Example polling scenario¶
We have 4 hosts we want to poll from:
10.202.4.201:161
10.202.4.202:161
10.202.4.203:161
10.202.4.204:163
Let’s say that we’re interested mostly in information about interfaces and some CPU related data. For this purposes,
we need to configure the IF-MIB
family for interfaces, and UCD-SNMP-MIB
for the CPU.
We’ll do two things under the scheduler
section: define the group from which we want to poll, and the profile of what exactly will be polled:
scheduler:
logLevel: "INFO"
profiles: |
switch_profile:
frequency: 60
varBinds:
- ['IF-MIB']
- ['UCD-SNMP-MIB']
groups: |
switch_group:
- address: 10.202.4.201
- address: 10.202.4.202
- address: 10.202.4.203
- address: 10.202.4.204
port: 163
Then we need to pass the proper instruction of what to do for SC4SNMP instance. This can be done by appending a new row
to poller.inventory
:
poller:
logLevel: "WARN"
inventory: |
address,port,version,community,secret,security_engine,walk_interval,profiles,smart_profiles,delete
switch_group,,2c,public,,,2000,switch_profile,,
Now we’re ready to reload SC4SNMP. We run the helm3 upgrade
command:
microk8s helm3 upgrade --install snmp -f values.yaml splunk-connect-for-snmp/splunk-connect-for-snmp --namespace=sc4snmp --create-namespace
We should see the new pod with Running
-> Completed
state:
microk8s kubectl get pods -n sc4snmp -w
Example output:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-worker-sender-5bc5cf864b-cwmfw 1/1 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-worker-poller-76dcfb5896-d55pd 1/1 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-worker-trap-68fb6476db-zl9rb 1/1 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-mibserver-58b558f5b4-zqf85 1/1 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-scheduler-57c5878444-k4qv4 1/1 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-worker-poller-76dcfb5896-bzgrm 1/1 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-trap-6cb76fcb49-l62f9 1/1 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-trap-6cb76fcb49-d7c88 1/1 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-mongodb-869cc8586f-kw67q 2/2 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-redis-master-0 1/1 Running 0 5h52m
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-inventory-g4bs7 1/1 Running 0 3s
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-inventory-g4bs7 0/1 Completed 0 5s
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-inventory-g4bs7 0/1 Completed 0 6s
snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-inventory-g4bs7 0/1 Completed 0 7s
We can check the pod’s logs to make sure everything was reloaded right, with:
microk8s kubectl logs -f snmp-splunk-connect-for-snmp-inventory-g4bs7 -n sc4snmp
Example output:
Successfully connected to redis://snmp-redis-headless:6379/0
Successfully connected to redis://snmp-redis-headless:6379/1
Successfully connected to mongodb://snmp-mongodb:27017
Successfully connected to http://snmp-mibserver/index.csv
{"message": "Loading inventory from /app/inventory/inventory.csv", "time": "2022-09-05T14:30:30.605420", "level": "INFO"}
{"message": "New Record address='10.202.4.201' port=161 version='2c' community='public' secret=None security_engine=None walk_interval=2000 profiles=['switch_profile'] smart_profiles=True delete=False", "time": "2022-09-05T14:30:30.607641", "level": "INFO"}
{"message": "New Record address='10.202.4.202' port=161 version='2c' community='public' secret=None security_engine=None walk_interval=2000 profiles=['switch_profile'] smart_profiles=True delete=False", "time": "2022-09-05T14:30:30.607641", "level": "INFO"}
{"message": "New Record address='10.202.4.203' port=161 version='2c' community='public' secret=None security_engine=None walk_interval=2000 profiles=['switch_profile'] smart_profiles=True delete=False", "time": "2022-09-05T14:30:30.607641", "level": "INFO"}
{"message": "New Record address='10.202.4.204' port=163 version='2c' community='public' secret=None security_engine=None walk_interval=2000 profiles=['switch_profile'] smart_profiles=True delete=False", "time": "2022-09-05T14:30:30.607641", "level": "INFO"}
In some time (depending of how long the walk takes), we’ll see events under:
| mpreview index=netmetrics | search profiles=switch_profile
query in Splunk. When groups are used, we can also use querying by the group name:
| mpreview index=netmetrics | search group=switch_group
Keep in mind, that querying by profiles/group in Splunk is only possible in the metrics index. Every piece of data being sent by SC4SNMP is formed based on the MIB file’s definition of the SNMP object’s index. The object is forwarded to an event index only if it doesn’t have any metric value inside.
The raw
metrics in Splunk example is:
{
"frequency":"60",
"group":"switch_group",
"ifAdminStatus":"up",
"ifAlias":"1",
"ifDescr":"lo",
"ifIndex":"1",
"ifName":"lo",
"ifOperStatus":"up",
"ifPhysAddress":"1",
"ifType":"softwareLoopback",
"profiles":"switch_profile",
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifInDiscards":21877,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifInErrors":21840,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifInNUcastPkts":14152789,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifInOctets":1977814270,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifInUcastPkts":220098191,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifInUnknownProtos":1488029,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifLastChange":124000001,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifMtu":16436,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifOutDiscards":21862,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifOutErrors":21836,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifOutNUcastPkts":14774727,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifOutOctets":1346799625,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifOutQLen":4294967295,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifOutUcastPkts":74003841,
"metric_name:sc4snmp.IF-MIB.ifSpeed":10000000
}
or
{
"frequency":"60",
"group":"switch_group",
"laNames":"Load-1",
"profiles":"switch_profile",
"metric_name:sc4snmp.UCD-SNMP-MIB.laIndex":1
}