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SNMP Events

 

Updated: May 13, 2016

Applies To: System Center 2012 R2 Operations Manager, System Center 2012 - Operations Manager, System Center 2012 SP1 - Operations Manager

SNMP monitors and rules in Operations Manager allow you to retrieve messages from computers and devices that support Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP). You can create rules and monitors that either wait for an SNMP trap to be sent or that retrieve information on a periodic basis using an SNMP probe.

Target

Rules and monitors run on the agent computer of each instance of the target class, and they usually access data on the local computer. SNMP rules and monitors typically work with information from a computer or device different from the one running the monitors or rules. For SNMP traps, the monitor or rule needs to be running on the agent that receives the trap. The device needs to be configured to deliver traps to this agent. For SNMP probes, the monitor or rule needs to be running on any agent that is authorized to access the device with SNMP. The device may need to be configured to allow communication from this agent.

Network devices that are discovered with the Discovery Wizard are managed by a resource pool that you specify during the discovery process. A resource pool contains one or more management servers. You can use the classes for these devices as targets, and the rule or monitor will run on each computer in the resource pool. In this case, the device will need to send SNMP traps to each of the computers in the pool and allow access to each computer in the pool for SNMP probes.

SNMP Event Wizards

The table below lists the wizards that are available for both simple and delimited text files.

Management Pack Object

Wizards Available

Monitors

SNMP probe monitor with single event reset

SNMP trap monitor with single event reset

Rules

Alert Generating SNMP trap rule

Event collection SNMP probe rule

Event collection SNMP trap rule

Performance collection SNMP probe rule

SNMP Event Wizard Options

When you run an SNMP monitor wizard, you will need to provide values for options in the following tables. Each table represents a single page in the wizard.

General

The General page includes general settings for the rule or wizard including its name, category, target, and the management pack file to store it in.

Option

Description

Name

The name used for the rule or monitor. For a rule, the name appears in the Rules view in the Authoring pane. When you create a view or report, you can select this name to use the data collected by it. For a monitor, the name appears in the Health Explorer of any target objects.

Description

Optional description of the rule or monitor.

Management Pack

Management pack file to store the rule or monitor.

For more information on management packs, see Selecting a Management Pack File.

Rule Category (Rules only)

The category for the rule. For an event collection rule, this should be Event Collection. For a performance collection rule, this should be Performance Collection. For an alerting rule, this should be Alert.

Parent Monitor (Monitors only)

The aggregate monitor that the monitor will be positioned under in the Health Explorer. For more information, see Aggregate Monitors.

Target

The class to use for the target of the rule or monitor. The rule or monitor will be run on any agent that has at least one instance of this class. For more information on targets, see Understanding Classes and Objects.

If you are monitoring a network device discovered in the Discovery Wizard, then use the class for the device or one of its components, depending on what the monitor most applies to.

Rule is enabled

Monitor is enabled

Specifies whether the rule or monitor is enabled.

SNMP Probe / SNMP Trap Provider

SNMP probe rules have an SNMP Probe page, while SNMP trap rules have an SNMP Trap Provider page. SNMP monitors will have two of the appropriate page, one to define the healthy state and the other to define the warning or critical state. The page defines the community string and OID of the SNMP probe or trap.

Option

Description

Frequency (Probe only)

The frequency that the probe is run. A frequency that is configured too low can result in excess overhead on the device being monitored. A frequency that is configured too high can result in the monitor not detecting a problem quickly. A frequency from 2 minutes to 15 minutes is a common range.

Community string

If Use discovery community string is selected, then the community of the target device is used. If Use custom community string is selected, then you can specify a community string.

Object Identifier

For a probe, one or more Object Identifiers (OID) to retrieve from the device. A value for each one will be collected and available for evaluation in the expression. Most rules and monitors will use a single OID, but multiple OIDs can be used.

For a trap, one or more Object Identifiers (OID) to listen for from the device. Most rules and monitors will use a single OID, but multiple OIDs can be used.

All Traps (Trap only)

If select, the Object Identifier list is disabled, and all traps from the target object will be collected, regardless of the OID.

Build Expression (Monitors Only)

SNMP monitors have a Build Expression page for each of the SNMP Probe or SNMP Trap Provider pages. The expression evaluates the SNMP data returned to determine the health state of the monitor.

For more information about expressions, Expressions.

The Parameter Name in each expression requires a variable referring to a piece of data from the SNMP probe or trap. The data that is available includes header information and a data element for each OID specified. The header information is shown in the following table:

Data Item

Description

Source

IP address of the device.

Destination

IP address of the agent receiving the event

CommunityString

Encrypted community string

ErrorCode

Error code returned by the request

Version

Version of SNMP used

The information in each data element is shown in the following table:

Data Item

Description

OID

OID of the data element

Syntax

Indicates the success or failure of the SNMP operation. If successful, the property is set to a value indicating the data type of the value. If unsuccessful, the property is set to a data type indicating the error. The specific values are listed in the documentation for the SNMP Probe Module.

Value

The value of the data element.

To refer to the OID data elements, you can use the following syntax:

Syntax

Example

Description

SnmpVarBinds/SnmpVarBind/<ElementName>

SnmpVarBinds/SnmpVarBind/Value

Use this syntax when a single OID is used.

SnmpVarBinds/SnmpVarBind[#]/<ElementName>

SnmpVarBinds/SnmpVarBind[2]/Value

Use this syntax when you have multiple OIDs and want to refer to each by its numeric order. The first OID is 1, the second is 2, and so on.

SnmpVarBinds/SnmpVarBind[OID="<OID>"]/<ElementName>

SnmpVarBinds/SnmpVarBind[OID="1.3.6.1.2.1.1.5.0"]/Value

Use this syntax when you have multiple OIDs and want to refer to each by the specific OID.

Configure Health

The Configure Health page is only available for monitors. It allows you to specify the health state that will be set for each of the events. The first event will typically set the monitor to Warning or Critical while the second event or the timer will set the monitor to Healthy.

Configure Alerts

The Configure Alerts page is only available for monitors and alerting rules. Its options are explained in Alerts.

Creating SNMP Monitors and Rules

Creating an SNMP Rule

Use the following procedure to create an SNMP performance collection rule in Operations Manager with the following details:

  • Runs on all network devices by using Node for the target.

  • Collects the number of open TCP connections (OID 1.3.6.1.2.1.6.9.0) every 10 minutes.

To create an SNMP Performance Collection Rule

  1. If you don’t have a management pack for the application that you are monitoring, create one using the process in Selecting a Management Pack File.

  2. In the Operations console, select the Authoring workspace, and then select Rules.

  3. Right-click Rules and select Create a new rule.

  4. On the Rule Type page, do the following:

    1. Expand Collection Rules, expand Performance Based, and then click SNMP Performance.

    2. Select the management pack from step 1.

    3. Click Next.

  5. On the General page, do the following:

    1. In the Rule Name box, type Collect Open TCP Connections.

    2. In the Rule Category box, select Performance Collection.

    3. Next to Rule Target click Select and then select Node.

    4. Leave Rule is enabled selected.

    5. Click Next.

  6. On the SNMP Probe page, do the following:

    1. In the Frequency box, 10 minutes.

    2. In the Object Identifier box, type 1.3.6.1.2.1.6.9.0 and press ENTER.

    3. Click Create.

Creating an SNMP Monitor

Use the following procedure to create an SNMP trap monitor Operations Manager with the following details:

  • Runs on all network devices by using Node for the target.

  • Monitors for the status of a port. Link down is indicated with OID .1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3. Link up is indicated with OID .1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4.

  • Monitors port 16 only. This is indicated by Object Identifier .1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.8.16 with a value of 2 for link down and Object Identifier .1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.8.16 with a value of 1 for link up.

  • Includes the OID and value for the first four entries in the SNMP data.

To create an SNMP Trap monitor

  1. If you don’t have a management pack for the application that you are monitoring, create one using the process in Selecting a Management Pack File.

  2. In the Operations console, select the Authoring workspace.

  3. Right-click Monitors, select Create a Monitor, and then select Unit Monitor.

  4. On the Monitor Type page, do the following:

    1. Expand SNMP, then Trap Based Detection, then Simple Trap Detection, and then SNMP Trap Monitor.

    2. Select the management pack from step 1.

    3. Click Next.

  5. On the General page, do the following:

    1. In the Name box, type Port active.

    2. Click Select next to the Monitor Target box.

    3. Select Node and click OK.

    4. In the Parent Monitor box, select Availability.

    5. Leave the Monitor is enabled box checked, select and click Next.

  6. On the First SnmpTrapProvider page, do the following:

    1. In the Object Identifier box, type .1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3 and press ENTER.

    2. Click Create.

  7. On the Build First Expression page, do the following:

    1. Click Insert.

    2. In the Parameter Name box type SnmpVarBinds/SnmpVarBind[OID=".1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.8.16"]/Value.

    3. In the Operator box select Equals.

    4. In the Value box type 2.

    5. Click Next.

  8. On the Second SnmpTrapProvider page, do the following:

    1. In the Object Identifier box, type .1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4 and press ENTER.

    2. Click Create.

  9. On the Build Second Expression page, do the following:

    1. Click Insert.

    2. In the Parameter Name box type SnmpVarBinds/SnmpVarBind[OID=".1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.8.16"]/Value.

    3. In the Operator box select Equals.

    4. In the Value box type 1.

    5. Click Next.

  10. On the Configure Health page, do the following:

    1. Next to FirstEventRaised, change the Health State to Critical.

    2. Click Next.

  11. On the Configure Alerts page, do the following:

    1. Check Generate alerts for this monitor

    2. In the Generate an alert when box, select The monitor is in a critical health state.

    3. Leave the box selected to automatically resolve the alert.

    4. In the Alert name box, type Port active

    5. Click the ellipse button next to the Alert description box.

    6. Clear the contents of the Value box.

    7. Click Data and then Source. Press ENTER.

    8. Click Data and then Destination. Press ENTER.

    9. Click Data, then SnmpVarBinds, then SnmpVarBind, and then OID.

    10. In the variable, change [<<INT>>] to [1].

    11. Type a space after the variable.

    12. Click Data, then SnmpVarBinds, then SnmpVarBind, and then Value.

    13. In the variable, change [<<INT>>] to [1].

    14. Repeat the previous steps to add the OID and value for entries 2, 3, and 4.

    15. Click OK.

  12. Click Create.