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NAME

    SNMP::Info - OO Interface to Network devices and MIBs through SNMP

VERSION

    SNMP::Info - Version 3.46

AUTHOR

    SNMP::Info is maintained by team of Open Source authors headed by Eric
    Miller, Bill Fenner, Max Baker, Jeroen van Ingen and Oliver Gorwits.

    Please visit http://sourceforge.net/projects/snmp-info/ for most
    up-to-date list of developers.

    SNMP::Info was originally created at UCSC for the Netdisco project
    http://netdisco.org by Max Baker.

DEVICES SUPPORTED

    There are now generic classes for most types of device and so the
    authors recommend loading SNMP::Info with AutoSpecify, and then
    reporting to the mail list any missing functionality (such as neighbor
    discovery tables).

SYNOPSIS

     use SNMP::Info;
    
     my $info = new SNMP::Info( 
                                # Auto Discover more specific Device Class
                                AutoSpecify => 1,
                                Debug       => 1,
                                # The rest is passed to SNMP::Session
                                DestHost    => 'router',
                                Community   => 'public',
                                Version     => 2 
                              ) or die "Can't connect to device.\n";
    
     my $err = $info->error();
     die "SNMP Community or Version probably wrong connecting to device. $err\n" if defined $err;
    
     $name  = $info->name();
     $class = $info->class();
     print "SNMP::Info is using this device class : $class\n";
    
     # Find out the Duplex status for the ports
     my $interfaces = $info->interfaces();
     my $i_duplex   = $info->i_duplex();
    
     # Get CDP Neighbor info
     my $c_if       = $info->c_if();
     my $c_ip       = $info->c_ip();
     my $c_port     = $info->c_port();
    
     # Print out data per port
     foreach my $iid (keys %$interfaces){
        my $duplex = $i_duplex->{$iid};
        # Print out physical port name, not snmp iid
        my $port  = $interfaces->{$iid};
    
        print "$port: ";
        print "$duplex duplex" if defined $duplex;
    
        # The CDP Table has table entries different than the interface tables.
        # So we use c_if to get the map from cdp table to interface table.
    
        my %c_map = reverse %$c_if; 
        my $c_key = $c_map{$iid};
        unless (defined $c_key) {
             print "\n\n";
             next;
         }
        my $neighbor_ip   = $c_ip->{$c_key};
        my $neighbor_port = $c_port->{$c_key};
    
        print " connected to $neighbor_ip / $neighbor_port\n" if defined $neighbor_ip;
        print "\n";
    
     }

SUPPORT

    Please direct all support, help, and bug requests to the
    snmp-info-users Mailing List at
    http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/snmp-info-users.

DESCRIPTION

    SNMP::Info gives an object oriented interface to information obtained
    through SNMP.

    This module is geared towards network devices. Subclasses exist for a
    number of network devices and common MIBs.

    The idea behind this module is to give a common interface to data from
    network devices, leaving the device-specific hacks behind the scenes in
    subclasses.

    In the SYNOPSIS example we fetch the name of all the ports on the
    device and the duplex setting for that port with two methods --
    interfaces() and i_duplex().

    The information may be coming from any number of MIB files and is very
    vendor specific. SNMP::Info provides you a common method for all
    supported devices.

    Adding support for your own device is easy, and takes little SNMP
    knowledge.

    The module is not limited to network devices. Any MIB or device can be
    given an objected oriented front-end by making a module that consists
    of a couple hashes. See EXTENDING SNMP::INFO.

REQUIREMENTS

    1. Net-SNMP

      To use this module, you must have Net-SNMP installed on your system.
      More specifically you need the Perl modules that come with it.

      DO NOT INSTALL SNMP:: or Net::SNMP from CPAN!

      The SNMP module is matched to an install of net-snmp, and must be
      installed from the net-snmp source tree.

      The Perl module SNMP is found inside the net-snmp distribution. Go to
      the perl/ directory of the distribution to install it, or run
      ./configure --with-perl-modules from the top directory of the
      net-snmp distribution.

      Net-SNMP can be found at http://net-snmp.sourceforge.net

      Version 5.3.2 or greater is recommended.

      Versions 5.0.1, 5.0301 and 5.0203 have issues with bulkwalk and are
      not supported.

      Redhat Users: Some versions that come with certain versions of
      Redhat/Fedora don't have the Perl library installed. Uninstall the
      RPM and install by hand.

    2. MIBS

      SNMP::Info operates on textual descriptors found in MIBs.

      If you are using SNMP::Info separate from Netdisco, download the
      Netdisco MIB package at
      http://sourceforge.net/projects/netdisco/files/netdisco-mibs/latest-s
      napshot/

      Make sure that your snmp.conf is updated to point to your MIB
      directory and that the MIBs are world-readable.

DESIGN GOALS

    1. Use of textual MIB leaf identifier and enumerated values

	* All values are retrieved via MIB Leaf node names

	For example SNMP::Info has an entry in its %GLOBALS hash for
	``sysName'' instead of 1.3.6.1.2.1.1.5.

	* Data returned is in the enumerated value form.

	For Example instead of looking up 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.3 and getting
	back 23

	SNMP::Info will ask for RFC1213-MIB::ifType and will get back ppp.

    2. SNMP::Info is easily extended to new devices

      You can create a new subclass for a device by providing four hashes :
      %GLOBALS, %MIBS, %FUNCS, and %MUNGE.

      Or you can override any existing methods from a parent class by
      making a short subroutine.

      See the section EXTENDING SNMP::INFO for more details.

      When you make a new subclass for a device, please be sure to send it
      back to the developers (via Source Forge or the mailing list) for
      inclusion in the next version.

SUBCLASSES

    These are the subclasses that implement MIBs and support devices:

    Required MIBs not included in the install instructions above are noted
    here.

 MIB Subclasses

    These subclasses implement method to access one or more MIBs. These are
    not used directly, but rather inherited from device subclasses.

    For more info run perldoc on any of the following module names.

    SNMP::Info::AdslLine

      SNMP Interface to the ADSL-LINE-MIB for ADSL interfaces.

      Requires the ADSL-LINE-MIB, down loadable from Cisco.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::AdslLine for details.

    SNMP::Info::Aggregate

      SNMP Interface to IF-MIB ifStackTable Aggregated Links

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::Aggregate for details.

    SNMP::Info::Airespace

      AIRESPACE-WIRELESS-MIB and AIRESPACE-SWITCHING-MIB. Inherited by
      devices based on the Airespace wireless platform.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::Airespace for details.

    SNMP::Info::AMAP

      ALCATEL-IND1-INTERSWITCH-PROTOCOL-MIB. Alcatel Mapping Adjacency
      Protocol (AMAP) Support.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::AMAP for details.

    SNMP::Info::Bridge

      BRIDGE-MIB (RFC1286). QBRIDGE-MIB. Inherited by devices with Layer2
      support.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::Bridge for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoAgg

      SNMP Interface to Cisco Aggregated Links

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoAgg for details.

    SNMP::Info::CDP

      CISCO-CDP-MIB. Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) Support. Inherited by
      Cisco, Enterasys, and HP devices.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CDP for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoConfig

      CISCO-CONFIG-COPY-MIB, CISCO-FLASH-MIB, and OLD-CISCO-SYS-MIB. These
      OIDs facilitate the writing of configuration files.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoConfig for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoPortSecurity

      CISCO-PORT-SECURITY-MIB and CISCO-PAE-MIB.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoPortSecurity for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoPower

      CISCO-POWER-ETHERNET-EXT-MIB.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoPower for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoQOS

      CISCO-CLASS-BASED-QOS-MIB. A collection of OIDs providing information
      about a Cisco device's QOS config.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoQOS for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoRTT

      CISCO-RTTMON-MIB. A collection of OIDs providing information about a
      Cisco device's RTT values.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoRTT for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoStack

      CISCO-STACK-MIB.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoStack for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoStpExtensions

      CISCO-STP-EXTENSIONS-MIB

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoStpExtensions for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoStats

      OLD-CISCO-CPU-MIB, CISCO-PROCESS-MIB, and CISCO-MEMORY-POOL-MIB.
      Provides common interfaces for memory, cpu, and os statistics for
      Cisco devices.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoStats for details.

    SNMP::Info::CiscoVTP

      CISCO-VTP-MIB, CISCO-VLAN-MEMBERSHIP-MIB,
      CISCO-VLAN-IFTABLE-RELATIONSHIP-MIB

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::CiscoVTP for details.

    SNMP::Info::EDP

      Extreme Discovery Protocol. EXTREME-EDP-MIB

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::EDP for details.

    SNMP::Info::Entity

      ENTITY-MIB. Used for device info in Cisco and other vendors.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::Entity for details.

    SNMP::Info::EtherLike

      EtherLike-MIB (RFC1398) - Some Layer3 devices implement this MIB, as
      well as some Aironet Layer 2 devices (non Cisco).

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::EtherLike for details.

    SNMP::Info::FDP

      Foundry (Brocade) Discovery Protocol. FOUNDRY-SN-SWITCH-GROUP-MIB

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::FDP for details.

    SNMP::Info::IPv6

      SNMP Interface for obtaining configured IPv6 addresses and mapping
      IPv6 addresses to MAC addresses and interfaces, using information
      from IP-MIB, IPV6-MIB and/or CISCO-IETF-IP-MIB.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::IPv6 for details.

    SNMP::Info::IEEE802dot11

      IEEE802dot11-MIB. A collection of OIDs providing information about
      standards based 802.11 wireless devices.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::IEEE802dot11 for details.

    SNMP::Info::IEEE802dot3ad

      SNMP Interface to IEEE Aggregated Links. IEEE8023-LAG-MIB

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::IEEE802dot3ad for details.

    SNMP::Info::LLDP

      LLDP-MIB, LLDP-EXT-DOT1-MIB, and LLDP-EXT-DOT3-MIB. Link Layer
      Discovery Protocol (LLDP) Support.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::LLDP for details.

    SNMP::Info::MAU

      MAU-MIB (RFC2668). Some Layer2 devices use this for extended Ethernet
      (Media Access Unit) interface information.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::MAU for details.

    SNMP::Info::MRO

      Method resolution introspection for SNMP::Info

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::MRO for details.

    SNMP::Info::NortelStack

      S5-AGENT-MIB, S5-CHASSIS-MIB.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::NortelStack for details.

    SNMP::Info::PowerEthernet

      POWER-ETHERNET-MIB

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::PowerEthernet for details.

    SNMP::Info::RapidCity

      RAPID-CITY. Inherited by Avaya switches for duplex and VLAN
      information.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::RapidCity for details.

    SNMP::Info::SONMP

      SynOptics Network Management Protocol (SONMP) SYNOPTICS-ROOT-MIB,
      S5-ETH-MULTISEG-TOPOLOGY-MIB. Inherited by Avaya/Nortel/Bay/Synoptics
      switches and hubs.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::SONMP for details.

 Device Subclasses

    These subclasses inherit from one or more classes to provide a common
    interface to data obtainable from network devices.

    All the required MIB files are included in the netdisco-mib package.
    (See Above).

    SNMP::Info::Layer1

      Generic Layer1 Device subclass.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer1 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer1::Allied

	Subclass for Allied Telesis Repeaters / Hubs.

	Requires ATI-MIB

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer1::Allied for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer1::Asante

	Subclass for Asante 1012 Hubs.

	Requires ASANTE-HUB1012-MIB

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer1::Asante for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer1::Bayhub

	Subclass for Nortel/Bay hubs. This includes System 5000, 100
	series, 200 series, and probably more.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer1::Bayhub for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer1::Cyclades

	Subclass for Cyclades terminal servers.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer1::Cyclades for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer1::S3000

	Subclass for Bay/Synoptics hubs. This includes System 3000, 281X,
	and probably more.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer1::S3000 for details.

    SNMP::Info::Layer2

      Generic Layer2 Device subclass.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::3Com

	SNMP::Info::Layer2::3Com - SNMP Interface to L2 3Com Switches

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::3Com for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Adtran

	Subclass for Adtran devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Adtran for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Airespace

	Subclass for Cisco (Airespace) wireless controllers.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Airespace for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Aironet

	Class for Cisco Aironet wireless devices that run IOS. See also
	Layer3::Aironet for Aironet devices that don't run IOS.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Aironet for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Allied

	Allied Telesis switches.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Allied for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Baystack

	Subclass for Avaya/Nortel/Bay Ethernet Switch/Baystack switches.
	This includes 303, 304, 350, 380, 410, 420, 425, 450, 460, 470
	series, 2500 series, 4000 series, 5000 series, Business Ethernet
	Switch (BES), Business Policy Switch (BPS), VSP 7000 series, and
	probably others.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Baystack for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Kentrox

	Class for Kentrox DataSMART DSU/CSU. See
	SNMP::Info::Layer2::Kentrox for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::C1900

	Subclass for Cisco Catalyst 1900 and 1900c Devices running CatOS.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::C1900 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::C2900

	Subclass for Cisco Catalyst 2900, 2950, 3500XL, and 3548 devices
	running IOS.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::C2900 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Catalyst

	Subclass for Cisco Catalyst switches running CatOS. These switches
	usually report a model number that starts with wsc. Note that this
	class does not support everything that has the name Catalyst.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Catalyst for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Centillion

	Subclass for Nortel/Bay Centillion and 5000BH ATM switches.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Centillion for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Cisco

	Generic Cisco subclass for layer 2 devices that are not yet
	supported in more specific subclassesand the base layer 2 Cisco
	class for other device specific layer 2 Cisco classes.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Cisco for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::CiscoSB

	Subclass for Cisco's "Small Business" product line, acquired from
	Linksys. This currently comprises the Sx300/500 line of switches.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::CiscoSB for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::HP

	Subclass for more recent HP Procurve Switches

	Requires HP-ICF-OID and ENTITY-MIB downloaded from HP.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::HP for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::HP4000

	Subclass for older HP Procurve Switches

	Requires HP-ICF-OID and ENTITY-MIB downloaded from HP.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::HP4000 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::HPVC

	Subclass for HP Virtual Connect Switches

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::HPVC for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::N2270

	Subclass for Nortel 2270 wireless switches.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::N2270 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::NAP222x

	Subclass for Nortel 222x series wireless access points.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::NAP222x for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Netgear

	Subclass for Netgear switches

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Netgear for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::NWSS2300

	SNMP Interface to Avaya (Trapeze) Wireless Controllers

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::NWSS2300 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Orinoco

	Subclass for Orinoco/Proxim wireless access points.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Orinoco for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Trapeze

	SNMP Interface to Juniper (Trapeze) Wireless Controllers

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Trapeze for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::Ubiquiti

	SNMP Interface to Ubiquiti Access Points and other devices

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::Ubiquiti for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer2::ZyXEL_DSLAM

	Zyxel DSLAMs. Need I say more?

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer2::ZyXEL_DSLAM for details.

    SNMP::Info::Layer3

      Generic Layer3 and Layer2+3 Device subclass.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Aironet

	Subclass for Cisco Aironet wireless access points (AP) not running
	IOS. These are usually older devices.

	MIBs for these devices now included in v2.tar.gz available from
	ftp.cisco.com.

	Note Layer2::Aironet

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Aironet for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::AlcatelLucent

	Alcatel-Lucent OmniSwitch Class.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::AlcatelLucent for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::AlteonAD

	Subclass for Radware Alteon Series ADC switches and Nortel
	BladeCenter Layer2-3 GbE Switch Modules.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::AlteonAD for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Altiga

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Altiga for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Arista

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Arista for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Aruba

	Subclass for Aruba wireless switches.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Aruba for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::BayRS

	Subclass for Avaya/Nortel/Bay Multiprotocol/BayRS routers. This
	includes BCN, BLN, ASN, ARN, AN, 2430, and 5430 routers.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::BayRS for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::BlueCoatSG

	Subclass for Blue Coat SG series proxy devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::BlueCoatSG for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::C3550

	Subclass for Cisco Catalyst 3550,3540,3560 2/3 switches running
	IOS.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::C3550 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::C4000

	This class covers Catalyst 4000s and 4500s.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::C4000 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::C6500

	This class covers Catalyst 6500s in native mode, hybrid mode.
	Catalyst 3750's, 2970's and probably others.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::C6500 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::CheckPoint

	Subclass for CheckPoint devices

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::CheckPoint for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Cisco

	This is a simple wrapper around layer 3 for IOS devices and the
	base layer 3 Cisco class for other device specific layer 3 Cisco
	classes.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Cisco for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::CiscoASA

	Subclass for Cisco Adaptive Security Appliances.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::CiscoASA for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::CiscoFWSM

	Subclass for Cisco Firewall Services Modules.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::CiscoFWSM for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::CiscoSwitch

	Base class for L3 Cisco switches. See documentation in
	SNMP::Info::Layer3::CiscoSwitch for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Contivity

	Subclass for Avaya/Nortel Contivity/VPN Routers.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Contivity for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::DLink

	Subclass for DLink devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::DLink for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Dell

	Subclass for Dell PowerConnect switches. D-Link, the IBM
	BladeCenter Gigabit Ethernet Switch Module and some Linksys
	switches also use this module based upon MIB support.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Dell for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Enterasys

	Subclass for Enterasys devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Enterasys for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Extreme

	Subclass for Extreme Networks switches.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Extreme for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::F5

	Subclass for F5 devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::F5 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Force10

	Subclass for Force10 devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Force10 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Fortinet

	Subclass for Fortinet devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Fortinet for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Foundry

	Subclass for Brocade (Foundry) Network devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Foundry for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::H3C

	SNMP Interface to Layer 3 Devices, H3C & HP A-series.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::H3C for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::HP9300

	Subclass for HP network devices which Foundry Networks was the
	Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) such as the HP ProCurve 9300
	and 6300 series.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::HP9300 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Huawei

	SNMP Interface to Huawei Layer 3 switches and routers.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Huawei for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::IBMGbTor

	SNMP Interface to IBM Rackswitch (formerly Blade Network
	Technologies) network devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::IBMGbTor for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Juniper

	Subclass for Juniper devices

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Juniper for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Lantronix

	Subclass for Lantronix devices

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Lantronix for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Microsoft

	Subclass for Generic Microsoft Routers running Microsoft Windows
	OS.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Microsoft for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Mikrotik

	Subclass for Mikrotik devices running RouterOS.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Mikrotik for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::N1600

	Subclass for Avaya/Nortel Ethernet Routing Switch 1600 series.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::N1600 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::NetSNMP

	Subclass for host systems running Net-SNMP.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::NetSNMP for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Netscreen

	Subclass for Juniper NetScreen.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Netscreen for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Nexus

	Subclass for Cisco Nexus devices running NX-OS

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Nexus for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::PacketFront

	Subclass for PacketFront DRG series CPE.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::PacketFront for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::PaloAlto

	Subclass for Palo Alto firewalls.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::PaloAlto for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Passport

	Subclass for Avaya/Nortel Ethernet Routing Switch/Passport 8000
	series, Accelar, and VSP 9000 series switches.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Passport for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Pf

	Subclass for FreeBSD-Based Firewalls using Pf /Pf Sense

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Pf for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Pica8

	Subclass for Pica8 devices.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Pica8 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::SonicWALL

	Subclass for generic SonicWALL devices. See documentation in
	SNMP::Info::Layer3::SonicWALL for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Steelhead

	Subclass for Riverbed Steelhead WAN optimization appliances. See
	documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Steelhead for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Sun

	Subclass for Generic Sun Routers running SunOS.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Sun for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Tasman

	Subclass for Avaya Secure Routers.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Tasman for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::Timetra

	Alcatel-Lucent SR Class.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::Timetra for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::VyOS

	Subclass for VyOS routers.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::VyOS for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer3::VMware

	Subclass for VMware ESXi hosts.

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer3::VMware for details.

    SNMP::Info::Layer7

      Generic Layer7 Devices.

      See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer7 for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer7::APC

	SNMP Interface to APC UPS devices

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer7::APC for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer7::CiscoIPS

	SNMP Interface to Cisco IPS devices

	See documentation in "SNMP::Info::Layer7::Cisco IPS" for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer7::Netscaler

	SNMP Interface to Citrix Netscaler appliances

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer7::Netscaler for details.

      SNMP::Info::Layer7::Neoteris

	SNMP Interface to Juniper SSL VPN appliances

	See documentation in SNMP::Info::Layer7::Neoteris for details.

Thanks

    Thanks for testing and coding help (in no particular order) to :
    Alexander Barthel, Andy Ford, Alexander Hartmaier, Andrew Herrick, Alex
    Kramarov, Bernhard Augenstein, Bradley Baetz, Brian Chow, Brian Wilson,
    Carlos Vicente, Dana Watanabe, David Pinkoski, David Sieborger, Douglas
    McKeown, Greg King, Ivan Auger, Jean-Philippe Luiggi, Jeroen van Ingen,
    Justin Hunter, Kent Hamilton, Matthew Tuttle, Michael Robbert, Mike
    Hunter, Nicolai Petri, Ralf Gross, Robert Kerr and people listed on the
    Netdisco README!

USAGE

 Constructor

    new()

      Creates a new object and connects via SNMP::Session.

       my $info = new SNMP::Info( 'Debug'             => 1,
                                  'AutoSpecify'       => 1,
                                  'BigInt'            => 1,
                                  'BulkWalk'          => 1,
                                  'BulkRepeaters'     => 20,
                                  'IgnoreNetSNMPConf' => 1,
                                  'LoopDetect'        => 1,
                                  'DestHost'          => 'myrouter',
                                  'Community'         => 'public',
                                  'Version'           => 2,
                                  'MibDirs'           => ['dir1','dir2','dir3'],
                                ) or die;

      SNMP::Info Specific Arguments :

      AutoSpecify

	Returns an object of a more specific device class

	(default 0, which means "off")

      BigInt

	Return Math::BigInt objects for 64 bit counters. Sets on a global
	scope, not object.

	(default 0, which means "off")

      BulkWalk

	Set to 0 to turn off BULKWALK commands for SNMPv2 connections.

	Note that BULKWALK is turned off for Net-SNMP versions 5.1.x
	because of a bug.

	(default 1, which means "on")

      BulkRepeaters

	Set number of MaxRepeaters for BULKWALK operation. See perldoc SNMP
	-> bulkwalk() for more info.

	(default 20)

      LoopDetect

	Detects looping during getnext table column walks by comparing IIDs
	for each instance. A loop is detected if the same IID is seen more
	than once and the walk is aborted. Note: This will not detect loops
	during a bulkwalk operation, Net-SNMP's internal bulkwalk function
	must detect the loop.

	Set to 0 to turn off loop detection.

	(default 1, which means "on")

      IgnoreNetSNMPConf

	Net-SNMP version 5.0 and higher read configuration files, snmp.conf
	or snmp.local.conf, from /etc/snmp, /usr/share/snmp,
	/usr/lib(64)/snmp, or $HOME/.snmp and uses those settings to
	automatically parse MIB files, etc.

	Set to 1 "on" to ignore Net-SNMP configuration files by overriding
	the SNMPCONFPATH environmental variable during object
	initialization. Note: MibDirs must be defined or Net-SNMP will not
	be able to load MIBs and initialize the object.

	(default 0, which means "off")

      Debug

	Prints Lots of debugging messages. Pass 2 to print even more
	debugging messages.

	(default 0, which means "off")

      DebugSNMP

	Set $SNMP::debugging level for Net-SNMP.

	See SNMP for more details.

      MibDirs

	Array ref to list of directories in which to look for MIBs. Note
	this will be in addition to the ones setup in snmp.conf at the
	system level.

	(default use net-snmp settings only)

      RetryNoSuch

	When using SNMP Version 1, try reading values even if they come
	back as "no such variable in this MIB". Set to false if so desired.
	This feature lets you read SNMPv2 data from an SNMP version 1
	connection, and should probably be left on.

	(default 1, which means "on")

      Session

	SNMP::Session object to use instead of connecting on own.

	(default creates session automatically)

      Offline

	Causes SNMP::Info to avoid network activity and return data only
	from its cache. If you ask for something not in the cache, an error
	is thrown. See also the cache() and offline() methods.

	(default 0, which means "online")

      Cache

	Pass in a HashRef to prime the cache of retrieved data. Useful for
	creating an instance in Offline mode from a previously dumped
	cache. See also the cache() method to retrieve a cache after
	running actial queries.

      OTHER

	All other arguments are passed to SNMP::Session.

	See SNMP::Session for a list of other possible arguments.

      A Note about the wrong Community string or wrong SNMP Version:

      If a connection is using the wrong community string or the wrong SNMP
      version, the creation of the object will not fail. The device still
      answers the call on the SNMP port, but will not return information.
      Check the error() method after you create the device object to see if
      there was a problem in connecting.

      A note about SNMP Versions :

      Some older devices don't support SNMP version 2, and will not return
      anything when a connection under Version 2 is attempted.

      Some newer devices will support Version 1, but will not return all
      the data they might have if you had connected under Version 1

      When trying to get info from a new device, you may have to try
      version 2 and then fallback to version 1.

    update()

      Replace the existing session with a new one with updated values,
      without re-identifying the device. The only supported changes are to
      Community or Context.

      Clears the object cache.

      This is useful, e.g., when a device supports multiple contexts (via
      changes to the Community string, or via the SNMPv3 Context
      parameter), but a context that you want to access does not support
      the objects (e.g., sysObjectID, sysDescr) that we use to identify the
      device.

 Data is Cached

    Methods and subroutines requesting data from a device will only load
    the data once, and then return cached versions of that data.

    Run $info->load_METHOD() where method is something like 'i_name' to
    reload data from a method.

    Run $info->clear_cache() to clear the cache to allow reload of both
    globals and table methods.

    The cache can be retrieved or set using the $info->cache() method. This
    works together with the Offline option.

 Object Scalar Methods

    These are for package related data, not directly supplied from SNMP.

    $info->clear_cache()

      Clears the cached data. This includes GLOBALS data and TABLE METHOD
      data.

    $info->debug(1)

      Returns current debug status, and optionally toggles debugging info
      for this object.

    $info->offline([1|0])

      Returns if offline mode is currently turned on for this object.

      Optionally sets the Offline parameter.

    $info->cache([new_cache])

      Returns a HashRef of all cached data in this object. There will be a
      store key for table data and then one key for each leaf.

      Optionally sets the cache parameters if passed a HashRef.

    $info->bulkwalk([1|0])

      Returns if bulkwalk is currently turned on for this object.

      Optionally sets the bulkwalk parameter.

    $info->loopdetect([1|0])

      Returns if loopdetect is currently turned on for this object.

      Optionally sets the loopdetect parameter.

    $info->device_type()

      Returns the Subclass name for this device. SNMP::Info is returned if
      no more specific class is available.

      First the device is checked for Layer 3 support and a specific
      subclass, then Layer 2 support and subclasses are checked.

      This means that Layer 2 / 3 switches and routers will fall under the
      SNMP::Info::Layer3 subclasses.

      If the device still can be connected to via SNMP::Info, then
      SNMP::Info is returned.

    $info->error(no_clear)

      Returns Error message if there is an error, or undef if there is not.

      Reading the error will clear the error unless you set the no_clear
      flag.

    $info->has_layer(3)

      Returns non-zero if the device has the supplied layer in the OSI
      Model

      Returns if the device doesn't support the layers() call.

    $info->snmp_comm()

      Returns SNMP Community string used in connection.

    $info->snmp_ver()

      Returns SNMP Version used for this connection

    $info->specify()

      Returns an object of a more-specific subclass.

       my $info = new SNMP::Info(...);
       # Returns more specific object type
       $info = $info->specific();

      Usually this method is called internally from new(AutoSpecify => 1)

      See device_type() entry for how a subclass is chosen.

    $info->cisco_comm_indexing()

      Returns 0. Is an overridable method used for vlan indexing for snmp
      calls on certain Cisco devices.

      See
      ftp://ftp.cisco.com/pub/mibs/supportlists/wsc5000/wsc5000-communityIn
      dexing.html

 Globals (Scalar Methods)

    These are methods to return scalar data from RFC1213.

    Some subset of these is probably available for any network device that
    speaks SNMP.

    $info->uptime()

      Uptime in hundredths of seconds since device became available.

      (sysUpTime)

    $info->contact()

      (sysContact)

    $info->name()

      (sysName)

    $info->location()

      (sysLocation)

    $info->layers()

      This returns a binary encoded string where each digit represents a
      layer of the OSI model served by the device.

          eg: 01000010  means layers 2 (physical) and 7 (Application) 
                        are served.

      Note: This string is 8 digits long.

      See $info->has_layer()

      (sysServices)

    $info->ports()

      Number of interfaces available on this device.

      Not too useful as the number of SNMP interfaces usually does not
      correspond with the number of physical ports

      (ifNumber)

    $info->ipforwarding()

      The indication of whether the entity is acting as an IP gateway

      Returns either forwarding or not-forwarding

      (ipForwarding)

 Table Methods

    Each of these methods returns a hash_reference to a hash keyed on the
    interface index in SNMP.

    Example : $info->interfaces() might return

        { '1.12' => 'FastEthernet/0',
          '2.15' => 'FastEthernet/1',
          '9.99' => 'FastEthernet/2'
        }

    The key is what you would see if you were to do an snmpwalk, and in
    some cases changes between reboots of the network device.

 Partial Table Fetches

    If you want to get only a part of an SNMP table or a single instance
    from the table and you know the IID for the part of the table that you
    want, you can specify it in the call:

        $local_routes = $info->ipr_route('192.168.0');

    This will only fetch entries in the table that start with 192.168.0,
    which in this case are routes on the local network.

    Remember that you must supply the partial IID (a numeric OID).

    Partial table results are not cached.

 Interface Information

    $info->interfaces()

      This methods is overridden in each subclass to provide a mapping
      between the Interface Table Index (iid) and the physical port name.

    $info->if_ignore()

      Returns a reference to a hash where key values that exist are
      interfaces to ignore.

      Ignored interfaces are ones that are usually not physical ports or
      Virtual Lans (VLANs) such as the Loopback interface, or the CPU
      interface.

    $info->bulkwalk_no()

      Returns 0. Is an overridable method used for turn off bulkwalk for
      the device class.

    $info->i_index()

      Default SNMP IID to Interface index.

      (ifIndex)

    $info->i_description()

      Description of the interface. Usually a little longer single word
      name that is both human and machine friendly. Not always.

      (ifDescr)

    $info->i_type()

      Interface type, such as Vlan, Ethernet, Serial

      (ifType)

    $info->i_mtu()

      INTEGER. Interface MTU value.

      (ifMtu)

    $info->i_speed()

      Speed of the link, human format. See munge_speed() later in document
      for details.

      (ifSpeed, ifHighSpeed if necessary)

    $info->i_speed_raw()

      Speed of the link in bits per second without munging. If i_speed_high
      is available it will be used and multiplied by 1_000_000.

      (ifSpeed, ifHighSpeed if necessary)

    $info->i_speed_high()

      Speed of a high-speed link, human format. See munge_highspeed() later
      in document for details. You should not need to call this directly,
      as i_speed() will call it if it needs to.

      (ifHighSpeed)

    $info->i_mac()

      MAC address of the interface. Note this is just the MAC of the port,
      not anything connected to it.

      (ifPhysAddress)

    $info->i_up()

      Link Status of the interface. Typical values are 'up' and 'down'.

      (ifOperStatus)

    $info->i_up_admin()

      Administrative status of the port. Typical values are 'enabled' and
      'disabled'.

      (ifAdminStatus)

    $info->i_lastchange()

      The value of sysUpTime when this port last changed states (up,down).

      (ifLastChange)

    $info->i_name()

      Interface Name field. Supported by a smaller subset of devices, this
      fields is often human set.

      (ifName)

    $info->i_alias()

      Interface Name field. For certain devices this is a more human
      friendly form of i_description(). For others it is a human set field
      like i_name().

      (ifAlias)

 Interface Statistics

    $info->i_octet_in(), $info->i_octets_out(), $info->i_octet_in64(),
    $info->i_octets_out64()

      Bandwidth.

      Number of octets sent/received on the interface including framing
      characters.

      64 bit version may not exist on all devices.

      NOTE: To manipulate 64 bit counters you need to use Math::BigInt,
      since the values are too large for a normal Perl scalar. Set the
      global $SNMP::Info::BIGINT to 1 , or pass the BigInt value to new()
      if you want SNMP::Info to do it for you.

      (ifInOctets) (ifOutOctets) (ifHCInOctets) (ifHCOutOctets)

    $info->i_errors_in(), $info->i_errors_out()

      Number of packets that contained an error preventing delivery. See
      IF-MIB for more info.

      (ifInErrors) (ifOutErrors)

    $info->i_pkts_ucast_in(), $info->i_pkts_ucast_out(),
    $info->i_pkts_ucast_in64(), $info->i_pkts_ucast_out64()

      Number of packets not sent to a multicast or broadcast address.

      64 bit version may not exist on all devices.

      (ifInUcastPkts) (ifOutUcastPkts) (ifHCInUcastPkts) (ifHCOutUcastPkts)

    $info->i_pkts_nucast_in(), $info->i_pkts_nucast_out(),

      Number of packets sent to a multicast or broadcast address.

      These methods are deprecated by i_pkts_multi_in() and
      i_pkts_bcast_in() according to IF-MIB. Actual device usage may vary.

      (ifInNUcastPkts) (ifOutNUcastPkts)

    $info->i_pkts_multi_in() $info->i_pkts_multi_out(),
    $info->i_pkts_multi_in64(), $info->i_pkts_multi_out64()

      Number of packets sent to a multicast address.

      64 bit version may not exist on all devices.

      (ifInMulticastPkts) (ifOutMulticastPkts) (ifHCInMulticastPkts)
      (ifHCOutMulticastPkts)

    $info->i_pkts_bcast_in() $info->i_pkts_bcast_out(),
    $info->i_pkts_bcast_in64() $info->i_pkts_bcast_out64()

      Number of packets sent to a broadcast address on an interface.

      64 bit version may not exist on all devices.

      (ifInBroadcastPkts) (ifOutBroadcastPkts) (ifHCInBroadcastPkts)
      (ifHCOutBroadcastPkts)

    $info->i_discards_in() $info->i_discards_out()

      "The number of inbound packets which were chosen to be discarded even
      though no errors had been detected to prevent their being deliverable
      to a higher-layer protocol. One possible reason for discarding such a
      packet could be to free up buffer space." (IF-MIB)

      (ifInDiscards) (ifOutDiscards)

    $info->i_bad_proto_in()

      "For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of packets received via
      the interface which were discarded because of an unknown or
      unsupported protocol. For character-oriented or fixed-length
      interfaces that support protocol multiplexing the number of
      transmission units received via the interface which were discarded
      because of an unknown or unsupported protocol. For any interface that
      does not support protocol multiplexing, this counter will always be
      0."

      (ifInUnknownProtos)

    $info->i_qlen_out()

      "The length of the output packet queue (in packets)."

      (ifOutQLen)

    $info->i_specific()

      See IF-MIB for full description

      (ifSpecific)

 IP Address Table

    Each entry in this table is an IP address in use on this device.
    Usually this is implemented in Layer3 Devices.

    $info->ip_index()

      Maps the IP Table to the IID

      (ipAdEntIfIndex)

    $info->ip_table()

      Maps the Table to the IP address

      (ipAdEntAddr)

    $info->ip_netmask()

      Gives netmask setting for IP table entry.

      (ipAdEntNetMask)

    $info->ip_broadcast()

      Gives broadcast address for IP table entry.

      (ipAdEntBcastAddr)

 IP Routing Table

    $info->ipr_route()

      The route in question. A value of 0.0.0.0 is the default gateway
      route.

      (ipRouteDest)

    $info->ipr_if()

      The interface (IID) that the route is on. Use interfaces() to map.

      (ipRouteIfIndex)

    $info->ipr_1()

      Primary routing metric for this route.

      (ipRouteMetric1)

    $info->ipr_2()

      If metrics are not used, they should be set to -1

      (ipRouteMetric2)

    $info->ipr_3()

      (ipRouteMetric3)

    $info->ipr_4()

      (ipRouteMetric4)

    $info->ipr_5()

      (ipRouteMetric5)

    $info->ipr_dest()

      From RFC1213:

        "The IP address of the next hop of this route.
        (In the case of a route bound to an interface
        which is realized via a broadcast media, the value
        of this field is the agent's IP address on that
        interface.)"

      (ipRouteNextHop)

    $info->ipr_type()

      From RFC1213:

          other(1),        -- none of the following
          invalid(2),      -- an invalidated route
                           -- route to directly
          direct(3),       -- connected (sub-)network
                           -- route to a non-local
          indirect(4)      -- host/network/sub-network
      
      
            "The type of route.  Note that the values
            direct(3) and indirect(4) refer to the notion of
            direct and indirect routing in the IP
            architecture.
      
            Setting this object to the value invalid(2) has
            the effect of invalidating the corresponding entry
            in the ipRouteTable object.  That is, it
            effectively disassociates the destination
            identified with said entry from the route
            identified with said entry.  It is an
            implementation-specific matter as to whether the
            agent removes an invalidated entry from the table.
            Accordingly, management stations must be prepared
            to receive tabular information from agents that
            corresponds to entries not currently in use.
            Proper interpretation of such entries requires
            examination of the relevant ipRouteType object."

      (ipRouteType)

    $info->ipr_proto()

      From RFC1213:

          other(1),       -- none of the following
                          -- non-protocol information,
                          -- e.g., manually configured
          local(2),       -- entries
                          -- set via a network
          netmgmt(3),     -- management protocol
                          -- obtained via ICMP,
          icmp(4),        -- e.g., Redirect
                          -- the remaining values are
                          -- all gateway routing
                          -- protocols
          egp(5),
          ggp(6),
          hello(7),
          rip(8),
          is-is(9),
          es-is(10),
          ciscoIgrp(11),
          bbnSpfIgp(12),
          ospf(13),
          bgp(14)

      (ipRouteProto)

    $info->ipr_age()

      Seconds since route was last updated or validated.

      (ipRouteAge)

    $info->ipr_mask()

      Subnet Mask of route. 0.0.0.0 for default gateway.

      (ipRouteMask)

    $info->ipr_info()

      Reference to MIB definition specific to routing protocol.

      (ipRouteInfo)

 Topology Information

    Based upon the manufacturer and software version devices may support
    some combination of Layer 2 topology protocol information. SNMP::Info
    supports querying Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP), Cisco Discovery
    Protocol (CDP), SynOptics/Bay/Nortel/Avaya Network Management Protocol
    (SONMP), Foundry/Brocade Discovery Protocol (FDP), Extreme Discovery
    Protocol (EDP), and Alcatel Mapping Adjacency Protocol (AMAP).

    For protocol specific information and implementation:

    LLDP: See SNMP::Info::LLDP for details.

    CDP: See SNMP::Info::CDP for details.

    SONMP: See SNMP::Info::SONMP for details.

    FDP: See SNMP::Info::FDP for details.

    EDP: See SNMP::Info::EDP for details.

    AMAP: See SNMP::Info::AMAP for details.

  Topology Capabilities

    $info->has_topo()

      Reports Layer 2 topology protocols which are supported and running on
      a device.

      Returns either a reference to an array of protocols, possible values
      being: lldp, cdp, sonmp, fdp, edp, amap or undef if no protocols are
      supported or running.

  Common Topology Table Information

    The common topology table methods below will query the device for
    information from the specified topology protocols and return a single
    hash combining all information. As a result, there may be identical
    topology information returned from the two protocols causing duplicate
    entries. It is the calling program's responsibility to identify any
    duplicate entries and remove duplicates if necessary. If it is
    necessary to understand which protocol provided the information,
    utilize the protocol specific methods directly rather than the generic
    methods.

    The methods support partial table fetches by providing a partial as the
    first argument.

    If a reference to an array is provided as the second argument, those
    protocols will be queried for information. The supported array values
    are: lldp, cdp, sonmp, fdp, edp, amap.

    If nothing is passed in as the second argument, the methods will call
    has_topo() to determine supported and running topology protocols on the
    device.

    $info->c_ip(partial, topology_protocol_arrayref)

      Returns reference to hash. Key: iid, Value: remote IPv4 address

      If multiple entries exist with the same local port, c_if(), with the
      same IPv4 address, c_ip(), it may be a duplicate entry.

      If multiple entries exist with the same local port, c_if(), with
      different IPv4 addresses, c_ip(), there is either a device in between
      two or more devices utilizing a different topology protocol or
      multiple devices which are not directly connected.

      Use the protocol specific methods to dig deeper.

    $info->c_if(partial, topology_protocol_arrayref)

      Returns reference to hash. Key: iid, Value: local device port
      (interfaces)

    $info->c_port(partial, topology_protocol_arrayref)

      Returns reference to hash. Key: iid, Value: remote port (interfaces)

    $info->c_id(partial, topology_protocol_arrayref)

      Returns reference to hash. Key: iid, Value: string value used to
      identify the chassis component associated with the remote system.

      Note: SONMP does not return this information.

    $info->c_platform(partial, topology_protocol_arrayref)

      Returns reference to hash. Key: iid, Value: Remote Device Type

      Note: EDP does not provide this information. LLDP uses
      (lldpRemSysDesc) or lldp_rem_sysname as the closest match.

    $info->c_cap(partial, topology_protocol_arrayref)

      Returns reference to hash of arrays. Key: iid, Value: Array of
      capabilities supported by the device. See the specific protocol class
      for string values which could be elements within the array.

      Note: Only CDP and LLDP support this method.

SETTING DATA VIA SNMP

    This section explains how to use SNMP::Info to do SNMP Set operations.

    $info->set_METHOD($value)

      Sets the global METHOD to value. Assumes that iid is .0

      Returns if failed, or the return value from SNMP::Session::set()
      (snmp_errno)

       $info->set_location("Here!");

    $info->set_METHOD($value,$iid)

      Table Methods. Set iid of method to value.

      Returns if failed, or the return value from SNMP::Session::set()
      (snmp_errno)

       # Disable a port administratively
       my %if_map = reverse %{$info->interfaces()}
       $info->set_i_up_admin('down', $if_map{'FastEthernet0/0'}) 
          or die "Couldn't disable the port. ",$info->error(1);

    NOTE: You must be connected to your device with a ReadWrite community
    string in order for set operations to work.

    NOTE: This will only set data listed in %FUNCS and %GLOBALS. For data
    acquired from overridden methods (subroutines) specific set_METHOD()
    subroutines will need to be added if they haven't been already.

Quiet Mode

    SNMP::Info will not chirp anything to STDOUT unless there is a serious
    error (in which case it will probably die).

    To get lots of debug info, set the Debug flag when calling new() or
    call $info->debug(1);

    When calling a method check the return value. If the return value is
    undef then check $info->error()

    Beware, calling $info->error() clears the error.

     my $name = $info->name() or die "Couldn't get sysName!" . $name->error();

EXTENDING SNMP::INFO

    To support a new class (vendor or platform) of device, add a Perl
    package with the data structures and methods listed below.

    If this seems a little scary, then the SNMP::Info developers are
    usually happy to accept the SNMP data from your device and make an
    attempt at the class themselves. Usually a "beta" release will go to
    CPAN for you to verify the implementation.

 Gathering MIB data for SNMP::Info Developers

    The preference is to open a feature request in the SourceForge project.
    This allows all developers to have visibility into the request. Please
    include pointers to the applicable platform MIBs. For development we
    will need an snmpwalk of the device. There is a tool now included in
    the SNMP::Info distribution to help with this task, although you'll
    most likely need to download the distribution from CPAN as it's
    included in the "contrib/util" directory.

    The utility is named make_snmpdata.pl. Run it with a command line like:

     ./make_snmpdata.pl -c community -i -d device_ip \
      -m /home/netdisco-mibs/rfc:/home/netdisco-mibs/net-snmp:/home/netdisco-mibs/dir3 \
      SNMPv2-MIB IF-MIB EtherLike-MIB BRIDGE-MIB Q-BRIDGE-MIB ENTITY-MIB \
      POWER-ETHERNET-MIB IPV6-MIB LLDP-MIB DEVICE-SPECIFIC-MIB-NAME(s) > output.txt

    This will print to the file every MIB entry with data in a format that
    the developers can use to emulate read operations without needing
    access to the device. Preference would be to mask any sensitive data in
    the output, zip the file, and upload as an attachment to the
    Sourceforge tracker. However, if you do not feel comfortable uploading
    the output to the tracker you could e-mail it to the developer that has
    claimed the ticket.

 Data Structures required in new Subclass

    A class inheriting this class must implement these data structures :

    $INIT

      Used to flag if the MIBs have been loaded yet.

    %GLOBALS

      Contains a hash in the form ( method_name => SNMP MIB leaf name )
      These are scalar values such as name, uptime, etc.

      To resolve MIB leaf name conflicts between private MIBs, you may
      prefix the leaf name with the MIB replacing each - (dash) and :
      (colon) with an _ (underscore). For example,
      ALTEON_TIGON_SWITCH_MIB__agSoftwareVersion would be used as the hash
      value instead of the net-snmp notation
      ALTEON-TIGON-SWITCH-MIB::agSoftwareVersion.

      When choosing the name for the methods, be aware that other new Sub
      Modules might inherit this one to get it's features. Try to choose a
      prefix for methods that will give it's own name space inside the
      SNMP::Info methods.

    %FUNCS

      Contains a hash in the form ( method_name => SNMP MIB leaf name)
      These are table entries, such as the ifIndex

      To resolve MIB leaf name conflicts between private MIBs, you may
      prefix the leaf name with the MIB replacing each - (dash) and :
      (colon) with an _ (underscore). For example,
      ALTEON_TS_PHYSICAL_MIB__agPortCurCfgPortName would be used as the
      hash value instead of the net-snmp notation
      ALTEON-TS-PHYSICAL-MIB::agPortCurCfgPortName.

    %MIBS

      A list of each mib needed.

          ('MIB-NAME' => 'itemToTestForPresence')

      The value for each entry should be a MIB object to check for to make
      sure that the MIB is present and has loaded correctly.

      $info->init() will throw an exception if a MIB does not load.

    %MUNGE

      A map between method calls (from %FUNCS or %GLOBALS) and subroutine
      methods. The subroutine called will be passed the data as it gets it
      from SNMP and it should return that same data in a more human
      friendly format.

      Sample %MUNGE:

       (my_ip     => \&munge_ip,
        my_mac    => \&munge_mac,
        my_layers => \&munge_dec2bin
       )

 Sample Subclass

    Let's make a sample Layer 2 Device subclass. This class will inherit
    the Cisco Vlan module as an example.

    ----------------------- snip --------------------------------

     # SNMP::Info::Layer2::Sample
    
     package SNMP::Info::Layer2::Sample;
    
     $VERSION = 0.1;
    
     use strict;
    
     use Exporter;
     use SNMP::Info::Layer2;
     use SNMP::Info::CiscoVTP;
    
     @SNMP::Info::Layer2::Sample::ISA = qw/SNMP::Info::Layer2
                                           SNMP::Info::CiscoVTP Exporter/;
     @SNMP::Info::Layer2::Sample::EXPORT_OK = qw//;
    
     use vars qw/$VERSION %FUNCS %GLOBALS %MIBS %MUNGE $AUTOLOAD $INIT $DEBUG/;
    
     %MIBS    = (%SNMP::Info::Layer2::MIBS,
                 %SNMP::Info::CiscoVTP::MIBS,
                 'SUPER-DOOPER-MIB'  => 'supermibobject'
                );
    
     %GLOBALS = (%SNMP::Info::Layer2::GLOBALS,
                 %SNMP::Info::CiscoVTP::GLOBALS,
                 'name'              => 'supermib_supername',
                 'favorite_color'    => 'supermib_fav_color_object',
                 'favorite_movie'    => 'supermib_fav_movie_val'
                 );
    
     %FUNCS   = (%SNMP::Info::Layer2::FUNCS,
                 %SNMP::Info::CiscoVTP::FUNCS,
                 # Super Dooper MIB - Super Hero Table
                 'super_hero_index'  => 'SuperHeroIfIndex',
                 'super_hero_name'   => 'SuperHeroIfName',
                 'super_hero_powers' => 'SuperHeroIfPowers'
                );
    
    
     %MUNGE   = (%SNMP::Info::Layer2::MUNGE,
                 %SNMP::Info::CiscoVTP::MUNGE,
                 'super_hero_powers' => \&munge_powers
                );
    
     # OverRide uptime() method from %SNMP::Info::GLOBALS
     sub uptime {
         my $sample = shift;
    
         my $name   = $sample->name();
    
         # this is silly but you get the idea
         return '600' if defined $name ;
     }
    
     # Create our own munge function
     sub munge_powers {
         my $power = shift;
    
         # Take the returned obscure value and return something useful.
         return 'Fire' if $power =~ /reallyhot/i;
         return 'Ice'  if $power =~ /reallycold/i;
    
         # Else 
         return $power;
     }
    
     # Copious Documentation here!!!
     =head1 NAME
     =head1 AUTHOR
     =head1 SYNOPSIS
     =head1 DESCRIPTION
     =head2 Inherited Classes
     =head2 Required MIBs
     =head1 GLOBALS
     =head2 Overrides
     =head1 TABLE METHODS
     =head2 Overrides
     =cut
    
     1; # don't forget this line
    ----------------------- snip --------------------------------

    Be sure and send the debugged version to
    snmp-info-users@lists.sourceforge.net to be included in the next
    version of SNMP::Info.

SNMP::INFO INTERNALS

 Object Namespace

    Internal data is stored with bareword keys. For example $info->{debug}

    SNMP Data is stored or marked cached with keys starting with an
    underscore. For example $info->{_name} is the cache for $info->name().

    Cached Table data is stored in $info->store() and marked cached per
    above.

 Package Globals

    These set the default value for an object upon creation.

    $DEBUG

      Default 0. Sends copious debug info to stdout. This global sets the
      object's debug status in new() unless 'Debug' argument passed in
      new(). Change objects' debug status with $info->debug().

    $BIGINT

      Default 0. Set to true to have 64 bit counters return Math::BigInt
      objects instead of scalar string values. See note under Interface
      Statistics about 64 bit values.

    $NOSUCH

      Default 1. Set to false to disable RetryNoSuch option for
      SNMP::Session. Or see method in new() to do it on an object scope.

    $REPEATERS

      Default 20. MaxRepeaters for BULKWALK operations. See perldoc SNMP
      for more info. Can change by passing BulkRepeaters option in new()

 Data Munging Callback Subroutines

    munge_speed()

      Makes human friendly speed ratings using %SPEED_MAP

       %SPEED_MAP = (
                      '56000'      => '56 kbps',
                      '64000'      => '64 kbps',
                      '115000'     => '115 kpbs',
                      '1500000'    => '1.5 Mbps',
                      '1536000'    => 'T1',      
                      '1544000'    => 'T1',
                      '2000000'    => '2.0 Mbps',
                      '2048000'    => '2.048 Mbps',
                      '3072000'    => 'Dual T1',
                      '3088000'    => 'Dual T1',   
                      '4000000'    => '4.0 Mbps',
                      '10000000'   => '10 Mbps',
                      '11000000'   => '11 Mbps',
                      '20000000'   => '20 Mbps',
                      '16000000'   => '16 Mbps',
                      '16777216'   => '16 Mbps',
                      '44210000'   => 'T3',
                      '44736000'   => 'T3',
                      '45000000'   => '45 Mbps',
                      '45045000'   => 'DS3',
                      '46359642'   => 'DS3',
                      '51850000'   => 'OC-1',
                      '54000000'   => '54 Mbps',
                      '64000000'   => '64 Mbps',
                      '100000000'  => '100 Mbps',
                      '200000000'  => '200 Mbps',
                      '149760000'  => 'ATM on OC-3',
                      '155000000'  => 'OC-3',
                      '155519000'  => 'OC-3',
                      '155520000'  => 'OC-3',
                      '400000000'  => '400 Mbps',
                      '599040000'  => 'ATM on OC-12', 
                      '622000000'  => 'OC-12',
                      '622080000'  => 'OC-12',
                      '1000000000' => '1.0 Gbps',
                      '2000000000' => '2.0 Gbps',
                      '2488000000' => 'OC-48',
                   )

      Note: high speed interfaces (usually 1 Gbps or faster) have their
      link speed in ifHighSpeed. i_speed() automatically determines whether
      to use ifSpeed or ifHighSpeed; if the latter is used, the value is
      munged by munge_highspeed(). SNMP::Info can return speeds up to
      terabit levels this way.

    munge_highspeed()

      Makes human friendly speed ratings for ifHighSpeed

    munge_ip()

      Takes a binary IP and makes it dotted ASCII

    munge_mac()

      Takes an octet stream (HEX-STRING) and returns a colon separated
      ASCII hex string.

    munge_prio_mac()

      Takes an 2-byte octet stream (HEX-STRING) and returns a colon
      separated ASCII hex string.

    munge_prio_port()

      Takes an 8-byte octet stream (HEX-STRING) and returns a colon
      separated ASCII hex string.

    munge_octet2hex()

      Takes a binary octet stream and returns an ASCII hex string

    munge_dec2bin()

      Takes a binary char and returns its ASCII binary representation

    munge_bits

      Takes a SNMP2 'BITS' field and returns the ASCII bit string

    munge_counter64

      If $BIGINT is set to true, then a Math::BigInt object is returned.
      See Math::BigInt for details.

    munge_i_up

      Net-SNMP tends to load RFC1213-MIB first, and so ignores the updated
      enumeration for ifOperStatus in IF-MIB. This munge handles the
      "newer" definitions for the enumeration in IF-MIB.

      TODO: Get the precedence of MIBs and overriding of MIB data in
      Net-SNMP figured out. Heirarchy/precendence of MIBS in SNMP::Info.

    munge_port_list

      Takes an octet string representing a set of ports and returns a
      reference to an array of binary values each array element
      representing a port.

      If the element has a value of '1', then that port is included in the
      set of ports; the port is not included if it has a value of '0'.

    munge_null()

      Removes control characters from a string

    munge_e_type()

      Takes an OID and return the object name if the right MIB is loaded.

 Internally Used Functions

    $info->init()

      Used internally. Loads all entries in %MIBS.

    $info->args()

      Returns a reference to the argument hash supplied to SNMP::Session

    $info->class()

      Returns the class name of the object.

    $info->error_throw(error message)

      Stores the error message for use by $info->error()

      If $info->debug() is true, then the error message is carped too.

    $info->funcs()

      Returns a reference to the %FUNCS hash.

    $info->globals()

      Returns a reference to the %GLOBALS hash.

    $info->mibs()

      Returns a reference to the %MIBS hash.

    $info->munge()

      Returns a reference of the %MUNGE hash.

    $info->nosuch()

      Returns NoSuch value set or not in new()

    $info->session()

      Gets or Sets the SNMP::Session object.

    $info->store(new_store)

      Returns or sets hash store for Table functions.

      Store is a hash reference in this format :

      $info->store = { attribute => { iid => value , iid2 => value2, ... }
      };

    $info->_global()

      Used internally by AUTOLOAD to create dynamic methods from %GLOBALS
      or a single instance MIB Leaf node name from a loaded MIB.

      Example: $info->name() on the first call dispatches to AUTOLOAD()
      which calls $info->_global('name') creating the method name().

      These methods return data as a scalar.

    $info->_set(attr,val,iid,type)

      Used internally by set_multi() to run an SNMP set command. When run
      clears attr cache.

      Attr can be passed as either a scalar or a reference to an array or
      array of arrays when used with set_multi().

      Example: $info->set_name('dog',3) uses autoload to resolve to
      $info->_set('name','dog',3);

    $info->_make_setter(val,iid)

      Used internally by AUTOLOAD to create dynamic methods from either
      %GLOBALS, %FUNCS, or a valid mib leaf from a loaded MIB which runs an
      SNMP set command. When run clears the attribute cache.

      Example: $info->set_name('dog',3) dispatches to autoload to resolve
      to $info->_set('name','dog',3) and _make_setter creates the
      set_name() method.

    $info->set_multi(arrayref)

      Used to run an SNMP set command on several new values in the one
      request. Returns the result of $info->_set(method).

      Pass either a reference to a 4 element array [<obj>, <iid>, <val>,
      <type>] or a reference to an array of 4 element arrays to specify
      multiple values.

          <obj> - One of the following forms:
              1) leaf identifier (e.g., C<'sysContact'>)
              2) An entry in either %FUNCS, %GLOBALS (e.g., 'contact')
          <iid> - The dotted-decimal, instance identifier. For scalar MIB objects
                   use '0'
          <val>  - The SNMP data value being set (e.g., 'netdisco')
          <type> - Optional as the MIB should be loaded.

      If one of the set assignments is invalid, then the request will be
      rejected without applying any of the new values - regardless of the
      order they appear in the list.

      Example: my $vlan_set = [
      ['qb_v_untagged',"$old_vlan_id","$old_untagged_portlist"],
      ['qb_v_egress',"$new_vlan_id","$new_egress_portlist"],
      ['qb_v_egress',"$old_vlan_id","$old_egress_portlist"],
      ['qb_v_untagged',"$new_vlan_id","$new_untagged_portlist"],
      ['qb_i_vlan',"$port","$new_vlan_id"], ];

          $info->set_multi($vlan_set);

    $info->load_all()

      Debugging routine. This does not include any overridden method or
      method implemented by subroutine.

      Runs $info->load_METHOD() for each entry in $info->funcs();

      Returns $info->store() -- See store() entry.

      Note return value has changed since version 0.3

    $info->all()

      Runs $info->load_all() once then returns $info->store();

      Use $info->load_all() to reload the data.

      Note return value has changed since version 0.3

    $info->_load_attr()

      Used internally by AUTOLOAD to create dynamic methods from %FUNCS or
      a MIB Leaf node name contained within a table of a loaded MIB.

      Supports partial table fetches and single instance table fetches. See
      "Partial Table Fetches" in SNMP::Info.

      These methods return data as a reference to a hash.

    $info->_show_attr()

      Used internally by AUTOLOAD to return data called by methods listed
      in %FUNCS.

    $info->snmp_connect_ip(ip)

      Returns true or false based upon snmp connectivity to an IP.

    modify_port_list(portlist,offset,replacement)

      Replaces the specified bit in a port_list array and returns the
      packed bitmask

    $info->_cache(attr, data)

      Cache retrieved data so that if it's asked for again, we use the
      cache instead of going back to Net-SNMP. Data is cached inside the
      blessed hashref $self.

      Accepts the leaf and value (scalar, or hashref for a table). Does not
      return anything useful.

    $info->_munge(attr, data)

      Raw data returned from Net-SNMP might not be formatted correctly or
      might have platform-specific bugs or mistakes. The MUNGE feature of
      SNMP::Info allows for fixups to take place.

      Accepts the leaf and value (scalar, or hashref for a table) and
      returns the raw or the munged data, as appropriate. That is, you do
      not need to know whether MUNGE is installed, and it's safe to call
      this method regardless.

    _validate_autoload_method(method)

      Used internally by AUTOLOAD to validate that a dynamic method should
      be created. Returns the OID of the MIB leaf node the method will get
      or set.

      1. Returns unless method is listed in %FUNCS, %GLOBALS, or is MIB
      Leaf node name in a loaded MIB for given class.

      2. Translates the MIB Leaf node name to an OID.

      3. Checks to see if the method access type is allowed for the
      resolved OID. Write access for set_ methods, read access for others.

    $info->can()

      Overrides UNIVERSAL::can() so that objects will correctly report
      their capabilities to include dynamic methods generated at run time
      via AUTOLOAD.

      Calls parent can() first to see if method exists, if not validates
      that a method should be created then dispatches to the appropriate
      internal method for creation. The newly created method is inserted
      into the symbol table returning to AUTOLOAD only for the initial
      method call.

      Returns undef if the method does not exist and can not be created.

 AUTOLOAD

    Each entry in either %FUNCS, %GLOBALS, or MIB Leaf node names present
    in loaded MIBs are used by AUTOLOAD() to create dynamic methods.
    Generated methods are inserted into the symbol table so that subsequent
    calls can avoid AUTOLOAD() and dispatch directly.

    1. Returns unless method is listed in %FUNCS, %GLOBALS, or is a MIB
    Leaf node name in a loaded MIB for given class.

    2. If the method exists in %GLOBALS or is a single instance MIB Leaf
    node name from a loaded MIB, _global() generates the method.

    3. If a set_ prefix is present _make_setter() generates the method.

    4. If the method exists in %FUNCS or is a MIB Leaf node name contained
    within a table from a loaded MIB, _load_attr() generates the method.

    5. A load_ prefix forces reloading of data and does not use cached
    data.

    6. A _raw suffix returns data ignoring any munge routines.

    Override any dynamic method listed in %GLOBALS, %FUNCS, or MIB Leaf
    node name a by creating a subroutine with the same name.

    For example to override $info->name() create `` sub name {...}'' in
    your subclass.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

    Changes from SNMP::Info Version 0.7 and on are: Copyright (c) 2003-2010
    Max Baker and SNMP::Info Developers All rights reserved.

    Original Code is: Copyright (c) 2002-2003, Regents of the University of
    California All rights reserved.

    Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
    modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
    met:

        * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
          this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
        * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
          notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
          documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
        * Neither the name of the University of California, Santa Cruz nor the 
          names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 
          derived from this software without specific prior written permission.

    THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS
    IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
    TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
    PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
    OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
    SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
    LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
    DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
    THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
    (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
    OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.