En un sistema Linux:
snmpwalk -v 2c -c public -M /usr/share/snmp/mibs/ -m ALL localhost sunHwMonProductGroup
En un sistema Oracle Solaris 11.1:
snmpwalk -v 2c -c public -M +/usr/lib/ssm/lib/mibs/ -m ALL localhost sunHwMonProductGroup
En un sistema Oracle Solaris 10:
snmpwalk -v 2c -c public -M +/opt/sun-ssm/lib/mibs/ -m ALL localhost sunHwMonProductGroup
Aparecerá una pantalla similar a la siguiente:
SUN-HW-MONITORING-MIB::sunHwMonProductName.0 = STRING: SUN FIRE X4440
SUN-HW-MONITORING-MIB::sunHwMonProductType.0 = INTEGER: rackmount(3)
SUN-HW-MONITORING-MIB::sunHwMonProductPartNumber.0 = STRING: 602-4058-01
SUN-HW-MONITORING-MIB::sunHwMonProductSerialNumber.0 = STRING: 0823QBU01C
SUN-HW-MONITORING-MIB::sunHwMonProductManufacturer.0 = STRING: SUN MICROSYSTEMS
SUN-HW-MONITORING-MIB::sunHwMonProductSlotNumber.0 = INTEGER: -1
SUN-HW-MONITORING-MIB::sunHwMonProductUUID.0 = STRING: 080020FFFFFFFFFFFFFF00144FEDE5E0
SUN-HW-MONITORING-MIB::sunHwMonProductBiosVersion.0 = STRING: S90_3B18
sunHwMonProductSlotNumber.0 = INTEGER: -1
Es el comportamiento previsto, ya que los números de ranura sólo son pertinentes para los servidores blade. Los servidores montados en bastidor no tienen números de ranura.