SNMP Explorer/Edit Network Settings

The SNMP Explorer appears in the right-side pane of the Workbench once you begin to either edit the default network or create a new network.

 

SNMP Explorer Window -  Editing SNMP Network Settings

 

 

From here, you can change the main settings to optimize the Network discovery.

Under Discovery Type you can:

In the Snmp Data settings, you can edit the following:

In the SNMP Explorer settings, you can edit the following:

Click the Explore button to start the discovery of the network. A new dialog box appears with all the devices found.

 

SNMP Explorer with Results

 

 

You can explore the information stored in every device by expanding the device tree. The SNMP Explorer can provide real time information coming from the devices. The MIB Items tree provides the organization of the data, while the device itself gives the data.

 

To be more precise, the Device tree is the instantiation of the MIB Items tree. When you load a MIB file into the MIB Items tree, you define the structure of a new branch of the tree that will be visible in all the devices where that branch is implemented. Without such information, the Device tree will have a simple tree form where the branches are numbers (and it is impossible for anyone to understand what they mean).

 

To make the link between the MIB Items tree and the Device tree, here is a simple example. In the figure below is a branch of the Device tree from SNMP Explorer that includes all the information about the devices installed on a machine.

 

Branch of the Tree in SNMP Explorer with Loaded MIB Items Tree

 

 

If you delete all the information from the MIB Items tree, the result is similar to what is shown in the figure below. See howthe branches are numbered in a way that is not helpful.

 

Branch of the Tree in SNMP Explorer - MIB Items Tree is not Loaded

 

Now that you can see why the information must be organized through the MIB Items tree, let's see how the information is organized. There are three kinds of information stored in a device:

Scalar Values

 

These are the simplest type of information that can be found. Every value has its own specific name and it is easily recognizable because its OID ends with ".0".

 

Usually, these objects contain particular information about the device, such as the system uptime, the device description, or the number of running processes. A simple set of scalar values in the "iso.org.dod.internet.mgmt.mib-2-system" folder is shown in the figure below. You can add a tag connected to the scalar value by double-clicking on it. The SNMP tag will be imported into the SNMP Connector, and you can retrieve it by using the Unified Data Browser.

 

Scalar Values

 

Arrays

 

If you think about information like the software installed on a machine or like the processes running, you understand that it is impossible to store them into scalar values. In fact, arrays are used to show this information. The name is the same for all the objects, but it is followed by an index that is unique to every object, and it is coming from the last part of the OID. In the figure below is an example of an array for all the software installed on the machine. The object hrSWInstalledName|4| is the fourth element of the array, and its OID ends with a ".4".

 

Array Values

 

In this case, the index of the array is an integer ("4"), but in SNMP, the index of an array can be also composed by an IP address, a string, an integer, or a combination of these objects. These indexes are called conceptual rows. It is not important to understand the full meaning of this because SNMP Explorer automatically recognizes the index of an array and shows it to you in a user-friendly way. In the example below, the array contains the UDP connections of the machine, and the index is composed by an IP address and an integer.

 

Note: The separator for the indexes is the pipe character " | ", and this identifies the SNMP indexed data within the GENESIS64 suite.

 

Array Values with Complex Indexes

 

As you can see, the IP addresses and the integers are easily recognizable both in the name and in the end of the OID of the object (as well as a simple integer). You can add the single element of the array to the tags selected by double-clicking on it.

 

The main problem with this kind of information is that part of the OID (which is the address of the information) is "hard coded" into the names. If the addresses change, the names change, too. So if you try to retrieve the information using the old names, the information is no longer available because the names are old. For example, if the UDP connection on port 1026 is closed, the tag "udpLocalAddress|0.0.0.0||1026|" is not available anymore.

 

However, the solution to this problem is simple. The arrays are usually contained in a folder that has the same name (but without indexes). Associated with each folder is a special tag that has the same name as the folder. Selecting this tag adds the entire array to the SNMP Configurator. Then, in GraphWorX64 (for example), it becomes possible to select the array and manage it as a normal array.

 

Array Tags Associated With the Arrays

 

Tables

 

Tables are no more than sets of arrays. The table simply carries the information about the conceptual rows and about the type of the arrays. Every table contains a special object called "Entry" that contains the arrays. While the arrays represent the columns of the table, the entry represents its rows. Like the arrays, there are tags associated with the tables that allow you to select the entire table.

 

Entry Contains All the Columns of the Table, Which Are Arrays

 

 

For example, let's try to retrieve the system description from the printer. Since "sysDescr" is a standard information, you can try this example with every SNMP-enabled device (not just the printers). To do this, click on the printer and then expand the tree to reach "sysDescr". Its path is "iso.org.dod.internet.mgmt.mib-2.system.sysDescr". Leaving the mouse on "sysDescr" shows a tooltip with all of the information that is available for "sysDescr" (the information comes from the MIB Items tree). Most of the information is also shown in the list view on the right pane.

 

Tooltip Shows All the Information About the Object

 

Select the "sysDescr" tag by double-clicking on it. It displays on the top of the SNMP Explorer. Click OK to send the selected tag(s) to the SNMP Configurator.

 

Selecting the Tag in the Unified Data Browser

 

Now in the SNMP Configurator, the SNMP tree is not empty anymore. The SNMP OIDs of the device are automatically converted into GENESIS64 SNMP tags. These two objects are similar (same name, same FullOID, same type...), but while the SNMP OID is stored in the device and it is unreachable by GENESIS64 applications, the SNMP tag is visible in the ICONICS Unified Data Browser and can be employed in every GENESIS64 application like a normal OPC tag.

 

SNMP Tags in the Configurator

 

There is a new device (directly imported from the SNMP Explorer) and the "sysDescr" item is placed under it. You can rebuild all the folders that contains sysDescr in the Explorer ("iso", "org", "dod", "internet", "mgmt", "mib-2", "system") by checking the Rebuild MIB tree check box. The result is shown in the figure below.

 

MIB Folder Structure Rebuilt in SNMP Tree

 

While this function is useless for one item only, it is useful for auto-organizing data when you import hundreds of OIDs from SNMP Explorer.

 

See also:

SNMP Settings

SNMP Configuration Quick Start

SNMP Connector