, and I was successful. Then I moved on to the "production" servers, which are behind firewall and I... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: designbc
0 Replies

8. AIX

AIX CDE Locale Configuration

Dears I am looking for this binary to complete my X11 installation and I can not find it in the media , can any one help me where can I download it X11.loc.en_US.Dt.rte AIX CDE Locale Configuration - U.S. English (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: thecobra151
1 Replies

9. AIX

Privacy enable on SNMPv3 AIX)

I have SNMPv3 working on our server but when viewed from the security software, it shows no privacy enabled AIX 7.1, TL1, snmp.crypto 6.1.2.0 installed, ran snmpv3_ssw -e Unsure what I have configured wrong. What is needed to show Privacy in AIX. I looked at a config on a Solaris box... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: anrivera140
5 Replies
SNMP.CONF(5)							     Net-SNMP							      SNMP.CONF(5)

NAME
snmp_config - describes how to configure the Net-SNMP applications. DESCRIPTION
The Net-SNMP package uses various configuration files to configure its applications. This manual page merely describes the overall nature of them, so that the other manual pages don't have to. DIRECTORIES SEARCHED
First off, there are numerous places that configuration files can be found and read from. By default, the applications look for configura- tion files in the following 3 directories, in order: /usr/share/snmp, /usr/lib/snmp, and $HOME/.snmp. In each of these directories, it looks for files with the extension of both .conf and 6 default places a configuration file can exist for any given configuration file type. Additionally, the above default search path can be overridden by setting the environment variable SNMPCONFPATH to a colon-separated list of directories to search for. Finally, applications that store persistent data will also look in the /var/snmp directory for configuration files there. CONFIGURATION FILE TYPES
Each application may use multiple configuration files, which will configure various different aspects of the application. For instance, the SNMP agent (snmpd) knows how to understand configuration directives in both the snmpd.conf and the snmp.conf files. In fact, most applications understand how to read the contents of the snmp.conf files. Note, however, that configuration directives understood in one file may not be understood in another file. For further information, read the associated manual page with each configuration file type. Also, most of the applications support a -H switch on the command line that will list the configuration files it will look for and the directives in each one that it understands. The snmp.conf configuration file is intended to be a application suite wide configuration file that supports directives that are useful for controlling the fundamental nature of all of the SNMP applications, such as how they all manipulate and parse the textual SNMP MIB files. SWITCHING CONFIGURATION TYPES IN MID-FILE It's possible to switch in mid-file the configuration type that the parser is supposed to be reading. Since that sentence doesn't make much sense, lets give you an example: say that you wanted to turn on packet dumping output for the agent by default, but you didn't want to do that for the rest of the applications (ie, snmpget, snmpwalk, ...). Normally to enable packet dumping in the configuration file you'd need to put a line like: dumpPacket true into the snmp.conf file. But, this would turn it on for all of the applications. So, instead, you can put the same line in the snmpd.conf file so that it only applies to the snmpd daemon. However, you need to tell the parser to expect this line. You do this by putting a spe- cial type specification token inside a [] set. In other words, inside your snmpd.conf file you could put the above snmp.conf directive by adding a line like so: [snmp] dumpPacket true This tells the parser to parse the above line as if it were inside a snmp.conf file instead of an snmpd.conf file. If you want to parse a bunch of lines rather than just one then you can make the context switch apply to the remainder of the file or until the next context switch directive by putting the special token on a line by itself: # make this file handle snmp.conf tokens: [snmp] dumpPacket true logTimestamp true # return to our original snmpd.conf tokens: [snmpd] rocommunity mypublic COMMENTS
Any lines beginning with the character '#' in the configuration files are treated as a comment and are not parsed. API INTERFACE
Information about writing C code that makes use of this system in either the agent's MIB modules or in applications can be found in the read_config(3) manual page. SEE ALSO
read_config(3). 4th Berkeley Distribution 28 Aug 2001 SNMP.CONF(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:40 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy