EFA acts as the SNMP Manager for all the SLX devices and agents and receives the traps from all the devices in its inventory.
Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) traps are alert messages sent from a remote SNMP-enabled device to a central collector, the SNMP Manager. Trap messages are the main form of communication between SNMP monitoring tools – an SNMP Agent and an SNMP Manager.
XCO acts as the SNMP Manager for all the SLX devices and agents and receives the traps from all the devices in its inventory. Once you register an SLX device with XCO, XCO automatically configures the SLX device to send v3 traps to XCO.
XCO acts as an SNMP proxy for all the SNMP v2 and v3 traps received from the SLX devices, forwarding them onto an external trap receiver, if there is one.
During an update operation, XCO verifies that it is still registered to receive traps from the SLX devices. If a device is unregistered from XCO, the SNMP configuration on the device is updated to no longer send traps to the XCO IP address.
efa inventory device snmp community
create
efa inventory device snmp community
delete
efa inventory device snmp community
list
efa inventory device snmp user
create
efa inventory device snmp user
delete
efa inventory device snmp user
list
efa inventory device snmp host
create
efa inventory device snmp host
delete
efa inventory device snmp host
list
efa inventory device snmp view
create
efa inventory device snmp view
delete
efa inventory device snmp view
list
For more information about these commands, see ExtremeCloud Orchestrator Command Reference, 3.2.1 .
SNMP-COMMUNITY-MIB::snmpTrapAddress.0
. It is not the XCO IP address.For more information about SLX-OS MIBs, see the Extreme SLX-OS MIB Reference for your version of SLX-OS.
When you boot the service for the first time after upgrade, any SNMP and NTP configuration on the switch are queried and persisted in the database and managed by XCO.
Similarly, any breakout interfaces or interfaces that have status admin-state DOWN and have a non-auto speed or non-default MTU value are persisted in the database and managed by XCO.
If you have additional updates to make to these configurations, you must make them manually using the XCO commands only.
If these configurations are updated using the SLX commands directly on the switch (meaning, not by using the XCO CLI), they are considered as drifted and are reconciled.
The gosnmp-service is responsible for persisting the trap subscribers, receiving the SNMP traps, and forwarding them to the subscribers.
The service is stateless, so no historical data (that is, previously received traps) is persisted.
For high availability deployment, the service runs in active-active mode, however, since the VIP is bound to one host at a time, the pod running on the active node receives the traps. On failover, the standby node takes over and the SNMP service running on that node forwards the traps.
You may have multiple IP subnets configured to access XCO. In such a case, XCO creates multiple subinterfaces under the management interface to which XCO is bound. XCO does not determine which interface sends out the trap, syslog or webhook. The administrator is responsible for configuring a route to the recipient. If one is found, the server sends out the trap. For more information, see Multiple Management IP Networks.