HP 1606 Fabric OS MIB Reference v6.4.0 (53-1001768-01, June 2010) - Page 24

Object instances, Loading Brocade MIBs

Page 24 highlights

1 Loading Brocade MIBs 5. swFabricWatchTrap This trap is generated when any Fabric Watch threshold is reached. Desired severity level is introduced to filter swFabricWatchTrap based on severity level. 6. swTrackChangesTrap This trap is generated by a login or a logout. 7. swIPv6ChangeTrap This trap is generated when an IPv6 address status change event occurs. It is generated only when IPv6 stateless state to deprecation state and not for just address change notification. 8. swPmgrEventTrap This trap is generated when any partition manager change happens. 9. swFabricReconfigTrap The trap to be sent for tracking fabric reconfiguration. 10. swFabricSegmentTrap The trap to be sent for tracking segmentation. 11. swExtTrap The trap adds the SSN binding to the traps if it is enabled. The Brocade trap (SW-TRAP) can be configured to send traps using the snmpConfig command. SW traps are available upto FOS v6.3.0. In FOS v6.4.0 SW traps are not available due to the enhancement to the mibcapability command. For more information on this command, refer to the Table 5 or Fabric OS Command Reference. Object instances MIB objects are defined by the OID, which is the type of object, and by the instance number, which is an instance of that MIB object. A Fibre Channel port is a MIB object, and port 0 is an instance of that object. The following is an OID number and an instance number: 1.3.6.1.4.1.1588.2.1.1.1.6.2.1.11.5 where: 1.3.6.1.4.1.1588.2.1.1.1.6.2.1.11 is the OID (of swFCPortTxWords) and 5 is the instance ID for port 4. You must add 1 to the port number to get its instance number in SNMP because SNMP numbering starts at 1; switch port numbering starts at 0. Loading Brocade MIBs The Brocade MIB is a set of variables that are private extensions to the Internet standard MIB-II. The Brocade agents support many other Internet-standard MIBs. These standard MIBs are defined in RFC publications. To find specific MIB information, examine the Brocade proprietary MIB structure and the standard RFC MIBs supported by Brocade. 6 Fabric OS MIB Reference 53-1001768-01

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6
Fabric OS MIB Reference
53-1001768-01
Loading Brocade MIBs
1
5.
swFabricWatchTrap
This trap is generated when any Fabric Watch threshold is reached.
Desired severity level is introduced to filter swFabricWatchTrap based on severity level.
6.
swTrackChangesTrap
This trap is generated by a login or a logout.
7.
swIPv6ChangeTrap
This trap is generated when an IPv6 address status change event occurs. It is generated only
when IPv6 stateless state to deprecation state and not for just address change notification.
8.
swPmgrEventTrap
This trap is generated when any partition manager change happens.
9.
swFabricReconfigTrap
The trap to be sent for tracking fabric reconfiguration.
10. swFabricSegmentTrap
The trap to be sent for tracking segmentation.
11. swExtTrap
The trap adds the SSN binding to the traps if it is enabled.
The Brocade trap (SW-TRAP) can be configured to send traps using the
snmpConfig
command. SW
traps are available upto FOS v6.3.0. In FOS v6.4.0 SW traps are not available due to the
enhancement to the mibcapability command. For more information on this command, refer to the
Table 5
or
Fabric OS Command Reference
.
Object instances
MIB objects are defined by the OID, which is the type of object, and by the instance number, which
is an instance of that MIB object. A Fibre Channel port is a MIB object, and port 0 is an instance of
that object. The following is an OID number and an instance number:
1.3.6.1.4.1.1588.2.1.1.1.6.2.1.11.5
where:
1.3.6.1.4.1.1588.2.1.1.1.6.2.1.11
is the OID (of swFCPortTxWords) and
5
is the instance
ID for port 4.
You must add 1 to the port number to get its instance number in SNMP because SNMP numbering
starts at 1; switch port numbering starts at 0.
Loading Brocade MIBs
The Brocade MIB is a set of variables that are private extensions to the Internet standard MIB-II.
The Brocade agents support many other Internet-standard MIBs. These standard MIBs are defined
in RFC publications. To find specific MIB information, examine the Brocade proprietary MIB
structure and the standard RFC MIBs supported by Brocade.