I have a question about ifAdminStatus and ifOperStatus. Here is an output of my network interfaces state using ifAdminStatus:
snmpwalk -Os -c public -v 1 192.168.1.1 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.7ifAdminStatus.1 = INTEGER: up(1)
ifAdminStatus.12 = INTEGER: down(2)
ifAdminStatus.13 = INTEGER: up(1)
ifAdminStatus.14 = INTEGER: up(1)
And here is the same list using ifOperStatus:
snmpwalk -Os -c public -v 1 192.168.1.1 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.8
ifOperStatus.12 = INTEGER: down(2)
ifOperStatus.13 = INTEGER: down(2)
ifOperStatus.14 = INTEGER: down(2)
As you can see an ifAdminStatus reports that #13 and #14 are up but ifOperStatus reports them both down. I know for a fact that #13 is up and passing packets though it ( it's my PPPoE Internet connection interface). According to cisco documentation "If ifAdminStatus is down(2) then ifOperStatus should be down(2)." Which doesn't seems to be the case here...
My question is - why the reported statuses are different and is it safe to use just ifAdminStatus to tell if the interface is up and running instead of ifOperStatus?
thanks!
Here is snmpwalk with additional interfaces info:
snmpwalk -Os -c public -v 1 192.168.1.1 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1
[.....]
ifIndex.12 = INTEGER: 12
ifIndex.13 = INTEGER: 13
ifIndex.14 = INTEGER: 14
[.....]
ifDescr.12 = STRING: etherip0
ifDescr.13 = STRING: ppp0
ifDescr.14 = STRING: tun1
[.....]
ifType.12 = INTEGER: ethernetCsmacd(6)
ifType.13 = INTEGER: ppp(23)
ifType.14 = INTEGER: other(1)
ifAdminStatus
reveals whether the interface is enabled for operation
ifOperStatus
reveals whether the interface has successfully formed a link.
The documentation you cited only asserts that ifAdminStatus=down
means ifOperStatus=down
. That much is true with ifIndex
12.
ifAdminStatus
reports ifIndex
13 and 14 as up. Therefore, the guidance you quoted from Cisco's documentation doesn't apply. The operational status of those interfaces can still be down, even if they are enabled to operate. One simple case would be if no cable was plugged into them.
EDIT
The whole time I have been answering this question, I thought you had a Cisco router running IOS. Based on your snmpwalk, this is in fact a Linksys
sysDescr.0 = STRING: Linux Linksys E4200 2.6.24.111 #8614
Tue Dec 20 05:09:38 CET 2011 mips
Based on the evidence I have seen, you just cant monitor ifOperStatus for your PPPoE connection; they didnt code that much functionality into the SNMP agent on the Linksys.
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