I would suspect that only routers capable of supporting ATM interfaces, ie 3640 and up, will respond, as ILMI is used for ATM. -Alexander Kiwerski -----Original Message----- From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu]On Behalf Of Eric Germann Sent: Monday, February 26, 2001 8:30 PM To: Jared Mauch Cc: nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: Warning: Cisco RW community backdoor. Cursory testing shows 16xx, 17xx, 26xx and 25xx don't seem to respond to it running various revs from 11.x to 12.1. 3640 running 12.0.1T coughs up the info. 3662 running 12.1(3a)T acts really goofy. Had to reboot the router to fix it (test point). CPU at 100%. At 09:48 PM 2/26/01 -0500, Jared Mauch wrote:
I was told by Cisco it should be RW. (To override the builtin one).
I never ran a test w/ RO so was speaking from that data.
If you get some message about the "community/party" exists or something like that, put this in:
no snmp-server view *ilmi
It doesn't get saved in the config, so if you machine generate your nvram:startup-config, you're ok, if you do not, you will need to re-add it each time you reboot.
- Jared
On Mon, Feb 26, 2001 at 06:43:40PM -0800, John Payne wrote:
On Mon, Feb 26, 2001 at 09:06:51PM -0500, Jared Mauch wrote:
1) Workaround provided by James is incorrect. You need RW not RO.
No, you only need to specify RO... at least according to the tests I've just run. As I understand it you're overriding a built in community.
-- John Payne http://www.sackheads.org/jpayne/ john@sackheads.org http://www.sackheads.org/uce/ Fax: +44 870 0547954 To send me mail, use the address in the From: header
-- Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from jared@puck.nether.net clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.
========================================================================== Eric Germann Inacom Info Systems egermann@inacomlima.com Lima, OH 45801 Ph: 419 331 9050 ICQ: 41927048 Fax: 603 825 5893 "It is so easy to miss pretty trivial solutions to problems deemed complicated. The goal of a scientist is to find an interesting problem, and live off it for a while. The goal of an engineer is to evade interesting problems :)" -- Vadim Antonov <avg@kotovnik.com> on NANOG