Reference Guide
668 | Simple Network Management Protocol
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Table 7 shows examples of using the command snmpset to copy a configuration. These examples assume
that:
• the server OS is Unix
• you are using SNMP version 2c
• the community name is public, and
• the file f10-copy-config.mib is in the current directory or in the snmpset tool path.
Note: In Unix, enter the command snmpset for help using this command. Place the file
f10-copy-config.mib the directory from which you are executing the snmpset command or in the snmpset
tool path.
Table 37-4. Copying Configuration Files via SNMP
Task
Copy the running-config to the startup-config using the following command from the Unix machine:
snmpset -v 2c -c public -m ./f10-copy-config.mib force10system-ip-address copySrcFileType.index i 2
copyDestFileType.index i 3
Figure 56 show the command syntax using MIB object names, and Figure 57 shows the same command using the object
OIDs. In both cases, the object is followed by a unique index number.
Figure 37-6. Copying Configuration Files via SNMP using Object-Name Syntax
Figure 37-7. Copying Configuration Files via SNMP using OID Syntax
> snmpset -v 2c -r 0 -t 60 -c public -m ./f10-copy-config.mib 10.10.10.10 copySrcFileType.101 i
2 copyDestFileType.101 i 3
FORCE10-COPY-CONFIG-MIB::copySrcFileType.101 = INTEGER: runningConfig(2)
FORCE10-COPY-CONFIG-MIB::copyDestFileType.101 = INTEGER: startupConfig(3)
> snmpset -v 2c -c public -m ./f10-copy-config.mib 10.10.10.10
.1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.5.1.1.1.1.2.100 i 2 .1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.5.1.1.1.1.5.100 i 3
FORCE10-COPY-CONFIG-MIB::copySrcFileType.100 = INTEGER: runningConfig(2)
FORCE10-COPY-CONFIG-MIB::copyDestFileType.100 = INTEGER: startupConfig(3)










