On Thu, September 16, 2010 8:45 am, Tony Sceats wrote: > you definitely need to setup snmpd.conf, although I'd be surprised if > decent defaults weren't already there > > snmpwalk is a useful utility for debugging this stuff - you should > basically get every snmp metric available by pointing this at your > monitored machine, using the right snmp version and credentials of course > > On Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 7:58 AM, Voytek Eymont <li...@sbt.net.au> wrote:
Tony, thanks the default conf works with default community, I get some info; I can snmpwalk, just don't seem to see anything (that appears to be NIC) # snmpwalk -v 2c localhost -c public system SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0 = STRING: Linux centos 2.6.18-194.el5 #1 SMP Fri Apr 2 14:58:35 EDT 2010 i686 SNMPv2-MIB::sysObjectID.0 = OID: NET-SNMP-MIB::netSnmpAgentOIDs.10 DISMAN-EVENT-MIB::sysUpTimeInstance = Timeticks: (3027643) 8:24:36.43 SNMPv2-MIB::sysContact.0 = STRING: sysadmin SNMPv2-MIB::sysName.0 = STRING: centos ... -- Voytek -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html