How To Configure Snmp - Cisco Catalyst 2960 series Configuration Manual

Consolidated platform configuration guide, ios release 15.2(4)e
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How to Configure SNMP

• To configure a remote user, specify the IP address or port number for the remote SNMP agent of the
• Before you configure remote users for a particular agent, configure the SNMP engine ID, using the
• When configuring SNMP informs, you need to configure the SNMP engine ID for the remote agent in
• If a local user is not associated with a remote host, the switch does not send informs for the auth
• Changing the value of the SNMP engine ID has significant results. A user's password (entered on the
Related Topics
Configuring SNMP Groups and Users, on page 456
Monitoring SNMP Status, on page 467
How to Configure SNMP
Disabling the SNMP Agent
The no snmp-server global configuration command disables all running versions (Version 1, Version 2C,
and Version 3) of the SNMP agent on the device. You reenable all versions of the SNMP agent by the first
snmp-server global configuration command that you enter. There is no Cisco IOS command specifically
designated for enabling SNMP.
Follow these steps to disable the SNMP agent.
Before You Begin
The SNMP Agent must be enabled before it can be disabled. The SNMP agent is enabled by the first
snmp-server global configuration command entered on the device.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. enable
2. configure terminal
3. no snmp-server
4. end
5. show running-config
6. copy running-config startup-config
Consolidated Platform Configuration Guide, Cisco IOS Release 15.2(4)E (Catalyst 2960-X Switches)
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device where the user resides.
snmp-server engineID global configuration command with the remote option. The remote agent's
SNMP engine ID and user password are used to compute the authentication and privacy digests. If you
do not configure the remote engine ID first, the configuration command fails.
the SNMP database before you can send proxy requests or informs to it.
(authNoPriv) and the priv (authPriv) authentication levels.
command line) is converted to an MD5 or SHA security digest based on the password and the local
engine ID. The command-line password is then destroyed, as required by RFC 2274. Because of this
deletion, if the value of the engine ID changes, the security digests of SNMPv3 users become invalid,
and you need to reconfigure SNMP users by using the snmp-server user username global configuration
command. Similar restrictions require the reconfiguration of community strings when the engine ID
changes.

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