HP StorageWorks 1606 Brocade Fabric OS Administrator's Guide v6.3.0 (53-100133 - Page 156

SNMP and Virtual Fabrics, The security level, Filtering ports, Switch and Chassis context enforcement

Page 156 highlights

6 Simple Network Management Protocol SNMP and Virtual Fabrics When an SNMPv3 request arrives with a particular username, it executes in the home Virtual Fabric. From the SNMP manager all SNMPv3 requests must have a home Virtual Fabric that is specified in the contextName field. Whenever the home Virtual Fabric is specified, it will be converted to the corresponding switch ID and the home Virtual Fabric will be set. If the user does not have permission for the specified home Virtual Fabric, this request fails with an error code of noAccess. For an SNMPv3 user to have a home Virtual Fabric, a list of allowed Virtual Fabrics, an RBAC role, and the name of the SNMPv3 user should match that of the Fabric OS user in the local switch database. SNMPv3 users whose names do not match with any of the existing Fabric OS local users have a default RBAC role of admin with the SNMPv3 user access control of read/write. Their SNMPv3 user logs in with an access control of read-only. Both user types will have the default switch as their home Virtual Fabrics. The contextName field should have the format "VF:xxx" where xxx is the actual VF_ID, for example "VF:1". If the contextName field is empty, then the home Virtual Fabric of the local Fabric OS user with the same name is used. As Virtual Fabrics and Admin Domains are mutually exclusive, this field is considered as Virtual Fabrics context whenever Virtual Fabrics is enabled. You cannot specify chassis context in the contextName field. The following example shows how the VF:xx field is used in the snmpwalk command. The snmpwalk command is executed on the host and it walks the entire MIB tree specified (.1). #snmpwalk -u admin -v 3 -n VF:4 192.168.176.181 .1 Filtering ports Each port can belong to only one Virtual Fabric at any time. An SNMP request coming to one Virtual Fabric can only view the port information of the ports belonging to that Virtual Fabric. All port attributes are filtered to allow SNMP to obtain the port information only from within the current Virtual Fabrics context. Switch and Chassis context enforcement All attributes are classified into one of two categories: • Chassis-level attributes • Switch-level attributes Attributes that are specific to each logical switch belong to the switch category. These attributes are available in the Virtual Fabrics context and not available in the Chassis context. Attributes that are common across the logical switches belong to the chassis level. These attributes are accessible to users having the chassis-role permission. When a chassis table is queried the context is set to chassis context, if the user has the chassis-role permission. The context is switched back to the original context after the operation is performed. The security level Use the snmpConfig --set seclevel command to set the security level. For more information about using the Brocade SNMP agent, see the Fabric OS MIB Reference. 114 Fabric OS Administrator's Guide 53-1001336-01

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114
Fabric OS Administrator’s Guide
53-1001336-01
Simple Network Management Protocol
6
SNMP and Virtual Fabrics
When an SNMPv3 request arrives with a particular username, it executes in the home Virtual
Fabric. From the SNMP manager all SNMPv3 requests must have a home Virtual Fabric that is
specified in the
contextName
field. Whenever the home Virtual Fabric is specified, it will be
converted to the corresponding switch ID and the home Virtual Fabric will be set. If the user does
not have permission for the specified home Virtual Fabric, this request fails with an error code of
noAccess
.
For an SNMPv3 user to have a home Virtual Fabric, a list of allowed Virtual Fabrics, an RBAC role,
and the name of the SNMPv3 user should match that of the Fabric OS user in the local switch
database. SNMPv3 users whose names do not match with any of the existing Fabric OS local users
have a default RBAC role of admin with the SNMPv3 user access control of read/write. Their
SNMPv3 user logs in with an access control of read-only. Both user types will have the default
switch as their home Virtual Fabrics.
The
contextName
field should have the format “VF:xxx” where xxx is the actual VF_ID, for example
“VF:1”. If the
contextName
field is empty, then the home Virtual Fabric of the local Fabric OS user
with the same name is used. As Virtual Fabrics and Admin Domains are mutually exclusive, this
field is considered as Virtual Fabrics context whenever Virtual Fabrics is enabled. You cannot
specify chassis context in the
contextName
field.
The following example shows how the VF:xx field is used in the
snmpwalk
command. The
snmpwalk
command is executed on the host and it walks the entire MIB tree specified (.1).
#snmpwalk -u admin -v 3 -n VF:4 192.168.176.181 .1
Filtering ports
Each port can belong to only one Virtual Fabric at any time. An SNMP request coming to one Virtual
Fabric can only view the port information of the ports belonging to that Virtual Fabric. All port
attributes are filtered to allow SNMP to obtain the port information only from within the current
Virtual Fabrics context.
Switch and Chassis context enforcement
All attributes are classified into one of two categories:
Chassis-level attributes
Switch-level attributes
Attributes that are specific to each logical switch belong to the switch category. These attributes
are available in the Virtual Fabrics context and not available in the Chassis context.
Attributes that are common across the logical switches belong to the chassis level. These
attributes are accessible to users having the chassis-role permission. When a chassis table is
queried the context is set to chassis context, if the user has the chassis-role permission. The
context is switched back to the original context after the operation is performed.
The security level
Use the
snmpConfig
--
set seclevel
command to set the security level. For more information about
using the Brocade SNMP agent, see the
Fabric OS MIB Reference
.