RFC2982

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Network Working Group R. Kavasseri Request for Comments: 2982 (Editor of this version) Category: Standards Track B. Stewart

                                        (Author of previous version)
                                                 Cisco Systems, Inc.
                                                        October 2000
             Distributed Management Expression 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 managing expressions of MIB objects. The results of these expressions become MIB objects usable like any other MIB object, such as for the test condition for declaring an event.

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.

The SNMP Management Framework

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.
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.

Overview

Users of MIBs often desire MIB objects that MIB designers have not provided. Furthermore, such needs vary from one management philosophy to another. Rather than fill more and more MIBs with standardized objects, the Expression MIB supports externally defined expressions of existing MIB objects.

In the Expression MIB the results of an evaluated expression are MIB objects that may be used like any other MIB objects. These custom- defined objects are thus usable anywhere any other MIB object can be used. For example, they can be used by a management application directly or referenced from another MIB, such as the Event MIB [MIBEventMIB]. They can even be used by the Expression MIB itself, forming expressions of expressions.

The Expression MIB is instrumentation for a relatively powerful, complex, high-level application, considerably different from simple instrumentation for a communication driver or a protocol. The MIB is appropriate in a relatively powerful, resource-rich managed system and not necessarily in a severely limited environment.

Nevertheless, due to dependencies from the Event MIB RFC2981 and the need to support as low-end a system as possible, the Expression MIB can be somewhat stripped down for lower-power, lower-resource implementations, as described in the Subsets section, below.

Implementation of the Expression MIB in a managed system led to the addition of objects that may not have been necessary in an application environment with complete knowledge of compiled MIB definitions. This is appropriate since implementation must be possible within typical managed systems with some constraints on system resources.

Usage

On managed systems that can afford the overhead, the Expression MIB is a way to create new, customized MIB objects for monitoring. Although these can save some network traffic and overhead on management systems, that is often not a good tradeoff for objects that are simply to be recorded or displayed.

An example of a use of the Expression MIB would be to provide custom objects for the Event MIB RFC2981. A complex expression can evaluate to a rate of flow or a boolean and thus be subject to testing as an event trigger, resulting in an SNMP notification. Without these capabilities such monitoring would be limited to the objects in predefined MIBs. The Expression MIB thus supports powerful tools for the network manager faced with the monitoring of large, complex systems that can support a significant level of self management.

Persistence

Although like most MIBs this one has no explicit controls for the persistence of the values set in configuring an expression, a robust, polite implementation would certainly not force its managing applications to reconfigure it whenever it resets.

Again, as with most MIBs, it is implementation specific how a system provides and manages such persistence. To speculate, one could imagine, for example, that persistence depended on the context in which the expression was configured, or perhaps system-specific characteristics of the expression's owner. Or perhaps everything in a MIB such as this one, which is clearly aimed at persistent configuration, is automatically part of a system's other persistent configuration.

Operation

Most of the operation of the MIB is described or implied in the object definitions but a few highlights bear mentioning here.

Sampling

The MIB supports three types of object sampling for the MIB objects that make up the expression: absolute, delta, and changed.

Absolute samples are simply the value of the MIB object at the time it is sampled.

Absolute samples are not sufficient for expressions of counters, as counters have meaning only as a delta (difference) from one sample to the next. Thus objects may be sampled as deltas. Delta sampling requires the application to maintain state for the value at the last sample, and to do continuous sampling whether or not anyone is looking at the results. It thus creates constant overhead.

Changed sampling is a simple fallout of delta sampling where rather than a difference the result is a boolean indicating whether or not the object changed value since the last sample.

Wildcards

Wildcards allow the application of a single expression to multiple instances of the same MIB object. The definer of the expression indicates this choice and provides a partial object identifier, with some or all of the instance portion left off. The application then does the equivalent of GetNext to obtain the object values, thus discovering the instances.

All wildcarded objects in an expression must have the same semantics for the missing portion of their object identifiers. Otherwise, any successful evaluation of the wildcarded expression would be the result of the accidental matching of the wildcarded portion of the object identifiers in the expression. Such an evaluation will likely produce results which are not meaningful.

The expression can be evaluated only for those instances where all the objects in the expression are available with the same value for the wildcarded portion of the instance.

Evaluation

There are two important aspects of evaluation that may not be obvious: what objects and when.

What objects get used in the evaluation depends on the type of request and whether or not the expression contains wildcarded objects. If the request was a Get, that locks down the instances to

be used. If the request was a GetNext or GetBulk, the application must work its way up to the next full set of objects for the expression.

Evaluation of expressions happens at two possible times, depending on the sampling method (delta or absolute) used to evaluate the expression.

If there are no delta or change values in an expression, the evaluation occurs on demand, i.e. when a requester attempts to read the value of the expression. In this case all requesters get a freshly calculated value.

For expressions with delta or change values, evaluation goes on continuously, every sample period. In this case requesters get the value as of the last sample period. For any given sample period of a given expression, only those instances exist that provided a full set of object values. It may be possible that a delta expression which was evaluated successfully for one sample period may not be successfully evaluated in the next sample period. This may, for example, be due to missing instances for some or all of the objects in the expression. In such cases, the value from the previous sample period (with the successful evaluation) must not be carried forward to the next sample period (with the failed evaluation).

Value Identification

Values resulting from expression evaluation are identified with a combination of the object identifier (OID) for the data type from expValueTable (such as expValueCounter32Val), the expression owner, the expression name, and an OID fragment.

The OID fragment is not an entire OID beginning with iso.dod.org (1.3.6). Rather it begins with 0.0. The remainder is either another 0 when there is no wildcarding or the instance that satisfied the wildcard if there is wildcarding.

Subsets

To pare down the Expression MIBs complexity and use of resources an implementor can leave out various parts.

No Wildcards

Leaving out wildcarding significantly reduces the complexity of retrieving values to evaluate expressions and the processing required to do so. Such an implementation would allow expressions made up of

individual MIB objects but would not be suitable for expressions applied across large tables as each instance in the table would require a separate expression definition.

Furthermore it would not be suitable for tables with arbitrary, dynamic instances, as expressions definitions could not predict what instance values to use.

An implementation without wildcards might be useful for a self- managing system with small tables or few dynamic instances, or one that can do calculations only for a few key objects.

No Deltas

Leaving out delta processing significantly reduces state that must be kept and the burden of ongoing processing even when no one is looking at the results. Unfortunately it also makes expressions on counters unusable, as counters have meaning only as deltas.

An implementation without deltas might be useful for a severely limited, self-managing system that has no need for expressions or events on counters. Although conceivable, such systems would be rare.

Structure

The MIB has the following sections:

   o   Resource -- management of the MIB's use of system resources.
   o   Definition -- definition of expressions.
   o   Value -- values of evaluated expressions.

Resource

The resource section has objects to manage resource usage by wildcarded delta expressions, a potential major consumer of CPU and memory.

Definition

The definition section contains the tables that define expressions.

The expression table, indexed by expression owner and expression name, contains those parameters that apply to the entire expression, such as the expression itself, the data type of the result, and the sampling interval if it contains delta or change values.

The object table, indexed by expression owner, expression name and object index within each expression, contains the parameters that apply to the individual objects that go into the expression, including the object identifier, sample type, discontinuity indicator, and such.

Value

The value section contains the values of evaluated expressions.

The value table, indexed by expression owner, expression name and instance fragment contains a "discriminated union" of evaluated expression results. For a given expression only one of the columns is instantiated, depending on the result data type for the expression. The instance fragment is a constant or the final section of the object identifier that filled in a wildcard.

Examples

The examples refer to tables and objects defined below in the MIB itself. They may well make more sense after reading those definitions.

Wildcarding

An expression may use wildcarded MIB objects that result in multiple values for the expression. To specify a wildcarded MIB object a management application leaves off part or all of the instance portion of the object identifier, and sets expObjectWildcard to true(1) for that object. For our example we'll use a counter of total blessings from a table of people. Another table, indexed by town and person has blessings just from that town.

So the index clauses are:

   personEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   ...
   INDEX { personIndex }

And:

   townPersonEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   ...
   INDEX { townIndex, personIndex }

In our friendly application we may have entered our expression as:

   100 * townPersonBlessings.976.* / personBlessings.*

What goes in expExpression is:

   100*$1/$2

For example purposes we'll use some slightly far-fetched OIDs. The People MIB is 1.3.6.1.99.7 and the Town MIB is 1.3.6.1.99.11, so for our two counters the OIDs are:

   personBlessings      1.3.6.1.99.7.1.3.1.4
   townPersonBlessings       1.3.6.1.99.11.1.2.1.9

The rule for wildcards is that all the wildcarded parts have to match exactly. In this case that means we have to hardwire the town and only the personIndex can be wildcarded. So our values for expObjectID are:

   1.3.6.1.99.7.1.3.1.4
   1.3.6.1.99.11.1.2.1.9.976

We're hardwired to townIndex 976 and personIndex is allowed to vary.

The value of expExpressionPrefix can be either of those two counter OIDs (including the instance fragment in the second case), since either of them takes you to a MIB definition where you can look at the INDEX clause and figure out what's been left off. What's been left off doesn't have to work out to be the same object, but it does have to work out to be the same values (semantics) for the result to make sense. Note that the managed system can not typically check such semantics and if given nonsense will return nonsense.

If we have people numbered 6, 19, and 42 in town number 976, the successive values of expValueInstance will be:

   0.0.6
   0.0.19
   0.0.42

So there will be three values in expValueTable, with those OIDs as the expValueInstance part of their indexing.

Calculation and Conditional

The following formula for line utilization of a half-duplex link is adapted from [PracPersp].

utilization = (ifInOctets + ifOutOctets) * 800 / seconds / ifSpeed

The expression results in the percentage line utilization per second. The total octets are multiplied by 8 to get bits and 100 to scale up the percentage as an integer.

The following Expression MIB object values implement this as an expression for all ifIndexes that directly represent actual hardware. Since the octet counters are Counter32 values, they must be delta sampled to be meaningful. The sample period is 6 seconds but for accuracy and independence is calculated as a delta of sysUpTime.

The expObjectTable entry for ifInOctets has an expObjectConditional that checks for being a hardware interface. Only one object in the expression needs that check associated, since it applies to the whole expression. Since ifConnectorPresent is a TruthValue with values of 1 or 2 rather than 0 and non-zero, it must also be in an expression rather than used directly for the conditional.

The interface-specific discontinuity indicator is supplied only for ifInOctets since invalidating that sample will invalidate an attempt at evaluation, effectively invalidating ifOutOctets as well (correctly, because it has the same indicator).

For notational clarity, in the rest of this document, a string in quotes as part of the object instance indicates the value that would actually be one subidentifier per byte. The objects all belong to owner "me".

Also for clarity OIDs are expressed as the object descriptor and instance. In fact they must be supplied numerically, with all subidentifiers in place before the part for the particular object and instance.

What the user would set in expExpressionTable:

expExpression.2."me".4."hard" = "$1==1" expExpressionValueType.2."me".4."hard" = unsigned32 expExpressionRowStatus.2."me"4."hard" = 'active'

expExpression.2."me".4."util" = "($1+$2)*800/$4/$3" expExpressionValueType.2."me".4."util" = integer32 expExpressionDeltaInterval.2."me".4."util" = 6 expExpressionRowStatus.2."me"4."util" = 'active'

What the user would set in expObjectTable:

expObjectID.2."me".4."hard".1 = ifConnectorPresent expObjectWildcard.2."me".4."hard".1 = 'true' expObjectSampleType.2."me".4."hard".1 = 'absoluteValue' expObjectRowStatus.2."me".4."hard".1 = 'active'

expObjectID.2."me".4."util".1 = ifInOctets expObjectWildcard.2."me".4."util".1 = 'true' expObjectSampleType.2."me".4."util".1 = 'deltaValue' expObjectConditional.2."me".4."util".1 = expValueUnsigned32Val.4."hard".0.0 expObjectConditionalWildcard.2."me".4."util".1 = 'true' expObjectDiscontinuityID.2."me".4."util".1 = ifCounterDiscontinuityTime expObjectDiscontinuityIDWildcard.2."me".4."util".1 = 'true' expObjectRowStatus.2."me".4."util".1 = 'active'

expObjectID.2."me".4."util".2 = ifOutOctets expObjectWildcard.2."me".4."util".2 = 'true' expObjectSampleType.2."me".4."util".2 = 'deltaValue' expObjectRowStatus.2."me".4."util".2 = 'active'

expObjectID.2."me".4."util".3 = ifSpeed expObjectWildcard.2."me".4."util".3 = 'true' expObjectSampleType.2."me".4."util".3 = 'absoluteValue' expObjectRowStatus.2."me".4."util".3 = 'active'

expObjectID.2."me".4."util".4 = sysUpTime.0 expObjectWildcard.2."me".4."util".4 = 'false' expObjectSampleType.2."me".4."util".4 = 'deltaValue' expObjectRowStatus.2."me".4."util".4 = 'active'

These settings will result in populating one column of expValueTable:

expValueInteger32Val.2."me".4."util".0.0.?

The subidentifier represented by "?" above represents one subidentifier that takes on a value of ifIndex and identifies a row for each ifIndex value where ifConnectorPresent is 'true' and the interface was present for two samples to provide a delta.

This value could in turn be used as an event threshold RFC2981 to watch for overutilization of all hardware network connections.

Definitions

DISMAN-EXPRESSION-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS

MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE,
Integer32, Gauge32, Unsigned32,
Counter32, Counter64, IpAddress,
TimeTicks, mib-2, zeroDotZero  FROM SNMPv2-SMI
RowStatus, TruthValue, TimeStamp    FROM SNMPv2-TC
sysUpTime                 FROM SNMPv2-MIB
SnmpAdminString           FROM SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB
MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP     FROM SNMPv2-CONF;

dismanExpressionMIB MODULE-IDENTITY

LAST-UPDATED "200010160000Z" -- 16 October 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: [email protected]"
DESCRIPTION
 "The MIB module for defining expressions of MIB objects for
 management purposes."

-- Revision History

   REVISION     "200010160000Z" -- 16 October 2000
   DESCRIPTION  "This is the initial version of this MIB.
                Published as RFC 2982"
::= { mib-2 90 }

dismanExpressionMIBObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

                                        { dismanExpressionMIB 1 }

expResource OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { dismanExpressionMIBObjects 1 } expDefine OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { dismanExpressionMIBObjects 2 } expValue OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { dismanExpressionMIBObjects 3 }

-- -- Resource Control --

expResourceDeltaMinimum OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Integer32 (-1 | 1..600)
UNITS       "seconds"
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The minimum expExpressionDeltaInterval this system will
 accept.  A system may use the larger values of this minimum to
 lessen the impact of constantly computing deltas.  For larger
 delta sampling intervals the system samples less often and
 suffers less overhead.  This object provides a way to enforce
 such lower overhead for all expressions created after it is
 set.
 The value -1 indicates that expResourceDeltaMinimum is
 irrelevant as the system will not accept 'deltaValue' as a
 value for expObjectSampleType.
 Unless explicitly resource limited, a system's value for
 this object should be 1, allowing as small as a 1 second
 interval for ongoing delta sampling.
 Changing this value will not invalidate an existing setting
 of expObjectSampleType."
::= { expResource 1 }

expResourceDeltaWildcardInstanceMaximum OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
UNITS       "instances"
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "For every instance of a deltaValue object, one dynamic instance
 entry is needed for holding the instance value from the previous
 sample, i.e. to maintain state.
 This object limits maximum number of dynamic instance entries
 this system will support for wildcarded delta objects in
 expressions. For a given delta expression, the number of
 dynamic instances is the number of values that meet all criteria
 to exist times the number of delta values in the expression.
 A value of 0 indicates no preset limit, that is, the limit
 is dynamic based on system operation and resources.
 Unless explicitly resource limited, a system's value for
 this object should be 0.
 Changing this value will not eliminate or inhibit existing delta
 wildcard instance objects but will prevent the creation of more
 such objects.
 An attempt to allocate beyond the limit results in expErrorCode
 being tooManyWildcardValues for that evaluation attempt."
::= { expResource 2 }

expResourceDeltaWildcardInstances OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Gauge32
UNITS       "instances"
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The number of currently active instance entries as
 defined for expResourceDeltaWildcardInstanceMaximum."
::= { expResource 3 }

expResourceDeltaWildcardInstancesHigh OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Gauge32
UNITS       "instances"
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The highest value of expResourceDeltaWildcardInstances
 that has occurred since initialization of the managed
 system."
::= { expResource 4 }

expResourceDeltaWildcardInstanceResourceLacks OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Counter32
UNITS       "instances"
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The number of times this system could not evaluate an
 expression because that would have created a value instance in
 excess of expResourceDeltaWildcardInstanceMaximum."
::= { expResource 5 }

--

-- Definition -- -- Expression Definition Table --

expExpressionTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ExpExpressionEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "A table of expression definitions."
::= { expDefine 1 }

expExpressionEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ExpExpressionEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "Information about a single expression.  New expressions
 can be created using expExpressionRowStatus.
 To create an expression first create the named entry in this
 table.  Then use expExpressionName to populate expObjectTable.
 For expression evaluation to succeed all related entries in
 expExpressionTable and expObjectTable must be 'active'.  If
 these conditions are not met the corresponding values in
 expValue simply are not instantiated.
 Deleting an entry deletes all related entries in expObjectTable
 and expErrorTable.
 Because of the relationships among the multiple tables for an
 expression (expExpressionTable, expObjectTable, and
 expValueTable) and the SNMP rules for independence in setting
 object values, it is necessary to do final error checking when
 an expression is evaluated, that is, when one of its instances
 in expValueTable is read or a delta interval expires.  Earlier
 checking need not be done and an implementation may not impose
 any ordering on the creation of objects related to an
 expression.
 To maintain security of MIB information, when creating a new row in
 this table, the managed system must record the security credentials
 of the requester.  These security credentials are the parameters
 necessary as inputs to isAccessAllowed from the Architecture for
 Describing SNMP Management Frameworks.  When obtaining the objects
 that make up the expression, the system must (conceptually) use
 isAccessAllowed to ensure that it does not violate security.
 The evaluation of the expression takes place under the
 security credentials of the creator of its expExpressionEntry.
 Values of read-write objects in this table may be changed
 at any time."
INDEX       { expExpressionOwner, expExpressionName }
::= { expExpressionTable 1 }

ExpExpressionEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

expExpressionOwner           SnmpAdminString,
expExpressionName             SnmpAdminString,
expExpression                OCTET STRING,
expExpressionValueType       INTEGER,
expExpressionComment         SnmpAdminString,
expExpressionDeltaInterval   Integer32,
expExpressionPrefix           OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
expExpressionErrors          Counter32,
expExpressionEntryStatus     RowStatus

}

expExpressionOwner OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX SnmpAdminString (SIZE(0..32)) MAX-ACCESS not-accessible STATUS current DESCRIPTION

 "The owner of this entry. The exact semantics of this
 string are subject to the security policy defined by the
 security administrator."
::= { expExpressionEntry 1 }

expExpressionName OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SnmpAdminString (SIZE (1..32))
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The name of the expression.  This is locally unique, within
 the scope of an expExpressionOwner."
::= { expExpressionEntry 2 }

expExpression OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OCTET STRING (SIZE (1..1024))
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The expression to be evaluated.  This object is the same
 as a DisplayString (RFC 1903) except for its maximum length.
 Except for the variable names the expression is in ANSI C
 syntax.  Only the subset of ANSI C operators and functions
 listed here is allowed.
 Variables are expressed as a dollar sign ('$') and an
 integer that corresponds to an expObjectIndex.  An
 example of a valid expression is:
      ($1-$5)*100
 Expressions must not be recursive, that is although an expression
 may use the results of another expression, it must not contain
 any variable that is directly or indirectly a result of its own
 evaluation. The managed system must check for recursive
 expressions.
 The only allowed operators are:
      ( )
      - (unary)
      + - * / %
      & | ^ << >> ~
      ! && || == != > >= < <=
 Note the parentheses are included for parenthesizing the
 expression, not for casting data types.
 The only constant types defined are:
      int (32-bit signed)
      long (64-bit signed)
      unsigned int
      unsigned long
      hexadecimal
      character
      string
      oid
 The default type for a positive integer is int unless it is too
 large in which case it is long.
 All but oid are as defined for ANSI C.  Note that a
 hexadecimal constant may end up as a scalar or an array of
 8-bit integers.  A string constant is enclosed in double
 quotes and may contain back-slashed individual characters
 as in ANSI C.
 An oid constant comprises 32-bit, unsigned integers and at
 least one period, for example:
      0.
      .0
      1.3.6.1
 No additional leading or trailing subidentifiers are automatically
 added to an OID constant.  The constant is taken as expressed.
 Integer-typed objects are treated as 32- or 64-bit, signed
 or unsigned integers, as appropriate.  The results of
 mixing them are as for ANSI C, including the type of the
 result.  Note that a 32-bit value is thus promoted to 64 bits
 only in an operation with a 64-bit value.  There is no
 provision for larger values to handle overflow.
 Relative to SNMP data types, a resulting value becomes
 unsigned when calculating it uses any unsigned value,
 including a counter.  To force the final value to be of
 data type counter the expression must explicitly use the
 counter32() or counter64() function (defined below).
 OCTET STRINGS and OBJECT IDENTIFIERs are treated as
 one-dimensioned arrays of unsigned 8-bit integers and
 unsigned 32-bit integers, respectively.
 IpAddresses are treated as 32-bit, unsigned integers in
 network byte order, that is, the hex version of 255.0.0.0 is
 0xff000000.
 Conditional expressions result in a 32-bit, unsigned integer
 of value 0 for false or 1 for true. When an arbitrary value
 is used as a boolean 0 is false and non-zero is true.
 Rules for the resulting data type from an operation, based on
 the operator:
 For << and >> the result is the same as the left hand operand.
 For &&, ||, ==, !=, <, <=, >, and >= the result is always
 Unsigned32.
 For unary - the result is always Integer32.
 For +, -, *, /, %, &, |, and ^ the result is promoted according
 to the following rules, in order from most to least preferred:
      If left hand and right hand operands are the same type,
      use that.
      If either side is Counter64, use that.
      If either side is IpAddress, use that.
      If either side is TimeTicks, use that.
      If either side is Counter32, use that.
      Otherwise use Unsigned32.
 The following rules say what operators apply with what data
 types.  Any combination not explicitly defined does not work.
 For all operators any of the following can be the left hand or
 right hand operand: Integer32, Counter32, Unsigned32, Counter64.
 The operators +, -, *, /, %, <, <=, >, and >= work with
 TimeTicks.
 The operators &, |, and ^ work with IpAddress.
 The operators << and >> work with IpAddress but only as the
 left hand operand.
 The + operator performs a concatenation of two OCTET STRINGs or
 two OBJECT IDENTIFIERs.
 The operators &, | perform bitwise operations on OCTET STRINGs.
 If the OCTET STRING happens to be a DisplayString the results
 may be meaningless, but the agent system does not check this as
 some such systems do not have this information.
 The operators << and >> perform bitwise operations on OCTET
 STRINGs appearing as the left hand operand.
 The only functions defined are:
      counter32
      counter64
      arraySection
      stringBegins
      stringEnds
      stringContains
      oidBegins
      oidEnds
      oidContains
      average
      maximum
      minimum
      sum
      exists
 The following function definitions indicate their parameters by
 naming the data type of the parameter in the parameter's position
 in the parameter list.  The parameter must be of the type indicated
 and generally may be a constant, a MIB object, a function, or an
 expression.
 counter32(integer) - wrapped around an integer value counter32
 forces Counter32 as a data type.
 counter64(integer) - similar to counter32 except that the
 resulting data type is 'counter64'.
 arraySection(array, integer, integer) - selects a piece of an
 array (i.e. part of an OCTET STRING or OBJECT IDENTIFIER).  The
 integer arguments are in the range 0 to 4,294,967,295.  The
 first is an initial array index (one-dimensioned) and the second
 is an ending array index.  A value of 0 indicates first or last
 element, respectively.  If the first element is larger than the
 array length the result is 0 length.  If the second integer is
 less than or equal to the first, the result is 0 length.  If the
 second is larger than the array length it indicates last
 element.
 stringBegins/Ends/Contains(octetString, octetString) - looks for
 the second string (which can be a string constant) in the first
 and returns the one-dimensioned arrayindex where the match began.
 A return value of 0 indicates no match (i.e. boolean false).
 oidBegins/Ends/Contains(oid, oid) - looks for the second OID
 (which can be an OID constant) in the first and returns the
 the one-dimensioned index where the match began. A return value
 of 0 indicates no match (i.e. boolean false).
 average/maximum/minimum(integer) - calculates the average,
 minimum, or maximum value of the integer valued object over
 multiple sample times.  If the object disappears for any
 sample period, the accumulation and the resulting value object
 cease to exist until the object reappears at which point the
 calculation starts over.
 sum(integerObject*) - sums all available values of the
 wildcarded integer object, resulting in an integer scalar.  Must
 be used with caution as it wraps on overflow with no
 notification.
 exists(anyTypeObject) - verifies the object instance exists. A
 return value of 0 indicates NoSuchInstance (i.e. boolean
 false)."
::= { expExpressionEntry 3 }

expExpressionValueType OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      INTEGER { counter32(1), unsigned32(2), timeTicks(3),
             integer32(4), ipAddress(5), octetString(6),
             objectId(7), counter64(8) }
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The type of the expression value.  One and only one of the
 value objects in expValueTable will be instantiated to match
 this type.
 If the result of the expression can not be made into this type,
 an invalidOperandType error will occur."
DEFVAL      { counter32 }
::= { expExpressionEntry 4 }

expExpressionComment OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SnmpAdminString
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "A comment to explain the use or meaning of the expression."
DEFVAL      { H }
::= { expExpressionEntry 5 }

expExpressionDeltaInterval OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Integer32 (0..86400)
UNITS       "seconds"
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "Sampling interval for objects in this expression with
 expObjectSampleType 'deltaValue'.
 This object has no effect if the the expression has no
 deltaValue objects.
 A value of 0 indicates no automated sampling.  In this case
 the delta is the difference from the last time the expression
 was evaluated.  Note that this is subject to unpredictable
 delta times in the face of retries or multiple managers.
 A value greater than zero is the number of seconds between
 automated samples.
 Until the delta interval has expired once the delta for the
 object is effectively not instantiated and evaluating
 the expression has results as if the object itself were not
 instantiated.
 Note that delta values potentially consume large amounts of
 system CPU and memory.  Delta state and processing must
 continue constantly even if the expression is not being used.
 That is, the expression is being evaluated every delta interval,
 even if no application is reading those values.  For wildcarded
 objects this can be substantial overhead.
 Note that delta intervals, external expression value sampling
 intervals and delta intervals for expressions within other
 expressions can have unusual interactions as they are impossible
 to synchronize accurately.  In general one interval embedded
 below another must be enough shorter that the higher sample
 sees relatively smooth, predictable behavior.  So, for example,
 to avoid the higher level getting the same sample twice, the
 lower level should sample at least twice as fast as the higher
 level does."
DEFVAL      { 0 }
::= { expExpressionEntry 6 }

expExpressionPrefix OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "An object prefix to assist an application in determining
 the instance indexing to use in expValueTable, relieving the
 application of the need to scan the expObjectTable to
 determine such a prefix.
 See expObjectTable for information on wildcarded objects.
 If the expValueInstance portion of the value OID may
 be treated as a scalar (that is, normally, 0) the value of
 expExpressionPrefix is zero length, that is, no OID at all.
 Note that zero length implies a null OID, not the OID 0.0.
 Otherwise, the value of expExpressionPrefix is the expObjectID
 value of any one of the wildcarded objects for the expression.
 This is sufficient, as the remainder, that is, the instance
 fragment relevant to instancing the values, must be the same for
 all wildcarded objects in the expression."
::= { expExpressionEntry 7 }

expExpressionErrors OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Counter32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The number of errors encountered while evaluating this
 expression.
 Note that an object in the expression not being accessible,
 is not considered an error. An example of an inaccessible
 object is when the object is excluded from the view of the
 user whose security credentials are used in the expression
 evaluation. In such cases, it is a legitimate condition
 that causes the corresponding expression value not to be
 instantiated."
::= { expExpressionEntry 8 }

expExpressionEntryStatus OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      RowStatus
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The control that allows creation and deletion of entries."
::= { expExpressionEntry 9 }

-- -- Expression Error Table --

expErrorTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ExpErrorEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "A table of expression errors."
::= { expDefine 2 }

expErrorEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ExpErrorEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "Information about errors in processing an expression.
 Entries appear in this table only when there is a matching
 expExpressionEntry and then only when there has been an
 error for that expression as reflected by the error codes
 defined for expErrorCode."
INDEX       { expExpressionOwner, expExpressionName }
::= { expErrorTable 1 }

ExpErrorEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

expErrorTime       TimeStamp,
expErrorIndex      Integer32,
expErrorCode       INTEGER,
expErrorInstance   OBJECT IDENTIFIER

}

expErrorTime OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      TimeStamp
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The value of sysUpTime the last time an error caused a
 failure to evaluate this expression."
::= { expErrorEntry 1 }

expErrorIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Integer32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The one-dimensioned character array index into
 expExpression for where the error occurred.  The value
 zero indicates irrelevance."
::= { expErrorEntry 2 }

expErrorCode OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      INTEGER {
      invalidSyntax(1),
      undefinedObjectIndex(2),
      unrecognizedOperator(3),
      unrecognizedFunction(4),
      invalidOperandType(5),
      unmatchedParenthesis(6),
      tooManyWildcardValues(7),
      recursion(8),
      deltaTooShort(9),
      resourceUnavailable(10),
      divideByZero(11)
      }
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The error that occurred.  In the following explanations the
 expected timing of the error is in parentheses.  'S' means
 the error occurs on a Set request.  'E' means the error
 occurs on the attempt to evaluate the expression either due to
 Get from expValueTable or in ongoing delta processing.
 invalidSyntax       the value sent for expExpression is not
                valid Expression MIB expression syntax
                (S)
 undefinedObjectIndex     an object reference ($n) in
                expExpression does not have a matching
                instance in expObjectTable (E)
 unrecognizedOperator     the value sent for expExpression held an
                unrecognized operator (S)
 unrecognizedFunction     the value sent for expExpression held an
                unrecognized function name (S)
 invalidOperandType  an operand in expExpression is not the
                right type for the associated operator
                or result (SE)
 unmatchedParenthesis     the value sent for expExpression is not
                correctly parenthesized (S)
 tooManyWildcardValues    evaluating the expression exceeded the
                limit set by
                expResourceDeltaWildcardInstanceMaximum
                (E)
 recursion      through some chain of embedded
                expressions the expression invokes itself
                (E)
 deltaTooShort       the delta for the next evaluation passed
                before the system could evaluate the
                present sample (E)
 resourceUnavailable some resource, typically dynamic memory,
                was unavailable (SE)
 divideByZero        an attempt to divide by zero occurred
                (E)
 For the errors that occur when the attempt is made to set
 expExpression Set request fails with the SNMP error code
 'wrongValue'.  Such failures refer to the most recent failure to
 Set expExpression, not to the present value of expExpression
 which must be either unset or syntactically correct.
 Errors that occur during evaluation for a Get* operation return
 the SNMP error code 'genErr' except for 'tooManyWildcardValues'
 and 'resourceUnavailable' which return the SNMP error code
 'resourceUnavailable'."
::= { expErrorEntry 3 }

expErrorInstance OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The expValueInstance being evaluated when the error
 occurred.  A zero-length indicates irrelevance."
::= { expErrorEntry 4 }

-- -- Object Table --

expObjectTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ExpObjectEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "A table of object definitions for each expExpression.
 Wildcarding instance IDs:
 It is legal to omit all or part of the instance portion for
 some or all of the objects in an expression. (See the
 DESCRIPTION of expObjectID for details.  However, note that
 if more than one object in the same expression is wildcarded
 in this way, they all must be objects where that portion of
 the instance is the same.  In other words, all objects may be
 in the same SEQUENCE or in different SEQUENCEs but with the
 same semantic index value (e.g., a value of ifIndex)
 for the wildcarded portion."
::= { expDefine 3 }

expObjectEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ExpObjectEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "Information about an object.  An application uses
 expObjectEntryStatus to create entries in this table while
 in the process of defining an expression.
 Values of read-create objects in this table may be
 changed at any time."
INDEX       { expExpressionOwner, expExpressionName, expObjectIndex }
::= { expObjectTable 1 }

ExpObjectEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

expObjectIndex                     Unsigned32,
expObjectID                        OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
expObjectIDWildcard                TruthValue,
expObjectSampleType                INTEGER,
expObjectDeltaDiscontinuityID      OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
expObjectDiscontinuityIDWildcard   TruthValue,
expObjectDiscontinuityIDType       INTEGER,
expObjectConditional               OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
expObjectConditionalWildcard       TruthValue,
expObjectEntryStatus               RowStatus

}

expObjectIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "Within an expression, a unique, numeric identification for an
 object.  Prefixed with a dollar sign ('$') this is used to
 reference the object in the corresponding expExpression."
::= { expObjectEntry 1 }

expObjectID OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The OBJECT IDENTIFIER (OID) of this object.  The OID may be
 fully qualified, meaning it includes a complete instance
 identifier part (e.g., ifInOctets.1 or sysUpTime.0), or it
 may not be fully qualified, meaning it may lack all or part
 of the instance identifier.  If the expObjectID is not fully
 qualified, then expObjectWildcard must be set to true(1).
 The value of the expression will be multiple
 values, as if done for a GetNext sweep of the object.
 An object here may itself be the result of an expression but
 recursion is not allowed.
 NOTE:  The simplest implementations of this MIB may not allow
 wildcards."
::= { expObjectEntry 2 }

expObjectIDWildcard OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      TruthValue
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A true value indicates the expObjecID of this row is a wildcard
    object. False indicates that expObjectID is fully instanced.
    If all expObjectWildcard values for a given expression are FALSE,
    expExpressionPrefix will reflect a scalar object (i.e. will
    be 0.0).
    NOTE:  The simplest implementations of this MIB may not allow
    wildcards."
DEFVAL      { false }
::= { expObjectEntry 3 }

expObjectSampleType OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      INTEGER { absoluteValue(1), deltaValue(2),
                      changedValue(3) }
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The method of sampling the selected variable.
 An 'absoluteValue' is simply the present value of the object.
 A 'deltaValue' is the present value minus the previous value,
 which was sampled expExpressionDeltaInterval seconds ago.
 This is intended primarily for use with SNMP counters, which are
 meaningless as an 'absoluteValue', but may be used with any
 integer-based value.
 A 'changedValue' is a boolean for whether the present value is
 different from the previous value.  It is applicable to any data
 type and results in an Unsigned32 with value 1 if the object's
 value is changed and 0 if not.  In all other respects it is as a
 'deltaValue' and all statements and operation regarding delta
 values apply to changed values.
 When an expression contains both delta and absolute values
 the absolute values are obtained at the end of the delta
 period."
DEFVAL      { absoluteValue }
::= { expObjectEntry 4 }

sysUpTimeInstance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { sysUpTime 0 }

expObjectDeltaDiscontinuityID OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The OBJECT IDENTIFIER (OID) of a TimeTicks, TimeStamp, or
 DateAndTime object that indicates a discontinuity in the value
 at expObjectID.
 This object is instantiated only if expObjectSampleType is
 'deltaValue' or 'changedValue'.
 The OID may be for a leaf object (e.g. sysUpTime.0) or may
 be wildcarded to match expObjectID.
 This object supports normal checking for a discontinuity in a
 counter.  Note that if this object does not point to sysUpTime
 discontinuity checking must still check sysUpTime for an overall
 discontinuity.
 If the object identified is not accessible no discontinuity
 check will be made."
DEFVAL      { sysUpTimeInstance }
::= { expObjectEntry 5 }

expObjectDiscontinuityIDWildcard OBJECT-TYPE

 SYNTAX      TruthValue
 MAX-ACCESS  read-create
 STATUS      current
 DESCRIPTION
 "A true value indicates the expObjectDeltaDiscontinuityID of
 this row is a wildcard object.  False indicates that
 expObjectDeltaDiscontinuityID is fully instanced.
 This object is instantiated only if expObjectSampleType is
 'deltaValue' or 'changedValue'.
 NOTE:  The simplest implementations of this MIB may not allow
 wildcards."
DEFVAL      { false }
 ::= { expObjectEntry 6 }

expObjectDiscontinuityIDType OBJECT-TYPE

 SYNTAX      INTEGER { timeTicks(1), timeStamp(2), dateAndTime(3) }
 MAX-ACCESS  read-create
 STATUS      current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The value 'timeTicks' indicates the expObjectDeltaDiscontinuityID
 of this row is of syntax TimeTicks.  The value 'timeStamp' indicates
 syntax TimeStamp.  The value 'dateAndTime indicates syntax
 DateAndTime.
 This object is instantiated only if expObjectSampleType is
 'deltaValue' or 'changedValue'."
DEFVAL      { timeTicks }
 ::= { expObjectEntry 7 }

expObjectConditional OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The OBJECT IDENTIFIER (OID) of an object that overrides
 whether the instance of expObjectID is to be considered
 usable.  If the value of the object at expObjectConditional
 is 0 or not instantiated, the object at expObjectID is
 treated as if it is not instantiated.  In other words,
 expObjectConditional is a filter that controls whether or
 not to use the value at expObjectID.
 The OID may be for a leaf object (e.g. sysObjectID.0) or may be
 wildcarded to match expObjectID.  If expObject is wildcarded and
 expObjectID in the same row is not, the wild portion of
 expObjectConditional must match the wildcarding of the rest of
 the expression.  If no object in the expression is wildcarded
 but expObjectConditional is, use the lexically first instance
 (if any) of expObjectConditional.
 If the value of expObjectConditional is 0.0 operation is
 as if the value pointed to by expObjectConditional is a
 non-zero (true) value.
 Note that expObjectConditional can not trivially use an object
 of syntax TruthValue, since the underlying value is not 0 or 1."
DEFVAL      { zeroDotZero }
::= { expObjectEntry 8 }
expObjectConditionalWildcard  OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX      TruthValue
 MAX-ACCESS  read-create
 STATUS      current
 DESCRIPTION
 "A true value indicates the expObjectConditional of this row is
 a wildcard object. False indicates that expObjectConditional is
 fully instanced.
 NOTE: The simplest implementations of this MIB may not allow
 wildcards."
DEFVAL      { false }
 ::= { expObjectEntry 9 }

expObjectEntryStatus OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      RowStatus
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The control that allows creation/deletion of entries.
 Objects in this table may be changed while
 expObjectEntryStatus is in any state."
::= { expObjectEntry 10 }

-- -- Expression Value Table --

expValueTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ExpValueEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "A table of values from evaluated expressions."
::= { expValue 1 }

expValueEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ExpValueEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "A single value from an evaluated expression.  For a given
 instance, only one 'Val' object in the conceptual row will be
 instantiated, that is, the one with the appropriate type for
 the value.  For values that contain no objects of
 expObjectSampleType 'deltaValue' or 'changedValue', reading a
 value from the table causes the evaluation of the expression
 for that value.  For those that contain a 'deltaValue' or
 'changedValue' the value read is as of the last sampling
 interval.
 If in the attempt to evaluate the expression one or more
 of the necessary objects is not available, the corresponding
 entry in this table is effectively not instantiated.
 To maintain security of MIB information, when creating a new
 row in this table, the managed system must record the security
 credentials of the requester.  These security credentials are
 the parameters necessary as inputs to isAccessAllowed from
 RFC2571. When obtaining the objects that make up the
 expression, the system must (conceptually) use isAccessAllowed to
 ensure that it does not violate security.
 The evaluation of that expression takes place under the
 security credentials of the creator of its expExpressionEntry.
 To maintain security of MIB information, expression evaluation must
 take place using security credentials for the implied Gets of the
 objects in the expression as inputs (conceptually) to
 isAccessAllowed from the Architecture for Describing SNMP
 Management Frameworks.  These are the security credentials of the
 creator of the corresponding expExpressionEntry."
INDEX       { expExpressionOwner, expExpressionName,
              IMPLIED expValueInstance }
::= { expValueTable 1 }

ExpValueEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

expValueInstance          OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
expValueCounter32Val      Counter32,
expValueUnsigned32Val     Unsigned32,
expValueTimeTicksVal      TimeTicks,
expValueInteger32Val      Integer32,
expValueIpAddressVal      IpAddress,
expValueOctetStringVal    OCTET STRING,
expValueOidVal            OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
expValueCounter64Val      Counter64

}

expValueInstance OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The final instance portion of a value's OID according to
 the wildcarding in instances of expObjectID for the
 expression.  The prefix of this OID fragment is 0.0,
 leading to the following behavior.
 If there is no wildcarding, the value is 0.0.0.  In other
 words, there is one value which standing alone would have
 been a scalar with a 0 at the end of its OID.
 If there is wildcarding, the value is 0.0 followed by
 a value that the wildcard can take, thus defining one value
 instance for each real, possible value of the wildcard.
 So, for example, if the wildcard worked out to be an ifIndex,
 there is an expValueInstance for each applicable ifIndex."
::= { expValueEntry 1 }

expValueCounter32Val OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Counter32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The value when expExpressionValueType is 'counter32'."
::= { expValueEntry 2 }

expValueUnsigned32Val OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The value when expExpressionValueType is 'unsigned32'."
::= { expValueEntry 3 }

expValueTimeTicksVal OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      TimeTicks
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The value when expExpressionValueType is 'timeTicks'."
::= { expValueEntry 4 }

expValueInteger32Val OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Integer32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The value when expExpressionValueType is 'integer32'."
::= { expValueEntry 5 }

expValueIpAddressVal OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      IpAddress
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The value when expExpressionValueType is 'ipAddress'."
::= { expValueEntry 6 }

expValueOctetStringVal OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..65536))
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The value when expExpressionValueType is 'octetString'."
::= { expValueEntry 7 }

expValueOidVal OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The value when expExpressionValueType is 'objectId'."
::= { expValueEntry 8 }

expValueCounter64Val OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Counter64
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
 "The value when expExpressionValueType is 'counter64'."
::= { expValueEntry 9 }

-- -- Conformance --

dismanExpressionMIBConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ dismanExpressionMIB 3 }

dismanExpressionMIBCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ dismanExpressionMIBConformance 1 }

dismanExpressionMIBGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ dismanExpressionMIBConformance 2 }

-- Compliance

dismanExpressionMIBCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE

 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
      "The compliance statement for entities which implement
      the Expression MIB."
 MODULE    -- this module
      MANDATORY-GROUPS {
           dismanExpressionResourceGroup,
           dismanExpressionDefinitionGroup,
           dismanExpressionValueGroup
      }
 OBJECT         expResourceDeltaMinimum
 SYNTAX         Integer32 (-1 | 60..600)
 DESCRIPTION
      "Implementation need not allow deltas or it may
      implement them and restrict them to higher values."
 OBJECT         expObjectSampleType
 WRITE-SYNTAX   INTEGER { absoluteValue(1) }
 DESCRIPTION
      "Implementation may disallow deltas calculation or
      change detection."
 OBJECT         expObjectIDWildcard
 WRITE-SYNTAX   INTEGER { false(2) }
 DESCRIPTION
      "Implementation may allow wildcards."
 OBJECT         expObjectDiscontinuityIDWildcard
 WRITE-SYNTAX   INTEGER { false(2) }
 DESCRIPTION
      "Implementation need not allow wildcards."
 OBJECT          expObjectConditionalWildcard
 WRITE-SYNTAX   INTEGER { false(2) }
 DESCRIPTION
      "Implementation need not allow deltas wildcards."
 ::= { dismanExpressionMIBCompliances 1 }

-- Units of Conformance

dismanExpressionResourceGroup OBJECT-GROUP

 OBJECTS {
      expResourceDeltaMinimum,
      expResourceDeltaWildcardInstanceMaximum,
      expResourceDeltaWildcardInstances,
      expResourceDeltaWildcardInstancesHigh,
      expResourceDeltaWildcardInstanceResourceLacks
 }
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
      "Expression definition resource management."
 ::= { dismanExpressionMIBGroups 1 }

dismanExpressionDefinitionGroup OBJECT-GROUP

 OBJECTS {
      expExpression,
      expExpressionValueType,
      expExpressionComment,
      expExpressionDeltaInterval,
      expExpressionPrefix,
      expExpressionErrors,
      expExpressionEntryStatus,
      expErrorTime,
      expErrorIndex,
      expErrorCode,
      expErrorInstance,
      expObjectID,
      expObjectIDWildcard,
      expObjectSampleType,
      expObjectDeltaDiscontinuityID,
      expObjectDiscontinuityIDWildcard,
      expObjectDiscontinuityIDType,
      expObjectConditional,
      expObjectConditionalWildcard,
      expObjectEntryStatus
 }
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
      "Expression definition."
 ::= { dismanExpressionMIBGroups 2 }

dismanExpressionValueGroup OBJECT-GROUP

 OBJECTS {
      expValueCounter32Val,
      expValueUnsigned32Val,
      expValueTimeTicksVal,
      expValueInteger32Val,
      expValueIpAddressVal,
      expValueOctetStringVal,
      expValueOidVal,
      expValueCounter64Val
 }
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
      "Expression value."
 ::= { dismanExpressionMIBGroups 3 }

END

Intellectual Property

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 has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and standards- related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such 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.

Acknowledgements

This MIB contains considerable contributions from the Distributed Management Design Team (Andy Bierman, Maria Greene, Bob Stewart, and Steve Waldbusser), and colleagues at Cisco who did the first implementation.

References

RFC2571 Harrington, D., Presuhn, R. and B. Wijnen, "An

           Architecture 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.

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.

RFC1903 Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,

           "Coexistence between Version 1 and version 2 of the
           Internet-standard Network Management Framework", RFC
           1903, January 1996.

RFC2981 Stewart, B., "Event MIB", RFC 2981, October 2000.

[PracPersp] Leinwand, A. and K. Fang, "Network Management: A

           Practical Perspective", Addison-Wesley Publishing
           Company, Inc., 1993.

Security Considerations

Expression MIB security involves two perspectives: protection of expressions from tampering or unauthorized use of resources, and protection of the objects used to calculate the expressions.

Security of expression definitions and results depends on the expression owner (expExpressionOwner). With view-based access control RFC2575 a network manager can control who has what level of access to what expressions.

Access control for the objects within the expression depends on the security credentials of the expression creator. These are the security credentials used to get the objects necessary to evaluate the expression. They are the security credentials that were used to set the expExpressionRowStatus object for that expression to 'active', as recorded by the managed system.

This means that the results of an expression could potentially be made available to someone who does not have access to the raw data that went into them. This could be either legitimate or a security violation, depending on the specific situation and security policy.

To facilitate the provisioning of access control by a security administrator for this MIB itself using the View-Based Access Control Model (VACM) defined in RFC 2575 RFC2575 for tables in which multiple users may need to independently create or modify entries, the initial index is used as an "owner index". Such an initial index has a syntax of SnmpAdminString, and can thus be trivially mapped to a securityName or groupName as defined in VACM, in accordance with a security policy.

All entries in related tables belonging to a particular user will have the same value for this initial index. For a given user's entries in a particular table, the object identifiers for the information in these entries will have the same subidentifiers (except for the "column" subidentifier) up to the end of the encoded owner index. To configure VACM to permit access to this portion of the table, one would create vacmViewTreeFamilyTable entries with the value of vacmViewTreeFamilySubtree including the owner index portion, and vacmViewTreeFamilyMask "wildcarding" the column subidentifier. More elaborate configurations are possible.

Author's Address

Bob Stewart Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 U.S.A.

Editor's Address

Ramanathan Kavasseri Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 U.S.A.

Phone: +1 408 527 2446 EMail: [email protected]

10. Full Copyright Statement

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Acknowledgement

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