From: Pierre-Alex (paguanel@hotmail.com)
Date: Wed Jun 14 2006 - 15:31:32 ART
Roberto,
You have to enable traps first before it works on the server-host
When you do 2b you enable ALL traps globally, then you only send cpu traps
to the server-host
When you do 2a you ONLY enable cpu traps globally, then you send cpu traps
to the server-host
For 1 I can't tell you right now because I do not have a router to check the
syntax, but I would say they both do the same thing (to check )
HTH
Pierre-Alex
----- Original Message -----
From: "Roberto Fernandez" <rofernandez@us.telefonica.com>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 14, 2006 6:56 PM
Subject: Clarification needed on SNMP
> Friends,
>
> 1- What would be the difference between?
>
> snmp-server host 192.168.1.1 CISCOTRAP cpu
> snmp-server host 192.168.1.1 traps CISCOTRAP cpu
>
>
> 2- Would this two be equivalent?
>
> a)
> snmp-server enable traps cpu
> snmp-server host 192.168.1.1 CISCOTRAP
>
> b)
> snmp-server enable traps
> snmp-server host 192.168.1.1 CISCOTRAP cpu
>
> If someone has a chewed-up digest on those SNMP options I'd really
> appreciate it.
>
> Thanks in advance,
> Roberto
>
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