| ############################################################################### |
| # |
| # EXAMPLE.conf: |
| # An example configuration file for configuring the ucd-snmp snmpd agent. |
| # |
| ############################################################################### |
| # |
| # This file is intended to only be an example. If, however, you want |
| # to use it, it should be placed in /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf. |
| # When the snmpd agent starts up, this is where it will look for it. |
| # |
| # You might be interested in generating your own snmpd.conf file using |
| # the "snmpconf" program (perl script) instead. It's a nice menu |
| # based interface to writing well commented configuration files. Try it! |
| # |
| # Note: This file is automatically generated from EXAMPLE.conf.def. |
| # Do NOT read the EXAMPLE.conf.def file! Instead, after you have run |
| # configure & make, and then make sure you read the EXAMPLE.conf file |
| # instead, as it will tailor itself to your configuration. |
| |
| # All lines beginning with a '#' are comments and are intended for you |
| # to read. All other lines are configuration commands for the agent. |
| |
| # |
| # PLEASE: read the snmpd.conf(5) manual page as well! |
| # |
| |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # Access Control |
| ############################################################################### |
| |
| # YOU SHOULD CHANGE THE "COMMUNITY" TOKEN BELOW TO A NEW KEYWORD ONLY |
| # KNOWN AT YOUR SITE. YOU *MUST* CHANGE THE NETWORK TOKEN BELOW TO |
| # SOMETHING REFLECTING YOUR LOCAL NETWORK ADDRESS SPACE. |
| |
| # By far, the most common question I get about the agent is "why won't |
| # it work?", when really it should be "how do I configure the agent to |
| # allow me to access it?" |
| # |
| # By default, the agent responds to the "public" community for read |
| # only access, if run out of the box without any configuration file in |
| # place. The following examples show you other ways of configuring |
| # the agent so that you can change the community names, and give |
| # yourself write access as well. |
| # |
| # The following lines change the access permissions of the agent so |
| # that the COMMUNITY string provides read-only access to your entire |
| # NETWORK (EG: 10.10.10.0/24), and read/write access to only the |
| # localhost (127.0.0.1, not its real ipaddress). |
| # |
| # For more information, read the FAQ as well as the snmpd.conf(5) |
| # manual page. |
| |
| #### |
| # First, map the community name (COMMUNITY) into a security name |
| # (local and mynetwork, depending on where the request is coming |
| # from): |
| |
| # sec.name source community |
| com2sec paranoid default public |
| #com2sec readonly default public |
| #com2sec readwrite default private |
| |
| #### |
| # Second, map the security names into group names: |
| |
| # sec.model sec.name |
| group MyROSystem v1 paranoid |
| group MyROSystem v2c paranoid |
| group MyROSystem usm paranoid |
| group MyROGroup v1 readonly |
| group MyROGroup v2c readonly |
| group MyROGroup usm readonly |
| group MyRWGroup v1 readwrite |
| group MyRWGroup v2c readwrite |
| group MyRWGroup usm readwrite |
| |
| #### |
| # Third, create a view for us to let the groups have rights to: |
| |
| # incl/excl subtree mask |
| view all included .1 80 |
| view system included .iso.org.dod.internet.mgmt.mib-2.system |
| |
| #### |
| # Finally, grant the 2 groups access to the 1 view with different |
| # write permissions: |
| |
| # context sec.model sec.level match read write notif |
| access MyROSystem "" any noauth exact system none none |
| access MyROGroup "" any noauth exact all none none |
| access MyRWGroup "" any noauth exact all all none |
| |
| # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # System contact information |
| # |
| |
| # It is also possible to set the sysContact and sysLocation system |
| # variables through the snmpd.conf file. **PLEASE NOTE** that setting |
| # the value of these objects here makes these objects READ-ONLY |
| # (regardless of any access control settings). Any attempt to set the |
| # value of an object whose value is given here will fail with an error |
| # status of notWritable. |
| |
| syslocation Unknown (configure /etc/snmp/snmpd.local.conf) |
| syscontact Root <root@localhost> (configure /etc/snmp/snmpd.local.conf) |
| |
| # Example output of snmpwalk: |
| # % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost system |
| # system.sysDescr.0 = "SunOS name sun4c" |
| # system.sysObjectID.0 = OID: enterprises.ucdavis.ucdSnmpAgent.sunos4 |
| # system.sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (595637548) 68 days, 22:32:55 |
| # system.sysContact.0 = "Me <me@somewhere.org>" |
| # system.sysName.0 = "name" |
| # system.sysLocation.0 = "Right here, right now." |
| # system.sysServices.0 = 72 |
| |
| |
| # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # Process checks. |
| # |
| # The following are examples of how to use the agent to check for |
| # processes running on the host. The syntax looks something like: |
| # |
| # proc NAME [MAX=0] [MIN=0] |
| # |
| # NAME: the name of the process to check for. It must match |
| # exactly (ie, http will not find httpd processes). |
| # MAX: the maximum number allowed to be running. Defaults to 0. |
| # MIN: the minimum number to be running. Defaults to 0. |
| |
| # |
| # Examples: |
| # |
| |
| # Make sure mountd is running |
| #proc mountd |
| |
| # Make sure there are no more than 4 ntalkds running, but 0 is ok too. |
| #proc ntalkd 4 |
| |
| # Make sure at least one sendmail, but less than or equal to 10 are running. |
| #proc sendmail 10 1 |
| |
| # A snmpwalk of the prTable would look something like this: |
| # |
| # % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.2 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prIndex.1 = 1 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prIndex.2 = 2 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prIndex.3 = 3 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prNames.1 = "mountd" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prNames.2 = "ntalkd" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prNames.3 = "sendmail" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMin.1 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMin.2 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMin.3 = 1 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMax.1 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMax.2 = 4 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMax.3 = 10 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prCount.1 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prCount.2 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prCount.3 = 1 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrorFlag.1 = 1 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrorFlag.2 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrorFlag.3 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrMessage.1 = "No mountd process running." |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrMessage.2 = "" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrMessage.3 = "" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrFix.1 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrFix.2 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrFix.3 = 0 |
| # |
| # Note that the errorFlag for mountd is set to 1 because one is not |
| # running (in this case an rpc.mountd is, but thats not good enough), |
| # and the ErrMessage tells you what's wrong. The configuration |
| # imposed in the snmpd.conf file is also shown. |
| # |
| # Special Case: When the min and max numbers are both 0, it assumes |
| # you want a max of infinity and a min of 1. |
| # |
| |
| |
| # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # Executables/scripts |
| # |
| |
| # |
| # You can also have programs run by the agent that return a single |
| # line of output and an exit code. Here are two examples. |
| # |
| # exec NAME PROGRAM [ARGS ...] |
| # |
| # NAME: A generic name. |
| # PROGRAM: The program to run. Include the path! |
| # ARGS: optional arguments to be passed to the program |
| |
| # a simple hello world |
| #exec echotest /bin/echo hello world |
| |
| # Run a shell script containing: |
| # |
| # #!/bin/sh |
| # echo hello world |
| # echo hi there |
| # exit 35 |
| # |
| # Note: this has been specifically commented out to prevent |
| # accidental security holes due to someone else on your system writing |
| # a /tmp/shtest before you do. Uncomment to use it. |
| # |
| #exec shelltest /bin/sh /tmp/shtest |
| |
| # Then, |
| # % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.8 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extIndex.1 = 1 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extIndex.2 = 2 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extNames.1 = "echotest" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extNames.2 = "shelltest" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extCommand.1 = "/bin/echo hello world" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extCommand.2 = "/bin/sh /tmp/shtest" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extResult.1 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extResult.2 = 35 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extOutput.1 = "hello world." |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extOutput.2 = "hello world." |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extErrFix.1 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extErrFix.2 = 0 |
| |
| # Note that the second line of the /tmp/shtest shell script is cut |
| # off. Also note that the exit status of 35 was returned. |
| |
| # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # disk checks |
| # |
| |
| # The agent can check the amount of available disk space, and make |
| # sure it is above a set limit. |
| |
| # disk PATH [MIN=DEFDISKMINIMUMSPACE] |
| # |
| # PATH: mount path to the disk in question. |
| # MIN: Disks with space below this value will have the Mib's errorFlag set. |
| # Default value = DEFDISKMINIMUMSPACE. |
| |
| # Check the / partition and make sure it contains at least 10 megs. |
| |
| #disk / 10000 |
| |
| # % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskIndex.1 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskPath.1 = "/" Hex: 2F |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskDevice.1 = "/dev/dsk/c201d6s0" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskMinimum.1 = 10000 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskTotal.1 = 837130 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskAvail.1 = 316325 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskUsed.1 = 437092 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskPercent.1 = 58 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskErrorFlag.1 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskErrorMsg.1 = "" |
| |
| # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # load average checks |
| # |
| |
| # load [1MAX=DEFMAXLOADAVE] [5MAX=DEFMAXLOADAVE] [15MAX=DEFMAXLOADAVE] |
| # |
| # 1MAX: If the 1 minute load average is above this limit at query |
| # time, the errorFlag will be set. |
| # 5MAX: Similar, but for 5 min average. |
| # 15MAX: Similar, but for 15 min average. |
| |
| # Check for loads: |
| #load 12 14 14 |
| |
| # % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.10 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveIndex.1 = 1 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveIndex.2 = 2 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveIndex.3 = 3 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveNames.1 = "Load-1" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveNames.2 = "Load-5" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveNames.3 = "Load-15" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveLoad.1 = "0.49" Hex: 30 2E 34 39 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveLoad.2 = "0.31" Hex: 30 2E 33 31 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveLoad.3 = "0.26" Hex: 30 2E 32 36 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveConfig.1 = "12.00" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveConfig.2 = "14.00" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveConfig.3 = "14.00" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrorFlag.1 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrorFlag.2 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrorFlag.3 = 0 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrMessage.1 = "" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrMessage.2 = "" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrMessage.3 = "" |
| |
| # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # Extensible sections. |
| # |
| |
| # This alleviates the multiple line output problem found in the |
| # previous executable mib by placing each mib in its own mib table: |
| |
| # Run a shell script containing: |
| # |
| # #!/bin/sh |
| # echo hello world |
| # echo hi there |
| # exit 35 |
| # |
| # Note: this has been specifically commented out to prevent |
| # accidental security holes due to someone else on your system writing |
| # a /tmp/shtest before you do. Uncomment to use it. |
| # |
| # exec .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.50 shelltest /bin/sh /tmp/shtest |
| |
| # % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.50 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.50.1.1 = 1 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.50.2.1 = "shelltest" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.50.3.1 = "/bin/sh /tmp/shtest" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.50.100.1 = 35 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.50.101.1 = "hello world." |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.50.101.2 = "hi there." |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.50.102.1 = 0 |
| |
| # Now the Output has grown to two lines, and we can see the 'hi |
| # there.' output as the second line from our shell script. |
| # |
| # Note that you must alter the mib.txt file to be correct if you want |
| # the .50.* outputs above to change to reasonable text descriptions. |
| |
| # Other ideas: |
| # |
| # exec .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.51 ps /bin/ps |
| # exec .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.52 top /usr/local/bin/top |
| # exec .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.53 mailq /usr/bin/mailq |
| |
| # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # Pass through control. |
| # |
| |
| # Usage: |
| # pass MIBOID EXEC-COMMAND |
| # |
| # This will pass total control of the mib underneath the MIBOID |
| # portion of the mib to the EXEC-COMMAND. |
| # |
| # Note: You'll have to change the path of the passtest script to your |
| # source directory or install it in the given location. |
| # |
| # Example: (see the script for details) |
| # (commented out here since it requires that you place the |
| # script in the right location. (its not installed by default)) |
| |
| # pass .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.255 /bin/sh /usr/local/passtest |
| |
| # % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.255 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.255.1 = "life the universe and everything" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.255.2.1 = 42 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.255.2.2 = OID: 42.42.42 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.255.3 = Timeticks: (363136200) 42 days, 0:42:42 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.255.4 = IpAddress: 127.0.0.1 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.255.5 = 42 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.255.6 = Gauge: 42 |
| # |
| # % snmpget -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.255.5 |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.255.5 = 42 |
| # |
| # % snmpset -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.255.1 s "New string" |
| # enterprises.ucdavis.255.1 = "New string" |
| # |
| |
| # For specific usage information, see the man/snmpd.conf.5 manual page |
| # as well as the local/passtest script used in the above example. |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # Subagent control |
| # |
| |
| # The agent can support subagents using a number of extension mechanisms. |
| # From the 4.2.1 release, AgentX support is being compiled in by default. |
| # However, this is still experimental code, so should not be used on |
| # critical production systems. |
| # Please see the file README.agentx for more details. |
| # |
| # If having read, marked, learnt and inwardly digested this information, |
| # you decide that you do wish to make use of this mechanism, simply |
| # uncomment the following directive. |
| # |
| # master agentx |
| # |
| # I repeat - this is *NOT* regarded as suitable for front-line production |
| # systems, though it is probably stable enough for day-to-day use. |
| # Probably. |
| # |
| # No refunds will be given. |
| |
| ############################################################################### |
| # Further Information |
| # |
| # See the snmpd.conf manual page, and the output of "snmpd -H". |
| # MUCH more can be done with the snmpd.conf than is shown as an |
| # example here. |