Hello,
I have always been advised that special characters and community strings
are a bad combination. Like drinking and driving, it's dangerous,
sometimes you end up OK, but usually when you don't it's disasterous.
How do you like that? A combination answer to a technical question AND a
holiday public service announcement all in one!!!!!!
Happy Holidays
Steve Valente
Nortel Networks
Bay Networks LOB
Optivity Unix Support
At 04:14 PM 11/25/98 -0500, Mary H Farris wrote:
>All,
>
>I am trying to test snmp access to one of our customer routers. To test
>I used the "snmpwalk -c " command but I can't seem to get snmp replies. I
>put a sniffer on the ring where my nms server is and captured the snmp data
>going to this router. What I found is that the community string the
>sniffer captured and the community string I used on the command line were
>different. As an example if the community string was netview$monitor and
>I typed "snmpwalk -c netview$monitor routeripaddress" then the sniffer
>capture would display the community string of "netview" it would just
>drop everything after the $. Is the $ a special character that cannot be
>used in community strings? If this is not a limitation
>
>thanks,
>
>Mary_Farris@freddiemac.com
>
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