Gufo SNMP Example: GetBulk Request
We have mastered the iteration of the MIB view
in our getnext example. SNMP v2
also offers more effective approach - the GetBulk
request. Gufo SNMP hides all implementation
difference and the interface to the GetBulk
requests is almost identical to the GetNext one.
getbulk.py import asyncio
import sys
from gufo.snmp import SnmpSession
async def main ( addr : str , community : str , oid : str ) -> None :
async with SnmpSession ( addr = addr , community = community ) as session :
async for k , v in session . getbulk ( oid ):
print ( f " { k } : { v } " )
asyncio . run ( main ( sys . argv [ 1 ], sys . argv [ 2 ], sys . argv [ 3 ]))
Let's see the details.
getbulk.py import asyncio
import sys
from gufo.snmp import SnmpSession
async def main ( addr : str , community : str , oid : str ) -> None :
async with SnmpSession ( addr = addr , community = community ) as session :
async for k , v in session . getbulk ( oid ):
print ( f " { k } : { v } " )
asyncio . run ( main ( sys . argv [ 1 ], sys . argv [ 2 ], sys . argv [ 3 ]))
Gufo SNMP is an async library. In our case
we should run the client from our synchronous script,
so we need to import asyncio to use asyncio.run().
getbulk.py import asyncio
import sys
from gufo.snmp import SnmpSession
async def main ( addr : str , community : str , oid : str ) -> None :
async with SnmpSession ( addr = addr , community = community ) as session :
async for k , v in session . getbulk ( oid ):
print ( f " { k } : { v } " )
asyncio . run ( main ( sys . argv [ 1 ], sys . argv [ 2 ], sys . argv [ 3 ]))
Import sys module to parse the CLI argument.
Warning
We use sys.argv only for demonstration purposes. Use argsparse or alternatives
in real-world applications.
getbulk.py import asyncio
import sys
from gufo.snmp import SnmpSession
async def main ( addr : str , community : str , oid : str ) -> None :
async with SnmpSession ( addr = addr , community = community ) as session :
async for k , v in session . getbulk ( oid ):
print ( f " { k } : { v } " )
asyncio . run ( main ( sys . argv [ 1 ], sys . argv [ 2 ], sys . argv [ 3 ]))
SnmpSession object holds all necessary API, so import it from gufo.snmp.
getbulk.py import asyncio
import sys
from gufo.snmp import SnmpSession
async def main ( addr : str , community : str , oid : str ) -> None :
async with SnmpSession ( addr = addr , community = community ) as session :
async for k , v in session . getbulk ( oid ):
print ( f " { k } : { v } " )
asyncio . run ( main ( sys . argv [ 1 ], sys . argv [ 2 ], sys . argv [ 3 ]))
Asynchronous code must be executed in the asynchronous functions or coroutines.
So we define our function as async. We expect the following arguments:
Address of the agent.
SNMP community to authorize.
Base OID to query.
getbulk.py import asyncio
import sys
from gufo.snmp import SnmpSession
async def main ( addr : str , community : str , oid : str ) -> None :
async with SnmpSession ( addr = addr , community = community ) as session :
async for k , v in session . getbulk ( oid ):
print ( f " { k } : { v } " )
asyncio . run ( main ( sys . argv [ 1 ], sys . argv [ 2 ], sys . argv [ 3 ]))
First, we need to create SnmpSession object which wraps the client's session.
The SnmpSession may be used as an instance directly or operated as async context manager
with the async with clause. When used as a context manager,
the client automatically closes all connections on the exit of context,
so its lifetime is defined explicitly.
SnmpSession constructor offers lots of configuration variables for fine-tuning. Refer to the
SnmpSession reference
for further details. In our example, we set the agent's address and SNMP community
to the given values.
getbulk.py import asyncio
import sys
from gufo.snmp import SnmpSession
async def main ( addr : str , community : str , oid : str ) -> None :
async with SnmpSession ( addr = addr , community = community ) as session :
async for k , v in session . getbulk ( oid ):
print ( f " { k } : { v } " )
asyncio . run ( main ( sys . argv [ 1 ], sys . argv [ 2 ], sys . argv [ 3 ]))
We use SnmpSession.getbulk() function to iterate within base OID. The function is an asynchronous
iterator returning pairs of (OID, value), so we use async for construction to iterate over the values.
See SnmpSession.getbulk() reference
for further details.
getbulk.py import asyncio
import sys
from gufo.snmp import SnmpSession
async def main ( addr : str , community : str , oid : str ) -> None :
async with SnmpSession ( addr = addr , community = community ) as session :
async for k , v in session . getbulk ( oid ):
print ( f " { k } : { v } " )
asyncio . run ( main ( sys . argv [ 1 ], sys . argv [ 2 ], sys . argv [ 3 ]))
It is up to the application how to deal with the result.
In our example we just print it.
getbulk.py import asyncio
import sys
from gufo.snmp import SnmpSession
async def main ( addr : str , community : str , oid : str ) -> None :
async with SnmpSession ( addr = addr , community = community ) as session :
async for k , v in session . getbulk ( oid ):
print ( f " { k } : { v } " )
asyncio . run ( main ( sys . argv [ 1 ], sys . argv [ 2 ], sys . argv [ 3 ]))
Lets run our asynchronous main() function via asyncio.run
and pass first command-line parameters as address, community, and oid.
Running
Let's check our script. Run example as:
$ python3 examples/async/getbulk.py 127.0.0.1 public 1.3.6.1.2.1.1
1.3.6.1.2.1.1.1.0: b'Linux d280d3a0a307 5.15.49-linuxkit #1 SMP Tue Sep 13 07:51:46 UTC 2022 x86_64'
1.3.6.1.2.1.1.2.0: 1.3.6.1.4.1.8072.3.2.10
1.3.6.1.2.1.1.3.0: 36567296
1.3.6.1.2.1.1.4.0: b'test <test@example.com>'
1.3.6.1.2.1.1.5.0: b'd280d3a0a307'
1.3.6.1.2.1.1.6.0: b'Gufo SNMP Test'
1.3.6.1.2.1.1.7.0: 72
...