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snmp3_set
Set the value of an SNMP object
Description
bool snmp3_set
( string $host
, string $sec_name
, string $sec_level
, string $auth_protocol
, string $auth_passphrase
, string $priv_protocol
, string $priv_passphrase
, string $object_id
, string $type
, string $value
[, int $timeout = 1000000
[, int $retries = 5
]] )
Even if the security level does not use an auth or priv protocol/password valid values have to be specified.
Parameters
-
host
-
The hostname of the SNMP agent (server).
-
sec_name
-
the security name, usually some kind of username
-
sec_level
-
the security level (noAuthNoPriv|authNoPriv|authPriv)
-
auth_protocol
-
the authentication protocol (MD5 or SHA)
-
auth_passphrase
-
the authentication pass phrase
-
priv_protocol
-
the privacy protocol (DES or AES)
-
priv_passphrase
-
the privacy pass phrase
-
object_id
-
The SNMP object id.
-
type
-
The MIB defines the type of each object id. It has to be specified as a single character from the below list.
types
= | The type is taken from the MIB |
i | INTEGER |
u | INTEGER |
s | STRING |
x | HEX STRING |
d | DECIMAL STRING |
n | NULLOBJ |
o | OBJID |
t | TIMETICKS |
a | IPADDRESS |
b | BITS |
If OPAQUE_SPECIAL_TYPES was defined while compiling the SNMP library, the following are also valid:
types
U | unsigned int64 |
I | signed int64 |
F | float |
D | double |
Most of these will use the obvious corresponding ASN.1 type. 's', 'x', 'd' and 'b' are all different ways of specifying an OCTET STRING value, and
the 'u' unsigned type is also used for handling Gauge32 values.
If the MIB-Files are loaded by into the MIB Tree with "snmp_read_mib" or by specifying it in the libsnmp config, '=' may be used as
the type parameter for all object ids as the type can then be automatically read from the MIB.
Note that there are two ways to set a variable of the type BITS like e.g.
"SYNTAX BITS {telnet(0), ftp(1), http(2), icmp(3), snmp(4), ssh(5), https(6)}":
-
Using type "b" and a list of bit numbers. This method is not recommended since GET query for the same OID would return e.g. 0xF8.
-
Using type "x" and a hex number but without(!) the usual "0x" prefix.
See examples section for more details.
-
value
-
The new value
-
timeout
-
The number of microseconds until the first timeout.
-
retries
-
The number of times to retry if timeouts occur.
Return Values
Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
If the SNMP host rejects the data type, an E_WARNING message like "Warning: Error in packet. Reason: (badValue) The value given has the wrong type or length." is shown.
If an unknown or invalid OID is specified the warning probably reads "Could not add variable".
Examples
Example #1 Using snmp3_set
<?php snmp3_set('localhost', 'james', 'authPriv', 'SHA', 'secret007', 'AES', 'secret007', 'IF-MIB::ifAlias.3', 's', "foo"); ?>
Example #2 Using snmp3_set for setting BITS SNMP object id
<?php snmp3_set('localhost', 'james', 'authPriv', 'SHA', 'secret007', 'AES', 'secret007', 'FOO-MIB::bar.42', 'b', '0 1 2 3 4'); // or snmp3_set('localhost', 'james', 'authPriv', 'SHA', 'secret007', 'AES', 'secret007', 'FOO-MIB::bar.42', 'x', 'F0'); ?>
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