On Mon, 26 February 2001, John Fraizer wrote:
While I agree that "public" and "private" are "wellknowns," in most implementations, they at least show up in the code. Cisco chose to hide this one where it would not show up in the code. That IMHO is a very bad thing and does bad things to my confidence level in Cisco.
What is the difference between a bug and a feature, the feature is documented. http://www.protocols.com/pbook/ilmi.htm Protocol Limitations The following are some known SNMP limitations. ATM messages must be formatted according to SNMP version 1, not SNMP version 2. ALL SNMP messages will use the community name ILMI. In all SNMP Traps, the agent address field always has an IP Address value of 0.0.0.0. The supported traps are coldStart and enterpriseSpecific. In all SNMP traps, the timestamp field contains the value of the agents sysUpTime MIB object at the time of trap generation. In all of the standard SNMP traps, the enterprise field in the Trap PDU contains the value of the agents sysObjectID MIB object. The size of messages can be up to 484 octets. Those darn ATM people again. Screwing up a perfectly good protocol for their ATM UNI ILMI stuff.