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- Network Working Group C. Kalbfleisch
- Request for Comments: 2039 OnRamp Technologies, Inc.
- Category: Informational November 1996
-
-
- Applicablity of Standards Track MIBs to Management of World Wide
- Web Servers
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo
- does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of
- this memo is unlimited.
-
- 1. Abstract
-
- This document was produced at the request of the Network Management
- Area Director following the HTTP-MIB BOF at the 35th IETF meeting to
- report on the applicability of the existing standards track MIBs to
- management of WWW servers.
-
- Requirements for management of a World Wide Web (WWW) server are
- presented. The applicable existing standards track MIBs are then
- examined. Finally, an analysis of the additional groups of MIB
- attributes that are needed to meet the requirements is presented.
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1. Abstract.................................................1
- 2. Overview.................................................2
- 3. Requirements.............................................3
- 3.1 Operational Model Requirements...........................3
- 3.1.1. Host specific and Application Monitoring.................3
- 3.1.2. Dependencies among applications..........................3
- 3.1.3. Error generation and reporting...........................3
- 3.1.4. Capacity planning........................................4
- 3.1.5. Log Digester.............................................4
- 3.2. Service Model Requirements...............................4
- 3.2.1. Retrieval services.......................................4
- 3.2.2. Document information store -- managing documents.........4
- 3.2.3. Server configuration.....................................4
- 3.2.4. Server Control...........................................4
- 3.2.5. Quality of Service.......................................4
- 4. Relationship to existing IETF efforts....................5
- 4.1. MIB-II [2]...............................................5
- 4.2. Host Resources MIB [3]...................................5
- 4.3. Network Services Monitoring MIB [4]......................6
- 4.4. Application MIB [5]......................................7
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- 5. Summary of Existing Standards Track MIBs.................8
- 6. Definition of additional attributes......................9
- 7. Usage Scenarios.........................................11
- 8. Conclusion..............................................11
- 9. References..............................................13
- 10. Acknowledgments.........................................13
- 11. Further Information.....................................14
- 12. Security Considerations.................................14
- 13. Authors' Address........................................14
-
- 2. Overview
-
- The World Wide Web (WWW) is a network of information, accessible via
- a simple easy to use interface. The information is often presented
- in HyperText or multi-media. The information is provided by servers
- which are located all around the world. The usability of the web
- depends largely on the performance of these servers. WWW servers are
- typically monitored through log files. This becomes a difficult task
- when a single organization is responsible for a number of servers.
- Since many organizations currently use the Internet Standard SNMP to
- manage their network devices, it is desirable to treat these WWW
- servers as additional devices within this framework. This will allow
- a single Network Management Station (NMS) to automate the management
- of a number of WWW servers as well as the entire enterprise. Defining
- a standard for this purpose allows a single management application to
- manage a number of servers from a variety of vendors. Additionally,
- a formal definition of what has to be managed and how to manage it
- tends to lead to integrated and improved performance and fault
- management.
-
- Content providers are interested in the access statistics and
- configuration of their sites. The content provider may be the same or
- a different organization than the one that maintains the server as a
- whole. It may be possible to realize the new paradigm of "Customer
- Network Management" to provide this information to the content
- provider. This means that there exists a distinct organization
- different than the network operations center that is also interested
- in the management information from a device. Customer network
- management is desirable to allow each content provider on a server to
- access information about his own documents independent of the rest.
-
- Various organizations may be interested in SNMP manageable WWW
- clients and proxies as well. At this time, our focus is on WWW
- servers. A natural extension to this work could be a framework for
- managing WWW Clients and general information retrieval systems like
- WWW proxies, NNTP, GOPHER, FTP and WAIS. The focus of this document
- remains the management of WWW servers.
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- 3. Requirements
-
- WWW servers can be viewed from several perspectives when assigning
- management responsibilities. For the sake of discussion, these
- perspectives are named the Operational Model and the Service Model.
- The Operational Model views WWW servers as computers with hardware,
- disk, OS and web server software. This model represents the actual
- resources that make up the machine so that it can be monitored from
- the perspective of resource utilization. The Service Model views the
- WWW server as a black box that simply handles the responses to
- requests from clients located on the web.
-
- The two models compliment each other while providing distinct
- information about the server. Members of the organization
- responsible for the WWW server, may be interested in one and/or both
- of the management models. For this reason, the management
- information should be scalable, for one or both models to be
- implemented independent of the other.
-
- With this in mind, the requirements for WWW server management can are
- summarized below by expanding upon those generated at the HTTP-MIB
- BOF.
-
- 3.1 Operational Model Requirements
-
- 3.1.1. Host specific and Application Monitoring
-
- This includes monitoring the utilization of CPU, disk and network
- capacity.
-
- 3.1.2. Dependencies among applications.
-
- Some systems implement a number of services within a single piece of
- code. Others use multiple pieces of code to implement the same set of
- services. Because of this, dependencies develop among processes.
- These dependencies become critical when a particular process needs to
- be stopped, restarted or reconfigured. These dependencies need to be
- defined within the management information so that management
- applications can operate the systems correctly.
-
- 3.1.3. Error generation and reporting
-
- The WWW server generally reports errors via logging facilities. The
- format of the log file is not well defined. It is required that a
- standard facility for error reporting be utilized.
-
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- 3.1.4. Capacity planning
-
- It is required to obtain statistics which can be used for capacity
- planning purposes. This includes planning for increased network
- bandwidth, computing power, disk space, number of concurrent server
- threads, etc.
-
- 3.1.5. Log Digester
-
- WWW servers generally report status information by data generated in
- Common Log Format [1]. This information needs to be preserved as
- attributes in a MIB to facilitate remote monitoring providing a
- standard way to represent and retrieve the management information.
-
- 3.2. Service Model Requirements
-
- 3.2.1. Retrieval services
-
- Retrieval services are an abstract decoupling the information space
- from the underlying transport mechanism. The goal at this time is to
- focus on the requirements for management of WWW servers. There may be
- considerable overlap with other types of servers like (FTP, NNTP,
- GOPHER and WAIS). The term "retrieval services" is used here to
- retain this abstraction. It is required to get statistics about the
- usage and performance of the retrieval services.
-
- 3.2.2. Document information store -- managing documents.
-
- Information from a WWW server can be static (a file) or dynamic (the
- output of some processing). Management of these two types of
- information sources range from maintaining access statistics and
- access permissions to verifying the operational status of all
- applications that provide the dynamic information.
-
- 3.2.3. Server configuration.
-
- It is desirable to be able to centralize configuration management of
- the servers within an enterprise.
-
- 3.2.4. Server Control.
-
- WWW servers generally need to be controlled in regards to starting
- and stopping them as well as rotating log files.
-
- 3.2.5. Quality of Service
-
- Provide an indication of the quality of service the WWW server is
- providing.
-
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- 4. Relationship to existing IETF efforts
-
- In general, a WWW server is made up of or depends upon the following
- components:
-
- -a general purpose workstation running some operating system
- -http server software to answers requests from the network
- -various support routines like CGI programs or external
- applications (like DBMS) used to access information
- -a document store on one or more storage devices
-
- The health and performance of each of the above components is of
- interest when managing a WWW server.
-
- There are a number of standards track MIB modules that are of
- interest to the above list of items. This list includes MIB-II [2],
- Host Resources MIB [3], Network Service Monitoring MIB [4] and
- Application MIB [5].
-
- This creates an impressive list of attributes to be implemented. A
- definition of various levels of management of a WWW server is desired
- so that the implementor may scale his implementation in chunks which
- may include various components of each section. For instance, this
- may allow customer network management without requiring the other
- groups being implemented.
-
- 4.1. MIB-II [2]
-
- MIB-II defines the managed objects which should be contained within
- TCP/IP based devices.
-
- The WWW server should support the applicable portions of MIB-II.
- This set probably includes, as a minimum, the following groups:
- system, interfaces, udp, icmp, tcp and snmp.
-
- 4.2. Host Resources MIB [3]
-
- This MIB defines a uniform set of objects useful for the management
- of host computers independently of the operating system, network
- services, or any software application.
-
- The MIB is structured as six groups; each specified as either
- "mandatory" or "optional". If ANY "optional" group of the MIB is
- implemented, then ALL "mandatory" groups of the MIB must also be
- implemented. This may cause implementation problems for some
- developers since many of these attributes require intimate knowledge
- of the OS.
-
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- The groups defined by the MIB are:
-
- -System Group Mandatory
- -Storage Group Mandatory
- -Device Group Mandatory
-
- -device types
- -device table
- -processor table
- -network table
- -printer table
- -disk storage table
- -partition table
- -file-system table
- -file-system types
- -Running Software Group Optional
- -Running Software Performance Group Optional
- -Installed Software Group Optional
-
- The system group provides general status information about the host.
- The storage and device groups define the information about the
- configuration and status of the resources which compose the host. It
- defines the resources which make up a generic host system and how
- they relate to each other. Much of this information is useful for
- managing various aspects of a WWW server, like the file system and
- CPU utilization. This information is useful for meeting the
- operational requirements. Much of this information is however more
- detailed than many WWW server managers require for service level
- requirements.
-
- The remaining groups define software components which are installed
- and/or running on the host. Performance information is defined which
- extends that defined for each running process. Unfortunately, the
- mapping between running software and installed software is difficult
- since it is related by a foreign key (Product ID) which does not
- appear to be required to exist in either table [6]. There is no
- provision to represent a group of processes which together perform
- some task (IE an application made up of multiple processes). The
- Applications MIB WG plans to address these deficiencies.
-
- 4.3. Network Services Monitoring MIB [4]
-
- This MIB is one of three documents produced by the MADMAN (Message
- And Directory MANagement) Working group. It defines a set of general
- purpose attributes which would be appropriate for a range of
- applications that provide network services. This definition is from
- the perspective of the service without considering the implementation
- in terms of host computers or processes. Attributes provide
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- statistics and status on the in-bound and out-bound associations that
- are currently active, and which have been active.
-
- This MIB is intended to be the minimum set of attributes common
- across a number of Network Service Applications. Additional
- attributes are to be defined as necessary to manage specific network
- service applications. WWW servers clearly fall into the category of
- network service applications. All attributes in this MIB are
- relevant to WWW servers.
-
- The MIB consists of two tables:
-
- -applTable Mandatory
- -assocTable Optional
-
- The applTable describes applications that provide network services
- and keeps statistics of the current number of active associations and
- the total number of associations since application initialization.
- The assocTable contains more detailed information about active
- associations.
-
- The other two MIBs defined by MADMAN, MTA MIB [7] and DSA MIB [8],
- are not relevant to the management of WWW services. They do,
- however, demonstrate how to extend the Network Services Monitoring
- MIB for a specific set of applications.
-
- 4.4. Application MIB [5]
-
- The Application MIB WG is defining two separate MIBs: the sysApplMib
- and the applMib. The first defines attributes that can be monitored
- without instrumenting the applications. The second will define
- additional attributes requiring application instrumentation.
-
- The sysApplMIB allows for the description of applications as a
- collection of executables, and files installed and executing on a
- host computer. The objects support configuration, fault and
- performance management of some of the basic attributes of application
- software.
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- The groups defined in the sysApplMIB are:
-
- -System Application Installed Group Mandatory
- -sysApplInstalledTable
- -sysApplCfgElmtTable
-
- -System Application Run Group Mandatory
- -sysApplRunTable
- -SysApplPastRunTable
- -sysApplElmtRunTable
- -sysApplElmtPastRunTable
-
- The sysApplInstalledTable captures what applications are installed on
- a particular host and the sysApplCfgElmtTable provides information
- regarding the executables and non executable files which collectively
- compose the application. The sysApplRunTable contains the application
- instances which are currently running and the sysApplPastRunTable
- contains a history about applications which have previously executed
- on the host. The sysApplElmtRunTable contains the process instances
- which are currently running and sysApplElmtPastRunTable contains a
- history about processes which have previously executed on the host.
-
- It should be noted that two implementations of the same set of
- network services may each define a different set of processes and
- files within this MIB. Ultimately enough management information is
- needed so that these different implementations can at least be
- managed similarly.
-
- WWW servers fall into the general category of application software.
- Therefore the attributes of this MIB are applicable if the process
- level detail is requested to meet the Operational Model requirements.
-
- The Application MIB WG is to resolve the problems described above
- with the relationship between the running and installed software of
- the Host Resources MIB.
-
- 5. Summary of Existing Standards Track MIBs
-
- The existing MIBs are largely orthogonal as demonstrated by the
- diagram below. Host Resources relates network information to the
- interfaces defined in MIB-II. The system application MIB relates its
- running element table to the equivalent entry in the Host Resources
- running software table.
-
- It should be noted that the running software of the Host Resources
- includes ALL software running on the host, while the running element
- table of the system application MIB only includes "interesting"
- processes of monitored applications.
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- In the diagram below, "Other Services", "Application Specific MIBs"
- and "Application MIB" represent work to be done or in progress.
-
- +---------------+
- | Application |
- | Specific MIBs |
- +---------------+
- |
- +--------+ +---+ +---+ +---------------+
- |Other | |MTA| |DSA| | Application |
- |services| |MIB| |MIB| | MIB |
- +--------+ +---+ +---+ +---------------+
- | | | |
- +--------------------+ +---------------+ +--------------+ +------+
- | Network Services | | System | |Host Resources| |MIB-II|
- | Monitoring MIB | |Application MIB|--| MIB |--| |
- +--------------------+ +---------------+ +--------------+ +------+
-
- The stack of MIBs above "Network Services Monitoring MIB" represent
- monitoring from the Service Model. The other stacks represent
- monitoring from the Operational Model. Neither of these stacks goes
- to the level of specific detail for any application. The author is of
- the opinion that HTTP or Web Server specific MIBs would exist at the
- top of each stack to represent the service and implementation view of
- the server respectively. There should be a relationship between
- these two perspectives defined so that the correlations between the
- two perspectives is possible. This relationship would be useful for
- general application and service monitoring in addition to just web
- servers. However, it is not of specific interest to either the
- MADMAN WG or the Application MIB WG. It is therefore suggested that
- such a relationship is defined in a general case outside of either of
- those groups that would be applicable for WWW servers as well as for
- other application to service mappings.
-
- 6. Definition of additional attributes
-
- The existing MIB attributes meet the Operational Model Requirement
- for tracking information specific to a host. Specifically, MIB-II,
- Host Resources and the Applications MIB address these items. The
- Network Services MIB addresses a portion of the service model
- requirement for the decoupling of the information space from the
- transport mechanism.
-
- Several sets of additional attributes are needed to meet the
- remaining requirements. These additional attributes may be generally
- applicable to other network information retrieval services (like FTP,
- NNTP, GOPHER and WAIS) as well as client and proxy management.
- Management of these services is not the scope of this document.
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- These additional attributes can be classified as:
-
- 1) Definition of relationship between the Network Services Monitoring
- and Application MIBs. This allows the functional organization of
- the server to be known. It allows the management application to
- understand the effect of restarting specific processes on the
- services provided. This addresses the Operational Model
- requirement to model dependencies between applications.
-
- 2) Additions to generic Network Services Monitoring MIB. A draft [9]
- has already been circulated due to the work of a mailing list and
- a sample implementation. These attributes list a summary at the
- service level of the configuration and the health of the server.
- From this, performance metrics can be observed. In addition, the
- health of the server in terms of data timeouts is known. These
- attributes address the requirement for Operational Model tracking
- of specific activity and the requirement for Service Model
- retrieval services.
-
- 3) Document storage and access statistics are needed to address
- service model requirements.
-
- 4) Additions to Application MIB are required to address server
- configuration requirements in the service model.
-
- 5) Error and fault management attributes are required to address
- requirements for tracking specific activity of the web server.
-
- 6) Configuration and Control are items that may be able to be defined
- in a general way within the applications MIB. If not, a specific
- definition would be required here.
-
- Of the items listed above, (1) is needed on a general basis. The
- others appear to the author as WWW server specific unless the scope
- of the work is opened to WWW clients and proxies as well as other
- services (like NNTP, FTP, GOPHER and WAIS).
-
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- 7. Usage Scenarios
-
- The example scenario will be a single host computer which implements
- WWW services using the "virtual domain" concept. In this model, a
- single host performs as the WWW server for one or more addresses.
- For the purpose of example, we will specify that there are three
- domains being serviced from this host whose WWW servers are:
-
- -www.a.com
- -www.b.com
- -www.c.com
-
- Some implementations may implement these services as one set of
- processes that handle requests for each of the addresses. Others may
- implement these services as a set of processes for each address.
- This means that the relationship defined between the Network Services
- Monitoring MIB and Application MIB components of the management
- information may vary between different implementations of the same
- configuration.
-
- MIB-II and Host Resources would provide the information about the
- host including the CPU, disk and network. The Host Resource running
- table provide information on the processes in the system.
-
- There would be an entry in the Network Services Monitoring applTable
- for each virtual domain. In addition, the assocTable shows which
- connections are currently active. An extension to the association
- table would be helpful to provide information as to what is being
- transmitted.
-
- The sysApplMib would have entries in its installed software tables
- for the web server software and each "interesting" component. This
- should include the server binary, CGI programs, configuration files
- and possibly the server log files. Depending on the implementation
- of the server, the processes for each domain may show up in the same
- or different running software tables.
-
- Additional information as described in the previous section would
- round out the management information that would be available for the
- WWW server.
-
- 8. Conclusion
-
- A number of currently defined attributes are useful for management of
- a WWW server. Specifically, MIB-II and Host Resources should be
- considered for monitoring the health of the machine in terms of host
- and network configuration and capacity. The Network Services
- Monitoring MIB and the Application MIBs provide a general framework
-
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- to represent the components of the WWW server from both a service and
- implementation perspective. The Network Services Monitoring MIB
- suggests that extensions are necessary to cover specific network
- application monitoring. A set of such attributes can be well defined
- to provide status information of the WWW server. The Application MIB
- suggests similar extensions. Some of these attributes may be generic
- to all applications, and thus be implemented within the scope of the
- applMib. It is the opinion of this author that there will still
- remain specific instrumentation for WWW servers that can not, and
- should not, be covered in the Network Services Monitoring and
- Application MIBs.
-
- Since the Network Services Monitoring MIB and the Applications MIB
- represent orthogonal efforts of management, it is desirable to define
- the relationship between the two in a standard way. This definition
- is probably more than a simple pointer from one table to another.
- Since it is outside the scope of either of those efforts, it is this
- author's opinion that that definition could and should be addressed
- within the scope of defining management of a specific application (IE
- WWW servers). This defintion although defined for a particular
- application, should be useful in a general way to describe the
- relationship between the Network Services Monitoring MIB and the
- Applications MIB.
-
- Additional attributes are needed in order to meet all of the
- requirements specified in this document. An IETF standard would
- prevent independent developments of this effort in many enterprise
- MIBs. It also allows management applications to control servers from
- multiple vendors. It is likely that as the work in this area
- progresses, the management information will be useful for other
- Network Information Retrieval services (like FTP, GOPHER, WAIS and
- NNTP) as well.
-
- Finally, the Operational Model and Service Model Requirements lead to
- two main uses of the management information. Design of the MIB
- including the usage of the existing MIBs should allow one or the
- other or both of these models to be implemented in a standard way.
- This may be desirable depending specifically on the audience of the
- data, the cost of instrumentation and the resources of the system.
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- 9. References
-
- [1] Anonymous, "Logging in the W3C httpd",
- http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/Daemon/User/Config/Logging.html,
- W3C, July 1995.
-
- [2] McCloghrie, K., and M. Rose, Editors, "Management Information
- Base for Network Management of TCP/IP-based internets: MIB-
- II", STD 17, RFC 1213, Hughes LAN Systems, Performance
- Systems International, March 1991.
-
- [3] Grillo, P., and S. Waldbusser, "Host Resources MIB", RFC 1514,
- Network Innovations, Intel Corporation, Carnegie Mellon
- University, September 1993.
-
- [4] Kille, S., and N. Freed, "Network Services Monitoring MIB",
- RFC 1565, ISODE Consortium, Innosoft, January 1994.
-
- [5] Saperia, J., C. Krupczak, R. Sturm, and J. Weinstock, "Definition
- of Managed Objects for Applications", Work in Progress.
-
- [6] Krupczak, C. and S. Waldbusser, "Applicability of Host Resources
- MIB to Application Management", Empire Technologies, Inc.,
- International Network Services, October 1995.
-
- [7] Kille, S., and N. Freed, "Mail Monitoring MIB", RFC 1566, ISODE
- Consortium, Innosoft, January 1994.
-
- [8] Mansfield, G., and S. Kille, "X.500 Directory Monitoring MIB",
- RFC 1567, AIC Systems Laboratory, ISODE Consortium, January 1994.
-
- [9] Hazewinkel, H., E. van Hengstum, A. Pras, "Definitions of Managed
- Objects for HTTP", Work in Progress.
-
- 10. Acknowledgments
-
- This document was produced at the request of the Network Management
- Area Director following the HTTP-MIB BOF at the 35th IETF meeting to
- report on the applicability of the existing standards track MIBs to
- management of WWW servers.
-
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- The author gratefully acknowledges the comments of the following
- individuals:
-
- Ned Freed, ned@innosoft.com
- Innosoft, Inc.
-
- Harrie Hazewinkel, hazewink@cs.utwente.nl
- University of Twente
-
- Cheryl Krupczak, cheryl@empiretech.com
- Empire Technologies, Inc.
-
- Rui Meneses, rui.meneses@jrc.it
- Centre for Earth Observation
-
- Jon Saperia, saperia@bgs.com
- BGS Systems, Inc.
-
- Juergen Schoenwaelder, schoenw@cs.utwente.nl
- University of Twente
-
- Chris Wellens, chrisw@iwl.com
- InterWorking Labs, Inc.
-
- 11. Further Information
-
- The current status of the HTTP-MIB standardization can be found on
- the World Wide Web at <URL:http://http-mib.onramp.net/>. An email
- list is in operation for discussion of this topic. To subscribe,
- send email to "http-mib-request@onramp.net" with the message body of
- "subscribe HTTP-MIB".
-
- 12. Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
- 13. Authors' Address
-
- Carl W. Kalbfleisch
- OnRamp Technologies, Inc.
- Email: cwk@onramp.net
- 1950 Stemmons Frwy
- 2026 INFOMART
- Dallas, TX 75207, USA Tel: (214) 672-7246
- cwk@onramp.net Fax: (214) 672-7275
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