libsnmpkit(3)
NAME
snmpkit - SNMP communication library
SYNOPSIS
#include <snmpkit.h> SNMPSTRUCTFILLER *new_snmpstructfiller(SNMPSESSION *session); void delete_snmpstructfiller(SNMPSTRUCTFILLER *doomed); void snmpstructfiller_append(SNMPSTRUCTFILLER *sf, const char *oidstr,Tags tag, unsigned int offset); void snmpstructfiller_remove(SNMPSTRUCTFILLER *sf,const char *oidstr); void *snmpstructfiller_get(SNMPSTRUCTFILLER *sf,void *tobefilled); void *snmpstructfiller_get_next(SNMPSTRUCTFILLER *sf, void *tobefilled); SNMPTABLE *new_snmptable(SNMPSESSION *session,unsigned int structlen); void delete_snmptable(SNMPTABLE *doomed); void snmptable_append(SNMPTABLE *st,const char *oidstr,Tags tag, unsigned int offset); void snmptable_remove(SNMPTABLE *st,const char *oidstr); void *snmptable_get(SNMPTABLE *st,unsigned int *len);
DESCRIPTION
snmpkit is a toolkit for doing SNMP queries of network connected
devices. Its design is quite different than other snmp libraries such
as those published by CMU and UC Davis. Those SNMP libraries largely
preserve the OSI model in their programming interfaces. In other words
words they expect that applications are going request objects by name
from the MIBs. This introduces quite a lot of overhead as the objects
are translated in and out of the textual representations each and every
time a request is done. They also assume that they are communicating
with only one host. snmpkit is different, because it assumes that the
program is going to do be querying a few well known object on a large
numbers of hosts. In other words the design of the library is exactly
the opposite of the traditional SNMP libraries. It doesn't bother with
all the MIB processing. It figures that the objects that the programmer
wants to query are well known at the time of application development
and therefore it is worth the time to read the MIB by hand and figure
out what the OID for the object is and hard code that into the application. Since it assumes that you are going to be communicating with a
large number of hosts, it provides a mechanism to allow many sessions
on one socket.
For example, say you want to find out the page count on all the printers you have enterprise wide. This amounts to 3500 different printers.
One approach to this would be to have a script sequentially go through
each and every printer and query it's page count. This would take a
very long time because the out of those 3500 printers there would be a
handful which are either turned off, broken, or for which you have
incorrect information. The queries would be reasonably fast up until
the point where you hit one which didn't respond and then your script
would pause for quite some time before giving up and going onto the
next one. One solution to this problem would be to parallelize the task
so that you start up several of the processes at once. In this case,
the problem is that each one of those queries would consume one process
as well as one socket per host. Care would have to be execised so as
not to not forkbomb the computer or run out of open file descritors.
This approach allows you to multiplex all the SNMP queries on one
socket.
The third thing that is different about snmpkit is that it is optimized
to fill structures with information. If you are fetching individual
objects, you basically specify the objects that you want in a structure
and tell the structure filler where within the structure to put the
object and then call the one of the get functions. If you want to fetch
all the rows in a table it is very similar. You specify the what
objects you want and their offsets into the structure and then you
specify the structure length and it will fetch all the rows within the
structure and return a vector of all the structures and the number of
structures that are fetched.
AUTHOR
Ben Woodard <ben@users.sourceforge.net>
BUGS
Interface bug -- The method of filling structures is really nasty code.
It does all sorts of really evil futzing with pointers. It should probably be rewritten to call a function which puts the variable in place.
The thing is it took a long time to get right but now it works and it
is very efficient.
Interface bug -- The snmptable functions return a pointer to a dynamically allocated vector of structures. It should probably return some
type of container instead.
Interface bug -- With this interface there is no way to perform any
sets. The snmpstructfiller and snmptable should include functions to do
sets.
The library can possibly throw different kinds of C++ execptions that
won't be caught by the glue code and therefore it can cause your program to crash inexplicably.
The library is implemented using a lot of hand crafted data structures.
It should be rewritten to use many of the features available in libstdc++.