Network Working Group                                         N. Brownlee
Request for Comments: 2720                     The University of Auckland
Obsoletes: 2064                                              October 1999
Category: Standards Track


                 Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter 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 (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  The RTFM Traffic Measurement Architecture provides a general
  framework for describing and measuring network traffic flows.  Flows
  are defined in terms of their Address Attribute values and measured
  by a 'Traffic Meter'.

  This document defines a Management Information Base (MIB) for use in
  controlling an RTFM Traffic Meter, in particular for specifying the
  flows to be measured.  It also provides an efficient mechanism for
  retrieving flow data from the meter using SNMP. Security issues
  concerning the operation of traffic meters are summarised.

Table of Contents

  1  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
  2  The SNMP Management Framework   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
  3  Overview  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
     3.1 Scope of Definitions, Textual Conventions . . . . . . . . .  4
     3.2 Usage of the MIB variables  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
  4  Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
  5  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
     5.1 SNMP Concerns   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
     5.2 Traffic Meter Concerns  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
  6  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
  7  Appendix A: Changes Introduced Since RFC 2064 . . . . . . . . . 49
  8  Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
  9  Intellectual Property Notice  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50



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RFC 2720          Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB       October 1999


  10 References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
  11 Author's Address  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
  12 Full Copyright Statement  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54

1  Introduction

  This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB)
  for use with network management protocols in the Internet community.
  In particular, it describes objects for managing and collecting data
  from network Realtime Traffic Flow Meters, as described in [RTFM-
  ARC].

  The MIB is 'basic' in the sense that it provides more than enough
  information for everyday traffic measurment.  Furthermore, it can be
  easily extended by adding new attributes as required.  The RTFM
  Working group is actively pursuing the development of the meter in
  this way.

2  The SNMP Management Framework

  The SNMP Management Framework presently consists of five major
  components:

  - An overall architecture, described in RFC 2571 [RFC2571].

  - Mechanisms for describing and naming objects and events for the
    purpose of management.  The first version of this Structure of
    Management Information (SMI) is called SMIv1 and described in STD
    16, RFC 1155 [RFC1155], STD 16, RFC 1212 [RFC1212] and RFC 1215
    [RFC1215].  The second version, called SMIv2, is described in STD
    58, RFC 2578 [RFC2578], RFC 2579 [RFC2579] and RFC 2580 [RFC2580].

  - Message protocols for transferring management information.  The
    first version of the SNMP message protocol is called SNMPv1 and
    described in STD 15, RFC 1157 [RFC1157].  A second version of the
    SNMP message protocol, which is not an Internet standards track
    protocol, is called SNMPv2c and described in RFC 1901 [RFC1901] and
    RFC 1906 [RFC1906].  The third version of the message protocol is
    called SNMPv3 and described in RFC 1906 [RFC1906], RFC 2572
    [RFC2572] and RFC 2574 [RFC2574].

  - Protocol operations for accessing management information.  The
    first set of protocol operations and associated PDU formats is
    described in STD 15, RFC 1157 [RFC1157].  A second set of protocol
    operations and associated PDU formats is described in RFC 1905
    [RFC1905].





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  - A set of fundamental applications described in RFC 2573 [RFC2573]
    and the view-based access control mechanism described in RFC 2575
    [RFC2575].

  A more detailed introduction to the current SNMP Management Framework
  can be found in [RFC2570].

  Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed
  the Management Information Base or MIB. Objects in the MIB are
  defined using the mechanisms defined in the SMI.

  This memo specifies a MIB module that is compliant to the SMIv2.  A
  MIB conforming to the SMIv1 can be produced through the appropriate
  translations.  The resulting translated MIB must be semantically
  equivalent, except where objects or events are omitted because no
  translation is possible (use of Counter64).  Some machine readable
  information in SMIv2 will be converted into textual descriptions in
  SMIv1 during the translation process.  However, this loss of machine
  readable information is not considered to change the semantics of the
  MIB.

3  Overview

  Traffic Flow Measurement seeks to provide a well-defined method for
  gathering traffic flow information from networks and internetworks.
  The background for this is given in "Internet Accounting Background"
  [ACT-BKG]. The Realtime Traffic Flow Measurement (rtfm) Working Group
  has produced a measurement architecture to achieve this goal; this is
  documented in "Traffic Flow Measurement:  Architecture" [RTFM-ARC].
  The architecture defines three entities:

  - METERS, which observe network traffic flows and build up a table of
    flow data records for them,

  - METER READERS, which collect traffic flow data from meters, and

  - MANAGERS, which oversee the operation of meters and meter readers.

  This memo defines the SNMP management information for a Traffic Flow
  Meter (TFM). Work in this field was begun by the Internet Accounting
  Working Group.  It has been further developed and expanded by the
  Realtime Traffic Flow Measurement Working Group.









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3.1  Scope of Definitions, Textual Conventions

  All objects defined in this memo are registered in a single subtree
  within the mib-2 namespace [MIB-II, RFC2578], and are for use in
  network devices which may perform a PDU forwarding or monitoring
  function.  For these devices, this MIB defines a group of objects
  with an SMI Network Management MGMT Code [ASG-NBR] of 40, i.e.

  flowMIB OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=  mib-2 40

  as defined below.

  The RTFM Meter MIB was first produced and tested using SNMPv1.  It
  was converted into SNMPv2 following the guidelines in [RFC1908].

3.2  Usage of the MIB variables

  The MIB is organised in four parts - control, data, rules and
  conformance statements.

  The rules implement the set of packet-matching actions, as described
  in the "Traffic Flow Measurment:  Architecture" document [RTFM-ARC].
  In addition they provide for BASIC-style subroutines, allowing a
  network manager to dramatically reduce the number of rules required
  to monitor a large network.

  Traffic flows are identified by a set of attributes for each of their
  end-points.  Attributes include network addresses for each layer of
  the network protocol stack, and 'subscriber ids', which may be used
  to identify an accountable entity for the flow.

  The conformance statements are set out as defined in [RFC2580].  They
  explain what must be implemented in a meter which claims to conform
  to this MIB.

  To retrieve flow data one could simply do a linear scan of the flow
  table.  This would certainly work, but would require a lot of
  protocol exchanges.  To reduce the overhead in retrieving flow data
  the flow table uses a TimeFilter variable, defined as a Textual
  Convention in the RMON2 MIB [RMON2-MIB].

  As an alternative method of reading flow data, the MIB provides a
  view of the flow table called the flowDataPackageTable.  This is
  (logically) a four-dimensional array, subscripted by package
  selector, RuleSet, activity time and starting flow number.  The
  package selector is a sequence of bytes which specifies a list of
  flow attributes.




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  A data package (as returned by the meter) is a sequence of values for
  the attributes specified in its selector, encoded using the Basic
  Encoding Rules [ASN-BER]. It allows a meter reader to retrieve all
  the attribute values it requires in a single MIB object.  This, when
  used together with SNMPv2's GetBulk request, allows a meter reader to
  scan the flow table and upload a specified set of attribute values
  for flows which have changed since the last reading, and which were
  created by a specified rule set.

  One aspect of data collection which needs emphasis is that all the
  MIB variables are set up to allow multiple independent meter readers
  to work properly, i.e. the flow table indexes are stateless.  An
  alternative approach would have been to 'snapshot' the flow table,
  which would mean that the meter readers would have to be
  synchronized.  The stateless approach does mean that two meter
  readers will never return exactly the same set of traffic counts, but
  over long periods (e.g. 15-minute collections over a day) the
  discrepancies are acceptable.  If one really needs a snapshot, this
  can be achieved by switching to an identical rule set with a
  different RuleSet number, hence asynchronous collections may be
  regarded as a useful generalisation of synchronised ones.

  The control variables are the minimum set required for a meter
  reader.  Their number has been whittled down as experience has been
  gained with the MIB implementation.  A few of them are 'general',
  i.e. they control the overall behaviour of the meter.  These are set
  by a single 'master' manager, and no other manager should attempt to
  change their values.  The decision as to which manager is the '
  master' must be made by the network operations personnel responsible;
  this MIB does not attempt to define any interaction between managers.

  There are three other groups of control variables, arranged into
  tables in the same way as in the RMON2 MIB [RMON2-MIB]. They are used
  as follows:

  - RULE SET INFO: Before attempting to download a RuleSet, a manager
    must create a row in the flowRuleSetInfoTable and set its
    flowRuleInfoSize to a value large enough to hold the RuleSet.  When
    the rule set is ready the manager must set flowRuleInfoRulesReady
    to 'true', indicating that the rule set is ready for use (but not
    yet 'running').

  - METER READER INFO: Any meter reader wishing to collect data
    reliably for all flows from a RuleSet should first create a row in
    the flowReaderInfoTable with flowReaderRuleSet set to that
    RuleSet's index in the flowRuleSetInfoTable.  It should write that
    row's flowReaderLastTime object each time it starts a collection




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    pass through the flow table.  The meter will not recover a flow's
    memory until every meter reader holding a row for that flow's
    RuleSet has collected the flow's data.

  - MANAGER INFO: Any manager wishing to run a RuleSet in the meter
    must create a row in the flowManagerInfo table, specifying the
    desired RuleSet to run and its corresponding 'standby' RuleSet (if
    one is desired).  A current RuleSet is 'running' if its
    flowManagerRunningStandby value is false(2), similarly a standby
    RuleSet is 'running' if flowManagerRunningStandby is true(1).

  Times within the meter are in terms of its Uptime, i.e. centiseconds
  since the meter started.  For meters implemented as self-contained
  SNMP agents this will be the same as sysUptime, but this may not be
  true for meters implemented as subagents.  Managers can read the
  meter's Uptime when neccessary (e.g. to set a TimeFilter value) by
  setting flowReaderLastTime, then reading its new value.

4  Definitions

FLOW-METER-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS
   MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE,
   Counter32, Counter64, Integer32, mib-2
       FROM SNMPv2-SMI
   TEXTUAL-CONVENTION, RowStatus, TimeStamp, TruthValue
       FROM SNMPv2-TC
   OBJECT-GROUP, MODULE-COMPLIANCE
       FROM SNMPv2-CONF
   ifIndex
       FROM IF-MIB
   TimeFilter
       FROM RMON2-MIB;

flowMIB MODULE-IDENTITY
   LAST-UPDATED "9910250000Z" -- October 25, 1999
   ORGANIZATION "IETF Realtime Traffic Flow Measurement Working Group"
   CONTACT-INFO
       "Nevil Brownlee, The University of Auckland

       Postal: Information Technology Sytems & Services
               The University of Auckland
               Private Bag 92-019
               Auckland, New Zealand

       Phone:  +64 9 373 7599 x8941
       E-mail: [email protected]"



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   DESCRIPTION
       "MIB for the RTFM Traffic Flow Meter."

   REVISION "9910250000Z"
   DESCRIPTION
       "Initial Version, published as RFC 2720."

    REVISION "9908301250Z"
    DESCRIPTION
        "UTF8OwnerString Textual Convention added, and used to
        replace OwnerString.  Conceptually the same as OwnerString,
        but facilitating internationalisation by using UTF-8
        encoding for its characters rather than US-ASCII."

   REVISION "9908191010Z"
   DESCRIPTION
       "Changes to SIZE specification for two variables:
         - flowRuleInfoName SIZE specified as (0..127)
         - flowRuleIndex SIZE increased to (1..2147483647)"

   REVISION "9712230937Z"
   DESCRIPTION
       "Two further variables deprecated:
         - flowRuleInfoRulesReady (use flowRuleInfoStatus intead)
         - flowDataStatus (contains no useful information)"

   REVISION "9707071715Z"
   DESCRIPTION
       "Significant changes since RFC 2064 include:
         - flowDataPackageTable added
         - flowColumnActivityTable deprecated
         - flowManagerCounterWrap deprecated"

   REVISION "9603080208Z"
   DESCRIPTION
       "Initial version of this MIB (RFC 2064)"
   ::= { mib-2 40 }

flowControl         OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { flowMIB 1 }

flowData            OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { flowMIB 2 }

flowRules           OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { flowMIB 3 }

flowMIBConformance  OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { flowMIB 4 }

-- Textual Conventions




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UTF8OwnerString ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   DISPLAY-HINT "127t"
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An administratively assigned name for the owner of a
       resource, conceptually the same as OwnerString in the RMON
       MIB [RMON-MIB].

       To facilitate internationalisation, this name information
       is represented using the ISO/IEC IS 10646-1 character set,
       encoded as an octet string using the UTF-8 transformation
       format described in the UTF-8 standard [UTF-8]."
   SYNTAX  OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..127))

PeerType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Indicates the type of a PeerAddress (see below).  The values
       used are from the 'Address Family Numbers' section of the
       Assigned Numbers RFC [ASG-NBR].  Peer types from other address
       families may also be used, provided only that they are
       identified by their assigned Address Family numbers."
   SYNTAX  INTEGER {
       ipv4(1),
       ipv6(2),
       nsap(3),
       ipx(11),
       appletalk(12),
       decnet(13) }

PeerAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Specifies the value of a peer address for various network
       protocols.  Address format depends on the actual protocol,
       as indicated below:

       IPv4:        ipv4(1)
           4-octet IpAddress  (defined in the SNMPv2 SMI [RFC2578])

       IPv6:        ipv6(2)
           16-octet IpAddress  (defined in the
                                   IPv6 Addressing RFC [V6-ADDR])

       CLNS:        nsap(3)
           NsapAddress  (defined in the SNMPv2 SMI [RFC2578])

       Novell:      ipx(11)



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           4-octet Network number,
           6-octet Host number (MAC address)

       AppleTalk:   appletalk(12)
           2-octet Network number (sixteen bits),
           1-octet Host number (eight bits)

       DECnet:      decnet(13)
           1-octet Area number (in low-order six bits),
           2-octet Host number (in low-order ten bits)
       "
   SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (3..20))

AdjacentType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Indicates the type of an adjacent address.  May be a medium
       type or (if metering is taking place inside a tunnel) a
       PeerType (see above).

       The values used for IEEE 802 medium types are from the 'Network
       Management Parameters (ifType definitions)' section of the
       Assigned Numbers RFC [ASG-NBR].  Other medium types may also
       be used, provided only that they are identified by their
       assigned ifType numbers."
   SYNTAX  INTEGER {
       ip(1),
       nsap(3),
       ethernet(7),  -- ethernet-like [ENET-OBJ],
                     --    includes ethernet-csmacd(6)
       tokenring(9),
       ipx(11),
       appletalk(12),
       decnet(13),
       fddi(15) }

AdjacentAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Specifies the value of an adjacent address.  May be a Medium
       Access Control (MAC) address or (if metering is taking place
       inside a tunnel) a PeerAddress (see above).

       MAC Address format depends on the actual medium, as follows:

       Ethernet:     ethernet(7)
           6-octet 802.3 MAC address in 'canonical' order




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       Token Ring:   tokenring(9)
           6-octet 802.5 MAC address in 'canonical' order

       FDDI:         fddi(15)
           FddiMACLongAddress, i.e. a 6-octet MAC address
           in 'canonical' order  (defined in [FDDI-MIB])
       "
   SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (3..20))

TransportType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Indicates the type of a TransportAddress (see below).  Values
       will depend on the actual protocol; for IP they will be those
       given in the 'Protocol Numbers' section of the  Assigned Numbers
       RFC [ASG-NBR], including icmp(1), tcp(6) and udp(17)."
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..255)

TransportAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Specifies the value of a transport address for various
       network protocols.  Format as follows:

       IP:
           2-octet UDP or TCP port number

       Other protocols:
           2-octet port number
       "
   SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (2))

RuleAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Specifies the value of an address.  Is a superset of
       MediumAddress, PeerAddress and TransportAddress."
   SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (2..20))

FlowAttributeNumber ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Uniquely identifies an attribute within a flow data record."
   SYNTAX  INTEGER {
       flowIndex(1),
       flowStatus(2),
       flowTimeMark(3),




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       sourceInterface(4),
       sourceAdjacentType(5),
       sourceAdjacentAddress(6),
       sourceAdjacentMask(7),
       sourcePeerType(8),
       sourcePeerAddress(9),
       sourcePeerMask(10),
       sourceTransType(11),
       sourceTransAddress(12),
       sourceTransMask(13),

       destInterface(14),
       destAdjacentType(15),
       destAdjacentAddress(16),
       destAdjacentMask(17),
       destPeerType(18),
       destPeerAddress(19),
       destPeerMask(20),
       destTransType(21),
       destTransAddress(22),
       destTransMask(23),

       pduScale(24),
       octetScale(25),

       ruleSet(26),
       toOctets(27),             -- Source-to-Dest
       toPDUs(28),
       fromOctets(29),           -- Dest-to-Source
       fromPDUs(30),
       firstTime(31),            -- Activity times
       lastActiveTime(32),

       sourceSubscriberID(33),   -- Subscriber ID
       destSubscriberID(34),
       sessionID(35),

       sourceClass(36),          -- Computed attributes
       destClass(37),
       flowClass(38),
       sourceKind(39),
       destKind(40),
       flowKind(41) }

RuleAttributeNumber ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Uniquely identifies an attribute which may be tested in



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RFC 2720          Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB       October 1999


       a rule.  These include attributes whose values come directly
       from (or are computed from) the flow's packets, and the five
       'meter' variables used to hold an Attribute Number."
   SYNTAX  INTEGER {
       null(0),
       sourceInterface(4),       -- Source Address
       sourceAdjacentType(5),
       sourceAdjacentAddress(6),
       sourcePeerType(8),
       sourcePeerAddress(9),
       sourceTransType(11),
       sourceTransAddress(12),

       destInterface(14),        -- Dest Address
       destAdjacentType(15),
       destAdjacentAddress(16),
       destPeerType(18),
       destPeerAddress(19),
       destTransType(21),
       destTransAddress(22),

       sourceSubscriberID(33),   -- Subscriber ID
       destSubscriberID(34),
       sessionID(35),

       sourceClass(36),          -- Computed attributes
       destClass(37),
       flowClass(38),
       sourceKind(39),
       destKind(40),
       flowKind(41),

       matchingStoD(50),         -- Packet matching

       v1(51),                   -- Meter variables
       v2(52),
       v3(53),
       v4(54),
       v5(55) }

ActionNumber ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Uniquely identifies the action of a rule, i.e. the Pattern
       Matching Engine's opcode number.  Details of the opcodes
       are given in the 'Traffic Flow Measurement: Architecture'
       document [RTFM-ARC]."
   SYNTAX  INTEGER {



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       ignore(1),
       noMatch(2),
       count(3),
       countPkt(4),
       return(5),
       gosub(6),
       gosubAct(7),
       assign(8),
       assignAct(9),
       goto(10),
       gotoAct(11),
       pushRuleTo(12),
       pushRuleToAct(13),
       pushPktTo(14),
       pushPktToAct(15),
       popTo(16),
       popToAct(17) }

--
-- Control Group:  RuleSet Info Table
--

flowRuleSetInfoTable OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF FlowRuleSetInfoEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An array of information about the RuleSets held in the
       meter.

       Any manager may configure a new RuleSet for the meter by
       creating a row in this table with status active(1), and setting
       values for all the objects in its rules.  At this stage the new
       RuleSet is available but not 'running', i.e. it is not being
       used by the meter to produce entries in the flow table.

       To actually 'run' a RuleSet a manager must create a row in
       the flowManagerInfoTable, set it's flowManagerStatus to
       active(1), and set either its CurrentRuleSet or StandbyRuleSet
       to point to the RuleSet to be run.

       Once a RuleSet is running a manager may not change any of the
       objects within the RuleSet itself.  Any attempt to do so should
       result in a notWritable(17) SNMP error-status for such objects.

       A manager may stop a RuleSet running by removing all
       references to it in the flowManagerInfoTable (i.e. by setting
       CurrentRuleSet and StandbyRuleSet values to 0).  This provides



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RFC 2720          Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB       October 1999


       a way to stop RuleSets left running if a manager fails.
       For example, when a manager is started, it could search the
       meter's flowManager table and stop all RuleSets having a
       specified value of flowRuleInfoOwner.

       To prevent a manager from interfering with variables belonging
       to another manager, the meter should use MIB views [RFC2575] so
       as to limit each manager's access to the meter's variables,
       effectively dividing the single meter into several virtual
       meters, one for each independent manager."
   ::= { flowControl 1 }

flowRuleSetInfoEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  FlowRuleSetInfoEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Information about a particular RuleSet."
   INDEX  { flowRuleInfoIndex }
   ::= { flowRuleSetInfoTable 1 }

FlowRuleSetInfoEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
   flowRuleInfoIndex         Integer32,
   flowRuleInfoSize          Integer32,
   flowRuleInfoOwner         UTF8OwnerString,
   flowRuleInfoTimeStamp     TimeStamp,
   flowRuleInfoStatus        RowStatus,
   flowRuleInfoName          OCTET STRING,
   flowRuleInfoRulesReady    TruthValue,
   flowRuleInfoFlowRecords   Integer32
   }

flowRuleInfoIndex OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..2147483647)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An index which selects an entry in the flowRuleSetInfoTable.
       Each such entry contains control information for a particular
       RuleSet which the meter may run."
   ::= { flowRuleSetInfoEntry 1 }

flowRuleInfoSize OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Number of rules in this RuleSet.  Setting this variable will



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       cause the meter to allocate space for these rules."
   ::= { flowRuleSetInfoEntry 2 }

flowRuleInfoOwner OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  UTF8OwnerString
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Identifies the manager which 'owns' this RuleSet.  A manager
       must set this variable when creating a row in this table."
   ::= { flowRuleSetInfoEntry 3 }

flowRuleInfoTimeStamp OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TimeStamp
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Time this row's associated RuleSet was last changed."
   ::= { flowRuleSetInfoEntry 4 }

flowRuleInfoStatus OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  RowStatus
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The status of this flowRuleSetInfoEntry. If this value is
       not active(1) the meter must not attempt to use the row's
       associated RuleSet.  Once its value has been set to active(1)
       a manager may not change any of the other variables in the
       row, nor the contents of the associated RuleSet.  Any attempt
       to do so should result in a notWritable(17) SNMP error-status
       for such variables or objects.

       To download a RuleSet, a manger could:
          - Locate an open slot in the RuleSetInfoTable.
          - Create a RuleSetInfoEntry by setting the status for this
              open slot to createAndWait(5).
          - Set flowRuleInfoSize and flowRuleInfoName as required.
          - Download the rules into the row's rule table.
          - Set flowRuleInfoStatus to active(1).

       The RuleSet would then be ready to run. The manager is not
       allowed to change the value of flowRuleInfoStatus from
       active(1) if the associated RuleSet is being referenced by any
       of the entries in the flowManagerInfoTable.

       Setting RuleInfoStatus to destroy(6) destroys the associated
       RuleSet together with any flow data collected by it."



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   ::= { flowRuleSetInfoEntry 5 }

flowRuleInfoName OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..127))
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An alphanumeric identifier used by managers and readers to
       identify a RuleSet.  For example, a manager wishing to run a
       RuleSet named WWW-FLOWS could search the flowRuleSetInfoTable
       to see whether the WWW-FLOWS RuleSet is already available on
       the meter.

       Note that references to RuleSets in the flowManagerInfoTable
       use indexes for their flowRuleSetInfoTable entries.  These may
       be different each time the RuleSet is loaded into a meter."
   ::= { flowRuleSetInfoEntry 6 }

flowRuleInfoRulesReady OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TruthValue
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "Indicates whether the rules for this row's associated RuleSet
       are ready for use.  The meter will refuse to 'run' the RuleSet
       unless this variable has been set to true(1).
       While RulesReady is false(2), the manager may modify the
       RuleSet, for example by downloading rules into it."
   ::= { flowRuleSetInfoEntry 7 }

flowRuleInfoFlowRecords OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The number of entries in the flow table for this RuleSet.
       These may be current (waiting for collection by one or more
       meter readers) or idle (waiting for the meter to recover
       their memory)."
   ::= { flowRuleSetInfoEntry 8 }

--
-- Control Group:  Interface Info Table
--

flowInterfaceTable OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF FlowInterfaceEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible



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   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An array of information specific to each meter interface."
   ::= { flowControl 2 }

flowInterfaceEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  FlowInterfaceEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Information about a particular interface."
   INDEX   { ifIndex }
   ::= { flowInterfaceTable 1 }

FlowInterfaceEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
   flowInterfaceSampleRate   Integer32,
   flowInterfaceLostPackets  Counter32
   }

flowInterfaceSampleRate OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The parameter N for statistical counting on this interface.
       Set to N to count 1/Nth of the packets appearing at this
       interface.  A sampling rate of 1 counts all packets.
       A sampling rate of 0 results in the interface being ignored
       by the meter.

       A meter should choose its own algorithm to introduce variance
       into the sampling so that exactly every Nth packet is counted.
       The IPPM Working Group's RFC 'Framework for IP Performance
       Metrics' [IPPM-FRM] explains why this should be done, and sets
       out an algorithm for doing it."
   DEFVAL { 1 }
   ::= { flowInterfaceEntry 1 }

flowInterfaceLostPackets OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The number of packets the meter has lost for this interface.
       Such losses may occur because the meter has been unable to
       keep up with the traffic volume."
   ::= { flowInterfaceEntry 2 }




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RFC 2720          Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB       October 1999


--
-- Control Group:  Meter Reader Info Table
--

-- Any meter reader wishing to collect data reliably for flows
-- should first create a row in this table.  It should write that
-- row's flowReaderLastTime object each time it starts a collection
-- pass through the flow table.

-- If a meter reader (MR) does not create a row in this table, e.g.
-- because its MIB view [RFC2575] did not allow MR create access to
-- flowReaderStatus, collection can still proceed but the meter will
-- not be aware of meter reader MR.  This could lead the meter to
-- recover flows before they have been collected by MR.

flowReaderInfoTable OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF FlowReaderInfoEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An array of information about meter readers which have
       registered their intent to collect flow data from this meter."
   ::= { flowControl 3 }

flowReaderInfoEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  FlowReaderInfoEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Information about a particular meter reader."
   INDEX  { flowReaderIndex }
   ::= { flowReaderInfoTable 1 }

FlowReaderInfoEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
   flowReaderIndex            Integer32,
   flowReaderTimeout          Integer32,
   flowReaderOwner            UTF8OwnerString,
   flowReaderLastTime         TimeStamp,
   flowReaderPreviousTime     TimeStamp,
   flowReaderStatus           RowStatus,
   flowReaderRuleSet          Integer32
   }

flowReaderIndex OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..2147483647)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION



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       "An index which selects an entry in the flowReaderInfoTable."
   ::= { flowReaderInfoEntry 1 }

flowReaderTimeout OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Specifies the maximum time (in seconds) between flow data
       collections for this meter reader.  If this time elapses
       without a collection, the meter should assume that this meter
       reader has stopped collecting, and delete this row from the
       table.  A value of zero indicates that this row should not be
       timed out."
   ::= { flowReaderInfoEntry 2 }

flowReaderOwner OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  UTF8OwnerString
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Identifies the meter reader which created this row."
   ::= { flowReaderInfoEntry 3 }

flowReaderLastTime OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TimeStamp
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Time this meter reader began its most recent data collection.

       This variable should be written by a meter reader as its first
       step in reading flow data.  The meter will set this LastTime
       value to its current Uptime, and set its PreviousTime value
       (below) to the old  LastTime.  This allows the meter to
       recover flows which have been inactive since PreviousTime,
       for these have been collected at least once.

       If the meter reader fails to write flowLastReadTime, collection
       may still proceed but the meter may not be able to recover
       inactive flows until the flowReaderTimeout has been reached
       for this entry."
   ::= { flowReaderInfoEntry 4 }

flowReaderPreviousTime OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TimeStamp
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current



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   DESCRIPTION
       "Time this meter reader began the collection before last."
   ::= { flowReaderInfoEntry 5 }

flowReaderStatus OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  RowStatus
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The status of this FlowReaderInfoEntry. A value of active(1)
       implies that the associated reader should be collecting data
       from the meter.  Once this variable has been set to active(1)
       a manager may only change this row's flowReaderLastTime and
       flowReaderTimeout variables."
   ::= { flowReaderInfoEntry 6 }

flowReaderRuleSet OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..2147483647)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An index to the array of RuleSets.  Specifies a set of rules
       of interest to this meter reader.  The reader will attempt to
       collect any data generated by the meter for this RuleSet, and
       the meter will not recover the memory of any of the RuleSet's
       flows until this collection has taken place.  Note that a
       reader may have entries in this table for several RuleSets."
   ::= { flowReaderInfoEntry 7 }

--
-- Control Group:  Manager Info Table
--

-- Any manager wishing to run a RuleSet must create a row in this
-- table.  Once it has a table row, the manager may set the control
-- variables in its row so as to cause the meter to run any valid
-- RuleSet held by the meter.

-- A single manager may run several RuleSets; it must create a row
-- in this table for each of them.  In short, each row of this table
-- describes (and controls) a 'task' which the meter is executing.

flowManagerInfoTable OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF FlowManagerInfoEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An array of information about managers which have



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       registered their intent to run RuleSets on this meter."
   ::= { flowControl 4 }

flowManagerInfoEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  FlowManagerInfoEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Information about a particular meter 'task.'  By creating
       an entry in this table and activating it, a manager requests
       that the meter 'run' the indicated RuleSet.

       The entry also specifies a HighWaterMark and a StandbyRuleSet.
       If the meter's flow table usage exceeds this task's
       HighWaterMark the meter will stop running the task's
       CurrentRuleSet and switch to its StandbyRuleSet.

       If the value of the task's StandbyRuleSet is 0 when its
       HighWaterMark is exceeded, the meter simply stops running the
       task's CurrentRuleSet.  By careful selection of HighWaterMarks
       for the various tasks a manager can ensure that the most
       critical RuleSets are the last to stop running as the number
       of flows increases.

       When a manager has determined that the demand for flow table
       space has abated, it may cause the task to switch back to its
       CurrentRuleSet by setting its flowManagerRunningStandby
       variable to false(2)."
   INDEX  { flowManagerIndex }
   ::= { flowManagerInfoTable 1 }

FlowManagerInfoEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
   flowManagerIndex           Integer32,
   flowManagerCurrentRuleSet  Integer32,
   flowManagerStandbyRuleSet  Integer32,
   flowManagerHighWaterMark   Integer32,
   flowManagerCounterWrap     INTEGER,
   flowManagerOwner           UTF8OwnerString,
   flowManagerTimeStamp       TimeStamp,
   flowManagerStatus          RowStatus,
   flowManagerRunningStandby  TruthValue
   }

flowManagerIndex OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..2147483647)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION



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       "An index which selects an entry in the flowManagerInfoTable."
   ::= { flowManagerInfoEntry 1 }

flowManagerCurrentRuleSet OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Index to the array of RuleSets.  Specifies which set of
       rules is the 'current' one for this task.  The meter will
       be 'running' the current RuleSet if this row's
       flowManagerRunningStandby value is false(2).

       When the manager sets this variable the meter will stop using
       the task's old current RuleSet and start using the new one.
       Specifying RuleSet 0 (the empty set) stops flow measurement
       for this task."
   ::= { flowManagerInfoEntry 2 }

flowManagerStandbyRuleSet OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Index to the array of RuleSets.  After reaching HighWaterMark
       (see below) the manager will switch to using the task's
       StandbyRuleSet in place of its CurrentRuleSet.  For this to be
       effective the designated StandbyRuleSet should have a coarser
       reporting granularity then the CurrentRuleSet.  The manager may
       also need to decrease the meter reading interval so that the
       meter can recover flows measured by this task's CurrentRuleSet."
   DEFVAL { 0 }  -- No standby
   ::= { flowManagerInfoEntry 3 }

flowManagerHighWaterMark OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (0..100)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "A value expressed as a percentage, interpreted by the meter
       as an indication of how full the flow table should be before
       it should switch to the standby RuleSet (if one has been
       specified) for this task.  Values of 0% or 100% disable the
       checking represented by this variable."
   ::= { flowManagerInfoEntry 4 }

flowManagerCounterWrap OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  INTEGER { wrap(1), scale(2) }



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   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "Specifies whether PDU and octet counters should wrap when
       they reach the top of their range (normal behaviour for
       Counter64 objects), or whether their scale factors should
       be used instead.  The combination of counter and scale
       factor allows counts to be returned as non-negative binary
       floating point numbers, with 64-bit mantissas and 8-bit
       exponents."
   DEFVAL { wrap }
   ::= { flowManagerInfoEntry 5 }

flowManagerOwner OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  UTF8OwnerString
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Identifies the manager which created this row."
   ::= { flowManagerInfoEntry 6 }

flowManagerTimeStamp OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TimeStamp
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Time this row was last changed by its manager."
   ::= { flowManagerInfoEntry 7 }

flowManagerStatus OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  RowStatus
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The status of this row in the flowManagerInfoTable.  A value
       of active(1) implies that this task may be activated, by
       setting its CurrentRuleSet and StandbyRuleSet variables.
       Its HighWaterMark and RunningStandby variables may also be
       changed."
   ::= { flowManagerInfoEntry 8 }

flowManagerRunningStandby OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TruthValue
   MAX-ACCESS  read-create
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Set to true(1) by the meter to indicate that it has switched
       to runnning this task's StandbyRuleSet in place of its



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       CurrentRuleSet.  To switch back to the CurrentRuleSet, the
       manager may simply set this variable to false(2)."
   DEFVAL { false }
   ::= { flowManagerInfoEntry 9 }

--
-- Control Group:  General Meter Control Variables
--

flowFloodMark OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (0..100)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "A value expressed as a percentage, interpreted by the meter
       as an indication of how full the flow table should be before
       it should take some action to avoid running out of resources
       to handle new flows, as discussed in section 4.6 (Handling
       Increasing Traffic Levels) of the RTFM Architecture RFC
       [RTFM-ARC].

       Values of 0% or 100% disable the checking represented by
       this variable."
   DEFVAL { 95 } -- Enabled by default.
   ::= { flowControl 5 }

flowInactivityTimeout OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The time in seconds since the last packet seen, after which
       a flow becomes 'idle.'  Note that although a flow may be
       idle, it will not be discarded (and its memory recovered)
       until after its data has been collected by all the meter
       readers registered for its RuleSet."
   DEFVAL { 600 } -- 10 minutes
   ::= { flowControl 6 }

flowActiveFlows OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The number of flows which are currently in use."
   ::= { flowControl 7 }

flowMaxFlows OBJECT-TYPE



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   SYNTAX  Integer32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The maximum number of flows allowed in the meter's
       flow table.  At present this is determined when the meter
       is first started up."
   ::= { flowControl 8 }

flowFloodMode OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TruthValue
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Indicates that the meter has passed its FloodMark and is
       not running in its normal mode.

       When the manager notices this it should take action to remedy
       the problem which caused the flooding.  It should then monitor
       flowActiveFlows so as to determine when the flood has receded.
       At that point the manager may set flowFloodMode to false(2) to
       resume normal operation."
   ::= { flowControl 9 }

--
-- The Flow Table
--

-- This is a table kept by a meter, with one flow data entry for every
-- flow being measured.  Each flow data entry stores the attribute
-- values for a traffic flow.  Details of flows and their attributes
-- are given in the 'Traffic Flow Measurement: Architecture'
-- document [RTFM-ARC].

-- From time to time a meter reader may sweep the flow table so as
-- to read counts.  This is most effectively achieved by using the
-- TimeMark variable together with successive GetBulk requests to
-- retrieve the values of the desired flow attribute variables.

-- This scheme allows multiple meter readers to independently use the
-- same meter; the meter readers do not have to be synchronised and
-- they may use different collection intervals.

-- If identical sets of counts are required from a meter, a manager
-- could achieve this using two identical copies of a RuleSet in that
-- meter and switching back and forth between them.  This is discussed
-- further in the RTFM Architecture document [RTFM-ARC].




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flowDataTable OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF FlowDataEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The list of all flows being measured."
   ::= { flowData 1 }

flowDataEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  FlowDataEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The flow data record for a particular flow."
   INDEX { flowDataRuleSet, flowDataTimeMark, flowDataIndex }
   ::= { flowDataTable 1 }

FlowDataEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
   flowDataIndex                   Integer32,
   flowDataTimeMark                TimeFilter,
   flowDataStatus                  INTEGER,

   flowDataSourceInterface         Integer32,
   flowDataSourceAdjacentType      AdjacentType,
   flowDataSourceAdjacentAddress   AdjacentAddress,
   flowDataSourceAdjacentMask      AdjacentAddress,
   flowDataSourcePeerType          PeerType,
   flowDataSourcePeerAddress       PeerAddress,
   flowDataSourcePeerMask          PeerAddress,
   flowDataSourceTransType         TransportType,
   flowDataSourceTransAddress      TransportAddress,
   flowDataSourceTransMask         TransportAddress,

   flowDataDestInterface           Integer32,
   flowDataDestAdjacentType        AdjacentType,
   flowDataDestAdjacentAddress     AdjacentAddress,
   flowDataDestAdjacentMask        AdjacentAddress,
   flowDataDestPeerType            PeerType,
   flowDataDestPeerAddress         PeerAddress,
   flowDataDestPeerMask            PeerAddress,
   flowDataDestTransType           TransportType,
   flowDataDestTransAddress        TransportAddress,
   flowDataDestTransMask           TransportAddress,

   flowDataPDUScale                Integer32,
   flowDataOctetScale              Integer32,

   flowDataRuleSet                 Integer32,



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   flowDataToOctets                Counter64,    -- Source->Dest
   flowDataToPDUs                  Counter64,
   flowDataFromOctets              Counter64,    -- Dest->Source
   flowDataFromPDUs                Counter64,
   flowDataFirstTime               TimeStamp,    -- Activity times
   flowDataLastActiveTime          TimeStamp,

   flowDataSourceSubscriberID      OCTET STRING,
   flowDataDestSubscriberID        OCTET STRING,
   flowDataSessionID               OCTET STRING,

   flowDataSourceClass             Integer32,
   flowDataDestClass               Integer32,
   flowDataClass                   Integer32,
   flowDataSourceKind              Integer32,
   flowDataDestKind                Integer32,
   flowDataKind                    Integer32
   }

flowDataIndex OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..2147483647)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Value of this flow data record's index within the meter's
       flow table."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 1 }

flowDataTimeMark OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TimeFilter
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "A TimeFilter for this entry.  Allows GetNext and GetBulk
       to find flow table rows which have changed since a specified
       value of the meter's Uptime."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 2 }

flowDataStatus OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  INTEGER { inactive(1), current(2) }
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "Status of this flow data record."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 3 }

flowDataSourceInterface OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32



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   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Index of the interface associated with the source address
       for this flow.  It's value is one of those contained in the
       ifIndex field of the meter's interfaces table."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 4 }

flowDataSourceAdjacentType OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  AdjacentType
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Adjacent address type of the source for this flow.

       If metering is being performed at the network level,
       AdjacentType will indicate the medium for the interface on
       which the flow was observed and AdjacentAddress will be the
       MAC address for that interface.  This is the usual case.

       If traffic is being metered inside a tunnel, AdjacentType will
       be the peer type of the host at the end of the tunnel and
       AdjacentAddress will be the peer address for that host."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 5 }

flowDataSourceAdjacentAddress OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  AdjacentAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Address of the adjacent device on the path for the source
       for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 6 }

flowDataSourceAdjacentMask OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  AdjacentAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "1-bits in this mask indicate which bits must match when
       comparing the adjacent source address for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 7 }

flowDataSourcePeerType OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  PeerType
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION



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       "Peer address type of the source for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 8 }

flowDataSourcePeerAddress OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  PeerAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Address of the peer device for the source of this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 9 }

flowDataSourcePeerMask OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  PeerAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "1-bits in this mask indicate which bits must match when
       comparing the source peer address for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 10 }

flowDataSourceTransType OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TransportType
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Transport address type of the source for this flow.  The
       value of this attribute will depend on the peer address type."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 11 }

flowDataSourceTransAddress OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TransportAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Transport address for the source of this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 12 }

flowDataSourceTransMask OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TransportAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "1-bits in this mask indicate which bits must match when
       comparing the transport source address for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 13 }

flowDataDestInterface OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32



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   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Index of the interface associated with the dest address for
       this flow.  This value is one of the values contained in the
       ifIndex field of the interfaces table."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 14 }

flowDataDestAdjacentType OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  AdjacentType
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Adjacent address type of the destination for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 15 }

flowDataDestAdjacentAddress OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  AdjacentAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Address of the adjacent device on the path for the
       destination for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 16 }

flowDataDestAdjacentMask OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  AdjacentAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "1-bits in this mask indicate which bits must match when
       comparing the adjacent destination address for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 17 }

flowDataDestPeerType OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  PeerType
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Peer address type of the destination for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 18 }

flowDataDestPeerAddress OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  PeerAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Address of the peer device for the destination of this flow."



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   ::= { flowDataEntry 19 }

flowDataDestPeerMask OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  PeerAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "1-bits in this mask indicate which bits must match when
       comparing the destination peer type for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 20 }

flowDataDestTransType OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TransportType
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Transport address type of the destination for this flow.  The
       value of this attribute will depend on the peer address type."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 21 }

flowDataDestTransAddress OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TransportAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Transport address for the destination of this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 22 }

flowDataDestTransMask OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TransportAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "1-bits in this mask indicate which bits must match when
       comparing the transport destination address for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 23 }

flowDataPDUScale OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (0..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The scale factor applied to this particular flow.  Indicates
       the number of bits the PDU counter values should be moved left
       to obtain the actual values."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 24 }

flowDataOctetScale OBJECT-TYPE



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   SYNTAX  Integer32 (0..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The scale factor applied to this particular flow.  Indicates
       the number of bits the octet counter values should be moved
       left to obtain the actual values."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 25 }

flowDataRuleSet OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The RuleSet number of the RuleSet which created this flow.
       Allows a manager to use GetNext or GetBulk requests to find
       flows belonging to a particular RuleSet."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 26 }

flowDataToOctets OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Counter64
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The count of octets flowing from source to destination
       for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 27 }

flowDataToPDUs OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Counter64
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The count of packets flowing from source to destination
       for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 28 }

flowDataFromOctets OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Counter64
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The count of octets flowing from destination to source
       for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 29 }

flowDataFromPDUs OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Counter64



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   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The count of packets flowing from destination to source
       for this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 30 }

flowDataFirstTime OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TimeStamp
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The time at which this flow was first entered in the table"
   ::= { flowDataEntry 31 }

flowDataLastActiveTime OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TimeStamp
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The last time this flow had activity, i.e. the time of
       arrival of the most recent PDU belonging to this flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 32 }

flowDataSourceSubscriberID OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  OCTET STRING (SIZE (4..20))
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Subscriber ID associated with the source address for this
       flow.  A Subscriber ID is an unspecified text string, used
       to ascribe traffic flows to individual users.  At this time
       the means by which a Subscriber ID may be associated with a
       flow is unspecified."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 33 }

flowDataDestSubscriberID OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  OCTET STRING (SIZE (4..20))
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Subscriber ID associated with the destination address for
       this flow.  A Subscriber ID is an unspecified text string,
       used to ascribe traffic flows to individual users.  At this
       time the means by which a Subscriber ID may be associated
       with a flow is unspecified."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 34 }




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flowDataSessionID OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  OCTET STRING (SIZE (4..10))
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Session ID for this flow.  Such an ID might be allocated
       by a network access server to distinguish a series of sessions
       between the same pair of addresses, which would otherwise
       appear to be parts of the same accounting flow."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 35 }

flowDataSourceClass OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Source class for this flow.  Determined by the rules, set by
       a PushRule action when this flow was entered in the table."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 36 }

flowDataDestClass OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Destination class for this flow.  Determined by the rules, set
       by a PushRule action when this flow was entered in the table."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 37 }

flowDataClass OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Class for this flow.  Determined by the rules, set by a
       PushRule action when this flow was entered in the table."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 38 }

flowDataSourceKind OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Source kind for this flow.  Determined by the rules, set by
       a PushRule action when this flow was entered in the table."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 39 }

flowDataDestKind OBJECT-TYPE



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   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Destination kind for this flow.  Determined by the rules, set
       by a PushRule action when this flow was entered in the table."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 40 }

flowDataKind OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Class for this flow.  Determined by the rules, set by a
       PushRule action when this flow was entered in the table."
   ::= { flowDataEntry 41 }

--
-- The Activity Column Table
--

flowColumnActivityTable OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF FlowColumnActivityEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS   deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "Index into the Flow Table.  Allows a meter reader to retrieve
       a list containing the flow table indexes of flows which were
       last active at or after a given time, together with the values
       of a specified attribute for each such flow."
   ::= { flowData 2 }

flowColumnActivityEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  FlowColumnActivityEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "The Column Activity Entry for a particular attribute,
       activity time and flow."
   INDEX { flowColumnActivityAttribute, flowColumnActivityTime,
           flowColumnActivityIndex }
   ::= { flowColumnActivityTable 1 }

FlowColumnActivityEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
   flowColumnActivityAttribute   FlowAttributeNumber,
   flowColumnActivityTime        TimeFilter,
   flowColumnActivityIndex       Integer32,
   flowColumnActivityData        OCTET STRING



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   }

flowColumnActivityAttribute OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  FlowAttributeNumber
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "Specifies the attribute for which values are required from
       active flows."
   ::= { flowColumnActivityEntry 1 }

flowColumnActivityTime OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TimeFilter
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "This variable is a copy of flowDataLastActiveTime in the
       flow data record identified by the flowColumnActivityIndex
       value of this flowColumnActivityTable entry."
   ::= { flowColumnActivityEntry 2 }

flowColumnActivityIndex OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..2147483647)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "Index of a flow table entry which was active at or after
       a specified flowColumnActivityTime."
   ::= { flowColumnActivityEntry 3 }

flowColumnActivityData OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  OCTET STRING (SIZE (3..1000))
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "Collection of attribute data for flows active after
       flowColumnActivityTime.  Within the OCTET STRING is a
       sequence of { flow index, attribute value } pairs, one for
       each active flow.  The end of the sequence is marked by a
       flow index value of 0, indicating that there are no more
       rows in this column.

       The format of objects inside flowColumnFlowData is as follows.
       All numbers are unsigned.  Numbers and strings appear with
       their high-order bytes leading.  Numbers are fixed size, as
       specified by their SYNTAX in the flow table (above), i.e. one
       octet for flowAddressType and small constants, and four octets
       for Counter and TimeStamp.  Strings are variable-length, with



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       the length given in a single leading octet.

       The following is an attempt at an ASN.1 definition of
       flowColumnActivityData:

       flowColumnActivityData ::= SEQUENCE flowRowItemEntry
       flowRowItemEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
          flowRowNumber    Integer32 (1..65535),
                                -- 0 indicates the end of this column
          flowDataValue   flowDataType -- Choice depends on attribute
          }
       flowDataType ::= CHOICE {
           flowByteValue   Integer32 (1..255),
           flowShortValue  Integer32 (1..65535),
           flowLongValue   Integer32,
           flowStringValue OCTET STRING  -- Length (n) in first byte,
                 -- n+1 bytes total length, trailing zeroes truncated
           }"
   ::= { flowColumnActivityEntry 4 }

--
-- The Data Package Table
--

flowDataPackageTable OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF FlowDataPackageEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS   current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Index into the Flow Table.  Allows a meter reader to retrieve
       a sequence containing the values of a specified set of
       attributes for a flow which came from a specified RuleSet and
       which was last active at or after a given time."
   ::= { flowData 3 }

flowDataPackageEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  FlowDataPackageEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The data package containing selected variables from
       active rows in the flow table."
   INDEX { flowPackageSelector,
       flowPackageRuleSet, flowPackageTime, flowPackageIndex }
   ::= { flowDataPackageTable 1 }

FlowDataPackageEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
   flowPackageSelector    OCTET STRING,



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   flowPackageRuleSet     Integer32,
   flowPackageTime        TimeFilter,
   flowPackageIndex       Integer32,
   flowPackageData        OCTET STRING
   }

flowPackageSelector OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  OCTET STRING
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Specifies the attributes for which values are required from
       an active flow.  These are encoded as a sequence of octets
       each containing a FlowAttribute number, preceded by an octet
       giving the length of the sequence (not including the length
       octet).  For a flowPackageSelector to be valid, it must
       contain at least one attribute."
   ::= { flowDataPackageEntry 1 }

flowPackageRuleSet OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..255)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Specifies the index (in the flowRuleSetInfoTable) of the rule
       set which produced the required flow."
   ::= { flowDataPackageEntry 2 }

flowPackageTime OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  TimeFilter
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "This variable is a copy of flowDataLastActiveTime in the
       flow data record identified by the flowPackageIndex
       value of this flowPackageTable entry."
   ::= { flowDataPackageEntry 3 }

flowPackageIndex OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..2147483647)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Index of a flow table entry which was active at or after
       a specified flowPackageTime."
   ::= { flowDataPackageEntry 4 }

flowPackageData OBJECT-TYPE



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   SYNTAX  OCTET STRING
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "A collection of attribute values for a single flow, as
       specified by this row's indexes.  The attribute values are
       contained within a BER-encoded sequence [ASN-1, ASN-BER],
       in the order they appear in their flowPackageSelector.

       For example, to retrieve a flowPackage containing values for
       attributes 11, 18 and 29, for a flow in RuleSet 7, with flow
       index 3447, one would GET the package whose Object Identifier
       (OID) is
           flowPackageData . 3.11.18.29 . 7. 0 . 3447

       To get a package for the next such flow which had been
       active since time 12345 one would GETNEXT the package whose
       Object Identifier (OID) is
           flowPackageData . 3.11.18.29 . 7. 12345 . 3447"
   ::= { flowDataPackageEntry 5 }

--
-- The Rule Table
--

-- This is an array of RuleSets; the 'running' ones are indicated
-- by the entries in the meter's flowManagerInfoTable.  Several
-- RuleSets can be held in a meter so that the manager can change the
-- running RuleSets easily, for example with time of day.  Note that
-- a manager may not change the rules in any RuleSet currently
-- referenced within the flowManagerInfoTable (either as 'current' or
-- 'standby')!  See the 'Traffic Flow Measurement: Architecture'
-- document [RTFM-ARC] for details of rules and how they are used.

-- Space for a RuleSet is allocated by setting the value of
-- flowRuleInfoSize in the rule table's flowRuleSetInfoTable row.
-- Values for each row in the RuleSet (Selector, Mask, MatchedValue,
-- Action and Parameter) can then be set by the meter.

-- Although an individual rule within a RuleSet could be modified,
-- it is much safer to simply download a complete new RuleSet.

flowRuleTable OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF FlowRuleEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS   current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Contains all the RuleSets which may be used by the meter."



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   ::= { flowRules 1 }

flowRuleEntry OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  FlowRuleEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS   current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The rule record itself."
   INDEX { flowRuleSet, flowRuleIndex }
   ::= { flowRuleTable 1 }

FlowRuleEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
   flowRuleSet                  Integer32,
   flowRuleIndex                Integer32,
   flowRuleSelector             RuleAttributeNumber,
   flowRuleMask                 RuleAddress,
   flowRuleMatchedValue         RuleAddress,
   flowRuleAction               ActionNumber,
   flowRuleParameter            Integer32
   }

flowRuleSet OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..2147483647)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Selects a RuleSet from the array of RuleSets."
   ::= { flowRuleEntry 1 }

flowRuleIndex OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..2147483647)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The index into the Rule table.  N.B: These values will
       normally be consecutive, given the fall-through semantics
       of processing the table."
   ::= { flowRuleEntry 2 }

flowRuleSelector OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  RuleAttributeNumber
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Indicates the attribute to be matched.

       null(0) is a special case; null rules always succeed.




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       matchingStoD(50) is set by the meter's Packet Matching Engine.
       Its value is true(1) if the PME is attempting to match the
       packet with its addresses in Source-to-Destination order (i.e.
       as they appear in the packet), and false(2) otherwise.
       Details of how packets are matched are given in the 'Traffic
       Flow Measurement: Architecture' document [RTFM-ARC].
       v1(51), v2(52), v3(53), v4(54) and v5(55) select meter
       variables, each of which can hold the name (i.e. selector
       value) of an address attribute.  When one of these is used
       as a selector, its value specifies the attribute to be
       tested.  Variable values are set by an Assign action."
   ::= { flowRuleEntry 3 }

flowRuleMask OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  RuleAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The initial mask used to compute the desired value.  If the
       mask is zero the rule's test will always succeed."
   ::= { flowRuleEntry 4 }

flowRuleMatchedValue OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  RuleAddress
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The resulting value to be matched for equality.
       Specifically, if the attribute chosen by the flowRuleSelector
       logically ANDed with the mask specified by the flowRuleMask
       equals the value specified in the flowRuleMatchedValue, then
       continue processing the table entry based on the action
       specified by the flowRuleAction entry.  Otherwise, proceed to
       the next entry in the rule table."
   ::= { flowRuleEntry 5 }

flowRuleAction OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX  ActionNumber
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The action to be taken if this rule's test succeeds, or if
       the meter's 'test' flag is off.  Actions are opcodes for the
       meter's Packet Matching Engine; details are given in the
       'Traffic Flow Measurement: Architecture' document [RTFM-ARC]."
   ::= { flowRuleEntry 6 }

flowRuleParameter OBJECT-TYPE



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   SYNTAX  Integer32 (1..65535)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "A parameter value providing extra information for this rule's
       action.  Most of the actions use the parameter value to specify
       which rule to execute after this rule's test has failed; details
       are given in the 'Traffic Flow Measurement: Architecture'
       document [RTFM-ARC]."
   ::= { flowRuleEntry 7 }

--
-- Traffic Flow Meter conformance statement
--

flowMIBCompliances
   OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { flowMIBConformance 1 }

flowMIBGroups
   OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { flowMIBConformance 2 }

flowControlGroup OBJECT-GROUP
   OBJECTS  {
       flowRuleInfoSize, flowRuleInfoOwner,
           flowRuleInfoTimeStamp, flowRuleInfoStatus,
           flowRuleInfoName,
           flowRuleInfoRulesReady,
           flowRuleInfoFlowRecords,
       flowInterfaceSampleRate,
           flowInterfaceLostPackets,
       flowReaderTimeout, flowReaderOwner,
           flowReaderLastTime, flowReaderPreviousTime,
           flowReaderStatus, flowReaderRuleSet,
       flowManagerCurrentRuleSet, flowManagerStandbyRuleSet,
           flowManagerHighWaterMark,
           flowManagerCounterWrap,
           flowManagerOwner, flowManagerTimeStamp,
           flowManagerStatus, flowManagerRunningStandby,
       flowFloodMark,
           flowInactivityTimeout, flowActiveFlows,
           flowMaxFlows, flowFloodMode }
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "The control group defines objects which are used to control
       an accounting meter."
   ::= {flowMIBGroups 1 }

flowDataTableGroup OBJECT-GROUP



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   OBJECTS  {
--      flowDataIndex,                    <- INDEX, not-accessible
       flowDataStatus,
       flowDataSourceInterface,
       flowDataSourceAdjacentType,
       flowDataSourceAdjacentAddress, flowDataSourceAdjacentMask,
       flowDataSourcePeerType,
       flowDataSourcePeerAddress, flowDataSourcePeerMask,
       flowDataSourceTransType,
       flowDataSourceTransAddress, flowDataSourceTransMask,
       flowDataDestInterface,
       flowDataDestAdjacentType,
       flowDataDestAdjacentAddress, flowDataDestAdjacentMask,
       flowDataDestPeerType,
       flowDataDestPeerAddress, flowDataDestPeerMask,
       flowDataDestTransType,
       flowDataDestTransAddress, flowDataDestTransMask,
--      flowDataRuleSet,                  <- INDEX, not-accessible
       flowDataToOctets, flowDataToPDUs,
       flowDataFromOctets, flowDataFromPDUs,
       flowDataFirstTime, flowDataLastActiveTime,
       flowDataSourceClass, flowDataDestClass, flowDataClass,
       flowDataSourceKind, flowDataDestKind, flowDataKind
       }
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "The flow table group defines objects which provide the
       structure for the flow table, including the creation time
       and activity time indexes into it.  In addition it defines
       objects which provide a base set of flow attributes for the
       adjacent, peer and transport layers, together with a flow's
       counters and times.  Finally it defines a flow's class and
       kind attributes, which are set by rule actions."
   ::= {flowMIBGroups 2 }

flowDataScaleGroup OBJECT-GROUP
   OBJECTS  {
       flowManagerCounterWrap,
       flowDataPDUScale, flowDataOctetScale
       }
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "The flow scale group defines objects which specify scale
       factors for counters."
   ::= {flowMIBGroups 3 }

flowDataSubscriberGroup OBJECT-GROUP
   OBJECTS  {



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       flowDataSourceSubscriberID, flowDataDestSubscriberID,
       flowDataSessionID
       }
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The flow subscriber group defines objects which may be used
       to identify the end point(s) of a flow."
   ::= {flowMIBGroups 4 }

flowDataColumnTableGroup OBJECT-GROUP
   OBJECTS  {
       flowColumnActivityAttribute,
       flowColumnActivityIndex,
       flowColumnActivityTime,
       flowColumnActivityData
       }
   STATUS  deprecated
   DESCRIPTION
       "The flow column table group defines objects which can be used
       to collect part of a column of attribute values from the flow
       table."
   ::= {flowMIBGroups 5 }

flowDataPackageGroup OBJECT-GROUP
   OBJECTS  {
       flowPackageData
       }
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The data package group defines objects which can be used
       to collect a specified set of attribute values from a row of
       the flow table."
   ::= {flowMIBGroups 6 }

flowRuleTableGroup OBJECT-GROUP
   OBJECTS  {
       flowRuleSelector,
       flowRuleMask, flowRuleMatchedValue,
       flowRuleAction, flowRuleParameter
       }
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The rule table group defines objects which hold the set(s)
       of rules specifying which traffic flows are to be accounted
       for."
   ::= {flowMIBGroups 7 }

flowDataScaleGroup2 OBJECT-GROUP



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   OBJECTS  {
--      flowManagerCounterWrap,           <- Deprecated
       flowDataPDUScale, flowDataOctetScale
       }
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The flow scale group defines objects which specify scale
       factors for counters.  This group replaces the earlier
       version of flowDataScaleGroup above (now deprecated)."
   ::= {flowMIBGroups 8}

flowControlGroup2 OBJECT-GROUP
   OBJECTS  {
       flowRuleInfoSize, flowRuleInfoOwner,
           flowRuleInfoTimeStamp, flowRuleInfoStatus,
           flowRuleInfoName,
--          flowRuleInfoRulesReady,       <- Deprecated
           flowRuleInfoFlowRecords,
       flowInterfaceSampleRate,
           flowInterfaceLostPackets,
       flowReaderTimeout, flowReaderOwner,
           flowReaderLastTime, flowReaderPreviousTime,
           flowReaderStatus, flowReaderRuleSet,
       flowManagerCurrentRuleSet, flowManagerStandbyRuleSet,
           flowManagerHighWaterMark,
--          flowManagerCounterWrap,       <- Moved to DataScaleGroup
           flowManagerOwner, flowManagerTimeStamp,
           flowManagerStatus, flowManagerRunningStandby,
       flowFloodMark,
           flowInactivityTimeout, flowActiveFlows,
           flowMaxFlows, flowFloodMode }
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The control group defines objects which are used to control
       an accounting meter.  It replaces the earlier version of
       flowControlGroup above (now deprecated)."
   ::= {flowMIBGroups 9 }

flowMIBCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The compliance statement for a Traffic Flow Meter."
   MODULE
       MANDATORY-GROUPS  {
           flowControlGroup2,
           flowDataTableGroup,
           flowDataPackageGroup,
           flowRuleTableGroup



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           }
   ::= { flowMIBCompliances 1 }

END















































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RFC 2720          Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB       October 1999


5  Security Considerations

5.1  SNMP Concerns

  There are a number of management objects defined in this MIB that
  have 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.

  There are a number of managed objects in this MIB that may contain
  sensitive information.  These include all the objects in the Control
  Group (since they control access to meter resources by Managers and
  Meter Readers) and those in the Flow Table (since they hold the
  collected traffic flow data).

  It is thus important to control even GET access to these objects and
  possibly to even encrypt the values of these object when sending them
  over the network via SNMP. Not all versions of SNMP provide features
  for such a secure environment.

  SNMPv1 by itself is not a secure environment.  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.

  It is recommended that the implementers consider the security
  features as provided by the SNMPv3 framework.  Specifically, the use
  of the User-based Security Model [RFC2574] and the View-based Access
  Control Model [RFC2575] is recommended.

  It is then a customer/user responsibility to ensure that the SNMP
  entity giving access to an instance of this MIB 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.

5.2  Traffic Meter Concerns

  This MIB describes how an RTFM traffic meter is controlled, and
  provides a way for traffic flow data to be retrieved from it by a
  meter reader.  This is essentially an application using SNMP as a
  method of communication between co-operating hosts; it does not - in
  itself - have any inherent security risks.






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  Since, however, the traffic flow data can be extremely valuable for
  network management purposes it is vital that sensible precautions be
  taken to keep the meter and its data secure.  In particular, an
  attacker must not be permitted to write any of the meter's variables!
  This requires that access to the meter for control purposes (e.g.
  loading RuleSets and reading flow data) be restricted.  Such
  restriction could be achieved in many ways, for example:

  - Physical Separation.  Meter(s) and meter reader(s) could be
    deployed so that control capabilities are kept within a separate
    network, access to which is carefully controlled.

  - Application-layer Security.  A minimal level of security for SNMP
    can be provided by using 'community' strings (which are essentially
    clear-text passwords) with SNMPv2C [RFC1157].  Where stronger
    security is needed, users should consider using the User-based
    Security Model [RFC2574] and the View-based Access Control Model
    [RFC2575].

  - Lower-layer Security.  Access to the meter can be protected using
    encryption at the network layer.  For example, one could run SNMP
    to the meter through an encrypted TCP tunnel.

  When implementing a meter it may be sensible to use separate network
  interfaces for control and for metering.  If this is done the control
  network can be set up so that it doesn't carry any 'user' traffic,
  and the metering interfaces can ignore any user attempts to take
  control of the meter.

  Users should also consider how they will address attempts to
  circumvent a meter, i.e. to prevent it from measuring flows.  Such
  attempts are essentially denial-of-service attacks on the metering
  interfaces.  For example

  - Port Scan attacks.  The attacker sends packets to each of a very
    large number of IP (Address :  Port) pairs.  Each of these packets
    creates a new flow in the meter; if there are enough of them the
    meter will recognise a 'flood' condition, and will probably stop
    creating new flows.  As a minimum, users (and implementors) should
    ensure that meters can recover from flood conditions as soon as
    possible after they occur.

  - Counter Wrap attacks:  The attacker sends enough packets to cause
    the counters in a flow to wrap several times between meter
    readings, thus causing the counts to be artificially low.  The
    change to using 64-bit counters in this MIB reduces this problem
    significantly.




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  Users can reduce the severity of both the above attacks by ensuring
  that their meters are read often enough to prevent them being
  flooded.  The resulting flow data will contain a record of the
  attacking packets, which may well be useful in determining where any
  attack came from.

6  IANA Considerations

  The RTFM Architecture document [RTFM-ARC], has two sets of assigned
  numbers:  Opcodes for the PME (Pattern Matching Engine) and RTFM
  Attribute numbers.  All the assigned numbers used in the Meter MIB
  appear in Textual Conventions.  The numbers they use are derived as
  follows:

  The MIB's 'Type' textual conventions use names and numbers from the
  Assigned Numbers RFC [ASG-NBR]:

     MediumType            Uses ifType Definitions
     PeerType              Uses Address Family Numbers
     TransportType         Uses Protocol Numbers

  The MIB's 'AttributeNumber' textual conventions use RTFM Attribute
  names and numbers from the RTFM Architecture document [RTFM-ARC], or
  other numbers allocated according to that document's IANA
  Considerations section:

     FlowAttributeNumber   Have values stored in a flow table row
     RuleAttributeNumber   May be tested in a rule

  The MIB's ActionNumber textual convention uses RTFM PME Opcode names
  and numbers from the RTFM Architecture document [RTFM-ARC], or other
  numbers allocated according to that document's IANA Considerations
  section.


















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7  Appendix A: Changes Introduced Since RFC 2064

  The first version of the Meter MIB was published as RFC 2064 in
  January 1997.  The most significant changes since then are summarised
  below.

  - TEXTUAL CONVENTIONS: Greater use is made of textual conventions to
    describe the various types of addresses used by the meter.

  - PACKET MATCHING ATTRIBUTES: Computed attributes (e.g. FlowClass and
    FlowKind) may now be tested.  This allows one to use these
    variables to store information during packet matching.

    A new attribute, MatchingStoD, has been added.  Its value is 1
    while a packet is being matched with its adresses in 'wire'
    (source-to-destination) order.

  - FLOOD MODE: This is now a read-write variable.  Setting it to
    false(2) switches the meter out of flood mode and back to normal
    operation.

  - CONTROL TABLES: Several variables have been added to the RuleSet,
    Reader and Manager tables to provide more effective control of the
    meter's activities.

  - FLOW TABLE: 64-bit counters are used for octet and PDU counts.
    This reduces the problems caused by the wrap-around of 32-bit
    counters in earlier versions.
    flowDataRuleSet is now used as an index to the flow table.  This
    allows a meter reader to collect only those flow table rows created
    by a specified RuleSet.

  - DATA PACKAGES: This is a new table, allowing a meter reader to
    retrieve values for a list of attributes from a flow as a single
    object (a BER-encoded sequence [ASN-1, ASN-BER]). It provides an
    efficient way to recover flow data, particularly when used with
    SNMP GetBulk requests.

    Earlier versions had a 'Column Activity Table'; using this it was
    difficult to collect all data for a flow efficiently in a single
    SNMP request.










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8  Acknowledgements

  An early draft of this document was produced under the auspices of
  the IETF's Accounting Working Group with assistance from the SNMP
  Working Group and the Security Area Advisory Group.  Particular
  thanks are due to Jim Barnes, Sig Handelman and Stephen Stibler for
  their support and their assistance with checking early versions of
  the MIB.

  Stephen Stibler shared the development workload of producing the MIB
  changes summarized in chapter 5 (above).

9  Intellectual Property Notice

  The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
  intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
  pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
  this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
  might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
  has made any effort to identify any such rights.  Information on the
  IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
  standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11.  Copies of
  claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of
  licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to
  obtain a general license or permission for the use of such
  proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can
  be obtained from the IETF Secretariat."

  The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
  copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
  rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice
  this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF Executive
  Director.

10  References

  [ACT-BKG]   Mills, C., Hirsch, G. and G. Ruth, "Internet Accounting
              Background", RFC 1272, November 1991.

  [ASG-NBR]   Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", STD 2,
              RFC 1700, ISI, October 1994.

  [ASN-1]     Information processing systems - Open Systems
              Interconnection - Specification of Abstract Syntax
              Notation One (ASN.1), International Organization for
              Standardization, International Standard 8824, December
              1987.




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RFC 2720          Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB       October 1999


  [ASN-BER]   Information processing systems - Open Systems
              Interconnection - Specification of Basic Encoding Rules
              for Abstract Notation One (ASN.1), International
              Organization for Standardization, International Standard
              8825, December 1987.

  [ENET-OBJ]  Kastenholz, F., "Definitions of Managed Objects for the
              Ethernet-like Interface Types", RFC 1643, July 1994.

  [FDDI-MIB]  Case, J. and A. Rijsinghani, "FDDI Management Information
              Base", RFC 1512, September 1993.

  [IPPM-FRM]  Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J. and  M. Mathis,
              "Framework for IP Performance Metrics", RFC 2330, May
              1998.

  [MIB-II]    McCloghrie, K. and M. Rose, "Management Information Base
              for Network Management of TCP/IP-based internets: MIB-
              II", STD 17, RFC 1213, March 1991.

  [RFC1155]   Rose, M., and K. McCloghrie, "Structure and
              Identification of Management Information for TCP/IP-based
              Internets", STD 16, RFC 1155, May 1990

  [RFC1157]   Case, J., Fedor, M., Schoffstall, M. and J. Davin,
              "Simple Network Management Protocol", STD 15, RFC 1157,
              May 1990.

  [RFC1212]   Rose, M. and K. McCloghrie, "Concise MIB Definitions",
              STD 16, RFC 1212, March 1991.

  [RFC1215]   Rose, M., "A Convention for Defining Traps for use with
              the SNMP", RFC 1215, March 1991

  [RFC1901]   Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,
              "Introduction to Community-based SNMPv2", RFC 1901,
              January 1996.

  [RFC1905]   Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,
              "Protocol Operations for Version 2 of the Simple Network
              Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1905, January 1996.

  [RFC1906]   Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,
              "Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network
              Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1906, January 1996.






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RFC 2720          Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB       October 1999


  [RFC1908]   Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,
              "Coexistence between version 1 and version 2 of the
              Internet-standard Network Management Framework", RFC
              1908, January 1996.

  [RFC2570]   Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D. and B. Stewart,
              "Introduction to Version 3 of the Internet-standard
              Network Management Framework", RFC 2570, April 1999.

  [RFC2571]   Harrington, D., Presuhn, R. and B. Wijnen, "An
              Architecture for Describing SNMP Management Frameworks",
              RFC 2571, April 1999.

  [RFC2572]   Case, J., Harrington D., Presuhn R. and B. Wijnen,
              "Message Processing and Dispatching for the Simple
              Network Management Protocol (SNMP)", RFC 2572, April
              1999.

  [RFC2573]   Levi, D., Meyer, P. and B. Stewart, "SNMPv3
              Applications", RFC 2573, April 1999.

  [RFC2574]   Blumenthal, U. and B. Wijnen, "User-based Security Model
              (USM) for version 3 of the Simple Network Management
              Protocol (SNMPv3)", RFC 2574, April 1999.

  [RFC2575]   Wijnen, B., Presuhn, R. and K. McCloghrie, "View-based
              Access Control Model (VACM) for the Simple Network
              Management Protocol (SNMP)", RFC 2575, April 1999.

  [RFC2578]   McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J.,
              Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser, "Structure of Management
              Information Version 2 (SMIv2)", STD 58, RFC 2578, April
              1999.

  [RFC2579]   McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J.,
              Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser, "Textual Conventions for
              SMIv2", STD 58, RFC 2579, April 1999.

  [RFC2580]   McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J.,
              Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser, "Conformance Statements for
              SMIv2", STD 58, RFC 2580, April 1999.

  [RMON-MIB]  Waldbusser, S., "Remote Network Monitoring Management
              Information Base", RFC 1757, February 1995.

  [RMON2-MIB] Waldbusser, S., "Remote Network Monitoring Management
              Information Base Version 2 using SMIv2", RFC 2021,
              January 1997.



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RFC 2720          Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB       October 1999


  [RTFM-ARC]  Brownlee, N., Mills, C. and Ruth, G., "Traffic Flow
              Measurement: Architecture", RFC 722, October 1999.

  [UTF-8]     Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
              10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.

  [V6-ADDR]   Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
              Architecture", RFC 2373, July 1998.

11  Author's Address

  Nevil Brownlee
  Information Technology Systems & Services
  The University of Auckland
  Private Bag 92-019
  Auckland, New Zealand

  Phone: +64 9 373 7599 x8941
  EMail: [email protected]
































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RFC 2720          Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB       October 1999


12  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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