SNMP statistics

Good evening,
The documentation from SUN DS 6.3 admin reference guide doesnt have good steps on setting
up SNMP monitoring on a Solaris 10 serer.
Do any one here know of any instructions?

I'm not exactly sure what you guys are in the market for but basically, there isn't much of an SNMP setup really. Everything goes through cacao on port 11161 for gets. Traps are under water. you can poll just fine though.
if you need help on installing the monitoring console, this http://docs.sun.com/app/docs/doc/819-5081/gbxni?a=view could be helpful (I'm not too sure though)
Otherwise, just use your usual SNMP walker/browser on port 11161 and you should be able to poll info from your instances.
cheers
-=arnaud=-

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      18: 15:49:01.881744 1200.0314.0600 0000.0c9f.fc14 0x8100 46: 802.1Q vlan#3092 P0 192.168.228.4.49175 > 10.105.27.115.33435:  [udp sum ok] udp 0 [ttl 1] (id 20090)
      19: 15:49:01.884201 1200.0314.0600 0000.0c9f.fc14 0x8100 46: 802.1Q vlan#3092 P0 192.168.228.4.49175 > 10.105.27.115.33436:  [udp sum ok] udp 0 [ttl 1] (id 24847)
      20: 15:49:01.886672 1200.0314.0600 0000.0c9f.fc14 0x8100 46: 802.1Q vlan#3092 P0 192.168.228.4.49175 > 10.105.27.115.33437:  [udp sum ok] udp 0 (ttl 2, id 8822)
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      22: 15:49:07.880371 1200.0314.0600 0000.0c9f.fc14 0x8100 46: 802.1Q vlan#3092 P0 192.168.228.4.49175 > 10.105.27.115.33439:  [udp sum ok] udp 0 (ttl 2, id 9126)
      23: 15:49:10.880340 1200.0314.0600 0000.0c9f.fc14 0x8100 46: 802.1Q vlan#3092 P0 192.168.228.4.49175 > 10.105.27.115.33440:  [udp sum ok] udp 0 (ttl 3, id 24404)
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    CAPTURES : I could see 206 SNMP packets output and traffic towards the NETCOOL SERVERS (10.105.27.115 AND 10.105.27.118)
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    0 SNMP packets input
        0 Bad SNMP version errors
        0 Unknown community name
        0 Illegal operation for community name supplied
        0 Encoding errors
        0 Number of requested variables
        0 Number of altered variables
        0 Get-request PDUs
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    206 SNMP packets output
        0 Too big errors (Maximum packet size 512)
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        206 Trap PDUs
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    Lab-asa1-p/ADMIN-CONTEXT/act# show capture TEST1
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       1: 18:36:17.631070 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.115.162:  udp 356
       2: 18:36:18.491261 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.115.162:  udp 355
       3: 18:36:22.389338 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.115.162:  udp 266
       4: 18:36:29.491231 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.115.162:  udp 355
       5: 18:36:40.491246 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.115.162:  udp 355
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    Lab-asa1-p/ADMIN-CONTEXT/act# show capture TEST2
    13 packets captured
       1: 18:37:16.198094 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 356
       2: 18:37:24.491307 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
       3: 18:37:35.491307 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
       4: 18:37:46.491307 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
       5: 18:37:57.491307 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
       6: 18:38:08.491322 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
       7: 18:38:19.491292 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
       8: 18:38:30.491338 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
       9: 18:38:41.491307 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
      10: 18:38:52.491307 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
      11: 18:39:03.491307 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
      12: 18:39:14.491307 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
      13: 18:39:25.491307 802.1Q vlan#710 P0 10.105.89.38.162 > 10.105.27.118.162:  udp 355
    13 packets shown
    thanks
    Ana

    Hi guys coould you please help me out ??
    BR
    ANA

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    When walking the following C Series with the suggested OID:
    snmpwalk -v2c -c XXXXXXX -m ALL XXXXXX sysdesc
    SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0 = STRING: Cisco Integrated Management Controller(CIMC) [UCS C220 M3S], Firmware Version 1.5(1l) Copyright (c) 2008-2012, Cisco Systems, Inc.
    I get the following output:
    snmpwalk -v2c -c XXXXXXX -m CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB XXXXXXXX cucsProcessorUnitTable
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitDn.1 = STRING: "sys/rack-unit-1/board/cpu-1"
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitDn.2 = STRING: "sys/rack-unit-1/board/cpu-2"
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitRn.1 = STRING: cpu-1
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitRn.2 = STRING: cpu-2
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitArch.1 = INTEGER: xeon(179)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitArch.2 = INTEGER: xeon(179)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitCores.1 = Gauge32: 4
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitCores.2 = Gauge32: 4
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitCoresEnabled.1 = Gauge32: 4
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitCoresEnabled.2 = Gauge32: 4
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitId.1 = Gauge32: 0
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitId.2 = Gauge32: 1
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitModel.1 = STRING: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2643 0 @ 3.30GHz
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitModel.2 = STRING: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2643 0 @ 3.30GHz
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitOperState.1 = INTEGER: operable(1)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitOperState.2 = INTEGER: operable(1)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitOperability.1 = INTEGER: operable(1)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitOperability.2 = INTEGER: operable(1)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitPerf.1 = INTEGER: ok(1)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitPerf.2 = INTEGER: ok(1)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitPower.1 = INTEGER: unknown(0)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitPower.2 = INTEGER: unknown(0)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitPresence.1 = INTEGER: equipped(10)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitPresence.2 = INTEGER: equipped(10)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitRevision.1 = STRING: unknown
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitRevision.2 = STRING: unknown
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitSerial.1 = STRING: Not Specified
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitSerial.2 = STRING: Not Specified
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitSocketDesignation.1 = STRING: CPU1
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitSocketDesignation.2 = STRING: CPU2
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitSpeed.1 = INTEGER: 3300
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitSpeed.2 = INTEGER: 3300
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitStepping.1 = Gauge32: 0
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitStepping.2 = Gauge32: 0
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitThermal.1 = INTEGER: unknown(0)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitThermal.2 = INTEGER: unknown(0)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitThreads.1 = Gauge32: 8
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitThreads.2 = Gauge32: 8
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitVendor.1 = STRING: Intel(R) Corporation
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitVendor.2 = STRING: Intel(R) Corporation
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitVoltage.1 = INTEGER: unknown(0)
    CISCO-UNIFIED-COMPUTING-PROCESSOR-MIB::cucsProcessorUnitVoltage.2 = INTEGER: unknown(0)
    Typical CPU performance graphs provide percentage integers in vertical or y-axis and time in the horizontal or x-axis. The suggested OID yields no percentage utilization which I can graph.   Am I correct in concluding that we must poll the hypervisor for this data instead of the CIMC directly?
    Thanks,
    Amir

    Hi tak,
    my suggestion is to place the main prog outside the loop B but inside loop A. This makes sure, that Loop A is turning once with every execution of the main prog. Beside this Loop B is executing independently. Then you need some communication between your main program and the loop B which can be implemented easiest with global variables, one for each communication direction. This could look like this to abort the main prog on "emergency":
    and to tell the Loop B to stop on finish of the Main prog:
    In the main prog- VI (which is a bit weird, because the while loop execute always and only once and therefore is unnecessary) your experiment shoult execute in a while loop, since it is abortable dynamically. The for loop will execute the predefined count, defined by wiring the "loop count"- terminal or wiring an array with autoindexing.
    I hope this helped a bit,
    dave
    Message Edited by daveTW on 06-17-2006 02:13 AM
    Greets, Dave
    Attachments:
    multiple_loop_w_different_duration.png ‏4 KB
    experiment.png ‏3 KB

  • Statistics\Reporting from a Wireless Conrtoller

    After explaining all of our requirenments to the local Cisco Partner they prepared a quote and we purchased a Cisco 5508 Wireless Controller and 6 Aironet 1141 wireless access points.  The wireless coverage in the building is great.
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    I cannot find a way to do it from the software on the Wireless Controller and now theCisco partner has no clue how to get that information for us either.
    Has anyone else found a way to do this?
    Thanks,
    Anna

    Hi Anna,
    We can use Either Cisco WCS or NCS for this or u can go for any freeware SNMP walk tool on Google and use WLC MIBS on the same.. however... these can answer only the first part of ur question that is..how many and what type of user are accessing our wireless on a monthly basis.
    But i am not sure of any device on this earth telling us what type of device users are accessing.. may be this will give u the MAC address and then using OUI i thing u need to get the vendor information..
    Please dont forget to rate the usefull posts!!
    Regards
    Surendra

  • PRI monitoring problem with SNMP

    Hello
    I'm having some problems with PRI monitoring.
    I'm using cpmDS1ActiveDS0 MIB on a 3800 VoIP gateway with 4 PRI (2x2) (IOS 12.4(4)T1)
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    Do I need to make some special configuration on the Router?

    Have you had any responses to this issue ?
    I am running into exactly the same issue and have tried everything I can find to get these individual PRI (count of channels/lines in use) statistics.
    Just for the record, here are some of the SNMP OIDs that I have tried (the ISRs do respond to them, only thing is, the data they send back is mostly rubbish...) the output below is from two separate routers, with different versions of IOS running (which is shown in the sysdescr response):
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    All of these OIDs have been suggested at various sites online as useable SNMP OIDs for the ISR, but at other sites, they are suggested to be faulty.  I have found no definitive statement for ways to get these stats successfully on the ISR platform (which amazes me.)  Output below is using net-snmp to collect the stats.
    I welcome any suggestions as to how this can be done reliably for the ISR, and what IOS versions WILL work.  (since I am getting way different reponses to the same OIDs on the two versions below).
    You'll see that for the second (DC) router below, the values are always Zero.
    Yet I can guarantee that the ACTUAL stats are NEVER zero during the time period queried.
    Timestamp: 2010-12-27_13:56:31.73
    C:\usr\share\snmp\mibs>snmptranslate -On CISCO-POP-MGMT-MIB::cpmActiveDS0s.0
    .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.19.1.1.4.0
    C:\usr\share\snmp\mibs>snmptranslate -On CISCO-POP-MGMT-MIB::cpmDS1ActiveDS0s.0.0
    .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.19.1.1.9.1.3.0.0
    C:\usr\share\snmp\mibs>snmptranslate -On CISCO-POP-MGMT-MIB::cpmISDNCfgBChannelsInUse.0
    .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.19.1.1.3.0
    C:\usr\share\snmp\mibs>snmptranslate -On CISCO-VOICE-DIAL-CONTROL-MIB::cvCallActiveDS0s.0
    .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.63.1.3.3.0
    C:\usr\share\snmp\mibs>snmptranslate -On ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.32
    .1.3.6.1.2.1.10.20.1.2.1.1.2.32
    From ROUTER2 - HQ:
    SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0 = STRING: Cisco IOS Software,
    3800 Software (C3825-ADVIPSERVICESK9-M),
    Version 12.4(15)T8, RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc3)
    CISCO-POP-MGMT-MIB::cpmActiveDS0s.0 = Gauge32: 14
    CISCO-POP-MGMT-MIB::cpmDS1ActiveDS0s.0.0 = Gauge32: 14
    CISCO-POP-MGMT-MIB::cpmISDNCfgBChannelsInUse.0 = Gauge32: 7
    CISCO-VOICE-DIAL-CONTROL-MIB::cvCallActiveDS0s.0 = Gauge32: 7 interfaces
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.32 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.33 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.34 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.35 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.36 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.37 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.38 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.39 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.40 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.41 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.42 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.43 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.44 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.45 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.46 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.47 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.48 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.49 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.50 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.51 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.52 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.53 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.54 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    From ROUTER2 - DC:
    SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0 = STRING: Cisco IOS Software,
    3800 Software (C3825-ADVIPSERVICESK9-M),
    Version 12.4(18), RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
    CISCO-POP-MGMT-MIB::cpmActiveDS0s.0 = Gauge32: 0
    CISCO-POP-MGMT-MIB::cpmDS1ActiveDS0s.0.0 = Gauge32: 0
    CISCO-POP-MGMT-MIB::cpmISDNCfgBChannelsInUse.0 = Gauge32: 0
    CISCO-VOICE-DIAL-CONTROL-MIB::cvCallActiveDS0s.0 = No Such Object available on this agent at this OID
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.32 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.33 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.34 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.35 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.36 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.37 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.38 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.39 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.40 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.41 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.42 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.43 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.44 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.45 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.46 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.47 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.48 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.49 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.50 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.51 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.52 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.53 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.54 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.81 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.82 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.83 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.84 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.85 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.86 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.87 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.88 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.89 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.90 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.91 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.92 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.93 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.94 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.95 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.96 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.97 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.98 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.99 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.100 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.101 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.102 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    ISDN-MIB::isdnBearerOperStatus.103 = INTEGER: idle(1)
    Timestamp: 2010-12-27_13:56:35.02

  • Is SNMP RO and telnet good enough for IPM?

    Dear friends,
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    Gautam

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    Welcome to the Apple Community.
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