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AdRem SNMP Manager is an integrated SNMP administration console that provides IT professionals with the remote view and control of devices (firewalls, routers, switches, printers, etc). The solution supports SNMP v1, v2, and v3, allowing users to perform key tasks, such as SNMP node discovery, trap receiving/forwarding as well as MIB viewing, compiling, loading, editing, and walking. The program’s SNMP View Editor provides an easy way to display derived values and freely customize SNMP views.
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boot manager
Voice Message Broadcast
Mutant Storm
SNMP Simulate
fireman incoming storm
find bargains
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The freeware edition of the LoriotPro software gives you access to a powerful graphical snmp manager. This Windows-based software helps you to access snmp devices, analyze snmp requests, perform snmp get and set requests, compile mib files, browse mib tree, receive events and traps, discover networks and hosts. This free manager is and ideal product for testing purposes, snmp tests and validation, snmp concept learning. This software is available for private and professional use. It is not limited in time. The number of monitored hosts (IP addresses) is limited to 10. Events and snmp traps reception but without filtering options. Limited access to extension (LoriotPro plugin). It can be easily upgraded to Loriotpro lite edition, a LoriotPro standard Edition or a LoriotPro extended edition. Run under Microsoft Windows XP Pro and 256 Mb of RAM.
AdRem SNMP Manager: http://www.adremsoft.com/download/snmpman.exe
LoriotPro Free Edition: http://www.luteus.biz/Download/LoriotPro_Soft/V5/LoriotPro-V5-Setup.exe |
StormFinder, stormfinder.exe
Version 1.0, February 2009
Software by Carsten Schmidt
If you like this software, please consider donating. Follow the Paypal
link or Amazon wishlist at:
http://software.ccschmidt.de/appreciation.html
Please report bugs and feature requests to:
Carsten@CCSchmidt.de
What does it do and how does it work?
Stormfinder is a little utility that requests non-unicast packet statistics from
all interfaces of a network device using SNMP. After requesting the number of
incoming NU-packets (i.e. broadcasts and multicasts) it does so again after 10
seconds and calculates the difference. Excessively high numbers of NU-packets in
this time interval indicate a network loop which should be investigated. In the
first column of the table, the OID is shown where the number after the last dot
is the interface number.
Simply enter the IP address and SNMP community of your device into the corresponding
fields and click on "Check Now". After ten seconds or so you will see the results
in the "Delta"-column of the table. Check for excessive NU-packets.
Please note!
SNMP is using UDP and a loop in the network is causing many packets to be delayed
or to get lost. Therefore, under certain circumstances this software may not yield
the desired results.
StormFinder: http://software.ccschmidt.de/downloads/stormfinder.zip
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