![]() ![]() There are two tools worth using to explore the available Fortinet’s SNMP data, they are snmpwalk and snmpget. ![]() See the Fortinet web site on how to setup the Fortigate for SNMP, its simple and should take a few minutes. Once the Fortinet is setup to accept SNMP from your host (in my case just a CENTOS Linux server), you can use a number of simple tools to retrieve the values you need. Recently (2013) I needed to enhance a monitoring system by including data transfer stats from our 12 firewalls running v3 software, without using any purchased software I decided to gather all the data using SNMP and then graph it in different ways. NOTE: MIB numbering changes depending on version! This document refers to an older v3 MIB, if you are on v5 or later then the names and numbering has changed … sorry, blame Fortinet □ ![]()
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