Computer Networks
Tutorial #15
- How would you request a router to return the actual values of the
objects ipForwarding, icmpInEchoes and tcpMaxConn?
Give solutions using each of the get and get-next
commands.
- The following is a diagrammatic view of portion of a table (ifTable)
in the interfaces portion of the standard MIB, edited to fit the
page. The table consists of a sequence of ifEntry elements. Values
shown are from the router r-bgowan at Bendigo.

- Describe interface 3 on this router.
- What would be the structure of an SNMP get-request to
discover the speed, in bps, of interface 1.
- What value would be returned by get-next(...ifSpeed.2)?
- Why do SNMP proponents use the expression "powerful get-next"? In
other words, what problem does the get-next operation solve very
elegantly?
- (Philosophical question) What is the purpose of the SNMP portion of
the MIB?
Practical exercises:
- Use tkined to discover routes to selected Internet hosts
and display the network map. Investigate some of the (very powerful and fully
industrial strength) functions available in tkined.
- Use the CMU SNMP utilities in the directory /usr/local/snmp on
our Unix systems. Try fetching the MIB variable
system.sysDescr.0 from various departmental systems, and thus
learn which are running SNMP.
- One of the current Big New Things is the integration of SNMP, and
network management in general, with the WWW. You can see an excellent
example of this at the URL
http://ironbark.bendigo.latrobe.edu.au/information/mrtg/
Have a look. Of particular interest is the ATM (microwave)
link between Bendigo and Bundoora!
Suggested solutions are available for this tutorial.
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Phil Scott