NAME
snmpd.conf
—
Simple Network Management Protocol
daemon configuration file
DESCRIPTION
snmpd.conf
is the configuration file for
the snmpd(8) daemon.
The snmpd.conf
file is divided into the
following main sections:
- Macros
- User-defined variables may be defined and used later, simplifying the configuration file.
- Global Configuration
- Global runtime settings for snmpd(8).
- User Configuration
- USM user definitions.
- OID Configuration
- Custom configuration of SNMP object identifiers and values.
The current line can be extended over multiple lines using a backslash (‘\’). Comments can be put anywhere in the file using a hash mark (‘#’), and extend to the end of the current line. Care should be taken when commenting out multi-line text: the comment is effective until the end of the entire block.
Argument names not beginning with a letter, digit, or underscore must be quoted.
Additional configuration files can be included with the
include
keyword, for example:
include "/etc/snmpd.conf.local"
MACROS
Macros can be defined that will later be expanded in context.
Macro names must start with a letter, digit, or underscore, and may contain
any of those characters. Macro names may not be reserved words (for example,
community
, system
, or
oid
). Macros are not expanded inside quotes.
For example:
ext_addr="192.168.0.1" listen on $ext_addr
GLOBAL CONFIGURATION
The following options can be set globally:
filter-pf-addresses
(yes
|no
)- If set to
yes
, snmpd(8) will filter out the OPENBSD-PF-MIB::pfTblAddrTable tree. Addresses stored in PF tables will not be available, but CPU use will be reduced during bulk walks. The default isno
. filter-routes
(yes
|no
)- If set to
yes
, ask the kernel to filter route update messages on the routing socket. Routing table information will not be available, but CPU use will be reduced during bulk updates. The default isno
. listen on
[tcp
|udp
] address [port
port] [flags]- Specify the local address
snmpd(8) should listen on for incoming SNMP messages, or
any
to listen on all local IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. Multiplelisten on
statements are supported. If nolisten on
statement is present, the default islisten on
any
.The flags are as follows:
read
- Accept get, getnext and bulkget requests.
write
- Accepts set requests.
notify
- Accepts trapv1 and trapv2 requests.
snmpv1
- Enable SNMPv1 subsystem on the listen address.
snmpv2c
- Enable SNMPv2c subsystem on the listen address.
snmpv3
- Enable SNMPv3 subsystem on the listen address.
The default protocol is
udp
. The default port is 161, unlessnotify
is the only permission flag; which sets the port to 162. If no permission flags are specified it defaults to “read
write
”, ornotify
when port is 162. If no subsystem flags are specified, it defaults tosnmpv3
.Having
notify
set requires at least onetrap handle
statement. engineid
[pen
enterprise] format- Set the snmp engineid, used for instance identification and key generation
for the
user
auth and key. enterprise specifies the private enterprise number of the instance and can be either an integer oropenbsd
(default).format can be one of the following:
ipv4
address- The engineID's format identifier is set to 1 and the ipv4 address is used in the format.
ipv6
address- The engineID's format identifier is set to 2 and the ipv6 address is used in the format.
mac
address- The engineID's format identifier is set to 3 and the mac address is used in the format.
text
text- The engineID's format identifier is set to 4 and the ASCII text is used in the format.
octets
octetstring- The engineID's format identifier is set to 5 and the octetstring in hexadecimal is used in the format.
hosthash
[hostname]- The engineID's format identifier is set to 129 and the first 27 bytes
of the sha256 hash of the hostname are used in
the format. This option is only valid for
enterprise
openbsd
. If used for the local engineID, then hostname defaults to the value of hostname(1). This format is the default. - number octetstring
- The engineID's format identifier is set to
number and the octetstring
in hexadecimal is used in the format. This format is only available if
enterprise is not
openbsd
. agentid
octetstring- RFC1910 legacy format. octetstring must be 8 bytes (or 16 characters in hexadecimal format).
read-only community
string- Specify the name of the read-only community. There is no default value.
read-write
community
string- Specify the name of the read-write community. There is no default value.
seclevel
(none
|auth
|enc
)- Specify the lowest security level that
snmpd(8) accepts on SNMPv3:
none
- Both authentication and encryption of messages is optional.
auth
- Authentication of messages is mandatory. snmpd(8) will discard any messages that don't have a valid digest. Encryption of messages is optional.
enc
- Messages must be encrypted and must have a valid digest for authentication. Otherwise they will be discarded. This is the default value.
system contact
string- Specify the name or description of the system contact, typically a name or an email address. The default value is root@hostname using the hostname of the local machine.
system description
string- Specify a description of the local system. The default value is the
operating system identification as printed by the
uname(1) command using the
-a
flag:OpenBSD myhost.example.com 4.2 GENERIC#595 i386
system location
string- Specify the string describing the location of the local system, typically a physical location. The default value is an empty string.
system name
string- Specify the name of the local system, typically a fully-qualified domain name. The default value is the hostname of the local system.
system oid
oid-string- Specify the authoritative identification of the local system. The default value is 1.3.6.1.4.1.30155.23.1 (iso.org.dod.internet.private.enterprises.openbsd.23.1) identifying a common OpenBSD system.
system services
number- Specify a magic value which indicates the set of services that the local system may provide. Refer to the sysServices description in the SNMP MIB for details. The value is given in decimal.
trap community
string- Specify the name of the trap community. There is no default value.
trap handle
oid "command"- Execute
command
upon receipt of an SNMP trap that begins with a prefix ofoid
. Alternately, the string "default
" may be used, in which case the prefix used is1.3
. The invoked command will receive the following information about the trap on standard input, one per line, in this order: the resolved hostname of the host sending the trap, the IP address of the host sending the trap, and any variable bindings contained in the trap (the OID followed by the value, separated by a single space). This option requires at least onelisten on
statement with anotify
flag set. Traps over SNMPv3 are currently unsupported. trap receiver
address [oid
oid-string]snmpv2c
[community
string] [source-address
address]- Specify the address or FQDN of a remote trap
receiver for outgoing traps sent by
snmpd(8). This option may be specified multiple times. The daemon
will send outgoing traps in
snmpv2c
format. The default community is specified by the globaltrap community
option. The IPv4 or IPv6 source address of the traps can be enforced using trap receiver
address [oid
oid-string] [snmpv3
]user
name [seclevel
level] [source-address
address]- Specify the address or FQDN of a remote trap
receiver for outgoing traps sent by
snmpd(8). This option may be specified multiple times. The daemon
will send outgoing traps in
snmpv3
format.user
must point to an existing globaluser
. Ifseclevel
is not defined, it defaults to the globalseclevel
option. The IPv4 or IPv6 source address of the traps can be enforced usingsource-address
.
USER CONFIGURATION
Users for the SNMP User-based Security Model (USM, RFC 3414) must be defined in the configuration file:
user
name [authkey
keyauth
hmac] [enckey
keyenc
cipher]- Defines a known user. The
authkey
keyword is required to specify the digest key used to authenticate messages. If this keyword is omitted then authentication is disabled for this user account. Optionally the HMAC algorithm used for authentication can be specified. hmac must be eitherhmac-md5
,hmac-sha1
,hmac-sha224
,hmac-sha256
,hmac-sha384
, orhmac-sha512
. If omitted, the default ishmac-sha1
.With
enckey
the encryption key used to encrypt and decrypt messages for privacy is defined. Without anenckey
specification the user account will neither accept encrypted incoming messages nor will it encrypt outgoing messages. The enc algorithm can be eitherdes
oraes
and defaults toaes
.Any user account that has encryption enabled requires authentication to be enabled too.
OID CONFIGURATION
It is possible to specify user-defined OIDs in the configuration file:
oid
oid-stringname
name [read-only
|read-write
] [type] value- Return the specified value to the client for this OID. The
read-write
option may allow the client to override it, and the type is eitherstring
orinteger
.
FILES
- /etc/snmpd.conf
- Default location of the configuration file.
- /etc/examples/snmpd.conf
- Example configuration file.
EXAMPLES
The following example will tell snmpd(8) to listen on localhost for SNMPv2c messages only with the community “8LHQtm1QLGzk”, override the default system OID, set the magic services value, and provide some custom OID values:
listen on 127.0.0.1 snmpv2c read-only community 8LHQtm1QLGzk system oid 1.3.6.1.4.1.30155.23.2 system services 74 oid 1.3.6.1.4.1.30155.42.1 name myName read-only string "humppa" oid 1.3.6.1.4.1.30155.42.2 name myStatus read-only integer 1
The next example will enforce SNMPv3 with authenticated and encrypted communication and the user-based security model. The configuration defines several users using varying encryption and authentication algorithms.
seclevel enc user "mgmt" auth hmac-sha256 authkey "password123" enc aes enckey "321drowssap" user "hans" auth hmac-sha1 authkey "password456" enc aes enckey "654drowssap" user "sophie" auth hmac-md5 authkey "password789" enc des enckey "987drowssap"
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The snmpd.conf
file format first appeared
in OpenBSD 4.3.
AUTHORS
The snmpd(8) program was written by Reyk Floeter <reyk@openbsd.org>.