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SNMP Monitor of generic SNMP OIDs for Routers/Printers/Switches/Servers #3765

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NEBELWAENDE opened this issue Sep 19, 2023 · 5 comments
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feature-request Request for new features to be added

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@NEBELWAENDE
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⚠️ Please verify that this feature request has NOT been suggested before.

  • I checked and didn't find similar feature request

🏷️ Feature Request Type

New Monitor

🔖 Feature description

To be able to check if a certain SNMP OID has a given String/Value and reached a certain Threshold

✔️ Solution

I have several SNMP Devices like Router / Printer / Switches and Servers and i want to Check Toner / Harddisk consumtion / CPU Utilisation via SNMP Host Ressources MIB oder Printer MIB

❓ Alternatives

Check the Values manualy via SNMPWALK / SNMPGET Unix/Linux CLI

📝 Additional Context

..

@NEBELWAENDE NEBELWAENDE added the feature-request Request for new features to be added label Sep 19, 2023
@CommanderStorm
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@NEBELWAENDE
I think this is a duplicate of #1675 and its dulicates like #3366, #1779, #420
If you agree, could you please close this Issue, as duplicates only create immortal zombies and are really hard to issue-manage?
If not, what makes this issue unique enough to require an additional issue? (Could this be integrated into the issue linked above?) ^^

@NEBELWAENDE
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I appologize - yes you are right. This is one of several duplicates on the needed SNMP availability in uptime kuma. I have seen in the syslog that the ping Implementation fires up ping commands periodicaly. An similar implementation of SNMP could be easy to use snmpget / snmpwalk CLI in the background. But anyway - ill close this one to keep the others alive the next couple of days. Warm regards, Gregor

@NEBELWAENDE
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On Ubuntu/Debian/Rasbian you can install Net-SNMP tools with one simple command: “apt-get install snmp“, or if you have CentOS/RHEL/Oracle Linux/Fedora you can use “yum install net-snmp net-snmp-utils“

$ snmpget -v 2c 127.0.0.1 -c public .1.3.6.1.2.1.1.5.0
SNMPv2-MIB::sysName.0 = STRING: centos7

$ snmpget -v 2c 127.0.0.1 -c public sysName.0
SNMPv2-MIB::sysName.0 = STRING: centos7

https://jfearn.fedorapeople.org/fdocs/en-US/Fedora_Draft_Documentation/0.1/html/System_Administrators_Guide/sect-System_Monitoring_Tools-Net-SNMP-Retrieving.html

@NEBELWAENDE
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Tank you.

@NEBELWAENDE
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.

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Labels
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