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RFC1565 - Network Services Monitoring MIB

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group S. Kille, WG Chair

Request for Comments: 1565 ISODE Consortium

Category: Standards Track N. Freed, Editor

Innosoft

January 1994

Network Services Monitoring MIB

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

2. The SNMPv2 Network Management Framework ...................... 2

2.1 Object Definitions .......................................... 3

3. Rationale for having a Network Services Monitoring MIB ....... 3

3.1 General Relationship to Other MIBs .......................... 4

3.2 Restriction of Scope ........................................ 4

3.3 Relationship to Directory Services .......................... 4

4. Application Objects .......................................... 5

5. Definitions .................................................. 6

6. Acknowledgements .............................................16

7. References ...................................................16

8. Security Considerations ......................................16

9. Authors' Addresses ...........................................17

1. Introduction

There are a wide range of networked applications for which it is

appropriate to provide SNMP Monitoring. This includes both TCP/IP

and OSI applications. This document defines a MIB which contains the

elements common to the monitoring of any network service application.

This information includes a table of all monitorable network service

applications, a count of the associations (connections) to each

application, and basic information about the parameters and status of

each application-related association.

This MIB may be used on its own for any application, and for most

simple applications this will suffice. This MIB is also designed to

serve as a building block which can be used in conjunction with

application-specific monitoring and management. Two examples of this

are MIBs defining additional variables for monitoring a Message

Transfer Agent (MTA) service or a Directory Service Agent (DSA)

service. It is eXPected that further MIBs of this nature will be

specified.

This MIB does not attempt to provide facilities for management of the

host or hosts the network service application runs on, nor does it

provide facilities for monitoring applications that provide something

other than a network service. Host resource and general application

monitoring is handled by the Host Resources MIB.

2. The SNMPv2 Network Management Framework

The SNMPv2 Network Management Framework consists of four major

components. They are:

o RFC1442 [1] which defines the SMI, the mechanisms used for

describing and naming objects for the purpose of management.

o STD 17, RFC1213 [2] defines MIB-II, the core set of managed

objects for the Internet suite of protocols.

o RFC1445 [3] which defines the administrative and other

architectural ASPects of the framework.

o RFC1448 [4] which defines the protocol used for network

Access to managed objects.

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 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. Rationale for having a Network Services Monitoring MIB

Much effort has been expended in developing tools to manage lower

layer network facilities. However, relatively little work has been

done on managing application layer entities. It is neither efficient

nor reasonable to manage all aspects of application layer entities

using only lower layer information. Moreover, the difficulty of

managing application entities in this way increases dramatically as

application entities become more complex.

This leads to a substantial need to monitor applications which

provide network services, particularly distributed components such as

MTAs and DSAs, by monitoring specific aspects of the application

itself. Reasons to monitor such components include but are not

limited to measuring load, detecting broken connectivity, isolating

system failures, and locating congestion.

In order to manage network service applications effectively two

requirements must be met:

(1) It must be possible to monitor a large number of components

(typical for a large organization).

(2) Application monitoring must be integrated into general

network management.

This specification defines simple read-only access; this is

sufficient to determine up/down status and provide an indication of a

broad class of operational problems.

3.1 General Relationship to Other MIBs

This MIB is intended to only provide facilities common to the

monitoring of any network service application. It does not provide

all the facilities necessary to monitor any specific application.

Each specific type of network service application is expected to have

a MIB of its own that makes use of these common facilities.

3.2 Restriction of Scope

The framework provided here is very minimal; there is a lot more that

could be done. For example:

(1) General network service application configuration monitoring and

control.

(2) Detailed examination and modification of individual entries in

service-specific request queues.

(3) Probing to determine the status of a specific request (e.g. the

location of a mail message with a specific message-id).

(4) Requesting that certain actions be performed (e.g. forcing an

immediate connection and transfer of pending messages to some

specific system).

All these capabilities are both impressive and useful. However,

these capabilities would require provisions for strict security

checking. These capabilities would also mandate a much more complex

design, with many characteristics likely to be fairly

implementation-specific. As a result such facilities are likely to

be both contentious and difficult to implement.

This document religiously keeps things simple and focuses on the

basic monitoring aspect of managing applications providing network

services. The goal here is to provide a framework which is simple,

useful, and widely implementable.

3.3 Relationship to Directory Services

Use of and management of directory services already is tied up with

network service application management. There are clearly many

things which could be dealt with by directory services and protocols.

We take the line here that static configuration information is both

provided by and dealt with by directory services and protocols. The

emphasis here is on transient application status.

By placing static information in the directory, the richness and

linkage of the directory information framework does not need to be

repeated in the MIB. Static information is information which has a

mean time to change of the order of days or longer.

When information about network service applications is stored in the

directory (regardless of whether or not the network service

application makes direct use of the directory), it is recommended

that a linkage be established, so that:

(1) The managed object contains its own directory name. This allows

all directory information to be oBTained by reference. This will

let a SNMP monitor capable of performing directory queries

present this information to the manager in an appropriate format.

It is intended that this will be the normal case.

(2) The directory will reference the location of the SNMP agent, so

that an SNMP capable directory query agent could probe dynamic

characteristics of the object.

(3) This approach could be extended further, so that the SNMP

attributes are modelled as directory attributes. This would

dramatically simplify the design of directory service agents that

use SNMP to obtain the information they need.

4. Application Objects

This MIB defines a set of general purpose attributes which would be

appropriate for a range of applications that provide network

services. Both OSI and non-OSI services can be accomodated.

Additional tables defined in extensions to this MIB provide

attributes specific to specific network services.

A table is defined which will have one row for each network service

application running on the system. The only static information held

on the application is its name. All other static information should

be obtained from various directory services. The applDirectoryName

is an external key, which allows an SNMP MIB entry to be cleanly

related to the X.500 Directory. In SNMP terms, the applications are

grouped in a table called applTable, which is indexed by an integer

key applIndex.

The type of the application will be determined by one or both of:

(1) Additional MIB variables specific to the applications.

(2) An association to the application of a specific protocol.

5. Definitions

APPLICATION-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS

OBJECT-TYPE, Counter32, Gauge32

FROM SNMPv2-SMI

mib-2

FROM RFC1213-MIB

DisplayString, TimeStamp

FROM SNMPv2-TC;

-- Textual conventions

-- DistinguishedName [5] is used to refer to objects in the

-- directory.

DistinguishedName ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"A Distinguished Name represented in accordance with

RFC1485."

SYNTAX DisplayString

application MODULE-IDENTITY

LAST-UPDATED "9311280000Z"

ORGANIZATION "IETF Mail and Directory Management Working Group"

CONTACT-INFO

" Ned Freed

Postal: Innosoft International, Inc.

250 West First Street, Suite 240

Claremont, CA 91711

US

Tel: +1 909 624 7907

Fax: +1 909 621 5319

E-Mail: ned@innosoft.com"

DESCRIPTION

"The MIB module describing network service applications"

::= { mib-2 27 }

-- The basic applTable contains a list of the application

-- entities.

applTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF ApplEntry

MAX-ACCESS not-accessible

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The table holding objects which apply to all different

kinds of applications providing network services."

::= {application 1}

applEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX ApplEntry

MAX-ACCESS not-accessible

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"An entry associated with a network service application."

INDEX {applIndex}

::= {applTable 1}

ApplEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

applIndex

INTEGER,

applName

DisplayString,

applDirectoryName

DistinguishedName,

applVersion

DisplayString,

applUptime

TimeStamp,

applOperStatus

INTEGER,

applLastChange

TimeStamp,

applInboundAssociations

Gauge32,

applOutboundAssociations

Gauge32,

applAccumulatedInboundAssociations

Counter32,

applAccumulatedOutboundAssociations

Counter32,

applLastInboundActivity

TimeStamp,

applLastOutboundActivity

TimeStamp,

applRejectedInboundAssociations

Counter32,

applFailedOutboundAssociations

Counter32

}

applIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX INTEGER (1..2147483647)

MAX-ACCESS not-accessible

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"An index to uniquely identify the network service

application."

::= {applEntry 1}

applName OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX DisplayString

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The name the network service application chooses to be

known by."

::= {applEntry 2}

applDirectoryName OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX DistinguishedName

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The Distinguished Name of the directory entry where

static information about this application is stored.

An empty string indicates that no information about

the application is available in the directory."

::= {applEntry 3}

applVersion OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX DisplayString

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The version of network service application software."

::= {applEntry 4}

applUptime OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX TimeStamp

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The value of sysUpTime at the time the network service

application was last initialized. If the application was

last initialized prior to the last initialization of the

network management subsystem, then this object contains

a zero value."

::= {applEntry 5}

applOperStatus OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX INTEGER {

up(1),

down(2),

halted(3),

congested(4),

restarting(5)

}

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"Indicates the operational status of the network service

application. 'down' indicates that the network service is

not available. 'running' indicates that the network service

is operational and available. 'halted' indicates that the

service is operational but not available. 'congested'

indicates that the service is operational but no additional

inbound associations can be accomodated. 'restarting'

indicates that the service is currently unavailable but is

in the process of restarting and will be available soon."

::= {applEntry 6}

applLastChange OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX TimeStamp

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The value of sysUpTime at the time the network service

application entered its current operational state. If

the current state was entered prior to the last

initialization of the local network management subsystem,

then this object contains a zero value."

::= {applEntry 7}

applInboundAssociations OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX Gauge32

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The number of current associations to the network service

application, where it is the responder. For dynamic single

threaded processes, this will be the number of application

instances."

::= {applEntry 8}

applOutboundAssociations OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX Gauge32

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The number of current associations to the network service

application, where it is the initiator. For dynamic single

threaded processes, this will be the number of application

instances."

::= {applEntry 9}

applAccumulatedInboundAssociations OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX Counter32

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The total number of associations to the application entity

since application initialization, where it was the responder.

For dynamic single threaded processes, this will be the

number of application instances."

::= {applEntry 10}

applAccumulatedOutboundAssociations OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX Counter32

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The total number of associations to the application entity

since application initialization, where it was the initiator.

For dynamic single threaded processes, this will be the

number of application instances."

::= {applEntry 11}

applLastInboundActivity OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX TimeStamp

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The value of sysUpTime at the time this application last

had an inbound association. If the last association

occurred prior to the last initialization of the network

subsystem, then this object contains a zero value."

::= {applEntry 12}

applLastOutboundActivity OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX TimeStamp

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The value of sysUpTime at the time this application last

had an outbound association. If the last association

occurred prior to the last initialization of the network

subsystem, then this object contains a zero value."

::= {applEntry 13}

applRejectedInboundAssociations OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX Counter32

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The total number of inbound associations the application

entity has rejected, since application initialization."

::= {applEntry 14}

applFailedOutboundAssociations OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX Counter32

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The total number associations where the application entity

is initiator and association establishment has failed,

since application initialization."

::= {applEntry 15}

-- The assocTable augments the information in the applTable

-- with information about associations. Note that two levels

-- of compliance are specified below, depending on whether

-- association monitoring is mandated.

assocTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF AssocEntry

MAX-ACCESS not-accessible

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The table holding a set of all active application

associations."

::= {application 2}

assocEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX AssocEntry

MAX-ACCESS not-accessible

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"An entry associated with an association for a network

service application."

INDEX {applIndex, assocIndex}

::= {assocTable 1}

AssocEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

assocIndex

INTEGER,

assocRemoteApplication

DisplayString,

assocApplicationProtocol

OBJECT IDENTIFIER,

assocApplicationType

INTEGER,

assocDuration

TimeStamp

}

assocIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX INTEGER (1..2147483647)

MAX-ACCESS not-accessible

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"An index to uniquely identify each association for a network

service application."

::= {assocEntry 1}

assocRemoteApplication OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX DisplayString

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The name of the system running remote network service

application. For an IP-based application this should be

either a domain name or IP address. For an OSI application

it should be the string encoded distinguished name of the

managed object. For X.400(84) MTAs which do not have a

Distinguished Name, the RFC1327 [6] syntax

'mta in globalid' should be used."

::= {assocEntry 2}

assocApplicationProtocol OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"An identification of the protocol being used for the

application. For an OSI Application, this will be the

Application Context. For Internet applications, the IANA

maintains a registry of the OIDs which correspond to

well-known applications. If the application protocol is

not listed in the registry, an OID value of the form

{applTCPProtoID port} or {applUDProtoID port} are used for

TCP-based and UDP-based protocols, respectively. In either

case 'port' corresponds to the primary port number being

used by the protocol."

::= {assocEntry 3}

assocApplicationType OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX INTEGER {

ua-initiator(1),

ua-responder(2),

peer-initiator(3),

peer-responder(4)}

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"This indicates whether the remote application is some type of

client making use of this network service (e.g. a User Agent)

or a server acting as a peer. Also indicated is whether the

remote end initiated an incoming connection to the network

service or responded to an outgoing connection made by the

local application."

::= {assocEntry 4}

assocDuration OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX TimeStamp

MAX-ACCESS read-only

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The value of sysUpTime at the time this association was

started. If this association started prior to the last

initialization of the network subsystem, then this

object contains a zero value."

::= {assocEntry 5}

-- Conformance information

applConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {application 3}

applGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {applConformance 1}

applCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {applConformance 2}

-- Compliance statements

applCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The compliance statement for SNMPv2 entities

which implement the Network Services Monitoring MIB

for basic monitoring of network service applications."

MODULE -- this module

MANDATORY-GROUPS {applGroup}

::= {applCompliances 1}

assocCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"The compliance statement for SNMPv2 entities which

implement the Network Services Monitoring MIB for basic

monitoring of network service applications and their

associations."

MODULE -- this module

MANDATORY-GROUPS {applGroup, assocGroup}

::= {applCompliances 2}

-- Units of conformance

applGroup OBJECT-GROUP

OBJECTS {

applName, applVersion, applUptime, applOperStatus,

applLastChange, applInboundAssociations,

applOutboundAssociations, applAccumulatedInboundAssociations,

applAccumulatedOutboundAssociations, applLastInboundActivity,

applLastOutboundActivity, applRejectedInboundAssociations,

applFailedOutboundAssociations}

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"A collection of objects providing basic monitoring of

network service applications."

::= {applGroups 1}

assocGroup OBJECT-GROUP

OBJECTS {

assocRemoteApplication, assocApplicationProtocol,

assocApplicationType, assocDuration}

STATUS current

DESCRIPTION

"A collection of objects providing basic monitoring of

network service applications' associations."

::= {applGroups 2}

-- OIDs of the form {applTCPProtoID port} are intended to be used

-- for TCP-based protocols that don't have OIDs assigned by other

-- means. {applUDPProtoID port} serves the same purpose for

-- UDP-based protocols. In either case 'port' corresponds to

-- the primary port number being used by the protocol. For example,

-- assuming no other OID is assigned for SMTP, an OID of

-- {applTCPProtoID 25} could be used, since SMTP is a TCP-based

-- protocol that uses port 25 as its primary port.

applTCPProtoID OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {application 4}

applUDPProtoID OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {application 5}

END

6. Acknowledgements

This document is a product of the Mail and Directory Management

(MADMAN) Working Group. It is based on an earlier MIB designed by S.

Kille, T. Lenggenhager, D. Partain, and W. Yeong.

7. References

[1] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and S. Waldbusser, "Structure

of Management Information for version 2 of the Simple Network

Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC1442, SNMP Research, Inc.,

Hughes LAN Systems, Dover Beach Consulting, Inc., Carnegie Mellon

University, April 1993.

[2] McCloghrie, K., and M. Rose, Editors, "Management Information

Base for Network Management of TCP/IP-based internets: MIB-II",

STD 17, RFC1213, Hughes LAN Systems, Performance Systems

International, March 1991.

[2] Galvin, J., and K. McCloghrie, "Administrative Model for version

2 of the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC1445,

Trusted Information Systems, Hughes LAN Systems, April 1993.

[4] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and S. Waldbusser, "Protocol

Operations for version 2 of the Simple Network Management

Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC1448, SNMP Research, Inc., Hughes LAN

Systems, Dover Beach Consulting, Inc., Carnegie Mellon

University, April 1993.

[5] Kille, S., "A String Representation of Distinguished Names", RFC

1485, ISODE Consortium, July 1993.

[6] Kille, S., "Mapping between X.400(1988) / ISO 10021 and RFC822",

RFC1327, University College London, May 1992.

8. Security Considerations

Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Authors' Addresses

Steve Kille, WG Chair

ISODE Consortium

The Dome, The Square

Richmond TW9 1DT

UK

Phone: +44 81 332 9091

EMail: S.Kille@isode.com

Ned Freed, Editor

Innosoft International, Inc.

250 West First Street, Suite 240

Claremont, CA 91711

USA

Phone: +1 909 624 7907

Fax: +1 909 621 5319

EMail: ned@innosoft.com

 
 
 
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