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HP Exam HPE6-A84 Topic 3 Question 22 Discussion

Actual exam question for HP's HPE6-A84 exam
Question #: 22
Topic #: 3
[All HPE6-A84 Questions]

Several AOS-CX switches are responding to SNMPv2 GET requests for the public community. The customer only permits SNMPv3. You have asked a network admin to fix this problem. The admin says, ''I tried to remove the community, but the CLI output an error.''

What should you recommend to remediate the vulnerability and meet the customer's requirements?

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Suggested Answer: B

This is because SNMPv3 is a secure version of SNMP that provides authentication, encryption, and access control for network management. SNMPv3-only is a configuration option on AOS-CX switches that disables SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c, which are insecure versions of SNMP that use plain text community strings for authentication. By setting the snmp-server settings to ''snmpv3-only'', the switch will only respond to SNMPv3 requests and reject any SNMPv1 or SNMPv2c requests, thus remedying the vulnerability and meeting the customer's requirements.

A) Enabling control plane policing to automatically drop SNMP GET requests. This is not a valid recommendation because control plane policing is a feature that protects the switch from denial-of-service (DoS) attacks by limiting the rate of traffic sent to the CPU. Control plane policing does not disable SNMPv1 or SNMPv2c, but rather applies a rate limit to all SNMP requests, regardless of the version. Moreover, control plane policing might also drop legitimate SNMP requests if they exceed the rate limit, which could affect the network management.

C) Adding an SNMP community with a long random name. This is not a valid recommendation because an SNMP community is a shared secret that acts as a password for accessing network devices using SNMPv1 or SNMPv2c. Adding an SNMP community with a long random name does not disable SNMPv1 or SNMPv2c, but rather creates another community string that can be used for authentication. Moreover, adding an SNMP community with a long random name does not improve the security of SNMPv1 or SNMPv2c, as the community string is still transmitted in plain text and can be intercepted by an attacker.

D) Enabling SNMPv3, which implicitly disables SNMPv1/v2. This is not a valid recommendation because enabling SNMPv3 does not implicitly disable SNMPv1 or SNMPv2c on AOS-CX switches. Enabling SNMPv3 only adds support for the secure version of SNMP, but does not remove support for the insecure versions. Therefore, enabling SNMPv3 alone does not remedy the vulnerability or meet the customer's requirements.


Contribute your Thoughts:

Roxanne
4 months ago
I'm not sure why the admin is having trouble removing the community. Maybe they need a bigger hammer? Anyway, option B looks like the simplest solution.
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Casandra
4 months ago
Haha, good luck trying to remove that community! Might as well just start from scratch with SNMPv3. Option D is the way to go, in my opinion.
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Yun
2 months ago
Yun: Yeah, starting fresh with SNMPv3 is the best option.
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Vivan
2 months ago
Vivan: Just enable SNMPv3, it will disable SNMPv1/v2.
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Burma
2 months ago
Admin: I tried to remove the community, but the CLI output an error.
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Clarinda
2 months ago
Clarinda: Yeah, starting fresh with SNMPv3 is the best option.
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Stefania
3 months ago
Stefania: Just enable SNMPv3, it will disable SNMPv1/v2.
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Merilyn
3 months ago
Admin: I tried to remove the community, but the CLI output an error.
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Mitsue
4 months ago
Option D seems the most straightforward. Enabling SNMPv3 will automatically disable SNMPv1/v2, which is exactly what the customer wants.
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Lamonica
4 months ago
But wouldn't setting snmp-server settings to ''snmpv3-only'' also work?
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Glory
4 months ago
I think option B is the way to go. Setting the snmp-server to 'snmpv3-only' is the best way to meet the customer's requirement.
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Derick
3 months ago
I agree, setting the snmp-server to 'snmpv3-only' is the most secure option in this situation.
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Brandee
3 months ago
Option B is definitely the best choice. It will solve the issue and meet the customer's requirements.
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Carmelina
5 months ago
I agree, enabling SNMPv3 is the most secure option.
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Sharen
5 months ago
I think option D is the best choice.
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