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- Network Working Group SNMPv2 Working Group
- Request for Comments: 1906 J. Case
- Obsoletes: 1449 SNMP Research, Inc.
- Category: Standards Track K. McCloghrie
- Cisco Systems, Inc.
- M. Rose
- Dover Beach Consulting, Inc.
- S. Waldbusser
- International Network Services
- January 1996
-
-
- Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the
- Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
- Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
- improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
- Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
- and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1. Introduction ................................................ 2
- 1.1 A Note on Terminology ...................................... 2
- 2. Definitions ................................................. 3
- 3. SNMPv2 over UDP ............................................. 5
- 3.1 Serialization .............................................. 5
- 3.2 Well-known Values .......................................... 5
- 4. SNMPv2 over OSI ............................................. 6
- 4.1 Serialization .............................................. 6
- 4.2 Well-known Values .......................................... 6
- 5. SNMPv2 over DDP ............................................. 6
- 5.1 Serialization .............................................. 6
- 5.2 Well-known Values .......................................... 6
- 5.3 Discussion of AppleTalk Addressing ......................... 7
- 5.3.1 How to Acquire NBP names ................................. 8
- 5.3.2 When to Turn NBP names into DDP addresses ................ 8
- 5.3.3 How to Turn NBP names into DDP addresses ................. 8
- 5.3.4 What if NBP is broken .................................... 9
- 6. SNMPv2 over IPX ............................................. 9
- 6.1 Serialization .............................................. 9
- 6.2 Well-known Values .......................................... 9
- 7. Proxy to SNMPv1 ............................................. 10
- 8. Serialization using the Basic Encoding Rules ................ 10
- 8.1 Usage Example .............................................. 11
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- 9. Security Considerations ..................................... 11
- 10. Editor's Address ........................................... 12
- 11. Acknowledgements ........................................... 12
- 12. References ................................................. 13
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- A management system contains: several (potentially many) nodes, each
- with a processing entity, termed an agent, which has access to
- management instrumentation; at least one management station; and, a
- management protocol, used to convey management information between
- the agents and management stations. Operations of the protocol are
- carried out under an administrative framework which defines
- authentication, authorization, access control, and privacy policies.
-
- Management stations execute management applications which monitor and
- control managed elements. Managed elements are devices such as
- hosts, routers, terminal servers, etc., which are monitored and
- controlled via access to their management information.
-
- The management protocol, version 2 of the Simple Network Management
- Protocol [1], may be used over a variety of protocol suites. It is
- the purpose of this document to define how the SNMPv2 maps onto an
- initial set of transport domains. Other mappings may be defined in
- the future.
-
- Although several mappings are defined, the mapping onto UDP is the
- preferred mapping. As such, to provide for the greatest level of
- interoperability, systems which choose to deploy other mappings
- should also provide for proxy service to the UDP mapping.
-
- 1.1. A Note on Terminology
-
- For the purpose of exposition, the original Internet-standard Network
- Management Framework, as described in RFCs 1155 (STD 16), 1157 (STD
- 15), and 1212 (STD 16), is termed the SNMP version 1 framework
- (SNMPv1). The current framework is termed the SNMP version 2
- framework (SNMPv2).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 2]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- 2. Definitions
-
- SNMPv2-TM DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
-
- IMPORTS
- OBJECT-IDENTITY, snmpDomains, snmpProxys
- FROM SNMPv2-SMI
- TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
- FROM SNMPv2-TC;
-
- -- SNMPv2 over UDP over IPv4
-
- snmpUDPDomain OBJECT-IDENTITY
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "The SNMPv2 over UDP transport domain. The corresponding
- transport address is of type SnmpUDPAddress."
- ::= { snmpDomains 1 }
-
- SnmpUDPAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
- DISPLAY-HINT "1d.1d.1d.1d/2d"
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "Represents a UDP address:
-
- octets contents encoding
- 1-4 IP-address network-byte order
- 5-6 UDP-port network-byte order
- "
- SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (6))
-
-
- -- SNMPv2 over OSI
-
- snmpCLNSDomain OBJECT-IDENTITY
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "The SNMPv2 over CLNS transport domain. The corresponding
- transport address is of type SnmpOSIAddress."
- ::= { snmpDomains 2 }
-
- snmpCONSDomain OBJECT-IDENTITY
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "The SNMPv2 over CONS transport domain. The corresponding
- transport address is of type SnmpOSIAddress."
- ::= { snmpDomains 3 }
-
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 3]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- SnmpOSIAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
- DISPLAY-HINT "*1x:/1x:"
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "Represents an OSI transport-address:
-
- octets contents encoding
- 1 length of NSAP 'n' as an unsigned-integer
- (either 0 or from 3 to 20)
- 2..(n+1) NSAP concrete binary representation
- (n+2)..m TSEL string of (up to 64) octets
- "
- SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (1 | 4..85))
-
-
- -- SNMPv2 over DDP
-
- snmpDDPDomain OBJECT-IDENTITY
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "The SNMPv2 over DDP transport domain. The corresponding
- transport address is of type SnmpNBPAddress."
- ::= { snmpDomains 4 }
-
- SnmpNBPAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "Represents an NBP name:
-
- octets contents encoding
- 1 length of object 'n' as an unsigned integer
- 2..(n+1) object string of (up to 32) octets
- n+2 length of type 'p' as an unsigned integer
- (n+3)..(n+2+p) type string of (up to 32) octets
- n+3+p length of zone 'q' as an unsigned integer
- (n+4+p)..(n+3+p+q) zone string of (up to 32) octets
-
- For comparison purposes, strings are case-insensitive All
- strings may contain any octet other than 255 (hex ff)."
- SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (3..99))
-
-
- -- SNMPv2 over IPX
-
- snmpIPXDomain OBJECT-IDENTITY
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "The SNMPv2 over IPX transport domain. The corresponding
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 4]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- transport address is of type SnmpIPXAddress."
- ::= { snmpDomains 5 }
-
- SnmpIPXAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
- DISPLAY-HINT "4x.1x:1x:1x:1x:1x:1x.2d"
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "Represents an IPX address:
-
- octets contents encoding
- 1-4 network-number network-byte order
- 5-10 physical-address network-byte order
- 11-12 socket-number network-byte order
- "
- SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (12))
-
-
- -- for proxy to SNMPv1 (RFC 1157)
-
- rfc1157Proxy OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpProxys 1 }
-
- rfc1157Domain OBJECT-IDENTITY
- STATUS current
- DESCRIPTION
- "The transport domain for SNMPv1 over UDP. The
- corresponding transport address is of type SnmpUDPAddress."
- ::= { rfc1157Proxy 1 }
-
- -- ::= { rfc1157Proxy 2 } this OID is obsolete
-
-
- END
-
- 3. SNMPv2 over UDP
-
- This is the preferred transport mapping.
-
- 3.1. Serialization
-
- Each instance of a message is serialized (i.e., encoded according to
- the convention of [1]) onto a single UDP[2] datagram, using the
- algorithm specified in Section 8.
-
- 3.2. Well-known Values
-
- It is suggested that administrators configure their SNMPv2 entities
- acting in an agent role to listen on UDP port 161. Further, it is
- suggested that notification sinks be configured to listen on UDP port
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 5]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- 162.
-
- When an SNMPv2 entity uses this transport mapping, it must be capable
- of accepting messages that are at least 484 octets in size.
- Implementation of larger values is encouraged whenever possible.
-
- 4. SNMPv2 over OSI
-
- This is an optional transport mapping.
-
- 4.1. Serialization
-
- Each instance of a message is serialized onto a single TSDU [3,4] for
- the OSI Connectionless-mode Transport Service (CLTS), using the
- algorithm specified in Section 8.
-
- 4.2. Well-known Values
-
- It is suggested that administrators configure their SNMPv2 entities
- acting in an agent role to listen on transport selector "snmp-l"
- (which consists of six ASCII characters), when using a CL-mode
- network service to realize the CLTS. Further, it is suggested that
- notification sinks be configured to listen on transport selector
- "snmpt-l" (which consists of seven ASCII characters, six letters and
- a hyphen) when using a CL-mode network service to realize the CLTS.
- Similarly, when using a CO-mode network service to realize the CLTS,
- the suggested transport selectors are "snmp-o" and "snmpt-o", for
- agent and notification sink, respectively.
-
- When an SNMPv2 entity uses this transport mapping, it must be capable
- of accepting messages that are at least 484 octets in size.
- Implementation of larger values is encouraged whenever possible.
-
- 5. SNMPv2 over DDP
-
- This is an optional transport mapping.
-
- 5.1. Serialization
-
- Each instance of a message is serialized onto a single DDP datagram
- [5], using the algorithm specified in Section 8.
-
- 5.2. Well-known Values
-
- SNMPv2 messages are sent using DDP protocol type 8. SNMPv2 entities
- acting in an agent role listens on DDP socket number 8, whilst
- notification sinks listen on DDP socket number 9.
-
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 6]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- Administrators must configure their SNMPv2 entities acting in an
- agent role to use NBP type "SNMP Agent" (which consists of ten ASCII
- characters), whilst notification sinks must be configured to use NBP
- type "SNMP Trap Handler" (which consists of seventeen ASCII
- characters).
-
- The NBP name for agents and notification sinks should be stable - NBP
- names should not change any more often than the IP address of a
- typical TCP/IP node. It is suggested that the NBP name be stored in
- some form of stable storage.
-
- When an SNMPv2 entity uses this transport mapping, it must be capable
- of accepting messages that are at least 484 octets in size.
- Implementation of larger values is encouraged whenever possible.
-
- 5.3. Discussion of AppleTalk Addressing
-
- The AppleTalk protocol suite has certain features not manifest in the
- TCP/IP suite. AppleTalk's naming strategy and the dynamic nature of
- address assignment can cause problems for SNMPv2 entities that wish
- to manage AppleTalk networks. TCP/IP nodes have an associated IP
- address which distinguishes each from the other. In contrast,
- AppleTalk nodes generally have no such characteristic. The network-
- level address, while often relatively stable, can change at every
- reboot (or more frequently).
-
- Thus, when SNMPv2 is mapped over DDP, nodes are identified by a
- "name", rather than by an "address". Hence, all AppleTalk nodes that
- implement this mapping are required to respond to NBP lookups and
- confirms (e.g., implement the NBP protocol stub), which guarantees
- that a mapping from NBP name to DDP address will be possible.
-
- In determining the SNMP identity to register for an SNMPv2 entity, it
- is suggested that the SNMP identity be a name which is associated
- with other network services offered by the machine.
-
- NBP lookups, which are used to map NBP names into DDP addresses, can
- cause large amounts of network traffic as well as consume CPU
- resources. It is also the case that the ability to perform an NBP
- lookup is sensitive to certain network disruptions (such as zone
- table inconsistencies) which would not prevent direct AppleTalk
- communications between two SNMPv2 entities.
-
- Thus, it is recommended that NBP lookups be used infrequently,
- primarily to create a cache of name-to-address mappings. These
- cached mappings should then be used for any further SNMP traffic. It
- is recommended that SNMPv2 entities acting in a manager role should
- maintain this cache between reboots. This caching can help minimize
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 7]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- network traffic, reduce CPU load on the network, and allow for (some
- amount of) network trouble shooting when the basic name-to-address
- translation mechanism is broken.
-
- 5.3.1. How to Acquire NBP names
-
- An SNMPv2 entity acting in a manager role may have a pre-configured
- list of names of "known" SNMPv2 entities acting in an agent role.
- Similarly, an SNMPv2 entity acting in a manager role might interact
- with an operator. Finally, an SNMPv2 entity acting in a manager role
- might communicate with all SNMPv2 entities acting in an agent role in
- a set of zones or networks.
-
- 5.3.2. When to Turn NBP names into DDP addresses
-
- When an SNMPv2 entity uses a cache entry to address an SNMP packet,
- it should attempt to confirm the validity mapping, if the mapping
- hasn't been confirmed within the last T1 seconds. This cache entry
- lifetime, T1, has a minimum, default value of 60 seconds, and should
- be configurable.
-
- An SNMPv2 entity acting in a manager role may decide to prime its
- cache of names prior to actually communicating with another SNMPv2
- entity. In general, it is expected that such an entity may want to
- keep certain mappings "more current" than other mappings, e.g., those
- nodes which represent the network infrastructure (e.g., routers) may
- be deemed "more important".
-
- Note that an SNMPv2 entity acting in a manager role should not prime
- its entire cache upon initialization - rather, it should attempt
- resolutions over an extended period of time (perhaps in some pre-
- determined or configured priority order). Each of these resolutions
- might, in fact, be a wildcard lookup in a given zone.
-
- An SNMPv2 entity acting in an agent role must never prime its cache.
- Such an entity should do NBP lookups (or confirms) only when it needs
- to send an SNMP trap. When generating a response, such an entity
- does not need to confirm a cache entry.
-
- 5.3.3. How to Turn NBP names into DDP addresses
-
- If the only piece of information available is the NBP name, then an
- NBP lookup should be performed to turn that name into a DDP address.
- However, if there is a piece of stale information, it can be used as
- a hint to perform an NBP confirm (which sends a unicast to the
- network address which is presumed to be the target of the name
- lookup) to see if the stale information is, in fact, still valid.
-
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 8]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- An NBP name to DDP address mapping can also be confirmed implicitly
- using only SNMP transactions. For example, an SNMPv2 entity acting
- in a manager role issuing a retrieval operation could also retrieve
- the relevant objects from the NBP group [6] for the SNMPv2 entity
- acting in an agent role. This information can then be correlated
- with the source DDP address of the response.
-
- 5.3.4. What if NBP is broken
-
- Under some circumstances, there may be connectivity between two
- SNMPv2 entities, but the NBP mapping machinery may be broken, e.g.,
-
- o the NBP FwdReq (forward NBP lookup onto local attached network)
- mechanism might be broken at a router on the other entity's
- network; or,
-
- o the NBP BrRq (NBP broadcast request) mechanism might be broken
- at a router on the entity's own network; or,
-
- o NBP might be broken on the other entity's node.
-
- An SNMPv2 entity acting in a manager role which is dedicated to
- AppleTalk management might choose to alleviate some of these failures
- by directly implementing the router portion of NBP. For example,
- such an entity might already know all the zones on the AppleTalk
- internet and the networks on which each zone appears. Given an NBP
- lookup which fails, the entity could send an NBP FwdReq to the
- network in which the agent was last located. If that failed, the
- station could then send an NBP LkUp (NBP lookup packet) as a directed
- (DDP) multicast to each network number on that network. Of the above
- (single) failures, this combined approach will solve the case where
- either the local router's BrRq-to-FwdReq mechanism is broken or the
- remote router's FwdReq-to-LkUp mechanism is broken.
-
- 6. SNMPv2 over IPX
-
- This is an optional transport mapping.
-
- 6.1. Serialization
-
- Each instance of a message is serialized onto a single IPX datagram
- [7], using the algorithm specified in Section 8.
-
- 6.2. Well-known Values
-
- SNMPv2 messages are sent using IPX packet type 4 (i.e., Packet
- Exchange Protocol).
-
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 9]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- It is suggested that administrators configure their SNMPv2 entities
- acting in an agent role to listen on IPX socket 36879 (900f
- hexadecimal). Further, it is suggested that notification sinks be
- configured to listen on IPX socket 36880 (9010 hexadecimal)
-
- When an SNMPv2 entity uses this transport mapping, it must be capable
- of accepting messages that are at least 546 octets in size.
- Implementation of larger values is encouraged whenever possible.
-
- 7. Proxy to SNMPv1
-
- In order to provide proxy to SNMPv1 [8], it may be useful to define a
- transport domain, rfc1157Domain, which indicates the transport
- mapping for SNMP messages as defined in RFC 1157. Section 3.1 of [9]
- specifies the behavior of the proxy agent.
-
- 8. Serialization using the Basic Encoding Rules
-
- When the Basic Encoding Rules [10] are used for serialization:
-
- (1) When encoding the length field, only the definite form is used; use
- of the indefinite form encoding is prohibited. Note that when
- using the definite-long form, it is permissible to use more than
- the minimum number of length octets necessary to encode the length
- field.
-
- (2) When encoding the value field, the primitive form shall be used for
- all simple types, i.e., INTEGER, OCTET STRING, and OBJECT
- IDENTIFIER (either IMPLICIT or explicit). The constructed form of
- encoding shall be used only for structured types, i.e., a SEQUENCE
- or an IMPLICIT SEQUENCE.
-
- (3) When encoding an object whose syntax is described using the BITS
- construct, the value is encoded as an OCTET STRING, in which all
- the named bits in (the definition of) the bitstring, commencing
- with the first bit and proceeding to the last bit, are placed in
- bits 8 to 1 of the first octet, followed by bits 8 to 1 of each
- subsequent octet in turn, followed by as many bits as are needed of
- the final subsequent octet, commencing with bit 8. Remaining bits,
- if any, of the final octet are set to zero on generation and
- ignored on receipt.
-
- These restrictions apply to all aspects of ASN.1 encoding, including
- the message wrappers, protocol data units, and the data objects they
- contain.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 10]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- 8.1. Usage Example
-
- As an example of applying the Basic Encoding Rules, suppose one
- wanted to encode an instance of the GetBulkRequest-PDU [1]:
-
- [5] IMPLICIT SEQUENCE {
- request-id 1414684022,
- non-repeaters 1,
- max-repetitions 2,
- variable-bindings {
- { name sysUpTime,
- value { unspecified NULL } },
- { name ipNetToMediaPhysAddress,
- value { unspecified NULL } },
- { name ipNetToMediaType,
- value { unspecified NULL } }
- }
- }
-
- Applying the BER, this would be encoded (in hexadecimal) as:
-
- [5] IMPLICIT SEQUENCE a5 82 00 39
- INTEGER 02 04 52 54 5d 76
- INTEGER 02 01 01
- INTEGER 02 01 02
- SEQUENCE 30 2b
- SEQUENCE 30 0b
- OBJECT IDENTIFIER 06 07 2b 06 01 02 01 01 03
- NULL 05 00
- SEQUENCE 30 0d
- OBJECT IDENTIFIER 06 09 2b 06 01 02 01 04 16 01 02
- NULL 05 00
- SEQUENCE 30 0d
- OBJECT IDENTIFIER 06 09 2b 06 01 02 01 04 16 01 04
- NULL 05 00
-
- Note that the initial SEQUENCE is not encoded using the minimum
- number of length octets. (The first octet of the length, 82,
- indicates that the length of the content is encoded in the next two
- octets.)
-
- 9. Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 11]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- 10. Editor's Address
-
- Keith McCloghrie
- Cisco Systems, Inc.
- 170 West Tasman Drive
- San Jose, CA 95134-1706
- US
-
- Phone: +1 408 526 5260
- EMail: kzm@cisco.com
-
- 11. Acknowledgements
-
- This document is the result of significant work by the four major
- contributors:
-
- Jeffrey D. Case (SNMP Research, case@snmp.com)
- Keith McCloghrie (Cisco Systems, kzm@cisco.com)
- Marshall T. Rose (Dover Beach Consulting, mrose@dbc.mtview.ca.us)
- Steven Waldbusser (International Network Services, stevew@uni.ins.com)
-
- In addition, the contributions of the SNMPv2 Working Group are
- acknowledged. In particular, a special thanks is extended for the
- contributions of:
-
- Alexander I. Alten (Novell)
- Dave Arneson (Cabletron)
- Uri Blumenthal (IBM)
- Doug Book (Chipcom)
- Kim Curran (Bell-Northern Research)
- Jim Galvin (Trusted Information Systems)
- Maria Greene (Ascom Timeplex)
- Iain Hanson (Digital)
- Dave Harrington (Cabletron)
- Nguyen Hien (IBM)
- Jeff Johnson (Cisco Systems)
- Michael Kornegay (Object Quest)
- Deirdre Kostick (AT&T Bell Labs)
- David Levi (SNMP Research)
- Daniel Mahoney (Cabletron)
- Bob Natale (ACE*COMM)
- Brian O'Keefe (Hewlett Packard)
- Andrew Pearson (SNMP Research)
- Dave Perkins (Peer Networks)
- Randy Presuhn (Peer Networks)
- Aleksey Romanov (Quality Quorum)
- Shawn Routhier (Epilogue)
- Jon Saperia (BGS Systems)
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 12]
-
- RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 January 1996
-
-
- Bob Stewart (Cisco Systems, bstewart@cisco.com), chair
- Kaj Tesink (Bellcore)
- Glenn Waters (Bell-Northern Research)
- Bert Wijnen (IBM)
-
- 12. References
-
- [1] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and
- S. Waldbusser, "Protocol Operations for Version 2 of the Simple
- Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1905, January 1996.
-
- [2] Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6, RFC 768,
- USC/Information Sciences Institute, August 1980.
-
- [3] Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection -
- Transport Service Definition, International Organization for
- Standardization. International Standard 8072, (June, 1986).
-
- [4] Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection -
- Transport Service Definition - Addendum 1: Connectionless-mode
- Transmission, International Organization for Standardization.
- International Standard 8072/AD 1, (December, 1986).
-
- [5] G. Sidhu, R. Andrews, A. Oppenheimer, Inside AppleTalk (second
- edition). Addison-Wesley, 1990.
-
- [6] Waldbusser, S., "AppleTalk Management Information Base", RFC 1243,
- Carnegie Mellon University, July 1991.
-
- [7] Network System Technical Interface Overview. Novell, Inc, (June,
- 1989).
-
- [8] Case, J., Fedor, M., Schoffstall, M., and J. Davin, "Simple Network
- Management Protocol", STD 15, RFC 1157, SNMP Research, Performance
- Systems International, MIT Laboratory for Computer Science, May
- 1990.
-
- [9] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and
- S. Waldbusser, "Coexistence between Version 1 and Version 2 of the
- Internet-standard Network Management Framework", RFC 1908,
- January 1996.
-
- [10] Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection -
- Specification of Basic Encoding Rules for Abstract Syntax Notation
- One (ASN.1), International Organization for Standardization.
- International Standard 8825, December 1987.
-
-
-
-
-
- SNMPv2 Working Group Standards Track [Page 13]
-
-