SNMPv2-TC (None)

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Contents:

1. SNMPv2-TC definition file
2. SNMPv2-TC basic information
3. SNMPv2-TC dependencies
4. SNMPv2-TC node properties
5. SNMPv2-TC MIB tree

1. SNMPv2-TC definition file

Click here to view MIB definition file.

2. SNMPv2-TC basic information

Root OID:  None
Nodes:  0
Traps:  0
Textual conventions:  30
Type assignments:  4
Imported nodes:  0

3. SNMPv2-TC dependencies

No dependencies.

4. SNMPv2-TC node properties

Textual conventions

DisplayString

Base syntax:  OCTET STRING
Composed syntax:  OCTET STRING
Size list:   1: 0..255
Status:  current
Display hint:  255a
Description: 
Represents textual information taken from the NVT ASCII
character set, as defined in pages 4, 10-11 of RFC 854.

To summarize RFC 854, the NVT ASCII repertoire specifies:

  - the use of character codes 0-127 (decimal)

  - the graphics characters (32-126) are interpreted as
    US ASCII

  - NUL, LF, CR, BEL, BS, HT, VT and FF have the special
    meanings specified in RFC 854

  - the other 25 codes have no standard interpretation

  - the sequence 'CR LF' means newline

  - the sequence 'CR NUL' means carriage-return

  - an 'LF' not preceded by a 'CR' means moving to the
    same column on the next line.

  - the sequence 'CR x' for any x other than LF or NUL is
    illegal.  (Note that this also means that a string may
    end with either 'CR LF' or 'CR NUL', but not with CR.)

Any object defined using this syntax may not exceed 255
characters in length.

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PhysAddress

Base syntax:  OCTET STRING
Composed syntax:  OCTET STRING
Status:  current
Display hint:  1x:
Description: 
Represents media- or physical-level addresses.

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MacAddress

Base syntax:  OCTET STRING
Composed syntax:  OCTET STRING
Size list:   1: 6
Status:  current
Display hint:  1x:
Description: 
Represents an 802 MAC address represented in the
`canonical' order defined by IEEE 802.1a, i.e., as if it
were transmitted least significant bit first, even though
802.5 (in contrast to other 802.x protocols) requires MAC
addresses to be transmitted most significant bit first.

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TruthValue

Base syntax:  INTEGER
Composed syntax:  INTEGER
Value list:   1: true(1)
2: false(2)
Status:  current
Description: 
Represents a boolean value.

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TestAndIncr

Base syntax:  INTEGER
Composed syntax:  INTEGER
Size list:   1: 0..2147483647
Status:  current
Description: 
Represents integer-valued information used for atomic
operations.  When the management protocol is used to specify
that an object instance having this syntax is to be
modified, the new value supplied via the management protocol
must precisely match the value presently held by the
instance.  If not, the management protocol set operation
fails with an error of `inconsistentValue'.  Otherwise, if
the current value is the maximum value of 2^31-1 (2147483647
decimal), then the value held by the instance is wrapped to
zero; otherwise, the value held by the instance is
incremented by one.  (Note that regardless of whether the
management protocol set operation succeeds, the variable-
binding in the request and response PDUs are identical.)

The value of the ACCESS clause for objects having this
syntax is either `read-write' or `read-create'.  When an
instance of a columnar object having this syntax is created,
any value may be supplied via the management protocol.

When the network management portion of the system is re-
initialized, the value of every object instance having this
syntax must either be incremented from its value prior to
the re-initialization, or (if the value prior to the re-
initialization is unknown) be set to a pseudo-randomly
generated value.

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AutonomousType

Base syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Composed syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Status:  current
Description: 
Represents an independently extensible type identification
value.  It may, for example, indicate a particular sub-tree
with further MIB definitions, or define a particular type of
protocol or hardware.

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InstancePointer

Base syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Composed syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Status:  obsolete
Description: 
A pointer to either a specific instance of a MIB object or
a conceptual row of a MIB table in the managed device.  In
the latter case, by convention, it is the name of the
particular instance of the first accessible columnar object
in the conceptual row.

The two uses of this textual convention are replaced by
VariablePointer and RowPointer, respectively.

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VariablePointer

Base syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Composed syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Status:  current
Description: 
A pointer to a specific object instance.  For example,
sysContact.0 or ifInOctets.3.

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RowPointer

Base syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Composed syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Status:  current
Description: 
Represents a pointer to a conceptual row.  The value is the
name of the instance of the first accessible columnar object
in the conceptual row.

For example, ifIndex.3 would point to the 3rd row in the
ifTable (note that if ifIndex were not-accessible, then
ifDescr.3 would be used instead).

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RowStatus

Base syntax:  INTEGER
Composed syntax:  INTEGER
Value list:   1: active(1)
2: notInService(2)
3: notReady(3)
4: createAndGo(4)
5: createAndWait(5)
6: destroy(6)
Status:  current
Description: 
The RowStatus textual convention is used to manage the
creation and deletion of conceptual rows, and is used as the
value of the SYNTAX clause for the status column of a
conceptual row (as described in Section 7.7.1 of [2].)

The status column has six defined values:

     - `active', which indicates that the conceptual row is
     available for use by the managed device;

     - `notInService', which indicates that the conceptual
     row exists in the agent, but is unavailable for use by
     the managed device (see NOTE below);

     - `notReady', which indicates that the conceptual row
     exists in the agent, but is missing information
     necessary in order to be available for use by the
     managed device;

     - `createAndGo', which is supplied by a management
     station wishing to create a new instance of a
     conceptual row and to have its status automatically set
     to active, making it available for use by the managed
     device;

     - `createAndWait', which is supplied by a management
     station wishing to create a new instance of a
     conceptual row (but not make it available for use by
     the managed device); and,

     - `destroy', which is supplied by a management station
     wishing to delete all of the instances associated with
     an existing conceptual row.

Whereas five of the six values (all except `notReady') may
be specified in a management protocol set operation, only
three values will be returned in response to a management
protocol retrieval operation:  `notReady', `notInService' or
`active'.  That is, when queried, an existing conceptual row
has only three states:  it is either available for use by
the managed device (the status column has value `active');
it is not available for use by the managed device, though
the agent has sufficient information to make it so (the
status column has value `notInService'); or, it is not
available for use by the managed device, and an attempt to
make it so would fail because the agent has insufficient
information (the state column has value `notReady').

                         NOTE WELL

     This textual convention may be used for a MIB table,
     irrespective of whether the values of that table's
     conceptual rows are able to be modified while it is
     active, or whether its conceptual rows must be taken
     out of service in order to be modified.  That is, it is
     the responsibility of the DESCRIPTION clause of the
     status column to specify whether the status column must
     not be `active' in order for the value of some other
     column of the same conceptual row to be modified.  If
     such a specification is made, affected columns may be
     changed by an SNMP set PDU if the RowStatus would not
     be equal to `active' either immediately before or after
     processing the PDU.  In other words, if the PDU also
     contained a varbind that would change the RowStatus
     value, the column in question may be changed if the
     RowStatus was not equal to `active' as the PDU was
     received, or if the varbind sets the status to a value
     other than 'active'.


Also note that whenever any elements of a row exist, the
RowStatus column must also exist.

To summarize the effect of having a conceptual row with a
status column having a SYNTAX clause value of RowStatus,
consider the following state diagram:


                                           STATE
                +--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
                |      A       |     B     |      C      |      D
                |              |status col.|status column|
                |status column |    is     |      is     |status column
      ACTION    |does not exist|  notReady | notInService|  is active
  --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
  set status    |noError    ->D|inconsist- |inconsistent-|inconsistent-
  column to     |       or     |   entValue|        Value|        Value
  createAndGo   |inconsistent- |           |             |
                |         Value|           |             |
  --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
  set status    |noError  see 1|inconsist- |inconsistent-|inconsistent-
  column to     |       or     |   entValue|        Value|        Value
  createAndWait |wrongValue    |           |             |
  --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
  set status    |inconsistent- |inconsist- |noError      |noError
  column to     |         Value|   entValue|             |
  active        |              |           |             |
                |              |     or    |             |
                |              |           |             |
                |              |see 2   ->D|          ->D|          ->D
  --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
  set status    |inconsistent- |inconsist- |noError      |noError   ->C
  column to     |         Value|   entValue|             |
  notInService  |              |           |             |
                |              |     or    |             |      or
                |              |           |             |
                |              |see 3   ->C|          ->C|wrongValue
  --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
  set status    |noError       |noError    |noError      |noError
  column to     |              |           |             |
  destroy       |           ->A|        ->A|          ->A|          ->A
  --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
  set any other |see 4         |noError    |noError      |see 5
  column to some|              |           |             |
  value         |              |      see 1|          ->C|          ->D
  --------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
  
(1) goto B or C, depending on information available to the
agent.

(2) if other variable bindings included in the same PDU,
provide values for all columns which are missing but
required, then return noError and goto D.

(3) if other variable bindings included in the same PDU,
provide values for all columns which are missing but
required, then return noError and goto C.

(4) at the discretion of the agent, the return value may be
either:

     inconsistentName:  because the agent does not choose to
     create such an instance when the corresponding
     RowStatus instance does not exist, or

     inconsistentValue:  if the supplied value is
     inconsistent with the state of some other MIB object's
     value, or

     noError: because the agent chooses to create the
     instance.

If noError is returned, then the instance of the status
column must also be created, and the new state is B or C,
depending on the information available to the agent.  If
inconsistentName or inconsistentValue is returned, the row
remains in state A.

(5) depending on the MIB definition for the column/table,
either noError or inconsistentValue may be returned.

NOTE: Other processing of the set request may result in a
response other than noError being returned, e.g.,
wrongValue, noCreation, etc.


                  Conceptual Row Creation

There are four potential interactions when creating a
conceptual row:  selecting an instance-identifier which is
not in use; creating the conceptual row; initializing any
objects for which the agent does not supply a default; and,
making the conceptual row available for use by the managed
device.

Interaction 1: Selecting an Instance-Identifier

The algorithm used to select an instance-identifier varies
for each conceptual row.  In some cases, the instance-
identifier is semantically significant, e.g., the
destination address of a route, and a management station
selects the instance-identifier according to the semantics.

In other cases, the instance-identifier is used solely to
distinguish conceptual rows, and a management station
without specific knowledge of the conceptual row might
examine the instances present in order to determine an
unused instance-identifier.  (This approach may be used, but
it is often highly sub-optimal; however, it is also a
questionable practice for a naive management station to
attempt conceptual row creation.)

Alternately, the MIB module which defines the conceptual row
might provide one or more objects which provide assistance
in determining an unused instance-identifier.  For example,
if the conceptual row is indexed by an integer-value, then
an object having an integer-valued SYNTAX clause might be
defined for such a purpose, allowing a management station to
issue a management protocol retrieval operation.  In order
to avoid unnecessary collisions between competing management
stations, `adjacent' retrievals of this object should be
different.

Finally, the management station could select a pseudo-random
number to use as the index.  In the event that this index
was already in use and an inconsistentValue was returned in
response to the management protocol set operation, the
management station should simply select a new pseudo-random
number and retry the operation.

A MIB designer should choose between the two latter
algorithms based on the size of the table (and therefore the
efficiency of each algorithm).  For tables in which a large
number of entries are expected, it is recommended that a MIB
object be defined that returns an acceptable index for
creation.  For tables with small numbers of entries, it is
recommended that the latter pseudo-random index mechanism be
used.


Interaction 2: Creating the Conceptual Row

Once an unused instance-identifier has been selected, the
management station determines if it wishes to create and
activate the conceptual row in one transaction or in a
negotiated set of interactions.

Interaction 2a: Creating and Activating the Conceptual Row

The management station must first determine the column
requirements, i.e., it must determine those columns for
which it must or must not provide values.  Depending on the
complexity of the table and the management station's
knowledge of the agent's capabilities, this determination
can be made locally by the management station.  Alternately,
the management station issues a management protocol get
operation to examine all columns in the conceptual row that
it wishes to create.  In response, for each column, there
are three possible outcomes:

     - a value is returned, indicating that some other
     management station has already created this conceptual
     row.  We return to interaction 1.

     - the exception `noSuchInstance' is returned,
     indicating that the agent implements the object-type
     associated with this column, and that this column in at
     least one conceptual row would be accessible in the MIB
     view used by the retrieval were it to exist. For those
     columns to which the agent provides read-create access,
     the `noSuchInstance' exception tells the management
     station that it should supply a value for this column
     when the conceptual row is to be created.

     - the exception `noSuchObject' is returned, indicating
     that the agent does not implement the object-type
     associated with this column or that there is no
     conceptual row for which this column would be
     accessible in the MIB view used by the retrieval.  As
     such, the management station can not issue any
     management protocol set operations to create an
     instance of this column.

Once the column requirements have been determined, a
management protocol set operation is accordingly issued.
This operation also sets the new instance of the status
column to `createAndGo'.

When the agent processes the set operation, it verifies that
it has sufficient information to make the conceptual row
available for use by the managed device.  The information
available to the agent is provided by two sources:  the
management protocol set operation which creates the
conceptual row, and, implementation-specific defaults
supplied by the agent (note that an agent must provide
implementation-specific defaults for at least those objects
which it implements as read-only).  If there is sufficient
information available, then the conceptual row is created, a
`noError' response is returned, the status column is set to
`active', and no further interactions are necessary (i.e.,
interactions 3 and 4 are skipped).  If there is insufficient
information, then the conceptual row is not created, and the
set operation fails with an error of `inconsistentValue'.
On this error, the management station can issue a management
protocol retrieval operation to determine if this was
because it failed to specify a value for a required column,
or, because the selected instance of the status column
already existed.  In the latter case, we return to
interaction 1.  In the former case, the management station
can re-issue the set operation with the additional
information, or begin interaction 2 again using
`createAndWait' in order to negotiate creation of the
conceptual row.

                         NOTE WELL

     Regardless of the method used to determine the column
     requirements, it is possible that the management
     station might deem a column necessary when, in fact,
     the agent will not allow that particular columnar
     instance to be created or written.  In this case, the
     management protocol set operation will fail with an
     error such as `noCreation' or `notWritable'.  In this
     case, the management station decides whether it needs
     to be able to set a value for that particular columnar
     instance.  If not, the management station re-issues the
     management protocol set operation, but without setting
     a value for that particular columnar instance;
     otherwise, the management station aborts the row
     creation algorithm.

Interaction 2b: Negotiating the Creation of the Conceptual
Row

The management station issues a management protocol set
operation which sets the desired instance of the status
column to `createAndWait'.  If the agent is unwilling to
process a request of this sort, the set operation fails with
an error of `wrongValue'.  (As a consequence, such an agent
must be prepared to accept a single management protocol set
operation, i.e., interaction 2a above, containing all of the
columns indicated by its column requirements.)  Otherwise,
the conceptual row is created, a `noError' response is
returned, and the status column is immediately set to either
`notInService' or `notReady', depending on whether it has
sufficient information to make the conceptual row available
for use by the managed device.  If there is sufficient
information available, then the status column is set to
`notInService'; otherwise, if there is insufficient
information, then the status column is set to `notReady'.
Regardless, we proceed to interaction 3.

Interaction 3: Initializing non-defaulted Objects

The management station must now determine the column
requirements.  It issues a management protocol get operation
to examine all columns in the created conceptual row.  In
the response, for each column, there are three possible
outcomes:

     - a value is returned, indicating that the agent
     implements the object-type associated with this column
     and had sufficient information to provide a value.  For
     those columns to which the agent provides read-create
     access (and for which the agent allows their values to
     be changed after their creation), a value return tells
     the management station that it may issue additional
     management protocol set operations, if it desires, in
     order to change the value associated with this column.

     - the exception `noSuchInstance' is returned,
     indicating that the agent implements the object-type
     associated with this column, and that this column in at
     least one conceptual row would be accessible in the MIB
     view used by the retrieval were it to exist. However,
     the agent does not have sufficient information to
     provide a value, and until a value is provided, the
     conceptual row may not be made available for use by the
     managed device.  For those columns to which the agent
     provides read-create access, the `noSuchInstance'
     exception tells the management station that it must
     issue additional management protocol set operations, in
     order to provide a value associated with this column.

     - the exception `noSuchObject' is returned, indicating
     that the agent does not implement the object-type
     associated with this column or that there is no
     conceptual row for which this column would be
     accessible in the MIB view used by the retrieval.  As
     such, the management station can not issue any
     management protocol set operations to create an
     instance of this column.

If the value associated with the status column is
`notReady', then the management station must first deal with
all `noSuchInstance' columns, if any.  Having done so, the
value of the status column becomes `notInService', and we
proceed to interaction 4.

Interaction 4: Making the Conceptual Row Available

Once the management station is satisfied with the values
associated with the columns of the conceptual row, it issues
a management protocol set operation to set the status column
to `active'.  If the agent has sufficient information to
make the conceptual row available for use by the managed
device, the management protocol set operation succeeds (a
`noError' response is returned).  Otherwise, the management
protocol set operation fails with an error of
`inconsistentValue'.


                         NOTE WELL

     A conceptual row having a status column with value
     `notInService' or `notReady' is unavailable to the
     managed device.  As such, it is possible for the
     managed device to create its own instances during the
     time between the management protocol set operation
     which sets the status column to `createAndWait' and the
     management protocol set operation which sets the status
     column to `active'.  In this case, when the management
     protocol set operation is issued to set the status
     column to `active', the values held in the agent
     supersede those used by the managed device.

If the management station is prevented from setting the
status column to `active' (e.g., due to management station
or network failure) the conceptual row will be left in the
`notInService' or `notReady' state, consuming resources
indefinitely.  The agent must detect conceptual rows that
have been in either state for an abnormally long period of
time and remove them.  It is the responsibility of the
DESCRIPTION clause of the status column to indicate what an
abnormally long period of time would be.  This period of
time should be long enough to allow for human response time
(including `think time') between the creation of the
conceptual row and the setting of the status to `active'.
In the absense of such information in the DESCRIPTION
clause, it is suggested that this period be approximately 5
minutes in length.  This removal action applies not only to
newly-created rows, but also to previously active rows which
are set to, and left in, the notInService state for a
prolonged period exceeding that which is considered normal
for such a conceptual row.


                 Conceptual Row Suspension

When a conceptual row is `active', the management station
may issue a management protocol set operation which sets the
instance of the status column to `notInService'.  If the
agent is unwilling to do so, the set operation fails with an
error of `wrongValue'.  Otherwise, the conceptual row is
taken out of service, and a `noError' response is returned.
It is the responsibility of the DESCRIPTION clause of the
status column to indicate under what circumstances the
status column should be taken out of service (e.g., in order
for the value of some other column of the same conceptual
row to be modified).


                  Conceptual Row Deletion

For deletion of conceptual rows, a management protocol set
operation is issued which sets the instance of the status
column to `destroy'.  This request may be made regardless of
the current value of the status column (e.g., it is possible
to delete conceptual rows which are either `notReady',
`notInService' or `active'.)  If the operation succeeds,
then all instances associated with the conceptual row are
immediately removed.

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TimeStamp

Base syntax:  TimeTicks
Composed syntax:  TimeTicks
Status:  current
Description: 
The value of the sysUpTime object at which a specific
occurrence happened.  The specific occurrence must be
defined in the description of any object defined using this
type.

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TimeInterval

Base syntax:  INTEGER
Composed syntax:  INTEGER
Size list:   1: 0..2147483647
Status:  current
Description: 
A period of time, measured in units of 0.01 seconds.

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DateAndTime

Base syntax:  OCTET STRING
Composed syntax:  OCTET STRING
Size list:   1: 8
2: 11
Status:  current
Display hint:  2d-1d-1d,1d:1d:1d.1d,1a1d:1d
Description: 
A date-time specification.

field  octets  contents                  range
-----  ------  --------                  -----
  1      1-2   year                      0..65536
  2       3    month                     1..12
  3       4    day                       1..31
  4       5    hour                      0..23
  5       6    minutes                   0..59
  6       7    seconds                   0..60
               (use 60 for leap-second)
  7       8    deci-seconds              0..9
  8       9    direction from UTC        '+' / '-'
  9      10    hours from UTC            0..11
 10      11    minutes from UTC          0..59

For example, Tuesday May 26, 1992 at 1:30:15 PM EDT would be
displayed as:

                1992-5-26,13:30:15.0,-4:0

Note that if only local time is known, then timezone
information (fields 8-10) is not present.

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StorageType

Base syntax:  INTEGER
Composed syntax:  INTEGER
Value list:   1: other(1)
2: volatile(2)
3: nonVolatile(3)
4: permanent(4)
5: readOnly(5)
Status:  current
Description: 
Describes the memory realization of a conceptual row.  A
row which is volatile(2) is lost upon reboot.  A row which
is either nonVolatile(3), permanent(4) or readOnly(5), is
backed up by stable storage.  A row which is permanent(4)
can be changed but not deleted.  A row which is readOnly(5)
cannot be changed nor deleted.

If the value of an object with this syntax is either
permanent(4) or readOnly(5), it cannot be modified.
Conversely, if the value is either other(1), volatile(2) or
nonVolatile(3), it cannot be modified to be permanent(4) or
readOnly(5).

Every usage of this textual convention is required to
specify the columnar objects which a permanent(4) row must
at a minimum allow to be writable.

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TDomain

Base syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Composed syntax:  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
Status:  current
Description: 
Denotes a kind of transport service.

Some possible values, such as snmpUDPDomain, are defined in
'Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMPv2)'.

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TAddress

Base syntax:  OCTET STRING
Composed syntax:  OCTET STRING
Size list:   1: 1..255
Status:  current
Description: 
Denotes a transport service address.

For snmpUDPDomain, a TAddress is 6 octets long, the initial 4
octets containing the IP-address in network-byte order and the
last 2 containing the UDP port in network-byte order.  Consult
'Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMPv2)' for further information on
snmpUDPDomain.

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5. SNMPv2-TC MIB tree