RFC3729

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Network Working Group S. Waldbusser Request for Comments: 3729 March 2004 Category: Standards Track

            Application Performance Measurement 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 (2004). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB) for use with network management protocols in TCP/IP-based internets. In particular, it defines objects for measuring the application performance as experienced by end-users.

The Internet-Standard Management Framework

For a detailed overview of the documents that describe the current Internet-Standard Management Framework, please refer to section 7 of RFC 3410 [8].

Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed the Management Information Base or MIB. MIB objects are generally accessed through the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP). Objects in the MIB are defined using the mechanisms defined in the Structure of Management Information (SMI). This memo specifies a MIB module that is compliant to the SMIv2, which is described in STD 58, RFC 2578 [1], STD 58, RFC 2579 [2] and STD 58, RFC 2580 [3].

Overview

This document continues the architecture created in the RMON MIB [7] by providing analysis of application performance as experienced by end-users.

Application performance measurement measures the quality of service delivered to end-users by applications. With this perspective, a true end-to-end view of the IT infrastructure results, combining the performance of the application, desktop, network, and server, as well as any positive or negative interactions between these components.

Despite all the technically sophisticated ways in which networking and system resources can be measured, human end-users perceive only two things about an application: availability and responsiveness.

  Availability - The percentage of the time that the application is
  ready to give a user service.
  Responsiveness - The speed at which the application delivers the
  requested service.

A transaction is an action initiated by a user that starts and completes a distributed processing function. A transaction begins when a user initiates a request for service (i.e., pushing a submit button) and ends when the work is completed (i.e., information is provided or a confirmation is delivered). A transaction is the fundamental item measured by the APM MIB.

A failed transaction is a transaction that fails to provide the service requested by the end user, regardless of whether it is due to a processing failure or transport failure.

An application protocol (e.g., POP3) may implement different commands or application "verbs" (e.g., POP3 Login and POP3 Retrieval). It will often be interesting to monitor these verbs separately because:

1) The verbs may have widely differing performance characteristics

  (in fact some may be response time oriented while others are
  throughput oriented)

2) The verbs have varying business significance 3) It provides more granularity of exactly what might be performing

  poorly

This MIB Module allows the measurement of a parent application, its component verbs, or both. If monitoring both, one can watch the top-level application and then drill down to the verbs when trouble is spotted to learn which subcomponents are in trouble. Each application verb is registered separately in the Protocol Directory [5] [6] as a child of its parent application.

Application protocols implement one of three different types of transactions: transaction-oriented, throughput-oriented, or streaming-oriented. While the availability metric is the same for all three types, the responsiveness metric varies:

  Transaction-Oriented: These transactions have a fairly constant
  workload to perform for all transactions.  In particular, to the
  degree that the workload may vary, it doesn't vary based on the
  amount of data to be transferred but based on the parameters of
  the transaction.  The responsiveness metric for transaction-
  oriented applications is application response time, the elapsed
  time between the user's request for service (e.g., pushing the
  submit button) and the completion of the request (e.g., displaying
  the results) and is measured in milliseconds.  This is commonly
  referred to as end-user response time.
  Throughput-Oriented: These transactions have widely varying
  workloads based on the amount of data requested.  The
  responsiveness metric for throughput-oriented applications is
  kilobits per second.
  Streaming-Oriented: These transactions deliver data at a constant
  metered rate of speed regardless of excess capacity in the
  networking and computing infrastructure.  However, when the
  infrastructures cannot deliver data at this speed, interruption of
  service or degradation of service can result.  The responsiveness
  metric for streaming-oriented applications is the signal quality
  ratio of time that the service is degraded or interrupted to the
  total service time.  This metric is measured in parts per million.

Report Aggregation

This MIB Module provides functions to aggregate measurements into higher level summaries.

Every transaction is identified by its application, server, and client and has an availability measure as well as a responsiveness measure. The appropriate responsiveness measure is context-sensitive depending on whether the application is transaction-oriented, throughput-oriented, or streaming- oriented. For example, in a 5 minute period several transactions might be recorded:

Application Client Server Successful Responsiveness HTTP Jim Sales 1 6 sec. SAP/R3 Jane Finance 1 17 sec. HTTP Joe HR 0 - FTP Jim FTP 1 212 Kbps HTTP Joe HR 1 25 sec. RealVideo Joe Videoconf 1 100.0% HTTP Jane HR 1 5 sec.

These transactions can be aggregated in several ways, providing statistical summaries - for example summarizing all HTTP transactions, or all HTTP transactions to the HR Server. Note that data from different applications may not be summarized because:

1. The performance characteristics of different applications differ

  widely enough to render statistical analysis meaningless.

2. The responsiveness metrics of different applications may be

  different, making a statistical analysis impossible (in other
  words, one application may be transaction-oriented, while another
  is throughput-oriented).

Aggregating transactions collected over a period requires an aggregation algorithm. In this MIB Module, transaction aggregation always results in the following statistics:

TransactionCount

  The total number of transactions during this period

SuccessfulTransactions

  The total number of transactions that were successful.  The
  management station can derive the percent success by dividing
  SuccessfulTransactions by the TransactionCount.

ResponsivenessMean

  The average of the responsiveness metric for all aggregated
  transactions that completed successfully.

ResponsivenessMin

  The minimum responsiveness metric for all aggregated transactions
  that completed successfully.

ResponsivenessMax

  The maximum responsiveness metric for all aggregated transactions
  that completed successfully.

ResponsivenessBx

  The count of successful transactions whose responsiveness metric
  fell into the range specified for Bx.  There are 7 buckets
  specified.  Because the performance of different applications
  varies widely, the bucket ranges are specified separately for each
  application (in the apmAppDirTable) so that they may be tuned to
  typical performance of each application.

For example, when aggregating the previous set of transactions by application we get (for simplicity the example only shows TransactionCount, SuccessfulTransactions, and ResponsivenessMean):

Application Count Successful ResponsivenessMean HTTP 4 3 12 sec. SAP/R3 1 1 17 sec. FTP 1 1 212 Kbps. RealVideo 1 1 100.0%

There are four different types of aggregation.

  The flows(1) aggregation is the simplest.  All transactions that
  share common application/server/client 3-tuples are aggregated
  together, resulting in a set of metrics for all such unique 3-
  tuples.
  The clients(2) aggregation results in somewhat more aggregation
  (i.e., fewer resulting records).  All transactions that share
  common application/client tuples are aggregated together,
  resulting in a set of metrics for all such unique tuples.
  The servers(3) aggregation usually results in still more
  aggregation (i.e., fewer resulting records).  All transactions
  that share common application/server tuples are aggregated
  together, resulting in a set of metrics for all such unique
  tuples.
  The applications(4) aggregation results in the most aggregation
  (i.e., the fewest resulting records).  All transactions that share
  a common application are aggregated together, resulting in a set
  of metrics for all such unique applications.

For example, if in a 5 minute period the following transactions occurred:

Actual Transactions:

  1. App Client Server Successful Responsiveness

1 HTTP Jim CallCtr N - 2 HTTP Jim HR Y 12 sec. 3 HTTP Jim Sales Y 7 sec. 4 HTTP Jim CallCtr Y 5 sec. 5 Email Jim Pop3 Y 12 sec. 6 HTTP Jane CallCtr Y 3 sec. 7 SAP/R3 Jane Finance Y 19 sec. 8 Email Jane Pop3 Y 16 sec. 9 HTTP Joe HR Y 18 sec.

The flows(1) aggregation results in the following table. Note that the first record (HTTP/Jim/CallCtr) is the aggregation of transactions #1 and #4:

Flow Aggregation: App Client Server Count Succe- Rsp Rsp Rsp RspB1 RspB2

                             ssful   Mean   Min   Max

HTTP Jim CallCtr 2 1 5 5 5 1 0 HTTP Jim HR 1 1 12 12 12 0 1 HTTP Jim Sales 1 1 7 7 7 1 0 Email Jim Pop3 1 1 12 12 12 0 1 HTTP Jane CallCtr 1 1 3 3 3 1 0 SAP/R3 Jane Finance 1 1 19 19 19 0 1 Email Jane Pop3 1 1 16 16 16 0 1 HTTP Joe HR 1 1 18 18 18 0 1

(Note: Columns above such as RspMean and RspB1 are abbreviations for objects in the apmReportTable)

The clients(2) aggregation results in the following table. Note that the first record (HTTP/Jim) is the aggregate of transactions #1, #2,

  1. 3 and #4:

Client Aggregation: App Client Count Succe- Rsp Rsp Rsp RspB1 RspB2 ...

                       ssful   Mean   Min   Max

HTTP Jim 4 3 8 5 12 2 1 Email Jim 1 1 12 12 12 0 1 HTTP Jane 1 1 3 3 3 1 0 SAP/R3 Jane 1 1 19 19 19 0 1 Email Jane 1 1 16 16 16 0 1 HTTP Joe 1 1 18 18 18 0 1

The servers(3) aggregation results in the following table. Note that the first record (HTTP/CallCtr) is the aggregation of transactions

  1. 1, #4 and #6:

Server Aggregation: App Server Count Succe- Rsp Rsp Rsp RspB1 RspB2 ...

                       ssful   Mean   Min   Max

HTTP CallCtr 3 2 4 3 5 2 0 HTTP HR 2 2 15 12 18 0 2 HTTP Sales 1 1 7 7 7 1 0 Email Pop3 2 2 14 12 16 0 2 SAP/R3 Finance 1 1 19 19 19 0 1

The applications(4) aggregation results in the following table. Note that the first record (HTTP) is the aggregate of transactions #1, #2,

  1. 3, #5, #6 and #9:

Application Aggregation: App Count Succe- Rsp Rsp Rsp RspB1 RspB2 ...

               ssful   Mean   Min   Max

HTTP 6 5 9 3 18 3 2 Email 2 2 14 12 16 0 2 SAP/R3 1 1 19 19 19 0 1

The apmReportControlTable provides for a historical set of the last 'X' reports, combining the historical records found in history tables with the periodic snapshots found in TopN tables. Conceptually the components are:

apmReportControlTable

  Specifies data collection and summarization parameters, including
  the number of reports to keep and the size of each report.

apmReport

  Each APM Report contains an aggregated list of records that
  represent data collected during a specific time period.
  An apmReportControlEntry causes a family of APM Reports to be
  created, where each report summarizes different, successive,
  contiguous periods of time.
  While the conceptual model of APM Reports shows them as distinct
  entities, they are all entries in a single apmReportTable, where
  entries in report 'A' are separated from entries in report 'B' by
  different values of the apmReportIndex.
  +-----------------------+
  |                       |
  | apmReportControlTable |
  |                       |      +-----------+
  +-----------------------+      |           |
                             +-----------+   |
                             |           |   |
                         +-----------+   |---+
                         |           |   |
                     +----------+    |---+
                     |          |    |               apmReport
                     |apmReport |----+  +-----------------------+
                     |          |       |Thu Mar 30 12-1PM      |
                     +----------+       |                       |
                                        |CLNT SERV  PROT  stats |
                                        |                       |
                                        |Joe  News  HTTP  data  |
                                        |Jan  POP   POP3  data  |
                                        |Jan  POP   SMTP  data  |
                                        |Bob  HR    PSOFT data  |
                                        |...                    |
                                        |...                    |
                                        +-----------------------+

AppLocalIndex Linkages

  The following set of example tables illustrates a few points:

1. How protocolDirEntries, apmHttpFilterEntries and

  apmUserDefinedAppEntries(not shown) all result in entries in the
  apmAppDirTable.

2. How a single appLocalIndex may be represented multiple times in

  the apmAppDirTable and apmReportTable if the agent measures
  multiple responsiveness types for that application.

A convention in the formatting of these tables is that the columns to the left of the '|' separator are index columns for the table.

Assuming the following entries in the RMON2 protocolDirectory:

protocolDirectory ID (*) Parameters | LocalIndex ... WWW None | 1 WWW Get None | 2 SAP/R3 None | 3

 (*) These IDs are represented here symbolically.  Consult [5] for
     more detail in their format

and the following entry in the apmHttpFilterTable:

ApmHttpFilterTable Index | AppLocalIndex ServerAddress URLPath MatchType ... 5 | 20 hr.example.com /expense prefix(3) ...

the apmAppDirTable would be populated with the following entries:

apmAppDir AppLocalIndex ResponsivenessType | Config ... 1 transaction(1) | On ... 1 throughput(2) | On ... 2 transaction(1) | On ... 2 throughput(2) | On ... 3 transaction(1) | On ... 20 transaction(1) | On ... 20 throughput(2) | On ...

The entries in the apmAppDirTable with an appLocalIndex of 1, 2 and 3 correspond to the identically named entries in the protocolDirectory table. appLocalIndex #1 results in 2 entries, one to measure the transaction responsiveness of WWW and one to measure its throughput responsiveness. In contrast, appLocalIndex #3 results in only a transaction entry because the agent does not measure the throughput responsiveness for SAP/R3 (probably because it isn't very meaningful). Finally, appLocalIndex #20 corresponds to the entry in the apmHttpFilterTable and has transaction responsiveness and throughput responsiveness measurements available.

If a report was configured using application aggregation, entries in that report might look like:

apmReportTable CtlIndex Index AppLocalIdx ResponsivenessType | TransactionCount ... 1 1 1 transaction(1) | counters... 1 1 1 throughput(2) | counters... 1 1 2 transaction(1) | counters... 1 1 2 throughput(2) | counters... 1 1 3 transaction(1) | counters... 1 1 20 transaction(1) | counters... 1 1 20 throughput(2) | counters...

Note that the index items protocolDirLocalIndex, apmReportServerAddress and apmReportClientID were omitted from apmReportTable example for brevity because they would have been equal to zero due to the use of the application aggregation in this example.

Measurement Methodology

There are many different measurement methodologies available for measuring application performance (e.g., probe-based, client-based, synthetic-transaction, etc.). This specification does not mandate a particular methodology - it is open to any that meet the minimum requirements. Conformance to this specification requires that the collected data match the semantics described herein. In particular, a data collection methodology must be able to measure response time, throughput, streaming responsiveness and availability as specified.

Note that in some cases a transaction may run for a long time but ultimately be successful. The measurement software shouldn't prematurely classify lengthy transactions as failures but should wait as long as the client application will wait for a successful response.

Instrumentation Architectures

Different architectural approaches and deployment strategies may be taken towards implementation of this specification. If a highly distributed approach is desired (e.g., an agent per desktop), one or both of the two approaches below may be used to make it more practical.

Application Directory Caching

It is necessary for the manager to have a copy of the tables that define the Application Directory in order to interpret APM measurements. It is likely that in a highly distributed network of

thousands of APM agents, this Application Directory will be the same on many, if not all of the agents. Repeated downloads of the Application Directory may be inefficient.

The apmAppDirID object is a single object that identifies the configuration of all aspects of the Application Directory when it is equal to a well-known, registered configuration. Thus, when a manager sees an apmAppDirID value that it recognizes, it need not download the Application Directory from that agent. In fact, the manager may discover a new registered Application Directory configuration on one agent and then re-use that configuration on another agent that shares the same apmAppDirID value.

Application directory registrations are unique within an administrative domain, allowing an administrator to create a custom application directory configuration without the need to assign it a globally-unique registration.

Push Model

When APM agents are installed on "desktops" (including laptops), a few issues make polling difficult:

1. Desktops often have dynamically-assigned addresses so there is no

  long-lived address to poll.

2. Desktops are not available as much as infrastructure components

  due to crashes, user-initiated reboots and shutdowns and user
  control over monitoring software.  Thus a desktop may not be
  available to answer a poll at the moment when the manager is
  scheduled to poll that desktop.

3. Laptops that are connected via dialup connections are only

  sporadically connected and will routinely be unreachable when the
  manager is scheduled to poll.

As a consequence, a push model is usually more appropriate for desktop-based agents. To achieve this, the agent should follow the following rules in deciding what data to send in notifications.

APM Reports

   If an agent wishes to push APM reports to a manager, it
   must send:
       apmAppDirID
       apmNameTable (any data updated since the last push)
   For each report the agent wishes to upload, it must
   send the entire apmReportControlEntry associated with
   that report and the associated entries in the
   apmReportTable that have changed since the last report.

APM Transactions

   If an agent wishes to push APM transactions to
   a manager, it must send:
       apmAppDirID
       apmNameTable (any data updated since the last push)
       apmTransactionTable (relevant entries)

APM Exceptions

   The agent must send:
       apmAppDirID
       apmNameTable (any data updated since the last push)
       apmTransactionEntry (of exception transaction)
       apmExceptionEntry (entry that generated exception)
 [Note that this list supersedes the information in the
 OBJECTS clauses of the apmTransactionResponsivenessAlarm
 and apmTransactionUnsuccessfulAlarm when the agent is
 using a push model.  This additional information
 eliminates the need for the manager to request additional
 data to understand the exception.]

The order of varbinds and where to segment varbinds into PDUs is at the discretion of the agent.

Structure of this MIB Module

The objects are arranged into the following groups:

  - APM Application Directory Group
  - APM User Defined Applications Group
  - APM Report Group
  - APM Transaction Group
  - APM Exception Group
  - APM Notification Group

These groups are the basic unit of conformance. If an agent implements a group, then it must implement all objects in that group. While this section provides an overview of grouping and conformance information for this MIB Module, the authoritative reference for such information is contained in the MODULE-COMPLIANCE and OBJECT-GROUP macros later in this MIB Module.

These groups are defined to provide a means of assigning object identifiers, and to provide a method for implementors of managed agents to know which objects they must implement.

The APM Application Directory Group

The APM Application Directory group contains configuration objects for every application or application verb monitored on this system. This group consists of the apmAppDirTable.

The APM User Defined Applications Group

The APM User Defined Applications Group contains objects that allow for the tracking of applications or application verbs that aren't registered in the protocolDirTable. This group consists of the apmHttpFilterTable and the apmUserDefinedAppTable.

The APM Report Group

The APM Report Group is used to prepare regular reports that aggregate application performance by flow, by client, by server, or by application. This group consists of the apmReportControlTable and the apmReportTable.

The APM Transaction Group

The APM Transaction Group is used to show transactions that are currently in progress and ones that have ended recently, along with their responsiveness metric.

Because many transactions last a very short time and because an agent may not retain completed transactions very long, transactions may exist in this table for a very short time. Thus, polling this table isn't an effective mechanism for retrieving all transactions unless the value of apmTransactionsHistorySize is suitably large for the transactions being monitored.

One important benefit of this table is that it allows a management station to check on the status of long-lived transactions. Because the apmReport and apmException mechanisms act only on transactions that have finished, a network manager may not have visibility for

some time into the performance of long-lived transactions such as streaming applications, large data transfers, or (very) poorly performing transactions. In fact, by their very definition, the apmReport and apmException mechanisms only provide visibility into a problem after nothing can be done about it. This group consists primarily of the apmTransactionTable.

The APM Exception Group

The APM Exception Group is used to generate immediate notifications of transactions that cross certain thresholds. The apmExceptionTable is used to configure which thresholds are to be checked for which types of transactions. The apmTransactionResponsivenessAlarm notification is sent when a transaction occurs with a responsiveness that crosses a threshold. The apmTransactionUnsuccessfulAlarm notification is sent when a transaction fails for which exception checking was configured. This group consists primarily of the apmExceptionTable.

The APM Notification Group

The APM Notification Group contains 2 notifications that are sent when thresholds in the APM Exception Table are exceeded.

Definitions

APM-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN IMPORTS

MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE,
NOTIFICATION-TYPE,
Counter32, Unsigned32                        FROM SNMPv2-SMI
TEXTUAL-CONVENTION, RowStatus, TimeStamp,
TimeInterval, TruthValue, DateAndTime,
StorageType                                  FROM SNMPv2-TC
MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP,
NOTIFICATION-GROUP                           FROM SNMPv2-CONF
SnmpAdminString                              FROM SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB
rmon, OwnerString                            FROM RMON-MIB
protocolDirLocalIndex                        FROM RMON2-MIB;

-- Application Performance Measurement MIB

apm MODULE-IDENTITY

LAST-UPDATED "200402190000Z"  -- February 19, 2004
ORGANIZATION "IETF RMON MIB Working Group"
CONTACT-INFO
    "Author:
                 Steve Waldbusser
         Phone:  +1-650-948-6500
         Fax :   +1-650-745-0671
         Email:  [email protected]
     Working Group Chair:
                 Andy Bierman
                 Cisco Systems, Inc.
         Postal: 170 West Tasman Drive
                 San Jose, CA USA 95134
            Tel: +1 408 527-3711
         E-mail: [email protected]
     Working Group Mailing List: <[email protected]>
     To subscribe send email to: <[email protected]>
    "
DESCRIPTION
    "The MIB module for measuring application performance
    as experienced by end-users.
    Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004). This version of
    this MIB module is part of RFC 3729; see the RFC itself for
    full legal notices."
REVISION "200402190000Z"    -- February 19, 2004
DESCRIPTION
    "The original version of this MIB Module, published as
    RFC3729."
::= { rmon 23 }

apmMibObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { apm 1 } apmConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { apm 2 } apmCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { apmConformance 1 } apmGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { apmConformance 2 }

AppLocalIndex ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION

STATUS       current
DESCRIPTION
    "A locally arbitrary unique identifier associated with an
    application or application verb.
    All objects of type AppLocalIndex are assigned by the agent
    out of a common number space. In other words, AppLocalIndex
    values assigned to entries in one table must not overlap with
    AppLocalIndex values assigned to entries in another
    table. Further, every protocolDirLocalIndex value registered
    by the agent automatically assigns the same value out of the
    AppLocalIndex number space.
    For example, if the protocolDirLocalIndex values { 1, 3, 5, 7 }
    have been assigned, and the apmHttpFilterAppLocalIndex values
    { 6, 8, 9 } have been assigned:
        - Assignment of new AppLocalIndex values must not use the
          values { 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }.
        - AppLocalIndex values { 1, 3, 5, 7 } are automatically
          assigned and are associated with the identical value of
          protocolDirLocalIndex. In particular, an entry in the
          apmAppDirTable indexed by a value provides further
          information about a protocol indexed by the same value
          in the protocolDirTable of RMON2.
    The value for each supported application must remain constant
    at least from one re-initialization of the entity's network
    management system to the next re-initialization, except that
    if an application is deleted and re-created, it must be
    re-created with a new value that has not been used since the
    last re-initialization.
    The specific value is meaningful only within a given SNMP
    entity. An AppLocalIndex value must not be re-used until the
    next agent restart."
SYNTAX       Unsigned32 (1..2147483647)

ProtocolDirNetworkAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION

STATUS       current
DESCRIPTION
    "A network level address whose semantics and encoding are
    specified by an associated protocolDirLocalIndex
    value. Objects of this type must specify which
    protocolDirLocalIndex value is used. This value is encoded
    according to the encoding rules for the identified
    protocolDirectory entry.
    For example, if the associated protocolDirLocalIndex indicates
    an encapsulation of ip, this object is encoded as a length
    octet of 4, followed by the 4 octets of the ip address,
    in network byte order.
    Objects of this type may allow this value to be the zero
    length string. If so, they must identify they meaning of this
    value."
SYNTAX        OCTET STRING (SIZE(0..255))

DataSourceOrZero ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION

STATUS       current
DESCRIPTION
    "Identifies the source of the data that the associated
    function is configured to analyze. This source can be any
    interface on this device.
    In order to identify a particular interface, this
    object shall identify the instance of the ifIndex
    object, defined in [4], for the desired interface.
    For example, if an entry were to receive data from
    interface #1, this object would be set to ifIndex.1.
    If the source of the data isn't an interface or cannot be
    localized to an interface, this object would be set to 0.0"
REFERENCE    "The DataSource textual convention is defined in
             RFC 2021 [5]."
SYNTAX       OBJECT IDENTIFIER

RmonClientID ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION

STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
     "A long-lived unique ID assigned to an end-system. This ID is
     assigned by the agent using an implementation-specific
     algorithm.
     Because a client machine may be assigned multiple addresses
     over any time period it can be difficult to attribute
     behavior to a particular client based solely on its
     address. A ClientID may be assigned to provide a more
     stable handle for referencing that client. The entity that
     assigns the ClientID may use various implementation
     techniques to keep track of a client but if the assigning
     entity is unable to track client address mappings, it may map
     client identifiers to client addresses rather than to
     distinct client machines.
     This is named ClientID because it helps to solve a problem
     seen in network clients (servers usually have well-known,
     long-lived addresses). However, ClientID's may be assigned to
     any end-system regardless of its role on the network."
SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..4294967295)

TransactionAggregationType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION

STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "Specifies one of 4 different techniques for aggregating
    transactions.
    The metrics for a single transaction are the responsiveness of
    the transaction and whether the transaction succeeded (a
    boolean). When such metrics are aggregated in this MIB Module,
    these metrics are replaced by averages and distributions of
    responsiveness and availability. The metrics describing
    aggregates are constant no matter which type of aggregation is
    being performed. These metrics may be found in the
    apmReportTable.
    The flows(1) aggregation is the simplest. All transactions
    that share common application/server/client 3-tuples are
    aggregated together, resulting in a set of metrics for all
    such unique 3-tuples.
    The clients(2) aggregation results in somewhat more
    aggregation (i.e., fewer resulting records). All transactions
    that share common application/client tuples are aggregated
    together, resulting in a set of metrics for all such unique
    tuples.
    The servers(3) aggregation usually results in still more
    aggregation (i.e., fewer resulting records). All transactions
    that share common application/server tuples are aggregated
    together, resulting in a set of metrics for all such unique
    tuples.
    The applications(4) aggregation results in the most
    aggregation (i.e., the fewest resulting records). All
    transactions that share a common application are aggregated
    together, resulting in a set of metrics for all such unique
    applications.
    Note that it is not meaningful to aggregate applications, as
    different applications have widely varying characteristics. As a
    result, this set of aggregations is complete."
SYNTAX      INTEGER {
              flows(1),    -- Least Aggregation
              clients(2),
              servers(3),
              applications(4) -- Most Aggregation
            }

-- The APM Application Directory Group

-- The Application Directory Table contains a record for every

-- application monitored by this agent. This table is also used to -- configure whether or not an application will be measured and which -- bucket boundaries will be used for the application. -- -- The bucket boundaries define the break-points between bins of a -- histogram analysis for that application. As an example of how this -- works, consider an entry representing response-time for http. -- If the boundaries are set as follows: -- Boundary1: 500 milliseconds -- Boundary2: 1 second -- Boundary3: 2 seconds -- Boundary4: 5 -- Boundary5: 15 -- Boundary6: 60 -- -- If the following measurements are made (all in milliseconds): -- 377, 8645, 1300, 487, 1405, 775, 1115, 850, 945, 1054, 7745, 9380 -- -- A report run during this interval would report the following -- counts: -- Bucket1: 2 -- Bucket2: 3 -- Bucket3: 4 -- Bucket4: 0 -- Bucket5: 3 -- Bucket6: 0 -- Bucket7: 0

apmAppDirTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ApmAppDirEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The APM MIB directory of applications and application
    verbs. The agent will populate this table with all
    applications/verbs of any responsivenessType it has the
    capability to monitor. Since the agent populates this table
    with every entry it has the capability to monitor, the
    entries in this table are read-write, allowing the management
    station to modify parameters in this table but not to add new
    entries or delete entries (however, entries may be
    disabled). If new entries are added to the apmHttpFilterTable
    or the apmUserDefinedAppTable, the agent will add the
    corresponding entries to this table.
    It is an implementation-dependent matter as to how the agent
    sets these default parameters. For example, it may leave
    certain entries in this table 'off(0)' if the agent developer
    believes that combination will be infrequently used, allowing
    a manager that needs that capability to set it to 'on(1)'.
    Some applications are registered in the RMON2 protocol
    directory and some are registered in other tables in this
    MIB Module. Regardless of where an application is originally
    registered, it is assigned an AppLocalIndex value that is the
    primary index for this table.
    The contents of this table affect all reports and exceptions
    generated by this agent. Accordingly, modification of this
    table should be performed by a manager acting in the role of
    administrator. In particular, management software should not
    require or enforce particular configuration of this table - it
    should reflect the preferences of the site administrator, not
    the software author. As a practical matter, this requires
    management software to allow the administrator to configure
    the values it will use so that it can be adapted to the site
    policy."
::= { apmMibObjects 1 }

apmAppDirEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ApmAppDirEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The APM MIB directory of applications and application
    verbs. An entry will exist in this table for all applications
    for which application performance measurement is supported."
INDEX { apmAppDirAppLocalIndex,
        apmAppDirResponsivenessType }
::= { apmAppDirTable 1 }

ApmAppDirEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

apmAppDirAppLocalIndex            AppLocalIndex,
apmAppDirResponsivenessType       INTEGER,
apmAppDirConfig                   INTEGER,
apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary1  Unsigned32,
apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary2  Unsigned32,
apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary3  Unsigned32,
apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary4  Unsigned32,
apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary5  Unsigned32,
apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary6  Unsigned32

}

apmAppDirAppLocalIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      AppLocalIndex
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The AppLocalIndex assigned for this application Directory
    entry."
::= { apmAppDirEntry 1 }

apmAppDirResponsivenessType OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      INTEGER {
              transactionOriented(1),
              throughputOriented(2),
              streamingOriented(3)
            }
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "This object describes and configures the agent's support for
    application performance measurement for this application.
    There are 3 types of measurements for different types of
    applications:
    Transaction-Oriented applications have a fairly constant
    workload to perform for all transactions. The responsiveness
    metric for transaction-oriented applications is application
    response time (from first request to final delivery of
    service) and is measured in milliseconds. This is
    commonly referred to as end-user response time.
    Throughput-Oriented applications have widely varying workloads
    based on the nature of the client request. In particular,
    throughput-oriented applications vary widely in the amount of
    data that must be transported to satisfy the request. The
    responsiveness metric for throughput-oriented applications is
    kilobits per second.
    Streaming-Oriented applications deliver data at a constant
    metered rate of speed regardless of the responsiveness of the
    networking and computing infrastructure. This constant rate of
    speed is generally specified to be below (sometimes well
    below) the nominal capability of the infrastructure. However,
    when the infrastructures cannot deliver data at this speed,
    interruption of service or degradation of service can
    result. The responsiveness metric for streaming-oriented
    applications is the ratio of time that the service is degraded
    or interrupted to the total service time. This metric is
    measured in parts per million.
    Note that for some applications, measuring more than one
    responsiveness type may be interesting. For agents that wish
    to support more than one measurement for a application, they
    will populate this table with multiple entries for that
    application, one for each type."
::= { apmAppDirEntry 2 }

apmAppDirConfig OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      INTEGER {
              off(1),
              on(2)
            }
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "This object describes and configures support for application
    performance measurement for this application.
    If the value of this object is on(2), the agent supports
    measurement of application performance metrics for this
    application and is configured to measure such metrics for all
    APM MIB functions and all interfaces.  If the value of this
    object is off(1), the agent supports measurement of
    application performance for this application but is configured
    to not measure these metrics for any APM MIB functions or
    interfaces.  Whenever this value changes from on(2) to off(1),
    the agent shall delete all related entries in all tables in
    this MIB Module.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmAppDirEntry 3 }

apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary1 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The boundary value between bucket1 and bucket 2. If this
    value is modified, all entries in the apmReportTable must be
    deleted by the agent.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmAppDirEntry 4 }

apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary2 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The boundary value between bucket2 and bucket 3. If this
    value is modified, all entries in the apmReportTable must be
    deleted by the agent.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmAppDirEntry 5 }

apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary3 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The boundary value between bucket3 and bucket 4. If this
    value is modified, all entries in the apmReportTable must be
    deleted by the agent.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmAppDirEntry 6 }

apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary4 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The boundary value between bucket4 and bucket 5. If this
    value is modified, all entries in the apmReportTable must be
    deleted by the agent.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmAppDirEntry 7 }

apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary5 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The boundary value between bucket5 and bucket 6. If this
    value is modified, all entries in the apmReportTable must be
    deleted by the agent.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmAppDirEntry 8 }

apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary6 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The boundary value between bucket6 and bucket 7. If this
    value is modified, all entries in the apmReportTable must be
    deleted by the agent.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmAppDirEntry 9 }

-- Scalars related to the Application Directory table

apmBucketBoundaryLastChange OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX     TimeStamp
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS     current
DESCRIPTION
    "The value of sysUpTime the last time that any bucket boundary
    in any appDirEntry was changed. This object can help to
    determine if two managers are both trying to enforce different
    configurations of this table."
::= { apmMibObjects 2 }

apmAppDirID OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX     OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS     current
DESCRIPTION
    "This object allows managers to avoid downloading application
    directory information when the directory is set to a known
    (usually fixed) configuration.
    If the value of this object isn't 0.0, it signifies
    that the entire contents of the apmAppDirTable,
    apmHttpFilterTable, apmUserDefinedAppTable and
    protocolDirTable are equal to a known state identified
    by the value of this object. If a manager recognizes this
    value as identifying a directory configuration it has a local
    copy of, it may use this local copy rather than downloading
    these tables. Note that it may have downloaded this local copy
    (and the ID) from another agent and used this copy for all
    other agents that advertised the same ID.
    If an agent recognizes that the entire contents of the
    apmAppDirTable, apmHttpFilterTable,
    apmUserDefinedAppTable and protocolDirTable are equal to
    a known state to which an ID has been assigned, it should set
    this object to that ID.
    In many cases when this feature is used, the application
    directory information will be in read-only memory and thus the
    tables may not be modified via SNMP requests. In the event
    that the tables are writable and a modification is made, the
    agent is responsible for setting this object to 0.0 if it
    cannot determine that the state is equal to a known state.
    An agent is not obligated to recognize and advertise all such
    registered states as it may not have knowledge of all states.
    Thus, a manager may encounter agents whose DirectoryID value
    is 0.0 even though the contents of the directory were equal to
    a registered state.
    Note that the contents of those tables includes the
    protocolDirLocalIndex and appLocalIndex values. In other
    words, these values can't be assigned randomly on each agent,
    but must be equal to values that are part of the known
    state. While it is possible for a manager to download
    application directory details using SNMP and to set the
    appropriate directoryID, the manager would need to have some
    scheme to ensure consistent values of LocalIndex variables
    from agent to agent. Such schemes are outside the scope of
    this specification.
    Application directory registrations are unique within an
    administrative domain.
    Typically these registrations will be made by an agent
    software developer who will set the application directory
    tables to a read-only state and assign a DirectoryID to that
    state. Thus, all agents running this software would share the
    same DirectoryID. As the application directory might change
    from one software release to the next, the developer may
    register different DirectoryID's for each software release.
    A customer could also create a site-wide application directory
    configuration and assign a DirectoryID to that configuration
    as long as consistent values of LocalIndex variables can be
    ensured.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
 ::= { apmMibObjects 3 }

-- APM HTTP Filter Table

-- The HTTP Filter Table creates virtual applications which measure the -- performance of certain web pages or sets of web pages. Some -- circumstances where this is particularly useful are: -- -- - An Intranet or ASP scenario where a business application is -- running on one or more web pages or scripts.

-- (i.e., /expense/submit.cgi?employeeID=3426&...) -- - A web-hosting scenario where one wants to measure the -- service level for a particular customer -- - An e-commerce scenario where the performance of certain -- pages needs to be monitored more closely. -- (i.e., shopping cart, shipping, credit card authorization)

apmHttpFilterTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ApmHttpFilterEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A table that creates virtual applications which measure the
    performance of certain web pages or sets of web pages.
    When an entry is added to this table, the agent will
    automatically create one or more entries in the
    apmAppDirTable (one for each responsivenessType it is
    capable of measuring).
    Note that when entries exist in this table some HTTP
    transactions will be summarized twice: in applications
    represented here as well as the HTTP application. If entries
    in this table overlap, these transactions may be summarized
    additional times.
    The contents of this table affect all reports and exceptions
    generated by this agent. Accordingly, modification of this
    table should be performed by a manager acting in the role of
    administrator. In particular, management software should not
    require or enforce particular configuration of this table - it
    should reflect the preferences of the site administrator, not
    the software author."
::= { apmMibObjects 4 }

apmHttpFilterEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ApmHttpFilterEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A virtual application which measure the performance of certain
    web pages or sets of web pages."
INDEX { apmHttpFilterIndex }
::= { apmHttpFilterTable 1 }

ApmHttpFilterEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

apmHttpFilterIndex              Unsigned32,
apmHttpFilterAppLocalIndex      AppLocalIndex,
apmHttpFilterServerProtocol     Unsigned32,
apmHttpFilterServerAddress      ProtocolDirNetworkAddress,
apmHttpFilterURLPath            OCTET STRING,
apmHttpFilterMatchType          INTEGER,
apmHttpFilterOwner              OwnerString,
apmHttpFilterStorageType        StorageType,
apmHttpFilterRowStatus          RowStatus

}

apmHttpFilterIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..65535)
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "An index that uniquely identifies an entry in the
    apmHttpFilterTable."
::= { apmHttpFilterEntry 1 }

apmHttpFilterAppLocalIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      AppLocalIndex
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The AppLocalIndex that represents HTTP transactions
    that match this entry.
    This object is read-only. A value is created by the agent from
    an unused AppLocalIndex value when this apmHttpFilterEntry is
    created."
::= { apmHttpFilterEntry 2 }

apmHttpFilterServerProtocol OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..2147483647)
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The protocolDirLocalIndex value of the network level protocol
    of the apmHttpFilterServerAddress."
::= { apmHttpFilterEntry 3 }

apmHttpFilterServerAddress OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ProtocolDirNetworkAddress
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "This entry will only represent transactions coming from the
    network address specified in this object.
    This is represented as an octet string with
    specific semantics and length as identified
    by the associated apmHttpFilterServerProtocol object.
    If this object is the zero-length string, then this entry will
    match one of the addresses represented by the 'host' component
    of the associated apmHttpFilterURLPath object, where the
    format if a URL [9] is
    http://<host>:<port>/<path>?<searchpart>."
::= { apmHttpFilterEntry 4 }

apmHttpFilterURLPath OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OCTET STRING (SIZE(0..65535))
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "This entry will only represent HTTP transactions
    where the URL path component in the request matches this
    value. This value represents the requested path regardless of
    any substitution that the server might perform.
    Prior to the matching, the URL is stripped of any server
    address or DNS name and consists solely of the path name on
    that server.
    If the length of this object is zero, then this entry will
    match if the associated apmHttpFilterServerAddress match. If
    the length of that object is also zero, then this entry will
    match nothing.
    The value of the associated apmHttpFilterMatchType dictates
    the type of matching that will be attempted."
::= { apmHttpFilterEntry 5 }

apmHttpFilterMatchType OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      INTEGER {
                exact(1),
                stripTrailingSlash(2),
                prefix(3)
            }
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The matching algorithm used to compare the URL pathname.
    If the value is exact(1), then the pathname component will be
    compared with the associated apmHttpFilterURLPath and
    will only be associated with this entry if it matches exactly.
    If the value is stripTrailingSlash(2), then the pathname
    component will be compared with the associated
    apmHttpFilterURLPath and will only be associated with this
    entry if it matches exactly or if the pathname ends with a '/'
    symbol and matches apmHttpFilterURLPath if the '/' symbol is
    removed from the pathname. This option exists for those paths
    where an optional trailing slash is possible but for which a
    prefix match would be too broad.
    If the value is prefix(3), then the pathname component will be
    compared with the associated apmHttpFilterURLPath and will
    only be associated with this entry if the beginning of the
    pathname matches every octet of this value. Octets that extend
    beyond the length of this value are ignored."
::= { apmHttpFilterEntry 6 }

apmHttpFilterOwner OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OwnerString
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The entity that configured this entry and is
    therefore using the resources assigned to it."
::= { apmHttpFilterEntry 7 }

apmHttpFilterStorageType OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      StorageType
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The storage type of this apmHttpFilterEntry. If the value of
    this object is 'permanent', no objects in this row need to be
    writable."
::= { apmHttpFilterEntry 8 }

apmHttpFilterRowStatus OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      RowStatus
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The status of this apmHttpFilterEntry. No objects in this row
    may be modified while the row's status is 'active'."
::= { apmHttpFilterEntry 9 }

apmHttpIgnoreUnregisteredURLs OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      TruthValue
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "When true, APM measurements of HTTP transactions will only
    measure transactions relating to URLs that match a filter in
    the apmHttpFilterTable. Thus, measurements for the HTTP
    application will present aggregated statistics for
    URL-matching HTTP transactions and measurements for the HTTP
    GET application verb will present aggregated statistics for
    URL-matching HTTP GET transactions.
    This will be used in environments that wish to monitor only
    targeted URLs and to ignore large volumes of internet web
    browsing traffic.
    This object affects all APM reports and exceptions generated
    by this agent. Accordingly, modification of this object should
    be performed by a manager acting in the role of
    administrator. In particular, management software should not
    require or enforce particular configuration of this object -
    it should reflect the preferences of the site administrator,
    not the software author.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmMibObjects 5 }

apmHttp4xxIsFailure OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      TruthValue
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "When true, this agent will recognize HTTP errors in the range
    of 400 through 499 and will treat them as unavailable
    transactions. When false or when this object isn't supported,
    they will be treated as successful transactions.
    This object allows such error pages to be tracked at the
    possible expense of having user typos treated as poor service
    on the part of the web server.
    This object affects all reports and exceptions generated by
    this agent. Accordingly, modification of this object should be
    performed by a manager acting in the role of administrator. In
    particular, management software should not require or enforce
    particular configuration of this object - it should reflect
    the preferences of the site administrator, not the software
    author.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmMibObjects 6 }

-- The APM User-Defined Application Table

-- Many application protocols will never be registered with a -- standards body (and thus included in a protocol directory standard) -- because they are custom, in-house or proprietary -- applications. Nevertheless, implementation strategies exist for -- monitoring the end-user experience of these applications. -- -- This read-only table provides a means for the agent to advertise -- which user-defined applications it is monitoring and to associate -- each with an AppLocalIndex value. It is an implementation-dependent -- matter as to how the agent learns how to monitor these -- applications.

apmUserDefinedAppTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ApmUserDefinedAppEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A table that advertises user-defined applications that the
    agent is measuring.
    The agent will automatically create one or more entries in the
    apmAppDirTable (one for each responsivenessType it is
    capable of measuring) for each entry in this table.
    Note that when entries exist in this table some
    transactions can be summarized more than once if there is
    overlap between applications defined here and applications
    defined in the protocol directory or in the httpFilter table."
::= { apmMibObjects 7 }

apmUserDefinedAppEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ApmUserDefinedAppEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A user-defined application that the agent is measuring, along
    with its AppLocalIndex assignment.
    The apmAppDirAppLocalIndex value in the index identifies
    the agent-assigned AppLocalIndex value for this user-defined
    application."
INDEX { apmAppDirAppLocalIndex }
::= { apmUserDefinedAppTable 1 }

ApmUserDefinedAppEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

apmUserDefinedAppParentIndex    Unsigned32,
apmUserDefinedAppApplication    SnmpAdminString

}

apmUserDefinedAppParentIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..2147483647)
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The protocolDirLocalIndex value of the highest-layer
    protocol defined in the protocolDirTable that this
    application is a child of."
::= { apmUserDefinedAppEntry 1 }

apmUserDefinedAppApplication OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SnmpAdminString
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A human readable descriptive tag for this application."
::= { apmUserDefinedAppEntry 2 }

-- The APM Name Table

apmNameTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ApmNameEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A client machine may have multiple addresses during a period
    of monitoring. The apmNameTable assigns a long-lived
    identifier to a client and records what addresses were
    assigned to that client for periods of time. Various
    implementation techniques exist for tracking this mapping but
    if an agent is unable to track client address mappings, it may
    map client identifiers to client addresses rather than to
    distinct client machines.
    A particular apmNameClientID should be a constant attribute of
    a particular client. When available, the agent may also record
    the machine name and/or user name which may be valuable for
    displaying to humans. The apmNameMachineName and
    apmNameUserName are relatively constant, changing only if
    these attributes actually change on the client.
    The agent will store a historical log of these entries, aging
    out old entries as the log becomes too large. Since this table
    contains information vital to the interpretation of other
    tables (e.g., the apmReportTable), the agent should ensure that
    the log doesn't age out entries that would be referenced by
    data in those tables.
    Note that an entry for a clientID is active from its
    StartTime until the StartTime of another entry (for the same
    clientID) that supersedes it, or 'now' if none supersede
    it. Therefore, if a clientID only has a single entry, it is by
    definition very new and should never be aged out. No entry for
    a clientID should be aged out unless it has been updated by a
    new entry for the client (i.e., with an updated address) and
    only if the new entry is 'old' enough.
    To determine how old is old enough, compute the maximum value
    of Interval * (NumReports + 1) of all entries in the
    apmReportControlTable (the '+ 1' is to allow a reasonable
    period of time for the report to be downloaded). Then take the
    larger of this value and the age in seconds of the oldest
    entry in the current transaction table. If an entry for a
    clientID is superseded by another entry whose StartTime is
    more than this many seconds ago, then the older entry may be
    deleted."
::= { apmMibObjects 8 }

apmNameEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ApmNameEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "An entry in the APM name table. An entry exists for each
    period of time that a client has been associated with a
    particular address.
    The protocolDirLocalIndex value in the index identifies
    the network layer protocol for the ClientAddress for this
    entry.
    Note that some combinations of index values may result in an
    index that exceeds 128 sub-identifiers in length which exceeds
    the maximum for the SNMP protocol. Implementations should take
    care to avoid such combinations."
INDEX { apmNameClientID,
        protocolDirLocalIndex, apmNameClientAddress,
        apmNameMappingStartTime }
::= { apmNameTable 1 }

ApmNameEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

apmNameClientID                  RmonClientID,
apmNameClientAddress             ProtocolDirNetworkAddress,
apmNameMappingStartTime          DateAndTime,
apmNameMachineName               SnmpAdminString,
apmNameUserName                  SnmpAdminString

}

apmNameClientID OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      RmonClientID
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
     "A unique ID assigned to the machine represented by this
     mapping. This ID is assigned by the agent using an
     implementation-specific algorithm."
::= { apmNameEntry 1 }

apmNameClientAddress OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ProtocolDirNetworkAddress (SIZE(1..255))
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The network client address for this client when this mapping
    was active.
    This is represented as an octet string with specific semantics
    and length as identified by the protocolDirLocalIndex
    component of the index. This object may not be the zero length
    string.
    Since this object is an index variable, it is encoded in the
    index according to the index encoding rules.  For example, if
    the protocolDirLocalIndex component of the index indicates an
    encapsulation of ip, this object is encoded as a length octet
    of 4, followed by the 4 octets of the ip address, in network
    byte order. Care should be taken to avoid values of this
    object that, in conjunction with the other index variables,
    would result in an index longer than SNMP's maximum of 128
    subidentifiers."
::= { apmNameEntry 2 }

apmNameMappingStartTime OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      DateAndTime
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The time that the agent first discovered this mapping
    as active."
::= { apmNameEntry 3 }

apmNameMachineName OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SnmpAdminString
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The human readable name of the client machine.
    If the client has no machine name or the agent is
    unable to learn the machine name, this object will be
    a zero-length string."
::= { apmNameEntry 4 }

apmNameUserName OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SnmpAdminString
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The human readable name of a human user using the client
    machine. If more than one user name are available
    simultaneously, it is an implementation-dependent matter as to
    which is used here. However, if the user name changes, this
    object should change to reflect that change.
    Non-human user names like 'root' or 'administrator' aren't
    intended as values for this object. If the client has no
    recorded user name or the agent is unable to learn a user
    name, this object will be a zero-length string."
::= { apmNameEntry 5 }

-- The APM Report Group

apmReportControlTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ApmReportControlEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "Parameters that control the creation of a set of reports that
    aggregate application performance."
::= { apmMibObjects 9 }

apmReportControlEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ApmReportControlEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A conceptual row in the apmReportControlTable.
    An example of the indexing of this table is
    apmReportControlInterval.3"
INDEX { apmReportControlIndex }
::= { apmReportControlTable 1 }

ApmReportControlEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

apmReportControlIndex            Unsigned32,
apmReportControlDataSource       DataSourceOrZero,
apmReportControlAggregationType  TransactionAggregationType,
apmReportControlInterval         Unsigned32,
apmReportControlRequestedSize    Unsigned32,
apmReportControlGrantedSize      Unsigned32,
apmReportControlRequestedReports Unsigned32,
apmReportControlGrantedReports   Unsigned32,
apmReportControlStartTime        TimeStamp,
apmReportControlReportNumber     Unsigned32,
apmReportControlDeniedInserts    Counter32,
apmReportControlDroppedFrames    Counter32,
apmReportControlOwner            OwnerString,
apmReportControlStorageType      StorageType,
apmReportControlStatus           RowStatus

}

apmReportControlIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..65535)
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "An index that uniquely identifies an entry in the
    apmReportControlTable.  Each such entry defines a unique
    report whose results are placed in the apmReportTable on
    behalf of this apmReportControlEntry."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 1 }

apmReportControlDataSource OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      DataSourceOrZero
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The source of the data for APM Reports generated on
    behalf of this apmReportControlEntry.
    If the measurement is being performed by a probe, this should
    be set to interface or port where data was received for
    analysis. If the measurement isn't being performed by a probe,
    this should be set to the primary interface over which the
    measurement is being performed. If the measurement isn't being
    performed by a probe and there is no primary interface or this
    information isn't known, this object should be set to 0.0.
    This object may not be modified if the associated
    apmReportControlStatus object is equal to active(1)."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 2 }

apmReportControlAggregationType OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      TransactionAggregationType
        --    INTEGER {
        --      flows(1),
        --      clients(2),
        --      servers(3),
        --      applications(4)
        --    }
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The type of aggregation being performed for this set of
    reports.
    The metrics for a single transaction are the responsiveness of
    the transaction and whether the transaction succeeded (a
    boolean). When such metrics are aggregated in this MIB Module,
    these metrics are replaced by averages and distributions of
    responsiveness and availability. The metrics describing
    aggregates are constant no matter which type of aggregation is
    being performed. These metrics may be found in the
    apmReportTable.
    The flows(1) aggregation is the simplest. All transactions
    that share common application/server/client 3-tuples are
    aggregated together, resulting in a set of metrics for all
    such unique 3-tuples.
    The clients(2) aggregation results in somewhat more
    aggregation (i.e., fewer resulting records). All transactions
    that share common application/client tuples are aggregated
    together, resulting in a set of metrics for all such unique
    tuples.
    The servers(3) aggregation usually results in still more
    aggregation (i.e., fewer resulting records). All transactions
    that share common application/server tuples are aggregated
    together, resulting in a set of metrics for all such unique
    tuples.
    The applications(4) aggregation results in the most
    aggregation (i.e., the fewest resulting records). All
    transactions that share a common application are aggregated
    together, resulting in a set of metrics for all such unique
    applications.
    Note that it is not meaningful to aggregate applications, as
    different applications have widely varying characteristics.
    As a result, this set of aggregations is complete.
    This object may not be modified if the associated
    apmReportControlStatus object is equal to active(1)."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 3 }

apmReportControlInterval OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
UNITS       "Seconds"
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The interval in seconds over which data is accumulated before
    being aggregated into a report in the apmReportTable.  All
    reports with the same apmReportControlIndex will be based on
    the same interval. This object must be greater than zero.
    Many users desire that these reports be synchronized to within
    seconds of the beginning of the hour because the results may
    be correlated more meaningfully to business behavior and so
    that data from multiple agents is aggregated over the same
    time periods. Thus management software may take extra effort
    to synchronize reports to the beginning of the hour and to one
    another. However, the agent must not allow reports to 'drift'
    over time as they will quickly become unsynchronized. In
    particular, if there is any fixed processing delay between
    reports, the reports should deduct this time from the interval
    so that reports don't drift.
    This object may not be modified if the associated
    apmReportControlStatus object is equal to active(1)."
DEFVAL { 3600 }
::= { apmReportControlEntry 4 }

apmReportControlRequestedSize OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of entries requested to be allocated for each
    report generated on behalf of this entry."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 5 }

apmReportControlGrantedSize OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of entries per report the agent has allocated
    based on the requested amount in apmReportControlRequestedSize.
    Since multiple reports are saved, the total number of entries
    allocated will be this number multiplied by the value of
    apmReportControlGrantedReports, or 1 if that object doesn't
    exist.
    When the associated apmReportControlRequestedSize object is
    created or modified, the agent should set this object as
    closely to the requested value as is possible for the
    particular implementation and available resources. When
    considering resources available, the agent must consider its
    ability to allocate this many entries for all reports.
    Note that while the actual number of entries stored in the
    reports may fluctuate due to changing conditions, the agent
    must continue to have storage available to satisfy the full
    report size for all reports when necessary. Further, the agent
    must not lower this value except as a result of a set to the
    associated apmReportControlRequestedSize object."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 6 }

apmReportControlRequestedReports OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..65535)
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of saved reports requested to be allocated on
    behalf of this entry."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 7 }

apmReportControlGrantedReports OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..65535)
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of saved reports the agent has allocated
    based on the requested amount in
    apmReportControlRequestedReports. Since each report can have
    many entries, the total number of entries allocated will be
    this number multiplied by the value of
    apmReportControlGrantedSize, or 1 if that object doesn't
    exist.
    When the associated apmReportControlRequestedReports object is
    created or modified, the agent should set this object as
    closely to the requested value as is possible for the
    particular implementation and available resources. When
    considering resources available, the agent must consider its
    ability to allocate this many reports each with the number of
    entries represented by apmReportControlGrantedSize, or 1 if
    that object doesn't exist.
    Note that while the storage required for each report may
    fluctuate due to changing conditions, the agent must continue
    to have storage available to satisfy the full report size for
    all reports when necessary. Further, the agent must not lower
    this value except as a result of a set to the associated
    apmReportControlRequestedSize object."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 8 }

apmReportControlStartTime OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      TimeStamp
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The value of sysUpTime when the system began processing the
    report in progress. Note that the report in progress is not
    available.
    This object may be used by the management station to figure
    out the start time for all previous reports saved for this
    apmReportControlEntry, as reports are started at fixed
    intervals."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 9 }

apmReportControlReportNumber OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of the report in progress. When an
    apmReportControlEntry is activated, the first report will be
    numbered one."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 10 }

apmReportControlDeniedInserts OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Counter32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of failed attempts to add an entry to reports for
    this apmReportControlEntry because the number of entries
    would have exceeded apmReportControlGrantedSize.
    This number is valuable in determining if enough entries have
    been allocated for reports in light of fluctuating network
    usage. Note that since an entry that is denied will often be
    attempted again, this number will not predict the exact number
    of additional entries needed, but can be used to understand
    the relative magnitude of the problem.
    Also note that there is no ordering specified for the entries
    in the report, thus there are no rules for which entries will
    be omitted when not enough entries are available. As a
    consequence, the agent is not required to delete 'least
    valuable' entries first."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 11 }

apmReportControlDroppedFrames OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Counter32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
   "The total number of frames which were received by the agent
    and therefore not accounted for in the *StatsDropEvents, but
    for which the agent chose not to count for this entry for
    whatever reason.  Most often, this event occurs when the agent
    is out of some resources and decides to shed load from this
    collection.
    This count does not include packets that were not counted
    because they had MAC-layer errors.
    This counter is only relevant if this apm report is based on
    a data source whose collection methodology is based on
    analyzing network traffic.
    Note that if the apmReportTables are inactive because no
    applications are enabled in the application directory, this
    value should be 0.
    Note that, unlike the dropEvents counter, this number is the
    exact number of frames dropped."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 12 }

apmReportControlOwner OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OwnerString
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The entity that configured this entry and is
    therefore using the resources assigned to it."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 13 }

apmReportControlStorageType OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      StorageType
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The storage type of this apmReportControlEntry. If the value
    of this object is 'permanent', no objects in this row need to
    be writable."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 14 }

apmReportControlStatus OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      RowStatus
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The status of this apmReportControlEntry.
    An entry may not exist in the active state unless all
    objects in the entry have an appropriate value. The only
    objects in the entry that may be modified while the entry is
    in the active state are apmReportControlRequestedSize and
    apmReportControlRequestedReports.
    If this object is not equal to active(1), all
    associated entries in the apmReportTable shall be deleted
    by the agent."
::= { apmReportControlEntry 15 }

-- The APM Report Table

apmReportTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ApmReportEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The data resulting from aggregated APM reports. Consult the
    definition of apmReportControlAggregationType for the
    definition of the various types of aggregations."
::= { apmMibObjects 10 }

apmReportEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ApmReportEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A conceptual row in the apmReportTable.
    The apmReportControlIndex value in the index identifies the
    apmReportControlEntry on whose behalf this entry was created.
    The apmReportIndex value in the index identifies which report
    (in the series of reports) this entry is a part of.
    The apmAppDirAppLocalIndex value in the index identifies
    the common application of the transactions aggregated in this
    entry.
    The apmAppDirResponsivenessType value in the index
    identifies the type of responsiveness metric reported by
    this entry and uniquely identifies this entry when more
    than one responsiveness metric is measured for a flow.
    Entries will only exist in this table for those
    combinations of AppLocalIndex and ResponsivenessType
    that are configured 'on(1)'.
    The protocolDirLocalIndex value in the index identifies
    the network layer protocol of the apmReportServerAddress.
    When the associated apmReportControlAggregationType value is
    equal to applications(4) or clients(2), this
    protocolDirLocalIndex value will equal 0.
    The apmReportServerAddress value in the index identifies the
    network layer address of the server in transactions aggregated
    in this entry.
    The apmNameClientID value in the index identifies the
    client in transactions aggregated in this entry. If the
    associated apmReportControlAggregationType is equal to
    applications(4) or servers(3), then this protocolDirLocalIndex
    value will equal 0.
    An example of the indexing of this entry is
    apmReportTransactionCount.3.15.3.1.8.4.192.168.1.2.3232235788
    Note that some combinations of index values may result in an
    index that exceeds 128 sub-identifiers in length which exceeds
    the maximum for the SNMP protocol. Implementations should take
    care to avoid such combinations."
INDEX { apmReportControlIndex, apmReportIndex,
        apmAppDirAppLocalIndex,
        apmAppDirResponsivenessType,
        protocolDirLocalIndex, apmReportServerAddress,
        apmNameClientID }
::= { apmReportTable 1 }

ApmReportEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

apmReportIndex                  Unsigned32,
apmReportServerAddress          ProtocolDirNetworkAddress,
apmReportTransactionCount       Unsigned32,
apmReportSuccessfulTransactions Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessMean     Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessMin      Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessMax      Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessB1       Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessB2       Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessB3       Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessB4       Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessB5       Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessB6       Unsigned32,
apmReportResponsivenessB7       Unsigned32

}

apmReportIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The value of apmReportControlReportNumber for the report to
    which this entry belongs."
::= { apmReportEntry 1 }

apmReportServerAddress OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ProtocolDirNetworkAddress
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The network server address for this apmReportEntry.
    This is represented as an octet string with
    specific semantics and length as identified
    by the protocolDirLocalIndex component of the index.
    Since this object is an index variable, it is encoded in the
    index according to the index encoding rules.  For example, if
    the protocolDirLocalIndex indicates an encapsulation of ip,
    this object is encoded as a length octet of 4, followed by the
    4 octets of the ip address, in network byte order. Care
    should be taken to avoid values of this object that, in
    conjunction with the other index variables, would result in an
    index longer than SNMP's maximum of 128 subidentifiers.
    If the associated apmReportControlAggregationType is equal to
    applications(4) or clients(2), then this object will be a null
    string and will be encoded simply as a length octet of 0."
::= { apmReportEntry 2 }

apmReportTransactionCount OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The total number of transactions aggregated into this record."
::= { apmReportEntry 3 }

apmReportSuccessfulTransactions OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The total number of successful transactions aggregated into
    this record."
::= { apmReportEntry 4 }

apmReportResponsivenessMean OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The arithmetic mean of the responsiveness metrics for all
    successful transactions aggregated into this record."
::= { apmReportEntry 5 }

apmReportResponsivenessMin OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The minimum of the responsiveness metrics for all
    successful transactions aggregated into this record."
::= { apmReportEntry 6 }

apmReportResponsivenessMax OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The maximum of the responsiveness metrics for all
    successful transactions aggregated into this record."
::= { apmReportEntry 7 }

-- Note that when updating a report entry, a transaction will not be -- counted in more than 1 bucket in an entry. It will be counted in -- the first bucket that matches, starting with Bucket 1 (B1). Note -- that if a transaction matches 2 application types, it will update

-- one bucket in each of 2 entries in this table.

apmReportResponsivenessB1 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of successful transactions aggregated into this
    record whose responsiveness was less than boundary1 value for
    this application."
::= { apmReportEntry 8 }

apmReportResponsivenessB2 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of successful transactions aggregated into this
    record whose responsiveness did not fall into Bucket 1 and was
    greater than or equal to the boundary1 value for this
    application and less than the boundary2 value for this
    application."
::= { apmReportEntry 9 }

apmReportResponsivenessB3 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of successful transactions aggregated into this
    record whose responsiveness did not fall into Bucket 1 or 2
    and as greater than or equal to the boundary2 value for this
    application and less than the boundary3 value for this
    application."
::= { apmReportEntry 10 }

apmReportResponsivenessB4 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of successful transactions aggregated into this
    record whose responsiveness did not fall into Buckets 1
    through 3 and was greater than or equal to the boundary3 value
    for this application and less than the boundary4 value for
    this application."
::= { apmReportEntry 11 }

apmReportResponsivenessB5 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of successful transactions aggregated into this
    record whose responsiveness did not fall into Buckets 1
    through 4 and was greater than or equal to the boundary4 value
    for this application and less than the boundary5 value for
    this application."
::= { apmReportEntry 12 }

apmReportResponsivenessB6 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of successful transactions aggregated into this
    record whose responsiveness did not fall into Buckets 1
    through 5 and was greater than or equal to the
    boundary5 value for this application and less than the
    boundary6 value for this application."
::= { apmReportEntry 13 }

apmReportResponsivenessB7 OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The number of successful transactions aggregated into this
    record whose responsiveness did not fall into Buckets 1
    through 6 and was greater than or equal to the boundary6 value
    for this application."
::= { apmReportEntry 14 }

-- APM Transaction Table

apmTransactionTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ApmTransactionEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "This table contains transactions that are currently running
    or have recently finished."
::= { apmMibObjects 11 }

apmTransactionEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ApmTransactionEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A conceptual row in the apmTransactionTable.
    The apmAppDirAppLocalIndex value in the index identifies
    the application of the transaction represented by this entry.
    The apmAppDirResponsivenessType value in the index
    identifies the type of responsiveness metric reported by
    this entry and uniquely identifies this entry when more
    than one responsiveness metric is measured for a flow.
    Entries will only exist in this table for those
    combinations of AppLocalIndex and ResponsivenessType
    that are configured 'on(1)'.
    The protocolDirLocalIndex value in the index identifies
    the network layer protocol of the apmTransactionServerAddress.
    The apmTransactionServerAddress value in the index identifies
    the network layer address of the server in the transaction
    represented by this entry.
    The apmNameClientID value in the index identifies the
    client in the transaction represented by this entry.
    An example of the indexing of this entry is
    apmTransactionCount.3.1.8.4.192.168.1.2.3232235788.2987
    Note that some combinations of index values may result in an
    index that exceeds 128 sub-identifiers in length which exceeds
    the maximum for the SNMP protocol. Implementations should take
    care to avoid such combinations."
INDEX { apmAppDirAppLocalIndex,
        apmAppDirResponsivenessType,
        protocolDirLocalIndex, apmTransactionServerAddress,
        apmNameClientID, apmTransactionID }
::= { apmTransactionTable 1 }

ApmTransactionEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

apmTransactionServerAddress      ProtocolDirNetworkAddress,
apmTransactionID                 Unsigned32,
apmTransactionResponsiveness     Unsigned32,
apmTransactionAge                TimeInterval,
apmTransactionSuccess            TruthValue

}

apmTransactionServerAddress OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ProtocolDirNetworkAddress (SIZE (1..255))
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The network server address for this apmTransactionEntry.
    This is represented as an octet string with specific semantics
    and length as identified by the protocolDirLocalIndex
    component of the index. This object may not be the zero length
    string.
    For example, if the protocolDirLocalIndex indicates an
    encapsulation of ip, this object is encoded as a length octet
    of 4, followed by the 4 octets of the ip address, in network
    byte order. Care should be taken to avoid values of this
    object that, in conjunction with the other index variables,
    would result in an index longer than SNMP's maximum of 128
    subidentifiers."
::= { apmTransactionEntry 1 }

apmTransactionID OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A unique value for this transaction amongst other
    transactions sharing the same application layer protocol and
    server and client addresses. Implementations may choose to use
    the value of the client's source port, when possible."
::= { apmTransactionEntry 2 }

apmTransactionResponsiveness OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The current value of the responsiveness metric for this
    transaction. If this transaction has completed, the final
    value of the metric will be available.
    Note that this value may change over the lifetime of the
    transaction and it is the final value of this metric that is
    recorded as the responsiveness of the transaction for use in
    other APM MIB functions."
::= { apmTransactionEntry 3 }

apmTransactionAge OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      TimeInterval
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "If this transaction is still executing, this value shall be
    the length of time since it was started. If it has completed,
    this value shall be the length of time it was executing."
::= { apmTransactionEntry 4 }

apmTransactionSuccess OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      TruthValue
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The success of this transaction up to this time. Once a
    transaction has been marked as failed, it cannot move back
    into the successful state."
::= { apmTransactionEntry 5 }

apmTransactionsRequestedHistorySize OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The maximum number of completed transactions desired to be
    retained in the apmTransactionTable. If the agent doesn't have
    enough resources to retain this many, it will retain as many as
    possible. Regardless of this value, the agent must attempt to
    keep records for all current transactions it is monitoring.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
::= { apmMibObjects 12 }

-- The APM Exception table -- The APM Exception Table creates filters so that a management -- station can get immediate notification of a transaction that has -- had poor availability or responsiveness. -- -- This function is particularly helpful in unaggregated situations -- where the numbers of agents is relatively high and the transaction -- rate per agent is relatively low (such as agents for desktops or -- dedicated to small workgroups). Polling agents in such an -- environment would either cause scalability problems (high rate) or -- lead to long notification delays (low rate).

apmExceptionTable OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF ApmExceptionEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "This table creates filters so that a management station can
    get immediate notification of a transaction that has had poor
    availability or responsiveness.
    Each apmExceptionEntry is associated with a particular type of
    transaction and is applied to all transactions of that
    type. Multiple apmExceptionEntries may be associated with a
    particular type of transaction. A transaction type is
    identified by the value of the apmAppDirAppLocalIndex
    component of the index.
    Because the quality of a transaction is not known until it is
    completed, these thresholds are only applied after the
    transaction has completed."
::= { apmMibObjects 13 }

apmExceptionEntry OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      ApmExceptionEntry
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "A conceptual row in the apmExceptionTable.
    The apmAppDirAppLocalIndex value in the index identifies
    the application this entry will monitor.
    The apmAppDirResponsivenessType value in the index
    identifies the type of responsiveness metric this entry will
    monitor."
INDEX { apmAppDirAppLocalIndex,
        apmAppDirResponsivenessType, apmExceptionIndex }
::= { apmExceptionTable 1 }

ApmExceptionEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

apmExceptionIndex                       Unsigned32,
apmExceptionResponsivenessComparison    INTEGER,
apmExceptionResponsivenessThreshold     Unsigned32,
apmExceptionUnsuccessfulException       INTEGER,
apmExceptionResponsivenessEvents        Counter32,
apmExceptionUnsuccessfulEvents          Counter32,
apmExceptionOwner                       OwnerString,
apmExceptionStorageType                 StorageType,
apmExceptionStatus                      RowStatus

}

apmExceptionIndex OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..65535)
MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "An index that uniquely identifies an entry in the
    apmExceptionTable amongst other entries with equivalent index
    values for apmAppDirAppLocalIndex and
    apmAppDirResponsivenessType. Each such entry sets up
    thresholds for a particular measurement of a particular
    application."
::= { apmExceptionEntry 1 }

apmExceptionResponsivenessComparison OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      INTEGER {
                none(1),
                greater(2),
                less(3)
            }
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "If this value is greater(2) or less(3), the associated
    apmExceptionResponsivenessThreshold will be compared to this
    value and an exception will be created if the responsiveness
    is greater than the threshold (greater(2)) or less than the
    threshold (less(3))."
::= { apmExceptionEntry 2 }

apmExceptionResponsivenessThreshold OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The threshold that responsiveness metrics are compared to."
::= { apmExceptionEntry 3 }

apmExceptionUnsuccessfulException OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      INTEGER {
                off(1),
                on(2)
            }
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "If this value is on(2), an exception will be created if a
    transaction of the associated type is unsuccessful."
::= { apmExceptionEntry 4 }

apmExceptionResponsivenessEvents OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Counter32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The total number of responsiveness exceptions generated. This
    counter will be incremented even if no notification was sent
    due to notifications not being configured or due to exceeding
    the apmNotificationMaxRate value."
::= { apmExceptionEntry 5 }

apmExceptionUnsuccessfulEvents OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Counter32
MAX-ACCESS  read-only
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The total number of unsuccessful exceptions generated. This
    counter will be incremented even if no notification was sent
    due to notifications not being configured or due to exceeding
    the apmNotificationMaxRate value."
::= { apmExceptionEntry 6 }

apmExceptionOwner OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      OwnerString
MAX-ACCESS  read-create
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The entity that configured this entry and is
    therefore using the resources assigned to it."
::= { apmExceptionEntry 7 }

apmExceptionStorageType OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX     StorageType
MAX-ACCESS read-create
STATUS     current
DESCRIPTION
    "The storage type of this apmReportControlEntry. If the value
    of this object is 'permanent', no objects in this row need to
    be writable."
::= { apmExceptionEntry 8 }

apmExceptionStatus OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX     RowStatus
MAX-ACCESS read-create
STATUS     current
DESCRIPTION
    "The status of this apmExceptionEntry. The only objects in the
    entry that may be modified while the entry is in the active
    state are apmExceptionResponsivenessComparison,
    apmExceptionResponsivenessThreshold and
    apmExceptionUnsuccessfulException."
::= { apmExceptionEntry 9 }

apmThroughputExceptionMinTime OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
UNITS       "seconds"
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "Because the responsiveness for throughput-oriented
    transactions is divided by the elapsed time, it can be very
    sensitive to short-term performance variations for
    transactions that take a short period of time. For example,
    when downloading a very short file, a single dropped packet
    could double or triple the total response time.
    Further, throughput is usually examined for applications that
    transfer a lot of data, and when doing so it is helpful to
    conceptualize transaction costs that are proportional to the
    amount of data separately from those costs that are relatively
    fixed (i.e., independent of the amount of data).  For very
    short transactions, these fixed transaction costs (handshake,
    setup time, authentication, round-trip time) may dominate the
    total response time for the transaction, resulting in
    throughput measurements that aren't really proportional to the
    network's, server's and client's combined data throughput
    capability.
    This object controls the minimum number of seconds that an
    throughput-based transaction must exceed before an exception
    can be generated for it. If this object is set to zero, then
    all throughput-based transactions are candidates for
    exceptions.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
DEFVAL     { 10 }
::= { apmMibObjects 14 }

apmNotificationMaxRate OBJECT-TYPE

SYNTAX      Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS  read-write
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "The maximum number of notifications that can be generated
    from this agent by the apmExceptionTable in any 60 second
    period.
    The value of this object must persist across reboots."
DEFVAL { 1 }
::= { apmMibObjects 15 }

-- APM Notifications

apmNotifications OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { apm 0 }

apmTransactionResponsivenessAlarm NOTIFICATION-TYPE

OBJECTS     { apmExceptionResponsivenessThreshold,
              apmTransactionResponsiveness }
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "Notification sent when a transaction exceeds a threshold
    defined in the apmException table. The index of the
    included apmExceptionResponsivenessThreshold object identifies
    the apmExceptionEntry that specified the threshold. The
    apmTransactionResponsiveness variable identifies the actual
    transaction and its responsiveness.
    Agent implementors are urged to include additional data
    objects in the alarm that may explain the reason for the
    alarm. It is helpful to include such data in the alarm because
    it describes the situation at the time the alarm was
    generated, where polls after the fact may not provide
    meaningful information. Examples of such information are CPU
    load, memory utilization, network utilization, and transaction
    statistics."
::= { apmNotifications 1 }

apmTransactionUnsuccessfulAlarm NOTIFICATION-TYPE

OBJECTS     { apmExceptionResponsivenessThreshold }
STATUS      current
DESCRIPTION
    "Notification sent when a transaction is unsuccessful.
    The index of the included apmExceptionResponsivenessThreshold
    object identifies both the type of the transaction that caused
    this notification as well as the apmExceptionEntry that
    specified the threshold.
    Agent implementors are urged to include additional data
    objects in the alarm that may explain the reason for the
    alarm. It is helpful to include such data in the alarm because
    it describes the situation at the time the alarm was
    generated, where polls after the fact may not provide
    meaningful information. Examples of such information are CPU
    load, memory utilization, network utilization, and transaction
    statistics."
::= { apmNotifications 2 }

apmCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE

STATUS  current
DESCRIPTION
    "Describes the requirements for conformance to
    the APM MIB"
MODULE  -- this module
    MANDATORY-GROUPS { apmAppDirGroup, apmReportGroup }
    GROUP apmUserDefinedApplicationsGroup
      DESCRIPTION
          "Implementation of the apmUserDefinedApplicationsGroup
          is optional."
    GROUP apmTransactionGroup
      DESCRIPTION
          "Implementation of the apmTransactionGroup is optional."
    GROUP apmExceptionGroup
      DESCRIPTION
          "Implementation of the apmExceptionGroup is optional."
    GROUP apmNotificationGroup
      DESCRIPTION
          "Implementation of the apmNotificationGroup is optional."
::= { apmCompliances 1 }

apmAppDirGroup OBJECT-GROUP

OBJECTS { apmAppDirConfig,
          apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary1,
          apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary2,
          apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary3,
          apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary4,
          apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary5,
          apmAppDirResponsivenessBoundary6,
          apmBucketBoundaryLastChange, apmAppDirID,
          apmNameMachineName, apmNameUserName }
STATUS  current
DESCRIPTION
    "The APM MIB directory of applications and application verbs."
::=  { apmGroups 1 }

apmUserDefinedApplicationsGroup OBJECT-GROUP

OBJECTS {     apmHttpFilterAppLocalIndex,
              apmHttpFilterServerProtocol,
              apmHttpFilterServerAddress, apmHttpFilterURLPath,
              apmHttpFilterMatchType, apmHttpFilterOwner,
              apmHttpFilterStorageType, apmHttpFilterRowStatus,
              apmHttpIgnoreUnregisteredURLs, apmHttp4xxIsFailure,
              apmUserDefinedAppParentIndex,
              apmUserDefinedAppApplication }
STATUS  current
DESCRIPTION
    "Objects used for creating and managing user-defined
    applications."
::= { apmGroups 2 }

apmReportGroup OBJECT-GROUP

OBJECTS { apmReportControlDataSource,
          apmReportControlAggregationType,
          apmReportControlInterval,
          apmReportControlRequestedSize,
          apmReportControlGrantedSize,
          apmReportControlRequestedReports,
          apmReportControlGrantedReports,
          apmReportControlStartTime,
          apmReportControlReportNumber,
          apmReportControlDeniedInserts,
          apmReportControlDroppedFrames,
          apmReportControlOwner,
          apmReportControlStorageType,
          apmReportControlStatus,
          apmReportTransactionCount,
          apmReportSuccessfulTransactions,
          apmReportResponsivenessMean,
          apmReportResponsivenessMin,
          apmReportResponsivenessMax,
          apmReportResponsivenessB1,
          apmReportResponsivenessB2,
          apmReportResponsivenessB3,
          apmReportResponsivenessB4,
          apmReportResponsivenessB5,
          apmReportResponsivenessB6,
          apmReportResponsivenessB7 }
STATUS  current
DESCRIPTION
    "The apm report group controls the creation and retrieval of
    reports that aggregate application performance."
::=  { apmGroups 3 }

apmTransactionGroup OBJECT-GROUP

OBJECTS { apmTransactionResponsiveness,
          apmTransactionAge, apmTransactionSuccess,
          apmTransactionsRequestedHistorySize }
STATUS  current
DESCRIPTION
    "The apm transaction group contains statistics for
    individual transactions."
::=  { apmGroups 4 }

apmExceptionGroup OBJECT-GROUP

OBJECTS { apmExceptionResponsivenessComparison,
          apmExceptionResponsivenessThreshold,
          apmExceptionUnsuccessfulException,
          apmExceptionResponsivenessEvents,
          apmExceptionUnsuccessfulEvents,
          apmExceptionOwner, apmExceptionStorageType,
          apmExceptionStatus, apmThroughputExceptionMinTime,
          apmNotificationMaxRate }
STATUS  current
DESCRIPTION
    "The apm exception group causes notifications to be sent
    whenever transactions are detected that had poor availability
    or responsiveness."
::=  { apmGroups 5 }

apmNotificationGroup NOTIFICATION-GROUP

NOTIFICATIONS { apmTransactionResponsivenessAlarm,
                apmTransactionUnsuccessfulAlarm }
STATUS        current
DESCRIPTION
    "Notifications sent by an APM MIB agent."
::= { apmGroups 6 }

END

Security Considerations

There are a number of management objects defined in this MIB module with a MAX-ACCESS clause of read-write and/or read-create. Such objects may be considered sensitive or vulnerable in some network environments. The support for SET operations in a non-secure environment without proper protection can have a negative effect on network operations.

Specifically, most of the read-write and read-create objects in this MIB module may be used to configure an agent to reveal network addresses, application usage information and conversation statistics that may be considered sensitive in some environments.

Some of the readable objects in this MIB module (i.e., objects with a MAX-ACCESS other than not-accessible) may be considered sensitive or vulnerable in some network environments. It is thus important to control even GET and/or NOTIFY access to these objects and possibly to even encrypt the values of these objects when sending them over the network via SNMP.

Specifically, this MIB contains network addresses, machines names, user names, application usage information, and conversation statistics. Data of this nature should be considered sensitive and the privacy of the users from whom it was gathered protected. Administrators should restrict read access to this data to specifically authorized individuals or agents that recognize the privacy implications of its release. In situations where read access to this data cannot be restricted, it should not be gathered.

Systems that implement the objects in this MIB module have the capability of measuring the time taken to execute transactions. Depending on the transaction type, some or all of this transaction time may be associated with the time taken to perform security calculations. Such data may help an attacker to use timing attacks to extract secrets from the systems involved in the transactions. See [10] for more information.

SNMP versions prior to SNMPv3 did not include adequate security. Even if the network itself is secure (for example by using IPSec), even then, there is no control as to who on the secure network is allowed to access and GET/SET (read/change/create/delete) the objects in this MIB module.

It is RECOMMENDED that implementers consider the security features as provided by the SNMPv3 framework (see [8], section 8), including full support for the SNMPv3 cryptographic mechanisms (for authentication and privacy).

Further, deployment of SNMP versions prior to SNMPv3 is NOT RECOMMENDED. Instead, it is RECOMMENDED to deploy SNMPv3 and to enable cryptographic security. It is then a customer/operator responsibility to ensure that the SNMP entity giving access to an instance of this MIB module is properly configured to give access to the objects only to those principals (users) that have legitimate rights to indeed GET or SET (change/create/delete) them.

References

Normative References

[1] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D. and J. Schoenwaelder, "Structure of

    Management Information Version 2 (SMIv2)", STD 58, RFC 2578,
    April 1999.

[2] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D. and J. Schoenwaelder, "Textual

    Conventions for SMIv2", STD 58, RFC 2579, April 1999.

[3] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D. and J. Schoenwaelder, "Conformance

    Statements for SMIv2", STD 58, RFC 2580, April 1999.

[4] McCloghrie, K. and F. Kastenholz, "The Interfaces Group MIB",

    RFC 2863, June 2000.

[5] Waldbusser, S., "Remote Network Monitoring Management

    Information Base Version 2 using SMIv2", RFC 2021, January 1997.

[6] Bierman, A., Bucci, C. and R. Iddon, "Remote Network Monitoring

    MIB Protocol Identifiers", RFC 2895, August 2000.

[7] Waldbusser, S., "Remote Network Monitoring Management

    Information Base", STD 59, RFC 2819, May 2000.

Informative References

[8] Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D. and B. Stewart, "Introduction

    and Applicability Statements for Internet-Standard Management
    Framework", RFC 3410, December 2002.

[9] Berners-Lee, T., Masinter, L. and M. McCahill, "Uniform Resource

    Locators (URL)", RFC 1738, December 1994.

[10] Boneh, D. and D. Brumley, "Remote timing attacks are practical",

    Proceedings of 12th USENIX Security Symposium, August 2003.

Author's Address

Steven Waldbusser EMail: [email protected]

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