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INTERNET DRAFT Expires April 23, 1993
ISO/CCITT and Internet Management Coexistence (IIMC):
Translation of Internet MIBs
to
ISO/CCITT GDMO MIBs
(IIMCIMIBTRANS)
9 October 1992
Lee LaBarre
The MITRE Corporation
Burlington Road
Bedford, MA 01730
cel@mbunix.mitre.org
Status of this Memo
This memo provides information to the network and systems
management community. This memo is intended as a
contribution to ongoing work in the area of multi-protocol
management coexistence and interworking. This memo is part
of a package of ISO/CCITT and Internet Management
Coexistence (IIMC) drafts; see also [IIMCOMIBTRANS]
[IIMCMIB-II] [IIMCPARTY] [IIMCPROXY].
This document is an Internet Draft. Internet Drafts are
working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF), its Areas, and its Working Groups. Note that other
groups may also distribute working documents as Internet
Drafts.
Internet Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of
six months. Internet Drafts may be updated, replaced, or
obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is not
appropriate to use Internet Drafts as reference material or
to cite them other than as a "working draft" or "work in
progress".
Please check the 1id-abstracts.txt listing contained in the
internet-drafts Shadow Directories on nic.ddn.mil,
nnsc.nsf.net, nic.nordu.net, ftp.nisc.sri.com, munnari.oz.au
to learn the current status of any Internet Draft.
Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Comments on this
memo should be sent to iimc@thumper.bellcore.com by November
20, 1992.
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
Abstract
This memo is intended to facilitate the multi-protocol
management coexistance and interworking for networks that
are managed using the OSI Common Management Information
Protocol (CMIP) and networks that are managed using the
Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP). This RFC
contains translation and registration procedures that are
applicable to translation of Internet MIBs defined according
to the Internet Structure of Management Information (SMI)
into ISO/CCITT SMI defined MIBs. It also defines management
information and SNMP trap to ISO/CCITT event mappings
required for ISO/CCITT-Internet proxy.
Table of Contents
Status of this Memo ......................................i
Abstract .................................................ii
Table of Contents ........................................ii
1. Introduction ..........................................1
1.1 Background ...........................................1
1.2 Overview .............................................2
1.3 Scope ................................................4
1.4 Terms and Conventions ................................5
2. Registration and Naming Procedures ....................5
2.1 Registration Procedures ..............................5
2.1.1 Object Classes and Attributes Registration .........7
2.1.2 Notifications Registration .........................7
2.1.3 NAME BINDINGs Registration .........................8
2.2 Naming Procedures ....................................8
2.2.1 Naming Attribute ...................................8
2.2.2 ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy Naming Tree ...............9
2.2.3 Distinguished Names ................................11
2.3 OID Translation ......................................12
2.3.1 OID/Name Translation: ISO/CCITT to Internet ........12
2.3.2 OID/Name Translation: Internet to ISO/CCITT ........13
2.4 Inheritance for Object Classes .......................14
2.5 Reference Labels for Derived Entities ................14
3. Internet to ISO/CCITT MIB Translation Procedures ......14
3.1 Pre-translation Procedures ...........................14
3.2 GDMO Translation Procedures ..........................16
3.2.1 Translation of Groups ..............................17
3.2.2 Translation of Table Objects .......................18
3.2.3 Translation of Table Entry Objects .................19
3.2.4 Translation of Other OBJECT-TYPES ..................20
3.2.5 Translation of Traps ...............................22
3.2.6 Translation of Internet Attribute Types ............24
3.3 Post-translation Procedures ..........................25
3.3.1 Post-translation of BEHAVIOUR Cause ................25
3.3.2 Post-translation of Notifications ..................26
3.3.3 Creation of NAME BINDING Templates .................27
LaBarre Page ii
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
4. ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy MIB .........................28
4.1 Object and Attribute Definitions .....................28
4.2 Name Bindings ........................................34
4.3 Common SNMP Derived Attribute Types ..................35
4.4 Notifications for SNMP/SNMP-2 Traps ..................41
4.5 ASN.1 Definitions ....................................43
4.6 ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy Communications ..............45
5. Acknowledgements ......................................45
References ...............................................46
LaBarre Page iii
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
1. Introduction
The past decade has witnessed the development of enterprise
wide networks composed of a multi-vendor environment
containing heterogeneous protocol and hardware suites.
Organizations have become increasingly dependent on these
enterprise networks for their daily operations. This
dependence has focussed attention on the need for operation,
administration, maintenance, and provisioning (OAM&P) of the
multi-vendor enterprise network on an end-to-end basis.
1.1 Background
This memo is part of a package of ISO/CCITT and Internet
Management Coexistence (IIMC) drafts. Other memos included
in this package are:
- Translation of ISO/CCITT GDMO MIBs to Internet MIBs
(Newnan) [IIMCOMIBTRANS]
- Translation of Internet MIB-II (RFC1213) to ISO/CCITT GDMO
MIB (LaBarre) [IIMCMIB-II]
- Translation of Internet Party MIB (RFC1353) to ISO/CCITT
GDMO MIB (LaBarre) [IIMCPARTY]
- ISO/CCITT to Internet Management Proxy (Chang) [IIMCPROXY]
These memos together comprise a package aimed at integrating
ISO/CCITT-based and Internet-based management systems.
These memos are offered as input to coexistence and
interworking efforts underway throughout the
industry,including organizations such as:
- IETF OSI Internet Management (OIM),
- Network Management Forum Technology Convergence Team,
- X/Open Systems Management (SysMan),
- OIW Network Management Special Interest Group (NMSIG), and
- OSF Management Special Interest Group (MANSIG).
This work was initiated, in part, by NM Forum efforts to
translate RFC 1214 for use with OMNIPoint 1 implementations.
Through this effort, it became obvious that end-to-end
management requires an integrated, unified view of the
managed network, despite differences in management protocol
and information structure. Integrated management can be
facilitated by the development of "proxy" mechanisms which
translate between functionally equivalent service, protocol,
and SMI differences to create this unified view. MIB
translation procedures can be used to support proxy
management, as well as to take advantage of existing MIB
definition and avoid duplication of effort. In this way,
commercial investment in both ISO/CCITT and Internet-based
LaBarre Page 1
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
management technologies can be preserved through deployment
of common methods and tools which support integration.
This overall strategy was outlined in a joint publication
developed by the NM Forum and X/Open entitled "ISO/CCITT and
Internet Management: Coexistence and Interworking Strategy"
[NMFMC92]. The memos included in the IIMC package are
intended as detailed specifications which implement several
of the methodologies identified in this strategy.
1.2 Overview
The response to the need for OAM&P of enterprise networks
has been the development of network management standards
within various networking communities - most notably the
ISO/CCITT and Internet community. However, coordination of
standards activities between these two communities has not
occurred. As a result, although they share a nearly common
management model, differences in their management protocols
and structure of management Information (SMI) have developed
due to differing management philosophies.
The ISO/CCITT community has developed the Common Management
Information Protocol (CMIP) [ISO9596], and related SMI
documents [ISO10165-1,3,4]. The Internet community has
developed the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)
[RFC1157], and is developing its successor, SNMP-2, based on
[SMPPROT]. The Internet SMI is defined in [RFC1155] and
[SMPSMI]. Although functionally similar, the Internet and
ISO/CCITT protocols and SMIs differ in terms of their
complexity and specific operations.
The focus on the need for end-to-end enterprise management
has indicated the need to integrate the management of
components managed by ISO/CCITT management, Internet
management and proprietary management mechanisms in a manner
which presents a unified view of the network despite
protocol and SMI differences. One way to integrate
management is by the development of "proxy" mechanisms which
translate between functionally equivalent services, protocol
and SMI differences to create this unified view.
A body of telecommunications and computer vendors,
represented by organizations such as the Network Management
Forum (NMF), and the U.S. government, as specified in the
Government Network Management Profile (GNMP) have based
their integrated management model on the ISO/CCITT
management model using CMIP and the ISO/CCITT SMI. These
organizations are particularly interested in the development
of proxies for devices that use the Internet management
protocols and SMI. Their interest is primarily due to the
widespread commercial implementation and use of such devices
within their enterprises, especially devices that use the
Internet TCP/IP protocol suite.
LaBarre Page 2
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
The basic model for ISO/CCITT-Internet proxy management is
illustrated in the following diagram.
Manager Proxy Agent
+-----------------+ +----------------+ +-------------------+
|+---------------+| |+----++--------+| | +---------------+ |
|| Management || ||GDMO||Internet|| | | Managed | |
|| Applications || ||MIB || MIB || | | Resources | |
|+---------------+| |+----++--------+| | +---------------+ |
| | | |+--------------+| | | |
| | | || Service || | | |
| | | || Emulation || | | |
| | | ||(scoping) || | | |
| | | || (filtering) || | | |
| | | || (operations)|| | | |
|+---------+-----+| |+--------------+| |+--------+--------+|
||ISO/CCITT|GDMO || || Map Protocols | ||Internet|Internet||
|| Manager |MIB || ||CMIS| |SNMP|| || Agent | MIB ||
|+---------+-----+| |+----+----+----+| |+--------+--------+|
| | | | |CMIS | | | | |
| |CMIS Services| | |Services | | | |SNMP "Services"|
| | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | SNMP| | | | |
| | | | |"Services"| | | | |
+-----------------+ +----------------+ +-------------------+
| CMIP | | CMIP | SNMP | | SNMP |
+-----------------+ +----------------+ +-------------------+
^ ^ ^ ^
| | | |
+---------------+ +---------------+
CMIP Messages SNMP Messages
The proxy architecture provides emulation of CMIS services
by mapping to the corresponding SNMP message(s) necessary to
carry out the service request. The service emulation allows
management of Internet objects by an ISO/CCITT manager. The
left hand side of the proxy behaves like an ISO/CCITT agent,
communicating with the ISO/CCITT manager using CMIP
protocols. The right hand side of the proxy behaves like
an Internet manager, communicating with the Internet agent
using SNMP protocols.
The proxy relies on the existence of a pair of directly-
related MIB definitions, where the Internet MIB has been
translated into ISO/CCITT GDMO using the procedures
specified in [IIMCMIBTRANS]. The proxy defined in
[IIMCPROXY] uses these MIB definitions and rules to provide
run-time translation of management information carried in
service requests and responses.
The proxy architecture is designed with a specified
interface between the proxy and the underlying protocol
LaBarre Page 3
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
stacks, and so deals primarily in terms of CMIS services and
SNMP "services". The proxy emulates services such as CMIS
scoping and filtering, processing of CMIS operations, and
forwarding/logging of CMIS notifications by performing a
mapping process which must be tailored for each protocol
(for example, SNMP, Secure SNMP, and SNMP-2 are all variants
of the same protocol mapping process).
Finally, [IIMCOMIBTRANS] specifies translation procedures
for converting ISO/CCITT GDMO MIBs into Internet MIBs. MIBs
generated by this translation process cannot be utilized by
the Proxy defined in [IIMCPROXY], although another kind of
Proxy could be defined for this purpose in the future.
1.3 Scope
A major reason for the rapid commercialization of devices
manageable via the Internet management protocol is due to
the speed with which the vendors in the Internet community
have been able to develop MIBs based on the Internet SMI.
To capitalize on this continuing Internet MIB development
and their deployment in commercial devices, communities
interested in integrated management via ISO/CCITT-Internet
proxies require that procedures be defined for translation
of Internet MIBs into ISO/CCITT GDMO MIBs, i.e., MIBs
defined according to the ISO/CCITT SMI Guidelines for
Definition of Managed Objects [ISO10165-4]. Such MIB
translations may also minimize the independent development
of ISO/CCITT GDMO MIBs for the same resources and thereby
reduce the incompatibilities with the Internet MIBs.
Of particular interest to the community interested in
ISO/CCITT-Internet proxies, are translation procedures which
may be automated to a high degree and include unambiguous
automated registration procedures. This memo defines such
procedures.
This memo also defines the ISO/CCITT-Internet proxy
management information and generic SNMP trap to CMIS
notification mappings required for ISO/CCITT-Internet proxy
managers, as well as common naming conventions and ASN.1
modules applicable to such proxies.
This memo assumes that the reader is familiar with the
ISO/CCITT SMI and Internet SMI, and the terminology of each.
The term SNMP will be used throughout the memo to indicate
either SNMP or SNMP-2, unless a distinction needs to be
made.
As of the publication date of this memo, the SNMP-2 SMI and
protocol are evolving. It is expected that the [SMPPROT],
[SMPSMI], [SMPMIB], [SMPTC] and related documents will be
the basis of that evolution, and that changes will not
LaBarre Page 4
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
significantly affect the registration, naming, and
translation procedures described in this memo.
Many, but not all, of the procedures defined in this memo
are subject to automation. Comments are provided concerning
possible aids to automation; however, it is not the intent
of this memo to provide automated translation algorithms.
1.4 Terms and Conventions
TBD
2. Registration and Naming Procedures
Registration and naming procedures are crucial to the unique
identification of management information. Registration
assures the uniqueness of management information element
types, while naming provides a way of distinguishing
instances of a type and locating them within the MIB.
2.1 Registration Procedures
Registration procedures specify that changes in the syntax
or semantics of registered entities require them to be
registered as new entities. The process of converting
Internet MIBs into the ISO/CCITT GDMO MIBs inevitably
introduces subtle semantic changes in how data can be
operated on, and changes in the content of the MIB element.
For example, ISO/CCITT attributes that are converted from
Internet Object Types acquire matching rules for use in
filtering operations. ISO/CCITT object classes that are
created from Internet groups acquire semantics related to
their inheritance of new attributes from the "top" managed
object class. The end result is that all the new ISO/CCITT
object classes, attributes, and notifications created during
the translation process must be registered. In addition,
name bindings for inserting object instances into the naming
hierarchy must be registered.
Registration procedures are critical to the goals of
automating the translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT
GDMO format, and the efficient implementation of ISO/CCITT-
Internet proxies. Registration involves assignment of an
ASN.1 Object Identifier (OID) to the entity. Management
entities defined according to the principles of the Internet
SMI may be registered under the IAB's "internet" arc, or
registered under an arc in another organization's
proprietary registration subtree. The effect of the
registration procedure specified in this document is to
graft the MIB elements defined as a subtree under the
"internet", or proprietary, registration arc into another
part of the registration tree without changing the subtree
structure.
LaBarre Page 5
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
For example, OIDs registered under the internet arc are of
the form:
OID = <internet> <internetEntityId>
where <internet> is the full registration path to the
"internet" arc; and <internetEntityId> is the portion of the
OID that uniquely identifies entities under that arc, i.e.,
the remainder of the OID.
OIDs registered under another organization's arc are of the
form:
OID = <organization> <internetEntityId>
and <organization> = <org arc> <org internet part>
where <org arc> is the arc assigned to the organization by
ISO, CCITT, ANSI, or some other registration authority; <org
internet part> is the path within the organization's subtree
down to the subtree that identifies MIB entities defined
according to the Internet SMI (an organization's internet
subtree); and <internetEntityId> is that portion of the OID
that uniquely identifies entities within the organization's
internet subtree.
Registration is accomplished by replacing the <internet> or
<organization> portion of the OID with a new registration
arc allocated for proxy registration such that the OID is of
the form:
OID = <cmipsnmpProxyXX> <internetEntityId>
This procedure preserves the unique identification of the
entities within the subtree, and since the new arc to which
it is attached is unique, assures a unique OID. Also, since
the original subtree information is present in the new OID,
implementation of proxy translation of the corresponding
management entities identified differently in the two SMIs
is made easier.
Internet defined groups and objects must be registered as
ISO/CCITT object classes and attributes; Internet traps must
be registered as ISO/CCITT notifications; and ISO/CCITT name
bindings must be defined and registered. This memo assumes
that an arc has been allocated in the registration hierarchy
for use in ISO/CCITT-Internet proxy registration. The arc
is named "cmipsnmpProxy". This memo assigns sub-arcs under
"cmipsnmpProxy" as follows:
cmipsnmpProxy OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {...}
cmipsnmpProxyIMIB OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 1}
LaBarre Page 6
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
-- for ISO/CCITT derived object classes and attributes
cmipsnmpProxyNB OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 2}
-- for ISO/CCITT derived NAME BINDINGS
cmipsnmpProxyNOT OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 3}
-- for ISO/CCITT Notifications
This memo assigns OIDs in 4.5 for registration of ISO/CCITT
entities derived from internet entities registered under the
"internet" arc, and for registration of entities defined in
this memo.
The following describes registration procedures to
facilitate automated translation and assure uniqueness of
registered ASN.1 object identifiers for ISO/CCITT object
classes, attributes, and notifications derived from internet
entities; and a registration procedure for their name
bindings.
2.1.1 Object Classes and Attributes Registration
Follow the procedure described in 2.1, using the internet
assigned OID for the group, conceptual table, or conceptual
table entry from which the object is derived, with
{cmipsnmpProxyIMIB} substituted for {cmipsnmpProxyXX}.
2.1.2 Notifications Registration
Notifications are registered using the OID corresponding to
the value of the Internet smpTrapOID object defined in
[SMPMIB].
For SNMP trap PDUs the smpTrapOID is derived as stated in
the SNMP/SNMP-2 Coexistance memo [SMPCOEX] 4.1.2(2). That
definition is repeated below:
"... if the value of the generic-trap field is
'enterpriseSpecific' then the value used is the
concatenation of the enterprise field from the trap PDU with
additional sub-identifiers, '0', and the value of the
specific-trap field."
For traps defined according to the SNMP-2 SMI, the
registered OID for the TRAP-DEFINITION macro is the value of
the smpTrapOID.
The registered OID for the ISO/CCITT derived notification is
then translated from the value for smpTrapOID according to
the procedures in 2.1 with {cmipsnmpProxyNOT} substituted
for {cmipsnmpProxyXX}.
2.1.3 NAME BINDINGs Registration
LaBarre Page 7
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
As described in 2.2.2 , the ISO/CCITT SMI requires that
managed object instances be bound into a naming hierarchy,
or tree, for purposes of naming. ISO/CCITT NAME BINDING
templates are used to register the manner in which such
instances may be bound. These name bindings must be
registered.
The Internet SMI does not include the concept of a naming
tree and name binding. Thus, there exists no registered
Internet entity from which an OID for the ISO/CCITT NAME
BINDING template can be derived. One solution is to use the
object class OID to register name bindings under an special
registration arc {cmipsnmpProxyNB} which is different from
the arc used to register notifications, object classes and
attributes. The following procedure is recommended for
registration of name bindings for an object class to be
inserted into the naming hierarchy, i.e., the subordinate
object class:
o Replace the {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB} portion of the
ISO/CCITT defined OID for the object class, derived
using the procedures of 2.1.1, with {cmipsnmpProxyNB
<sub-dentifier>}. The integer <sub-identifier> is
used to distinguish possible multiple name bindings
for the same object class. Sub-identifier values
shall be greater than or equal to 1.
2.2 Naming Procedures
ISO/CCITT object instances are identified by specifying
read-only attributes within the object class as naming
attributes. The naming attribute is used to form the
relative distinguished name of the object instance. The
sequence of relative distinguished names that trace the path
in the naming hierarchy from the root to the object forms a
distinguished name that uniquely identifies the object
instance.
2.2.1 Naming Attribute
The conversion of Internet MIBs into ISO/CCITT GDMO MIBs
requires that naming attributes be defined and registered
for each ISO/CCITT object class.
This paper specifies a generic naming attribute, and the
conventions for its value definition, to facilitate
automated generation of naming attributes for object classes
derived from Internet MIBs. This generic naming attribute
is applicable to all ISO/CCITT object classes derived from
Internet defined MIBs.
The generic naming attribute, "internetClassId", is of
ASN.1 type OBJECT IDENTIFIER with the following conventions
for its value, as per the conventions in [RFC1212]:
LaBarre Page 8
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
o For ISO/CCITT object classes that may have only a
single instance per managed system, the value is the
OID for the object class concatenated with a "0".
Object classes derived from the Internet TCP, UDP,
and IP groups are examples of such object classes.
o For object classes that may have multiple instances
per managed system, such as table entries, the value
is the concatenation of the ISO/CCITT object class
OID and the Internet object instance identification
(an OID) of the form specified for the table entry
instance identification in the original Internet MIB
definition. The Internet object instance
identification is the the concatenation of the values
of the Internet OBJECT-TYPE(s) identified in the
conceptual table entry OBJECT-TYPE INDEX clause. If
an SNMP-2 AUGMENTS clause is present, the instance
identification is the concatenation of the values of
the OBJECT-TYPE(s) identifed in the INDEX clause of
the table entry referenced in the value of the
AUGMENTS clause.
The formats for naming attributes of table entries
are compatible with instance identification
conventions used by the Internet, thereby
facilitating the automated conversion of Internet
MIBs into ISO/CCITT SMI format and the name mapping
required for proxy management.
2.2.2 ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy Naming Tree
The ISO/CCITT SMI requires that managed object instances
(conventionally just called managed objects) be bound into a
naming hierarchy, or tree, for purposes of naming. This
hierarchy is often called the containment hierarchy. The
binding must specify for each managed object class: the
object class which is superior to it in the containment
hierarchy; and a naming attribute in the object class that
is used to distinguish instances of the object class at a
given level in the hierarchy. The name binding is specified
after the object class has been defined. Multiple name
bindings may be defined and registered that locate the
object instances at different places in the naming
hierarchy.
This memo defines a subtree of the naming hierarchy for the
ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy MIB to be used in ISO/CCITT-
Internet proxies. The subtree is rooted at the
"cmipsnmpProxyTable" object defined in 4. Each entry in the
table, called "cmipsnmpProxyAgent", corresponds to an SNMP
agent in a managed system. MIB elements specific to each
agent are subtrees of a "cmipsnmpProxyAgent" instance.
LaBarre Page 9
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
One name binding for the "cmipsnmpProxyTable" object is
specified which binds it to the ISO/CCITT "system" object
class defined in [ISO10165-2]. Other name bindings may be
specified.
The ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy MIB is organized using the
conventions of tables and table entries to optimize the
benefits of CMIS scoping. While this is not required by the
ISO/CCITT SMI or CMIS, it minimizes the number of objects to
which filtering must be applied, or the number of objects
that are returned if filtering is not applied with scoping.
A Naming Tree diagram for the ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy MIB
defined in this memo, the object classesdefined in the Party
MIB [IIMCPARTY], and the MIB-II [IIMCMIB-II] is illustrated
below. Although the ISO/CCITT "system" object class is
shown to be the root of the tree, other object classes may
be used. Object classes derived from groups in other
Internet defined MIBs, that are specific to an SNMP agent,
are bound to the "cmipsnmpProxyAgent" managed object, or to
other objects within the cmipsnmpProxyAgent sub-tree as
appropriate.
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992" : system
|
|-- cmipsnmpProxyTable
|
|-- partyTable --- partyEntry
|
|-- partySecretsTable --- partySecretsEntry
|
|-- aclTable --- aclEntry
|
|-- viewTable --- viewEntry
|
|--cmipsnmpProxyAgent
|
|-- partyTable --- partyEntry
|
|-- partySecretsTable --- partySecretsEntry
|
|-- aclTAble --- aclEntry
|
|-- viewTable --- viewEntry
|
|-- internetSystem
|
|-- at --- atTable --- atEntry
|
|-- egp --- egpNeighTable --- egpNeighEntry
|
|-- icmp
|
|-- interfaces --- ifTable --- ifEntry
LaBarre Page 10
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
|
|-- ip --- ipRoutingTable --- ipRouteEntry
| |
| |---- ipAddrTable --- ipAddrEntry
| |
| |-- ipNetToMediaTable --- ipNetToMediaEntry
| |
| |---- ipForwardTable --- ipForwardEntry
|
|-- snmp
|
|-- tcp --- tcpConnTable --- tcpConnEntry
|
|-- udp --- udpTable --- udpEntry
2.2.3 Distinguished Names
The distinguished name (DN) of a managed object consists of
a sequence of relative distinguished names (RDN), one for
each managed object on the naming path from the root to the
managed object. Each relative distinguished name contains
exactly one attribute, the "naming" attribute for the
corresponding class, as specified by a NAME BINDING
template. This DN is used as the CMIP ManagedObjectInstance
parameter for identifying managed objects.
For example, a distinguished name designating a particular
routing table entry (of class ipRouteEntry) might be
{
O O O
-- higher level object RDNs
{internetClassId = {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 0}}
-- cmipsnmpProxyTable
{cmipsnmpProxyAgentId = "troi.mitre.org" }
-- cmipsnmpProxyAgent
{internetClassId = {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB 2 1 4 0}}
-- ip
{internetClassId = {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB 2 1 4 21 0}}
-- ipRouteTable
{internetClassId = {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB 2 1 4 21 129 83 2 17}}
-- ipRouteEntry
}
The "internetClassId" naming attribute definition, to be
used for object classes derived from the Internet MIBs, can
be found in the ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy MIB defined in 4 of
this memo.
2.3 OID Translation
The procedures required to translate between Internet
registered OIDs and names, and ISO/CCITT registered
attribute and class OIDs are described in this section.
LaBarre Page 11
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
2.3.1 OID/Name Translation ISO/CCITT to Internet
The general procedure for deriving ISO/CCITT registered OIDs
from Internet OIDs was explained in 2.1, and the structure
of the naming attribute value was explained in 2.2. This
paragraph explains how the information used in an ISO/CCITT
class OID, attribute OID, and the naming attribute value may
be used to create the identifier for naming Internet
objects.
The following definitions apply: ((c) and (a) refer to class
and attribute, respectively)
From 2.1,
{classOID} ::= {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB
<internetEntityId>(c)}
For example
ipRouteTable ::= {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB 2 1 4 21 }
where <internetEntityId>(c) ::= 2 1 4 21.
{attributeOID} ::= {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB
<internetEntityId>(a)}
For example,
ipRouteNextHop ::= {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB 2 1 4 21 1 7}
where <internetEntityId>(a) ::= 2 1 4 21 1 7.
From 2.2, the naming attribute value contains the OID formed
as, (the "( )" indicates "contents of"):
(naming attribute) ::= {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB
<internetEntityId>(c)
<internet instanceId>}
where the <internet instanceId>, the OID created uniquely
for each Internet object instance, is "0" for object classes
that may only have a single instance.
For example, the naming attribute value for the instance of
ipRouteEntry specific to IP address 129 83 2 17 is
{cmipsnmpProxyIMIB 2 1 4 21 1 129 83 2 17}, where
<internetEntityId>(c) ::= 2 1 4 21 1, and <internet
instanceId> ::= 129 83 2 17.
The Internet uses the following convention to uniquely
identify an Internet object instance:
{internet object name}::= {<internet> or <organization>
<internetEntityId>(a)
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<internet instanceId>}
For example, the internet object name for ipRouteNextHop
corresponding to IP address 129 83 2 17 is {internet 2 1 4
21 1 7 129 83 2 17}, where <internetEntityId>(a) ::= 2 1 4
21 1 7, <internet instanceId> ::=129 83 2 17.
Therefore, given the contents of the naming attribute for
the ISO/CCITT object instance being accessed the <internet
InstanceId> and <internet> or <organization> are extracted.
Given the attributeOID for the attribute being operated
upon, the <internetEntityId>(a) is extracted. The {internet
object name} is then formed from the results.
For example, assume that a CMIS request is issued specifying
a distinguished name for an ipRouteEntry managed object as
illustrated in 2.2.3; and an attribute for ipRouteEntry, say
ipRouteNextHop. The ipRouteNextHop attribute has been
assigned the identifier {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB 2 1 4 21 1 7} in
the MIB defined in [IIMCMIB-II]. Therefore, the
ipRouteNextHop attribute identifier would first have to be
translated into the corresponding Internet identifier
{internet 2 1 4 21 1 7} by substituting "internet" for
"cmipsnmpProxyIMIB". Then, from the RDN value for the
ipRouteEntry extract the <internet instanceId> {129 83 2
17}. Finally the Internet identification for this piece of
management information would be constructed according to
RFC1213 as {ipRouteNextHop 129 83 2 17}, or equivalently,
{internet 2 1 4 21 1 7 129 83 2 17}. The system in which
this information resides is identified in the
"cmipsnmpProxyAgent" RDN as "troi.mitre.org."
2.3.2 OID/Name Translation Internet to ISO/CCITT
Given the definitions shown in 2.3.1, the ISO/CCITT
{classOID}, {attributeOID}, and distinguished name can be
derived from Internet OIDs and names.
- The cmipsnmpProxyIMIB value is known.
- The <internetEntityId>(a) value is extracted from the
{internet object name}, and combined with the
cmipsnmpProxyIMIB value to form the {attributeOID}.
- The {classOID} can be determined by finding the ISO/CCITT
object class to which the attribute identified as
{cmipsnmpProxyIMIB <internetEntityId>(a) } belongs.
NOTE: Avoid the temptation to derive the {classOID} from
the {attributeOID} by assuming that the {attributeOID}
={classOID <integer>}. Sometimes post-processing procedures
may combine attributes from multiple classes into a single
class. See 3.3 for a discussion on this issue.
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2.4 Inheritance for Object Classes
The "top" class defined by [ISO10165-2] is the ultimate
superior in the ISO/CCITT inheritance hierarchy. The class
"top" contains attributes which are inherited by all managed
object classes that are defined using the ISO/CCITT SMI and
GDMO templates.
Not all attributes of "top" need to be instantianted in any
single managed object. All objects should instantiate the
mandatory "objectClass", and "nameBindings" attributes. If
multiple packages may apply, an object should instantiate
the "packages" attribute.
2.5 Reference Labels for Derived Entities
The labels used to reference Internet entities (groups,
objects, traps) should be used to reference the
corresponding templates for the derived ISO/CCITT entity
(object class, attribute, notification).
3. Internet to ISO/CCITT MIB Translation Procedures
The procedures for translating Internet SMI MIBs into
ISO/CCITT SMI MIBs consist of pre-translation procedures,
GDMO template translation procedures, and post-translation
procedures. Many of the procedures are subject to
automation; some are not. Comments are provided concerning
possible aids to automation; however, it is not the intent
of this memo to provide automated translation algorithms.
3.1 Pre-translation Procedures
Pre-translation procedures are outlined below. The
rationale for steps (a) - (e) is that the ISO/CCITT object
classes and associated attributes must be identified. The
rationale for steps (f) - (g) is that all ASN.1 syntax
references in templates must be an ASN.1
Externaltypereference or Externalvaluereference, i.e., must
reference a label that appears on the left side of an ASN.1
construct within some ASN.1 module that appears in the
document that defines the derived MIB. Internet MIBs often
reference basic ASN.1 constructs, such as INTEGER and OCTET
STRING, which must be converted into an
Externaltypereference. Default values must reference an
Externalvaluereference.
(a) Identify Internet groups and OBJECT-TYPEs
associated with each group. For SNMP-2 defined MIBs, the
OBJECT-GROUP macro includes this information. For SNMP
defined MIBs, the group may be identified manually and then
the members of the group identified by the fact that their
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OIDs contain the group object identifier. For SNMP defined
MIBs, procedure (c) must be followed.
(b) Identify conceptual table OBJECT-TYPEs, conceptual
table entry (row) OBJECT-TYPEs associated with each table,
and columnar OBJECT-TYPEs associated with each conceptual
table entry.
Note: For SNMP-2 defined MIBs, the MAX-ACCESS clause of the
OBJECT-TYPES macro will have a value of 'not-accessible' and
the convention often used is to include the word "Table" or
"Entry" in the macro label. Once a table has been
identified the corresponding entry OBJECT-TYPE macro can be
identified via its registered object identifier through the
convention of appending a 1 to the table object identifier.
SNMP defined MIBs are not so consistent in their use of
"not-accessible"; however, the other conventions apply.
Note: For SNMP-2 defined MIBs, tables may be defined with
table entries that augment (SNMP-2 AUGMENT clause) entries
for an existing table. The table object classes derived
from such tables will be deleted from the ISO/CCITT MIB
during post-translation (see 3.3.3). The table entry object
class for the deleted table will be bound to the table entry
object class that corresponds to the reference in the
AUGMENTS clause.
(c) For each group, the OBJECT-TYPEs not identified in
procedure (b) and not having an ACCESS clause value of "not-
accessible" are identified for translation into attributes
of an ISO/CCITT object class.
(d) For each conceptual table entry OBJECT-TYPE, the
columnar OBJECT-TYPEs associated with the table entry and
not having an ACCESS clause value of "not-accessible" are
identified for translation into ISO/CCITT attributes of an
ISO/CCITT object class.
(e) For each conceptual table, an ISO/CCITT object
class is created that contains the generic naming attribute
"internetClassId". OBJECT-TYPES that are directly
associated with the table become attributes of that table.
(f) Create an ASN.1 module. For each OBJECT-TYPE that
is to be translated into an ISO/CCITT attribute, check the
value of the SYNTAX clause, and if it is not one of the
Internet attribute types defined by the SNMP or SNMP-2 SMI
(Counter, IpAddress, Gauge, TimeTicks, Opaque, Counter32,
Gauge32, Counter64, NsapAddress), or defined using an SNMP-2
TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro, then do one of the following:
i) If the value is not an Externaltypereference:
create an Externaltypereference for the value in
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the SYNTAX clause and put it into the ASN.1
module.
ii) If the value is an Externaltypereference:
put the Externaltypereference value into the
ASN.1 module. The ASN.1 module is used for the
GDMO template translations.
g) Create an Externalvaluereference which has the type
indicated by the OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX clause and is assigned
the value of the DEFVAL clause.
For convenience, an ASN.1 module of common definitions for
Externaltypereferences of the basic ASN.1 types included in
the SNMP SMI and SNMP-2 SMI (e.g., INTEGER, OCTET STRING) is
defined in 4.5. The Externaltypereferences in this module
must either be imported into a local ASN.1 module within the
document that defines the derived MIB, or appropriate
equivalent references need to be declared within the local
ASN.1 module.
3.2 GDMO Translation Procedures
Readers of this memo are assumed to have familiarity with
the GDMO templates and their format. The templates
presented here should be considered exemplar, and not
definitive.
The GDMO templates in this paragraph contain elements
indicated by "< x >", where "x" is to be interpreted and the
result substituted into the template.
The "||" symbol indicates concatenation of elements.
Adjacent elements that are not concatenated should be
separated by at least one space.
The "[ ]" symbols surrounding a construct indicate that it
may be present or absent in any particular instance of the
template.
The "[ ]*" symbols surrounding a construct indicate that it
may be present or absent in any particular instance of the
template an undefined number of times.
An "|" symbol is used to indicate that a choice must be
made between alternate constructs.
The "!" symbol is used to delimit text strings in the
templates. Other delimiters may be used, as specified by
the GDMO. The delimiter may not be used in the text string
unless it is "doubled", e.g., "!!".
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Elements that are defined in one template are not repeated
for other templates unless changes are made to its
interpretation.
Note: other SNMP-2 SMI macro clauses contain textual or
other information that may be inserted into the BEHAVIOUR
clause of the an ISO/CCITT template, e.g., UNITS, REFERENCE.
Provisions for including information in these macro clauses
are not explicitly described in the translation procedures
below, however the contents of these clauses should be
included in the BEHAVIOUR clause.
The Internet SNMP-2 SMI also includes macros for specifying
compliance with the MIBs. These macros correspond to
ISO/CCITT managed object conformance statements (MOCS), and
are not addressed here.
3.2.1 Translation of Groups
Internet groups may be translated to ISO/CCITT managed
object classes by filling in the following GDMO template:
<group label> MANAGED OBJECT CLASS
DERIVED FROM
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992" :top
CHARACTERIZED BY
<group label> || "Pkg" PACKAGE
[BEHAVIOUR
<group label> || "PkgBehaviour" BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS !<optional textual definition>!;;]
ATTRIBUTES
internetClassId GET
["," <OBJECT-TYPE label n>
<OBJECT-TYPE label n ACCESS clause translation>
[DEFAULT VALUE <DEFVAL clause translation>]]*;
[NOTIFICATIONS <notification label>
["," <notification label>]*;];;
REGISTERED AS { {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB} <internetEntityId>(c)
};
The following definitions apply:
<group label> - The label associated with the Internet
group.
<optional textual definition> - Any textual description
that is applicable to the resource modelled by this
group, and the resource's management behaviour. Text
in the SNMP-2 DESCRIPTION clause of the OBJECT-GROUP
macro may be used.
<OBJECT-TYPE label n> - The label of an Internet
OBJECT-TYPE which is included in the group and does not
represent a conceptual table, a conceptual table entry,
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or an OBJECT-TYPE included in a conceptual table entry.
These become attributes of the object class.
<OBJECT-TYPE label n ACCESS clause translation> -
The mapping of the ACCESS (or SNMP-2 MAX-ACCESS) clause
value as defined below (multi-valued attributes are not
permitted in the Internet SMI):
OBJECT-TYPE
ACCESS Clause Value* ISO/CCITT
read-only GET
read-write GET-REPLACE
write-only REPLACE
read-create GET-REPLACE
* OBJECT-TYPEs with an ACCESS clause value of
'not-accessible' will not become ISO/CCITT attributes.
<DEFVAL clause translation> - The value of the DEFVAL
clause in the form of an Externalvaluereference, i.e.,
<module-name>.<value-name>, where the module-name is
the name of an ASN.1 module within the document in
which this object class is defined, and the value-name
is the label assigned to the ASN.1 value definition
contained in the DEFVAL clause. Where it is necessary
to refer to the label of a definition contained in
another document, this may be achieved by means of a
local ASN.1 module which makes use of the ASN.1 IMPORTS
mechanism to import the appropriate value definition.
3.2.2 Translation of Table Objects
Internet conceptual table objects may be translated to
ISO/CCITT managed object classes by filling in the
following GDMO template:
<OBJECT-TYPE label> MANAGED OBJECT CLASS
DERIVED FROM
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992" :top;
CHARACTERIZED BY
<OBJECT-TYPE label> || "Pkg" PACKAGE
[BEHAVIOUR
<OBJECT-TYPE label> || "PkgBehaviour" BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!<OBJECT-TYPE DESCRIPTION clause text>!;;]
ATTRIBUTES
internetClassId GET
["," <OBJECT-TYPE label n>
<OBJECT-TYPE label n ACCESS clause translation>
[DEFAULT VALUE <DEFVAL clause translation>]]*;
[NOTIFICATIONS <notification label>
["," <notification label>]*;];;
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REGISTERED AS { {cmipsnmpProxyIMIB} <internetEntityId>(c)
};
The following definitions apply:
<OBJECT-TYPE label> - The label associated with the
OBJECT-TYPE macro.
<OBJECT-TYPE DESCRIPTION clause text> - The text in
the DESCRIPTION clause.
3.2.3 Translation of Table Entry Objects
Internet conceptual table entry objects may be translated to
ISO/CCITT managed object classes by filling in the
following GDMO template:
<OBJECT-TYPE label> MANAGED OBJECT CLASS
DERIVED FROM
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992" :top;
CHARACTERIZED BY
<OBJECT-TYPE label> || "Pkg" PACKAGE
BEHAVIOUR
<OBJECT-TYPE label> || "PkgBehaviour" BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!<OBJECT-TYPE DESCRIPTION/INDEX/STATUS clause text>!;;
ATTRIBUTES
internetClassId GET
["," <OBJECT-TYPE label n>
<OBJECT-TYPE label n ACCESS clause translation>
[DEFAULT VALUE <DEFVAL clause translation>]]*;
[NOTIFICATIONS <notification label>
["," <notification label>]*;];;
REGISTERED AS {{cmipsnmpProxyIMIB} <internetEntityId>(c) };
The following definitions apply:
<OBJECT-TYPE label> - The label of an Internet
OBJECT-TYPE which represents a conceptual table entry.
<OBJECT-TYPE label n> - The label of an Internet
OBJECT-TYPE which represents an OBJECT-TYPE included in
a conceptual table entry. These become attributes of
the table entry managed object.
<OBJECT-TYPE DESCRIPTION/INDEX/STATUS clause text> -
The text in the DESCRIPTION clause and the INDEX clause
including the keyword INDEX. Note: in the post-
translation phase, information about the status
variable used for creation and deletion will be
inserted.
Note: Table object classes that contain table entry object
classes which were derived from OBJECT-TYPES with an
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AUGMENTS clause will be deleted in the post-translation
phase according to 3.3.3.
3.2.4 Translation of Other OBJECT-TYPES
Other Internet OBJECT-TYPEs are translated into ISO/CCITT
attributes by filling in the following GDMO template:
<OBJECT-TYPE label> ATTRIBUTE
[WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
<module identification>|| "." ||
<SYNTAX clause translation 1>
[MATCHES FOR <SYNTAX clause type matching rules>;] ]
| [DERIVED FROM <SYNTAX clause translation 2>]
[BEHAVIOUR
<OBJECT-TYPE label> || "Behaviour" BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS !<DESCRIPTION clause text>!;;]
REGISTERED AS {{cmipsnmpProxyIMIB} <internetEntityId>(a)};
The following definitions apply:
<module identification> - The label of the ASN.1 module
that contains the ASN.1 syntax being referenced. The
module must appear in the document that defines the
translated MIB.
ISO/CCITT have the concept of a generic "attribute type",
which is a defined type that can be used in the definition
of specific attributes. Attribute types have a defined
syntax, generic semantics, and matching rules. For example,
counter and gauge are attribute types.
The SNMP-2 SMI has a similar concept embodied in the
TEXTUAL-CONVENTIONS macro, which allows the definition of
"Internet attribute types" with associated syntax and
semantics. See 3.2.6 for translation procedures associated
with the TEXTUAL CONVENTIONS macro.
Attributes of the defined SNMP types (Counter, IpAddress,
Gauge, TimeTicks, Opaque, Counter32, Gauge32, Counter64,
NsapAddress) should inherit the semantics associated with
the type - not just the syntax. As such, they could have
been defined as Internet attribute types using a TEXTUAL
CONVENTIONS macro. See 4.3 for the conversion of these
types into ISO/CCITT attribute types. In addition, 4.3
contains ISO/CCITT attribute type definitions derived from
[SMPTC].
Attribute templates derived from OBJECT-TYPE macros that
specify these Internet attribute types in their SYNTAX
clause should contain the DERIVED FROM clause. Attribute
templates derived from other ASN.1 types should contain the
WITH SYNTAX and MATCHING RULES clauses.
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<SYNTAX clause translation 1> - Translation of the
SYNTAX clause into a valid type reference name using
the ASN.1 Externaltypereference notation as GDMO
requires.
<SYNTAX clause type matching rules> - The matching
rules for use in CMIS filtering operations.
Note: This normally is a manual process; however
matching rules that generally apply for some specific
types are provided in the table below. These rules
also to Externaltypereferences that reference the
syntax type. These matching rules may be applied by
automated mechanisms and then examined in the post-
translation.
Syntax Type Matching Rules
INTEGER EQUALITY, ORDERING
OCTET STRING EQUALITY, ORDERING,
SUBSTRINGS
BIT STRING EQUALITY
OBJECT IDENTIFIER EQUALITY, ORDERING
SEQUENCE EQUALITY
Counter (x) EQUALITY, ORDERING *
Gauge (x) EQUALITY, ORDERING *
IpAddress EQUALITY, ORDERING
SUBSTRINGS*
NsapAddress EQUALITY, ORDERING
SUBSTRINGS*
TimeTicks EQUALITY, ORDERING
SUBSTRINGS*
Opaque EQUALITY, ORDERING*
The * indicates the matching rules that are
inherited from the ISO/CCITT attribute type as
defined in 4.3.
The (x) indicates counters and gauges of differing
sizes.
<SYNTAX clause translation 2> - Attributes of the
defined SNMP/SNMP-2 types (Counter, IpAddress, Gauge,
TimeTicks, Opaque, Counter32, Gauge32, Counter64,
NsapAddress),and Internet attribute types defined using
the SNMP-2 TEXTUAL CONVENTIONS macro, should be treated
as ISO/CCITT attribute types. Specific attributes are
derived from these types.
The following table indicates the translations required
for Internet attribute types as defined either in
this memo or Internet documents. ISO/CCITT attribute
types for Internet attribute types types are
defined in 4.3.
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Syntax Type Substituted Value
AutonomousType "IIMCMIBTRANS" :autonomousType
Counter "IIMCMIBTRANS" :counter32
Counter32 "IIMCMIBTRANS" :counter32
Counter64 "IIMCMIBTRANS" :counter64
DisplayString "IIMCMIBTRANS" :displayString
Gauge "IIMCMIBTRANS" :gauge32
Gauge32 "IIMCMIBTRANS" :gauge32
InstancePointer "IIMCMIBTRANS" :instancePointer
IpAddress "IIMCMIBTRANS" :ipAddress
MacAddress "IIMCMIBTRANS" :macAddress
NsapAddress "IIMCMIBTRANS" :nsapAddress
Opaque "IIMCMIBTRANS" :opaque
PhysAddress "IIMCMIBTRANS" :physAddress
RowStatus "IIMCMIBTRANS" :rowStatus
TestAndIncrement "IIMCMIBTRANS" :testAndIncrement
TimeInterval "IIMCMIBTRANS" :timeInterval
TimeStamp "IIMCMIBTRANS" :timeStamp
TimeTicks "IIMCMIBTRANS" :timeTicks
TruthValue "IIMCMIBTRANS" :truthValue
3.2.5 Translation of Traps
The Concise MIB Definitions [RFC1212] for SNMP does not
contain a macro for representing traps since, in SNMP, traps
were considered part of the protocol and not part of the
MIB. A subsequent attempt was made to correct this problem
in [RFC1215] by defining a TRAP-TYPE macro. The SNMP-2 SMI
[SMPSMI] defines a TRAP-DEFINITION macro and its mapping
onto an SNMP-2 PDU. The memo on SNMP/SNMP-2 Coexistance
[SMPCOEX] defines a mapping between SNMP and SNMP-2 trap
PDUs. Therefore, by inference, there exists a mapping of
SNMP trap PDUs into an SNMP-2 TRAP-DEFINITION macro. This
memo assumes that SNMP trap PDUs will be translated into
SNMP-2 trap PDUs, and that by inference the mapping into a
SNMP-2 TRAP-DEFINITION exists.
The translation of Internet traps, as defined for SNMP Trap
PDUs and the SNMP-2 TRAP-DEFINITION macro, may be translated
to ISO/CCITT notifications by filling in the following GDMO
template:
<trap label> NOTIFICATION
BEHAVIOUR
"<trap label>" || "Behaviour" BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!<DESCRIPTION and
OBJECTS/VARIABLES clause translation>!;;
WITH INFORMATION SYNTAX
<module identification>|| "." ||
"MonitoredAttributes";
-- MonitoredAttributes must be imported
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-- from Attribute-ASN1Module, defined in
-- Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992,
-- into the ASN.1 module defined in the
-- document that contains the MIB
-- translation
AND ATTRIBUTE IDS
monitoredAttributes
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992"
:monitoredAttributes;
REGISTERED AS {<notificationOID>};
<trap label> - The label of the TRAP-DEFINITION (or
TRAP-TYPE) macro, or one assigned by local means for
SNMP enterprise specific traps.
<DESCRIPTION and OBJECTS/VARIABLES clause translation>-
The value of the TRAP-DEFINITION OBJECTS (or TRAP-TYPE
VARIABLES) clause indicates the names of the attributes
to be inserted into the monitoredAttributes field of
the trap. A sentence indicating this fact should be
inserted into the text of the DESCRIPTION clause and
the result becomes the text for the template BEHAVIOUR
clause. The text describing behaviour for SNMP traps
and the attributes to be inserted into the
monitoredAttributes field for traps not specified using
a macro is not defined.
The IpAddress of the SNMP agent in the SNMP Trap PDU is
missing from the SNMP-2 TRAP-DEFINITION macro. The address
may be inferred from the managed system's domain name in the
"cmipsnmpProxyEntryId" RDN of the DN contained in the
ManagedObjectInstance field of the CMIP event report that
carries the notification.
Similarly, the SNMP PDU "generic-trap", and "specific-trap"
fields are missing from the SNMP-2 trap PDU and SNMP-2 TRAP-
DEFINITION macro. The information contained in these fields
are combined into the registered object identifier for the
SNMP-2 TRAP-DEFINITION macro. This object identifier
corresponds to the smpTrapOID object defined in [SMPMIB].
<notificationOID> - The OID for the notification as
derived in 2.1.2.
3.2.6 Translation of Internet Attribute Types
ISO/CCITT has the concept of a generic "attribute type",
which is a defined type that can be used in the definition
of specific attributes. Attribute types have a defined
syntax, generic semantics, and matching rules. For example,
counter and gauge are attribute types.
The SNMP-2 SMI has a similar concept embodied in the
TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro, which allows the definition of
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"Internet attribute types" with associated syntax and
semantics.
Attributes of the defined SNMP types (Counter, IpAddress,
Gauge, TimeTicks, Opaque, Counter32, Gauge32, Counter64,
NsapAddress) should inherit the semantics associated with
the type - not just the syntax. As such, they could have
been defined as Internet attribute types using a TEXTUAL-
CONVENTION macro.
ISO/CCITT attribute types are defined using the ATTRIBUTE
template, without the REGISTERED AS clause.
<Internet attribute type label> ATTRIBUTE
[WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
<module identification>|| "." ||
<SYNTAX clause translation 1>
[MATCHES FOR
<SYNTAX clause type matching rules>;] ]
| [DERIVED FROM <SYNTAX clause translation 2>]
[BEHAVIOUR
<Internet attribute type label> || "Behaviour"
BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS !<DESCRIPTION clause text>!;;]
The following definitions apply:
<Internet attribute type label> - The label associated
with the TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro, or with the
generic type that could have been defined using that
macro.
Attribute templates derived from OBJECT-TYPE macros that
specify Internet attribute types in their SYNTAX clause
should specify the corresponding ISO/CCITT attribute types
in their DERIVED FROM clause.
3.3 Post-translation Procedures
Post-translation procedures generally includes manual
checking of the BEHAVIOUR clause text for proper behaviour
definitions, the addition of information concerning
variables for creation and deletion, the assignment of
notifications to an appropriate ISO/CCITT object class, and
the creation of name bindings for placing the derived
ISO/CCITT objects into the containment hierarchy. However,
sometimes the procedures are not so straightforward.
Post-translation procedures may result in deletion of some
ISO/CCITT MIB elements derived from the procedures described
in 2.2. For example, if the table object class contains
entries that were derived from Internet OBJECT-TYPES that
contained an AUGMENTS clause, then the table is deleted from
the MIB.
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Post-translation procedures may also result in the
combination multiple ISO/CCITT MIB object classes to form
one class. The multiple object classes should perhaps
belong to a single object class, but were created as
separate object classes due to specific SNMP SMI
requirements. The resulting multiple object classes may be
constrained to synchronize their behaviour, e.g., to
synchronize creation and deletion procedures. However, when
viewed from an ISO/CCITT context, the rationale for using
multiple objects may disappear, or ISO/CCITT SMI and
protocol constraints may prohibit their use. See
[IIMCPARTY] for an example of this situation.
3.3.1 Post-translation of BEHAVIOUR Cause
The SNMP and SNMP-2 text descriptions often contain
SNMP/SNMP-2 protocol, or SMI, relevant information that is
inappropriate for an ISO/CCITT object class or attribute;
such text should be removed or properly modified.
A reference to the Internet MIB entity from which the
ISO/CCITT entity was derived should be added.
Descriptions of circumstances that cause the generation of
specific notifications should be included.
Information should be added that is relevant to attributes
for instance identification and creation/deletion status.
Such information should be added in a way that facilitates
automated parsing of the BEHAVIOUR clause. The use of
keywords is recommended.
Multiple instance objects should be indicated by the
keywordS "MULTIPLE INSTANCE" in the text.
The text should include relevant information related to
instance identification in the form of the full INDEX or
AUGMENTS clause.
The status variable, and its value for deletion, must be
described for table entries that may be created and deleted
by management action. The following format should be used:
STATUSVAR ::= <label>
STATUSDELETE ::= <value>
where <label> is the label of the attribute used to indicate
deletion of an entry, and <value> is the value which
indicates deletion. The value specification should be
consistent with the type of the status attribute.
3.3.2 Post-translation of Notifications
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The ISO/CCITT SMI models notifications as being emitted by
specific managed objects. As a consequence, notifications
must be assigned to appropriate object classes at the time
the object class is defined. New notifications cannot be
added to an object class without changing its registration.
The fact that the ISO/CCITT SMI models notifications as
being emitted by specific managed objects implies that
notifications may only contain information known to the
managed object. However, the Internet SMI has no explicit
concept of traps being associated with an object. They may
contain information related to multiple internet objects.
Consequently, some notifications may be derived from SNMP
traps that contain variables not affiliated with the same
derived ISO/CCITT object class. This memo allows variables
to be placed into a notification even if they are not
attributes of the object class from which the notification
is emitted.
The following procedures should be applied:
1) identify the object class that corresponds to the
resource to which the notification applies.
2) insert the notification into the NOTIFICATIONS
clause of the object class.
3.3.3 Creation of NAME BINDING Templates
The ISO/CCITT name bindings for object classes to be bound
into the naming hierarchy described in 2.2.2 are created by
filling in the GDMO template defined below.
<object class label>-NB NAME BINDING
SUBORDINATE OBJECT CLASS
<object class label> AND SUBCLASSES;
NAMED BY SUPERIOR OBJECT CLASS
<superior object class label> AND SUBCLASSES;
WITH ATTRIBUTE internetClassId;
[CREATE [<create modifier>] ;]
[DELETE [<delete-modifier>];]
REGISTERED AS { <name binding OID>};
<object class label> - the reference label of the
object class to which the name binding applies.
<superior object class label> - the reference label of
the superior object class in the naming hierarchy.
Object classes derived from groups normally have the
"cmipsnmpProxyAgent" object class as their superior.
Table object classes, derived from conceptual tables,
have the object class derived from the group in which
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they were defined as their superior. One way to
determine the group is to use the structure of the OID
for the table object, i.e., it contains the internet
specific portion of the OID for the group. However, if
the table object class contains entries that were
derived from Internet OBJECT-TYPES that contained an
AUGMENTS clause, then the table is deleted from the
MIB. The reason for this is that the ISO/CCITT SMI
prohibits adding attributes to an object class. The
solution used in this memo is to make a table entry
object class that augments another table entry the
direct subordinate of the table entry object class
being augmented. The table is no longer needed.
Table entry object classes, derived from conceptual
table entries, have the corresponding table object
class as their superior. One way to determine the
table is to use the structure of the OID for the table
entry object class, i.e., it contains the internet
specific portion of the OID for the table.However,
table entry object classes derived from OBJECT-TYPES
that contain an AUGMENTS clause have the table entry
object class derived from the OBJECT-TYPE referenced in
the AUGMENTS clause as their superior.
The Internet SMI only allows the possibility of conceptual
table entries being created and deleted. Many table entries
are automatically created and deleted as a result of normal
resource operation.
For SNMP-2 defined MIBs, if the table entry contains an
OBJECT-TYPE that has a SYNTAX clause value of "RowStatus"
and a MAX-ACCESS clause value of "read-create", then the
table entry may be created and deleted.
For SNMP defined MIBs, the use of an OBJECT-TYPE within a
table entry which indicates "RowStatus" is inconsistant.
Usually, the text definition for the table entry may need to
be consulted to determine if creation and deletion are
allowed, and the columnar object and associated value which
indicates deletion.
<create modifier> - the "WITH-AUTOMATIC-INSTANCE-
NAMING" modifier should be part of the CREATE clause if
the object class is being used for proxy. This allows
the proxy, which is closer to the resource than the
manager, to assign instance names. The "WITH-
REFERENCE-OBJECT" may also be be used.
<delete-modifier> - The delete modifier for the DELETE
clause should be "DELETES-CONTAINED-OBJECTS"
if the table entry contains an object class added as a
result of an SNMP-2 OBJECT-TYPE AUGMENTS clause.
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<name binding OID> - As defined in 2.1.3.
4. ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy MIB
The ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy MIB defines a set of objects
for specifying the information that is needed for both
community-based and party-based SNMP management on a per
SNMP agent basis.
The ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy MIB defines the
"cmipsnmpProxyTable" object class which contains entry
object classes named "cmipsnmpProxyAgent". The
"cmipsnmpProxyAgent" has information to identify SNMP agents
and how they may be reached. Its naming attribute, which
contains the administratively assigned name of the managed
device where the SNMP agent is located, is used in the
naming hierarchy to identify the SNMP managed device.
The definition of these two object classes and their
attributes are defined in 4.1.
4.1 Object and Attribute Definitions
ISO/CCITT-Internet proxy MIB object classes and attributes
are assigned OIDs under the {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB} arc. The
Internet convention of registering attributes under the
object class to which they belong is followed in this memo.
cmipsnmpProxyAgent MANAGED OBJECT CLASS
DERIVED FROM
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992" :top;
CHARACTERIZED BY
cmipsnmpProxyAgentPkg PACKAGE
BEHAVIOUR
cmipsnmpProxyAgentPkgBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This managed object class is used to represent an
SNMP/SNMP-2 agent in the proxy MIB. Each agent
that the proxy manages is represented by an
instance of this object class.
The cmipsnmpProxyAgentId attribute contains the
administratively assigned name of the managed
system that contains the SNMP/SNMP-2 agent.
Usually this is an Internet Domain Name. The
value is determined by the manager when the object
is created.
The proxyOID attribute contains the proxy arc
used in the re-registration and derivation of
OIDs. The following sub-arcs are assigned:
{<proxyOID> 1} - object classes, attributes
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{<proxyOID> 2} - name bindings
{<proxyOID> 3} - notifications
The replaceByProxyOID attribute contains the
"internet" OID or an organization specific OID.
The portion of the OID for an internet defined
object that corresponds to the replaceByProxyOID
contents is replaced by {<proxyOID> 1} when
translating internet object OIDs into ISO/CCITT
OIDs, and {<proxyOID> 3} when translating internet
trap OIDs into ISO/CCITT notification OIDs.
The managementProtocol attribute specifies the
Internet management protocol used by the proxy to
manage devices. It may be an OID indicating
SNMP, SNMP-2, or some other protocol. This
attribute is assigned a value (an OID) by the
manager that is appropriate to the agent.
The supportedMIBs attribute contains the set of
OIDs of registered MIBs that the agent supports.
The manager may add or remove elements to/from
this attribute.
The specificAccessControlUsed attribute indicates
whether access control specific to an SNMP agent
is none, uses Internet defined mechanisms and MIB
elements, or uses ISO/CCITT defined mechanisms and
MIB elements.
The accessControlEnforcement attribute indicates
where access control is applied: SNMP agent,
proxy, or both.
The operationalState attribute indicates the
perceived state of the agent in the managed
system:
The "enabled" state means that the agent
is operational, as perceived by the proxy,
i.e., it can be reached.
The "disabled" state means that the agent
is not operational, as perceived by the
proxy, i.e., it cannot be reached.
The administrativeState attribute is used to
suspend and resume the proxy activity relative to
the agent.
The "unlocked" state means that proxy
must continue to perform, or resume
performing, proxy activities on behalf of the
agent.
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The "locked" state means that the proxy
must not perform, or suspend performing,
proxy activities on behalf of the agent.
The authenticationFailure notification is
emitted when the SNMP agent is the addressee of a
protocol message that is not properly
authenticated.
The coldStart notification is emitted when the
SNMP agent reinitializes itself such that its
configuration may be altered.
The warmStart notification is emitted when the
SNMP agent reinitializes itself such that its
configuration is not altered.
This object class may have MULTIPLE INSTANCES.!;;
ATTRIBUTES
cmipsnmpProxyAgentId GET,
proxyOID GET-REPLACE,
replacedByProxyOID GET-REPLACE,
managementProtocol GET
REPLACE-WITH-DEFAULT,
supportedMIBs GET-REPLACE
ADD-REMOVE,
specificAccessControlUsed GET-REPLACE
DEFAULT VALUE
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.Zero,
accessControlEnforcement GET-REPLACE,
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992":
administrativeState GET-REPLACE,
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992":
operationalState GET;
NOTIFICATIONS
authenticationFailure,
coldStart,
warmStart;;;
REGISTERED AS { cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 1};
cmipsnmpProxyTable MANAGED OBJECT CLASS
DERIVED FROM
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992" :top;
CHARACTERIZED BY
cmipsnmpProxyTablePkg PACKAGE
BEHAVIOUR
cmipsnmpProxyTablePkgBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This managed object class is used to contain
objects that represent an SNMP/SNMP-2 agent in the
proxy MIB.
The globalAccessControlUsed attribute indicates
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whether access control global (uniformly applied)
to all SNMP agents is none, uses Internet defined
mechanisms and MIB elements, or uses ISO/CCITT
defined mechanisms and MIB elements.!;;
ATTRIBUTES
internetClassId GET,
globalAccessControlUsed GET-REPLACE
DEFAULT VALUE
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.Zero;;;
REGISTERED AS { cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1};
accessControlEnforcement ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.AccessControlEnforcement;
BEHAVIOUR
accessControlEnforcementBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!The accessControlEnforcement attribute indicates
where access control is applied: SNMP agent,
proxy, or both.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 1 7};
cmipsnmpProxyAgentId ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.CmipsnmpProxyAgentId;
BEHAVIOUR
cmipsnmpProxyAgentIdBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This is the naming attribute for the
cmipsnmpProxyAgent object class. It contains
the Internet Domain Name of the managed system
that contains the SNMP/SNMP-2 agent. The value is
determined by the manager at the time the
object is created.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, SUBSTRINGS;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 1 1};
globalAccessControlUsed ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.AccessControlUsed;
BEHAVIOUR
globalAccessControlUsedBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!The globalAccessControlUsed attribute indicates
whether access control global (uniformly applied)
to all SNMP agents is none, uses Internet defined
mechanisms and MIB elements, or uses ISO/CCITT
defined mechanisms and MIB elements.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 3};
internetClassId ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
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CmipsnmpCommonDef.ObjectIdentifier;
BEHAVIOUR
internetClassIdBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This is a generic naming attribute
intended to be used for naming all object
classes derived from Internet MIB translation.
For ISO/CCITT object classes that may have only a
single instance per managed system, the value
is the OID for the object class concatenated with
the sub-identifier "0". Object classes derived
from the Internet TCP, UDP, and IP groups are
examples of such object classes.
For object classes that may have multiple
instances per managed system, such as table
entries, the value is the concatenation of the
ISO/CCITT object class OID and the Internet object
instance identifier (an OID) of the form
specified for the table entry instance
identification in the original Internet MIB
definition.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 2};
managementProtocol ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpCommonDef.ObjectIdentifier;
BEHAVIOUR
managementProtocolBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This attributes specifies the internet
management protocol used for proxy to
managed devices. It may be either SNMP or
SNMP-2.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 1 4};
proxyOID ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpCommonDef.ObjectIdentifier;
BEHAVIOUR
proxyOIDBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!The proxyOID attribute contains the proxy arc
used in the re-registration and derivation of
OIDs. The following sub-arcs are assigned:
{<proxyOID> 1} - object classes, attributes
{<proxyOID> 2} - name bindings
{<proxyOID> 3} - notifications!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 1 2};
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replaceByProxyOID ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpCommonDef.ObjectIdentifier;
BEHAVIOUR
replaceByProxyOIDBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!The replaceByProxyOID attribute contains the
"internet" OID or an organization specific OID.
The portion of the OID for an internet defined
object that corresponds to the replaceByProxyOID
contents is replaced by {<proxyOID> 1} when
translating internet object OIDs into ISO/CCITT
OIDs, and {<proxyOID> 3} when translating internet
trap OIDs into ISO/CCITT notification OIDs!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 1 3};
specificAccessControlUsed ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.AccessControlUsed;
BEHAVIOUR
specificAccessControlUsedBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!The specificAccessControlUsed attribute indicates
whether access control specific to an SNMP agent
is none, uses Internet defined mechanisms and MIB
elements, or uses ISO/CCITT defined mechanisms and
MIB elements.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 1 6};
supportedMIBs ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.SupportedMIBs;
BEHAVIOUR
supportedMIBsBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This attributes specifies the set of
Internet OIDs of registered MIBs that the
agent supports.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, SET-COMPARISON,
SET-INTERSECTION;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIB 1 1 5};
4.2 Name Bindings
ISO/CCITT-Internet proxy namebindings are registered under
the {cmipsnmpProxyPMIBNB} arc which is the
{cmipsnmpProxyMISC 2} arc. The name bindings are registered
by appending two sub-identifiers: the first sub-identifier
is associated with the object class to which the name
binding applies, the second sub-identifier identifies the
instance of the name binding for that object class. The
second sub-identfier must be greater than or equal to 1.
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cmipsnmpProxyAgent-NB NAME BINDING
SUBORDINATE OBJECT CLASS
cmipsnmpProxyAgent AND SUBCLASSES;
NAMED BY SUPERIOR OBJECT CLASS
cmipsnmpProxyTable AND SUBCLASSES;
WITH ATTRIBUTE cmipsnmpProxyAgentId;
CREATE;
DELETE DELETES-CONTAINED-OBJECTS;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIBNB 2 1};
cmipsnmpProxyTable-NB NAME BINDING
SUBORDINATE OBJECT CLASS
cmipsnmpProxyTable AND SUBCLASSES;
NAMED BY SUPERIOR OBJECT CLASS
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 :1992": system
AND SUBCLASSES;
WITH ATTRIBUTE internetClassId;
CREATE;
DELETE ONLY-IF-NO-CONTAINED-OBJECTS;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyPMIBNB 1 1};
4.3 Common SNMP Derived Attribute Types
Internet Attribute types defined by the SNMP-2 TEXTUAL-
CONVENTION macro are translated into ISO/CCITT attribute
types. Attributes of the defined SNMP/SNMP-2 types
(Counter, IpAddress, Gauge, TimeTicks, Opaque, Counter32,
Gauge32, Counter64, NsapAddress), which could also have been
defined in a TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro, are also considered
to be Internet attribute types.
ISO/CCITT Attribute templates derived from these types
should contain the DERIVED FROM clause.
The following ISO/CCITT attribute types, listed in
alphabetical order, are derived from Internet attribute
types to facilitate Internet MIB translation. Other
attributes may be derived from these types.
autonomousType ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpCommonDef.OctetString;
BEHAVIOUR
autonomousTypeBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!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. This corresponds to the
type defined in [SMPTC] by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING, SUBSTRINGS;;
counter32 ATTRIBUTE
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WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpProxyASN1.Counter32;
BEHAVIOUR
counter32Behaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!As defined for counter type in ISO/IEC 10165-2.
Only the value range constraint (0..4294967295)
is added. This corresponds to the type defined in
[SMPSMI] by the same name!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
counter64 ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpProxyASN1.Counter64;
BEHAVIOUR
counter64Behaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!As defined for counter type in ISO/IEC 10165-2.
Only the value range constraint
(0..18446744073709551615) is added.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPSMI]
by the same name!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
dateAndTime ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpProxyASN1.DateAndTime;
BEHAVIOUR
dateAndTimeBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!DISPLAY-HINT "2d-1d-1d,1d:1d:1d.1d,1a1d:1d"
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 UT "+" / "-"
9 10 hours from UT 0..11
10 11 minutes from UT 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.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPSMI]
by the same name!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
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displayString ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpCommonDef.OctetString;
BEHAVIOUR
displayStringBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!DISPLAY-HINT "255a"
Represents textual information taken from the NVT
ASCII character set, as defined in pages 4, 10-11
of RFC 854. Any object defined using this syntax
may not exceed 255 characters in length. This
corresponds to the type defined in [SMPTC] by
the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING, SUBSTRINGS;;
gauge32 ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpProxyASN1.Gauge32;
BEHAVIOUR
gauge32Behaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!As defined for the integer gauge type in ISO/IEC
10165-2. Only the value range constraint
(0..4294967295) is added.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPSMI]
by the same name!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
instancePointer ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpCommonDef.ObjectIdentifier;
BEHAVIOUR
instancePointerBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!A pointer to a specific instance of a conceptual
row of a MIB table in the managed device. By
convention, it is the name of the particular
instance of the first columnar object in the
conceptual row. This corresponds to the type
defined in [SMPTC] by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
ipAddress ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpCommonDef.OctetString;
BEHAVIOUR
ipAddressBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This attribute represents a 32-bit internet
address. It is represented as an octet string
of length 4, in network Byte-order.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPSMI]
by the same name!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING, SUBSTRINGS;;
macAddress ATTRIBUTE
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WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpProxyASN1.MacAddress;
BEHAVIOUR
macAddressBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!DISPLAY-HINT "1x:"
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.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPTC]
by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING, SUBSTRINGS;;
nsapAddress ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpCommonDef.OctetString;
BEHAVIOUR
nsapAddressBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This attribute represents an ISO/CCITT network
address. It is represented as a variable
length octet string. The first octet of the
string contains a binary value, in the range of
0..20, and indicates the length in octets of
the NSAP. Following the first octet, is the
NSAP expressed in concrete binary notation,
starting with the most significant octet. A
zero-length NSAP is used as a "special"
address, meaning "the default NSAP" (analogous
to the IP address of 0.0.0.0). Such an NSAP
is encoded as a single octet containing the
value 0. All other NSAPS are encoded in at
least 4 octets. This corresponds to the type
defined in [SMPSMI] by the same name!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING, SUBSTRINGS;;
opaque ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpCommonDef.OctetString;
BEHAVIOUR
opaqueBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This attribute represents arbitrary ASN.1
syntax. A value is encoded using the Basic
Encoding Rules [ISO8825] into a string of
octets. This, in turn, is encoded as an OCTET
STRING, in effect "double-wrapping" the
original ASN.1 value. This corresponds to the
type defined in [SMPSMI] by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
physAddress ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpCommonDef.OctetString;
BEHAVIOUR
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physAddressBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!DISPLAY-HINT "1x:"
Represents media- or physical-level addresses.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPTC]
by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING, SUBSTRINGS;;
rowStatus ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.RowStatus;
BEHAVIOUR
rowStatusBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!The syntax used for the status column for a
conceptual row. If present, the value of the
DEFVAL clause for an object having this syntax is
either `underModification(3)' or `active(4)'.
To create new object instances for a conceptual
row, a management protocol set operation is
issued which sets the new instance of the status
column to `underCreation(1)'. If the instance
already exists, then the management protocol set
operation fails with an error of
`inconsistentValue'.
Otherwise, the instance is created. If the
management protocol set operation created
sufficient instances so that this conceptual row
may be used by the correspondent SMP entity, and
the value of the DEFVAL clause for the status
column is `active(4)', then the SMP entity acting
in an agent role immediately sets the value of
this instance to `active(4)'. Otherwise, the SMP
entity acting in an agent role immediately sets
the value of this instance to
`underModification(3)'.
See [SMPTC] for a description of the algorithm to
create a new conceptual row.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPTC]
by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
testAndIncrement ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.TestAndIncrement;
BEHAVIOUR
testAndIncrementBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!Represents integer-valued information used for
atomic operations. When the management protocol
is used to specify that an object instance having
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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 previous value held by
the instance is returned.)
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.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPTC]
by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
timeInterval ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.Integer32;
BEHAVIOUR
timeIntervalBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!A period of time, measured in units of 0.01
seconds.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPTC]
by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
timeStamp ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.TimeTicks;
BEHAVIOUR
timeStampBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!The value of MIB-II's sysUpTime object at which a
specific occurrence happened. The specific
occurrence must be defined in the description of
any object defined using this type.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPTC]
by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
timeTicks ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.TimeTicks;
BEHAVIOUR
timeTicksBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
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DEFINED AS
!This attribute represents a non-negative
integer which represents the time, modulo 2->32
(4294967296 decimal), in hundredths of a second
between two epochs. When attributes are
defined which use this attribute type, the
description of the object identifies both of
the reference epochs. This corresponds to the
type defined in [SMPSMI] by the same name!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY, ORDERING;;
truthValue ATTRIBUTE
WITH ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX CmipsnmpProxyASN1.TruthValue;
BEHAVIOUR
truthValueBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!Represents a boolean value.
This corresponds to the type defined in [SMPTC]
by the same name.!;;
MATCHES FOR EQUALITY;;
4.4 Notifications for SNMP/SNMP-2 Traps
Notification templates for the SNMP generic traps are listed
here in alphabetical order. They are registered under the
{cmipsnmpProxyNOT} arc with sub-identifiers allocated
according to the SNMP-2 assignment for generic traps.
Pending progression of SNMP-2 to an Internet standard, and
the subsequent assignment of OIDs under the "internet" arc,
this memo has not assigned OIDs for the standard
notifications defined in [RFC1157] and [SMPMIB].
authenticationFailure NOTIFICATION
BEHAVIOUR
authenticationFailureBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This notification maps to the
authenticationFailure generic trap defined in RFC
1157, i.e., generic-trap=4.
An authenticationFailure notification signifies
that the SNMP/SNMP-2 entity, acting in an agent
role, has received a protocol message that is not
properly authenticated. The snmpEnableAuthentraps
attribute of the snmp object class indicates
whether this notification will be generated by an
SNMP agent.!;;
WITH INFORMATION SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.MonitoredAttributes
AND ATTRIBUTE IDS
monitoredAttributes
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992"
:monitoredAttributes;
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Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyNOT ?};
coldStart NOTIFICATION
BEHAVIOUR
coldStartBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This notification maps to the coldStart generic
trap defined in RFC 1157, i.e., generic-trap=0.
A coldStart notification signifies that an
SNMP/SNMP-2 entity acting in an agent role, is
reinitializing itself such that its configuration
may be altered.!;;
WITH INFORMATION SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.MonitoredAttributes
AND ATTRIBUTE IDS
monitoredAttributes
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992"
:monitoredAttributes;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyNOT ?};
egpNeighborLoss NOTIFICATION
BEHAVIOUR
egpNeighborLossBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This notification maps to the egpNeighborLoss
generic trap defined in RFC 1157, i.e., generic-
trap=5.
An egpNeighborLoss notification signifies
that an EGP neighbor has been marked down
and the RGP peer relationship no longer
obtains.!;;
WITH INFORMATION SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.MonitoredAttributes
AND ATTRIBUTE IDS
monitoredAttributes
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992"
:monitoredAttributes;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyNOT ?};
linkDown NOTIFICATION
BEHAVIOUR
linkDownBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This notification maps to the linkDown generic
trap defined in RFC 1157, i.e., generic-trap=2.
The ifIndex of the interface causing the event
shall appear in the monitored attributes.
A linkdown notification signifies that the
SNMP/SNMP-2, entity acting in an agent role,
recognizes a failure in one of the communication
links represented in its configuration.!;;
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WITH INFORMATION SYNTAX
Attribute-ASN1Module.MonitoredAttributes
AND ATTRIBUTE IDS
monitoredAttributes
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992"
:monitoredAttributes;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyNOT ?};
linkUp NOTIFICATION
BEHAVIOUR
linkUpBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This notification maps to the linkUp generic trap
defined in RFC 1157, i.e., generic-trap=3. The
ifIndex of the interface causing the event shall
appear in the monitoredAttributes.
A linkup notification signifies that the
SNMP/SNMP-2, entity acting in an agent role,
recognizes that one of the communication links
represented in its configuration has come up.!;;
WITH INFORMATION SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.MonitoredAttributes
AND ATTRIBUTE IDS
monitoredAttributes
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992"
:monitoredAttributes;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyNOT ?};
warmStart NOTIFICATION
BEHAVIOUR
warmStartBehaviour BEHAVIOUR
DEFINED AS
!This notification maps to the warmStart generic
trap defined in RFC 1157, i.e., generic-trap=1.
A warmstart notification signifies that an
SNMP/SNMP-2 entity acting in an agent role, is
reinitializing itself such that its configuration
is unaltered.!;;
WITH INFORMATION SYNTAX
CmipsnmpProxyASN1.MonitoredAttributes
AND ATTRIBUTE IDS
monitoredAttributes
"Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992"
:monitoredAttributes;
REGISTERED AS {cmipsnmpProxyNOT ?};
4.5 ASN.1 Definitions
CmipsnmpProxyAssignedOIDs {cmipsnmpProxyPMIBMOD 1}
DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
EXPORTS ;-- EVERYTHING
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Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
cmipsnmpProxy OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {...}
cmipsnmpProxyIMIB OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 1}
-- for ISO/CCITT derived object classes and attributes
cmipsnmpProxyNB OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 2}
-- for ISO/CCITT derived NAME BINDINGS
cmipsnmpProxyNOT OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 3}
-- for ISO/CCITT Notifications
cmipsnmpProxyPMIB OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 4}
-- for ISO/CCITT Proxy MIB defined in this memo
cmipsnmpProxyPMIBNOT OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
{cmipsnmpProxy 5}
-- for standard SNMP notifications
cmipsnmpProxyPMIBNB OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 6}
-- for ISO/CCITT Proxy MIB NAME BINDINGS
cmipsnmpProxyPMIBMOD OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 7}
-- for ISO/CCITT Proxy MIB ASN.1 Modules
cmipsnmpProxyMISC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxy 8}
-- for micellaneous
snmpOID OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxyMISC 1}
snmp2OID OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {cmipsnmpProxyMISC 1}
-- required for management protocol identification
END
{Editor's Note: Should OIDs be assigned for SNMP and SNMP-2
in this document?}
CmipsnmpCommonDef {cmipsnmpProxyPMIBMOD 2}
DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
EXPORTS -- EVERYTHING
Integer, OctetString, ObjectIdentifier,
Null, BitString;
--
Integer ::= INTEGER
OctetString ::= OCTET STRING
ObjectIdentifier ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Null ::= NULL
BitString ::= BIT STRING
END
CmipsnmpProxyASN1 {cmipsnmpProxyPMIBMOD 3}
DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
IMPORTS MonitoredAttributes
FROM Attribute-ASN1Module;
-- defined in
-- Rec. X.721 | ISO/IEC 10165-2 : 1992,
Counter32 ::= INTEGER (0..4294967295)
Counter64 ::= INTEGER (0..18446744073709551615)
DateAndTime ::= ::= OCTET STRING (SIZE (8 | 11))
Gauge32 ::= INTEGER (0..4294967295)
TimeTicks ::= INTEGER (0..4294967295)
MacAddress ::= OCTET STRING (SIZE (6))
TruthValue ::= INTEGER { true(1), false(2) }
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Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
TestAndIncrement ::= INTEGER (0..2147483647)
RowStatus ::= INTEGER {
active(1)
underConstruction(2),
underDestruction(3),
underModification(4),
}
CmipsnmpProxyAgentId ::= GraphicString
AccessControlUsed ::= INTEGER {
none (1),
internet (2),
osi (3)}
AccessControlEnforcement ::= INTEGER {
agent (1),
proxy (2),
both (3)}
SupportedMIBs ::= SET OF OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Zero ::= INTEGER 0
END
4.6 ISO/CCITT-Internet Proxy Communications
An ISO/CCITT-Internet proxy requires knowledge of the SNMP
agent's "community string" or SNMP "party" values to
communicate with the agent. This information may be placed
in MIB elements defined in the SNMP Party MIB [IIMCPARTY]
which is derived from the Internet MIB defined in [RFC1353].
Therefore the proxy must also include, at a minimum, the
"partyTable" and "partyEntry" object classes defined in
[IIMCPARTY]. These object classes contain the information
required for party-based security (including authentication,
integrity, and confidentiality services), and are adapted
for use with community-based security. The MIB defined in
[RFC1353] is also included in the SNMP-2 MIB [SMPMIM].
The Party MIB may also contain information required for
controlling access to operations on management information
based on an access control list mechanism. Access control
list information is contained the "aclTable" entries.
Constraints on what information may be accessed may be
placed in the "viewTable" entries.
5. Acknowledgements
The author thanks the following individuals for their
insightful comments and contributions:
Jon Biggar - NETLABS
April Chang - NETLABS
Dean Voiss - NETLABS
Jock Embry - Opening Technologies
Steve Ng - MPR Teltech
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Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
Lisa Phifer - Bellcore
Owen Newnan - US West Advanced Technologies
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Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
References
[ISO8824] ISO/IEC IS 8824: Information Technology -
Open System Interconnection - Specification of Abstract
Syntax Notation One (ASN.1),1990.
[ISO8825] ISO/IEC IS 8825: Information Technology -
Open System Interconnection - Specification of Basic
Encoding Rules for Abstract Syntax Notation One
(ASN.1),1990.
[ISO7498-4] ISO/IEC IS 7498-4, Information Processing
Systems - Open Systems Interconnection - Basic Reference
Model Part 4 - Management Framework, 1989.
[ISO9595] ISO/IEC IS 9595, Information Technology -
Open SystemInterconnection - Common Management Information
Service Definition, 1991.
[ISO9596-1] ISO/IEC IS 9596-1, Information Technology -
Open Systems Interconnection - Common Management Information
Protocol - Part 1: Specification, 1991.
ISO10165-1] ISO/IEC IS 10165-1: Information Technology -
Open Systems Interconnection - Structure of Management
Information - Part 1: Management Information Model, 1991.
[ISO10165-2] ISO/IEC IS 10165-2: Information Technology -
Open Systems Interconnection - Structure of Management
Information - Part 2:Definition of Management Information,
1992.
[ISO10165-4] ISO/IEC IS 10165-4: Information Technology -
Open Systems Interconnection - Structure of Management
Information - Part 4: Guidelines for the Definition of
Managed Objects, 1991.
[RFC1155] RFC1155, M. Rose and K. McCloghrie, Structure
and Identification of Management Information for TCP/IP
based internets, May 1990.
[RFC1157] RFC 1157, J.D. Case, M.S. Fedor, M.L.
Schoffstall, C. Davin, Simple Network Management Protocol
(SNMP), May 1990.
[RFC1212] RFC1212, M. Rose, K. McCloghrie - Editors,
Concise MIB Definitions, March 1991.
[RFC1213] RFC1213, K. McCloghrie and M. Rose - Editors,
Management Information Base for Network Management of
TCP/IP-based internets: MIB-II, March 1991.
[RFC1214] RFC1214, L. LaBarre - editor, OSI Internet
Management:Management Information Base, April 1991.
LaBarre Page 46
Draft Translation of Internet MIBs to ISO/CCITT MIBs 10/9/1992
[RFC1215] RFC1215, M. Rose - Editor, Management A
convention for Defining Traps for use with the SNMP, March
1991.
[RFC1353] RFC1353, K. McCloghrie, J.R. Davin, J.M.
Galvin, Definitions of Managed Objects for SNMP Parties,
July 1992.
[SMPCOEX] J.D. Case, K. McCloghrie, M.T. Rose, S.L.
Waldbusser, Coexistance between the Internet-standard
Network Management Framework and the Simple Management
Protocol (SMP) Framework, Internet-draft, October 1992.
[SMPPROT] J.D. Case, K. McCloghrie, M.T. Rose, S.L.
Waldbusser, Protocol Operations for the Simple Management
Protocol (SMP) Framework, Internet-draft, October 1992.
[SMPSMI] J.D. Case, K. McCloghrie, M.T. Rose, S.L.
Waldbusser, Protocol Structure of Management Information for
the Simple Management Protocol (SMP) Framework, Internet-
draft, October 1992.
[SMPMIB] J.D. Case, K. McCloghrie, M.T. Rose, S.L.
Waldbusser, Management Information Base for the Simple
Management Protocol (SMP) Framework, Internet-draft, October
1992.
[SMPTC] J.D. Case, K. McCloghrie, M.T. Rose, S.L.
Waldbusser, Textual Conventions for the Simple Management
Protocol (SMP) Framework, Internet-draft, October 1992.
[IIMCPARTY] L. LaBarre, ISO/CCITT and Internet Management
Coexistence: Translation of Internet Party MIB (RFC1353) to
ISO/CCITT GDMO MIB, October 1992.
[IIMCMIB-II] L. LaBarre, ISO/CCITT and Internet Management
Coexistence: Translation of Internet MIB-II (RFC1213) to
ISO/CCITT GDMO MIB, October 1992.
[IIMCPROXY] A. Chang, ISO/CCITT and Internet Management
Coexistence: ISO/CCITT to Internet Management Proxy, October
1992.
[IIMCOMIBTRANS] O. Newnan, ISO/CCITT and Internet Management
Coexistence: Translation of ISO/CCITT GDMO MIBs to Internet
MIBs, October 1992.
[NMFMC92] NM Forum and X/Open, ISO/CCITT/CCITT and
Internet Management: Coexistence and Interworking Strategy,
October, 1992.
- INTERNET DRAFT Expires April 23 , 1993 -
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