Users Guide

Setup and Administration 27
For Red Hat Enterprise Linux operating systems, the default SNMP agent configuration gives read-only
access for the "public" community only to the MIB-II "system" branch (identified by the 1.3.6.1.2.1.1
OID) of the MIB tree. This configuration does not allow management applications to retrieve or change
Server Administrator or other systems management information outside of the MIB-II "system" branch.
Server Administrator SNMP Agent Install Actions
If Server Administrator detects the default SNMP configuration during installation, it attempts to
modify the SNMP agent configuration to give read-only access to the entire MIB tree for the "public"
community. Server Administrator modifies the /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf SNMP agent configuration file in
two ways.
The first change is to create a view to the entire MIB tree by adding the following line if it does not exist:
view all included .1
The second change is to modify the default "access" line to give read-only access to the entire MIB tree
for the "public" community. Server Administrator looks for the following line:
access notConfigGroup "" any noauth exact systemview none none
If Server Administrator finds the line above, it modifies the line so that it reads:
access notConfigGroup "" any noauth exact all none none
These changes to the default SNMP agent configuration give read-only access to the entire MIB tree for
the "public" community.
NOTE: To ensure that Server Administrator is able to modify the SNMP agent configuration to provide proper
access to systems management data, it is recommended that any other SNMP agent configuration changes be
made after installing Server Administrator.
Server Administrator SNMP communicates with the SNMP agent using the SNMP Multiplexing
(SMUX) protocol. When Server Administrator SNMP connects to the SNMP agent, it sends an object
identifier to the SNMP agent to identify itself as a SMUX peer. Because that object identifier must be
configured with the SNMP agent, Server Administrator adds the following line to the SNMP agent
configuration file, /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf, during installation if it does not exist:
smuxpeer .1.3.6.1.4.1.674.10892.1
Changing the SNMP Community Name
Configuring the SNMP community names determines which systems are able to manage your system
through SNMP. The SNMP community name used by management applications must match an SNMP
community name configured on the Server Administrator system so that the management applications
can retrieve management information from Server Administrator.