Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)

The Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) enables devices on a network to be monitored and configured from a central instance. Since the initial release of SNMPv1 in 1988, it has continued to evolve with the versions SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 to meet the needs of increasingly complex network infrastructures and the demands for user-friendliness, security and flexibility.

The protocol SNMP (simple network management protocol) meets the highest standards for convenient management and monitoring of a network. It allows for the early detection of problems and errors on a network and offers support in eliminating them. The simple network management protocol allows a central instance to monitor and configure the devices on a network from, and it regulates the communication between the monitored devices and the monitoring station. This means that parameters such as the status of the device, CPU utilization, the temperature of a device, its connection status, errors, and others can be monitored and analyzed, for example with LANmonitor. The administrator benefits from active support with network management and is helped to detect problems at an early stage. The latest SNMPv3 version of the protocol, in contrast to the previous versions SNMPv1 and SNMPv2, now enables encrypted data communication between the network and its management system, which provides a crucial security factor. By offering different user accounts for authentication, the integrated user administration provides optimal control over access to the configurations. You have precise control over the rights to the different levels of access that administrators receive, and the network is optimally protected.

SNMP components

The typical SNMP architecture consists of three components:

SNMP manager
The SNMP manager sends SNMP requests to the SNMP agent and evaluates the SNMP responses from it. LANconfig and LANmonitor act as this type of SNMP manager. LCOS devices comply with the standards SNMPv1, SNMPv2, and SNMPv3, so it is possible to use an alternative SNMP administration and management software.
SNMP agent
The SNMP agent is a module that is active on the managed device. When it receives a request from the SNMP manager, it retrieves the requested status data from the MIB in the device and returns this information to the SNMP manager as an "SNMP response". Depending on the configuration, an SNMP agent that detects certain changes of state in the managed device can independently act to send an "SNMP trap" to the SNMP manager. It is also possible to send a notification to the device administrator by means of a SYSLOG message or e‑mail.
Managed device
The status of this device is stored in its Management Information Base (MIB). When requested by the SNMP agent, the device reads out this information and returns it to the SNMP agent.

By default, SNMP requests and SNMP responses are exchanged between the SNMP manager and SNMP agent by the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) on port 161. SNMP traps are transmitted with the UDP via port 162 by default.

SNMP versions

The differences between the various versions of SNMP can be summarized as follows:

SNMPv1
Version 1 was launched in 1988 and has long been regarded as the de facto standard for network management. In SNMPv1, the SNMP manager authenticates at the SNMP agent by means of a community string, which must be identical on both components. The security of this is very limited, as the community strings are transmitted in cleartext. The increase in demands for secure network communication necessitated a revision of version 1.
SNMPv2
After 1993, the main improvements in version 2 were to its user-friendliness. Numerous intermediate steps and the repeated rejection of concepts eventually led to the version SNMPv2c. This version allows large amounts of data to be requested via a GetBulkRequest command and also the communication between SNMP managers. However, the exchange of the community strings was still as cleartext as with version 1.
SNMPv3
From 1999, version 3 finally met the by then much-needed security requirements. Among other things, the communication was encrypted and the communication partners first had to authenticate and authorize themselves. Also, the structure of SNMP became more modular so that improvements, for example in encryption technologies, can be incorporated into SNMPv3, without having to completely redesign the standard.
LCOS supports the following SNMP versions:
  • SNMPv1
  • SNMPv2c
  • SNMPv3

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