Hello Team Support,
I'm writing to you about a issue with SNMPTRAP, we have a Datadomain DD2500 and we want to monitor disk space and replication.
When I use this command for cheking the SNMP, I received this error :
Command : snmptrap -v 2c -c publicrsm host DATA-DOMAIN-MIB::ddboost 192.168.X.X
Error : No log handling enabled - turning on stderr logging
Thanks in advance for you help
Best regards
SNMPTRAP DATADOMAIN
-
SteveBeauchemin
- Posts: 524
- Joined: Mon Oct 14, 2013 7:19 pm
Re: SNMPTRAP DATADOMAIN
SNMP and SNMPTrap are 2 different things.
To use snmptrap, the remote host is setup to send data to a snmp trap listener somewhere. When the remote host detects something wrong, it calls for help.
To use snmp, from a central host you reach out to a remote host and ask it how it is doing.
Those are 2 different protocols, using 2 different ports to communicate. Look in /etc/services to find them and see.
If you want to reach out to your DataDomain device and see what it will tell you, try this syntax:
for numeric output only:
for full text output:
I like to test first using the uptime oid just to prove I can get data - Up Time = .1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0
Once I see data, then I try for the specific information I want.
Also, you may want to redirect the data to a file so you can scan through and find the specific information that interests you.
Example of up time redirected to a file:
I once monitored datadomain, but only for a space issue. The Admin that supported the device sent to the nagios syslog, from there I used a log scrape to get what I needed. Very long time ago and I do not recall much about it.
Steve B
To use snmptrap, the remote host is setup to send data to a snmp trap listener somewhere. When the remote host detects something wrong, it calls for help.
To use snmp, from a central host you reach out to a remote host and ask it how it is doing.
Those are 2 different protocols, using 2 different ports to communicate. Look in /etc/services to find them and see.
If you want to reach out to your DataDomain device and see what it will tell you, try this syntax:
for numeric output only:
Code: Select all
snmpwalk -t 3 -v 2c -Cc -On -c publicrsm 192.168.X.X DATA-DOMAIN-MIB::ddboostCode: Select all
snmpwalk -t 3 -v 2c -Cc -m ALL -c publicrsm 192.168.X.X DATA-DOMAIN-MIB::ddboostOnce I see data, then I try for the specific information I want.
Also, you may want to redirect the data to a file so you can scan through and find the specific information that interests you.
Example of up time redirected to a file:
Code: Select all
snmpwalk -t 3 -v 2c -Cc -m ALL -c publicrsm 192.168.X.X .1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0 > /tmp/snmpwalk-192.168.X.X-full.txtSteve B
XI 5.7.3 / Core 4.4.6 / NagVis 1.9.8 / LiveStatus 1.5.0p11 / RRDCached 1.7.0 / Redis 3.2.8 /
SNMPTT / Gearman 0.33-7 / Mod_Gearman 3.0.7 / NLS 2.0.8 / NNA 2.3.1 /
NSClient 0.5.0 / NRPE Solaris 3.2.1 Linux 3.2.1 HPUX 3.2.1
SNMPTT / Gearman 0.33-7 / Mod_Gearman 3.0.7 / NLS 2.0.8 / NNA 2.3.1 /
NSClient 0.5.0 / NRPE Solaris 3.2.1 Linux 3.2.1 HPUX 3.2.1
-
dwhitfield
- Former Nagios Staff
- Posts: 4583
- Joined: Wed Sep 21, 2016 10:29 am
- Location: NoLo, Minneapolis, MN
- Contact:
Re: SNMPTRAP DATADOMAIN
@Said was @SteveBeauchemin information enough for you?
If it was not, please post the output of all of the commands Steve gave you. Also cat /etc/services could be useful. Please wrap the output in a code block. Thanks!
If it was not, please post the output of all of the commands Steve gave you. Also cat /etc/services could be useful. Please wrap the output in a code block. Thanks!