check_snmp - warning numbers

Matias Blanco matias at valastro.com.ar
Fri May 8 18:02:28 CEST 2009


Hello,

When i made an snmpwalk to a ip computer there is no response.
The snmpwalk to a switch,router or printer works ok.

Does any body know the reason?


Cristian...




-----Mensaje original-----
De: Matias Blanco [mailto:matias at valastro.com.ar] 
Enviado el: Jueves, 07 de Mayo de 2009 17:02
Para: 'Alejandro Sánchez Meroño'; Nagios-users at lists.sourceforge.net
Asunto: Re: [Nagios-users] check_snmp - warning numbers

Hello, 
How can i do an snmpwalk on my switch?

Thanks,

Cristian...




-----Mensaje original-----
De: Alejandro Sánchez Meroño [mailto:alejandro.sanchez at ite.es] 
Enviado el: Jueves, 07 de Mayo de 2009 05:44
Para: Matias Blanco; Nagios-users at lists.sourceforge.net
Asunto: RE: [Nagios-users] check_snmp - warning numbers

Hola de nuevo...

I'll answer you in English so that anybody in the list can understand
and participate in this subject.

I think that if you don't know exactly which parameter to monitor you
should browse the whole OID list that you receive when you do a snmpwalk
on your switch, and identify the ones that fit your needs, with the help
of the website I said yesterday, or any other OIDs reference.

My case: The only thing I want to detect is if there is any damaged port
in any of my switches. So what I did was to snmpwalk on a switch which I
positively knew that had its port #2 damaged, and discover which OID was
significantly different for this port. And the one I found is: 

iso.3.6.1.2.1.10.7.2.1.7

(maybe you can find it as its equivalent: SNMPv2-SMI::mib-2.10.7.2.1.7)

defined as: "a count of frames for which the first transmission attempt
on a particular interface is delayed because the medium is busy".

The thing is that it's the only OID I found that gave a very high value
for port #2 (about 65,000 or so) and 0 for the rest of ports that work
properly.

The command I defined for this was like this: 

define command {
	command_name check_port
	command_line $USER1$/check_snmp -H $HOSTADDRESS$ -C password -O
iso.3.6.1.2.1.10.7.2.1.7.$ARG1$ -w 1 -c 10 -u retries
}

For sure there must be somebody else in the list who can give to you a
more detailed or a more formally correct answer...

Hasta la proxima, 

      Alejandro

==
Alejandro Sanchez Merono
Area de Informatica y Comunicaciones
Instituto de Tecnologia Electrica - http://www.ite.es 
Valencia - Spain



-----Mensaje original-----
De: Matias Blanco [mailto:matias at valastro.com.ar] 
Enviado el: miércoles, 06 de mayo de 2009 19:27
Para: Alejandro Sánchez Meroño; Nagios-users at lists.sourceforge.net
Asunto: RE: [Nagios-users] check_snmp - warning numbers

Hola Alejandro,

Ahora otra cosa:

De que manera crees que pueda chequear los puertos de mi switch con
nagios para tener una idea más clara de lo que está sucediendo?
Porque esos paquetes entrantes con errores no se si son por causa de la
PC o de los puerto del switch...

Muchas Gracias...

Cristian




************************************

Hola Matías... :-) and hola everyone...

There exists a magical website where to identify every OID you can check
with SNMP, the link is: 

http://support.ipmonitor.com/mibs_byoidtree.aspx

For your particular issue, if you type "RFC1213-MIB" at the "Search
for:" form, click the result given ("RFC1213-MIB"), and then "View:
Oid-tree", you'll be able to locate "ifInErrors(14)" at the tree shown,
and clicking it you'll find its Description, which reads literally:

"The number of inbound packets that contained errors preventing them
from being deliverable to a higher-layer protocol."

That's the answer to your question!!

Now some other questions appear...

Wouldn't it be nicer to know what exactly are you monitoring before you
monitor it, so you could properly interpret the results?

Is that parameter (number of inbound packets that contained errors and
blah blah blah...) significant enough to determine if a port is working
properly or not? 

Hope this helps...

Best regards, 

         Alejandro

==
Alejandro Sanchez Merono
Area de Informatica y Comunicaciones
Instituto de Tecnologia Electrica - http://www.ite.es Valencia - Spain


 

-----Mensaje original-----
De: Matias Blanco [mailto:matias at valastro.com.ar] Enviado el: miércoles,
06 de mayo de 2009 17:49
Para: Nagios-users at lists.sourceforge.net
Asunto: [Nagios-users] check_snmp - warning numbers

Hi, I am using the check_snmp nagios`s plugin. And when we check the
ports status of a 3com Baseline 2250 Plus, we recibe many ports results:

SNMP OK - 0
SNMP WARNING - *1*
SNMP WARNING - *84*
SNMP WARNING - *2*
SNMP WARNING - *2*
SNMP WARNING - *4*

The question is, what´s the meaning of the warning numbers?


Other information:
------------------

# 'check_snmp' command definition
define command{
        command_name    check_snmp
        command_line    $USER1$/check_snmp -H $HOSTADDRESS$ $ARG1$
        }

Example of service
-------------------

define service {
	use			service-15x3x5-switchs
	host_name		3COM2250P
	service_description	Port 03 [In Errors]
	check_command		check_snmp!-C public -o ifInErrors.3 -w
0 -m RFC1213-MIB
	notifications_enabled	0
	}



THANKS...
Matías Blanco.





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The NEW KODAK i700 Series Scanners deliver under ANY circumstances! Your
production scanning environment may not be a perfect world - but thanks to
Kodak, there's a perfect scanner to get the job done! With the NEW KODAK i700
Series Scanner you'll get full speed at 300 dpi even with all image 
processing features enabled. http://p.sf.net/sfu/kodak-com
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::: Please include Nagios version, plugin version (-v) and OS when reporting any issue. 
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