Network Working Group Editor of this version:
Request for Comments: 3014 R. Kavasseri
Category: Standards Track Cisco Systems, Inc.
Author of previous version:
B. Stewart
November 2000
Notification Log 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.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
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 logging Simple
Network Management Protocol (SNMP) Notifications.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
Table of Contents
1 The SNMP Management Framework ................................. 2
2 Overview ...................................................... 32.1 Environment ................................................. 32.1.1 SNMP Engines and Contexts ................................. 42.1.2 Security .................................................. 42.2 Structure ................................................... 52.2.1 Configuration ............................................. 52.2.2 Statistics ................................................ 62.2.3 Log ....................................................... 62.3 Example ..................................................... 6
3 Definitions ................................................... 7
4 Intellectual Property ......................................... 23
5 References .................................................... 23
6 Security Considerations ....................................... 25
7 Author's Address .............................................. 25
8 Full Copyright Statement ...................................... 26
The SNMP Management Framework presently consists of five major
components:
o An overall architecture, described in RFC 2571 [RFC2571].
o Mechanisms for describing and naming objects and events for the
purpose of management. The first version of this Structure of
Management Information (SMI) is called SMIv1 and described in
STD 16, RFC 1155 [RFC1155], STD 16, RFC 1212 [RFC1212] and RFC
1215 [RFC1215]. The second version, called SMIv2, is described
in STD 58, RFC 2578 [RFC2578], STD 58, RFC 2579 [RFC2579] and
STD 58, RFC 2580 [RFC2580].
o Message protocols for transferring management information. The
first version of the SNMP message protocol is called SNMPv1 and
described in STD 15, RFC 1157 [RFC1157]. A second version of
the SNMP message protocol, which is not an Internet standards
track protocol, is called SNMPv2c and described in RFC 1901
[RFC1901] and RFC 1906 [RFC1906]. The third version of the
message protocol is called SNMPv3 and described in RFC 1906
[RFC1906], RFC 2572 [RFC2572] and RFC 2574 [RFC2574].
o Protocol operations for accessing management information. The
first set of protocol operations and associated PDU formats is
described in STD 15, RFC 1157 [RFC1157]. A second set of
protocol operations and associated PDU formats is described in
RFC 1905 [RFC1905].
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o A set of fundamental applications described in RFC 2573
[RFC2573] and the view-based access control mechanism described
in RFC 2575 [RFC2575].
A more detailed introduction to the current SNMP Management Framework
can be found in RFC 2570 [RFC2570].
Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed
the Management Information Base or MIB. Objects in the MIB are
defined using the mechanisms defined in the SMI.
This memo specifies a MIB module that is compliant to the SMIv2. A
MIB conforming to the SMIv1 can be produced through the appropriate
translations. The resulting translated MIB must be semantically
equivalent, except where objects or events are omitted because no
translation is possible (use of Counter64). Some machine readable
information in SMIv2 will be converted into textual descriptions in
SMIv1 during the translation process. However, this loss of machine
readable information is not considered to change the semantics of the
MIB.
Systems that support SNMP often need a mechanism for recording
Notification information as a hedge against lost Notifications,
whether those are Traps or Informs [RFC1905] that exceed
retransmission limits. This MIB therefore provides common
infrastructure for other MIBs in the form of a local logging
function. It is intended primarily for senders of Notifications but
could be used also by receivers.
Given the Notification Log MIB, individual MIBs bear less
responsibility to record the transient information associated with an
event against the possibility that the Notification message is lost,
and applications can poll the log to verify that they have not missed
important Notifications.
The overall environmental concerns for the MIB are:
o SNMP Engines and Contexts
o Security
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There are two distinct information flows from multiple notification
originators that one may log. The first is the notifications that
are received (from one or more SNMP engines) for logging as SNMP
informs and traps. The other comprises notifications delivered to an
SNMP engine at the interface to the notification originator (using a
notification mechanism other than SNMP informs or traps). The latter
information flow (using a notification mechanism other than SNMP
informs or traps) is modeled here as the SNMP engine (which maintains
the log) sending a notification to itself. The remainder of this
section discusses the handling of the former information flow -
notifications (received in the form of SNMP informs or traps) from
multiple SNMP engines.
As described in the SNMP architecture [RFC2571], a given system may
support multiple SNMP engines operating independently of one another,
each with its own SNMP engine identification. Furthermore, within
the purview of a given engine there may be multiple named management
contexts supporting overlapping or disjoint sets of MIB objects and
Notifications. Thus, understanding a particular Notification
requires knowing the SNMP engine and management context from whence
it came.
To provide the necessary source information for a logged
Notification, the MIB includes objects to record that Notification's
source SNMP engine ID and management context name.
Security for Notifications is awkward since access control for the
objects in the Notification can be checked only where the
Notification is created. Thus such checking is possible only for
locally-generated Notifications, and even then only when security
credentials are available.
For the purpose of this discussion, "security credentials" means the
input values for the abstract service interface function
isAccessAllowed [RFC2571] and using those credentials means
conceptually using that function to see that those credentials allow
access to the MIB objects in question, operating as for a
Notification Originator in [RFC2573].
The Notification Log MIB has the notion of a "named log." By using
log names and view-based access control [RFC2575] a network
administrator can provide different access for different users. When
an application creates a named log the security credentials of the
creator stay associated with that log.
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
A managed system with fewer resources MAY disallow the creation of
named logs, providing only the default, null-named log. Such a log
has no implicit security credentials for Notification object access
control and Notifications are put into it with no further checking.
When putting locally-generated Notifications into a named log, the
managed system MUST use the security credentials associated with that
log and MUST apply the same access control rules as described for a
Notification Originator in [RFC2573].
The managed system SHOULD NOT apply access control when adding
remotely-generated Notifications into either a named log or the
default, null-named log. In those cases the security of the
information in the log SHOULD be left to the normal, overall access
control for the log itself.
The Notification Log MIB allows applications to set the maximum
number of Notifications that can be logged, using
nlmConfigGlobalEntryLimit. Similarly, an application can set the
maximum age using nlmConfigGlobalAgeOut, after which older
Notifications MAY be timed out. Please be aware that contention
between multiple applications trying to set these objects to
different values MAY affect the reliability and completeness of data
seen by each application, i.e., it is possible that one application
may change the value of either of these objects, resulting in some
Notifications being deleted before the other applications have had a
chance to see them. This could be used to orchestrate a denial-of-
service attack. Methods for countering such an attack are for
further study.
The MIB has the following sections:
o Configuration -- control over how much the log can hold and
what Notifications are to be logged.
o Statistics -- indications of logging activity.
o Log -- the Notifications themselves.
The configuration section contains objects to manage resource use by
the MIB.
This section also contains a table to specify what logs exist and how
they operate. Deciding which Notifications are to be logged depends
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on filters defined in the the snmpNotifyFilterTable in the standard
SNMP Notification MIB [RFC2573] identified by the initial index
(snmpNotifyFilterName) from that table.
The statistics section contains counters for Notifications logged and
discarded, supplying a means to understand the results of log
capacity configuration and resource problems.
The log contains the Notifications and the objects that came in their
variable binding list, indexed by an integer that reflects when the
entry was made. An application that wants to collect all logged
Notifications or to know if it may have missed any can keep track of
the highest index it has retrieved and start from there on its next
poll, checking sysUpTime for a discontinuity that would have reset
the index and perhaps have lost entries.
Variables are in a table indexed by Notification index and variable
index within that Notification. The values are kept as a
"discriminated union," with one value object per variable. Exactly
which value object is instantiated depends on the SNMP data type of
the variable, with a separate object of appropriate type for each
distinct SNMP data type.
An application can thus reconstruct the information from the
Notification PDU from what is recorded in the log.
Following is an example configuration of a named log for logging only
linkUp and linkDown Notifications.
In nlmConfigLogTable:
nlmConfigLogFilterName.5."links" = "link-status"
nlmConfigLogEntryLimit.5."links" = 0
nlmConfigLogAdminStatus.5."links" = enabled
nlmConfigLogOperStatus.5."links" = operational
nlmConfigLogStorageType.5."links" = nonVolatile
nlmConfigLogEntryStatus.5."links" = active
Note that snmpTraps is:
iso.org.dod.internet.snmpV2.snmpModules.snmpMIB.snmpMIBObjects.5
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
Or numerically:
1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5
And linkDown is snmpTraps.3 and linkUp is snmpTraps.4.
So to allow the two Notifications in snmpNotifyFilterTable:
snmpNotifyFilterMask.11."link-status".1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3 = ''H
snmpNotifyFilterType.11."link-status".1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3 = include
snmpNotifyFilterStorageType.11."link-status".1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3
= nonVolatile
snmpNotifyFilterRowStatus.11."link-status".1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3
= active
snmpNotifyFilterMask.11."link-status".1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4 = ''H
snmpNotifyFilterType.11."link-status".1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4 = include
snmpNotifyFilterStorageType.11."link-status".1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4
= nonVolatile
snmpNotifyFilterRowStatus.11."link-status".1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4
= active
NOTIFICATION-LOG-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
IMPORTS
MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE,
Integer32, Unsigned32,
TimeTicks, Counter32, Counter64,
IpAddress, Opaque, mib-2 FROM SNMPv2-SMI
TimeStamp, DateAndTime,
StorageType, RowStatus,
TAddress, TDomain FROM SNMPv2-TC
SnmpAdminString, SnmpEngineID FROM SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB
MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP FROM SNMPv2-CONF;
notificationLogMIB MODULE-IDENTITY
LAST-UPDATED "200011270000Z" -- 27 November 2000
ORGANIZATION "IETF Distributed Management Working Group"
CONTACT-INFO "Ramanathan Kavasseri
Cisco Systems, Inc.
170 West Tasman Drive,
San Jose CA 95134-1706.
Phone: +1 408 527 2446
Email: ramk@cisco.com"
DESCRIPTION
"The MIB module for logging SNMP Notifications, that is, Traps
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
and Informs."
-- Revision History
REVISION "200011270000Z" -- 27 November 2000
DESCRIPTION "This is the initial version of this MIB.
Published as RFC 3014"
::= { mib-2 92 }
notificationLogMIBObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { notificationLogMIB 1 }
nlmConfig OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { notificationLogMIBObjects 1 }
nlmStats OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { notificationLogMIBObjects 2 }
nlmLog OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { notificationLogMIBObjects 3 }
--
-- Configuration Section
--
nlmConfigGlobalEntryLimit OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The maximum number of notification entries that may be held
in nlmLogTable for all nlmLogNames added together. A particular
setting does not guarantee that much data can be held.
If an application changes the limit while there are
Notifications in the log, the oldest Notifications MUST be
discarded to bring the log down to the new limit - thus the
value of nlmConfigGlobalEntryLimit MUST take precedence over
the values of nlmConfigGlobalAgeOut and nlmConfigLogEntryLimit,
even if the Notification being discarded has been present for
fewer minutes than the value of nlmConfigGlobalAgeOut, or if
the named log has fewer entries than that specified in
nlmConfigLogEntryLimit.
A value of 0 means no limit.
Please be aware that contention between multiple managers
trying to set this object to different values MAY affect the
reliability and completeness of data seen by each manager."
DEFVAL { 0 }
::= { nlmConfig 1 }
nlmConfigGlobalAgeOut OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
UNITS "minutes"
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The number of minutes a Notification SHOULD be kept in a log
before it is automatically removed.
If an application changes the value of nlmConfigGlobalAgeOut,
Notifications older than the new time MAY be discarded to meet the
new time.
A value of 0 means no age out.
Please be aware that contention between multiple managers
trying to set this object to different values MAY affect the
reliability and completeness of data seen by each manager."
DEFVAL { 1440 } -- 24 hours
::= { nlmConfig 2 }
--
-- Basic Log Configuration Table
--
nlmConfigLogTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF NlmConfigLogEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A table of logging control entries."
::= { nlmConfig 3 }
nlmConfigLogEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX NlmConfigLogEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A logging control entry. Depending on the entry's storage type
entries may be supplied by the system or created and deleted by
applications using nlmConfigLogEntryStatus."
INDEX { nlmLogName }
::= { nlmConfigLogTable 1 }
NlmConfigLogEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
nlmLogName SnmpAdminString,
nlmConfigLogFilterName SnmpAdminString,
nlmConfigLogEntryLimit Unsigned32,
nlmConfigLogAdminStatus INTEGER,
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
nlmConfigLogOperStatus INTEGER,
nlmConfigLogStorageType StorageType,
nlmConfigLogEntryStatus RowStatus
}
nlmLogName OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpAdminString (SIZE(0..32))
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The name of the log.
An implementation may allow multiple named logs, up to some
implementation-specific limit (which may be none). A
zero-length log name is reserved for creation and deletion by
the managed system, and MUST be used as the default log name by
systems that do not support named logs."
::= { nlmConfigLogEntry 1 }
nlmConfigLogFilterName OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpAdminString (SIZE(0..32))
MAX-ACCESS read-create
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A value of snmpNotifyFilterProfileName as used as an index
into the snmpNotifyFilterTable in the SNMP Notification MIB,
specifying the locally or remotely originated Notifications
to be filtered out and not logged in this log.
A zero-length value or a name that does not identify an
existing entry in snmpNotifyFilterTable indicate no
Notifications are to be logged in this log."
DEFVAL { ''H }
::= { nlmConfigLogEntry 2 }
nlmConfigLogEntryLimit OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS read-create
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The maximum number of notification entries that can be held in
nlmLogTable for this named log. A particular setting does not
guarantee that that much data can be held.
If an application changes the limit while there are
Notifications in the log, the oldest Notifications are discarded
to bring the log down to the new limit.
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
A value of 0 indicates no limit.
Please be aware that contention between multiple managers
trying to set this object to different values MAY affect the
reliability and completeness of data seen by each manager."
DEFVAL { 0 }
::= { nlmConfigLogEntry 3 }
nlmConfigLogAdminStatus OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX INTEGER { enabled(1), disabled(2) }
MAX-ACCESS read-create
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Control to enable or disable the log without otherwise
disturbing the log's entry.
Please be aware that contention between multiple managers
trying to set this object to different values MAY affect the
reliability and completeness of data seen by each manager."
DEFVAL { enabled }
::= { nlmConfigLogEntry 4 }
nlmConfigLogOperStatus OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX INTEGER { disabled(1), operational(2), noFilter(3) }
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The operational status of this log:
disabled administratively disabled
operational administratively enabled and working
noFilter administratively enabled but either
nlmConfigLogFilterName is zero length
or does not name an existing entry in
snmpNotifyFilterTable"
::= { nlmConfigLogEntry 5 }
nlmConfigLogStorageType OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX StorageType
MAX-ACCESS read-create
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The storage type of this conceptual row."
::= { nlmConfigLogEntry 6 }
nlmConfigLogEntryStatus OBJECT-TYPE
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
SYNTAX RowStatus
MAX-ACCESS read-create
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Control for creating and deleting entries. Entries may be
modified while active.
For non-null-named logs, the managed system records the security
credentials from the request that sets nlmConfigLogStatus
to 'active' and uses that identity to apply access control to
the objects in the Notification to decide if that Notification
may be logged."
::= { nlmConfigLogEntry 7 }
--
-- Statistics Section
--
nlmStatsGlobalNotificationsLogged OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
UNITS "notifications"
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The number of Notifications put into the nlmLogTable. This
counts a Notification once for each log entry, so a Notification
put into multiple logs is counted multiple times."
::= { nlmStats 1 }
nlmStatsGlobalNotificationsBumped OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
UNITS "notifications"
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The number of log entries discarded to make room for a new entry
due to lack of resources or the value of nlmConfigGlobalEntryLimit
or nlmConfigLogEntryLimit. This does not include entries discarded
due to the value of nlmConfigGlobalAgeOut."
::= { nlmStats 2 }
--
-- Log Statistics Table
--
nlmStatsLogTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF NlmStatsLogEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A table of Notification log statistics entries."
::= { nlmStats 3 }
nlmStatsLogEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX NlmStatsLogEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A Notification log statistics entry."
AUGMENTS { nlmConfigLogEntry }
::= { nlmStatsLogTable 1 }
NlmStatsLogEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
nlmStatsLogNotificationsLogged Counter32,
nlmStatsLogNotificationsBumped Counter32
}
nlmStatsLogNotificationsLogged OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
UNITS "notifications"
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The number of Notifications put in this named log."
::= { nlmStatsLogEntry 1 }
nlmStatsLogNotificationsBumped OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
UNITS "notifications"
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The number of log entries discarded from this named log to make
room for a new entry due to lack of resources or the value of
nlmConfigGlobalEntryLimit or nlmConfigLogEntryLimit. This does not
include entries discarded due to the value of
nlmConfigGlobalAgeOut."
::= { nlmStatsLogEntry 2 }
--
-- Log Section
--
--
-- Log Table
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
--
nlmLogTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF NlmLogEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A table of Notification log entries.
It is an implementation-specific matter whether entries in this
table are preserved across initializations of the management
system. In general one would expect that they are not.
Note that keeping entries across initializations of the
management system leads to some confusion with counters and
TimeStamps, since both of those are based on sysUpTime, which
resets on management initialization. In this situation,
counters apply only after the reset and nlmLogTime for entries
made before the reset MUST be set to 0."
::= { nlmLog 1 }
nlmLogEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX NlmLogEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A Notification log entry.
Entries appear in this table when Notifications occur and pass
filtering by nlmConfigLogFilterName and access control. They are
removed to make way for new entries due to lack of resources or
the values of nlmConfigGlobalEntryLimit, nlmConfigGlobalAgeOut, or
nlmConfigLogEntryLimit.
If adding an entry would exceed nlmConfigGlobalEntryLimit or system
resources in general, the oldest entry in any log SHOULD be removed
to make room for the new one.
If adding an entry would exceed nlmConfigLogEntryLimit the oldest
entry in that log SHOULD be removed to make room for the new one.
Before the managed system puts a locally-generated Notification
into a non-null-named log it assures that the creator of the log
has access to the information in the Notification. If not it
does not log that Notification in that log."
INDEX { nlmLogName, nlmLogIndex }
::= { nlmLogTable 1 }
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
NlmLogEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
nlmLogIndex Unsigned32,
nlmLogTime TimeStamp,
nlmLogDateAndTime DateAndTime,
nlmLogEngineID SnmpEngineID,
nlmLogEngineTAddress TAddress,
nlmLogEngineTDomain TDomain,
nlmLogContextEngineID SnmpEngineID,
nlmLogContextName SnmpAdminString,
nlmLogNotificationID OBJECT IDENTIFIER
}
nlmLogIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A monotonically increasing integer for the sole purpose of
indexing entries within the named log. When it reaches the
maximum value, an extremely unlikely event, the agent wraps the
value back to 1."
::= { nlmLogEntry 1 }
nlmLogTime OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TimeStamp
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value of sysUpTime when the entry was placed in the log. If
the entry occurred before the most recent management system
initialization this object value MUST be set to zero."
::= { nlmLogEntry 2 }
nlmLogDateAndTime OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX DateAndTime
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The local date and time when the entry was logged, instantiated
only by systems that have date and time capability."
::= { nlmLogEntry 3 }
nlmLogEngineID OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpEngineID
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The identification of the SNMP engine at which the Notification
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
originated.
If the log can contain Notifications from only one engine
or the Trap is in SNMPv1 format, this object is a zero-length
string."
::= { nlmLogEntry 4 }
nlmLogEngineTAddress OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TAddress
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The transport service address of the SNMP engine from which the
Notification was received, formatted according to the corresponding
value of nlmLogEngineTDomain. This is used to identify the source
of an SNMPv1 trap, since an nlmLogEngineId cannot be extracted
from the SNMPv1 trap pdu.
This object MUST always be instantiated, even if the log
can contain Notifications from only one engine.
Please be aware that the nlmLogEngineTAddress may not uniquely
identify the SNMP engine from which the Notification was received.
For example, if an SNMP engine uses DHCP or NAT to obtain
ip addresses, the address it uses may be shared with other
network devices, and hence will not uniquely identify the
SNMP engine."
::= { nlmLogEntry 5 }
nlmLogEngineTDomain OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TDomain
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Indicates the kind of transport service by which a Notification
was received from an SNMP engine. nlmLogEngineTAddress contains
the transport service address of the SNMP engine from which
this Notification was received.
Possible values for this object are presently found in the
Transport Mappings for SNMPv2 document (RFC 1906 [8])."
::= { nlmLogEntry 6 }
nlmLogContextEngineID OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpEngineID
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
"If the Notification was received in a protocol which has a
contextEngineID element like SNMPv3, this object has that value.
Otherwise its value is a zero-length string."
::= { nlmLogEntry 7 }
nlmLogContextName OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpAdminString
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The name of the SNMP MIB context from which the Notification came.
For SNMPv1 Traps this is the community string from the Trap."
::= { nlmLogEntry 8 }
nlmLogNotificationID OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The NOTIFICATION-TYPE object identifier of the Notification that
occurred."
::= { nlmLogEntry 9 }
--
-- Log Variable Table
--
nlmLogVariableTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF NlmLogVariableEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A table of variables to go with Notification log entries."
::= { nlmLog 2 }
nlmLogVariableEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX NlmLogVariableEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A Notification log entry variable.
Entries appear in this table when there are variables in
the varbind list of a Notification in nlmLogTable."
INDEX { nlmLogName, nlmLogIndex, nlmLogVariableIndex }
::= { nlmLogVariableTable 1 }
NlmLogVariableEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
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RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
nlmLogVariableIndex Unsigned32,
nlmLogVariableID OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
nlmLogVariableValueType INTEGER,
nlmLogVariableCounter32Val Counter32,
nlmLogVariableUnsigned32Val Unsigned32,
nlmLogVariableTimeTicksVal TimeTicks,
nlmLogVariableInteger32Val Integer32,
nlmLogVariableOctetStringVal OCTET STRING,
nlmLogVariableIpAddressVal IpAddress,
nlmLogVariableOidVal OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
nlmLogVariableCounter64Val Counter64,
nlmLogVariableOpaqueVal Opaque
}
nlmLogVariableIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A monotonically increasing integer, starting at 1 for a given
nlmLogIndex, for indexing variables within the logged
Notification."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 1 }
nlmLogVariableID OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The variable's object identifier."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 2 }
nlmLogVariableValueType OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX INTEGER { counter32(1), unsigned32(2), timeTicks(3),
integer32(4), ipAddress(5), octetString(6),
objectId(7), counter64(8), opaque(9) }
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The type of the value. One and only one of the value
objects that follow must be instantiated, based on this type."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 3 }
nlmLogVariableCounter32Val OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
Kavasseri Standards Track [Page 18]
RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
"The value when nlmLogVariableType is 'counter32'."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 4 }
nlmLogVariableUnsigned32Val OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when nlmLogVariableType is 'unsigned32'."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 5 }
nlmLogVariableTimeTicksVal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TimeTicks
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when nlmLogVariableType is 'timeTicks'."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 6 }
nlmLogVariableInteger32Val OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Integer32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when nlmLogVariableType is 'integer32'."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 7 }
nlmLogVariableOctetStringVal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX OCTET STRING
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when nlmLogVariableType is 'octetString'."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 8 }
nlmLogVariableIpAddressVal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX IpAddress
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when nlmLogVariableType is 'ipAddress'.
Although this seems to be unfriendly for IPv6, we
have to recognize that there are a number of older
MIBs that do contain an IPv4 format address, known
as IpAddress.
IPv6 addresses are represented using TAddress or
InetAddress, and so the underlying datatype is
Kavasseri Standards Track [Page 19]
RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
OCTET STRING, and their value would be stored in
the nlmLogVariableOctetStringVal column."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 9 }
nlmLogVariableOidVal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when nlmLogVariableType is 'objectId'."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 10 }
nlmLogVariableCounter64Val OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter64
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when nlmLogVariableType is 'counter64'."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 11 }
nlmLogVariableOpaqueVal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Opaque
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when nlmLogVariableType is 'opaque'."
::= { nlmLogVariableEntry 12 }
--
-- Conformance
--
notificationLogMIBConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
{ notificationLogMIB 3 }
notificationLogMIBCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
{ notificationLogMIBConformance 1 }
notificationLogMIBGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
{ notificationLogMIBConformance 2 }
-- Compliance
notificationLogMIBCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The compliance statement for entities which implement
the Notification Log MIB."
MODULE -- this module
Kavasseri Standards Track [Page 20]
RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
MANDATORY-GROUPS {
notificationLogConfigGroup,
notificationLogStatsGroup,
notificationLogLogGroup
}
OBJECT nlmConfigGlobalEntryLimit
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (0..4294967295)
MIN-ACCESS read-only
DESCRIPTION
"Implementations may choose a limit and not allow it to be
changed or may enforce an upper or lower bound on the
limit."
OBJECT nlmConfigLogEntryLimit
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (0..4294967295)
MIN-ACCESS read-only
DESCRIPTION
"Implementations may choose a limit and not allow it to be
changed or may enforce an upper or lower bound on the
limit."
OBJECT nlmConfigLogEntryStatus
MIN-ACCESS read-only
DESCRIPTION
"Implementations may disallow the creation of named logs."
GROUP notificationLogDateGroup
DESCRIPTION
"This group is mandatory on systems that keep wall clock
date and time and should not be implemented on systems that
do not have a wall clock date."
::= { notificationLogMIBCompliances 1 }
-- Units of Conformance
notificationLogConfigGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
nlmConfigGlobalEntryLimit,
nlmConfigGlobalAgeOut,
nlmConfigLogFilterName,
nlmConfigLogEntryLimit,
nlmConfigLogAdminStatus,
nlmConfigLogOperStatus,
nlmConfigLogStorageType,
nlmConfigLogEntryStatus
}
Kavasseri Standards Track [Page 21]
RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Notification log configuration management."
::= { notificationLogMIBGroups 1 }
notificationLogStatsGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
nlmStatsGlobalNotificationsLogged,
nlmStatsGlobalNotificationsBumped,
nlmStatsLogNotificationsLogged,
nlmStatsLogNotificationsBumped
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Notification log statistics."
::= { notificationLogMIBGroups 2 }
notificationLogLogGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
nlmLogTime,
nlmLogEngineID,
nlmLogEngineTAddress,
nlmLogEngineTDomain,
nlmLogContextEngineID,
nlmLogContextName,
nlmLogNotificationID,
nlmLogVariableID,
nlmLogVariableValueType,
nlmLogVariableCounter32Val,
nlmLogVariableUnsigned32Val,
nlmLogVariableTimeTicksVal,
nlmLogVariableInteger32Val,
nlmLogVariableOctetStringVal,
nlmLogVariableIpAddressVal,
nlmLogVariableOidVal,
nlmLogVariableCounter64Val,
nlmLogVariableOpaqueVal
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Notification log data."
::= { notificationLogMIBGroups 3 }
notificationLogDateGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
nlmLogDateAndTime
}
STATUS current
Kavasseri Standards Track [Page 22]
RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
DESCRIPTION
"Conditionally mandatory notification log data.
This group is mandatory on systems that keep wall
clock date and time and should not be implemented
on systems that do not have a wall clock date."
::= { notificationLogMIBGroups 4 }
END
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
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proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can
be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice
this standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive
Director.
[RFC2571] Harrington, D., Presuhn, R. and B. Wijnen, "An
Architecture for Describing SNMP Management Frameworks",
RFC 2571, April 1999.
[RFC1155] Rose, M. and K. McCloghrie, "Structure and Identification
of Management Information for TCP/IP-based Internets",
STD 16, RFC 1155, May 1990.
[RFC1212] Rose, M. and K. McCloghrie, "Concise MIB Definitions",
STD 16, RFC 1212, March 1991.
[RFC1215] Rose, M., "A Convention for Defining Traps for use with
the SNMP", RFC 1215, March 1991.
Kavasseri Standards Track [Page 23]
RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
[RFC2578] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J.,
Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser, "Structure of Management
Information Version 2 (SMIv2)", STD 58, RFC 2578, April
1999.
[RFC2579] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J.,
Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser, "Textual Conventions for
SMIv2", STD 58, RFC 2579, April 1999.
[RFC2580] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J.,
Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser, "Conformance Statements for
SMIv2", STD 58, RFC 2580, April 1999.
[RFC1157] Case, J., Fedor, M., Schoffstall, M. and J. Davin,
"Simple Network Management Protocol", STD 15, RFC 1157,
May 1990.
[RFC1901] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,
"Introduction to Community-based SNMPv2", RFC 1901,
January 1996.
[RFC1906] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,
"Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1906, January 1996.
[RFC2572] Case, J., Harrington D., Presuhn R. and B. Wijnen,
"Message Processing and Dispatching for the Simple
Network Management Protocol (SNMP)", RFC 2572, April
1999.
[RFC2574] Blumenthal, U. and B. Wijnen, "User-based Security Model
(USM) for version 3 of the Simple Network Management
Protocol (SNMPv3)", RFC 2574, April 1999.
[RFC1905] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,
"Protocol Operations for Version 2 of the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1905, January 1996.
[RFC2573] Levi, D., Meyer, P. and B. Stewart, "SNMPv3
Applications", RFC 2573, April 1999.
[RFC2575] Wijnen, B., Presuhn, R. and K. McCloghrie, "View-based
Access Control Model (VACM) for the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMP)", RFC 2575, April 1999.
[RFC2570] Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D. and B. Stewart,
"Introduction to Version 3 of the Internet-standard
Network Management Framework", RFC 2570, April 1999.
Kavasseri Standards Track [Page 24]
RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
Bob Stewart
Cisco Systems, Inc.
170 West Tasman Drive
San Jose, CA 95134-1706
U.S.A.
Ramanathan Kavasseri
Cisco Systems, Inc.
170 West Tasman Drive
San Jose, CA 95134-1706
U.S.A.
Phone: +1 408 527 2446
EMail: ramk@cisco.com
Kavasseri Standards Track [Page 25]
RFC 3014 Notification Log MIB November 2000
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.
This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
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included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
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Acknowledgement
Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
Internet Society.
Kavasseri Standards Track [Page 26]