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snmpnetstat(1M)		System Administration Commands	       snmpnetstat(1M)

NAME
       snmpnetstat - show network status using SNMP

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/sfw/bin/snmpnetstat [common options] [-a] [-n] agent

       /usr/sfw/sma_snmp/bin/snmpnetstat [common options] [-iorns] agent

       /usr/sfw/sma_snmp/bin/snmpnetstat [common options] [-in] [-I interface]
       agent [interval]

       /usr/sfw/sma_snmp/bin/snmpnetstat [common options] [-an] [-s]  [-P pro‐
       tocol] agent

DESCRIPTION
       The  snmpnetstat	 command  symbolically	displays the values of various
       network-related information retrieved from a remote  system  using  the
       SNMP  protocol.	There are a number of output formats, depending on the
       options for the	information  presented.	 Referring  to	the  SYNOPSIS,
       above:

	 ·  The first form of the command displays a list of active sockets.

	 ·  The	 second	 form  presents	 the  values  of other network-related
	    information according to the option selected.

	 ·  The third form, with an interval specified, continuously  displays
	    the information regarding packet traffic on the configured network
	    interfaces.

	 ·  The fourth form displays statistics about the named protocol.

       The operand agent identifies a target SNMP agent that  is  instrumented
       to  monitor the given objects. At its simplest, the agent specification
       consists of a host name or an IPv4 address. In this situation, the com‐
       mand  attempts  communication with the agent using UDP/IPv4 to port 161
       of the target host. See snmpcmd(1M) for a full  list  of	 the  possible
       formats for agent.

       The version 1 and version 2c community specifies the community name for
       the transaction with the remote system.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       common options

	   See snmpcmd(1M) for a list of possible values for  common  options,
	   as well as their descriptions.

       -a

	   With	 the default display, show the state of all sockets. Normally,
	   sockets used by server processes are not shown.

       -i

	   Show the state of all of the network interfaces. The interface dis‐
	   play	 provides  a  table of cumulative statistics regarding packets
	   transferred, errors, and collisions. The network addresses  of  the
	   interface  and  the	maximum	 transmission unit (MTU) are also dis‐
	   played.

       -o

	   Show an abbreviated interface status, giving	 octets	 in  place  of
	   packets.  This is useful when observing virtual interfaces (such as
	   Frame Relay circuits) on a router.

       -I interface

	   Show information only about this interface; used with  an  interval
	   as described below.

       -n

	   Show	 network  addresses  as numbers. (Normally, snmpnetstat inter‐
	   prets addresses and attempts to display  them  symbolically).  This
	   option can be used with any of the display formats.

       -P protocol

	   Show	 statistics  about protocol, which is either a well-known name
	   for a protocol or an alias for it. Some protocol names and  aliases
	   are	listed	in  the	 file /etc/protocols or in a naming service. A
	   null response typically means that there are no interesting numbers
	   to  report.	The program will complain if protocol is unknown or if
	   there is no statistics routine for it.

       -s

	   Show per-protocol statistics. When used with the  -r	 option,  show
	   routing statistics instead.

       -r

	   Show the routing tables. When -s is also present, show per-protocol
	   routing statistics instead of the routing tables.

       interval

	   When snmpnetstat is invoked with an interval argument, it  displays
	   a running count of statistics related to network interfaces. inter‐
	   val is the number of seconds between reporting of statistics.

       snmpnetstat supports the following types of display:

       active sockets display (default)

	   The default display, for active sockets, shows the local and remote
	   addresses,  protocol,  and  the  internal  state  of	 the protocol.
	   Address formats are of the form  host.port  or  network.port	 if  a
	   socket's  address specifies a network but no specific host address.
	   When known, the host and network addresses are  displayed  symboli‐
	   cally according to /etc/hosts and /etc/networks, respectively. If a
	   symbolic name for an address is unknown, or if  the	-n  option  is
	   specified,  the  address  is	 printed numerically, according to the
	   address family. For more information regarding  the	Internet  "dot
	   format,"   refer   to   inet(3SOCKET).  Unspecified,	 or  wildcard,
	   addresses and ports appear as "∗".

       interface display

	   The interface display provides a  table  of	cumulative  statistics
	   regarding  packets transferred, errors, and collisions. The network
	   addresses of the interface and the maximum transmission unit	 (MTU)
	   are also displayed.

       routing table display

	   The	routing table display indicates the available routes and their
	   status. Each route consists of a destination host or network and  a
	   gateway  to	use  in	 forwarding packets. The flags field shows the
	   state of the route (U if the route is up), whether the route is  to
	   a gateway (G), whether the route was created dynamically by a redi‐
	   rect (D), and whether the route has been  modified  by  a  redirect
	   (M).	 Direct	 routes are created for each interface attached to the
	   local host. The gateway field for such entries shows the address of
	   the	outgoing  interface. The interface entry indicates the network
	   interface used for the route.

       interface display with an interval

	   When snmpnetstat is invoked with an interval argument, it  displays
	   a  running  count of statistics related to network interfaces. This
	   display consists of a column for the primary interface and a column
	   summarizing	information  for all interfaces. The primary interface
	   can be replaced with another interface  with	 the  -I  option.  The
	   first  line	of each screen of information contains a summary since
	   the system was last rebooted. Subsequent lines of output show  val‐
	   ues accumulated over the preceding interval.

       active sockets display for a single protocol

	   When	 a  protocol  is specified with the -P option, the information
	   displayed is similar to that in  the	 default  display  for	active
	   sockets, except the display is limited to the given protocol.

       Note  that figures snmpnetstat reports in the Ipkts column (part of the
       interface display) might differ from figures in	the  Ipkts  column  in
       netstat(1M).  snmpnetstat  displays  a total of unicast, multicast, and
       broadcast packets. netstat omits broadcast packets from its total.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1: Displaying Active Sockets

       The following is an example of snmpnetstat's default display, which  is
       to display active sockets.

       % snmpnetstat -v 2c -c public -a testhost

       Active Internet (tcp) Connections (including servers)
       Proto Local Address Foreign Address (state)
       tcp   *.echo	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.discard	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.daytime	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.chargen	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.ftp	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.telnet	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.smtp	   *.*		   LISTEN

       Active Internet (udp) Connections
       Proto Local Address
       udp   *.echo
       udp   *.discard
       udp   *.daytime
       udp   *.chargen
       udp   *.time

       % snmpnetstat -v 2c -c public -i testhost

       Name Mtu	 Network   Address  Ipkts     Ierrs  Opkts  Oerrs Queue
       eri0 1500 10.6.9/24 testhost 170548881 245601 687976 0	  0
       lo0  8232 127	  localhost 7530982   0	     7530982 0	  0

       Example 2: Displaying Statistics for a Specific Protocol

       The  following  example shows how snmpnetstat displays statistics for a
       specific protocol.

       % snmpnetstat -v 2c -c public -P tcp testhost

       Active Internet (tcp) Connections
       Proto Local Address Foreign Address (state)
       tcp   *.echo	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.discard	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.daytime	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.chargen	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.ftp	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.telnet	   *.*		   LISTEN
       tcp   *.smtp	   *.*		   LISTEN

EXIT STATUS
       0

	   Successful completion.

       1

	   A usage syntax error. A usage message is displayed.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWsmcmd			   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability	     │External			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       iostat(1M), netstat(1M), snmpcmd(1M), vmstat(1M), attributes(5)

SunOS 5.10			  20 Jan 2004		       snmpnetstat(1M)
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