Manpages - NetSNMP_TrapReceiver.3pm

Table of Contents



NAME

NetSNMP::TrapReceiver - Embedded perl trap handling for Net-SNMP’s snmptrapd

SYNOPSIS

Put the following lines in your snmptrapd.conf file:

perl NetSNMP::TrapReceiver::register(“trapOID”, \&myfunc);

ABSTRACT

The NetSNMP::TrapReceiver module is used to register perl subroutines into the Net-SNMP snmptrapd process. Net-SNMP MUST have been configured using –enable-embedded-perl. Registration of functions is then done through the snmptrapd.conf configuration file. This module can NOT be used in a normal perl script to receive traps. It is intended solely for embedded use within the snmptrapd demon.

DESCRIPTION

Within the snmptrapd.conf file, the keyword perl may be used to call any perl expression and using this ability, you can use the NetSNMP::TrapReceiver module to register functions which will be called every time a given notification (a trap or an inform) is received. Registered functions are called with 2 arguments. The first is a reference to a hash containing information about how the trap was received (what version of the SNMP protocol was used, where it came from, what SNMP user name or community name it was sent under, etc). The second argument is a reference to an array containing the variable bindings (OID and value information) that define the noification itself. Each variable is itself a reference to an array containing four values: a NetSNMP::OID object, a string representation of the value that came associated with it, the value’s numeric type (see NetSNMP::ASN for further details on SNMP typing information), and the raw value of the trap, encoded according to its type, 64-bit integer types are returned as strings, integer types as integers, strings as strings, object identifiers as NetSNMP::OID objects, and any other types as undefs.

Registered functions should return one of the following values:

NETSNMPTRAPD_HANDLER_OK
Handling the trap succeeded, but lets the snmptrapd demon check for further appropriate handlers.
NETSNMPTRAPD_HANDLER_FAIL
Handling the trap failed, but lets the snmptrapd demon check for further appropriate handlers.
NETSNMPTRAPD_HANDLER_BREAK
Stops evaluating the list of handlers for this specific trap, but lets the snmptrapd demon apply global handlers.
NETSNMPTRAPD_HANDLER_FINISH
Stops searching for further appropriate handlers.

If a handler function does not return anything appropriate or even nothing at all, a return value of NETSNMPTRAPD_HANDLER_OK is assumed.

Subroutines are registered using the NetSNMP::TrapReceiver::register function, which takes two arguments. The first is a string describing the notification you want to register for (such as linkUp or MyMIB::MyTrap or .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021….). Two special keywords can be used in place of an OID: default and all. The default keyword indicates you want your handler to be called in the case where no other handlers are called. The all keyword indicates that the handler should ALWAYS be called for every notification.

EXAMPLE

As an example, put the following code into a file (say /usr/local/share/snmp/mytrapd.pl):

#!/usr/bin/perl sub my_receiver { print “** PERL RECEIVED A NOTIFICATION:\n”; # print the PDU info (a hash reference) print “PDU INFO:\n”; foreach my $k(keys(%{$_[0]})) { if ($k eq “securityEngineID”

  $k eq “contextEngineID”) { printf “ %-30s 0x%s\n”, $k, unpack(h*,

$_[0]{$k}); } else { printf “ %-30s %s\n”, $k, $_[0]{$k}; } } # print the variable bindings: print “VARBINDS:\n”; foreach my $x (@{$_[1]}) { printf “ %-30s type=%-2d value=%s\n”, $x->[0], $x->[2], $x->[1]; } } NetSNMP::TrapReceiver::register(“all”, \&my_receiver) || warn “failed to register our perl trap handler\n”; print STDERR “Loaded the example perl snmptrapd handler\n”;

Then, put the following line in your snmprapd.conf file:

perl do “/usr/local/share/snmp/mytrapd.pl”;

Start snmptrapd (as root, and the following other opions make it stay in the foreground and log to stderr):

snmptrapd -f -Le

You should see it start up and display the final message from the end of the above perl script:

Loaded the perl snmptrapd handler 2004-02-11 10:08:45 NET-SNMP version 5.2 Started.

Then, if you send yourself a fake trap using the following example command:

snmptrap -v 2c -c mycommunity localhost 0 linkUp ifIndex.1 i 1 \ ifAdminStatus.1 i up ifOperStatus.1 i up ifDescr s eth0

You should see the following output appear from snmptrapd as your perl code gets executed:

Passing Arguments

If you need to pass arguments in to the script, you’ll need to do it by one of two methods:

Using Subroutines

You can either define a subroutine in the file rather than have the file itself do something. IE, in the file if you put:

sub foo { print “$_[0]\n”; }

and then put these lines in the snmptrapd.conf file:

perl do /path/to/script perl foo(“hello world”); perl foo(“now I am passing something different”);

It’d call the foo function twice, and print the results to the console where snmptrapd was started.

Using Variables

Or you could always set a variable ahead of time:

perl $myVariable = 42; perl do /path/to/script

And have the script look for and use the $myVariable value in the script

EXPORT

None by default.

Exportable constants

NETSNMPTRAPD_AUTH_HANDLER NETSNMPTRAPD_HANDLER_BREAK NETSNMPTRAPD_HANDLER_FAIL NETSNMPTRAPD_HANDLER_FINISH NETSNMPTRAPD_HANDLER_OK NETSNMPTRAPD_POST_HANDLER NETSNMPTRAPD_PRE_HANDLER

SEE ALSO

NetSNMP::OID, NetSNMP::ASN

snmptrapd.conf (5) for configuring the Net-SNMP trap receiver.

snmpd.conf (5) for configuring the Net-SNMP snmp agent for sending traps.

http://www.net-snmp.org/

AUTHOR

  1. Hardaker, <hardaker@users.sourceforge.net>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2004 by W. Hardaker

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

Author: dt

Created: 2022-02-20 Sun 18:07