SNMP, an application layer protocol, facilitates the exchange of management information among network devices, such as nodes and routers. As part of the TCP/IP suite, SNMP enables administrators to remotely manage network performance, find and solve network problems, and plan for network growth.
![]() Note | Cisco allows you to use any SFTP server product but recommends SFTP products that have been certified with Cisco through the Cisco Technology Developer Partner program (CTDP). CTDP partners, such as GlobalSCAPE, certify their products with specified version of Cisco Unified Communications Manager. For information about which vendors have certified their products with your version of Cisco Unified Communications Manager, refer to the following URL: http://www.cisco.com/pcgi-bin/ctdp/Search.pl For information on using GlobalSCAPE with supported Cisco Unified Communications versions, refer to the following URL: http://www.globalscape.com/gsftps/cisco.aspx Cisco uses the following servers for internal testing. You may use one of the servers, but you must contact the vendor for support:
For issues with third-party products that have not been certified through the CTDP process, contact the third-party vendor for support. |
You use the serviceability GUI to configure SNMP-associated settings, such as community strings, users, and notification destinations for V1, V2c, and V3. The SNMP settings that you configure apply to the local node; however, if your system configuration supports clusters, you can apply settings to all servers in the cluster with the "Apply to All Nodes" option in the SNMP configuration windows.
SNMP supports IPv4, although the CISCO-CCM-MIB includes columns and storage for IPv6 addresses, preferences, and so on.