20042014 Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved. The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License, Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/. Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the License. snmpm_user snmpm_user.xml
snmpm_user Behaviour module for the SNMP manager user.

This module defines the behaviour of the manager user. A snmpm_user compliant module must export the following functions:

handle_error/3

handle_agent/4

handle_pdu/4

handle_trap/3

handle_inform/3

handle_report/3

handle_invalid_result/2

The semantics of them and their exact signatures are explained below.

Some of the function has no defined return value (void()), they can of course return anything. But the functions that do have specified return value(s) must adhere to this. None of the functions can use exit of throw to return.

If the manager is not configured to use any particular transport domain, the behaviour handle_agent/4 will for backwards copmpatibility reasons be called with the old IpAddr and PortNumber arguments

DATA TYPES
handle_error(ReqId, Reason, UserData) -> void() Handle error ReqId = integer() Reason = {unexpected_pdu, SnmpInfo} | {invalid_sec_info, SecInfo, SnmpInfo} | {empty_message, Addr, Port} | term() SnmpInfo = snmp_gen_info() SecInfo = term() Addr = ip_address() Port = integer() UserData = term()

This function is called when the manager needs to communicate an "asynchronous" error to the user: e.g. failure to send an asynchronous message (i.e. encoding error), a received message was discarded due to security error, the manager failed to generate a response message to a received inform-request, or when receiving an unexpected PDU from an agent (could be an expired async request).

If ReqId is less then 0, it means that this information was not available to the manager (that info was never retrieved before the message was discarded).

For SnmpInfo see handle_agent below.

handle_agent(Domain, Addr, Type, SnmpInfo, UserData) -> Reply Handle agent Domain = transportDomainUdpIpv4 | transportDomainUdpIpv6 Addr = {inet:ip_address(), inet:port_number()} Type = pdu | trap | report | inform SnmpInfo = SnmpPduInfo | SnmpTrapInfo | SnmpReportInfo | SnmpInformInfo SnmpPduInfo = snmp_gen_info() SnmpTrapInfo = snmp_v1_trap_info() SnmpReportInfo = snmp_gen_info() SnmpInformInfo = snmp_gen_info() UserData = term() Reply = ignore | {register, UserId, TargetName, AgentConfig} UserId = term() TargetName = target_name() AgentConfig = [agent_config()]

This function is called when a message is received from an unknown agent.

Note that this will always be the default user that is called.

For more info about the agent_config(), see register_agent.

The arguments Type and SnmpInfo relates in the following way:

pdu - SnmpPduInfo (see handle_pdu for more info).

trap - SnmpTrapInfo (see handle_trap for more info).

report - SnmpReportInfo (see handle_report for more info).

inform - SnmpInformInfo (see handle_inform for more info).

The only user which would return {register, UserId, TargetName, AgentConfig} is the default user.

handle_pdu(TargetName, ReqId, SnmpPduInfo, UserData) -> void() Handle the reply to an asynchronous request TargetName = target_name() ReqId = term() SnmpPduInfo = snmp_gen_info() UserData = term()

Handle the reply to an asynchronous request, such as async_get, async_get_next or async_set.

It could also be a late reply to a synchronous request.

ReqId is returned by the asynchronous request function.

handle_trap(TargetName, SnmpTrapInfo, UserData) -> Reply Handle a trap/notification message TargetName = TargetName2 = target_name() SnmpTrapInfo = snmp_v1_trap_info() | snmp_gen_info() UserData = term() Reply = ignore | unregister | {register, UserId, TargetName2, AgentConfig} UserId = term() AgentConfig = [agent_config()]

Handle a trap/notification message from an agent.

For more info about the agent_config(), see register_agent

The only user which would return {register, UserId, TargetName2, agent_info()} is the default user.

handle_inform(TargetName, SnmpInformInfo, UserData) -> Reply Handle a inform message TargetName = TargetName2 = target_name() SnmpInformInfo = snmp_gen_info() UserData = term() Reply = ignore | no_reply | unregister | {register, UserId, TargetName2, AgentConfig} UserId = term() AgentConfig = [agent_config()]

Handle a inform message.

For more info about the agent_config(), see register_agent

The only user which would return {register, UserId, TargetName2, AgentConfig} is the default user.

If the inform request behaviour configuration option is set to user or {user, integer()}, the response (acknowledgment) to this inform-request will be sent when this function returns.

handle_report(TargetName, SnmpReportInfo, UserData) -> Reply Handle a report message TargetName = TargetName2 = target_name() Addr = ip_address() Port = integer() SnmpReportInfo = snmp_gen_info() UserData = term() Reply = ignore | unregister | {register, UserId, TargetName2, AgentConfig} UserId = term() AgentConfig = [agent_config()]

Handle a report message.

For more info about the agent_config(), see register_agent

The only user which would return {register, UserId, TargetName2, AgentConfig} is the default user.

handle_invalid_result(IN, OUT) -> void() Handle a report message IN = {Func, Args} Func = atom() Args = list() OUT = {crash, CrashInfo} | {result, InvalidResult} CrashInfo = {ErrorType, Error, Stacktrace} ErrorType = atom() Error = term() Stacktrace = list() InvalidResult = term()

If any of the other callback functions crashes (exit, throw or a plain crash) or return an invalid result (if a valid return has been specified), this function is called. The purpose is to allow the user handle this error (for instance to issue an error report).

IN reprecents the function called (and its arguments). OUT represents the unexpected/invalid result.