Configuration data may be included in configuration files
that is located in the configuration directory. The name of this
directory is given in the config_dir configuration
parameter. These files are read at start-up.
The directory where the configuration files are found is given as a parameter to the manager.
The entry format in all files are Erlang terms, separated by a '.' and a newline. In the following sections, the formats of these terms are described. Comments may be specified as ordinary Erlang comments.
Syntax errors in these files are discovered and reported with the
function config_err/2 of the
error report module
at start-up.
The manager information should be stored in a file called
manager.conf.
Each entry is a tuple of size two:
{Variable, Value}.
Variable is one of the following:
address - which defines the IP address of the
manager. Default is local host.port - which defines which UDP port the manager uses
for communicating with agents. Mandatory.engine_id - The SnmpEngineID as defined in
SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB. Mandatory.max_message_size - The snmpEngineMaxMessageSize as
defined in SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB. Mandatory.Value is the value for the variable.
The following example shows a manager.conf file:
{address, [141,213,11,24]}.
{port, 5000}.
{engine_id, "mgrEngine"}.
{max_message_size, 484}.
The value of engine_id is a string, which should have a
very specific structure. See RFC 2271/2571 for details.
For each manager user, the manager needs some information.
This information is either added in the users.conf config
file or by calling the
register_user
function in runtime.
Each row defines a manager user of the manager.
Each entry is a tuple of size three:
{UserId, UserMod, UserData}.
UserId is any term (used to uniquely identify the user).
UserMod is the user callback module (atom).
UserData is any term (passed on to the user when calling the
UserMod.
The information needed to handle agents should be stored in a
file called agents.conf. It is also possible to add agents
in runtime by calling the
register_agent.
Each entry is a tuple of size thirteen:
{UserId,
TargetName, Comm, Ip, Port, EngineID, Timeout,
MaxMessageSize, Version, SecModel, SecName, SecLevel}.
UserId is the identity of the manager user
responsible for this agent (term).
TargetName is a string.
Comm is the community string (string).
Ip is the ip address of the agent (a list of four integers).
Port is the port number of the agent (integer).
EngineID is the engine-id of the agent (string).
Timeout is re-transmission timeout
(infinity | integer).
MaxMessageSize is the max message size for outgoing messages
to this agent (integer).
Version is the version (v1 | v2 | v3).
SecModel is the security model (any | v1 | v2c | usm).
SecName is the security name (string).
SecLevel is security level (noAuthNoPriv | authNoPriv |
authPriv).
The information about Security data for USM should be stored in a
file called usm.conf, which must be present if the manager
wishes to use SNMPv3 when commuincating with agents. It is also
possible to add usm data in runtime by calling the
register_usm_user.
The corresponding table is usmUserTable in the
SNMP-USER-BASED-SM-MIB.
Each entry is a term:
{EngineID, UserName, AuthP, AuthKey, PrivP, PrivKey}.
{EngineID, UserName, SecName, AuthP, AuthKey, PrivP, PrivKey}.
The first case is when we have the identity-function
(SecName = UserName).
EngineID is a string.
UserName is a string.
SecName is a string.
AuthP is a usmNoAuthProtocol,
usmHMACMD5AuthProtocol, or usmHMACSHAAuthProtocol.
AuthKey is a list (of integer). This is the User's
secretlocalized authentication key. It is not visible in the MIB.
The length of this key needs to be 16 if
usmHMACMD5AuthProtocol is used, and 20 if
usmHMACSHAAuthProtocol is used.
PrivP is a usmNoPrivProtocol,
usmDESPrivProtocol or usmAesCfb128Protocol.
PrivKey is a list (of integer). This is the User's secret
localized encryption key. It is not visible in the MIB. The length
of this key needs to be 16 if usmDESPrivProtocol
or usmAesCfb128Protocol is used.