Table 16: SNMP Terminology (continued)
MeaningTerm
SNMPv3 term; an individual who accesses the routeruser
SNMPv3 term; defines the management information available to the user:
read, write, or notification
view
SNMP Features Supported
This SNMP implementation provides the following:
â– Standard SNMP MIB support for services and interfaces as defined by the Internet
Engineering Task Force (IETF)
â– A set of AS number version 1 notated enterprise MIBs for all management
functions not addressed by standard MIBs
â– A multilingual SNMP server that supports SNMPv1, SNMPv2c, and SNMPv3
protocols
â– Enhanced security and management features supported in SNMPv3
â– Traps for alarm and state change events
â– Bulk data collection and retrieval
â– Management of virtual routers
â– Secure audit logging for packet mirroring traps and Juni-PACKET-MIRROR MIB
access
NOTE: You can disable the management interface through SNMP. But, if you disable
the management interface, you can no longer access the router through SNMP.
NOTE: JUNOSe software supports SNMP packet mirroring traps; however, the packet
mirroring-related SNMP commands, categories, and traps are visible in the CLI only
to authorized users. See JUNOSe Policy Management Configuration Guide for information
about using SNMP with secure packet mirroring.
SNMP Client
The SNMP client runs on a network host and communicates with one or more SNMP
servers on other network devices, such as routers, to configure and monitor the
operation of those network devices.
Overview â– 149
Chapter 4: Configuring SNMP