Asynchronous: asyncio#
The asyncio
module first appeared in standard library since
Python 3.3 (in provisional basis). Its main design feature is that it
makes asynchronous code looking like synchronous one thus eliminating
“callback hell”.
With asyncio built-in facilities, you could run many SNMP queries in parallel and/or sequentially, interleave SNMP queries with I/O operations with other systems. Other asyncio-compatible Python modules can be easily found as it is a popular programming paradigm.
In most examples approximate analogues of well known Net-SNMP snmp* tools command line options are shown. That may help those readers who, by chance are familiar with Net-SNMP tools, better understanding what example code does.
Here’s a quick example on a simple SNMP GET by high-level API:
with SNMPv1, community ‘public’
over IPv4/UDP
to an Agent at demo.pysnmp.com:161
for an instance of SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0 MIB object
Based on asyncio I/O framework
import asyncio
from pysnmp.hlapi.asyncio.slim import Slim
from pysnmp.smi.rfc1902 import ObjectIdentity, ObjectType
async def run():
with Slim(1) as slim:
errorIndication, errorStatus, errorIndex, varBinds = await slim.get(
"public",
"demo.pysnmp.com",
161,
ObjectType(ObjectIdentity("SNMPv2-MIB", "sysDescr", 0)),
)
if errorIndication:
print(errorIndication)
elif errorStatus:
print(
"{} at {}".format(
errorStatus.prettyPrint(),
errorIndex and varBinds[int(errorIndex) - 1][0] or "?",
)
)
else:
for varBind in varBinds:
print(" = ".join([x.prettyPrint() for x in varBind]))
asyncio.run(run())
To make use of SNMPv3 and USM, the following code performs a series of SNMP GETNEXT operations effectively fetching a table of SNMP variables from SNMP Agent:
with SNMPv3, user ‘usr-none-none’, no authentication, no privacy
over IPv4/UDP
to an Agent at demo.pysnmp.com:161
for all OIDs past SNMPv2-MIB::system
run till end-of-mib condition is reported by Agent
based on asyncio I/O framework
import asyncio
from pysnmp.hlapi.asyncio import *
async def run(varBinds):
snmpEngine = SnmpEngine()
while True:
errorIndication, errorStatus, errorIndex, varBindTable = await bulkCmd(
snmpEngine,
UsmUserData("usr-none-none"),
UdpTransportTarget(("demo.pysnmp.com", 161)),
ContextData(),
0,
50,
*varBinds,
)
if errorIndication:
print(errorIndication)
break
elif errorStatus:
print(
f"{errorStatus.prettyPrint()} at {varBinds[int(errorIndex) - 1][0] if errorIndex else '?'}"
)
else:
for varBindRow in varBindTable:
for varBind in varBindRow:
print(" = ".join([x.prettyPrint() for x in varBind]))
varBinds = varBindTable[-1]
if isEndOfMib(varBinds):
break
return
asyncio.run(
run([ObjectType(ObjectIdentity("TCP-MIB")), ObjectType(ObjectIdentity("IP-MIB"))])
)
More examples on Command Generator API usage follow.
Sending SNMP TRAP’s and INFORM’s is as easy with PySNMP library. The following code sends SNMP TRAP:
SNMPv1
with community name ‘public’
over IPv4/UDP
send TRAP notification
with Generic Trap #1 (warmStart) and Specific Trap 0
with default Uptime
with default Agent Address
with Enterprise OID 1.3.6.1.4.1.20408.4.1.1.2
include managed object information ‘1.3.6.1.2.1.1.1.0’ = ‘my system’
import asyncio
from pysnmp.hlapi.asyncio import *
async def run():
snmpEngine = SnmpEngine()
errorIndication, errorStatus, errorIndex, varBinds = await sendNotification(
snmpEngine,
CommunityData("public", mpModel=0),
UdpTransportTarget(("demo.pysnmp.com", 162)),
ContextData(),
"trap",
NotificationType(ObjectIdentity("1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.2")).addVarBinds(
("1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.4.3.0", "1.3.6.1.4.1.20408.4.1.1.2"),
("1.3.6.1.2.1.1.1.0", OctetString("my system")),
),
)
if errorIndication:
print(errorIndication)
snmpEngine.closeDispatcher()
asyncio.run(run())
More examples on Notification Originator API usage follow.
More sophisticated or less popular SNMP operations can still be performed with PySNMP through its Native API to Standard SNMP Applications.