snmptable

Langue: en

Version: 25 Jul 2003 (mandriva - 22/10/07)

Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)

NAME

snmptable - retrieve an SNMP table and display it in tabular form

SYNOPSIS

snmptable [COMMON OPTIONS] [-Cb] [-CB] [-Ch] [-CH] [-Ci] [-Cf STRING] [-Cw WIDTH] AGENT TABLE-OID

DESCRIPTION

snmptable is an SNMP application that repeatedly uses the SNMP GETNEXT or GETBULK requests to query for information on a network entity. The parameter TABLE-OID must specify an SNMP table.

snmptable is an SNMP application that repeatedly uses the SNMP GETNEXT or GETBULK requests to query for information on a network entity. The parameter TABLE-OID must specify an SNMP table.

AGENT identifies a target SNMP agent, which is instrumented to monitor the gievn objects. At its simplest, the AGENT specification will consist of a hostname or an IPv4 address. In this situation, the command will attempt communication with the agent, using UDP/IPv4 to port 161 of the given target host. See snmpcmd(1) for a full list of the possible formats for AGENT.

OPTIONS

COMMON OPTIONS
Please see snmpcmd(1) for a list of possible values for COMMON OPTIONS as well as their descriptions.
-Cb
Display only a brief heading. Any common prefix of the table field names will be deleted.
-CB
Do not use GETBULK requests to retrieve data, only GETNEXT.
-Cc CHARS
Print table in columns of CHARS characters width.
-Cf STRING
The string STRING is used to separate table columns. With this option, each table entry will be printed in compact form, just with the string given to separate the columns (useful if you want to import it into a database). Otherwise it is printed in nicely aligned columns.
-Ch
Display only the column headings.
-CH
Do not display the column headings.
-Ci
This option prepends the index of the entry to all printed lines.
-Cl
Left justify the data in each column.
-Cr REPEATERS
For GETBULK requests, REPEATERS specifies the max-repeaters value to use. For GETNEXT requests, REPEATERS specifies the number of entries to retrieve at a time.
-Cw WIDTH
Specifies the width of the lines when the table is printed. If the lines will be longer, the table will be printed in sections of at most WIDTH characters. If WIDTH is less than the length of the contents of a single column, then that single column will still be printed.

EXAMPLES

$ snmptable -v 2c -c public localhost at.atTable

SNMP table: at.atTable RFC1213-MIB::atTable

atIfIndex atPhysAddress atNetAddress
        1  8:0:20:20:0:ab 130.225.243.33

$ snmptable -v 2c -c public -Cf + localhost at.atTable

SNMP table: at.atTable

atIfIndex+atPhysAddress+atNetAddress 1+8:0:20:20:0:ab+130.225.243.33

 $ snmptable localhost -Cl -CB -Ci -OX -Cb -Cc 16 -Cw 64 ifTable
 
 SNMP table: ifTable
 
 Index           Descr           Type            Mtu             
 Speed           PhysAddress     AdminStatus     OperStatus      
 LastChange      InOctets        InUcastPkts     InNUcastPkts    
 InDiscards      InErrors        InUnknownProtos OutOctets       
 OutUcastPkts    OutNUcastPkts   OutDiscards     OutErrors       
 OutQLen         Specific        
 
 index: [1]
 1               lo              softwareLoopbac 16436           
 10000000                        up              up              
 ?               2837283786      3052466         ?               
 0               0               ?               2837283786      
 3052466         ?               0               0               
 0               zeroDotZero     
 
 index: [2]
 2               eth0            ethernetCsmacd  1500            
 10000000        0:5:5d:d1:f7:cf up              up              
 ?               2052604234      44252973        ?               
 0               0               ?               149778187       
 65897282        ?               0               0               
 0               zeroDotZero     
 
 
 

BUGS

The test for TABLE-OID actually specifying a table is rather heuristic. Note also that the test requires the defining MIB file to be loaded.

SEE ALSO

snmpcmd(1), variables(5).