HP StorageWorks SN6000C Cisco MDS 9000 Family MIB Quick Reference (OL-18087-01 - Page 3
SNMP Traps and Informs
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Send documentation comments to [email protected] Table 1 SNMP Operations Operation Description get-request Retrieves a value from a specific variable. get-next-request get-bulk2 Retrieves the value following the named variable. Often used to retrieve variables from within a table.1 Retrieves large blocks of data, such as multiple rows in a table, which would otherwise require the transmission of many small blocks of data. set-request Stores a value in a specific variable. response Replies to the above commands sent by an NMS and to the informs sent by an agent. trap inform2 Sends an unsolicited message by an SNMP agent to an SNMP manager indicating that some event has occurred. Sends an unsolicited message by an SNMP agent to an SNMP manager indicating that some event has occurred. Differs from a trap in that an acknowledgement is required from the manager. 1.With this operation, an SNMP manager does not need to know the exact variable name. A sequential search finds the next variable from within the MIB. 2.The get-bulk and inform commands are not a part of SNMPv1. SNMP has been updated twice since its inception. SNMPv1 is the initial version of the protocol. SNMPv2 added support for 64-bit counters, and SNMPv3 added robust security for access, authentication, and encryption of managed data. SNMP Traps and Informs You can configure the Cisco MDS 9000 Family switch to send notifications to SNMP managers when particular events occur. You can send these notifications as traps or inform requests. Traps are unreliable because the receiver does not send any acknowledgment when it receives a trap. The sender cannot determine if the trap was received. However, an SNMP manager that receives an inform request acknowledges the message with an SNMP response. If the sender never receives a response, the inform request can be sent again. Thus, informs are more likely to reach their intended destinations. Notifications may contain a list of MIB variables or varbinds that clarify the status being relayed by the notification. The list of varbinds associated with a notification is included in the notification definition in the MIB. In the case of standard MIBs, Cisco has enhanced some notifications with additional varbinds that further clarify the cause of the notification. See the "Extending the IF-MIB" section on page 55 for an example of this in the IF-MIB. Americas Headquarters: Cisco Systems, Inc., 170 West Tasman Drive, San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA © Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.