| 1 | SNMP exercises, part I | 
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| 2 | ====================== | 
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| 3 |  | 
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| 4 | Note: many of the commands in this exercise do not have to be run as root, | 
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| 5 | but it is safe to run them all as root. So it's simpler if you start a | 
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| 6 | root shell and enter them all there. You can start a root shell like this: | 
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| 7 |  | 
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| 8 | $ sudo -s | 
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| 9 |  | 
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| 10 | or | 
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| 11 |  | 
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| 12 | $ sudo -s | 
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| 13 |  | 
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| 14 | 0. Installing client (manager) tools | 
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| 15 | ------------------------------------ | 
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| 16 |  | 
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| 17 | # apt-get install snmp | 
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| 18 | # apt-get install snmp-mibs-downloader | 
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| 19 |  | 
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| 20 | The second of the two commands downloads the standard IETF and IANA | 
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| 21 | SNMP MIBs which are not included by default. | 
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| 22 |  | 
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| 23 | Note: for this to work, you must enable the "multiverse" source in your | 
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| 24 | APT configuration, if you are using Ubuntu 12.04. This has already been | 
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| 25 | done for you here. | 
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| 26 |  | 
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| 27 |  | 
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| 28 | Now, edit the file /etc/snmp/snmp.conf | 
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| 29 |  | 
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| 30 | Change this line: | 
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| 31 |  | 
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| 32 | mibs : | 
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| 33 |  | 
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| 34 | ... so that it looks like: | 
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| 35 |  | 
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| 36 | # mibs : | 
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| 37 |  | 
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| 38 | (You are "commenting out" the empty mibs statement, which was telling the | 
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| 39 | snmp* tools *not* to automatically load the mibs in the | 
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| 40 | /usr/share/mibs/ directory) | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 |  | 
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| 43 | 1. Configure SNMP on Your Router | 
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| 44 | -------------------------------- | 
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| 45 |  | 
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| 46 | For this exercise you need to work in groups. Assign one person to type on | 
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| 47 | the keyboard. | 
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| 48 |  | 
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| 49 | If you are unsure of what group you are in refer to the Network Diagram on the | 
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| 50 | classroom wiki by going to <http://noc.ws.nsrc.org/> and clicking on the Network | 
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| 51 | Diagram link. | 
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| 52 |  | 
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| 53 | Now connect to your router: | 
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| 54 |  | 
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| 55 | $ ssh cisco@rtrN.ws.nsrc.org        (or "ssh cisco@10.10.N.254") | 
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| 56 |  | 
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| 57 | username: cisco | 
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| 58 | password: <CLASS PASSWORD> | 
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| 59 |  | 
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| 60 | rtrN> enable | 
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| 61 | Password: <CLASS PASSWORD> | 
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| 62 | rtrN# configure terminal                    (conf t) | 
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| 63 |  | 
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| 64 | Now we need to add an Access Control List rule for SNMP access, turn on SNMP, assign | 
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| 65 | a read-only SNMP community string and tell the router to maintain SNMP information | 
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| 66 | across reboots. To do this we do: | 
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| 67 |  | 
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| 68 | rtrN(config)# access-list 99 permit 10.10.0.0 0.0.255.255 | 
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| 69 | rtrN(config)# snmp-server community NetManage ro 99 | 
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| 70 | rtrN(config)# snmp-server ifindex persist | 
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| 71 |  | 
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| 72 | Now let's exit and save this new configuration to the routers permanent config. | 
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| 73 |  | 
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| 74 | rtrN(config)# exit | 
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| 75 | rtrN# write memory                                  (wr mem) | 
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| 76 | rtrN# exit                                          (until you return to your pc) | 
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| 77 |  | 
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| 78 | Now to see if your changes are working. | 
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| 79 |  | 
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| 80 |  | 
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| 81 | 2. Testing SNMP | 
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| 82 | --------------- | 
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| 83 |  | 
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| 84 | To check that your SNMP installation works, run the | 
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| 85 | snmpstatus command on each of the following devices | 
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| 86 |  | 
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| 87 | $ snmpstatus -c 'NetManage' -v2c <IP_ADDRESS> | 
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| 88 |  | 
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| 89 | Where <IP_ADDRESS> is each of the following: | 
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| 90 |  | 
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| 91 | * The NOC server:       10.10.0.250 | 
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| 92 | * Your group's router:  10.10.N.254 | 
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| 93 | * The backbone switch:  10.10.0.253 | 
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| 94 | * The access points:    10.10.0.251, 10.10.0.252 | 
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| 95 |  | 
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| 96 | What happens if you try using the wrong community string (i.e. change | 
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| 97 | 'NetManage' to something else?) | 
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| 98 |  | 
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| 99 |  | 
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| 100 | 3. SNMP Walk and OIDs | 
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| 101 | --------------------- | 
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| 102 |  | 
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| 103 | Now, you are going to use the 'snmpwalk' command, part of the | 
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| 104 | SNMP toolkit, to list the tables associated with the OIDs listed | 
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| 105 | below, on each piece of equipment you tried above: | 
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| 106 |  | 
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| 107 | .1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.2 | 
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| 108 | .1.3.6.1.2.1.31.1.1.1.18 | 
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| 109 | .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.13.1 | 
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| 110 | .1.3.6.1.2.1.25.2.3.1 | 
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| 111 | .1.3.6.1.2.1.25.4.2.1 | 
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| 112 |  | 
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| 113 | You will try this with two forms of the 'snmpwalk' command: | 
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| 114 |  | 
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| 115 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c <IP_ADDRESS> <OID> | 
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| 116 |  | 
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| 117 | and | 
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| 118 |  | 
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| 119 | $ snmpwalk -On -c 'NetManage' -v2c <IP_ADDRESS> <OID> | 
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| 120 |  | 
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| 121 | ... where OID is one of the OIDs listed above: .1.3.6... | 
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| 122 |  | 
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| 123 | ...where IP_ADDRESS can be your group's router... | 
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| 124 |  | 
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| 125 | Note: the "-On" option turns on numerical output, i.e.: no translation | 
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| 126 | of the OID <-> MIB object takes place. | 
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| 127 |  | 
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| 128 | For these OIDs: | 
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| 129 |  | 
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| 130 | a) Do all the devices answer ? | 
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| 131 | b) Do you notice anything important about the OID on the output ? | 
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| 132 |  | 
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| 133 | 4. Configuration of snmpd on your PC | 
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| 134 | ------------------------------------- | 
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| 135 |  | 
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| 136 | For this exercise your group needs to verify that the snmpd service is running and | 
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| 137 | responding to queries for all machines in your group. First enable snmpd on your machine, | 
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| 138 | then test if your machine is responding, then check each machine of your other group | 
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| 139 | members. | 
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| 140 |  | 
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| 141 | * Install the SNMP agent (daemon) | 
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| 142 |  | 
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| 143 | # apt-get install snmpd | 
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| 144 |  | 
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| 145 | * Configuration. | 
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| 146 |  | 
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| 147 | We will make a backup of the distributed config, and then we will | 
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| 148 | create our own: | 
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| 149 |  | 
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| 150 | # cd /etc/snmp | 
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| 151 | # mv snmpd.conf snmpd.conf.dist | 
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| 152 | # editor snmpd.conf | 
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| 153 |  | 
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| 154 | Then, copy/paste the following (do not include the `-- cut here --` lines) | 
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| 155 |  | 
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| 156 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
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| 157 | -- cut here ------------------------- | 
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| 158 | #  Listen for connections on all interfaces (both IPv4 *and* IPv6) | 
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| 159 | agentAddress udp:161,udp6:[::1]:161 | 
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| 160 |  | 
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| 161 | # Configure Read-Only community and restrict who can connect | 
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| 162 | rocommunity NetManage  10.10.0.0/16 | 
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| 163 | rocommunity NetManage  127.0.0.1 | 
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| 164 |  | 
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| 165 | # Information about this host | 
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| 166 | sysLocation    NSRC Network Management Workshop | 
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| 167 | sysContact     sysadm@pcX.ws.nsrc.org | 
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| 168 |  | 
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| 169 | # Which OSI layers are active in this host | 
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| 170 | # (Application + End-to-End layers) | 
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| 171 | sysServices    72 | 
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| 172 |  | 
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| 173 | # Include proprietary dskTable MIB (in addition to hrStorageTable) | 
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| 174 | includeAllDisks  10% | 
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| 175 | -- cut here ------------------------- | 
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| 176 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
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| 177 |  | 
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| 178 | Now save and exit from the editor. | 
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| 179 |  | 
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| 180 | * Restart snmpd | 
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| 181 |  | 
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| 182 | # service snmpd restart | 
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| 183 |  | 
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| 184 | 5. Check that snmpd is working: | 
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| 185 | ------------------------------- | 
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| 186 |  | 
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| 187 | $ snmpstatus -c 'NetManage' -v2c localhost | 
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| 188 |  | 
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| 189 | What do you observe ? | 
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| 190 |  | 
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| 191 | 6. Test your neighbors | 
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| 192 | ---------------------- | 
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| 193 |  | 
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| 194 | Check now that you can run snmpstatus against your other group members servers: | 
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| 195 |  | 
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| 196 | $ snmpstatus -c 'NetManage' -v2c pcN.ws.nsrc.org | 
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| 197 |  | 
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| 198 | For instance, in group 5, you should verify against: | 
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| 199 |  | 
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| 200 | * pc17.ws.nsrc.org | 
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| 201 | * pc18.ws.nsrc.org | 
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| 202 | * pc19.ws.nsrc.org | 
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| 203 | * pc20.ws.nsrc.org | 
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| 204 |  | 
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| 205 |  | 
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| 206 | 7. Adding MIBs | 
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| 207 | -------------- | 
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| 208 |  | 
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| 209 | Remember when you ran: | 
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| 210 |  | 
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| 211 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c 10.10.X.254  .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.13.1 | 
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| 212 |  | 
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| 213 | If you noticed, the SNMP client (snmpwalk) couldn't interpret | 
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| 214 | all the OIDs coming back from the Agent: | 
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| 215 |  | 
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| 216 | SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.9.9.13.1.3.1.2.1 = STRING: "chassis" | 
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| 217 | SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.9.9.13.1.3.1.6.1 = INTEGER: 1 | 
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| 218 |  | 
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| 219 | What is '9.9.13.1.3.1' ? | 
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| 220 |  | 
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| 221 | To be able to interpret this information, we need to download extra MIBs: | 
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| 222 |  | 
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| 223 | We will use the following MIBs (Don't download them yet!): | 
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| 224 |  | 
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| 225 | > CISCO MIBS: | 
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| 226 | > | 
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| 227 | >     ftp://ftp.cisco.com/pub/mibs/v2/CISCO-SMI.my | 
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| 228 | >     ftp://ftp.cisco.com/pub/mibs/v2/CISCO-ENVMON-MIB.my | 
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| 229 |  | 
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| 230 | To make it easier, we have a local mirror on <http://noc.ws.nsrc.org/mibs/>. | 
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| 231 | Download them now as follows: | 
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| 232 |  | 
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| 233 | # apt-get install wget | 
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| 234 | # cd /usr/share/mibs | 
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| 235 | # mkdir cisco | 
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| 236 | # cd cisco | 
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| 237 |  | 
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| 238 | # wget http://noc.ws.nsrc.org/mibs/CISCO-ENVMON-MIB.my | 
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| 239 | # wget http://noc.ws.nsrc.org/mibs/CISCO-SMI.my | 
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| 240 |  | 
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| 241 | Now we need to tell the snmp tools that we have the cisco MIBS it | 
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| 242 | should load. So edit the file /etc/snmp/snmp.conf, and add the | 
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| 243 | following two lines: | 
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| 244 |  | 
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| 245 | mibdirs +/usr/share/mibs/cisco | 
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| 246 | mibs +CISCO-ENVMON-MIB:CISCO-SMI | 
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| 247 |  | 
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| 248 | Save the file, quit. | 
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| 249 |  | 
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| 250 | Now, try again: | 
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| 251 |  | 
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| 252 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c 10.10.X.254  .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.13.1 | 
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| 253 |  | 
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| 254 | What do you notice ? | 
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| 255 |  | 
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| 256 |  | 
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| 257 | 8. SNMPwalk - the rest of MIB-II | 
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| 258 | -------------------------------- | 
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| 259 |  | 
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| 260 | Try and run snmpwalk on any hosts (routers, switches, machines) you | 
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| 261 | have not tried yet, in the 10.10.0.X network | 
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| 262 |  | 
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| 263 | Note the kind of information you can obtain. | 
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| 264 |  | 
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| 265 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c 10.10.0.X ifDescr | 
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| 266 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c 10.10.0.X ifAlias | 
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| 267 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c 10.10.0.X ifTable | less | 
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| 268 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c 10.10.0.X ifXTable | less | 
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| 269 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c 10.10.0.X ifOperStatus | 
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| 270 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c 10.10.0.X ifAdminStatus | 
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| 271 | $ snmpwalk -c 'NetManage' -v2c 10.10.0.X if | 
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| 272 |  | 
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| 273 | (Remember that with 'less' you press space for next page, 'b' to go | 
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| 274 | back to previous page, and 'q' to quit) | 
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| 275 |  | 
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| 276 | Can you see what's different between `ifTable` and `ifXTable`? | 
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| 277 |  | 
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| 278 | What do you think might be the difference between `ifOperStatus` and | 
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| 279 | `ifAdminStatus`? Can you imagine a scenario where this could be useful ? | 
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| 280 |  | 
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| 281 |  | 
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| 282 | 9. More MIB-OID fun | 
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| 283 | -------------------- | 
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| 284 |  | 
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| 285 | * Use SNMP to examine: | 
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| 286 |  | 
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| 287 | a) the running processes on your neighbor's server (hrSWRun) | 
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| 288 | b) the amount of free diskspace on your neighbor's server (hrStorage) | 
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| 289 | c) the interfaces on your neighbor's server (ifIndex, ifDescr) | 
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| 290 |  | 
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| 291 | Can you use short names to walk these OID tables ? | 
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| 292 |  | 
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| 293 | * Experiment with the "snmptranslate" command, example: | 
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| 294 |  | 
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| 295 | $ snmptranslate .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.13.1 | 
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| 296 |  | 
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| 297 | * Try with various OIDs | 
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