On Thu, Oct 4, 2012 at 12:17 PM, James Pifer <jep@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 10/4/2012 9:40 AM, James Pifer wrote: >> I have a CentOS release 5.8 that has snmp traps being sent to it. I've >> been trying to forward the snmp traps to another system. I've tried >> forwarding with snmpd/snmptrapd, iptables, and some forwarding programs. >> I can see snmp traps getting delivered to the system with tcpdump and >> wireshark, but no matter what app I run, the traps do not appear to be >> reaching the application or port 162. It seems like the packets are >> possibly being dropped right away. >> >> iptables is wide open: >> >> # iptables -L >> Chain INPUT (policy ACCEPT) >> target prot opt source destination >> >> Chain FORWARD (policy ACCEPT) >> target prot opt source destination >> >> Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT) >> target prot opt source destination >> >> If I run the apps I can see port 162 open and closed depending on what I >> have running, so I'm sure there's not a specific app running already on >> that port. >> >> Anyone have any ideas on what could be happening to these packets and >> why they might not be reaching port 162 on this host? >> > > > Just a follow up. I ran tcpdump for port 162 for a little while and when > I stopped I see this at the end: > > 737 packets captured > 737 packets received by filter > 0 packets dropped by kernel > > So I guess the kernel is not dropping them. Still can't explain why > applications are not picking them up. > > Any help is appreciated. I'd try strace'ing the app that is supposed to be receiving them to see if the socket opens are working and what happens with a packet arrives on the port. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos