BSNMPD(1) BSD General Commands Manual BSNMPD(1)NAME
bsnmpd — simple and extensible SNMP daemon
SYNOPSIS
bsnmpd [-dh] [-c file] [-D options] [-I paths] [-l prefix]
[-m variable[=value]] [-p file]
DESCRIPTION
The bsnmpd daemon serves the internet SNMP (Simple Network Management
Protocol). It is intended to serve only the absolute basic MIBs and
implement all other MIBs through loadable modules. In this way the
bsnmpd can be used in unexpected ways.
The options are as follows:
-d Do not daemonize. Used for debugging.
-h Print a short usage message.
-c file Use file as configuration file instead of the standard one.
-D options Debugging options are specified as a comma separated string.
The following options are available.
dump Dump all sent and received PDUs to the terminal.
events Set the debugging level of the event library
(see eventlib(3)) to 10.
trace=level Set the snmp library trace flag to the specified
value. The value can be specified in the usual
C-syntax for numbers.
-I paths Specify a colon separated list of directories to search for
configuration include files. The default is
/etc:/usr/etc/:/usr/local/etc. These paths are only searched
for include specified within <> parentheses.
-l prefix Use prefix as the default basename for the pid and the con‐
figuration files.
-m variable[=value]
Define a configuration variable.
-p file Specify an alternate pid file instead of the default one.
CONFIGURATION
bsnmpd reads its configuration from either the default or the user speci‐
fied configuration file. The configuration file consists of the follow‐
ing types of lines:
· variable assignments
· section separators
· include directives
· MIB variable assignments
If a line is too long it can be continued on the next line by ending it
with a backslash. Empty lines and lines in which the first non-blank
character is a “#” sign are ignored.
All MIB variable assignments of the entire configuration (including
nested configuration files) are handled as one transaction, i.e., as if
they arrived in a single SET PDU. Any failure during the initial config‐
uration read causes bsnmpd to exit. A failure during the configuration
read caused by a module load causes the loading of the module to fail.
The configuration is read during initialization of bsnmpd, when a module
is loaded and when bsnmpd receives a SIGHUP.
VARIABLE ASSIGNMENTS
Variable assignments can take one of two forms:
variable := string
variable ?= string
The string reaches from the first non-blank character after the equal
sign until the first new line or “#” character. In the first case the
string is assigned to the variable unconditionally, in the second case
the variable is only assigned if it does not exist yet.
Variable names must begin with a letter or underscore and contain only
letters, digits or underscores.
SECTION SEPARATORS
The configuration consists of named sections. The MIB variable assign‐
ments in the section named “snmpd” are executed only during initial setup
or when bsnmpd receives a SIGHUP. All other sections are executed when
either a module with the same name as the section is loaded or bsnmpd
receives a SIGHUP and that module is already loaded. The default section
at the start of the configuration is “snmpd”. One can switch to another
section with the syntax
%secname
Where secname is the name of the section. The same secname can be used
in more than one place in the configuration. All of these parts are col‐
lected into one section.
INCLUDE DIRECTIVES
Another configuration file can be included into the current one with the
include directive that takes one of two forms:
.include "file"
.include <"file">
The first form causes the file to be searched in the current directory,
the second form causes the file to be searched in the directories speci‐
fied in the system include path. Nesting depth is only restricted by
available memory.
MIB VARIABLE ASSIGNMENTS
A MIB variable is assigned with the syntax
oid [ suboids ] = value
oid is the name of the variable to be set. Only the last component of
the entire name is used here. If the variable is a scalar, the index
(.0) is automatically appended and need not to be specified. If the
variable is a table column, the index (suboids) must be specified. The
index consist of elements each separated from the previous one by a dot.
Elements may be either numbers, strings or hostnames enclosed in []
brackets. If the element is a number it is appended to the current oid.
If the element is a string, its length and the ASCII code of each of its
characters are appended to the current oid. If the element is a host‐
name, the IP address of the host is looked up and the four elements of
the IP address are appended to the oid.
For example, an oid of
myvariable.27.foooll.[localhost]."&^!"
results in the oid
myvariable.27.6.102.111.111.111.108.108.127.0.0.1.38.94.33
The value of the assignment may be either empty, a string or a number.
If a string starts with a letter or an underscore and consists only of
letters, digits, underscores and minus signs, it can be written without
quotes. In all other cases the string must be enclosed in double quotes.
SUBSTITUTIONS
A variable substitution is written as
$(variable)
where variable is the name of the variable to substitute. Using an unde‐
fined variable is considered an error.
FILES
/etc/⟨prefix⟩.config Default configuration file, where the default
⟨prefix⟩ is “snmpd”.
/var/run/⟨prefix⟩.pid Default pid file.
/etc:/usr/etc/:/usr/local/etc
Default search path for system include files.
/usr/share/snmp/mibs/FOKUS-MIB.txt
/usr/share/snmp/mibs/BEGEMOT-MIB.txt
/usr/share/snmp/mibs/BEGEMOT-SNMPD.txt
Definitions for the MIBs implemented in the dae‐
mon.
/etc/hosts.allow, /etc/hosts.deny
Access controls that should be enforced by TCP
wrappers are defined here. Further details are
described in hosts_access(5).
SEE ALSOgensnmptree(1), hosts_access(5)STANDARDS
The bsnmpd conforms to the applicable IETF RFCs.
AUTHORS
Hartmut Brandt ⟨harti@FreeBSD.org⟩
BUGS
Sure.
BSD October 23, 2010 BSD