Configuring The Snmp Community; Configuring Alert Entries For Snmp Traps - Juniper JUNOS OS 10.4 - PROTECTED SYSTEM DOMAIN Configuration Manual

Protected system domain configuration
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JUNOS 10.4 Protected System Domain Configuration Guide

Configuring the SNMP Community

Configuring Alert Entries for SNMP Traps

44
Tasks to configure SNMP traps and alerts on the JCS management module are:
Configuring the SNMP Community on page 44
Configuring Alert Entries for SNMP Traps on page 44
Configuring Monitored Alerts for SNMP Traps on page 45
The SNMP community defines the relationship between an SNMP server system and
client systems. To configure the SNMP community, set the community name and type.
Also set the IP address for the community.
To configure the SNMP community:
Log in to the JCS management module.
1.
Use the
command to specify
env
2.
system> env -T mm[1]
Use the
command to configure the SNMP community. For example:
snmp
3.
system:mm[1]> snmp -c3 trap
system:mm[1]> snmp -c3i1 192.168.171.100 -ca3 trap
In this example, the community 3 name is
is
, and the community 3 type is
192.168.171.100
CAUTION: By default, SNMP is enabled on the JCS management module.
Do not disable SNMP. If you disable SNMP, your system might not function
correctly. Also, do not erase or change the SNMP default c1 community.
To use SNMP notifications on the JCS management module, you must specify the alert
recipient. These recipients indicate where network registrar notifications are directed.
Alert recipients are numbered from 1 through 12.
To configure the alert recipient:
Log in to the JCS management module.
1.
Use the
command to specify
2.
env
system> env -T mm[1]
Use the
command to configure the alert recipient. For example:
alertentries
3.
system:mm[1]> alertentries -1 -n trap -status on -f none -t snmp
In this example, the alert recipient number is
status is
, alert filtering is
on
the alert type is
SNMP
.
as the configuration target. For example:
mm[1]
, the IP address of the trap destination
trap
.
trap
as the configuration target. For example:
mm[1]
, the recipient is named
1
(all alerts are received, not just critical alerts), and
none
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.
, the alert
trap

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