Snmp-Server Engineid Local - HP Bc1500 - BladeSystem - Blade PC Reference Manual

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snmp-server engineid local

The snmp-server engineid local Global Configuration mode command specifies the Simple
Network Management Protocol (SNMP) engine ID on the local device. To remove the
configured engine ID, use the no form of this command.
Syntax
snmp-server engineid local {engineid-string | default}
no snmp-server engineid local
Parameters
engineid-string — Specifies a character string that identifies the engine ID.
(Range: engine ID must contain from 9 through 64 hexadecimal digits)
default — The engine ID is created automatically based on the device MAC address.
Default Setting
The engine ID is not configured.
If SNMPv3 is enabled using this command, and the default is specified, the default engine ID is
defined per standard as:
First 4 octets — first bit = 1, the rest is IANA Enterprise number = 674.
Fifth octet — set to 3 to indicate the MAC address that follows.
Last 6 octets — MAC address of the device.
Command Mode
Global Configuration mode
Command Usage
To use SNMPv3, you have to specify an engine ID for the device. You can specify your own ID
or use a default string that is generated using the MAC address of the device.
If the SNMPv3 engine ID is deleted or the configuration file is erased, SNMPv3 cannot be used.
By default, SNMPv1/v2 are enabled on the device. SNMPv3 is enabled only by defining the
Local Engine ID.
If you want to specify your own ID, you do not have to specify the entire 32-character engine ID
if it contains trailing zeros. Specify only the portion of the engine ID up to the point where just
zeros remain in the value. For example, to configure an engine ID of
123400000000000000000000, you can specify snmp-server engineID local 1234.
Since the engine ID should be unique within an administrative domain, the following is
recommended:
For a standalone device, use the default keyword to configure the engine ID.
Changing the value of the engine ID has the following important side-effect. A user's password
(entered on the command line) is converted to an MD5 or SHA security digest. This digest is
based on both the password and the local engine ID. The user's command line password is then
destroyed, as required by RFC 2274. As a result, the security digests of SNMPv3 users become
invalid if the local value of the engine ID change, and the users will have to be reconfigured.
You cannot specify an engine ID that consists of all 0x0, all 0xF or 0x000000001.
HP PC Blade Switch CLI Reference Guide
www.hp.com
SNMP Commands
21-7

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