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BSNMPD(1)		    General Commands Manual		     BSNMPD(1)

NAME
       bsnmpd -- simple	and extensible SNMP daemon

SYNOPSIS
       bsnmpd  [-dh]  [-c  file] [-D options] [-e file]	[-I paths] [-l prefix]
	      [-m variable[=value]] [-p	file]

DESCRIPTION
       The bsnmpd daemon serves	the internet SNMP (Simple  Network  Management
       Protocol).   It	is  intended to	serve only the absolute	basic MIBs and
       implement all other MIBs	through	loadable modules.   In	this  way  the
       bsnmpd can be used in unexpected	ways.

       The options are as follows:

       -d	   Do not daemonize.  Used for debugging.

       -h	   Print a short usage message.

       -c file	   Use file as configuration file instead of the standard one.

       -D options  Debugging  options are specified with a -o flag followed by
		   a comma separated string of options.	 The following options
		   are available.

		   dump		Dump all sent and received PDUs	to the	termi-
				nal.

		   events	Set  the  debugging level of the event library
				(see eventlib(3)) to 10.

		   trace=level	Set the	snmp library trace flag	to the	speci-
				fied value.
		   The	value  can be specified	in the usual C-syntax for num-
		   bers.

       -e file	   Specify an alternate	file where the agent's engine  id  and
		   number of boots are saved.

       -I paths	   Specify a colon separated list of directories to search for
		   configuration    include    files.	  The	 default    is
		   /etc:/usr/etc/:/usr/local/etc.   These   paths   are	  only
		   searched for	include	specified within <> parentheses.

       -l prefix   Use prefix as the default basename for the pid and the con-
		   figuration files.

       -m variable[=value]
		   Define a configuration variable.

       -p file	   Specify an alternate	pid file instead of the	default	one.

CONFIGURATION
       bsnmpd  reads  its  configuration  from	either the default or the user
       specified configuration file.  The configuration	file consists  of  the
       following types of lines:

	     	 variable assignments

	     	 section separators

	     	 include directives

	     	 MIB variable assignments

       If a line is too	long it	can be continued on the	next line by ending it
       with  a	backslash.  Empty lines	and lines in which the first non-blank
       character is a "#" sign are ignored.

       All MIB variable	assignments of	the  entire  configuration  (including
       nested configuration files) are handled as one transaction, i.e., as if
       they  arrived in	a single SET PDU.  Any failure during the initial con-
       figuration read causes bsnmpd to	exit.  A failure during	the configura-
       tion read caused	by a module load causes	the loading of the  module  to
       fail.

       The  configuration is read during initialization	of bsnmpd, when	a mod-
       ule is loaded and when bsnmpd receives a	SIGHUP.

   VARIABLE ASSIGNMENTS
       Variable	assignments can	take one of two	forms:

	     variable := string
	     variable ?= string

       The string reaches from the first non-blank character after  the	 equal
       sign  until the first new line or "#" character.	 In the	first case the
       string is assigned to the variable unconditionally, in the second  case
       the variable is only assigned if	it does	not exist yet.

       Variable	 names must begin with a letter	or underscore and contain only
       letters,	digits or underscores.

   SECTION SEPARATORS
       The configuration consists of named sections.  The MIB variable assign-
       ments in	the section named "snmpd" are  executed	 only  during  initial
       setup  or  when	bsnmpd receives	a SIGHUP.  All other sections are exe-
       cuted when either a module with the same	name as	the section is	loaded
       or bsnmpd receives a SIGHUP and that module is already loaded.  The de-
       fault  section  at  the start of	the configuration is "snmpd".  One can
       switch to another section with the syntax

	     %secname

       Where secname is	the name of the	section.  The same secname can be used
       in more than one	place in the configuration.  All of  these  parts  are
       collected into one section.

   INCLUDE DIRECTIVES
       Another	configuration  file  can be included into the current one with
       the include directive that takes	one of two forms:

	     .include "file"
	     .include <"file">

       The first form causes the file to be searched in	the current directory,
       the second form causes the file to be searched in the directories spec-
       ified in	the system include path.  Nesting depth	is only	restricted  by
       available memory.

   MIB VARIABLE	ASSIGNMENTS
       A MIB variable is assigned with the syntax

	     oid [ suboids ] = value

       oid  is the name	of the variable	to be set.  Only the last component of
       the entire name is used here.  If the variable is a scalar,  the	 index
       (.0)  is	 automatically	appended and need not to be specified.	If the
       variable	is a table column, the index (suboids) must be specified.  The
       index consist of	elements each separated	from the  previous  one	 by  a
       dot.   Elements may be either numbers, strings or hostnames enclosed in
       [] brackets.  If	the element is a number	it is appended to the  current
       oid.  If	the element is a string, its length and	the ASCII code of each
       of its characters are appended to the current oid.  If the element is a
       hostname, the IP	address	of the host is looked up and the four elements
       of the IP address are appended to the oid.

       For example, an oid of

	     myvariable.27.foooll.[localhost]."&^!"

       results in the oid

	     myvariable.27.102.111.111.111.108.108.127.0.0.1.38.94.33

       The  value of the assignment may	be either empty, a string or a number.
       If a string starts with a letter	or an underscore and consists only  of
       letters,	digits,	underscores and	minus signs, it	can be written without
       quotes.	 In  all  other	 cases	the  string must be enclosed in	double
       quotes.

SUBSTITUTIONS
       A variable substitution is written as

	     $(variable)

       where variable is the name of the variable to substitute.  Using	an un-
       defined variable	is considered an error.

FILES
       /etc/<prefix>.config   Default configuration file,  where  the  default
			      <prefix> is "snmpd".
       /var/<prefix>.engine   Default engine id	file.
       /var/run/<prefix>.pid  Default pid file.
       /etc:/usr/etc/:/usr/local/etc
			      Default search path for system include files.
       /usr/share/snmp/mibs/FOKUS-MIB.txt
       /usr/share/snmp/mibs/BEGEMOT-MIB.txt
       /usr/share/snmp/mibs/BEGEMOT-SNMPD.txt
			      Definitions for the MIBs implemented in the dae-
			      mon.
       /etc/hosts.allow, /etc/hosts.deny
			      Access  controls	that should be enforced	by TCP
			      wrappers are defined here.  Further details  are
			      described	in hosts_access(5).

SEE ALSO
       gensnmptree(1), hosts_access(5)

STANDARDS
       The bsnmpd conforms to the applicable IETF RFCs.

AUTHORS
       Hartmut Brandt <harti@FreeBSD.org>

BUGS
       Sure.

FreeBSD	14.3			 May 14, 2016			     BSNMPD(1)

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