Munin::Plugin::SNMP man page on DragonFly

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Munin::Plugin::SNMP(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentatioMunin::Plugin::SNMP(3)

NAME
       Munin::Plugin::SNMP - Net::SNMP subclass for Munin plugins

SYNOPSIS
       The Munin::Plugin::SNMP module extends Net::SNMP with methods useful
       for Munin plugins.

SNMP CONFIGURATION
       SNMP plugins (that use this module) share a common configuration
       interface implemented in the function session().	 Please see the
       documentation for that function for complete instructions and examples
       on how to configure SNMP.  The documentation is located there to ensure
       that it is up to date and matches the code.

DEBUGGING
       Additional debugging messages can be enabled by setting
       $Munin::Plugin::SNMP::DEBUG, $Munin::Plugin::DEBUG, or by exporting the
       "MUNIN_DEBUG" environment variable before running the plugin (by
       passing the "--pidebug" option to "munin-run", for instance).

METHODS
   config_session() - Decode environment to get the needed plugin
       configuration parameters
	 ($host, $port, $version, $tail) = Munin::Plugin::SNMP->config_session();

       This is a convenience function for the "config" part of the plugin - it
       decodes the environment/plugin name to retrieve the information needed
       in the configuration phase.  It returns a 4 tuple consisting of:

       1) the host name
       2) the UDP port to use
       3) the SNMP version to use (3 for version 3, 2 for version 1 or 2c)
       4) the tail of the plugin name: whatever is left of the plugin name
       after "snmp_<host>_".

       The tail can be interesting for the "fetch" part of the plugin as well.

   session([optional Net::SNMP options]) - create new Munin::Plugin::SNMP
       object
	 $session = Munin::Plugin::SNMP->session();

       This method overrides the Net::SNMP constructor to get the connection
       information from the plugin name and/or environment.  Please note that
       no error string is returned.  The function handles errors internally -
       giving a error message and calling die.	Calling die is the right thing
       to do.

       The host name is taken from the plugin symlink, which must be on the
       form "snmp[v3]_<hostname>_<plugin_name>[_args]".

       The "v3" form is taken to mean that SNMPv3 is to be used.  It is also a
       name trick providing a separate "namespace" for devices that use SNMPv3
       so it can be configured separately in munin/plugin-conf.d/ files.
       E.g.:

	 [snmp_*]
	    env.version 2
	    env.community public

	 [snmpv3_*]
	    env.v3username snmpoperator
	    env.v3authpassword s3cr1tpa55w0rd

       See below for how to configure for each different case.	The first case
       above shows Munin's default configuration.

       NOTE: munin-node-configure does not yet utilize the "v3" thing.

       The following environment variables are consulted:

       "env.host"
	   If the plugin name (symlink) does not contain the host name this is
	   used as the host name to connect to.

	   The host name must be specified, but is usually specified in the
	   plugin name.	 If the hostname somehow does not resolve in DNS (or
	   the hosts file) it is possible to do this:

	     [snmp_*]
		env.version 2c
		env.community floppa

	     [snmp_switch1.langfeldt.net]
		env.host 192.168.2.45

	     [snmp_switch2.langfeldt.net]
		env.host 192.168.2.46

       "env.port"
	   The port to connect to.  Default 161.

       "env.timeout"
	   The timeout in seconds to use. Default 5.

       "env.version"
	   The SNMP version to use for the connection. One of 1, 2, 3, snmpv1,
	   snmpv2c or snmpv3.  SNMP v2 is better as it supports bulk
	   operations.	Therefore 2 is the default in "Munin::Plugin::SNMP".
	   If your device supports v3 that may be even better as it supports
	   proper security - but the encryption may slow things down.

	   Security is handled differently for versions 1/2c and 3.  See
	   below.

       SNMP 1/2c authentication
       "env.community"
	   The community name for version 1 and 2c agents. The default is
	   'public'.  If this works your device is probably very insecure and
	   needs a security checkup.

       SNMP 3 authentication
	   SNMP v3 has three security levels. Lowest is "noAuthNoPriv", which
	   provides neither authentication nor encryption.  If a username and
	   "authpassword" are given it goes up to "authNoPriv", and the
	   connection is authenticated.	 If "privpassword" is given the
	   security level becomes "authPriv" - the connection is authenticated
	   and encrypted.

	   Note: Encryption can slow down slow or heavily loaded network
	   devices.  For most uses "authNoPriv" will be secure enough -- the
	   password is sent over the network encrypted in any case.

	   "Munin::Plugin::SNMP" does not support ContextEngineIDs and such
	   for authentication/privacy.	If you see the need and know how it
	   should be done please send patches!

	   For further reading on SNMP v3 security models please consult
	   RFC3414 and the documentation for Net::SNMP.

	   If version is set to 3 or snmpv3 the following variables are used
	   to define authentication:

	   "env.v3username"
	       Username.  There is no default.

	   "env.v3authpassword"
	       Authentication password.	 Optional when encryption is also
	       enabled, in which case defaults to the privacy password
	       ("env.v3privpassword").	The password is sent encrypted (one
	       way hash) over the network.

	   "env.v3authprotocol"
	       Authentication protocol.	 One of 'md5' or 'sha' (HMAC-MD5-96,
	       RFC1321 and SHA-1/HMAC-SHA-96, NIST FIPS PIB 180, RFC2264).
	       The default is 'md5'.

	   "env.v3privpassword"
	       Privacy password to enable encryption.  An empty ('') password
	       is considered as no password and will not enable encryption.

	       Privacy requires a v3privprotocol as well as a v3authprotocol
	       and a v3authpassword, but all of these are defaulted (to 'des',
	       'md5', and the v3privpassword value, respectively) and may
	       therefore be left unspecified.

	   "env.v3privprotocol"
	       If the v3privpassword is set this setting controls what kind of
	       encryption is used to achieve privacy in the session.  Only the
	       very weak 'des' encryption method is supported officially.  The
	       default is 'des'.

	       The implementing perl module (Net::SNMP) also supports '3des'
	       (CBC-3DES-EDE aka Triple-DES, NIST FIPS 46-3) as specified in
	       IETF draft-reeder-snmpv3-usm-3desede.  Whether or not this
	       works with any particular device, we do not know.

   get_hash() - retrieve a table as a hash of hashes
	 $result = $session->get_hash(
				[-callback	  => sub {},]	  # non-blocking
				[-delay		  => $seconds,]	  # non-blocking
				[-contextengineid => $engine_id,] # v3
				[-contextname	  => $name,]	  # v3
				-baseoid	  => $oid,
				-cols		  => \%columns
			    );

       This method transforms the -baseoid and -cols to a array of -columns
       and calls "get_entries()" with all the other arguments.	It then
       transforms the data into a hash of hashes in the following manner:

       The keys of the main hash are the last element(s) of the OIDs, after
       $oid and the matching keys from %columns are removed. The values are
       hashes with keys corresponding to the values of %columns hash and
       values from the subtables corresponding to the keys of %columns.

       For this to work, all the keys of "-cols" must have the same number of
       elements.  Also, don't try to specify a next-to-next-to-leaf-node
       baseoid, the principle it breaks both "get_entries" and the logic in
       "get_hash".

       If (all) the OIDs are unavailable a defined but empty hashref is
       returned.

       Example:

	 $session->get_hash(
		      -baseoid => '1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1', # IF-MIB
		      -cols    => {
				   1 => 'index',
				   2 => 'descr',
				   4 => 'mtu',
				  }
		   );

       given the following SNMP table:

	 IF-MIB::ifIndex.1 = INTEGER: 1
	 IF-MIB::ifIndex.2 = INTEGER: 2
	 IF-MIB::ifDescr.1 = STRING: lo0
	 IF-MIB::ifDescr.2 = STRING: lna0
	 IF-MIB::ifType.1 = INTEGER: softwareLoopback(24)
	 IF-MIB::ifType.2 = INTEGER: ethernetCsmacd(6)
	 IF-MIB::ifMtu.1 = INTEGER: 32768
	 IF-MIB::ifMtu.2 = INTEGER: 1500
	 ...

       will return a hash like this:

	 '1' => {
		 'index' => '1',
		 'mtu' => '32768',
		 'descr' => 'lo0'
		},
	 '2' => {
		 'index' => '2',
		 'descr' => 'lna0',
		 'mtu' => '1500'
		}

   get_single() - Retrieve a single value by OID
	 $uptime = $session->get_single("1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0") || 'U';

       If the call fails to get a value the above call sets $uptime to 'U'
       which Munin interprets as "Undefined" and handles accordingly.

       If you stop to think about it you should probably use "get_hash()" (it
       gets too much, but is good for arrays) or "get_entries()" - it gets
       exactly what you want, so you mus

   get_by_regex() - Retrive table of values filtered by regex applied to the
       value
       This example shows the usage for a netstat plugin.

	 my $tcpConnState = "1.3.6.1.2.1.6.13.1.1.";
	 my $connections = $session->get_by_regex($tcpConnState, "[1-9]");

       It gets all OIDs based at $tcpConnState and only returns the ones that
       contain a number in the value.

TODO
       Lots.

BUGS
       Ilmari wrote: "get_hash()" doesn't handle tables with sparse indices.

       Nicolai Langfeldt: Actually I think it does.

SEE ALSO
       Net::SNMP

AUTHOR
       Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsaaker, Nicolai Langfeldt Rune Nordboe Skillingstad
       added timeout support.

COPYRIGHT/License.
       Copyright (c) 2004-2009 Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsaaker and Nicolai
       Langfeldt.

       All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can
       redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
       Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2
       dated June, 1991.

perl v5.20.3			  2016-02-19		Munin::Plugin::SNMP(3)
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