SNMPv2 These slides are based in parts upon slides of Prof. Dssouli (Concordia university)
Overview SNMPv1 was developed as an interim solution to an eventual adoption of OSI. This never came about: OSI was not as widely adopted as originally hoped. SNMPv2, released in 1996, was basically major revisions added to SNMP.
SNMPv1 SNMPv1 Protocol SMIv1 Data Definition Language Full Standards: RFC 1157 – Simple Network Management Protocol SMIv1 Data Definition Language Full Standards: RFC 1155 - Structure of Management Information RFC 1212 - Concise MIB Definitions Informational: RFC 1215 - A Convention for Defining Traps SMIv1 MIB Modules RFC 1213 - Management Information Base II RFC 1643 - Ethernet-Like Interface Types MIB
SNMPv2 SMIv2 Data Definition Language Full Standards: RFC 2578 - Structure of Management Information RFC 2579 - Textual Conventions RFC 2580 - Conformance Statements SMIv2 MIB Modules RFC 2819 - Remote Network Monitoring MIB RFC 3411 - SNMP Framework MIB RFC 3412 - SNMPv3 MPD MIB RFC 3413 - SNMP Applications MIBs RFC 3414 - SNMPv3 USM MIB RFC 3415 - SNMP VACM MIB RFC 3418 - SNMP MIB
Major Changes Bulk data transfer Request and receive bulk data using the get-bulk message Manager-to-manager message Enhances interoperability and allows for managing large distributed networks Enhancements to SMI: SMIv2 Module definitions: MODULE-IDENTITY macro Object definitions: OBJECT-TYPE macro (same as before) Trap definitions: NOTIFICATION-TYPE macro Textual conventions: define new data types Conformance statements Help customers compare features of various products Keeps vendors open to their product’s compatibility with SNMP
Major Changes Row creation and deletion in table A table can also be expanded by augmenting another table MIB enhancements Two new subgroups: security and snmpV2 Transport mappings UDP remains the preferred transport protocol; however, other protocols can also be used with SNMPv2 Security features, originally to be in SNMPv2 moved to SNMPv3 SNMPv2 is community-based administrative framework SNMPv2 mgmt (2) directory (1) experimental (3) private (4) Internet {1 3 6 1} security (5) snmpv2 (6) SNMPv2 Internet Group
SNMPv2 System Architecture SNMP Manager Application response get-bulk-request get-next-request set-request snmpV2-trap SNMP UDP IP DLC PHY Physical Medium PDU get-request inform-request SNMP Agent
Additional Messages manager-to-manager message inform-request manager-to-manager message The receiving manager responds with a response message Enhances interoperability get-bulk-request transfer of large data, e.g. retrieval of table data SNMPv2-trap Similar to trap messages in SNMPv1
SMIv2- Modules Definitions Defines and describe semantics of an information module (info. related to network management) added to provide administrative information regarding the informational module and the revision history MODULE-IDENTITY macro defines the module definitions
SMIv2- Object Definitions OBJECT IDENTIFIER, OBJECT-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE OBJECT IDENTIFIER defines the administrative identification of a node in the MIB OBJECT-IDENTITY macro (defines info. about OID) assigns an object identifier to a class of managed objects in the MIB (e.g., defining a class of routers!) The object itself is not managed OBJECT-TYPE macro defines the type of a managed object (e.g., a specific router type) Focuses on the details of implementation NOTE: OBJECT-IDENTITY is high level description OBJECT-TYPE details description needed for implementation
OBJECT-TYPE OBJECT-TYPE MACRO ::= BEGIN TYPE NOTATION ::= "SYNTAX" Syntax UnitsPart "MAX-ACCESS" Access "STATUS" Status "DESCRIPTION" Text ReferPart IndexPart DefValPart VALUE NOTATION ::= value(VALUE ObjectName)
"SYNTAX" Syntax Syntax ::= -- Must be one of the following: -- a base type (or its refinement), -- a textual convention (or its refinement), or -- a BITS pseudo-type type | "BITS" "{" NamedBits "}“ NamedBits ::= NamedBit | NamedBits "," NamedBit NamedBit ::= identifier "(" number ")“ -- number is nonnegative
(Example) SYNTAX BITS protocolDirType OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX BITS { extensible(0), addressRecognitionCapable(1) } MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION “…” ::= { protocolDirEntry 5 }
UnitsPart: UNITS UnitsPart ::= "UNITS" Text | empty hrDiskStorageCapacity OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX KBytes UNITS "KBytes" MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The total size for this long-term storage device. If the media is removable and is currently removed, this value should be zero." ::= { hrDiskStorageEntry 4 } Back to OBJECT-TYPE
"MAX-ACCESS" Access Access ::= "not-accessible" | "accessible-for-notify" | "read-only" | "read-write" | "read-create" ordered from least to greatest: "not-accessible": indicates an auxiliary object "accessible-for-notify": accessible only via a notification "read-only": read only "read-write": read and write, but create does not. "read-create": read, write and create
"STATUS" Status “current”: the definition is current and valid. | "deprecated" | "obsolete" “current”: the definition is current and valid. “deprecated”: indicates an obsolete definition, it permits new/continued implementation. “obsolete”: the definition is obsolete and should not be implemented.
ReferPart ReferPart ::= "REFERENCE" Text | empty ipForwardTable OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF IpForwardEntry MAX-ACCESS not-accessible STATUS obsolete DESCRIPTION "This entity's IP Routing table." REFERENCE "RFC 1213 Section 6.6, The IP Group“ ::= { ipForward 2 }
Object Definitions, example NOTE: A specific instance of routerIsi123 could be identified by its IP address 10.1.2.3
Table Definition Static Tables Dynamic Table Tables completely controlled by the agent. Access is read-only, and read-write These are useful when the number of rows corresponds to a fixed attribute (e.g., # physical interfaces) or a quantity controlled only by agent Dynamic Table Allows row creation/deletion by a manager Access includes also read, write and create privileges A table can be initialized with no rows and expanded as needed SNMPv2: Augmentation of a table (dependent table) Adds additional columns to an existing table (base table) Number of rows is not affected INDEX of the second table is the same as the first table One to one correspondence between rows of two tables
Augmentation of Tables Base table Table 1 Augmented table table1 table 2 (T1) (T2) table1Entry table2Entry (E1) (E2) T1.E1.C1.1 T1.E1.C2.1 T1.E1.C3.1 T2.E2.C4.1 T2.E2.C5.1 T1.E1.C1.2 T1.E1.C2.2 T1.E1.C3.2 T2.E2.C4.2 T2.E2.C5.2 T1.E1.C1.3 T1.E1.C2.3 T1.E1.C3.3 T2.E2.C4.3 T2.E2.C5.3 T1.E1.C1.4 T1.E1.C2.4 T.E1.C3.4 T2.E2.C4.4 T2.E2.C5.4 Example Columnar object:T2.E2.C4 Index: T1.E1.C1.2 Value: T2.E2.C4.2 Conceptual rows: 1. T1.E1.C1.1 2. T1.E1.C1.2 3. T1.E1.C1.3 4. T1.E1.C1.4 Index: First columnar object in Table 1
Augmentation of Tables --Conceptual row extension A clause used to increase the number of columns in a table w/out rewriting the table definition Example: a vendor can easily specify vendor-specific objects as extensions to standard MIB table. It should be easier for applications to access these objects than if they were defined as new, separate table The resulting table is therefore treated the same way as if it was defined in a single table definition
Row Creation A new feature in SMIv2 2 methods Create a row and make it active (or available) Create a row and make it available at a later time definition of the status of a row Used by agent to send responses to a manager Used by manager for row creation/deletion
2 states for RowStatus: createAndGo, createAndWait Row Creation table1 entry1 status.1 index.1 data.1 status.2 index.2 data.2 status.3 index.3 data.3 Row to be created/deleted 2 states for RowStatus: createAndGo, createAndWait
Create and Go Manager initiates a SetRequest-PDU to create a new row Agent Managed Process Process Entity SetRequest ( status.3 = 4, index.3 = 3, data.3 = DefData ) Create Instance Response ( status.3 = 1, index.3 = 3, data.3 = DefData ) Instance Created Manager initiates a SetRequest-PDU to create a new row status = 4, i.e., create and go Agent interacts with the management entity and successfully create an instance; subsequently a response is transmitted to the manager status = 1, indicates that the row is active
Create and Wait Manager Agent Process Process SetRequest ( status.3 = 5, index.3 = 3 ) Create and wait, no default data specified Response ( status.3 = 3, index.3 = 3 ) Agent responds with “notReady” (no default value) GetRequest ( data.3 ) Get the data for the row Response ( data.3 = noSuchInstance) Data value is missing SetRequest ( data.3 = DefData ) Value of data is sent Response ( status.3 = 2 Agent responds with notInServcie status.3 = 1 ) Manager requests to activate the row Row activated
Row Deletion SetRequest ( status.3 = 6 ) Response ( Manager Process Agent Managed Entity Delete Instance Instance Deleted
Textual Conventions Enables defining new data types Makes semantics of data types consistent and human readable Creates new data types using existing ones and applies restrictions to them An important textual convention in SNMPv2, RowStatus creates and deletes rows SNMPv2 SNMPv1 A string of up to 255 characters (refer to table 6.2 for more rules)
Textual Conventions-Macro TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MACRO ::= BEGIN TYPE NOTATION ::= DisplayPart "STATUS" Status "DESCRIPTION" Text ReferPart "SYNTAX" Syntax VALUE NOTATION ::= value(VALUE Syntax) DisplayPart ::= "DISPLAY-HINT" Text | empty Status ::= "current" | "deprecated" | "obsolete“ ReferPart ::= "REFERENCE" Text | empty ……………………….. END Example: Hundredths ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION DISPLAY-HINT “d-2” ... SYNTAX INTEGER (0..10000) suggests that a Hundredths value of 1234 be rendered as "12.34"
Textual Conventions- example RowStatus ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The RowStatus textual convention is used to manage the …” SYNTAX INTEGER { -- the following two values are states: -- these values may be read or written active(1), notInService(2), -- the following value is a state: -- this value may be read, but not written notReady(3), -- the following three values are -- actions: these values may be written, -- but are never read createAndGo(4), createAndWait(5), destroy(6) }
SNMPv2 Protocol Overall, 8 messages with almost common message format to improve the efficiency and performance Significant improvement is that trap message has the same format PDU Error Error VarBind 1 VarBind 1 VarBind n VarBind n RequestID ... Type Status Index name value name value SNMPv2 PDU Indicate the type of PDU (e.g., Request-PDU, etc) identifies the first variable binding in the variable-binding list that caused the error Indicate the status of the error (e.g., noError, tooBig, etc.) NOTE: SNMPv1 operations (e.g., GET-REQUEST) are atomic: either all values are returned or none! In SNMPv2: a binding list (with corresponding values) is prepared even if one variable cannot be returned an (error-status), (error-index) are returned in the case of anomaly.
SNMPv2 Protocol Error index is set to “0” if there is no error; otherwise, it identifies the first variable binding in the variable binding list that caused the error
SNMPv2 Protocol GetBulkRequest enables the retrieval of data in bulk PDU Non- Max VarBind 1 VarBind 1 VarBind n VarBind n RequestID ... Type Repeaters Repetitions name value name value SNMPv2 GetBulkRequest PDU GetBulkRequest enables the retrieval of data in bulk Uses the same selection principle as GetNexRequest (i.e., next object instance) Retrieval of multiple rows of data from table (constrained by the max. message size) Error status field replaced by Non-repeaters Non-repeaters indicates the number of non repetitive (scalar) field values requested Error index field replaced by Max repetitions Max repetitions designates the maximum number of table rows requested to be returned in the response message NOTE 1: value depends on the size of the SNMP message and buffer size in implementation NOTE 2: no one to one relationship between the VarBindList of request and response messages
GetBulkRequest-PDU Operation Z A B 1.1 E 1.2 1.3 1.4 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 T.E.1.1 T.E.2.1 T.E.3.1 T.E.1.2 T.E.2.2 T.E.3.2 E T Z A B T.E.1.3 T.E.2.3 T.E.3.3 T.E.1.4 T.E.2.4 T.E.3.4
GetBulkRequest-PDU Operation GetRequest ( A,B ) GetNextRequest (T.E.1,T.E.2,T.E.3) GetResponse (T.E.1.1,T.E.2.1,T.E.3.1) GetNextRequest (T.E.1.1,T.E.2.1,T.E.3.1) GetResponse (T.E.1.2,T.E.2.2,T.E.3.2) GetResponse (T.E.1.3,T.E.2.3,T.E.3.3) GetNextRequest (T.E.1.3,T.E.2.3,T.E.3.3) GetResponse (T.E.1.4,T.E.2.4,T.E.3.4) GetResponse (T.E.2.1,T.E.3.1,Z) Manager Process Agent GetResponse (A,B) GetNextRequest (T.E.1.4,T.E.2.4,T.E.3.4) GetNextRequest (T.E.1.2,T.E.2.2,T.E.3.2)
GetBulkRequest-PDU Operation T.E.1.1 T.E.2.1 T.E.3.1 T.E.1.2 T.E.2.2 T.E.3.2 E T Z A B T.E.1.3 T.E.2.3 T.E.3.3 T.E.1.4 T.E.2.4 T.E.3.4 2 non repetitive objects (A, B) 3 repetitive instances Of the columnar object T.E.1, T.E.2, T.E.3 Manager Agent Process Process GetBulkRequest ( 2,3, A,B,T.E.1, T.E.2, T.E.3 ) Response ( A, B, T.E.1.1, T.E.2.1, T.E.3.1 T.E.1.2, T.E.2.2, T.E.3.2 T.E.1.3, T.E.2.3, T.E.3.3 ) 3 more rows GetBulkRequest ( 0,3, T.E.1.3, T.E.2.3, T.E.3.3 ) Response ( T.E.1.4, T.E.2.4, T.E.3.4, Z , " endOfMibView" ) Z is next in the lexicographic order
GetBulkRequest-PDU Operation
SNMPv2 Trap PDU Addition of NOTIFICATION-TYPE macro Error Error VarBind1 VarBind1 VarBind2 VarBind 2 RequestID ... Type Status Index sysUpTime value snmpTrapOID value Addition of NOTIFICATION-TYPE macro Positions 1 and 2 in VarBindList are sysUpTime and snmpTrapOID Inform-Request behaves as trap in that the message goes from one manager to another unsolicited The receiving manager sends response to the sending manager
Conformance Statements for SMIv2 (RFC 2580)
MIB MODULE IMPORTS EXPORTS I MODULE-IDENTITY E TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MI OBJECT IDENTIFIER Application Data Types OBJECT-TYPE NOTIFICATION-TYPE OBJECT-GROUP NOTIFICATION-GROUP MODULE-COMPLIANCE I E MI TCs OIs OTs NTs OGs NGs MCs
data types I MI data types E MC MC OI OI TC TC NT NG OT OG OT OG NT NG
Four Macros in SNMPv2-CONF OBJECT-GROUP macro NOTIFICATION-GROUP macro MODULE-COMPLIANCE macro AGENT-CAPABILITIES macro
Conformance: OBJECT-GROUP Conformance defined by OBJECT-GROUP macro NOTIFICATION-GROUP macro OBJECT-GROUP Compiled during implementation, not at run time OBJECTS clause names each object Every object belongs to an OBJECT-GROUP Access defined by MAX-ACCESS, the maximum access privilege for the object
OBJECT-GROUP OBJECT-GROUP MACRO ::= BEGIN TYPE NOTATION ::= ObjectsPart "STATUS" Status "DESCRIPTION" Text ReferPart VALUE NOTATION ::= value(VALUE OBJECT IDENTIFIER) ObjectsPart ::= "OBJECTS" "{" Objects "}" Objects ::= Object | Objects "," Object Object ::= value(ObjectName) Status ::= "current" | "deprecated" | "obsolete" ReferPart ::= "REFERENCE" Text | empty Text ::= value(IA5String) END
OBJECT-GROUP Example hrSWRunGroup OBJECT-GROUP OBJECTS { hrSWOSIndex, hrSWRunIndex, hrSWRunName, hrSWRunID, hrSWRunPath, hrSWRunParameters, hrSWRunType, hrSWRunStatus } STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The Host Resources Running Software Group." ::= { hrMIBGroups 4 }
Conformance: NOTIFICATION-GROUP Contains trap entities defined in SMIv1 NOTIFICATIONS clause identifies the notifications in the group NOTIFICATIONS-GROUP macro compiled during implementation, not at run time
NOTIFICATION-GROUP NOTIFICATION-GROUP MACRO ::= BEGIN TYPE NOTATION ::= NotificationsPart "STATUS" Status "DESCRIPTION" Text ReferPart VALUE NOTATION ::= value(VALUE OBJECT IDENTIFIER) NotificationsPart ::= "NOTIFICATIONS" "{" Notifications "}" Notifications ::= Notification | Notifications "," Notification Notification ::= value(NotificationName) Status ::= "current" | "deprecated" | "obsolete" ReferPart ::= "REFERENCE" Text | empty Text ::= value(IA5String) END
NOTIFICATION-GROUP Example linkUpDownNotificationsGroup NOTIFICATION-GROUP NOTIFICATIONS { linkUp, linkDown } STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The notifications which indicate specific changes in the value of ifOperStatus." ::= { ifGroups 14 }
Compliance Compliance has two classes of groups MANDATORY-GROUPS ... Required GROUP …Optional
MODULE-COMPLIANCE MODULE-COMPLIANCE MACRO ::= BEGIN TYPE NOTATION ::= "STATUS" Status "DESCRIPTION" Text ReferPart ModulePart VALUE NOTATION ::= value(VALUE OBJECT IDENTIFIER)
ModulePart ModulePart ::= Modules Modules ::= Module | Modules Module "MODULE" ModuleName MandatoryPart CompliancePart ModuleName ::= identifier ModuleIdentifier | empty ModuleIdentifier ::= value(OBJECT IDENTIFIER) | empty MandatoryPart ::= "MANDATORY-GROUPS" "{" Groups "}“ | empty Groups ::= Group | Groups "," Group Group ::= value(OBJECT IDENTIFIER)
CompliancePart (1/2) CompliancePart ::= Compliances | empty Compliances ::= Compliance | Compliances Compliance Compliance ::= ComplianceGroup | Object ComplianceGroup ::= "GROUP" value(OBJECT IDENTIFIER) "DESCRIPTION" Text Object ::= "OBJECT" value(ObjectName) SyntaxPart WriteSyntaxPart AccessPart
CompliancePart (2/2) SyntaxPart ::= "SYNTAX" Syntax | empty -- must be a refinement for object's SYNTAX clause WriteSyntaxPart ::= "WRITE-SYNTAX" Syntax | empty Syntax ::= type | "BITS" "{" NamedBits "}" NamedBits ::= NamedBit | NamedBits "," NamedBit NamedBit ::= identifier "(" number ")" AccessPart ::= "MIN-ACCESS" Access | empty Access ::= "not-accessible" | "accessible-for-notify" | "read-only" | "read-write" | "read-create"
MODULE-COMPLIANCE Example hrMIBCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The requirements for conformance to the Host Resources MIB." MODULE -- this module MANDATORY-GROUPS { hrSystemGroup, hrStorageGroup, hrDeviceGroup } OBJECT hrSystemDate MIN-ACCESS read-only "Write access is not required.“ GROUP hrSWRunGroup "The Running Software Group. Implementation of this group is mandatory only when the hrSWRunPerfGroup is implemented." … ::= { hrMIBCompliances 1 }
OBJECT ifAdminStatus SYNTAX INTEGER { up(1), down(2) } MIN-ACCESS read-only DESCRIPTION "Write access is not required, nor is support for the value testing(3)."
OBJECT-GROUP
Agent Capabilities AGENT-CAPABILITIES macro SUPPORTS modules and includes groups VARIATION identifies additional features
AGENT-CAPABILITIES
SNMPv2 Internet Group
NOTIFICATION-TYPE
Object Types for SNMPv2 Traps
Inform-Request Inform-Request behaves as trap in that the message goes from one manager to another unsolicited The receiving manager sends response to the sending manager
SNMPv2- Decentralized management Agent Element manager MIB SNMPv2 agent MIB SNMPv2 Manager/agent Management server MIB Management Applications SNMPv2 manager MIB SNMPv2 agent MIB SNMPv2 Manager/agent MIB SNMPv2 agent SNMPv2 Configuration
Compatibility with SNMPv1 SNMPv2 MIB is not backward compatible with SNMPv1 Compatibility with SNMPv1 2 evolution paths: Bilingual Manager Proxy Server Bilingual Manager expensive in resource and operation SNMPv1 Agents Bilingual Manager Interpreter SNMPv2 Agent Profile SNMP Bilingual Manager Both interpreters are required!
SNMP Proxy Server SNMPv1 Agents SNMPv2 Manager Proxy Server SNMPv2 Pass-Through SNMPv2 Manager SNMPv1 Agent GetNextRequest GetRequest SetRequest Set: 1. non-repeaters = 0 2. max-repetitions = 0 GetBulkRequest Exception: For 'tooBig' error, contents of variable-bindings field removed . Response Prepend VarBind: 1. sysUpTime.0 2. snmpTrapOID.0 SNMPv2-Trap GetResponse Trap SNMP v2-v1 Proxy Server
SNMPv2 MIB