
Essential SNMP
Description
Alles über E-Books | Antworten auf Fragen rund um E-Books, Kopierschutz und Dateiformate finden Sie in unserem Info- & Hilfebereich.
More details
Other editions
Additional editions

Content
- Intro
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Audience for This Book
- Organization
- What's New in This Edition
- Example Programs
- Using Code Examples
- Conventions Used in This Book
- Comments and Questions
- Safari® Enabled
- Acknowledgments for the Second Edition
- Douglas
- Kevin
- Acknowledgments for the First Edition
- Introduction to SNMP and Network Management
- What Is SNMP?
- RFCs and SNMP Versions
- Managers and Agents
- The Structure of Management Information and MIBs
- Host Management
- A Brief Introduction to Remote Monitoring (RMON)
- The Concept of Network Management
- Fault Management
- Configuration Management
- Accounting Management
- Performance Management
- Security Management
- Applying the Concepts of Network Management
- Business Case Requirements
- Levels of Activity
- Reporting of Trend Analysis
- Response Time Reporting
- Alarm Correlation
- Trouble Resolution
- Change Management
- Planning for Change
- Managing Change
- High-Level Process Flow for Planned Change Management
- Scope
- Risk assessment
- Test and validation
- Change planning
- Change controller
- Change management team
- Communication
- Implementation team
- Test evaluation of change
- Network management update
- Documentation
- High-Level Process Flow for Emergency Change Management
- Issue determination
- Limited risk assessment
- Communication and documentation
- Implementation
- Test and evaluation
- Before and After SNMP
- Staffing Considerations
- Getting More Information
- SNMPv1 and SNMPv2
- SNMP and UDP
- SNMP Communities
- The Structure of Management Information
- Naming OIDs
- Defining OIDs
- Extensions to the SMI in Version 2
- A Closer Look at MIB-II
- SNMP Operations
- The get Operation
- The getnext Operation
- The getbulk Operation
- The set Operation
- get, getnext, getbulk, and set Error Responses
- SNMP Traps
- SNMP Notification
- SNMP inform
- SNMP report
- Host Management Revisited
- Remote Monitoring Revisited
- Reverse Engineering SNMP
- SNMPv3
- Changes in SNMPv3
- The SNMPv3 Engine
- SNMPv3 Applications
- What Does an Entity Look Like?
- SNMPv3 Textual Conventions
- USM
- The Basics
- Discovery
- USM Timeliness
- Authentication
- Privacy
- USM User Table
- Localized Keys and Changing Keys
- VACM
- The Basics
- Context Table
- Security to Group Table
- Access Table
- View Tree Family Table
- SNMPv3 in the Real World
- NMS Architectures
- Hardware Considerations
- NMS Architectures
- A Look Ahead
- Configuring Your NMS
- HP's OpenView Network Node Manager
- Running NNM
- The netmon Process
- Configuring Polling Intervals
- A Few Words About NNM Map Colors
- Using OpenView Filters
- Sets
- Filters
- FilterExpressions
- Loading MIBs into OpenView
- Castle Rock's SNMPc Enterprise Edition
- SNMPc's Map
- Discovery and Filters
- Discovery Run-Through
- Configuring SNMPv3
- Loading MIBs into SNMPc
- Configuring SNMP Agents
- Parameter Settings
- Security Concerns
- Agent Configuration Walkthroughs
- Windows Agents (Net-SNMP)
- HP OpenView Agent for HP-UX and Solaris
- Simple configuration
- Advanced configuration
- Net-SNMP for Unix
- Running the configuration script
- Creating a configuration by hand
- Using snmpusm to manage users
- Concord SystemEDGE Agent for Unix and Windows
- Simple configuration
- Advanced configuration
- Cisco Devices
- Simple configuration
- Advanced configuration
- Configuring SNMPv3
- APC Symetra
- Polling and Setting
- Retrieving a Single MIB Value
- Using HP OpenView to Retrieve Values
- Using Net-SNMP
- Retrieving Multiple MIB Values
- Walking the MIB Tree with OpenView
- Walking the Tree with Net-SNMP
- Setting a MIB Value
- Error Responses
- Polling and Thresholds
- Internal Polling
- Remote Monitoring (RMON)
- RMON configuration
- External Polling
- Collecting and Displaying Data with OpenView
- OpenView Graphing
- OpenView Data Collection and Thresholds
- Designing collections
- Creating a threshold
- Castle Rock's SNMPc
- Open Source Tools for Data Collection and Graphing
- Traps
- Understanding Traps
- SNMPv2 Traps
- Receiving Traps
- HP OpenView
- Using NNM's Event Configurations
- Selecting event sources
- Setting event categories
- Forwarding events and event severities
- Log messages, notifications, and automatic actions
- Custom Event Categories
- The Event Categories Display
- The Alarms Browser
- Creating Events Within OpenView
- Monitoring Traps with Perl
- Using the Network Computing Technologies Trap Receiver
- Receiving Traps Using Net-SNMP
- Sending Traps
- Sending Traps with OpenView
- Sending Traps with Perl
- Sending Traps with Network Computing Technologies' Trap Generator
- Sending Traps with Net-SNMP
- Forcing Your Hardware to Generate Traps
- Receiving Traps with SNMPc
- Custom trap actions
- Using Hooks with Your Programs
- Extensible SNMP Agents
- Net-SNMP
- SystemEDGE
- Extensibility for Unix and Windows
- Added Extensibility for Windows
- OpenView's Extensible Agent
- Tables
- Adapting SNMP to Fit Your Environment
- General Trap-Generation Program
- Who's Logging into My Machine? (I-Am-In)
- Throw Core
- Veritas Disk Check
- Disk-Space Checker
- Port Monitor
- Service Monitoring
- Web Content
- SMTP and POP3
- DNS
- More Monitoring Suggestions
- Pinging with Cisco
- Simple SNMP Agent
- Switch Port Control
- Wireless Networking
- SNMP: The Object-Oriented Way
- Extending SNMP::Info
- Final Words
- MRTG
- Using MRTG
- Viewing Graphs
- Graphing Other Objects
- Other Data-Gathering Applications
- Pitfalls
- Getting Help
- RRDtool and Cricket
- RRDtool
- Installing RRDtool
- Cricket
- Cricket's History
- Cricket's Config Tree
- Installing Cricket
- Configuring and Using Cricket
- Gathering Router Data
- Command-Line Data Sources
- Parallelizing Cricket
- Help with Cricket
- Java and SNMP
- SNMP4J
- SNMP getnext
- SNMP set
- Sending Traps and Informs
- Receiving Traps and Informs
- Resources
- Using Input and Output Octets
- More on OpenView's NNM
- Using External Data
- Adding a Menu to NNM
- Profiles for Different Users
- Using NNM for Communications
- Net-SNMP Tools
- Net-SNMP and MIB Files
- Common Command-Line Arguments
- Net-SNMP Command-Line Tools
- snmpwalk
- snmpget
- snmpbulkget
- snmpbulkwalk
- snmpset
- snmptrap
- snmpdelta
- snmpdf
- snmpgetnext
- snmpstatus
- snmptable
- snmpusm
- snmpconf
- snmpinform
- snmptranslate
- SNMP RFCs
- SMIv1 Data Definition Language
- SMIv2 Data Definition Language
- SNMPv3 Protocol
- SNMP Agent Extensibility
- SMIv1 MIB Modules
- SMIv2 MIB Modules
- IANA-Maintained MIB Modules
- Related Documents
- SNMP Support for Perl
- SNMP_Util
- MIB Management Routines
- snmpmapOID( )
- snmpMIB_to_OID( )
- snmpLoad_OID_Cache( )
- snmpQueue_MIB_File( )
- SNMP Operations
- snmpget( )
- snmpgetnext( )
- snmpwalk( )
- snmpset( )
- snmptrap( )
- Net-SNMP
- MIB Management Routines
- &SNMP::loadModules(&mod&,...)
- &SNMP::addMibDirs(&dir&,...)
- SNMP Operations
- snmpwalk
- snmpget
- snmpset
- Network Management Software
- SNMP Agents
- NMS Suites
- Element Managers (Vendor-Specific Management)
- Trend Analysis
- Supporting Software
- Open Source Monitoring Software
- Big Brother
- Nagios
- JFFNMS
- OpenNMS
- NINO
- Network Troubleshooting Primer
- ping
- ipconfig and ifconfig
- arp
- netstat
- traceroute and tracert
- nslookup and dig
- whois
- Ethereal
- Index
System requirements
File format: ePUB
Copy protection: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
System requirements:
- Computer (Windows; MacOS X; Linux): Install the free reader Adobe Digital Editions prior to download (see eBook Help).
- Tablet/smartphone (Android; iOS): Install the free app Adobe Digital Editions or the app PocketBook before downloading (see eBook Help).
- E-reader: Bookeen, Kobo, Pocketbook, Sony, Tolino and many more (not Kindle).
The file format ePub works well for novels and non-fiction books – i.e., „flowing” text without complex layout. On an e-reader or smartphone, line and page breaks automatically adjust to fit the small displays.
This eBook uses Adobe-DRM, a „hard” copy protection. If the necessary requirements are not met, unfortunately you will not be able to open the eBook. You will therefore need to prepare your reading hardware before downloading.
Please note: We strongly recommend that you authorise using your personal Adobe ID after installation of any reading software.
For more information, see our ebook Help page.