snmpcmd - options and behaviour common to most of the Net-SNMP
command-line tools
snmpcmd [OPTIONS] AGENT [PARAMETERS]
This manual page describes the common options for the SNMP
commands: snmpbulkget, snmpbulkwalk, snmpdelta,
snmpget, snmpgetnext, snmpnetstat, snmpset,
snmpstatus, snmptable, snmptest, snmptrap,
snmpdf, snmpusm , snmpwalk . The command line
applications use the SNMP protocol to communicate with an SNMP capable
network entity, an agent. Individual applications typically (but not
necessarily) take additional parameters that are given after the agent
specification. These parameters are documented in the manual pages for each
application.
In addition to the options described in this manual page, all of
the tokens described in the snmp.conf and other .conf manual pages
can be used on the command line of Net-SNMP applications as well by
prefixing them with "--". EG, specifying
--dontLoadHostConfig=true on the command line will turn of loading of
the host specific configuration files.
The snmp.conf file settings and the double-dash arguments
over-ride the single-dash arguments. So it's important to note that if
single-dash arguments aren't working because you have settings in the
snmp.conf file that conflict with them then you'll need to use the
longer-form double-dash arguments to successfully trump the snmp.conf
file settings.
These options control how the Net-SNMP commands behave regardless
of what version of SNMP you are using. See further below for options that
control specific versions or sub-modules of the SNMP protocol.
- -d
- Dump (in hexadecimal) the raw SNMP packets sent and received.
- -D[TOKEN[,...]]
- Turn on debugging output for the given TOKEN(s). Try ALL for
extremely verbose output.
- -h, --help
- Display a brief usage message and then exit.
- -H
- Display a list of configuration file directives understood by the command
and then exit.
- -I [brRhu]
- Specifies input parsing options. See INPUT OPTIONS below.
- -L [eEfFoOsS]
- Specifies output logging options. See LOGGING OPTIONS below.
- -m MIBLIST
- Specifies a colon separated list of MIB modules (not files) to load for
this application. This overrides (or augments) the environment variable
MIBS, the snmp.conf directive mibs, and the list of MIBs
hardcoded into the Net-SNMP library.
- If MIBLIST has a leading '-' or '+' character, then the MIB modules
listed are loaded in addition to the default list, coming before or after
this list respectively. Otherwise, the specified MIBs are loaded
instead of this default list.
- The special keyword ALL is used to load all MIB modules in the MIB
directory search list. Every file whose name does not begin with
"." will be parsed as if it were a MIB file.
- -M DIRLIST
- Specifies a colon separated list of directories to search for MIBs. This
overrides (or augments) the environment variable MIBDIRS, the
snmp.conf directive mibdirs, and the default directory
hardcoded into the Net-SNMP library (/usr/share/snmp/mibs).
- If DIRLIST has a leading '-' or '+' character, then the given
directories are added to the default list, being searched before or after
the directories on this list respectively. Otherwise, the specified
directories are searched instead of this default list.
Note that the directories appearing later in the list have
have precedence over earlier ones. To avoid searching any MIB
directories, set the MIBDIRS environment variable to the empty string
("").
Note that MIBs specified using the -m option or the
mibs configuration directive will be loaded from one of the
directories listed by the -M option (or equivalents). The mibfile
directive takes a full path to the specified MIB file, so this does not
need to be in the MIB directory search list.
- -v 1 | 2c |
3
- Specifies the protocol version to use: 1 (RFCs 1155-1157), 2c (RFCs
1901-1908), or 3 (RFCs 2571-2574). The default is typically version 3.
Overrides the defVersion token in the snmp.conf file.
-O [abeEfnqQsStTuUvxX] Specifies output printing options.
See OUTPUT OPTIONS below.
- -P [cdeRuwW]
- Specifies MIB parsing options. See MIB PARSING OPTIONS below.
- -r retries
- Specifies the number of retries to be used in the requests. The default is
5.
- -t timeout
- Specifies the timeout in seconds between retries. The default is 1.
Floating point numbers can be used to specify fractions of seconds.
- -V, --version
- Display version information for the application and then exit.
- -Yname="value"
- --name="value"
- Allows one to specify any token ("name") supported in the
snmp.conf file and sets its value to "value". Overrides
the corresponding token in the snmp.conf file. See
snmp.conf(5) for the full list of tokens.
The following options are generic to all forms of SNMPv3,
regardless of whether it's the original SNMPv3 with USM or the newer SNMPv3
over (D)TLS support.
- -l secLevel
- Set the securityLevel used for SNMPv3 messages
(noAuthNoPriv|authNoPriv|authPriv). Appropriate pass phrase(s) must
provided when using any level higher than noAuthNoPriv. Overrides the
defSecurityLevel token in the snmp.conf file.
- -n
contextName
- Set the contextName used for SNMPv3 messages. The default contextName is
the empty string "". Overrides the defContext token in
the snmp.conf file.
These options pass transport-specific parameters to the TLS layer.
If you're using SNMP over TLS or DTLS you'll need to pass a combination of
these either through these command line options or through snmp.conf
configuration tokens.
A note about <certificate-specifier>s : Net-SNMP
looks for X.509 certificates in each of the normal SNMP configuration
directory search paths under a "tls" subdirectory. IE, it will
look in ~/.snmp/tls and in /usr/local/share/snmp/tls for certificates. The
certificate components (eg, the public and private halves) are stored in
sub-directories underneath this root set of directories. See the
net-snmp-cert tool for help in importing, creating and managing Net-SNMP
certificates. <certificate-specifier>s can reference either a
fingerprint of the certificate to use (the net-snmp-cert tool can help you
figure out the certificates) or the filename's prefix can be used. For
example, if you had a "snmpd.crt" certificate file then you could
simply refer to the certificate via the "snmpd" specifier.
- -T
localCert=<certificate-specifier>
- Indicates to the transport which key should be used to initiate (D)TLS
client connections. This would typically be a certificate found using the
certificate fingerprint, the application name (eg snmpd, snmptrapd, perl,
python) or genericized name "snmpapp" if using one of the
generic applications (snmpget, snmpwalk, etc). This can also be set using
the localCert specifier in a snmp.conf configuration file.
- -T
peerCert=<certificate-specifier>
- If you expect a particular certificate to be presented by the other side
then you can use this specifier to indicate the certificate it should
present. If it fails to present the expected certificate the client will
refuse to open the connection (because doing otherwise could lead to
man-in-the-middle attacks). This can also be set using the peerCert
specifier in a snmp.conf configuration file.
- -T
trust_cert=<certificate-specifier>
- If you have a trusted CA certificate you wish to anchor trust with, you
can use this flag to load a given certificate as a trust anchor. A copy of
the certificate must exist within the Net-SNMP certificate storage system
or this must point to a complete path name. Also see the
"trustCert" snmp.conf configuration token.
- -T
their_hostname=<name>
- If the server's presented certificate can be validating using a trust
anchor then their hostname will be checked to ensure their presented
hostname matches one that is expected (you don't want to connect to
goodhost.example.com and accept a certificate presented by
badhost.example.com do you?). This token can specify the exact host name
expected to be presented by the remote side, either in a subjectAltName
field or in the CommonName field of the server's X.509 certificate.
These options are specific to using SNMPv3 with the original
User-based Security Model (USM).
- -3[MmKk] 0xHEXKEY
- Sets the keys to be used for SNMPv3 transactions. These options allow you
to set the master authentication and encryption keys (-3m and -3M
respectively) or set the localized authentication and encryption keys (-3k
and -3K respectively). SNMPv3 keys can be either passed in by hand using
these flags, or by the use of keys generated from passwords using the -A
and -X flags discussed below. For further details on SNMPv3 and its usage
of keying information, see the Net-SNMP tutorial web site (
http://www.Net-SNMP.org/tutorial-5/commands/ ). Overrides the
defAuthMasterKey (-3m), defPrivMasterKey (-3M), defAuthLocalizedKey (-3k)
or defPrivLocalizedKey (-3K) tokens, respectively, in the snmp.conf
file, see snmp.conf(5).
- -a
authProtocol
- Set the authentication protocol (MD5 or SHA) used for authenticated SNMPv3
messages. Overrides the defAuthType token in the snmp.conf
file.
- -A
authPassword
- Set the authentication pass phrase used for authenticated SNMPv3 messages.
Overrides the defAuthPassphrase token in the snmp.conf file.
It is insecure to specify pass phrases on the command line, see
snmp.conf(5).
- -e engineID
- Set the authoritative (security) engineID used for SNMPv3 REQUEST
messages, given as a hexadecimal string (optionally prefixed by
"0x"). It is typically not necessary to specify this engine ID,
as it will usually be discovered automatically.
- -E engineID
- Set the context engineID used for SNMPv3 REQUEST messages scopedPdu, given
as a hexadecimal string. If not specified, this will default to the
authoritative engineID.
- -u secName
- Set the securityName used for authenticated SNMPv3 messages. Overrides the
defSecurityName token in the snmp.conf file.
- -x
privProtocol
- Set the privacy protocol (DES or AES) used for encrypted SNMPv3 messages.
Overrides the defPrivType token in the snmp.conf file. This
option is only valid if the Net-SNMP software was build to use
OpenSSL.
- -X
privPassword
- Set the privacy pass phrase used for encrypted SNMPv3 messages. Overrides
the defPrivPassphrase token in the snmp.conf file. It is
insecure to specify pass phrases on the command line, see
snmp.conf(5).
- -Z boots,time
- Set the engineBoots and engineTime used for authenticated SNMPv3 messages.
This will initialize the local notion of the agents boots/time with an
authenticated value stored in the LCD. It is typically not necessary to
specify this option, as these values will usually be discovered
automatically.
- -c community
- Set the community string for SNMPv1/v2c transactions. Overrides the
defCommunity token in the snmp.conf file.
The string AGENT in the SYNOPSIS above specifies the
remote SNMP entity with which to communicate. This specification takes the
form:
- [<transport-specifier>:]<transport-address>
At its simplest, the AGENT specification may consist of a
hostname, or an IPv4 address in the standard "dotted quad"
notation. In this case, communication will be attempted using UDP/IPv4 to
port 161 of the given host. Otherwise, the <transport-address> part of
the specification is parsed according to the following table:
- <transport-specifier>
- <transport-address> format
- udp
- hostname[:port] or IPv4-address[:port]
- tcp
- hostname[:port] or IPv4-address[:port]
- unix
- pathname
- ipx
- [network]:node[/port]
- aal5pvc or pvc
- [interface.][VPI.]VCI
- udp6 or udpv6 or
udpipv6
- hostname[:port] or IPv6-address:port or
'['IPv6-address']'[:port]
- tcp6 or tcpv6 or
tcpipv6
- hostname[:port] or IPv6-address:port or
'['IPv6-address']'[:port]
Note that <transport-specifier> strings are case-insensitive
so that, for example, "tcp" and "TCP" are equivalent.
Here are some examples, along with their interpretation:
- hostname:161
- perform query using UDP/IPv4 datagrams to hostname on port
161. The ":161" is redundant here since that is the
default SNMP port in any case.
- udp:hostname
- identical to the previous specification. The "udp:" is redundant
here since UDP/IPv4 is the default transport.
- TCP:hostname:1161
- connect to hostname on port 1161 using TCP/IPv4 and perform
query over that connection. udp6:hostname:10161 perform the query
using UDP/IPv6 datagrams to port 10161 on hostname (which
will be looked up as an AAAA record).
- UDP6:[fe80::2d0:b7ff:fe21:c6c0]
- perform the query using UDP/IPv6 datagrams to port 161 at address
fe80::2d0:b7ff:fe21:c6c0.
- tcpipv6:[::1]:1611
- connect to port 1611 on the local host (::1 in IPv6
parlance) using TCP/IPv6 and perform query over that connection.
- tls:hostname:10161
- dtls:hostname:10161
- Connects using SNMP over DTLS or TLS as documented by the ISMS working
group (RFCs not yet published as of this date). This will require (and
automatically ensures) that the TSM security model is in use. You'll also
need to set up trust paths for the certificates presented by the server
(see above for descriptions of this).
- ssh:hostname:22
- Connects using SNMP over SSH as documented by the ISMS working group (RFCs
not yet published as of this date). This will require that the TSM
security model is in use (--defSecurityModel=tsm).
- ipx::00D0B7AAE308
- perform query using IPX datagrams to node number 00D0B7AAE308 on
the default network, and using the default IPX port of 36879 (900F
hexadecimal), as suggested in RFC 1906.
- ipx:0AE43409:00D0B721C6C0/1161
- perform query using IPX datagrams to port 1161 on node number
00D0B721C6C0 on network number 0AE43409.
- unix:/tmp/local-agent
- connect to the Unix domain socket /tmp/local-agent, and perform the
query over that connection.
- /tmp/local-agent
- identical to the previous specification, since the Unix domain is the
default transport iff the first character of the <transport-address>
is a '/'.
- alias:myname
- perform a connection to the myname alias which needs to be defined
in the snmp.conf file using a line like " alias myname
udp:127.0.0.1:9161 ". Any type of transport definition can be
used as the alias expansion parameter. Aliases are particularly useful for
using repeated complex transport strings.
- AAL5PVC:100
- perform the query using AAL5 PDUs sent on the permanent virtual circuit
with VPI=0 and VCI=100 (decimal) on the first ATM adapter in the
machine.
- PVC:1.10.32
- perform the query using AAL5 PDUs sent on the permanent virtual circuit
with VPI=10 (decimal) and VCI=32 (decimal) on the second ATM adapter in
the machine. Note that "PVC" is a synonym for
"AAL5PVC".
Note that not all the transport domains listed above will always
be available; for instance, hosts with no IPv6 support will not be able to
use udp6 transport addresses, and attempts to do so will result in the error
"Unknown host". Likewise, since AAL5 PVC support is only currently
available on Linux, it will fail with the same error on other platforms.
The Net-SNMP MIB parser mostly adheres to the Structure of
Management Information (SMI). As that specification has changed through
time, and in recognition of the (ahem) diversity in compliance expressed in
MIB files, additional options provide more flexibility in reading MIB
files.
- -Pc
- Toggles whether ASN.1 comments should extend to the end of the MIB source
line. Strictly speaking, a second appearance of "--" should
terminate the comment, but this breaks some MIB files. The default
behaviour (to interpret comments correctly) can also be set with the
configuration token commentToEOL.
- -Pd
- Disables the loading of MIB object DESCRIPTIONs when parsing MIB files.
This reduces the amount of memory used by the running application.
- -Pe
- Toggles whether to show errors encountered when parsing MIB files. These
include references to IMPORTed modules and MIB objects that cannot be
located in the MIB directory search list. The default behaviour can also
be set with the configuration token showMibErrors.
- -PR
- If the same MIB object (parent name and sub-identifier) appears multiple
times in the list of MIB definitions loaded, use the last version to be
read in. By default, the first version will be used, and any duplicates
discarded. This behaviour can also be set with the configuration token
mibReplaceWithLatest.
Such ordering is normally only relevant if there are two MIB
files with conflicting object definitions for the same OID (or different
revisions of the same basic MIB object).
- -Pu
- Toggles whether to allow the underline character in MIB object names and
other symbols. Strictly speaking, this is not valid SMI syntax, but some
vendor MIB files define such names. The default behaviour can also be set
with the configuration token mibAllowUnderline.
- -Pw
- Show various warning messages in parsing MIB files and building the
overall OID tree. This can also be set with the configuration directive
mibWarningLevel 1
- -PW
- Show some additional warning messages, mostly relating to parsing
individual MIB objects. This can also be set with the configuration
directive mibWarningLevel 2
The format of the output from SNMP commands can be controlled
using various parameters of the -O flag. The effects of these
sub-options can be seen by comparison with the following default output
(unless otherwise specified):
$ snmpget -c public -v 1 localhost sysUpTime.0
SNMPv2-MIB::sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63
- -Oa
- Display string values as ASCII strings (unless there is a DISPLAY-HINT
defined for the corresponding MIB object). By default, the library
attempts to determine whether the value is a printable or binary string,
and displays it accordingly.
This option does not affect objects that do have a
Display Hint.
- -Ob
- Display table indexes numerically, rather than trying to interpret the
instance subidentifiers as string or OID values:
$ snmpgetnext -c public -v 1 localhost vacmSecurityModel
SNMP-VIEW-BASED-ACM-MIB::vacmSecurityModel.0."wes" = xxx
$ snmpgetnext -c public -v 1 -Ob localhost vacmSecurityModel
SNMP-VIEW-BASED-ACM-MIB::vacmSecurityModel.0.3.119.101.115 = xxx
- -Oe
- Removes the symbolic labels from enumeration values:
$ snmpget -c public -v 1 localhost ipForwarding.0
IP-MIB::ipForwarding.0 = INTEGER: forwarding(1)
$ snmpget -c public -v 1 -Oe localhost ipForwarding.0
IP-MIB::ipForwarding.0 = INTEGER: 1
- -OE
- Modifies index strings to escape the quote characters:
$ snmpgetnext -c public -v 1 localhost vacmSecurityModel
SNMP-VIEW-BASED-ACM-MIB::vacmSecurityModel.0."wes" = xxx
$ snmpgetnext -c public -v 1 -OE localhost vacmSecurityModel
SNMP-VIEW-BASED-ACM-MIB::vacmSecurityModel.0.\"wes\" = xxx
- This allows the output to be reused in shell commands.
- -Of
- Include the full list of MIB objects when displaying an OID:
.iso.org.dod.internet.mgmt.mib-2.system.sysUpTime.0 =
Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63
- -On
- Displays the OID numerically:
.1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63
- -Oq
- Removes the equal sign and type information when displaying varbind
values:
SNMPv2-MIB::sysUpTime.0 1:15:09:27.63
- -OQ
- Removes the type information when displaying varbind values:
SNMPv2-MIB::sysUpTime.0 = 1:15:09:27.63
- -Os
- Display the MIB object name (plus any instance or other subidentifiers):
sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63
- -OS
- Display the name of the MIB, as well as the object name:
SNMPv2-MIB::sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63
- This is the default OID output format.
- -Ot
- Display TimeTicks values as raw numbers:
SNMPv2-MIB::sysUpTime.0 = 14096763
- -OT
- If values are printed as Hex strings, display a printable version as
well.
- -Ou
- Display the OID in the traditional UCD-style (inherited from the original
CMU code). That means removing a series of "standard" prefixes
from the OID, and displaying the remaining list of MIB object names (plus
any other subidentifiers):
system.sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (14096763) 1 day, 15:09:27.63
- -OU
- Do not print the UNITS suffix at the end of the value.
- -Ov
- Display the varbind value only, not the OID:
$ snmpget -c public -v 1 -Ov localhost ipForwarding.0
INTEGER: forwarding(1)
- -Ox
- Display string values as Hex strings (unless there is a DISPLAY-HINT
defined for the corresponding MIB object). By default, the library
attempts to determine whether the value is a printable or binary string,
and displays it accordingly.
This option does not affect objects that do have a
Display Hint.
- -OX
- Display table indexes in a more "program like" output, imitating
a traditional array-style index format:
$ snmpgetnext -c public -v 1 localhost ipv6RouteTable
IPv6-MIB::ipv6RouteIfIndex.63.254.1.0.255.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.64.1 = INTEGER: 2
$ snmpgetnext -c public -v 1 -OX localhost ipv6RouteTable
IPv6-MIB::ipv6RouteIfIndex[3ffe:100:ff00:0:0:0:0:0][64][1] = INTEGER: 2
Most of these options can also be configured via configuration
tokens. See the snmp.conf(5) manual page for details.
The mechanism and destination to use for logging of warning and
error messages can be controlled by passing various parameters to the
-L flag.
- -Le
- Log messages to the standard error stream.
- -Lf FILE
- Log messages to the specified file.
- -Lo
- Log messages to the standard output stream.
- -Ls FACILITY
- Log messages via syslog, using the specified facility ('d' for LOG_DAEMON,
'u' for LOG_USER, or '0'-'7' for LOG_LOCAL0 through LOG_LOCAL7).
There are also "upper case" versions of each of these
options, which allow the corresponding logging mechanism to be restricted to
certain priorities of message. Using standard error logging as an
example:
- -LE pri
- will log messages of priority 'pri' and above to standard error.
- -LE p1-p2
- will log messages with priority between 'p1' and 'p2' (inclusive) to
standard error.
For -LF and -LS the priority specification comes
before the file or facility token. The priorities recognised are:
- 0 or ! for LOG_EMERG,
1 or a for LOG_ALERT,
2 or c for LOG_CRIT,
3 or e for LOG_ERR,
4 or w for LOG_WARNING,
5 or n for LOG_NOTICE,
6 or i for LOG_INFO, and
7 or d for LOG_DEBUG.
Normal output is (or will be!) logged at a priority level of
LOG_NOTICE
The interpretation of input object names and the values to be
assigned can be controlled using various parameters of the -I flag.
The default behaviour will be described at the end of this section.
- -Ib
- specifies that the given name should be regarded as a regular expression,
to match (case-insensitively) against object names in the MIB tree. The
"best" match will be used - calculated as the one that matches
the closest to the beginning of the node name and the highest in the tree.
For example, the MIB object vacmSecurityModel could be matched by the
expression vacmsecuritymodel (full name, but different case), or
vacm.*model (regexp pattern).
Note that '.' is a special character in regular expression
patterns, so the expression cannot specify instance subidentifiers or
more than one object name. A "best match" expression will only
be applied against single MIB object names. For example, the expression
sys*ontact.0 would not match the instance sysContact.0 (although
sys*ontact would match sysContact). Similarly, specifying a MIB
module name will not succeed (so SNMPv2-MIB::sys.*ontact would
not match either).
- -Ih
- disables the use of DISPLAY-HINT information when assigning values. This
would then require providing the raw value:
snmpset ... HOST-RESOURCES-MIB::hrSystemDate.0
x "07 D2 0C 0A 02 04 06 08"
instead of a formatted version:
snmpset ... HOST-RESOURCES-MIB::hrSystemDate.0
= 2002-12-10,2:4:6.8
- -Ir
- disables checking table indexes and the value to be assigned against the
relevant MIB definitions. This will (hopefully) result in the remote agent
reporting an invalid request, rather than checking (and rejecting) this
before it is sent to the remote agent.
Local checks are more efficient (and the diagnostics provided
also tend to be more precise), but disabling this behaviour is
particularly useful when testing the remote agent.
- -IR
- enables "random access" lookup of MIB names. Rather than
providing a full OID path to the desired MIB object (or qualifying this
object with an explicit MIB module name), the MIB tree will be searched
for the matching object name. Thus
.iso.org.dod.internet.mib-2.system.sysDescr.0 (or SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0)
can be specified simply as sysDescr.0.
- Warning:
- Since MIB object names are not globally unique, this approach may return a
different MIB object depending on which MIB files have been loaded.
- The MIB-MODULE::objectName syntax has the advantage of uniquely
identifying a particular MIB object, as well as being slightly more
efficient (and automatically loading the necessary MIB file if
necessary).
- -Is SUFFIX
- adds the specified suffix to each textual OID given on the command line.
This can be used to retrieve multiple objects from the same row of a
table, by specifying a common index value.
- -IS PREFIX
- adds the specified prefix to each textual OID given on the command line.
This can be used to specify an explicit MIB module name for all objects
being retrieved (or for incurably lazy typists).
- -Iu
- enables the traditional UCD-style approach to interpreting input OIDs.
This assumes that OIDs are rooted at the 'mib-2' point in the tree (unless
they start with an explicit '.' or include a MIB module name). So the
sysDescr instance above would be referenced as system.sysDescr.0.
Object names specified with a leading '.' are always interpreted
as "fully qualified" OIDs, listing the sequence of MIB objects
from the root of the MIB tree. Such objects and those qualified by an
explicit MIB module name are unaffected by the -Ib, -IR and
-Iu flags.
Otherwise, if none of the above input options are specified, the
default behaviour for a "relative" OID is to try and interpret it
as an (implicitly) fully qualified OID, then apply "random access"
lookup (-IR), followed by "best match" pattern matching
(-Ib).
- PREFIX
- The standard prefix for object identifiers (when using UCD-style output).
Defaults to .iso.org.dod.internet.mgmt.mib-2
- MIBS
- The list of MIBs to load. Defaults to
SNMPv2-TCSNMPv2-MIB:IF-MIB:IP-MIBTCP-MIBUDP-MIBSNMP-VACM-MIB. Overridden
by the -m option.
- MIBDIRS
- The list of directories to search for MIBs. Defaults to
/usr/share/snmp/mibs. Overridden by the -M option.
- /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf
- Agent configuration file. See snmpd.conf(5).
- /etc/snmp/snmp.conf
- ~/.snmp/snmp.conf
- Application configuration files. See snmp.conf(5).
snmpget(1), snmpgetnext(1), snmpset(1), snmpbulkget(1),
snmpbulkwalk(1), snmpwalk(1), snmptable(1), snmpnetstat(1), snmpdelta(1),
snmptrap(1), snmpinform(1), snmpusm(1), snmpstatus(1), snmptest(1),
snmp.conf(5).