Hmm -our mailing list software thinks you are a mail daemon somehow...
You probably have to hack the snmp.tcl file directly to set the community
string. If you can come up with a more general little API (2-line procedure)
to add to that module, that would be helpful. It has been some time since
I played with TclHttpd and Scotty together.
>>>Fruitbat said:
>
> Heya!
>
> Been looking to use the tclhttpd server with scotty extensions
> to watch our network (I currently use tkined/scotty, just what to move
> it to http serve)
>
> This is all good and well, EXCEPT I can't find anywhere to set the snmp
> 'community' string (we don't use 'public' and have our own community
> strings set, and some machines on our network aren't ours and they use a
> different community string again).
>
> No big deal...if you use scotty/tkined you can set SNMP:Alias for each
> host and reflect the value for SNMP:Alias in the .scottyrc or,
> alternately, set a default snmp community string in the tkined.defaults
> file...(neither of which seemed to hold any duress over tclhttpd and
> keeps getting a 'connection refused' response ;) I even tried
> 'community'@hostname.....sigh...
>
>
>
> Any way around this?
>
>
> Cheers!
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> ....
>
-- Brent Welch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.scriptics.com
Scriptics: The Tcl Platform Company