Dell Force10 S55T FTOS Command Line Reference Guide for the S55 System FTOS 8. - Page 982
snmp-server engineID
View all Dell Force10 S55T manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 982 highlights
www.dell.com | support.dell.com Usage Information Related Commands FTOS supports up to 16 SNMP trap receivers. If this command is not configured, no traps controlled by this command are sent. If you do not specify a notification-type and notification-option, all traps are enabled. snmp-server community Enable SNMP and set the community string. snmp-server engineID c e s Configure name for both the local and remote SNMP engines on the router. Syntax snmp-server engineID [local engineID] [remote ip-address udp-port port-number engineID] To return to the default, use the no snmp-server engineID [local engineID] [remote ip-address udp-port port-number engineID] command Parameters local engineID remote ip-address udp-port port-number engineID Enter the keyword local followed by the engine ID number that identifies the copy of the SNMP on the local device. Format (as specified in RFC 3411): 12 octets. • The first 4 octets are set to the private enterprise number. • The remaining 8 octets are the MAC address of the chassis. Enter the keyword remote followed by the IP address that identifies the copy of the SNMP on the remote device. Enter the keyword udp-port followed by the UDP (User Datagram Protocol) port number on the remote device. Range: 0 to 65535 Default: 162 Defaults As above Command Modes CONFIGURATION Command History Version 8.3.5.0 Introduced on S55 Version 7.6.1.0 Support added for S-Series Version 7.5.1.0 Support added for C-Series E-Series legacy command Usage Information Changing the value of the SNMP Engine ID has important side effects. A user's password (entered on the command line) is converted to an MD5 (Message Digest Algorithm) or SHA (Secure Hash Algorithm) security digest. This digest is based on both the password and the local Engine ID. The command line password is then destroyed, as required by RFC 2274. Because of this deletion, if the local value of the Engine ID changes, the security digests of SNMPv3 users will be invalid, and the users will have to be reconfigured. For the remote Engine ID, the host IP and UDP port are the indexes to the command that are matched to either overwrite or remove the configuration. 982 | SNMP and Syslog