rfc2233.txt
来自「著名的RFC文档,其中有一些文档是已经翻译成中文的的.」· 文本 代码 · 共 1,442 行 · 第 1/5 页
TXT
1,442 行
Network Working Group K. McCloghrieRequest for Comments: 2233 Cisco SystemsObsoletes: 1573 F. KastenholzCategory: Standards Track FTP Software November 1997 The Interfaces Group MIB using SMIv2Status 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.Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.Table of Contents 1 Introduction .............................................. 2 2 The SNMP Network Management Framework ..................... 2 2.1 Object Definitions ...................................... 3 3 Experience with the Interfaces Group ...................... 3 3.1 Clarifications/Revisions ................................ 3 3.1.1 Interface Sub-Layers .................................. 4 3.1.2 Guidance on Defining Sub-layers ....................... 6 3.1.3 Virtual Circuits ...................................... 8 3.1.4 Bit, Character, and Fixed-Length Interfaces ........... 8 3.1.5 Interface Numbering ................................... 10 3.1.6 Counter Size .......................................... 14 3.1.7 Interface Speed ....................................... 16 3.1.8 Multicast/Broadcast Counters .......................... 17 3.1.9 Trap Enable ........................................... 18 3.1.10 Addition of New ifType values ........................ 18 3.1.11 InterfaceIndex Textual Convention .................... 18 3.1.12 New states for IfOperStatus .......................... 19 3.1.13 IfAdminStatus and IfOperStatus ....................... 20 3.1.14 IfOperStatus in an Interface Stack ................... 21 3.1.15 Traps ................................................ 21 3.1.16 ifSpecific ........................................... 23 3.1.17 Creation/Deletion of Interfaces ...................... 24 3.1.18 All Values Must be Known ............................. 24 4 Media-Specific MIB Applicability .......................... 25McCloghrie & Kastenholz Standards Track [Page 1]RFC 2233 Interfaces Group MIB using SMIv2 November 1997 5 Overview .................................................. 26 6 Interfaces Group Definitions .............................. 26 7 Acknowledgements .......................................... 64 8 References ................................................ 64 9 Security Considerations ................................... 65 10 Authors' Addresses ....................................... 65 11 Full Copyright Statement ................................. 661. Introduction This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB) for use with network management protocols in the Internet community. In particular, it describes managed objects used for managing Network Interfaces. This memo discusses the 'interfaces' group of MIB-II, especially the experience gained from the definition of numerous media- specific MIB modules for use in conjunction with the 'interfaces' group for managing various sub-layers beneath the internetwork- layer. It specifies clarifications to, and extensions of, the architectural issues within the previous model used for the 'interfaces' group. This memo also includes a MIB module. As well as including new MIB definitions to support the architectural extensions, this MIB module also re-specifies the 'interfaces' group of MIB-II in a manner that is both compliant to the SNMPv2 SMI and semantically- identical to the existing SNMPv1-based definitions. The key words "MUST" and "MUST NOT" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [10].2. The SNMP Network Management Framework The SNMP Network Management Framework presently consists of three major components. They are: o RFC 1902 which defines the SMI, the mechanisms used for describing and naming objects for the purpose of management. o STD 17, RFC 1213 defines MIB-II, the core set of managed objects for the Internet suite of protocols. o STD 15, RFC 1157 and RFC 1905 which define two versions of the protocol used for network access to managed objects.McCloghrie & Kastenholz Standards Track [Page 2]RFC 2233 Interfaces Group MIB using SMIv2 November 1997 The Framework permits new objects to be defined for the purpose of experimentation and evaluation.2.1. Object Definitions Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed the Management Information Base or MIB. Objects in the MIB are defined using the subset of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) defined in the SMI. In particular, each object object type is named by an OBJECT IDENTIFIER, an administratively assigned name. The object type together with an object instance serves to uniquely identify a specific instantiation of the object. For human convenience, we often use a textual string, termed the descriptor, to refer to the object type.3. Experience with the Interfaces Group One of the strengths of internetwork-layer protocols such as IP [6] is that they are designed to run over any network interface. In achieving this, IP considers any and all protocols it runs over as a single "network interface" layer. A similar view is taken by other internetwork-layer protocols. This concept is represented in MIB-II by the 'interfaces' group which defines a generic set of managed objects such that any network interface can be managed in an interface-independent manner through these managed objects. The 'interfaces' group provides the means for additional managed objects specific to particular types of network interface (e.g., a specific medium such as Ethernet) to be defined as extensions to the 'interfaces' group for media-specific management. Since the standardization of MIB-II, many such media-specific MIB modules have been defined. Experience in defining these media-specific MIB modules has shown that the model defined by MIB-II is too simplistic and/or static for some types of media-specific management. As a result, some of these media-specific MIB modules assume an evolution or loosening of the model. This memo documents and standardizes that evolution of the model and fills in the gaps caused by that evolution. This memo also incorporates the interfaces group extensions documented in RFC 1229 [7].3.1. Clarifications/Revisions There are several areas for which experience has indicated that clarification, revision, or extension of the model would be helpful. The following sections discuss the changes in the interfaces group adopted by this memo in each of these areas.McCloghrie & Kastenholz Standards Track [Page 3]RFC 2233 Interfaces Group MIB using SMIv2 November 1997 In some sections, one or more paragraphs contain discussion of rejected alternatives to the model adopted in this memo. Readers not familiar with the MIB-II model and not interested in the rationale behind the new model may want to skip these paragraphs.3.1.1. Interface Sub-Layers Experience in defining media-specific management information has shown the need to distinguish between the multiple sub-layers beneath the internetwork-layer. In addition, there is a need to manage these sub-layers in devices (e.g., MAC-layer bridges) which are unaware of which, if any, internetwork protocols run over these sub-layers. As such, a model of having a single conceptual row in the interfaces table (MIB-II's ifTable) represent a whole interface underneath the internetwork-layer, and having a single associated media-specific MIB module (referenced via the ifType object) is too simplistic. A further problem arises with the value of the ifType object which has enumerated values for each type of interface. Consider, for example, an interface with PPP running over an HDLC link which uses a RS232-like connector. Each of these sub-layers has its own media-specific MIB module. If all of this is represented by a single conceptual row in the ifTable, then an enumerated value for ifType is needed for that specific combination which maps to the specific combination of media- specific MIBs. Furthermore, such a model still lacks a method to describe the relationship of all the sub-layers of the MIB stack. An associated problem is that of upward and downward multiplexing of the sub-layers. An example of upward multiplexing is MLP (Multi-Link-Procedure) which provides load-sharing over several serial lines by appearing as a single point-to-point link to the sub-layer(s) above. An example of downward multiplexing would be several instances of PPP, each framed within a separate X.25 virtual circuit, all of which run over one fractional T1 channel, concurrently with other uses of the T1 link. The MIB structure must allow these sorts of relationships to be described. Several solutions for representing multiple sub-layers were rejected. One was to retain the concept of one conceptual row for all the sub-layers of an interface and have each media-specific MIB module identify its "superior" and "subordinate" sub-layers through OBJECT IDENTIFIER "pointers". This scheme would have several drawbacks: the superior/subordinate pointers would be contained in the media-specific MIB modules; thus, a manager could not learn the structure of an interface without inspecting multiple pointers in different MIB modules; this would be overlyMcCloghrie & Kastenholz Standards Track [Page 4]RFC 2233 Interfaces Group MIB using SMIv2 November 1997 complex and only possible if the manager had knowledge of all the relevant media-specific MIB modules; MIB modules would all need to be retrofitted with these new "pointers"; this scheme would not adequately address the problem of upward and downward multiplexing; and finally, enumerated values of ifType would be needed for each combination of sub-layers. Another rejected solution also retained the concept of one conceptual row for all the sub-layers of an interface but had a new separate MIB table to identify the "superior" and "subordinate" sub-layers and to contain OBJECT IDENTIFIER "pointers" to the media-specific MIB module for each sub-layer. Effectively, one conceptual row in the ifTable would represent each combination of sub-layers between the internetwork-layer and the wire. While this scheme has fewer drawbacks, it still would not support downward multiplexing, such as PPP over MLP: observe that MLP makes two (or more) serial lines appear to the layers above as a single physical interface, and thus PPP over MLP should appear to the internetwork-layer as a single interface; in contrast, this scheme would result in two (or more) conceptual rows in the ifTable, both of which the internetwork-layer would run over. This scheme would also require enumerated values of ifType for each combination of sub-layers. The solution adopted by this memo is to have an individual conceptual row in the ifTable to represent each sub-layer, and have a new separate MIB table (the ifStackTable, see section 6 below) to identify the "superior" and "subordinate" sub-layers through INTEGER "pointers" to the appropriate conceptual rows in the ifTable. This solution supports both upward and downward multiplexing, allows the IANAifType to Media-Specific MIB mapping to identify the media-specific MIB module for that sub-layer, such that the new table need only be referenced to obtain information about layering, and it only requires enumerated values of ifType for each sub-layer, not for combinations of them. However, it does require that the descriptions of some objects in the ifTable (specifically, ifType, ifPhysAddress, ifInUcastPkts, and ifOutUcastPkts) be generalized so as to apply to any sub-layer (rather than only to a sub-layer immediately beneath the network layer as previously), plus some (specifically, ifSpeed) which need to have appropriate values identified for use when a generalized definition does not apply to a particular sub-layer. In addition, this adopted solution makes no requirement that a device, in which a sub-layer is instrumented by a conceptual row of the ifTable, be aware of whether an internetwork protocol runs on top of (i.e., at some layer above) that sub-layer. In fact, the counters of packets received on an interface are defined as counting the number "delivered to a higher-layer protocol". This meaning of "higher-layer" includes:McCloghrie & Kastenholz Standards Track [Page 5]RFC 2233 Interfaces Group MIB using SMIv2 November 1997 (1) Delivery to a forwarding module which accepts packets/frames/octets and forwards them on at the same protocol layer. For example, for the purposes of this
⌨️ 快捷键说明
复制代码Ctrl + C
搜索代码Ctrl + F
全屏模式F11
增大字号Ctrl + =
减小字号Ctrl + -
显示快捷键?