Configure SNMP System and Agent Parameters
High level SNMP identification is configured by all SNMP users. This information includes system-level management Information, system contact information, system name and location information and is applicable to both SNMPv1v2 and SNMPv3 deployments. The Oracle® Communications Session Border Controller MIB Reference Guide includes detail on SNMP data.
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Access the
system-config configuration element.
ORACLE# configure terminal ORACLE(configure)# system ORACLE(system)# system-config ORACLE(system-config)#
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Type
select to begin editing the
system-config object.
ORACLE(system-config)# select ORACLE(system-config)# -
mib-system-contact—Specifies
contact information that is used within
OCSBC MIB transactions.
This value is a textual identification and usually contains information about
the company system contact person.
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mib-system-name—Specifies
the identity of this
OCSBC that is presented
within MIB transactions, which is the FQDN of the node.
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mib-system-location—Specifies
the physical location of the
OCSBC that is reported
within MIB transactions. This parameter is reported when an SNMP GET is issued
by the NMS for the MIB-II sysLocation variable. This parameter has no direct
relation to the location field in the system configuration element.
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snmp-agent-mode
—Select the operating mode of the SNMP agent.
- v1v2—(Default) The SNMP agent supports SNMPv1 and SNMPv2. Configure the The snmp-community and trap-receiver elements only.
- v3—The SNMP agent
supports SNMPv3, but can also support SNMPv2 through
snmp-user-group
element configuration.
Note:
To create a v2 snmp-user-group, you configure the mp-model parameter to v1v2 and leave the community-string parameter blank. The system then matches hosts' SNMP version 2 community strings with the user-list parameter value. You also configure snmp-user-entry and snmp-address-entry elements to complete your v2 group configuration.
- snmp-engine-id-suffix—Uniquely identifies the SNMP Engine by specifying a unique suffix for the SNMPEngineID. This attribute is optional.
- snmp-rate-limit—Set the rate limit for SNMP traffic to prevent SNMP from interfering with service traffic. The range is from 0 to 9999 packets per second. The default is zero, which applies no limit.
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lower-snmp-priority—This
option allows you to lower the priority of the SNMP processing task to prevent
SNMP from interfering with service processing.
ORACLE(system-config)options +lower-snmp-priority=enabledIf you type the option without the plus sign, you overwrite any previously configured options. To append the new option to the options list, prepend the new option with a plus sign as shown in the previous example.
- Type done to save your configuration.


