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| Network Working Group SNMPv2 Working Group |
| Request for Comments: 1903 J. Case |
| Obsoletes: 1443 SNMP Research, Inc. |
| Category: Standards Track K. McCloghrie |
| Cisco Systems, Inc. |
| M. Rose |
| Dover Beach Consulting, Inc. |
| S. Waldbusser |
| International Network Services |
| January 1996 |
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| |
| Textual Conventions |
| for Version 2 of the |
| Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2) |
| |
| Status of this Memo |
| |
| This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the |
| Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for |
| improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet |
| Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state |
| and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. |
| |
| Table of Contents |
| |
| 1. Introduction ................................................ 1 |
| 1.1 A Note on Terminology ...................................... 2 |
| 2. Definitions ................................................. 3 |
| 3. Mapping of the TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro ..................... 19 |
| 3.1 Mapping of the DISPLAY-HINT clause ......................... 19 |
| 3.2 Mapping of the STATUS clause ............................... 21 |
| 3.3 Mapping of the DESCRIPTION clause .......................... 21 |
| 3.4 Mapping of the REFERENCE clause ............................ 21 |
| 3.5 Mapping of the SYNTAX clause ............................... 22 |
| 4. Security Considerations ..................................... 22 |
| 5. Editor's Address ............................................ 22 |
| 6. Acknowledgements ............................................ 22 |
| 7. References .................................................. 23 |
| |
| 1. Introduction |
| |
| A management system contains: several (potentially many) nodes, each |
| with a processing entity, termed an agent, which has access to |
| management instrumentation; at least one management station; and, a |
| management protocol, used to convey management information between |
| the agents and management stations. Operations of the protocol are |
| carried out under an administrative framework which defines |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 1] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| authentication, authorization, access control, and privacy policies. |
| |
| Management stations execute management applications which monitor and |
| control managed elements. Managed elements are devices such as |
| hosts, routers, terminal servers, etc., which are monitored and |
| controlled via access to their management information. |
| |
| Management information is viewed as a collection of managed objects, |
| residing in a virtual information store, termed the Management |
| Information Base (MIB). Collections of related objects are defined |
| in MIB modules. These modules are written using a subset of OSI's |
| Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) [1], termed the Structure of |
| Management Information (SMI) [2]. |
| |
| When designing a MIB module, it is often useful to define new types |
| similar to those defined in the SMI. In comparison to a type defined |
| in the SMI, each of these new types has a different name, a similar |
| syntax, but a more precise semantics. These newly defined types are |
| termed textual conventions, and are used for the convenience of |
| humans reading the MIB module. It is the purpose of this document to |
| define the initial set of textual conventions available to all MIB |
| modules. |
| |
| Objects defined using a textual convention are always encoded by |
| means of the rules that define their primitive type. However, |
| textual conventions often have special semantics associated with |
| them. As such, an ASN.1 macro, TEXTUAL-CONVENTION, is used to |
| concisely convey the syntax and semantics of a textual convention. |
| |
| For all textual conventions defined in an information module, the |
| name shall be unique and mnemonic, and shall not exceed 64 characters |
| in length. (However, names longer than 32 characters are not |
| recommended.) All names used for the textual conventions defined in |
| all "standard" information modules shall be unique. |
| |
| 1.1. A Note on Terminology |
| |
| For the purpose of exposition, the original Internet-standard Network |
| Management Framework, as described in RFCs 1155 (STD 16), 1157 (STD |
| 15), and 1212 (STD 16), is termed the SNMP version 1 framework |
| (SNMPv1). The current framework is termed the SNMP version 2 |
| framework (SNMPv2). |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 2] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| 2. Definitions |
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| SNMPv2-TC DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN |
| |
| IMPORTS |
| ObjectSyntax, TimeTicks |
| FROM SNMPv2-SMI; |
| |
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| -- definition of textual conventions |
| |
| TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MACRO ::= |
| BEGIN |
| TYPE NOTATION ::= |
| DisplayPart |
| "STATUS" Status |
| "DESCRIPTION" Text |
| ReferPart |
| "SYNTAX" Syntax |
| |
| VALUE NOTATION ::= |
| value(VALUE Syntax) |
| |
| DisplayPart ::= |
| "DISPLAY-HINT" Text |
| | empty |
| |
| Status ::= |
| "current" |
| | "deprecated" |
| | "obsolete" |
| |
| ReferPart ::= |
| "REFERENCE" Text |
| | empty |
| |
| -- uses the NVT ASCII character set |
| Text ::= """" string """" |
| |
| Syntax ::= |
| type(ObjectSyntax) |
| | "BITS" "{" Kibbles "}" |
| Kibbles ::= |
| Kibble |
| | Kibbles "," Kibble |
| Kibble ::= |
| identifier "(" nonNegativeNumber ")" |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 3] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| END |
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| DisplayString ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| DISPLAY-HINT "255a" |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Represents textual information taken from the NVT ASCII |
| character set, as defined in pages 4, 10-11 of RFC 854. |
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| To summarize RFC 854, the NVT ASCII repertoire specifies: |
| |
| - the use of character codes 0-127 (decimal) |
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| - the graphics characters (32-126) are interpreted as |
| US ASCII |
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| - NUL, LF, CR, BEL, BS, HT, VT and FF have the special |
| meanings specified in RFC 854 |
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| - the other 25 codes have no standard interpretation |
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| - the sequence 'CR LF' means newline |
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| - the sequence 'CR NUL' means carriage-return |
| |
| - an 'LF' not preceded by a 'CR' means moving to the |
| same column on the next line. |
| |
| - the sequence 'CR x' for any x other than LF or NUL is |
| illegal. (Note that this also means that a string may |
| end with either 'CR LF' or 'CR NUL', but not with CR.) |
| |
| Any object defined using this syntax may not exceed 255 |
| characters in length." |
| SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..255)) |
| |
| |
| PhysAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| DISPLAY-HINT "1x:" |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Represents media- or physical-level addresses." |
| SYNTAX OCTET STRING |
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| MacAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| DISPLAY-HINT "1x:" |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 4] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Represents an 802 MAC address represented in the |
| `canonical' order defined by IEEE 802.1a, i.e., as if it |
| were transmitted least significant bit first, even though |
| 802.5 (in contrast to other 802.x protocols) requires MAC |
| addresses to be transmitted most significant bit first." |
| SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (6)) |
| |
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| TruthValue ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Represents a boolean value." |
| SYNTAX INTEGER { true(1), false(2) } |
| |
| TestAndIncr ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Represents integer-valued information used for atomic |
| operations. When the management protocol is used to specify |
| that an object instance having this syntax is to be |
| modified, the new value supplied via the management protocol |
| must precisely match the value presently held by the |
| instance. If not, the management protocol set operation |
| fails with an error of `inconsistentValue'. Otherwise, if |
| the current value is the maximum value of 2^31-1 (2147483647 |
| decimal), then the value held by the instance is wrapped to |
| zero; otherwise, the value held by the instance is |
| incremented by one. (Note that regardless of whether the |
| management protocol set operation succeeds, the variable- |
| binding in the request and response PDUs are identical.) |
| |
| The value of the ACCESS clause for objects having this |
| syntax is either `read-write' or `read-create'. When an |
| instance of a columnar object having this syntax is created, |
| any value may be supplied via the management protocol. |
| |
| When the network management portion of the system is re- |
| initialized, the value of every object instance having this |
| syntax must either be incremented from its value prior to |
| the re-initialization, or (if the value prior to the re- |
| initialization is unknown) be set to a pseudo-randomly |
| generated value." |
| SYNTAX INTEGER (0..2147483647) |
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| AutonomousType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 5] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Represents an independently extensible type identification |
| value. It may, for example, indicate a particular sub-tree |
| with further MIB definitions, or define a particular type of |
| protocol or hardware." |
| SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER |
| |
| |
| InstancePointer ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS obsolete |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "A pointer to either a specific instance of a MIB object or |
| a conceptual row of a MIB table in the managed device. In |
| the latter case, by convention, it is the name of the |
| particular instance of the first accessible columnar object |
| in the conceptual row. |
| |
| The two uses of this textual convention are replaced by |
| VariablePointer and RowPointer, respectively." |
| SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER |
| |
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| VariablePointer ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "A pointer to a specific object instance. For example, |
| sysContact.0 or ifInOctets.3." |
| SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER |
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| RowPointer ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Represents a pointer to a conceptual row. The value is the |
| name of the instance of the first accessible columnar object |
| in the conceptual row. |
| |
| For example, ifIndex.3 would point to the 3rd row in the |
| ifTable (note that if ifIndex were not-accessible, then |
| ifDescr.3 would be used instead)." |
| SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER |
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| RowStatus ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "The RowStatus textual convention is used to manage the |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 6] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| creation and deletion of conceptual rows, and is used as the |
| value of the SYNTAX clause for the status column of a |
| conceptual row (as described in Section 7.7.1 of [2].) |
| |
| The status column has six defined values: |
| |
| - `active', which indicates that the conceptual row is |
| available for use by the managed device; |
| |
| - `notInService', which indicates that the conceptual |
| row exists in the agent, but is unavailable for use by |
| the managed device (see NOTE below); |
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| - `notReady', which indicates that the conceptual row |
| exists in the agent, but is missing information |
| necessary in order to be available for use by the |
| managed device; |
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| - `createAndGo', which is supplied by a management |
| station wishing to create a new instance of a |
| conceptual row and to have its status automatically set |
| to active, making it available for use by the managed |
| device; |
| |
| - `createAndWait', which is supplied by a management |
| station wishing to create a new instance of a |
| conceptual row (but not make it available for use by |
| the managed device); and, |
| |
| - `destroy', which is supplied by a management station |
| wishing to delete all of the instances associated with |
| an existing conceptual row. |
| |
| Whereas five of the six values (all except `notReady') may |
| be specified in a management protocol set operation, only |
| three values will be returned in response to a management |
| protocol retrieval operation: `notReady', `notInService' or |
| `active'. That is, when queried, an existing conceptual row |
| has only three states: it is either available for use by |
| the managed device (the status column has value `active'); |
| it is not available for use by the managed device, though |
| the agent has sufficient information to make it so (the |
| status column has value `notInService'); or, it is not |
| available for use by the managed device, and an attempt to |
| make it so would fail because the agent has insufficient |
| information (the state column has value `notReady'). |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 7] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| NOTE WELL |
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| This textual convention may be used for a MIB table, |
| irrespective of whether the values of that table's |
| conceptual rows are able to be modified while it is |
| active, or whether its conceptual rows must be taken |
| out of service in order to be modified. That is, it is |
| the responsibility of the DESCRIPTION clause of the |
| status column to specify whether the status column must |
| not be `active' in order for the value of some other |
| column of the same conceptual row to be modified. If |
| such a specification is made, affected columns may be |
| changed by an SNMP set PDU if the RowStatus would not |
| be equal to `active' either immediately before or after |
| processing the PDU. In other words, if the PDU also |
| contained a varbind that would change the RowStatus |
| value, the column in question may be changed if the |
| RowStatus was not equal to `active' as the PDU was |
| received, or if the varbind sets the status to a value |
| other than 'active'. |
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| |
| Also note that whenever any elements of a row exist, the |
| RowStatus column must also exist. |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 8] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| To summarize the effect of having a conceptual row with a |
| status column having a SYNTAX clause value of RowStatus, |
| consider the following state diagram: |
| |
| |
| STATE |
| +--------------+-----------+-------------+------------- |
| | A | B | C | D |
| | |status col.|status column| |
| |status column | is | is |status column |
| ACTION |does not exist| notReady | notInService| is active |
| --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+------------- |
| set status |noError ->D|inconsist- |inconsistent-|inconsistent- |
| column to | or | entValue| Value| Value |
| createAndGo |inconsistent- | | | |
| | Value| | | |
| --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+------------- |
| set status |noError see 1|inconsist- |inconsistent-|inconsistent- |
| column to | or | entValue| Value| Value |
| createAndWait |wrongValue | | | |
| --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+------------- |
| set status |inconsistent- |inconsist- |noError |noError |
| column to | Value| entValue| | |
| active | | | | |
| | | or | | |
| | | | | |
| | |see 2 ->D| ->D| ->D |
| --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+------------- |
| set status |inconsistent- |inconsist- |noError |noError ->C |
| column to | Value| entValue| | |
| notInService | | | | |
| | | or | | or |
| | | | | |
| | |see 3 ->C| ->C|wrongValue |
| --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+------------- |
| set status |noError |noError |noError |noError |
| column to | | | | |
| destroy | ->A| ->A| ->A| ->A |
| --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+------------- |
| set any other |see 4 |noError |noError |see 5 |
| column to some| | | | |
| value | | see 1| ->C| ->D |
| --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+------------- |
| |
| (1) goto B or C, depending on information available to the |
| agent. |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 9] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| (2) if other variable bindings included in the same PDU, |
| provide values for all columns which are missing but |
| required, then return noError and goto D. |
| |
| (3) if other variable bindings included in the same PDU, |
| provide values for all columns which are missing but |
| required, then return noError and goto C. |
| |
| (4) at the discretion of the agent, the return value may be |
| either: |
| |
| inconsistentName: because the agent does not choose to |
| create such an instance when the corresponding |
| RowStatus instance does not exist, or |
| |
| inconsistentValue: if the supplied value is |
| inconsistent with the state of some other MIB object's |
| value, or |
| |
| noError: because the agent chooses to create the |
| instance. |
| |
| If noError is returned, then the instance of the status |
| column must also be created, and the new state is B or C, |
| depending on the information available to the agent. If |
| inconsistentName or inconsistentValue is returned, the row |
| remains in state A. |
| |
| (5) depending on the MIB definition for the column/table, |
| either noError or inconsistentValue may be returned. |
| |
| NOTE: Other processing of the set request may result in a |
| response other than noError being returned, e.g., |
| wrongValue, noCreation, etc. |
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| Conceptual Row Creation |
| |
| There are four potential interactions when creating a |
| conceptual row: selecting an instance-identifier which is |
| not in use; creating the conceptual row; initializing any |
| objects for which the agent does not supply a default; and, |
| making the conceptual row available for use by the managed |
| device. |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 10] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| Interaction 1: Selecting an Instance-Identifier |
| |
| The algorithm used to select an instance-identifier varies |
| for each conceptual row. In some cases, the instance- |
| identifier is semantically significant, e.g., the |
| destination address of a route, and a management station |
| selects the instance-identifier according to the semantics. |
| |
| In other cases, the instance-identifier is used solely to |
| distinguish conceptual rows, and a management station |
| without specific knowledge of the conceptual row might |
| examine the instances present in order to determine an |
| unused instance-identifier. (This approach may be used, but |
| it is often highly sub-optimal; however, it is also a |
| questionable practice for a naive management station to |
| attempt conceptual row creation.) |
| |
| Alternately, the MIB module which defines the conceptual row |
| might provide one or more objects which provide assistance |
| in determining an unused instance-identifier. For example, |
| if the conceptual row is indexed by an integer-value, then |
| an object having an integer-valued SYNTAX clause might be |
| defined for such a purpose, allowing a management station to |
| issue a management protocol retrieval operation. In order |
| to avoid unnecessary collisions between competing management |
| stations, `adjacent' retrievals of this object should be |
| different. |
| |
| Finally, the management station could select a pseudo-random |
| number to use as the index. In the event that this index |
| was already in use and an inconsistentValue was returned in |
| response to the management protocol set operation, the |
| management station should simply select a new pseudo-random |
| number and retry the operation. |
| |
| A MIB designer should choose between the two latter |
| algorithms based on the size of the table (and therefore the |
| efficiency of each algorithm). For tables in which a large |
| number of entries are expected, it is recommended that a MIB |
| object be defined that returns an acceptable index for |
| creation. For tables with small numbers of entries, it is |
| recommended that the latter pseudo-random index mechanism be |
| used. |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 11] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| Interaction 2: Creating the Conceptual Row |
| |
| Once an unused instance-identifier has been selected, the |
| management station determines if it wishes to create and |
| activate the conceptual row in one transaction or in a |
| negotiated set of interactions. |
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| Interaction 2a: Creating and Activating the Conceptual Row |
| |
| The management station must first determine the column |
| requirements, i.e., it must determine those columns for |
| which it must or must not provide values. Depending on the |
| complexity of the table and the management station's |
| knowledge of the agent's capabilities, this determination |
| can be made locally by the management station. Alternately, |
| the management station issues a management protocol get |
| operation to examine all columns in the conceptual row that |
| it wishes to create. In response, for each column, there |
| are three possible outcomes: |
| |
| - a value is returned, indicating that some other |
| management station has already created this conceptual |
| row. We return to interaction 1. |
| |
| - the exception `noSuchInstance' is returned, |
| indicating that the agent implements the object-type |
| associated with this column, and that this column in at |
| least one conceptual row would be accessible in the MIB |
| view used by the retrieval were it to exist. For those |
| columns to which the agent provides read-create access, |
| the `noSuchInstance' exception tells the management |
| station that it should supply a value for this column |
| when the conceptual row is to be created. |
| |
| - the exception `noSuchObject' is returned, indicating |
| that the agent does not implement the object-type |
| associated with this column or that there is no |
| conceptual row for which this column would be |
| accessible in the MIB view used by the retrieval. As |
| such, the management station can not issue any |
| management protocol set operations to create an |
| instance of this column. |
| |
| Once the column requirements have been determined, a |
| management protocol set operation is accordingly issued. |
| This operation also sets the new instance of the status |
| column to `createAndGo'. |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 12] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| When the agent processes the set operation, it verifies that |
| it has sufficient information to make the conceptual row |
| available for use by the managed device. The information |
| available to the agent is provided by two sources: the |
| management protocol set operation which creates the |
| conceptual row, and, implementation-specific defaults |
| supplied by the agent (note that an agent must provide |
| implementation-specific defaults for at least those objects |
| which it implements as read-only). If there is sufficient |
| information available, then the conceptual row is created, a |
| `noError' response is returned, the status column is set to |
| `active', and no further interactions are necessary (i.e., |
| interactions 3 and 4 are skipped). If there is insufficient |
| information, then the conceptual row is not created, and the |
| set operation fails with an error of `inconsistentValue'. |
| On this error, the management station can issue a management |
| protocol retrieval operation to determine if this was |
| because it failed to specify a value for a required column, |
| or, because the selected instance of the status column |
| already existed. In the latter case, we return to |
| interaction 1. In the former case, the management station |
| can re-issue the set operation with the additional |
| information, or begin interaction 2 again using |
| `createAndWait' in order to negotiate creation of the |
| conceptual row. |
| |
| NOTE WELL |
| |
| Regardless of the method used to determine the column |
| requirements, it is possible that the management |
| station might deem a column necessary when, in fact, |
| the agent will not allow that particular columnar |
| instance to be created or written. In this case, the |
| management protocol set operation will fail with an |
| error such as `noCreation' or `notWritable'. In this |
| case, the management station decides whether it needs |
| to be able to set a value for that particular columnar |
| instance. If not, the management station re-issues the |
| management protocol set operation, but without setting |
| a value for that particular columnar instance; |
| otherwise, the management station aborts the row |
| creation algorithm. |
| |
| Interaction 2b: Negotiating the Creation of the Conceptual |
| Row |
| |
| The management station issues a management protocol set |
| operation which sets the desired instance of the status |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 13] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| column to `createAndWait'. If the agent is unwilling to |
| process a request of this sort, the set operation fails with |
| an error of `wrongValue'. (As a consequence, such an agent |
| must be prepared to accept a single management protocol set |
| operation, i.e., interaction 2a above, containing all of the |
| columns indicated by its column requirements.) Otherwise, |
| the conceptual row is created, a `noError' response is |
| returned, and the status column is immediately set to either |
| `notInService' or `notReady', depending on whether it has |
| sufficient information to make the conceptual row available |
| for use by the managed device. If there is sufficient |
| information available, then the status column is set to |
| `notInService'; otherwise, if there is insufficient |
| information, then the status column is set to `notReady'. |
| Regardless, we proceed to interaction 3. |
| |
| Interaction 3: Initializing non-defaulted Objects |
| |
| The management station must now determine the column |
| requirements. It issues a management protocol get operation |
| to examine all columns in the created conceptual row. In |
| the response, for each column, there are three possible |
| outcomes: |
| |
| - a value is returned, indicating that the agent |
| implements the object-type associated with this column |
| and had sufficient information to provide a value. For |
| those columns to which the agent provides read-create |
| access (and for which the agent allows their values to |
| be changed after their creation), a value return tells |
| the management station that it may issue additional |
| management protocol set operations, if it desires, in |
| order to change the value associated with this column. |
| |
| - the exception `noSuchInstance' is returned, |
| indicating that the agent implements the object-type |
| associated with this column, and that this column in at |
| least one conceptual row would be accessible in the MIB |
| view used by the retrieval were it to exist. However, |
| the agent does not have sufficient information to |
| provide a value, and until a value is provided, the |
| conceptual row may not be made available for use by the |
| managed device. For those columns to which the agent |
| provides read-create access, the `noSuchInstance' |
| exception tells the management station that it must |
| issue additional management protocol set operations, in |
| order to provide a value associated with this column. |
| |
| |
| |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 14] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| |
| - the exception `noSuchObject' is returned, indicating |
| that the agent does not implement the object-type |
| associated with this column or that there is no |
| conceptual row for which this column would be |
| accessible in the MIB view used by the retrieval. As |
| such, the management station can not issue any |
| management protocol set operations to create an |
| instance of this column. |
| |
| If the value associated with the status column is |
| `notReady', then the management station must first deal with |
| all `noSuchInstance' columns, if any. Having done so, the |
| value of the status column becomes `notInService', and we |
| proceed to interaction 4. |
| |
| Interaction 4: Making the Conceptual Row Available |
| |
| Once the management station is satisfied with the values |
| associated with the columns of the conceptual row, it issues |
| a management protocol set operation to set the status column |
| to `active'. If the agent has sufficient information to |
| make the conceptual row available for use by the managed |
| device, the management protocol set operation succeeds (a |
| `noError' response is returned). Otherwise, the management |
| protocol set operation fails with an error of |
| `inconsistentValue'. |
| |
| |
| NOTE WELL |
| |
| A conceptual row having a status column with value |
| `notInService' or `notReady' is unavailable to the |
| managed device. As such, it is possible for the |
| managed device to create its own instances during the |
| time between the management protocol set operation |
| which sets the status column to `createAndWait' and the |
| management protocol set operation which sets the status |
| column to `active'. In this case, when the management |
| protocol set operation is issued to set the status |
| column to `active', the values held in the agent |
| supersede those used by the managed device. |
| |
| If the management station is prevented from setting the |
| status column to `active' (e.g., due to management station |
| or network failure) the conceptual row will be left in the |
| `notInService' or `notReady' state, consuming resources |
| indefinitely. The agent must detect conceptual rows that |
| have been in either state for an abnormally long period of |
| |
| |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| time and remove them. It is the responsibility of the |
| DESCRIPTION clause of the status column to indicate what an |
| abnormally long period of time would be. This period of |
| time should be long enough to allow for human response time |
| (including `think time') between the creation of the |
| conceptual row and the setting of the status to `active'. |
| In the absense of such information in the DESCRIPTION |
| clause, it is suggested that this period be approximately 5 |
| minutes in length. This removal action applies not only to |
| newly-created rows, but also to previously active rows which |
| are set to, and left in, the notInService state for a |
| prolonged period exceeding that which is considered normal |
| for such a conceptual row. |
| |
| |
| Conceptual Row Suspension |
| |
| When a conceptual row is `active', the management station |
| may issue a management protocol set operation which sets the |
| instance of the status column to `notInService'. If the |
| agent is unwilling to do so, the set operation fails with an |
| error of `wrongValue'. Otherwise, the conceptual row is |
| taken out of service, and a `noError' response is returned. |
| It is the responsibility of the DESCRIPTION clause of the |
| status column to indicate under what circumstances the |
| status column should be taken out of service (e.g., in order |
| for the value of some other column of the same conceptual |
| row to be modified). |
| |
| |
| Conceptual Row Deletion |
| |
| For deletion of conceptual rows, a management protocol set |
| operation is issued which sets the instance of the status |
| column to `destroy'. This request may be made regardless of |
| the current value of the status column (e.g., it is possible |
| to delete conceptual rows which are either `notReady', |
| `notInService' or `active'.) If the operation succeeds, |
| then all instances associated with the conceptual row are |
| immediately removed." |
| |
| |
| SYNTAX INTEGER { |
| -- the following two values are states: |
| -- these values may be read or written |
| active(1), |
| notInService(2), |
| |
| |
| |
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| -- the following value is a state: |
| -- this value may be read, but not written |
| notReady(3), |
| |
| -- the following three values are |
| -- actions: these values may be written, |
| -- but are never read |
| createAndGo(4), |
| createAndWait(5), |
| destroy(6) |
| } |
| |
| |
| TimeStamp ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "The value of the sysUpTime object at which a specific |
| occurrence happened. The specific occurrence must be |
| defined in the description of any object defined using this |
| type." |
| SYNTAX TimeTicks |
| |
| |
| TimeInterval ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "A period of time, measured in units of 0.01 seconds." |
| SYNTAX INTEGER (0..2147483647) |
| |
| |
| DateAndTime ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| DISPLAY-HINT "2d-1d-1d,1d:1d:1d.1d,1a1d:1d" |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "A date-time specification. |
| |
| field octets contents range |
| ----- ------ -------- ----- |
| 1 1-2 year 0..65536 |
| 2 3 month 1..12 |
| 3 4 day 1..31 |
| 4 5 hour 0..23 |
| 5 6 minutes 0..59 |
| 6 7 seconds 0..60 |
| (use 60 for leap-second) |
| 7 8 deci-seconds 0..9 |
| 8 9 direction from UTC '+' / '-' |
| 9 10 hours from UTC 0..11 |
| |
| |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 17] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| |
| 10 11 minutes from UTC 0..59 |
| |
| For example, Tuesday May 26, 1992 at 1:30:15 PM EDT would be |
| displayed as: |
| |
| 1992-5-26,13:30:15.0,-4:0 |
| |
| Note that if only local time is known, then timezone |
| information (fields 8-10) is not present." |
| SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (8 | 11)) |
| |
| |
| StorageType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Describes the memory realization of a conceptual row. A |
| row which is volatile(2) is lost upon reboot. A row which |
| is either nonVolatile(3), permanent(4) or readOnly(5), is |
| backed up by stable storage. A row which is permanent(4) |
| can be changed but not deleted. A row which is readOnly(5) |
| cannot be changed nor deleted. |
| |
| If the value of an object with this syntax is either |
| permanent(4) or readOnly(5), it cannot be modified. |
| Conversely, if the value is either other(1), volatile(2) or |
| nonVolatile(3), it cannot be modified to be permanent(4) or |
| readOnly(5). |
| |
| Every usage of this textual convention is required to |
| specify the columnar objects which a permanent(4) row must |
| at a minimum allow to be writable." |
| SYNTAX INTEGER { |
| other(1), -- eh? |
| volatile(2), -- e.g., in RAM |
| nonVolatile(3), -- e.g., in NVRAM |
| permanent(4), -- e.g., partially in ROM |
| readOnly(5) -- e.g., completely in ROM |
| } |
| |
| |
| TDomain ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Denotes a kind of transport service. |
| |
| Some possible values, such as snmpUDPDomain, are defined in |
| 'Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network |
| Management Protocol (SNMPv2)'." |
| |
| |
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| SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER |
| |
| |
| TAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| STATUS current |
| DESCRIPTION |
| "Denotes a transport service address. |
| |
| For snmpUDPDomain, a TAddress is 6 octets long, the initial 4 |
| octets containing the IP-address in network-byte order and the |
| last 2 containing the UDP port in network-byte order. Consult |
| 'Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network |
| Management Protocol (SNMPv2)' for further information on |
| snmpUDPDomain." |
| SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (1..255)) |
| |
| |
| END |
| |
| 3. Mapping of the TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro |
| |
| The TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro is used to convey the syntax and |
| semantics associated with a textual convention. It should be noted |
| that the expansion of the TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro is something which |
| conceptually happens during implementation and not during run-time. |
| |
| For all descriptors appearing in an information module, the |
| descriptor shall be unique and mnemonic, and shall not exceed 64 |
| characters in length. (However, descriptors longer than 32 |
| characters are not recommended.) Further, the hyphen is not allowed |
| as a character in the name of any textual convention. |
| |
| 3.1. Mapping of the DISPLAY-HINT clause |
| |
| The DISPLAY-HINT clause, which need not be present, gives a hint as |
| to how the value of an instance of an object with the syntax defined |
| using this textual convention might be displayed. The DISPLAY-HINT |
| clause may be present if and only if the syntax has an underlying |
| primitive type of INTEGER or OCTET STRING. (Note, however, that the |
| semantics defined for a particular syntax can cause the use of |
| DISPLAY-HINT for that syntax to make no sense, e.g., for Counter32 |
| [2].) |
| |
| When the syntax has an underlying primitive type of INTEGER, the hint |
| consists of an integer-format specification, containing two parts. |
| The first part is a single character suggesting a display format, |
| either: 'x' for hexadecimal, or 'd' for decimal, or 'o' for octal, or |
| 'b' for binary. The second part is always omitted for 'x', 'o' and |
| |
| |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 19] |
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| 'b', and need not be present for 'd'. If present, the second part |
| starts with a hyphen and is followed by a decimal number, which |
| defines the implied decimal point when rendering the value. For |
| example: |
| |
| Hundredths ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION |
| DISPLAY-HINT "d-2" |
| ... |
| SYNTAX INTEGER (0..10000) |
| |
| suggests that a Hundredths value of 1234 be rendered as "12.34" |
| |
| When the syntax has an underlying primitive type of OCTET STRING, the |
| hint consists of one or more octet-format specifications. Each |
| specification consists of five parts, with each part using and |
| removing zero or more of the next octets from the value and producing |
| the next zero or more characters to be displayed. The octets within |
| the value are processed in order of significance, most significant |
| first. |
| |
| The five parts of a octet-format specification are: |
| |
| (1) the (optional) repeat indicator; if present, this part is a `*', |
| and indicates that the current octet of the value is to be used as |
| the repeat count. The repeat count is an unsigned integer (which |
| may be zero) which specifies how many times the remainder of this |
| octet-format specification should be successively applied. If the |
| repeat indicator is not present, the repeat count is one. |
| |
| (2) the octet length: one or more decimal digits specifying the number |
| of octets of the value to be used and formatted by this octet- |
| specification. Note that the octet length can be zero. If less |
| than this number of octets remain in the value, then the lesser |
| number of octets are used. |
| |
| (3) the display format, either: `x' for hexadecimal, `d' for decimal, |
| `o' for octal, or `a' for ascii. If the octet length part is |
| greater than one, and the display format part refers to a numeric |
| format, then network-byte ordering (big-endian encoding) is used |
| interpreting the octets in the value. |
| |
| (4) the (optional) display separator character; if present, this part |
| is a single character which is produced for display after each |
| application of this octet-specification; however, this character is |
| not produced for display if it would be immediately followed by the |
| display of the repeat terminator character for this octet- |
| specification. This character can be any character other than a |
| decimal digit and a `*'. |
| |
| |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| |
| (5) the (optional) repeat terminator character, which can be present |
| only if the display separator character is present and this octet- |
| specification begins with a repeat indicator; if present, this part |
| is a single character which is produced after all the zero or more |
| repeated applications (as given by the repeat count) of this |
| octet-specification. This character can be any character other |
| than a decimal digit and a `*'. |
| |
| Output of a display separator character or a repeat terminator |
| character is suppressed if it would occur as the last character of |
| the display. |
| |
| If the octets of the value are exhausted before all the octet-format |
| specification have been used, then the excess specifications are |
| ignored. If additional octets remain in the value after interpreting |
| all the octet-format specifications, then the last octet-format |
| specification is re-interpreted to process the additional octets, |
| until no octets remain in the value. |
| |
| 3.2. Mapping of the STATUS clause |
| |
| The STATUS clause, which must be present, indicates whether this |
| definition is current or historic. |
| |
| The values "current", and "obsolete" are self-explanatory. The |
| "deprecated" value indicates that the definition is obsolete, but |
| that an implementor may wish to support the use of this textual |
| convention to foster interoperability with older implementations. |
| |
| 3.3. Mapping of the DESCRIPTION clause |
| |
| The DESCRIPTION clause, which must be present, contains a textual |
| definition of the textual convention, which provides all semantic |
| definitions necessary for implementation, and should embody any |
| information which would otherwise be communicated in any ASN.1 |
| commentary annotations associated with the object. |
| |
| Note that, in order to conform to the ASN.1 syntax, the entire value |
| of this clause must be enclosed in double quotation marks, and |
| therefore cannot itself contain double quotation marks, although the |
| value may be multi-line. |
| |
| 3.4. Mapping of the REFERENCE clause |
| |
| The REFERENCE clause, which need not be present, contains a textual |
| cross-reference to a related item defined in some other published |
| work. |
| |
| |
| |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 21] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| |
| 3.5. Mapping of the SYNTAX clause |
| |
| The SYNTAX clause, which must be present, defines abstract data |
| structure corresponding to the textual convention. The data |
| structure must be one of the alternatives defined in the ObjectSyntax |
| CHOICE or the BITS construct (see section 7.1 in [2]). |
| |
| 4. Security Considerations |
| |
| Security issues are not discussed in this memo. |
| |
| 5. Editor's Address |
| |
| Keith McCloghrie |
| Cisco Systems, Inc. |
| 170 West Tasman Drive |
| San Jose, CA 95134-1706 |
| US |
| |
| Phone: +1 408 526 5260 |
| EMail: kzm@cisco.com |
| |
| 6. Acknowledgements |
| |
| This document is the result of significant work by the four major |
| contributors: |
| |
| Jeffrey D. Case (SNMP Research, case@snmp.com) |
| Keith McCloghrie (Cisco Systems, kzm@cisco.com) |
| Marshall T. Rose (Dover Beach Consulting, mrose@dbc.mtview.ca.us) |
| Steven Waldbusser (International Network Services, stevew@uni.ins.com) |
| |
| In addition, the contributions of the SNMPv2 Working Group are |
| acknowledged. In particular, a special thanks is extended for the |
| contributions of: |
| |
| Alexander I. Alten (Novell) |
| Dave Arneson (Cabletron) |
| Uri Blumenthal (IBM) |
| Doug Book (Chipcom) |
| Kim Curran (Bell-Northern Research) |
| Jim Galvin (Trusted Information Systems) |
| Maria Greene (Ascom Timeplex) |
| Iain Hanson (Digital) |
| Dave Harrington (Cabletron) |
| Nguyen Hien (IBM) |
| Jeff Johnson (Cisco Systems) |
| Michael Kornegay (Object Quest) |
| |
| |
| |
| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 22] |
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| RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMPv2 January 1996 |
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| |
| Deirdre Kostick (AT&T Bell Labs) |
| David Levi (SNMP Research) |
| Daniel Mahoney (Cabletron) |
| Bob Natale (ACE*COMM) |
| Brian O'Keefe (Hewlett Packard) |
| Andrew Pearson (SNMP Research) |
| Dave Perkins (Peer Networks) |
| Randy Presuhn (Peer Networks) |
| Aleksey Romanov (Quality Quorum) |
| Shawn Routhier (Epilogue) |
| Jon Saperia (BGS Systems) |
| Bob Stewart (Cisco Systems, bstewart@cisco.com), chair |
| Kaj Tesink (Bellcore) |
| Glenn Waters (Bell-Northern Research) |
| Bert Wijnen (IBM) |
| |
| 7. References |
| |
| [1] Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection - |
| Specification of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1), |
| International Organization for Standardization. International |
| Standard 8824, (December, 1987). |
| |
| [2] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and |
| S. Waldbusser, "Structure of Management Information for Version 2 |
| of the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1902, |
| January 1996. |
| |
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| SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 23] |
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