.\" /*********************************************************** .\" Copyright 1988, 1989 by Carnegie Mellon University .\" .\" All Rights Reserved .\" .\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its .\" documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, .\" provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that .\" both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in .\" supporting documentation, and that the name of CMU not be .\" used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the .\" software without specific, written prior permission. .\" .\" CMU DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING .\" ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL .\" CMU BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR .\" ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, .\" WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, .\" ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS .\" SOFTWARE. .\" ******************************************************************/ .TH SNMPTEST 1 "08 Feb 2002" VVERSIONINFO "Net-SNMP" .UC 4 .SH NAME snmptest - communicates with a network entity using SNMP requests .SH SYNOPSIS .B snmptest [COMMON OPTIONS] .SH DESCRIPTION .B snmptest is a flexible SNMP application that can monitor and manage information on a network entity. .PP After invoking the program, a command line interpreter proceeds to accept commands. It will prompt with: .PP .B Variable: .PP At this point you can enter one or more variable names, one per line. A blank line is a command to send a request for each of the variables (in a single packet) to the remote entity. Each variable name is given in the format specified in .IR variables(5) . For example: .PP snmptest -c public -v 1 zeus .br .BR Variable: " system.sysDescr.0" .br .BR Variable: .PP will return some information about the request and reply packets, as well as the information: .PP requestid 0x5992478A errstat 0x0 errindex 0x0 .br system.sysDescr.0 = STRING: "Unix 4.3BSD" .PP Upon startup, the program defaults to sending a GET request packet. This can be changed to a GETNEXT request or a SET request by typing the commands "$N" or "$S" respectively. Typing "$G" will go back to the GET request mode. .PP The command "$D" will toggle the dumping of each sent and received packet. .PP The command "$QP" will toggle a quicker, less verbose output form. .PP When in the "SET request" mode, more information is requested by the prompt for each variable. The prompt: .PP .B Type [i|s|x|d|n|o|t|a]: .PP requests the type of the variable be entered. Type "i" for an integer, "s" for an octet string in ASCII, "x" for an octet string as hex bytes separated by whitespace, "d" for an octet string as decimal bytes separated by whitespace, , "a" for an ip address in dotted IP notation, and "o" for an object identifier. At this point a value will be prompted for: .PP .B Value: .PP If this is an integer value, just type the integer (in decimal). If it is a decimal string, type in white-space separated decimal numbers, one per byte of the string. Again type a blank line at the prompt for the variable name to send the packet. .PP At the variable name line, typing "$Q" will quit the program. .SH OPTIONS .B snmptest takes the common options described in the .I snmpcmd(1) manual page. .SH "SEE ALSO" snmpcmd(1), snmpget(1), snmpset(1), variables(5)