分享
 
 
 

RFC1909 - An Administrative Infrastructure for SNMPv2

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
窄屏简体版  字體: |||超大  

Network Working Group K. McCloghrie, Editor

Request for Comments: 1909 Cisco Systems, Inc.

Category: EXPerimental February 1996

An Administrative InfrastrUCture for SNMPv2

Status of this Memo

This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet

community. This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any

kind. Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.

Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction ................................................ 2

2. Overview .................................................... 2

2.1 Contexts ................................................... 3

2.2 Authorization: Access Rights and MIB Views ................. 3

2.3 Authentication and Privacy ................................. 4

2.4 Access Control ............................................. 5

2.5 Security Models ............................................ 5

2.6 Proxy ...................................................... 5

3. Elements of the Model ....................................... 7

3.1 SNMPv2 Entity .............................................. 7

3.2 SNMPv2 Agent ............................................... 7

3.3 SNMPv2 Manager ............................................. 8

3.4 SNMPv2 Dual-Role Entity .................................... 8

3.5 View SuBTree and Families .................................. 9

3.6 MIB View ................................................... 9

3.7 SNMPv2 Context ............................................. 10

3.7.1 Local SNMPv2 Context ..................................... 11

3.7.2 Proxy SNMPv2 Context ..................................... 11

3.8 SNMPv2 PDUs and Operations ................................. 12

3.8.1 The Report-PDU ........................................... 12

3.9 SNMPv2 Access Control Policy ............................... 13

4. Security Considerations ..................................... 13

5. Editor's Address ............................................ 14

6. Acknowledgements ............................................ 14

7. References .................................................. 14

Appendix A Disambiguating the SNMPv2 Protocol Definition ....... 16

Appendix B Who Sends Inform-Requests? ......................... 17

Appendix B.1 Management Philosophy ............................. 17

Appendix B.2 The Danger of Trap Storms ......................... 17

Appendix B.3 Inform-Requests ................................... 18

1. Introduction

A management system contains: several (potentially many) nodes, each

with a processing entity, termed an agent, which has access to

management instrumentation; at least one management station; and, a

management protocol, used to convey management information between

the agents and management stations. Operations of the protocol are

carried out under an administrative framework which defines

authentication, authorization, access control, and privacy policies.

Management stations execute management applications which monitor and

control managed elements. Managed elements are devices such as

hosts, routers, terminal servers, etc., which are monitored and

controlled via access to their management information.

It is the purpose of this document, An Administrative Infrastructure

for SNMPv2, to define an administrative framework which realizes

effective management in a variety of configurations and environments.

The SNMPv2 framework is fully described in [1-6]. This framework is

derived from the original Internet-standard Network Management

Framework (SNMPv1), which consists of these three documents:

STD 16, RFC1155 [7] which defines the Structure of Management

Information (SMI), the mechanisms used for describing and naming

objects for the purpose of management.

STD 16, RFC1212 [8] which defines a more concise description

mechanism, which is wholly consistent with the SMI.

STD 15, RFC1157 [9] which defines the Simple Network Management

Protocol (SNMP), the protocol used for network access to managed

objects.

For information on coexistence between SNMPv1 and SNMPv2, consult

[10].

2. Overview

A management domain typically contains a large amount of management

information. Each individual item of management information is an

instance of a managed object type. The definition of a related set

of managed object types is contained in a Management Information Base

(MIB) module. Many such MIB modules are defined. For each managed

object type it describes, a MIB module defines not only the semantics

and syntax of that managed object type, but also the method of

identifying an individual instance so that multiple instances of the

same managed object type can be distinguished.

2.1. Contexts

Typically, there are many instances of each managed object type

within a management domain. For simplicity, the method for

identifying instances specified by the MIB module does not allow each

instance to be distinguished amongst the set of all instances within

the management domain; rather, it allows each instance to be

identified only within some scope or "context", where there are

multiple such contexts within the management domain. Often, a

context is a physical device, or perhaps, a logical device, although

a context can also encompass multiple devices, or a subset of a

single device, or even a subset of multiple devices. Thus, in order

to identify an individual item of management information within the

management domain, its context must be identified in addition to its

object type and its instance.

For example, the managed object type, ifDescr [11], is defined as the

description of a network interface. To identify the description of

device-X's first network interface, three pieces of information are

needed, e.g., device-X (the context), ifDescr (the managed object

type), and "1" (the instance).

Note that each context has (at least) one globally-unique

identification within the management domain. Note also that the same

item of management information can exist in multiple contexts. So,

an item of management information can have multiple globally-unique

identifications, either because it exists in multiple contexts,

and/or because each such context has multiple globally-unique

identifications.

2.2. Authorization: Access Rights and MIB Views

For security reasons, it is often valuable to be able to restrict the

access rights of some management applications to only a subset of the

management information in the management domain. To provide this

capability, access to a context is via a "MIB view" which details a

specific set of managed object types (and optionally, the specific

instances of object types) within that context. For example, for a

given context, there will typically always be one MIB view which

provides access to all management information in that context, and

often there will be other MIB views each of which contains some

subset of the information. So, by providing access rights to a

management application in terms of the particular (subset) MIB view

it can access for that context, then the management application is

restricted in the desired manner.

Since managed object types (and their instances) are identified via

the tree-like naming structure of ISO's OBJECT IDENTIFIERs [12, 1],

it is convenient to define a MIB view as the combination of a set of

"view subtrees", where each view subtree is a sub-tree within the

managed object naming tree. Thus, a simple MIB view (e.g., all

managed objects within the Internet Network Management Framework) can

be defined as a single view sub-tree, while more complicated MIB

views (e.g., all information relevant to a particular network

interface) can be represented by the union of multiple view sub-

trees.

While any set of managed objects can be described by the union of

some number of view subtrees, situations can arise that would require

a very large number of view subtrees. This could happen, for

example, when specifying all columns in one conceptual row of a MIB

table because they would appear in separate subtrees, one per column,

each with a very similar format. Because the formats are similar,

the required set of subtrees can easily be aggregated into one

structure. This structure is named a family of view subtrees after

the set of subtrees that it conceptually represents. A family of

view subtrees can either be included or excluded from a MIB view.

In addition to restricting access rights by identifying (sub-)sets of

management information, it is also valuable to restrict the requests

allowed on the management information within a particular context.

For example, one management application might be prohibited from

write-access to a particular context, while another might be allowed

to perform any type of operation.

2.3. Authentication and Privacy

The enforcement of access rights requires the means not only to

identify the entity on whose behalf a request is generated but also

to authenticate such identification. Another security capability

which is (optionally) provided is the ability to protect the data

within an SNMPv2 operation from disclosure (i.e., to encrypt the

data). This is particularly useful when sensitive data (e.g.,

passWords, or security keys) are accessed via SNMPv2 requests.

Recommendations for which algorithms are best for authentication and

privacy are subject to change. Such changes may occur as and when

new research results on the vulnerability of various algorithms are

published, and/or with the prevailing status of export control and

patent issues. Thus, it is valuable to allow these algorithms to be

specified as parameters, so that new algorithms can be accommodated

over time. In particular, one type of algorithm which may become

useful in the future is the set of algorithms associated with

asymmetric (public key) cryptography.

Note that not all accesses via SNMPv2 requests need to be secure.

Indeed, there are purposes for which insecure access is required.

One example of this is the ability of a management application to

learn about devices of which it has no previous knowledge. Another

example is to perform any synchronization which the security

algorithms need before they can be used to communicate securely.

This need for insecure access is accommodated by defining one of the

algorithms for authentication as providing no authentication, and

similarly, one of the algorithms for privacy as providing no

protection against disclosure. (The combination of these two

insecure algorithms is sometimes referred to as "noAuth/noPriv".)

2.4. Access Control

An access control policy specifies the types of SNMPv2 requests and

associated MIB views which are authorized for a particular identity

(on whose behalf a request is generated) when using a particular

level of security to access a particular context.

2.5. Security Models

A security model defines the mechanisms used to achieve an

administratively-defined level of security for protocol interactions:

(1) by defining the security parameters associated with a

communication, including the authentication and privacy algorithms

and the security keys (if any) used.

(2) by defining how entities on whose behalf requests are generated are

identified.

(3) by defining how contexts are identified.

(4) by defining the mechanisms by which an access control policy is

derived whenever management information is to be accessed.

2.6. Proxy

It is an SNMPv2 agent which responds to requests for access to

management information. Each such request is contained within an

SNMPv2 message which provides the capability to perform a single

operation on a list of items of management information. Rather than

having to identify the context as well as the managed object type and

instance for each item of management information, each SNMPv2 message

is concerned with only a single context. Thus, an SNMPv2 agent must

be able to process requests for all items of management information

within the one or more contexts it supports.

In responding to a request, an SNMPv2 agent might be acting as a

proxy for some other agent. The term "proxy" has historically been

used very loosely, with multiple different meanings. These different

meanings include (among others):

(1) the forwarding of SNMPv2 requests on to other SNMP agents without

regard for what managed object types are being accessed; for

example, in order to forward SNMPv2 request from one transport

domain to another, or to translate SNMPv2 requests into SNMPv1

requests;

(2) the translation of SNMPv2 requests into operations of some non-SNMP

management protocol;

(3) support for aggregated managed objects where the value of one

managed object instance depends upon the values of multiple other

(remote) items of management information.

Each of these scenarios can be advantageous; for example, support for

aggregation for management information can significantly reduce the

bandwidth requirements of large-scale management activities.

However, using a single term to cover multiple different scenarios

causes confusion.

To avoid such confusion, this SNMPv2 administrative framework uses

the term "proxy" with a much more tightly defined meaning, which

covers only the first of those listed above. Specifically, the

distinction between a "regular SNMPv2 agent" and a "proxy SNMPv2

agent" is simple:

- a proxy SNMPv2 agent is an SNMPv2 agent which forwards requests on

to other agents according to the context, and irrespective of the

specific managed object types being accessed;

- in contrast, an SNMPv2 agent which processes SNMPv2 requests

according to the (names of the) individual managed object types and

instances being accessed, is NOT a proxy SNMPv2 agent from the

perspective of this administrative model.

Thus, when an SNMPv2 agent acts as a proxy SNMPv2 agent for a

particular context, although information on how to forward the

request is specifically associated with that context, the proxy

SNMPv2 agent has no need of a detailed definition of the MIB view

(since the proxy SNMPv2 agent forwards the request irrespective of

the managed object types).

In contrast, a SNMPv2 agent operating without proxy must have the

detailed definition of the MIB view, and even if it needs to issue

requests to other agents, that need is dependent on the individual

managed object instances being accessed (i.e., not only on the

context).

3. Elements of the Model

This section provides a more formal description of the model.

3.1. SNMPv2 Entity

An SNMPv2 entity is an actual process which performs management

operations by generating and/or responding to SNMPv2 protocol

messages in the manner specified in [4]. An SNMPv2 entity assumes

the identity of a particular administrative entity when processing an

SNMPv2 message.

An SNMPv2 entity is not required to process multiple protocol

messages concurrently, regardless of whether such messages require it

to assume the identity of the same or different administrative

entity. Thus, an implementation of an SNMPv2 entity which supports

more than one administrative entity need not be multi-threaded.

However, there may be situations where implementors may choose to use

multi-threading.

An SNMPv2 entity listens for incoming, unsolicited SNMPv2 messages on

each transport service address for which it is configured to do so.

It is a local matter whether an SNMPv2 entity also listens for SNMPv2

messages on any other transport service addresses. In the absence of

any other information on where to listen, an SNMPv2 entity must

listen on the transport service addresses corresponding to the

standard transport-layer "ports" [5] on its local network-layer

addresses.

3.2. SNMPv2 Agent

An SNMPv2 agent is the operational role assumed by an SNMPv2 entity

when it acts in an agent role. Specifically, an SNMPv2 agent

performs SNMPv2 management operations in response to received SNMPv2

protocol messages (except for inform notifications).

In order to be manageable, all network components need to be

instrumented. SNMPv2 access to the instrumented information is via

the managed objects supported by an SNMPv2 agent in one or more

contexts.

3.3. SNMPv2 Manager

An SNMPv2 manager is the operational role assumed by an SNMPv2 entity

when it acts in a manager role on behalf of management applications.

Specifically, an SNMPv2 manager initiates SNMPv2 management

operations by the generation of appropriate SNMPv2 protocol messages,

or when it receives and processes trap and inform notifications.

It is interesting to consider the case of managing an SNMPv2 manager.

It is highly desirable that an SNMPv2 manager, just like any other

networking application, be instrumented for the purposes of being

managed. Such instrumentation of an SNMPv2 manager (just like for

any other networking application) is accessible via the managed

objects supported by an SNMPv2 agent. As such, an SNMPv2 manager is

no different from any other network application in that it has

instrumentation, but does not itself have managed objects.

That is, an SNMPv2 manager does not itself have managed objects.

Rather, it is an associated SNMPv2 agent supporting managed objects

which provides access to the SNMPv2 manager's instrumentation.

3.4. SNMPv2 Dual-Role Entity

An SNMPv2 entity which sometimes acts in an agent role and sometimes

acts in a manager role, is termed an SNMPv2 dual-role entity. An

SNMPv2 dual-role entity initiates requests by acting in a manager

role, and processes requests regarding management information

accessible to it (locally or via proxy) through acting in an agent

role. In the case of sending inform notifications, an SNMPv2 dual-

role entity acts in a manager role in initiating an inform

notification containing management information which is accessible to

it when acting in an agent role.

An SNMPv2 entity which can act only in an SNMPv2 manager role is not

SNMP-manageable, since there is no way to access its management

instrumentation. In order to be SNMP-manageable, an SNMPv2 entity

must be able to act in an SNMPv2 agent role in order to allow its

instrumentation to be accessed. Thus, it is highly desirable that

all SNMPv2 entities be either SNMPv2 agents or SNMPv2 dual-role

entities.

There are two categories of SNMPv2 dual-role entities: proxy SNMPv2

agents and (so-called) mid-level managers. Proxy SNMPv2 agents only

forward requests/responses; they do not originate requests. In

contrast, mid-level managers often originate requests. (Note that

the term proxy SNMPv2 agent does not include an SNMPv2 agent which

translates SNMPv2 requests into the requests of some other management

protocol; see section 2.6.)

3.5. View Subtree and Families

A view subtree is the set of all MIB object instances which have a

common ASN.1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER prefix to their names. A view subtree

is identified by the OBJECT IDENTIFIER value which is the longest

OBJECT IDENTIFIER prefix common to all (potential) MIB object

instances in that subtree.

A family of view subtrees is a pairing of an OBJECT IDENTIFIER value

(called the family name) together with a bitstring value (called the

family mask). The family mask indicates which sub-identifiers of the

associated family name are significant to the family's definition.

For each possible managed object instance, that instance belongs to a

particular view subtree family if both of the following conditions

are true:

o the OBJECT IDENTIFIER name of the managed object instance contains

at least as many sub-identifiers as does the family name, and

o each sub-identifier in the OBJECT IDENTIFIER name of the managed

object instance matches the corresponding sub-identifier of the

family name whenever the corresponding bit of the associated family

mask is non-zero.

When the configured value of the family mask is all ones, the view

subtree family is identical to the single view subtree identified by

the family name.

When the configured value of the family mask is shorter than required

to perform the above test, its value is implicitly extended with

ones. Consequently, a view subtree family having a family mask of

zero length always corresponds to a single view subtree.

3.6. MIB View

A MIB view is a subset of the set of all instances of all object

types defined according to the SMI [1] within an SNMPv2 context,

subject to the following constraints:

o It is possible to specify a MIB view which contains the full set of

all object instances within an SNMPv2 context.

o Each object instance within a MIB view is uniquely named by an

ASN.1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER value.

As such, identically named instances of a particular object type must

be contained within different SNMPv2 contexts. That is, a particular

object instance name resolves within a particular SNMPv2 context to

at most one object instance.

A MIB view is defined as a collection of view subtree families, where

each view subtree family has a type. The type determines whether the

view subtree family is included in, or excluded from, the MIB view.

A managed object instance is contained/not contained within the MIB

view according to the view subtree families to which the instance

belongs:

o If a managed object instance belongs to none of the relevant

subtree families, then that instance is not in the MIB view.

o If a managed object instance belongs to exactly one of the relevant

subtree families, then that instance is included in, or excluded

from, the relevant MIB view according to the type of that subtree

family.

o If a managed object instance belongs to more than one of the

relevant subtree families, then that instance is included in, or

excluded from, the relevant MIB view according to the type of a

particular one of the subtree families to which it belongs. The

particular subtree family is the one for which, first, the

associated family name comprises the greatest number of sub-

identifiers, and, second, the associated family name is

lexicographically greatest.

3.7. SNMPv2 Context

An SNMPv2 context is a collection of management information

accessible by an SNMPv2 entity. The collection of management

information identified by a context is either local or proxy.

For a local SNMPv2 context which is realized by an SNMPv2 entity,

that SNMPv2 entity uses locally-defined mechanisms to access the

management information identified by the SNMPv2 context.

For a proxy SNMPv2 context, the SNMPv2 entity acts as a proxy SNMPv2

agent to access the management information identified by the SNMPv2

context.

The term remote SNMPv2 context is used at an SNMPv2 manager to

indicate a SNMPv2 context (either local or proxy) which is not

realized by the local SNMPv2 entity (i.e., the local SNMPv2 entity

uses neither locally-defined mechanisms, nor acts as a proxy SNMPv2

agent, to access the management information identified by the SNMPv2

context).

3.7.1. Local SNMPv2 Context

A local context refers to a collection of MIB objects which

(logically) belong to a single entity within a managed device. When

an SNMPv2 entity accesses that management information, it does so

using locally-defined mechanisms.

Because a device may contain several such local entities, each local

context has associated with it a "local entity" name. Further,

because management information changes over time, each local context

also has associated with it an associated temporal domain, termed its

"local time". This allows, for example, one context to refer to the

current values of a device's parameters, and a different context to

refer to the values that the same parameters for the same device will

have after the device's next restart.

3.7.2. Proxy SNMPv2 Context

A proxy relationship exists when a proxy SNMPv2 agent processes a

received SNMPv2 message (a request or a response) by forwarding it to

another entity, solely according to the SNMPv2 context of the

received message. Such a context is called a proxy SNMPv2 context.

When an SNMPv2 entity processes management requests/responses for a

proxy context, it is operating as a proxy SNMPv2 agent.

The transparency principle that defines the behavior of an SNMPv2

entity in general, applies in particular to a proxy SNMPv2 context:

The manner in which a receiving SNMPv2 entity processes SNMPv2

protocol messages sent by another SNMPv2 entity is entirely

transparent to the sending SNMPv2 entity.

Implicit in the transparency principle is the requirement that the

semantics of SNMPv2 management operations are preserved between any

two SNMPv2 peers. In particular, the "as if simultaneous" semantics

of a

Set operation are extremely difficult to guarantee if its scope

extends to management information resident at multiple network

locations. Note however, that agents which support the forwarding of

Set operations concerning information at multiple locations are not

considered to be proxy SNMPv2 agents (see section 2.6 above).

Also implicit in the transparency principle is the requirement that,

throughout its interaction with a proxy SNMPv2 agent, an SNMPv2

manager is supplied with no information about the nature or progress

of the proxy mechanisms used to perform its requests. That is, it

should seem to the SNMPv2 manager (except for any distinction in an

underlying transport address) as if it were interacting via SNMPv2

directly with the proxied device. Thus, a timeout in the

communication between a proxy SNMPv2 agent and its proxied device

should be represented as a timeout in the communication between the

SNMPv2 manager and the proxy SNMPv2 agent. Similarly, an error

response from a proxied device should - as much as possible - be

represented by the corresponding error response in the interaction

between the proxy SNMPv2 agent and SNMPv2 manager.

3.8. SNMPv2 PDUs and Operations

An SNMPv2 PDU is defined in [4]. Each SNMPv2 PDU specifies a

particular operation, one of:

GetBulkRequest

GetNextRequest

GetRequest

Inform

Report

Response

SNMPv2-Trap

SetRequest

3.8.1. The Report-PDU

[4] requires that an administrative framework which makes use of the

Report-PDU must define its usage and semantics. With this

administrative framework, the Report-PDU differs from the other PDU

types described in [4] in that it is not a protocol operation between

SNMPv2 managers and agents, but rather is an ASPect of error-

reporting between SNMPv2 entities. Specifically, it is an interaction

between two protocol engines.

A communication between SNMPv2 entities is in the form of an SNMPv2

message. Such a message is formatted as a "wrapper" encapsulating a

PDU according to the "Elements of Procedure" for the security model

used for transmission of the message.

While processing a received communication, an SNMPv2 entity may

determine that the received message is unacceptable due to a problem

associated with the contents of the message "wrapper". In this case,

an appropriate counter is incremented and the received message is

discarded without further processing (and without transmission of a

Response-PDU).

However, if an SNMPv2 entity acting in the agent role makes such a

determination, then after incrementing the appropriate counter, it

may be required to generate a Report-PDU and to send it to the

transport address which originated the received message.

If the agent is able to determine the value of the request-id field

of the received PDU [4], then it must use that value for the

request-id field of the Report-PDU. Otherwise, the value 2147483647

is used.

The error-status and error-index fields of the Report-PDU are always

set to zero. The variable-bindings field contains a single variable:

the identity of the counter which was incremented and its new value.

There is at least one case in which a Report-PDU must not be sent by

an SNMPv2 entity acting in the agent role: if the received message

was tagged as a Report-PDU. Particular security models may identify

other such cases.

3.9. SNMPv2 Access Control Policy

An SNMPv2 access policy specifies the types of SNMPv2 operations

authorized for a particular identity using a particular level of

security, and if the operation is to be performed on a local SNMPv2

context, two accessible MIB views. The two MIB views are a read-view

and a write-view. A read-view is a set of object instances

authorized for the identity when reading objects. Reading objects

occurs when processing a retrieval (get, get-next, get-bulk)

operation and when sending a notification. A write-view is the set

of object instances authorized for the identity when writing objects.

Writing objects occurs when processing a set operation. An

identity's access rights may be different at different agents.

A security model defines how an SNMPv2 access policy is derived;

however, the application of an SNMPv2 access control policy is

performed only:

o on receipt of GetRequest, GetNextRequest, GetBulkRequest, and

SetRequest operations; and

o prior to transmission of SNMPv2-Trap and Inform operations.

Note that application of an SNMPv2 access control policy is never

performed for Response or Report operations.

4. Security Considerations

Security issues are not directly discussed in this memo.

5. Editor's Address

Keith McCloghrie

Cisco Systems, Inc.

170 West Tasman Drive

San Jose, CA 95134-1706

US

Phone: +1 408 526 5260

EMail: kzm@cisco.com

6. Acknowledgements

This document is the result of significant work by three major

contributors:

Keith McCloghrie (Cisco Systems, kzm@cisco.com)

Marshall T. Rose (Dover Beach Consulting, mrose@dbc.mtview.ca.us)

Glenn W. Waters (Bell-Northern Research Ltd., gwaters@bnr.ca)

The authors wish to acknowledge James M. Galvin of Trusted

Information Systems who contributed significantly to earlier work on

which this memo is based, and the general contributions of members of

the SNMPv2 Working Group, and, in particular, Aleksey Y. Romanov and

Steven L. Waldbusser.

A special thanks is extended for the contributions of:

Uri Blumenthal (IBM)

Shawn Routhier (Epilogue)

Barry Sheehan (IBM)

Bert Wijnen (IBM)

7. References

[1] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and

S. Waldbusser, "Structure of Management Information for Version 2

of the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC1902,

January 1996.

[2] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and

S. Waldbusser, "Textual Conventions for Version 2 of the Simple

Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC1903, January 1996.

[3] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and

S., Waldbusser, "Conformance Statements for Version 2 of the Simple

Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC1904, January 1996.

[4] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and

S. Waldbusser, "Protocol Operations for Version 2 of the Simple

Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC1905, January 1996.

[5] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and

Waldbusser, S., "Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple

Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC1906, January 1996.

[6] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and

Waldbusser, S., "Management Information Base for Version 2 of the

Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC1907,

January 1996.

[7] Rose, M., and K. McCloghrie, "Structure and Identification of

Management Information for TCP/IP-based internets", STD 16, RFC

1155, May 1990.

[8] Rose, M., and K. McCloghrie, "Concise MIB Definitions", STD 16,

RFC1212, March 1991.

[9] Case, J., Fedor, M., Schoffstall, M., and J. Davin, "Simple

Network Management Protocol", STD 15, RFC1157, SNMP Research,

Performance Systems International, MIT Laboratory for Computer

Science, May 1990.

[10] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and

Waldbusser, S., "Coexistence between Version 1 and Version 2 of the

Internet-standard Network Management Framework", RFC1908, January

1996.

[11] McCloghrie, K., and F. Kastenholz, "Evolution of the Interfaces

Group of MIB-II", RFC1573, Cisco Systems, FTP Software, January

1994.

[12] Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection -

Specification of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1),

International Organization for Standardization. International

Standard 8824, (December, 1987).

APPENDIX A - Disambiguating the SNMPv2 Protocol Definition

The descriptions in [4] of the role in which an SNMPv2 entity acts when

sending an Inform-Request PDU are ambiguous. The following updates

serve to remove those ambiguities.

(1) Add the following sentence to section 2.1:

Further, when an SNMPv2 entity sends an inform notification,

it acts in a manager role in respect to initiating the

operation, but the management information contained in the

inform notification is associated with that entity acting in

an agent role. By convention, the inform is sent from the

same transport address as the associated agent role is

listening on.

(2) Modify the last sentence of the second paragraph in section 2.3:

This type is used by one SNMPv2 entity, acting in a manager

role, to notify another SNMPv2 entity, also acting in a

manager role, of management information associated with the

sending SNMPv2 entity acting in an agent role.

(3) Modify the second paragraph of section 4.2 (concerning the

generation of Inform-Request PDUs):

It is mandatory that all SNMPv2 entities acting in a manager

role be able to generate the following PDU types: GetRequest-

PDU, GetNextRequest-PDU, GetBulkRequest-PDU, SetRequest-PDU,

and Response-PDU; further, all such implementations must be

able to receive the following PDU types: Response-PDU,

SNMPv2-Trap-PDU, InformRequest-PDU. It is mandatory that all

dual-role SNMPv2 entities must be able to generate an Inform-

Request PDU.

(4) Modify the first paragraph of section 4.2.7:

An InformRequest-PDU is generated and transmitted at the

request of an application in a SNMPv2 entity acting in a

manager role, that wishes to notify another application (via

an SNMPv2 entity also acting in a manager role) of information

in a MIB view which is accessible to the sending SNMPv2 entity

when acting in an agent role.

APPENDIX B - Who Sends Inform-Requests?

B.1. Management Philosophy

Ever since its beginnings as SGMP, through its definition as SNMPv1,

and continuing with the definition of SNMPv2, SNMP has embodied more

than just a management protocol and the definitions of MIB objects.

Specifically, SNMP has also had a fundamental philosophy of

management, consisting of a number of design strategies. These

strategies have always included the following:

(1) The impact of incorporating an SNMP agent into a system should be

minimal, so that both: a) it is feasible to do so even in the

smallest/cheapest of systems, and b) the operational role and

performance of a system is not compromised by the inclusion of an

SNMP agent. This promotes widespread development, which allows

ubiquitous deployment of manageable systems.

(2) Every system (potentially) incorporates an SNMP agent. In

contrast, the number of SNMP managers is limited. Thus, there is a

significantly larger number of SNMP agents than SNMP managers.

Therefore, overall system development/complexity/cost is optimized

if the SNMP agent is allowed to be simple and any required

complexity is performed by an SNMP manager.

(3) The number of unsolicited messages generated by SNMP agents is

minimized. This enables the amount of network management traffic

to be controlled by the small number of SNMP managers which are

(more) directly controlled by network operators. In fact, this

control is considered of greater importance than any additional

protocol overhead which might be incurred. Monitoring of network

state at any significant level of detail is accomplished primarily

by SNMP managers polling for the appropriate information, with the

use of unsolicited messages confined to those situations where it

is necessary to properly guide an SNMP manager regarding the timing

and focus of its polling. This strategy is sometimes referred to

as "trap-directed polling".

B.2. The Danger of Trap Storms

The need for such control over the amount of network management

traffic is due to the potential that the SNMP manager receiving an

unsolicited message does not want, no longer wants, or already knows

of the information contained in the message. This potential is

significantly reduced by having the majority of messages be specific

requests for information by SNMP managers and responses (to those

requests) from SNMP agents.

The danger of not having the amount of network management be

controlled in this manner is the potential for a "storm" of useless

traps. As a simple example of "useless", consider that after a

building power outage, every device in the network sends a coldStart

trap, even though every SNMP manager and every network operator

already knows what happened. For a simple example of "storm",

consider the result if each transmitted trap caused the sending of

another. The greater the number of problems in the state of the

network, the greater the risk of such a storm occurring, especially

in the unstructured, heterogeneous environment typical of today's

internets.

While SNMP philosophy considers the above to be more important than

any lack of reliability in unsolicited messages, some

users/developers have been wary of using traps because of the use

(typically) of an unreliable transport protocol and because traps are

not acknowledged. However, following this logic would imply that

having acknowledged-traps would make them reliable; of course, this

is false since no amount of re- transmission will succeed if the

receiver and/or the connectivity to the receiver is down. A SNMP

manager cannot just sit and wait and assume the network is fine just

because it is not receiving any unsolicited messages.

B.3. Inform-Requests

One of the new features of SNMPv2 is the Inform-request PDU. The

Inform-Request contains management information specified in terms of

MIB objects for a context supported by the sender. Since by

definition, an SNMPv2 manager does not itself have managed objects

(see sections 3.3), the managed objects contained in the Inform-

request belong to a context of an SNMPv2 agent, just like the managed

objects contained in an SNMPv2-Trap.

However, it is not the purpose of an Inform-request to change the

above described philosophy, i.e., it would be wrong to consider it as

an "acknowledged trap". To do so, would make the likelihood and

effect of trap storms worse. Recall the building power outage

example: with regular traps, the SNMP manager's buffer just

overflows when it receives messages faster than it can cope with; in

contrast, if every device in the network were to send a coldStart

Inform-request, then after a power outage, all will re-transmit their

Inform-request several times unless the receiving SNMP managers send

responses. In the best case when no messages are lost or re-

transmitted, there are twice as many useless messages; in the worst

case, the SNMP manager is unable to respond at all and every message

is re-transmitted its maximum number of times.

The above serves to explain the rationale behind the definition (see

Appendix A's update to section 4.2.7 of [4]) that:

An InformRequest-PDU is generated and transmitted at the request of

an application in a SNMPv2 entity acting in a manager role, that

wishes to notify another application (via an SNMPv2 entity also

acting in a manager role) of information in a MIB view which is

accessible to the sending SNMPv2 entity when acting in an agent

role.

This definition says that SNMPv2 agents do not send Inform-Requests,

which has three implications (ordered in terms of importance):

(1) the number of devices which send Inform-requests is required to be

a small subset of all devices in the network;

(2) while some devices traditionally considered to be SNMP agents are

perfectly capable of sending Inform-requests, the overall system

development/complexity/cost is not increased as it would be by

having to configure/re-configure every SNMPv2 agent as to which

Inform-requests to send where and how often; and

(3) the cost of implementing an SNMPv2 agent in the smallest/cheapest

system is not increased.

 
 
 
免责声明:本文为网络用户发布,其观点仅代表作者个人观点,与本站无关,本站仅提供信息存储服务。文中陈述内容未经本站证实,其真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。
2023年上半年GDP全球前十五强
 百态   2023-10-24
美众议院议长启动对拜登的弹劾调查
 百态   2023-09-13
上海、济南、武汉等多地出现不明坠落物
 探索   2023-09-06
印度或要将国名改为“巴拉特”
 百态   2023-09-06
男子为女友送行,买票不登机被捕
 百态   2023-08-20
手机地震预警功能怎么开?
 干货   2023-08-06
女子4年卖2套房花700多万做美容:不但没变美脸,面部还出现变形
 百态   2023-08-04
住户一楼被水淹 还冲来8头猪
 百态   2023-07-31
女子体内爬出大量瓜子状活虫
 百态   2023-07-25
地球连续35年收到神秘规律性信号,网友:不要回答!
 探索   2023-07-21
全球镓价格本周大涨27%
 探索   2023-07-09
钱都流向了那些不缺钱的人,苦都留给了能吃苦的人
 探索   2023-07-02
倩女手游刀客魅者强控制(强混乱强眩晕强睡眠)和对应控制抗性的关系
 百态   2020-08-20
美国5月9日最新疫情:美国确诊人数突破131万
 百态   2020-05-09
荷兰政府宣布将集体辞职
 干货   2020-04-30
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案逍遥观:鹏程万里
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案神机营:射石饮羽
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案昆仑山:拔刀相助
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案天工阁:鬼斧神工
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案丝路古道:单枪匹马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:与虎谋皮
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:李代桃僵
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:指鹿为马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:小鸟依人
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:千金买邻
 干货   2019-11-12
 
推荐阅读
 
 
 
>>返回首頁<<
 
靜靜地坐在廢墟上,四周的荒凉一望無際,忽然覺得,淒涼也很美
© 2005- 王朝網路 版權所有