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Cisco SCE 8000 CLI Command Reference
Chapter 2 CLI Command Reference
snmp-server enable traps
snmp-server enable traps
Enables or disables sending the specified SNMP traps. (Only authentication-failure traps and enterprise
traps can be controlled using this command.)
To reset SNMP traps to the default status, use the default form of this command.
snmp-server enable traps [snmp [snmp-trap-name]] [enterprise [enterprise-trap-name]]
no snmp-server enable traps [snmp [snmp-trap-name]] [enterprise [enterprise-trap-name]]
default snmp-server enable traps [snmp [snmp-trap-name]] [enterprise [enterprise-trap-name]]
Syntax Description
Command Default SNMP traps are disabled.
Enterprise traps are enabled.
Command Modes Global configuration
Command History This table includes the following release-specific history entries:
Usage Guidelines The following classes of SNMP traps are controlled by this command:
• SNMP traps
• Enterprise traps
The snmp and enterprise keywords specify the class of traps that are to be enabled or disabled by this
command. Each class, or type, is composed of specific traps. Use these keywords as follows:
• To enable or disable all traps of one type—Specify only snmp or enterprise.
• To enable or disable only one specific trap—Specify snmp or enterprise with the trap-name
argument naming the trap.
• To enable or disable all traps—Do not specify either snmp or enterprise.
Because currently only the SNMP type of trap is the authentication trap, the snmp and authentication
keywords are redundant.
snmp-trap-name (Optional) Controls a specific SNMP trap. The only valid trap is
Authentication.
enterprise-trap-name (Optional) Controls a specific enterprise trap.
Choose attack, chassis, link-bypass, logger, operational-status,
port-operational-status, pull-request-failure, RDR-formatter, session,
SNTP, subscriber, system-reset, telnet, vas-traffic-forwarding
Release Modification
2.5.7 This command was introduced.
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