Common Operations with High-Level API¶
In this tutorial we will gradually build and run a few different SNMP command requests and notifications. We will be using PySNMP asyncio based high-level API which is the simplest to use.
Creating SNMP Engine¶
SNMP engine is a central, umbrella object in PySNMP. All PySNMP
operations involve SnmpEngine
class
instance. PySNMP app can run multiple independent SNMP engines each
guided by its own SnmpEngine object.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> SnmpEngine()
SnmpEngine(snmpEngineID=<SnmpEngineID value object, tagSet <TagSet object, tags 0:0:4>, subtypeSpec <ConstraintsIntersection object, consts <ValueSizeConstraint object, consts 0, 65535>, <ValueSizeConstraint object, consts 5, 32>>, encoding iso-8859-1, payload [0x80004fb8054d61...6c6f63611bb6c040]>)
SNMP engine has unique identifier that can be assigned automatically or administratively. This identifier is used in SNMP protocol operations.
Warning
SnmpEngine
object allocates many resources under the hood, so make
sure to call its close_dispatcher()
method when you are done with it.
Making SNMP Query¶
We will send SNMP GET command to read a MIB object from SNMP agent.
For that purpose we will call asyncio based, high-level
get_cmd()
function.
Other SNMP commands can be used in a vary similar way by calling
corresponding functions.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>> [ x for x in dir() if 'cmd' in x]
['bulk_cmd', 'get_cmd', 'next_cmd', 'set_cmd']
>>> get_cmd
<function get_cmd at 0x222b330>
Choosing SNMP Protocol and Credentials¶
We have a choice of three SNMP protocol versions. To employ
SNMP versions 1 or 2c, we pass properly initialized instance of
CommunityData
class. For the third
SNMP version we pass UsmUserData
class
instance.
SNMP community name, as well as the choice between SNMP v1 and v2c,
is conveyed to SNMP LCD via CommunityData
object.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> CommunityData('public', mpModel=0) # SNMPv1
CommunityData('public')
>>> CommunityData('public', mpModel=1) # SNMPv2c
CommunityData('public')
Use of UsmUserData
object for LCD
configuration implies using SNMPv3. Besides setting up USM user name,
UsmUserData object can also carry crypto keys and crypto protocols
to SNMP engine LCD.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> UsmUserData('testuser', authKey='myauthkey')
UsmUserData(userName='testuser', authKey=<AUTHKEY>)
>>> UsmUserData('testuser', authKey='myauthkey', privKey='myenckey')
UsmUserData(userName='testuser', authKey=<AUTHKEY>, privKey=<PRIVKEY>)
PySNMP supports MD5 and SHA message authentication algorithms, DES, AES128/192/256 and 3DES encryption algorithms.
For sake of simplicity, let’s use SNMPv2. Although completely insecure, it’s still the most popular SNMP version in use.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await get_cmd(SnmpEngine(), CommunityData('public'),
...
Setting Transport and Target¶
PySNMP supports UDP-over-IPv4 and UDP-over-IPv6 network transports.
In this example we will query public SNMP Simulator available over IPv4 on
the Internet at demo.pysnmp.com. Transport configuration is passed to
SNMP LCD in form of properly initialized
UdpTransportTarget
or
Udp6TransportTarget
objects respectively.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await get_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
...
Addressing SNMP Context¶
SNMP context is a parameter in SNMP (v3) message header that addresses specific collection of MIBs served by SNMP engine at managed entity. SNMP engine could serve many identical MIB objects representing completely different instances of hardware or software being managed. This is where SNMP context could be used.
To indicate SNMP context at high-level API a properly initialized
ContextData
object should be used.
For this example we will use the ‘empty’ context (default).
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await get_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
... ContextData(),
...
Specifying MIB Object¶
Finally, we have to specify the MIB object we want to read. On protocol level, MIB objects are identified by OIDs, but humans tend to address them by name:
$ snmpget -v2c -c public demo.pysnmp.com SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0
SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0 = STRING: SunOS zeus.pysnmp.com
$
$ snmpget -v2c -c public demo.pysnmp.com 1.3.6.1.2.1.1.1.0
SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0 = STRING: SunOS zeus.pysnmp.com
Both object name and OID come from MIB. Name and OID linking is done by high-level SMI construct called OBJECT-TYPE. Here is an example MIB object definition for sysUpTime with OID …mgmt.mib-2.system.3 and value type TimeTicks.
sysUpTime OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TimeTicks
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The time (in hundredths of a second) since
the network management portion of the system
was last re-initialized."
::= { system 3 }
In PySNMP we use the ObjectIdentity
class
that is responsible for MIB objects identification. ObjectIdentity
represents ways to address MIB object from human perspective. It needs
to consult MIB to enter a fully “resolved” state. ObjectIdentity could
be initialized with MIB object name, after a MIB look up it starts
behaving like an OID.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> x = ObjectIdentity('SNMPv2-MIB', 'system')
>>> # ... calling MIB lookup ...
>>> tuple(x)
(1, 3, 6, 1, 2, 1, 1, 1)
>>> x = ObjectIdentity('iso.org.dod.internet.mgmt.mib-2.system.sysDescr')
>>> # ... calling MIB lookup ...
>>> str(x)
'1.3.6.1.2.1.1.1'
MIB resolution means the service of MIB object name into OID transformation or vice versa.
The ObjectType
class instance
represents OBJECT-TYPE SMI construct in PySNMP. ObjectType is a
container object that references ObjectIdentity and SNMP
type instances. As a Python object it looks like a tuple of
(OID, value).
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>> x = ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('SNMPv2-MIB', 'sysDescr', 0), 'Linux i386 box'))
>>> # ... calling MIB lookup ...
>>> x[0].prettyPrint()
'SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0'
>>> x[1].prettyPrint()
'Linux i386 box'
The trailing zero is an indication of MIB object instance. Objects described in MIBs are just declarations, they never contain any data. Data is stored in MIB object instances addressed by appending extra information (known as index) to MIB object identifiers.
For scalar MIB objects index is ‘0’ by convention. The ObjectIdentity class takes indices as its initializers.
>>> x = ObjectIdentity('SNMPv2-MIB', 'system', 0)
>>> # ... calling MIB lookup ...
>>> tuple(x)
(1, 3, 6, 1, 2, 1, 1, 1, 0)
We will be reading sysDescr scalar MIB object instance as defined
in RFC3418 SNMPv2-MIB
module.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>> g = await get_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
... ContextData(),
... ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('SNMPv2-MIB', 'sysDescr', 0)))
By default PySNMP will search your local filesystem for ASN.1 MIB files you refer to. It can also be configured to automatically download them from remote hosts. We maintain a collection of ASN.1 MIB modules on mibs.pysnmp.com that you can use in your SNMP projects.
Note
An “ASN.1 MIB” is a plain-text description of identifiers and types. It is the common format that is distributed by manufacturers to describe their SNMP services, and is the same format used by Perl’s Net::SNMP and almost all SNMP tools.
Reading Scalar Value¶
We are finally in a position to send SNMP query and hopefully receive something meaningful in response.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await get_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
... ContextData(),
... ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('SNMPv2-MIB', 'sysUpTime', 0)))
>>> g
(None, 0, 0, [ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0'), TimeTicks(44430646))])
Working with SNMP Tables¶
SNMP defines a concept of table. Tables are used when a single given MIB object may apply to many instances of a property. For example, properties of network interfaces are put into SNMP table. Each instance of a property is addressed by a suffix appended to base MIB object.
Tables are specified in MIBs, their index (or indices) are declared via the INDEX clause. Table index is non-zero integer, or string or any base SNMP type.
At the protocol level all indices take shape of OID parts. For humans to work with indices comfortably, SNMP management applications rely on DISPLAY-HINT clause for automatic indices conversion between their OID and SNMP type-specific, human-friendly representation.
ifEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX IfEntry
INDEX { ifIndex }
::= { ifTable 1 }
ifIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX InterfaceIndex
::= { ifEntry 1 }
ifDescr OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX DisplayString (SIZE (0..255))
::= { ifEntry 2 }
InterfaceIndex ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
DISPLAY-HINT "d"
SYNTAX Integer32 (1..2147483647)
In PySNMP parlance:
>>> x = ObjectIdentity('IF-MIB', 'ifDescr', 123)
>>> # ... calling MIB lookup ...
>>> str(x)
'1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.2.123'
Some SNMP tables are indexed by many indices. Each of these indices become parts of OID concatenated to each other and ultimately to MIB object OID.
From semantic standpoint, each index reflects an important and distinct property of a MIB object.
tcpConnectionEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TcpConnectionEntry
INDEX { tcpConnectionLocalAddressType,
tcpConnectionLocalAddress,
tcpConnectionLocalPort,
tcpConnectionRemAddressType,
tcpConnectionRemAddress,
tcpConnectionRemPort }
::= { tcpConnectionTable 1 }
tcpConnectionLocalPort OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX InetPortNumber
::= { tcpConnectionEntry 3 }
PySNMP’s ObjectIdentity
class takes
any number of indices in human-friendly representation and converts
them into full OID:
>>> x = ObjectIdentity('TCP-MIB', 'tcpConnectionState',
... 'ipv4', '195.218.254.105', 41511,
... 'ipv4', '194.67.1.250', 993)
>>> # ... calling MIB lookup ...
>>> str(x)
'1.3.6.1.2.1.6.19.1.7.1.4.195.218.254.105.41511.1.4.194.67.1.250.993'
Let’s read TCP-MIB::tcpConnectionState object for a TCP connection:
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await get_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
... ContextData(),
... ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('TCP-MIB', 'tcpConnectionState',
... 'ipv4', '195.218.254.105', 41511,
... 'ipv4', '194.67.1.250', 993)
>>> g
(None, 0, 0, [ObjectType(ObjectIdentity(ObjectName('1.3.6.1.2.1.6.19.1.7.1.4.195.218.254.105.41511.1.4.194.67.1.250.993')), Integer(5))])
SNMP Command Operations¶
SNMP allows you to request a MIB object that is “next” to the given
one. That way you can read MIB objects you are not aware about in
advance. MIB objects are conceptually sorted by their OIDs.
This feature is implemented by the next_cmd()
function.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>> g = await next_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
... ContextData(),
... ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('SNMPv2-MIB', 'sysDescr')))
>>> g
(None, 0, 0, [ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.1.1.0'), DisplayString('SunOS zeus.pysnmp.com'))])
Iteration over the generator object “walk” over SNMP agent’s MIB objects
requires walk_cmd()
function to be
called.
SNMPv2c introduced significant optimization to the GETNEXT command - the revised version is called GETBULK and is capable to gather and respond a bunch of “next” MIB objects at once. Additional non-repeaters and max-repetitions parameters can be used to influence MIB objects batching.
PySNMP hides this GETBULK optimization at the protocol level, the
bulk_walk_cmd()
function exposes the
same generator API as getNext() for convenience.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> N, R = 0, 25
>>> g = await bulk_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
... ContextData(),
... N, R,
... ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6')))
>>>
>>> g
(None, 0, 0, [ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.1.1.0'), DisplayString('SunOS zeus.pysnmp.com')), ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.1.2.0'), ObjectIdentifier('1.3.6.1.4.1.20408'))])
Python generators can not only produce data, but it is also possible to send data into running generator object. That feature is used by the high-level API to repeat the same SNMP operation for a new set of MIB objects.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await next_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
... ContextData(),
... ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('IF-MIB', 'ifTable')))
>>>
>>> g.send([ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('IF-MIB', 'ifInOctets'))])
(None, 0, 0, [(ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.10.1'), Counter32(284817787))])
You could operate on many unrelated MIB object just by listing them in a single PDU. Response PDU will carry a list of MIB objects and their values in exactly the same order as they were in request message.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await get_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
... ContextData(),
... ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('SNMPv2-MIB', 'sysDescr', 0)),
... ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('SNMPv2-MIB', 'sysUpTime', 0))
... )
>>> g
(None, 0, 0, [ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.1.1.0'), DisplayString('SunOS zeus.pysnmp.com')), ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0'), TimeTicks(44430646))])
Configuration management part of SNMP relies on SNMP SET command. Although its implementation on managed entity’s side proved to be somewhat demanding (due to locking and transactional behavior requirements). So vendors tend to leave it out thus rendering managed entity being read-only.
PySNMP supports SET uniformly through set_cmd()
function.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await set_cmd(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 161)),
... ContextData(),
... ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('SNMPv2-MIB', 'sysDescr', 0), 'Linux i386')
... )
>>> g
(None, 0, 0, [ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.1.1.0'), DisplayString('Linux i386'))])
Sending SNMP Notifications¶
Managed entity could send unsolicited messages to the managing entity. That is called notification in SNMP. Notifications help reduce polling, what may become a problem for large networks.
SNMP notifications are enumerated and each has definite semantics. This is done through a special, high-level SMI construct called NOTIFICATION-TYPE. Like OBJECT-TYPE, that defines a MIB object, NOTIFICATION-TYPE has a unique OID, but instead of SNMP value references a sequence of other MIB objects. These MIB objects are specified with the OBJECTS clause and when notification is being sent, their current values are included into the notification message.
linkUp NOTIFICATION-TYPE
OBJECTS { ifIndex, ifAdminStatus, ifOperStatus }
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"..."
::= { snmpTraps 4 }
To model NOTIFICATION-TYPE construct in PySNMP, we have the
NotificationType
class that is a
container object. It is identified by the
ObjectIdentity
class and reference a
sequence of ObjectType
class
instances.
From behavior standpoint, NotificationType looks like a sequence of ObjectType class instances.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> x = NotificationType(ObjectIdentity('IF-MIB', 'linkUp'))
>>> # ... calling MIB lookup ...
>>> >>> [ str(y) for x in n ]
['SNMPv2-MIB::snmpTrapOID.0 = 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3', 'IF-MIB::ifIndex = ', 'IF-MIB::ifAdminStatus = ', 'IF-MIB::ifOperStatus = ']
Sending notification with PySNMP is not much different than sending SNMP command. The difference is in how PDU var-binds are built. There are two different kinds of notifications in SNMP: trap and inform.
With trap, agent-to-manager communication is one-way - no response or acknowledgement is sent.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await send_notification(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 162)),
... ContextData(),
... 'trap',
... NotificationType(ObjectIdentity('IF-MIB', 'linkUp'), instanceIndex=(123,))
... )
>>> g
(None, 0, 0, [])
The inform notification is much like a command. The difference is in PDU format. Informs are used for manager-to-manager communication as well as for agent-to-manager.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> g = await send_notification(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 162)),
... ContextData(),
... 'inform',
... NotificationType(ObjectIdentity('IF-MIB', 'linkUp'), instanceIndex=(123,))
... )
>>> g
(None, 0, 0, [ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0'), TimeTicks(0)), ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.4.1.0'), ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4')), ObjectType(ObjectName('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.1.123'), Null('')), ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.7.123'), Null('')), ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.8.123'), Null(''))])
In the latter example you can see MIB objects (ifIndex, ifAdminStatus, ifOperStatus) being automatically expanded from IF-MIB::linkUp notification. To address specific row of SNMP table objects by index, the index part of MIB objects could be passed to NotificationType via instanceIndex parameter.
As you can see, the actual values for expanded MIB objects are NULLs. That’s because in these examples our simple scripts do not have access to those MIB objects. We can supply that missing information by passing NotificationType a dictionary-like object that maps MIB object OIDs to current values.
>>> from pysnmp.hlapi.v3arch.asyncio import *
>>>
>>> mib = {ObjectIdentifier('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.1.123'): 123,
... ObjectIdentifier('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.7.123'): 'testing',
... ObjectIdentifier('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.8.123'): 'up'}
>>>
>>> g = await send_notification(SnmpEngine(),
... CommunityData('public'),
... await UdpTransportTarget.create(('demo.pysnmp.com', 162)),
... ContextData(),
... 'inform',
... NotificationType(ObjectIdentity('IF-MIB', 'linkUp'), instanceIndex=(123,), objects=mib)
... )
>>> g
(None, 0, 0, [ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0'), TimeTicks(0)), ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.4.1.0'), ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4')), ObjectType(ObjectName('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.1.123'), InterfaceIndex(123)), ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.7.123'), Integer(3)), ObjectType(ObjectIdentity('1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.8.123'), Integer(1))])
High-volume Messaging¶
When it comes to managing large network, reading MIB objects sequentially introduces latency. By some point the latency becomes intolerable. Solutions to parallelize queries are well known - you could do that by offloading individual operations into multiple processes, or multiple threads of execution or build your application around the asynchronous I/O model.
Compared to other solutions, asynchronous model is most lightweight and scalable. The idea is simple: never wait for I/O - do something else whenever possible. The back side of this is that execution flow becomes non-linear what hurts program analysis by human reader.
PySNMP high-level API is adapted to work with the standard
asynchronous I/O framework asyncio
.
Please, refer to PySNMP API References
and Samples for more information on
asynchronous API.