Network Working Group                                   O. Nicklass, Ed.
Request for Comments: 4805                 RAD Data Communications, Ltd.
Obsoletes: 3895                                               March 2007
Category: Standards Track


                    Definitions of Managed Objects
           for the DS1, J1, E1, DS2, and E2 Interface Types

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 IETF Trust (2007).

Abstract

  This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB)
  for use with network management protocols in the Internet community.
  In particular, it describes objects used for managing DS1, J1, E1,
  DS2, and E2 interfaces.  This document is a companion to the
  documents that define managed objects for the DS0, DS3/E3, and
  Synchronous Optical Network/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SONET/SDH)
  Interface Types.

  This document obsoletes RFC 3895.



















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Table of Contents

  1. The Internet-Standard Management Framework ......................2
  2. Conventions Used in This Document ...............................3
  3. Overview ........................................................3
     3.1. Use of ifTable for DS1 Layer ...............................4
     3.2. Usage Guidelines ...........................................5
          3.2.1. Usage of ifStackTable for Routers and DSUs ..........5
          3.2.2. Usage of ifStackTable for DS1/J1/E1 on DS2/E2 .......7
          3.2.3. Usage of Channelization for DS3, DS1, DS0 ...........8
          3.2.4. Usage of Channelization for DS3, DS2, DS1 ...........9
          3.2.5. Usage of Loopbacks .................................10
     3.3. Objectives of This MIB Module .............................10
     3.4. DS1 Terminology ...........................................11
          3.4.1. Error Events .......................................11
          3.4.2. Performance Defects ................................12
          3.4.3. Performance Parameters .............................13
          3.4.4. Failure States .....................................17
          3.4.5. Other Terms ........................................20
  4. Object Definitions .............................................20
  5. Security Considerations ........................................83
  6. Acknowledgments ................................................84
  7. References .....................................................84
     7.1. Normative References ......................................84
     7.2. Informative References ....................................86
  Appendix A - Use of dsx1IfIndex and dsx1LineIndex .................88
  Appendix B - The Delay Approach to Unavailable Seconds ............90
  Appendix C - Changes from Previous Versions .......................92
     C.1. Changes from RFC 3895 .....................................92
     C.2. Changes from RFC 2495 .....................................92
     C.3. Changes from RFC 1406 .....................................92
     C.4. Companion Documents .......................................93

1.  The Internet-Standard Management Framework

  For a detailed overview of the documents that describe the current
  Internet-Standard Management Framework, please refer to section 7 of
  RFC 3410 [RFC3410].

  Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed
  the Management Information Base or MIB.  MIB objects are generally
  accessed through the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP).
  Objects in the MIB are defined using the mechanisms defined in the
  Structure of Management Information (SMI).  This memo specifies a MIB
  module that is compliant to the SMIv2, which is described in STD 58,
  RFC 2578 [RFC2578], STD 58, RFC 2579 [RFC2579] and STD 58, RFC 2580
  [RFC2580].




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2.  Conventions Used in This Document

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].

3.  Overview

  These objects are used when the particular media being used to
  realize an interface is a DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 interface.  At present,
  this applies to the following value of the ifType variable in the
  Internet-standard MIB:

       ds1 (18)

  The definitions contained herein are based on the AT&T T-1 Superframe
  (a.k.a. D4) [ANSI-T1.107] and Extended Superframe (ESF) formats
  [AT&T-UM-305], [AT&T-TR-54016], the latter of which conforms to ANSI
  specifications [ANSI-T1.403], and the CCITT Recommendations
  [CCITT-G.703], [ITU-T-G.704], referred to as E1 for the rest of this
  memo.  J1 refers to the definition presented in [JT-G704], [JT-G706],
  and [JT-I431].

  The various DS1, J1, and E1 line disciplines are similar enough that
  separate MIBs are unwarranted, although there are some differences.
  For example, Loss of Frame is defined more rigorously in the ESF
  specification than in the D4 specification, or Yellow Alarm
  generation and detection are a bit different between T1 and J1 but in
  both examples, there is definition in both related lines.  Therefore,
  interface types e1(19) and g703at2mb(67) have been obsoleted and
  there is also no need for special type for J1.

  Where it is necessary to distinguish between the flavors of E1 with
  and without Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC), E1-CRC denotes the "with
  CRC" form (G.704 Table 5B) and E1-noCRC denotes the "without CRC"
  form (G.704 Table 5A).















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3.1.  Use of ifTable for DS1 Layer

  Only the ifGeneralInformationGroup needs to be supported.

          ifTable Object    Use for DS1 Layer
  ===================================================================
          ifIndex           Interface index.

          ifDescr           See interfaces MIB [RFC2863].

          ifType            ds1(18)

          ifSpeed           Speed of line rate
                            DS1 - 1544000
                            J1  - 1544000
                            E1  - 2048000
                            DS2 - 6312000
                            E2  - 8448000

          ifPhysAddress     The value of the Circuit Identifier.
                            If no Circuit Identifier has been assigned,
                            this object should have an octet string
                            with zero length.

          ifAdminStatus     See interfaces MIB [RFC2863].

          ifOperStatus      See interfaces MIB [RFC2863].

          ifLastChange      See interfaces MIB [RFC2863].

          ifName            See interfaces MIB [RFC2863].

          ifLinkUpDownTrapEnable   Set to enabled(1).

          ifHighSpeed       Speed of line in mega-bits per second
                            (2, 6, or 8).

          ifConnectorPresent Set to true(1) normally, except for
                             cases such as DS1/E1 over AAL1/ATM where
                             false(2) is appropriate.











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3.2.  Usage Guidelines

3.2.1.  Usage of ifStackTable for Routers and DSUs

  The object dsx1IfIndex has been deprecated.  This object previously
  allowed a very special proxy situation to exist for routers and
  Channel Service Units (CSUs).  This section now describes how to use
  the ifStackTable to represent this relationship.

  The paragraphs discussing dsx1IfIndex and dsx1LineIndex have been
  preserved in Appendix A for informational purposes.

  The ifStackTable is used in the proxy case to represent the
  association between pairs of interfaces, i.e., this T1 is attached to
  that T1.  This use is consistent with the use of the ifStackTable to
  show the association between various sub-layers of an interface.  In
  both cases, entire PDUs are exchanged between the interface pairs --
  in the case of a T1, entire T1 frames are exchanged; in the case of
  PPP and High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC), entire HDLC frames are
  exchanged.  This usage is not meant to suggest the use of the
  ifStackTable to represent Time Division Multiplexing (TDM)
  connections in general.

  External and Internal interface scenario: the SNMP agent resides on a
  host external from the device supporting DS1 interfaces (e.g., a
  router).  The agent represents both the host and the DS1 device.

























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  Example:

  A shelf full of CSUs connected to a router.  An SNMP agent residing
  on the router proxies for itself and the CSU.  The router has also an
  Ethernet interface:

        +-----+
  |     |     |
  |     |     |               +---------------------+
  |E    |     |  1.544  MBPS  |              Line#A | DS1 Link
  |t    |  R  |---------------+ - - - - -  - - -  - +------>
  |h    |     |               |                     |
  |e    |  O  |  1.544  MBPS  |              Line#B | DS1 Link
  |r    |     |---------------+ - - - - - - - - - - +------>
  |n    |  U  |               |  CSU Shelf          |
  |e    |     |  1.544  MBPS  |              Line#C | DS1 Link
  |t    |  T  |---------------+ - - - -- -- - - - - +------>
  |     |     |               |                     |
  |-----|  E  |  1.544  MBPS  |              Line#D | DS1 Link
  |     |     |---------------+ -  - - - -- - - - - +------>
  |     |  R  |               |_____________________|
  |     |     |
  |     +-----+

  The assignment of the index values could, for example, be as follows:

          ifIndex  Description
          1        Ethernet
          2        Line#A Router
          3        Line#B Router
          4        Line#C Router
          5        Line#D Router
          6        Line#A CSU Router
          7        Line#B CSU Router
          8        Line#C CSU Router
          9        Line#D CSU Router
          10       Line#A CSU Network
          11       Line#B CSU Network
          12       Line#C CSU Network
          13       Line#D CSU Network

  The ifStackTable is then used to show the relationships between the
  various DS1 interfaces.








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         ifStackTable Entries

         HigherLayer   LowerLayer
          2             6
          3             7
          4             8
          5             9
          6             10
          7             11
          8             12
          9             13

  If the CSU shelf is managed by itself by a local SNMP agent, the
  situation would be identical, except the Ethernet and the four router
  interfaces are deleted.  Interfaces would also be numbered from 1 to
  8.

          ifIndex  Description
          1        Line#A CSU Router
          2        Line#B CSU Router
          3        Line#C CSU Router
          4        Line#D CSU Router
          5        Line#A CSU Network
          6        Line#B CSU Network
          7        Line#C CSU Network
          8        Line#D CSU Network

          ifStackTable Entries

          HigherLayer   LowerLayer
          1             5
          2             6
          3             7
          4             8

3.2.2.  Usage of ifStackTable for DS1/J1/E1 on DS2/E2

  An example is given of how DS1/J1/E1 interfaces are stacked on DS2/E2
  interfaces.  It is not necessary nor is it always desirable to
  represent DS2 interfaces.  If this is required, the following
  stacking should be used.  All ifTypes are ds1.  The DS2 is determined
  by examining ifSpeed or dsx1LineType.









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          ifIndex  Description
          1        DS1 #1
          2        DS1 #2
          3        DS1 #3
          4        DS1 #4
          5        DS2

          ifStackTable Entries

          HigherLayer   LowerLayer
          1             5
          2             5
          3             5
          4             5

3.2.3.  Usage of Channelization for DS3, DS1, DS0

  An example is given here to explain the channelization objects in the
  DS3, DS1, and DS0 MIBs to help the implementer use the objects
  correctly.  Treatment of E3 and E1 would be similar, with the number
  of DS0s being different depending on the framing of the E1.

  Assume that a DS3 (with ifIndex 1) is channelized into DS1s (without
  DS2s).  The object dsx3Channelization is set to enabledDs1.  There
  will be 28 DS1s in the ifTable.  Assume the entries in the ifTable
  for the DS1s are created in channel order and the ifIndex values are
  2 through 29.  In the DS1 MIB, there will be an entry in the
  dsx1ChanMappingTable for each DS1.  The entries will be as follows:

          dsx1ChanMappingTable Entries

          ifIndex  dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber   dsx1ChanMappedIfIndex
          1        1                      2
          1        2                      3
          ......
          1        28                     29

  In addition, the DS1s are channelized into DS0s.  The object
  dsx1Channelization is set to enabledDS0 for each DS1.  When this
  object is set to this value, 24 DS0s are created by the agent.  There
  will be 24 DS0s in the ifTable for each DS1.  If the
  dsx1Channelization is set to disabled, the 24 DS0s are destroyed.

  Assume the entries in the ifTable are created in channel order and
  the ifIndex values for the DS0s in the first DS1 are 30 through 53.
  In the DS0 MIB, there will be an entry in the dsx0ChanMappingTable
  for each DS0.  The entries will be as follows:




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          dsx0ChanMappingTable Entries

          ifIndex   dsx0Ds0ChannelNumber  dsx0ChanMappedIfIndex
          2         1                     30
          2         2                     31
          ......
          2         24                    53

3.2.4.  Usage of Channelization for DS3, DS2, DS1

  An example is given here to explain the channelization objects in the
  DS3 and DS1 MIBs to help the implementer use the objects correctly.

  Assume that a DS3 (with ifIndex 1) is channelized into DS2s.  The
  object dsx3Channelization [RFC3896] is set to enabledDs2.  There will
  be 7 DS2s (ifType of DS1) in the ifTable.  Assume the entries in the
  ifTable for the DS2s are created in channel order and the ifIndex
  values are 2 through 8.  In the DS1 MIB, there will be an entry in
  the dsx1ChanMappingTable for each DS2.  The entries will be as
  follows:

          dsx1ChanMappingTable Entries

          ifIndex  dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber   dsx1ChanMappedIfIndex
          1        1                      2
          1        2                      3
          ......
          1        7                      8

  In addition, the DS2s are channelized into DS1s.  The object
  dsx1Channelization is set to enabledDS1 for each DS2.  There will be
  4 DS1s in the ifTable for each DS2.  Assume the entries in the
  ifTable are created in channel order and the ifIndex values for the
  DS1s in the first DS2 are 9 through 12, then 13 through 16 for the
  second DS2, and so on.  In the DS1 MIB, there will be an entry in the
  dsx1ChanMappingTable for each DS1.  The entries will be as follows:

          dsx1ChanMappingTable Entries

          ifIndex   dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber  dsx1ChanMappedIfIndex
          2         1                     9
          2         2                     10
          2         3                     11
          2         4                     12
          3         1                     13
          3         2                     14
          ...
          8         4                     36



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3.2.5.  Usage of Loopbacks

  This section discusses the behavior of objects related to loopbacks.

  The object dsx1LoopbackConfig represents the desired state of
  loopbacks on this interface.  Using this object, a manager can
  request

      LineLoopback
      PayloadLoopback (if ESF framing)
      InwardLoopback
      DualLoopback (Line + Inward)
      NoLoopback

  The remote end can also request loopbacks either through the Facility
  Data Link (FDL) channel if ESF or inband if D4.  The loopbacks that
  can be requested this way are

      LineLoopback
      PayloadLoopback (if ESF framing)
      NoLoopback

  To model the current state of loopbacks on a DS1 interface, the
  object dsx1LoopbackStatus defines which loopback is currently applied
  to an interface.  This object, which is a bitmap, will have bits
  turned on that reflect the currently active loopbacks on the
  interface as well as the source of those loopbacks.

  The following restrictions/rules apply to loopbacks:

  The far end cannot undo loopbacks set by a manager.

  A manager can undo loopbacks set by the far end.

  Both a line loopback and an inward loopback can be set at the same
  time.  Only these two loopbacks can co-exist and either one may be
  set by the manager or the far end.  A LineLoopback request from the
  far end is incremental to an existing Inward loopback established by
  a manager.  When a NoLoopback is received from the far end in this
  case, the InwardLoopback remains in place.

3.3.  Objectives of This MIB Module

  There are numerous things that could be included in a MIB for DS1
  signals:  the management of multiplexers, CSUs, Data Service Units
  (DSUs), and the like.  The intent of this document is to facilitate
  the common management of all devices with DS1, J1, E1, DS2, or E2
  interfaces.  As such, a design decision was made up front to very



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  closely align the MIB with the set of objects that can generally be
  read from these types of devices that are currently deployed.

  J2 interfaces are not supported by this MIB.

3.4.  DS1 Terminology

  The terminology used in this document to describe error conditions on
  a DS1 interface as monitored by a DS1 device are based on the latest
  ANSI T1.231 standard [ANSI-T1.231].  If the definition in this
  document does not match the definition in the ANSI T1.231 document,
  the implementer should follow the definition described in this
  document.

3.4.1.  Error Events

  Bipolar Violation (BPV) Error Event
     A BPV error event for an AMI-coded (AMI stands for Alternate Mark
     Inversion) signal is the occurrence of a pulse of the same
     polarity as the previous pulse (see T1.231, Section 4.2.1.1.1).  A
     BPV error event for a B8ZS- or HDB3-coded signal is the occurrence
     of a pulse of the same polarity as the previous pulse without
     being a part of the zero substitution code.

  Excessive Zeroes (EXZ) Error Event
     An Excessive Zeroes error event for an AMI-coded signal is the
     occurrence of more than fifteen contiguous zeroes (see T1.231
     Section 4.2.1.1.2).  For a B8ZS-coded signal, the defect occurs
     when more than seven contiguous zeroes are detected.

  Line Coding Violation (LCV) Error Event
     A Line Coding Violation (LCV) is the occurrence of either a
     Bipolar Violation (BPV) or Excessive Zeroes (EXZ) error event.
     (Also known as CV-L; see T1.231, Section 4.6.1.1.)

  Path Coding Violation (PCV) Error Event
     A Path Coding Violation error event is a frame synchronization bit
     error in the D4 and E1-noCRC formats, or a CRC or frame synch. bit
     error in the ESF and E1-CRC formats.  (Also known as CV-P; see
     T1.231, Section 4.6.2.1.)

  Controlled Slip (CS) Error Event
     A Controlled Slip is the replication or deletion of the payload
     bits of a DS1 frame (see T1.231, Section 4.2.1.2.3).  A Controlled
     Slip may be performed when there is a difference between the
     timing of a synchronous receiving terminal and the received
     signal.  A Controlled Slip does not cause an Out of Frame defect.




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3.4.2.  Performance Defects

  Out of Frame (OOF) Defect
     An OOF defect is the occurrence of a particular density of Framing
     Error events (see T1.231, Section 4.2.2.2.1).

     For DS1 links, an Out of Frame defect is declared when the
     receiver detects two or more framing errors within a 3-msec period
     for ESF signals and 0.75 msec for D4 signals, or two or more
     errors out of five or fewer consecutive framing bits.

     For E1 links, an Out of Frame defect is declared when three
     consecutive frame alignment signals have been received with an
     error (see G.706, Section 4.1 [CCITT-G.706]).

     For DS2 links, an Out of Frame defect is declared when seven or
     more consecutive errored framing patterns (four multiframe) are
     received.  The OOF is cleared when three or more consecutive
     correct framing patterns are received.

     Once an Out Of Frame Defect is declared, the framer starts
     searching for a correct framing pattern.  The Out of Frame defect
     ends when the signal is in-frame.

     In-frame occurs when there are fewer than two frame bit errors
     within a 3-msec period for ESF signals and 0.75 msec for D4
     signals.

     For E1 links, in-frame occurs when a) in frame N the frame
     alignment signal is correct and b) in frame N+1 the frame
     alignment signal is absent (i.e., bit 2 in TS0 is a one) and c) in
     frame N+2 the frame alignment signal is present and correct (see
     G.704, Section 4.1).

  Alarm Indication Signal (AIS) Defect
     For D4 and ESF links, the 'all ones' condition is detected at a
     DS1 line interface upon observing an unframed signal with a one's
     density of at least 99.9% present for a time equal to or greater
     than T, where 3 ms <= T <= 75 ms.  The AIS is terminated upon
     observing a signal not meeting the one's density or the unframed
     signal criteria for a period equal to or greater than T (see
     G.775, Section 5.4).

     For E1 links, the 'all-ones' condition is detected at the line
     interface as a string of 512 bits containing fewer than three zero
     bits (see O.162 [ITU-T-O.162], Section 3.3.2).





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     For DS2 links, the DS2 AIS shall be sent from the NT1 to the user
     to indicate a loss of the 6,312-kbps frame capability on the
     network side.  The DS2 AIS is defined as a bit array of 6,312 kbps
     in which all binary bits are set to '1'.

     The DS2 AIS detection and removal shall be implemented according
     to ITU-T Draft Recommendation G.775 [ITU-T-G.775] Section 5.5:

     -  a DS2 AIS defect is detected when the incoming signal has two
        or less zeroes in a sequence of 3156 bits (0.5 ms).

     -  a DS2 AIS defect is cleared when the incoming signal has three
        or more zeroes in a sequence of 3156 bits (0.5 ms).

3.4.3.  Performance Parameters

  All performance parameters are accumulated in 15-minute intervals,
  and up to 96 intervals (24 hours' worth) are kept by an agent.  Fewer
  than 96 intervals of data will be available if the agent has been
  restarted within the last 24 hours.  In addition, there is a rolling
  24-hour total of each performance parameter.  Performance parameters
  continue to be collected when the interface is down.

  There is no requirement for an agent to ensure a fixed relationship
  between the start of a 15-minute interval and any wall clock;
  however, some agents may align the 15-minute intervals with quarter
  hours.

  Performance parameters are of types PerfCurrentCount,
  PerfIntervalCount, and PerfTotalCount.  These textual conventions are
  all Gauge32, and they are used because it is possible for these
  objects to decrease.  Objects may decrease when Unavailable Seconds
  occur across a 15-minute interval boundary.  See Unavailable Second
  discussion later in this section.

  Line Errored Second (LES)
     A Line Errored Second is a second in which one or more Line Coding
     Violation error events were detected. (Also known as ES-L; see
     T1.231, Section 4.6.1.2.)

  Controlled Slip Second (CSS)
     A Controlled Slip Second is a one-second interval containing one
     or more controlled slips (see T1.231, Section 4.6.2.9).  This is
     not incremented during an Unavailable Second.







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  Errored Second (ES)
     For ESF and E1-CRC links, an Errored Second is a second with one
     or more Path Coding Violations OR one or more Out of Frame defects
     OR one or more Controlled Slip events OR a detected AIS defect.
     (See T1.231, Section 4.6.2.2 and G.826 [ITU-T-G.826], Section
     B.1).

     For D4 and E1-noCRC links, the presence of Bipolar Violations also
     triggers an Errored Second.

     This is not incremented during an Unavailable Second.

  Bursty Errored Second (BES)
     A Bursty Errored Second (also known as Errored Second type B in
     T1.231, Section 4.6.2.4) is a second with fewer than 320 and more
     than 1 Path Coding Violation error events, no Severely Errored
     Frame defects, and no detected incoming AIS defects.  Controlled
     Slips are not included in this parameter.

     This is not incremented during an Unavailable Second.  It applies
     to ESF signals only.

  Severely Errored Second (SES)
     A Severely Errored Second for ESF signals is a second with 320 or
     more Path Coding Violation error events OR one or more Out of
     Frame defects OR a detected AIS defect (see T1.231, Section
     4.6.2.5).

     For E1-CRC signals, a Severely Errored Second is a second with 832
     or more Path Coding Violation error events OR one or more Out of
     Frame defects.

     For E1-noCRC signals, a Severely Errored Second is 2048 LCVs or
     more.

     For D4 signals, a Severely Errored Second is a count of one-second
     intervals with Framing Error events, or an OOF defect, or 1544
     LCVs or more.

     Controlled Slips are not included in this parameter.

     This is not incremented during an Unavailable Second.

  Severely Errored Framing Second (SEFS)
     An Severely Errored Framing Second is a second with one or more
     Out of Frame defects OR a detected AIS defect.  (Also known as
     SAS-P (SEF/AIS second); see T1.231, Section 4.6.2.6.)




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  Degraded Minutes
     A Degraded Minute is one in which the estimated error rate exceeds
     1E-6 but does not exceed 1E-3 (see G.821 [CCITT-G.821]).

     Degraded Minutes are determined by collecting all of the Available
     Seconds, removing any Severely Errored Seconds, grouping the
     result in 60-second long groups, and counting a 60-second long
     group (a.k.a. minute) as degraded if the cumulative errors during
     the seconds present in the group exceed 1E-6.  Available seconds
     are merely those seconds that are not Unavailable as described
     below.

  Unavailable Second (UAS)
     Unavailable Seconds (UASs) are calculated by counting the number
     of seconds that the interface is unavailable.  The DS1 interface
     is said to be unavailable from the onset of 10 contiguous SESs, or
     the onset of the condition leading to a failure (see Failure
     States).  If the condition leading to the failure was immediately
     preceded by one or more contiguous SESs, then the DS1 interface
     unavailability starts from the onset of these SESs.  Once
     unavailable, and if no failure is present, the DS1 interface
     becomes available at the onset of 10 contiguous seconds with no
     SESs.  Once unavailable, and if a failure is present, the DS1
     interface becomes available at the onset of 10 contiguous seconds
     with no SESs, if the failure clearing time is less than or equal
     to 10 seconds.  If the failure clearing time is more than 10
     seconds, the DS1 interface becomes available at the onset of 10
     contiguous seconds with no SESs, or the onset period leading to
     the successful clearing condition, whichever occurs later.  With
     respect to the DS1 error counts, all counters are incremented
     while the DS1 interface is deemed available.  While the interface
     is deemed unavailable, the only count that is incremented is UASs.

     Note that this definition implies that the agent cannot determine
     until after a 10-second interval has passed whether a given one-
     second interval belongs to available or unavailable time.  If the
     agent chooses to update the various performance statistics in real
     time, then it must be prepared to retroactively reduce the ES,
     BES, SES, and SEFS counts by 10 and increase the UAS count by 10
     when it determines that available time has been entered.  It must
     also be prepared to adjust the PCV count and the DM count as
     necessary since these parameters are not accumulated during
     unavailable time.  It must be similarly prepared to retroactively
     decrease the UAS count by 10 and increase the ES, BES, and DM
     counts as necessary upon entering available time.  A special case
     exists when the 10-second period leading to available or
     unavailable time crosses a 900-second statistics window boundary,
     as the foregoing description implies that the ES, BES, SES, SEFS,



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


     DM, and UAS counts the PREVIOUS interval must be adjusted.  In
     this case, successive GETs of the affected dsx1IntervalSESs and
     dsx1IntervalUASs objects will return differing values if the first
     GET occurs during the first few seconds of the window.

     The agent may instead choose to delay updates to the various
     statistics by 10 seconds in order to avoid retroactive adjustments
     to the counters.  A way to do this is sketched in Appendix B.

  In any case, a linkDown trap shall be sent only after the agent has
  determined for certain that the unavailable state has been entered,
  but the time on the trap will be that of the first UAS (i.e., 10
  seconds earlier).  A linkUp trap shall be handled similarly.

  According to ANSI T1.231, unavailable time begins at the onset of 10
  contiguous severely errored seconds -- that is, unavailable time
  starts with the first of the 10 contiguous SESs.  Also, while an
  interface is deemed unavailable all counters for that interface are
  frozen except for the UAS count.  It follows that an implementation
  that strictly complies with this standard must not increment any
  counters other than the UAS count -- even temporarily -- as a result
  of anything that happens during those 10 seconds.  Since changes in
  the signal state lag the data to which they apply by 10 seconds, an
  ANSI-compliant implementation must pass the one-second statistics
  through a 10-second delay line prior to updating any counters.  That
  can be done by performing the following steps at the end of each
  one-second interval.

  i)   Read near/far end CV counter and alarm status flags from the
       hardware.

  ii)  Accumulate the CV counts for the preceding second and compare
       them to the ES and SES threshold for the layer in question.
       Update the signal state and shift the one-second CV counts and
       ES/SES flags into the 10-element delay line.  Note that far-end
       one-second statistics are to be flagged as "absent" during any
       second in which there is an incoming defect at the layer in
       question or at any lower layer.

  iii) Update the current interval statistics using the signal state
       from the previous update cycle and the one-second CV counts and
       ES/SES flags shifted out of the 10-element delay line.

  This approach is further described in Appendix B.







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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


3.4.4.  Failure States

  The following failure states are received, or detected failures, that
  are reported in the dsx1LineStatus object.  When a DS1 interface
  would, if ever, produce the conditions leading to the failure state
  is described in the appropriate specification.

  Far End Alarm Failure
     The Far End Alarm failure is also known as "Yellow Alarm" in the
     DS1 and J1 cases, "Distant Alarm" in the E1 case, and "Remote
     Alarm" in the DS2 case.

     For D4 links, the Far End Alarm failure is declared when bit 6 of
     all channels has been zero for at least 335 ms and is cleared when
     bit 6 of at least one channel is non-zero for a period T, where T
     is usually less than one second and always less than five seconds.
     The Far End Alarm failure is not declared for D4 links when a Loss
     of Signal is detected.  In J1 the 12th F-bit is set to 1.

     For ESF links, the Far End Alarm failure is declared if the Yellow
     Alarm signal pattern occurs in at least seven out of ten
     contiguous 16-bit pattern intervals and is cleared if the Yellow
     Alarm signal pattern does not occur in ten contiguous 16-bit
     signal pattern intervals.  For DS1 the patterns is FF00 and for J1
     the pattern is FFFF.

     For E1 links, the Far End Alarm failure is declared when bit 3 of
     time-slot zero is received set to one on two consecutive
     occasions.  The Far End Alarm failure is cleared when bit 3 of
     time-slot zero is received set to zero.

     For DS2 links, if a loss of frame alignment (LOF or LOS) and/or
     DS2 AIS condition is detected, the RAI signal shall be generated
     and transmitted to the remote side.

     The Remote Alarm Indication (RAI) signal is defined on m-bits as a
     repetition of the 16-bit sequence consisting of eight binary '1s'
     and eight binary '0s' in m-bits(1111111100000000).  When the RAI
     signal is not sent (in normal operation), the HDLC flag pattern
     (01111110) in the m-bit is sent.

     The RAI failure is detected when 16 or more consecutive RAI-
     patterns (1111111100000000) are received.  The RAI failure is
     cleared when 4 or more consecutive incorrect-RAI-patterns are
     received.






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  Alarm Indication Signal (AIS) Failure
     The Alarm Indication Signal failure is declared when an AIS defect
     is detected at the input and the AIS defect still exists after the
     Loss of Frame failure (which is caused by the unframed nature of
     the 'all-ones' signal) is declared.  The AIS failure is cleared
     when the Loss of Frame failure is cleared.  (See T1.231, Section
     4.3.1.2.2).

     An AIS defect at a 6312-kbit/s (G.704) interface is detected when
     the incoming signal has two or less zeroes in a sequence of 3156
     bits (0.5ms).

     The AIS signal defect is cleared when the incoming signal has
     three {3} or more zeroes in a sequence of 3156 bits (0.5ms).

  Loss Of Frame (LOF) Failure
     For DS1 links, the Loss of Frame failure is declared when an OOF
     or LOS defect has persisted for T seconds, where 2 <= T <= 10.
     The Loss of Frame failure is cleared when there have been no OOF
     or LOS defects during a period T where 0 <= T <= 20.  Many systems
     will perform "hit integration" within the period T before
     declaring or clearing the failure; e.g., see TR 62411
     [AT&T-TR-62411].

     For E1 links, the Loss of Frame failure is declared when an OOF
     defect is detected.

  Loss Of Signal (LOS) Failure
     For DS1, the Loss of Signal failure is declared upon observing
     175 +/- 75 contiguous pulse positions with no pulses of either
     positive or negative polarity.  The LOS failure is cleared upon
     observing an average pulse density of at least 12.5% over a period
     of 175 +/- 75 contiguous pulse positions starting with the receipt
     of a pulse.

     For E1 links, the Loss of Signal failure is declared when greater
     than 10 consecutive zeroes are detected (see O.162, Section
     3.4.4).

     A LOS defect at 6312kbit/s interfaces is detected when the
     incoming signal has "no transitions", i.e., when the signal level
     is less than or equal to a signal level of 35dB below nominal, for
     N consecutive pulse intervals, where 10 <= N <= 255.

     The LOS defect is cleared when the incoming signal has
     "transitions", i.e., when the signal level is greater than or
     equal to a signal level of 9dB below nominal, for N consecutive
     pulse intervals, where 10 <= N <= 255.



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


     A signal with "transitions" corresponds to a G.703-compliant
     signal.

  Loopback Pseudo-Failure
     The Loopback Pseudo-Failure is declared when the near-end
     equipment has placed a loopback (of any kind) on the DS1.  This
     allows a management entity to determine from one object whether
     the DS1 can be considered to be in service or not (from the point
     of view of the near-end equipment).

  TS16 Alarm Indication Signal Failure
     For E1 links, the TS16 Alarm Indication Signal failure is declared
     when time-slot 16 is received as all ones for all frames of two
     consecutive multiframes (see G.732, Section 4.2.6).  This
     condition is never declared for DS1.

  Loss of MultiFrame Failure
     The Loss of MultiFrame failure is declared when two consecutive
     multiframe alignment signals (bits 4 through 7 of TS16 of frame 0)
     have been received with an error.  The Loss of Multiframe failure
     is cleared when the first correct multiframe alignment signal is
     received.  The Loss of Multiframe failure can only be declared for
     E1 links operating with G.732 [CCITT-G.732] framing (sometimes
     called "Channel Associated Signalling" mode).

  Far End Loss of Multiframe Failure
     The Far End Loss of Multiframe failure is declared when bit 2 of
     TS16 of frame 0 is received set to one on two consecutive
     occasions.  The Far End Loss of Multiframe failure is cleared when
     bit 2 of TS16 of frame 0 is received set to zero.  The Far End
     Loss of Multiframe failure can only be declared for E1 links
     operating in "Channel Associated Signalling" mode (see G.732).

  DS2 Payload AIS Failure
     The DS2 Payload AIS failure is declared when the incoming signal
     of the 6,312-kbps frame payload (time-slots 1 through 96) has two
     or less zeroes in a sequence of 3072 bits (0.5ms).  The DS2
     Payload AIS is cleared when the incoming signal of the 6,312-kbps
     frame payload has three or more zeroes in a sequence of 3072 bits
     (0.5 ms).

  DS2 Performance Threshold Failure
     DS2 Performance Threshold failure monitors equipment performance
     and is based on the CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check) procedure
     defined in G.704.

     The DS2 Performance Threshold failure is declared when the bit
     error ratio exceeds 10^-4 (Performance Threshold), and the DS2



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


     Performance Threshold failure is cleared when the bit error ratio
     decreases to less than 10^-6."

3.4.5.  Other Terms

  Circuit Identifier
     This is a character string specified by the circuit vendor and is
     useful when communicating with the vendor during the
     troubleshooting process (see M.1400 [ITU-T-M.1400] for additional
     information).

  Proxy
     In this document, the word proxy is meant to indicate an
     application that receives SNMP messages and replies to them on
     behalf of the devices that implement the actual DS1/E1 interfaces.
     The proxy may have already collected the information about the
     DS1/J1/E1 interfaces into its local database and may not
     necessarily forward the requests to the actual DS1/J1/E1
     interface.  It is expected in such an application that there are
     periods of time where the proxy is not communicating with the
     DS1/J1/E1 interfaces.  In these instances, the proxy will not
     necessarily have up-to-date configuration information and will
     most likely have missed the collection of some statistics data.
     Missed statistics data collection will result in invalid data in
     the interval table.

4.  Object Definitions

  DS1-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

  IMPORTS
       MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE,
       NOTIFICATION-TYPE, transmission
       FROM SNMPv2-SMI         -- [RFC2578]
       DisplayString, TimeStamp, TruthValue
       FROM SNMPv2-TC          -- [RFC2579]
       MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP,
       NOTIFICATION-GROUP
       FROM SNMPv2-CONF        -- [RFC2580]
       InterfaceIndex, ifIndex
       FROM IF-MIB             -- [RFC2863]
       PerfCurrentCount, PerfIntervalCount,
       PerfTotalCount
       FROM PerfHist-TC-MIB;   -- [RFC3593]

  ds1 MODULE-IDENTITY
      LAST-UPDATED "200703050000Z"
      ORGANIZATION "IETF AToM MIB Working Group"



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


      CONTACT-INFO
        "WG charter:
         http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/atommib-charter.html

         Mailing Lists:
           General Discussion: [email protected]
           To Subscribe: [email protected]

         Editor: Orly Nicklass

         Postal: RAD Data Communications, Ltd.
                 Ziv Tower, 24 Roul Walenberg
                 Tel Aviv, Israel, 69719

                 Tel: +9723 765 9969
         E-mail: [email protected]"

      DESCRIPTION
           "The MIB module to describe DS1, J1, E1, DS2, and
            E2 interfaces objects.

            Copyright (c) The IETF Trust (2007).  This
            version of this MIB module is part of RFC 4805;
            see the RFC itself for full legal notices."
      REVISION "200703050000Z"
      DESCRIPTION
           "The following changes were made:
            (1) Values were added to dsx1LineType to
                support J1 types.
            (2) The object dsx1LineImpedance was added.
            (3) All DM-related objects were deprecated
                following their removal from ITU performance
                standards.
           The RFC 4805 version of this MIB module."
      REVISION "200409090000Z"
      DESCRIPTION
           "The RFC 3895 version of this MIB module.
            The key changes made to this MIB module
            since its publication in RFC 2495 are as follows:
       (1) The dsx1FracIfIndex SYNTAX matches the description
           range.
       (2) A value was added to dsx1TransmitClockSource.
       (3) Values were added to dsx1LineType.
       (4) Two objects were added, dsx1LineMode and
           dsx1LineBuildOut, to better express transceiver
           mode and LineBuildOut for T1.
       (5) Reference was added to Circuit Identifier object.




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       (6) Align the DESCRIPTION clauses of few statistic
           objects with the near-end definition, with the far-end
           definition, and with RFC 3593.
       (7) Changes in Compliance Statements to include new
           objects.
       (8) A typographical error in dsx2E2 was fixed; the new name
           is dsx1E2."

      REVISION "199808011830Z"
      DESCRIPTION
           "The RFC 2495 version of this MIB module.
            The key changes made to this MIB module
            since its publication in RFC 1406 are as follows:
       (1)  The Fractional table has been deprecated.
       (2)  This document uses SMIv2.
       (3)  Usage is given for ifTable and ifXTable.
       (4)  Example usage of ifStackTable is included.
       (5)  dsx1IfIndex has been deprecated.
       (6)  Support for DS2 and E2 has been added.
       (7)  Additional lineTypes for DS2, E2, and unframed E1
            were added.
       (8)  The definition of valid intervals has been clarified
            for the case where the agent proxied for other
            devices.  In particular, the treatment of missing
            intervals has been clarified.
       (9)  An inward loopback has been added.
       (10) Additional lineStatus bits have been added for Near
            End in Unavailable Signal State, Carrier Equipment
            Out of Service, DS2 Payload AIS, and DS2 Performance
            Threshold.
       (11) A read-write line Length object has been added.
       (12) Signal mode of other has been added.
       (13) Added a lineStatus last change, trap and enabler.
       (14) The e1(19) ifType has been obsoleted, so this MIB
            does not list it as a supported ifType.
       (15) Textual Conventions for statistics objects have
            been used.
       (16) A new object, dsx1LoopbackStatus, has been
            introduced to reflect the loopbacks established
            on a DS1 interface and the source to the requests.
            dsx1LoopbackConfig continues to be the desired
            loopback state while dsx1LoopbackStatus reflects
            the actual state.
       (17) A dual loopback has been added to allow the setting
            of an inward loopback and a line loopback at the
            same time.
       (18) An object indicating which channel to use within a
            parent object (i.e., DS3) has been added.



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       (19) An object has been added to indicate whether or
            not this DS1/E1 is channelized.
       (20) Line coding type of B6ZS has been added for DS2."

      REVISION "199301252028Z"
      DESCRIPTION
           "Initial version, published as RFC 1406."
      ::= { transmission 18 }

  -- note that this subsumes cept(19) and g703at2mb(67)
  -- there is no separate CEPT or G703AT2MB MIB
  -- The DS1 Near End Group

  -- The DS1 Near End Group consists of five tables:
  --    DS1 Configuration
  --    DS1 Current
  --    DS1 Interval
  --    DS1 Total
  --    DS1 Channel Table

  -- The DS1 Configuration Table

  dsx1ConfigTable OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF Dsx1ConfigEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The DS1 Configuration table."
       ::= { ds1 6 }

  dsx1ConfigEntry OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  Dsx1ConfigEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "An entry in the DS1 Configuration table."
       INDEX   { dsx1LineIndex }
       ::= { dsx1ConfigTable 1 }

  Dsx1ConfigEntry ::=
       SEQUENCE {
             dsx1LineIndex                    InterfaceIndex,
             dsx1IfIndex                      InterfaceIndex,
             dsx1TimeElapsed                  INTEGER,
             dsx1ValidIntervals               INTEGER,
             dsx1LineType                     INTEGER,
             dsx1LineCoding                   INTEGER,
             dsx1SendCode                     INTEGER,



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


             dsx1CircuitIdentifier            DisplayString,
             dsx1LoopbackConfig               INTEGER,
             dsx1LineStatus                   INTEGER,
             dsx1SignalMode                   INTEGER,
             dsx1TransmitClockSource          INTEGER,
             dsx1Fdl                          INTEGER,
             dsx1InvalidIntervals             INTEGER,
             dsx1LineLength                   INTEGER,
             dsx1LineStatusLastChange         TimeStamp,
             dsx1LineStatusChangeTrapEnable   INTEGER,
             dsx1LoopbackStatus               INTEGER,
             dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber             INTEGER,
             dsx1Channelization               INTEGER,
             dsx1LineMode                     INTEGER,
             dsx1LineBuildOut                 INTEGER,
             dsx1LineImpedance                INTEGER
  }

  dsx1LineIndex OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  InterfaceIndex
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This object should be made equal to ifIndex.  The
              next paragraph describes its previous usage.
              Making the object equal to ifIndex allows proper
              use of the ifStackTable and ds0/ds0bundle MIBs.

              Previously, this object was the identifier of a DS1
              interface on a managed device.  If there is an
              ifEntry that is directly associated with this and
              only this DS1 interface, it should have the same
              value as ifIndex.  Otherwise, number the
              dsx1LineIndices with a unique identifier
              following the rules of choosing a number that is
              greater than ifNumber and numbering the inside
              interfaces (e.g., equipment side) with even
              numbers and outside interfaces (e.g., network
              side) with odd numbers."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 1 }

  dsx1IfIndex OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  InterfaceIndex
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  deprecated
       DESCRIPTION
              "This value for this object is equal to the value



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              of ifIndex from the Interfaces table (RFC 2863)."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 2 }

  dsx1TimeElapsed OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (0..899)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of seconds that have elapsed since the
              beginning of the near-end current error-
              measurement period.  If, for some reason, such as
              an adjustment in the system's time-of-day clock,
              the current interval exceeds the maximum value,
              the agent will return the maximum value."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 3 }

  dsx1ValidIntervals OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (0..96)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of previous near-end intervals for
              which data was collected.  The value will be 96
              unless the interface was brought online within the
              last 24 hours, in which case the value will be the
              number of complete 15-minute near-end intervals
              since the interface has been online.  In the case
              where the agent is a proxy, it is possible that
              some intervals are unavailable.  In this case,
              this interval is the maximum interval number for
              which data is available."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 4 }

  dsx1LineType OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX INTEGER {
                 other(1),
                 dsx1ESF(2),
                 dsx1D4(3),
                 dsx1E1(4),
                 dsx1E1CRC(5),
                 dsx1E1MF(6),
                 dsx1E1CRCMF(7),
                 dsx1Unframed(8),
                 dsx1E1Unframed(9),
                 dsx1DS2M12(10),
                 dsx1E2(11),
                 dsx1E1Q50(12),
                 dsx1E1Q50CRC(13),



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                 dsx1J1ESF(14),
                 dsx1J1Unframed(16)
                                 }
       MAX-ACCESS read-write
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This variable indicates the variety of DS1
              Line implementing this circuit.  The type of
              circuit affects the number of bits per second
              that the circuit can reasonably carry, as well
              as the interpretation of the usage and error
              statistics.  The values, in sequence, describe:

                    TITLE:          SPECIFICATION:
                    dsx1ESF         Extended SuperFrame DS1
                                           (T1.107)
                    dsx1D4          AT&T D4 format DS1 (T1.107)
                    dsx1E1          ITU-T G.704, (Table 5A)
                    dsx1E1-CRC      ITU-T G.704, (Table 5B)
                    dsxE1-MF        G.704 (Table 5A) with TS16
                                           multiframing enabled
                    dsx1E1-CRC-MF   G.704 (Table 5B) with TS16
                                           multiframing enabled
                    dsx1Unframed    DS1 with No Framing
                    dsx1E1Unframed  E1 with No Framing (G.703)
                    dsx1DS2M12      DS2 frame format (T1.107)
                    dsx1E2          E2 frame format (G.704)
                    dsx1E1Q50       TS16 bits 5,7,8 set to 101,
                                    [in all other cases it is set
                                    to 111.] (G.704, table 14)
                    dsx1E1Q50CRC    E1Q50 with CRC
                    dsx1J1ESF       J1 according to (JT-G704,
                                           JT-G706, and JT-I431)
                    dsx1J1Unframed  J1 with No Framing

              For clarification, the capacity for each E1 type
              is as listed below:
              dsx1E1Unframed - E1, no framing = 32 x 64k = 2048k
              dsx1E1 or dsx1E1CRC - E1, with framing,
              no signalling = 31 x 64k = 1984k
              dsx1E1MF or dsx1E1CRCMF - E1, with framing,
              signalling = 30 x 64k = 1920k"
       REFERENCE
         "American National Standard for
               telecommunications -
               digital hierarchy - formats specification,
               ANSI T1.107- 1988.
          ITU-T G.703: Physical/Electrical Characteristics



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


               of Hierarchical Digital Interfaces, November
               2001.
          ITU-T G.704: Synchronous frame structures used at
               1544, 6312, 2048, 8488 and 44 736 kbit/s
               Hierarchical Levels, July 1995.
          JT-G704: Synchronous frame structures used at
               Primary and Secondary Hierarchical Levels,2002.
          JT-G706. Frame Alignment and Cyclic Redundancy
               Check (CRC) Procedures.
          JT-I431. ISDN Primary Rate User-Network Interface,
               Layer 1 Specifications, 2002 "
  ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 5 }

  dsx1LineCoding OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER {
                  dsx1JBZS(1),
                  dsx1B8ZS(2),
                  dsx1HDB3(3),
                  dsx1ZBTSI(4),
                  dsx1AMI(5),
                  other(6),
                  dsx1B6ZS(7)
              }
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This variable describes the variety of Zero Code
              Suppression used on this interface, which in turn
              affects a number of its characteristics.

              dsx1JBZS refers the Jammed Bit Zero Suppression,
              in which the AT&T specification of at least one
              pulse every 8-bit period is literally implemented
              by forcing a pulse in bit 8 of each channel.
              Thus, only 7 bits per channel, or 1.344 Mbps,
              are available for data.

              dsx1B8ZS refers to the use of a specified pattern
              of normal bits and bipolar violations that are
              used to replace a sequence of 8 zero bits.
              ANSI Clear Channels may use dsx1ZBTSI, or Zero
              Byte Time Slot Interchange.

              E1 links, with or without CRC, use dsx1HDB3 or
              dsx1AMI.

              dsx1AMI refers to a mode wherein no Zero Code
              Suppression is present and the line encoding does



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              not solve the problem directly.  In this
              application, the higher layer must provide data
              that meets or exceeds the pulse density
              requirements, such as inverting HDLC data.

              dsx1B6ZS refers to the user of a specified pattern
              of normal bits and bipolar violations that are
              used to replace a sequence of 6 zero bits.  Used
              for DS2.
              For more information about line coding see
              [ANSI-T1.102]"
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 6 }

  dsx1SendCode OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER {
                 dsx1SendNoCode(1),
                 dsx1SendLineCode(2),
                 dsx1SendPayloadCode(3),
                 dsx1SendResetCode(4),
                 dsx1SendQRS(5),
                 dsx1Send511Pattern(6),
                 dsx1Send3in24Pattern(7),
                 dsx1SendOtherTestPattern(8)
                 }
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This variable indicates what type of code is
              being sent across the DS1 interface by the device.
              Setting this variable causes the interface to send
              the code requested.  The values mean the following:

        dsx1SendNoCode
             sending looped or normal data

        dsx1SendLineCode
             sending a request for a line loopback

        dsx1SendPayloadCode
             sending a request for a payload loopback

        dsx1SendResetCode
             sending a loopback termination request

        dsx1SendQRS
             sending a Quasi-Random Signal (QRS) test
             pattern




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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


        dsx1Send511Pattern
             sending a 511-bit fixed test pattern

        dsx1Send3in24Pattern
             sending a fixed test pattern of 3 bits set
             in 24

        dsx1SendOtherTestPattern
             sending a test pattern other than those
             described by this object"
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 7 }

  dsx1CircuitIdentifier OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  DisplayString (SIZE (0..255))
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This variable contains the transmission vendor's
              circuit identifier, for the purpose of
              facilitating troubleshooting."
       REFERENCE "ITU-T M.1400"
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 8 }

  dsx1LoopbackConfig OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER {
                   dsx1NoLoop(1),
                   dsx1PayloadLoop(2),
                   dsx1LineLoop(3),
                   dsx1OtherLoop(4),
                   dsx1InwardLoop(5),
                   dsx1DualLoop(6)
                 }
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This variable represents the desired loopback
              configuration of the DS1 interface.  Agents
              supporting read/write access should return
              inconsistentValue in response to a requested
              loopback state that the interface does not
              support.  The values mean:

        dsx1NoLoop
              not in the loopback state.  A device that is not
              capable of performing a loopback on the interface
              shall always return this as its value.

        dsx1PayloadLoop



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              the received signal at this interface is looped
              through the device.  Typically, the received signal
              is looped back for retransmission after it has
              passed through the device's framing function.

        dsx1LineLoop
              the received signal at this interface does not go
              through the device (minimum penetration) but is
              looped back out.

        dsx1OtherLoop
              loopbacks that are not defined here.

        dsx1InwardLoop
              the transmitted signal at this interface is
              looped back and received by the same interface.
              What is transmitted onto the line is product
              dependent.

        dsx1DualLoop
              both dsx1LineLoop and dsx1InwardLoop will be
              active simultaneously."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 9 }

  dsx1LineStatus OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (1..131071)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This variable indicates the line status of the
              interface.  It contains loopback, failure,
              received alarm and transmitted alarms
              information.

              The dsx1LineStatus is a bitmap represented as a
              sum; therefore, it can represent multiple failures
              (alarms) and a LoopbackState simultaneously.

              dsx1NoAlarm must be set if and only if no other
              flag is set.

              If the dsx1loopbackState bit is set, the loopback
              in effect can be determined from the
              dsx1loopbackConfig object.  The various bit
              positions are as follows:

        1     dsx1NoAlarm           No alarm present
        2     dsx1RcvFarEndLOF      Far end LOF (a.k.a.



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                                    Yellow Alarm)
        4     dsx1XmtFarEndLOF      Near end sending LOF
                                    indication
        8     dsx1RcvAIS            Far end sending AIS
       16     dsx1XmtAIS            Near end sending AIS
       32     dsx1LossOfFrame       Near end LOF (a.k.a.
                                    Red Alarm)
       64     dsx1LossOfSignal      Near end Loss of Signal
      128     dsx1LoopbackState     Near end is looped
      256     dsx1T16AIS            E1 TS16 AIS
      512     dsx1RcvFarEndLOMF     Far end sending TS16 LOMF
     1024     dsx1XmtFarEndLOMF     Near end sending TS16 LOMF
     2048     dsx1RcvTestCode       Near end detects a test code
     4096     dsx1OtherFailure      Any line status not defined
                                    here
     8192     dsx1UnavailSigState   Near end in unavailable
                                    signal state
    16384     dsx1NetEquipOOS       Carrier equipment out of
                                    service
    32768     dsx1RcvPayloadAIS     DS2 payload AIS
    65536     dsx1Ds2PerfThreshold  DS2 performance threshold
                                    exceeded"
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 10 }

  dsx1SignalMode OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER {
                  none(1),
                  robbedBit(2),
                  bitOriented(3),
                  messageOriented(4),
                  other(5)
              }
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
         "'none' indicates that no bits are reserved for
         signaling on this channel.

         'robbedBit' indicates that DS1 Robbed Bit Signaling
         is in use.

         'bitOriented' indicates that E1 Channel Associated
         Signaling is in use.

         'messageOriented' indicates that Common Channel
         Signaling is in use on either channel 16 of
         an E1 link or channel 24 of a DS1."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 11 }



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


  dsx1TransmitClockSource OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER {
                  loopTiming(1),
                  localTiming(2),
                  throughTiming(3),
                  adaptive (4)
              }
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
         "The source of transmit clock.

          'loopTiming' indicates that the recovered
          receive clock is used as the transmit clock.

          'localTiming' indicates that a local clock
         source is used or when an external clock is
         attached to the box containing the interface.

          'throughTiming' indicates that recovered
         receive clock from another interface is used as
         the transmit clock.

          'adaptive' indicates that the clock is recovered
         based on the data flow and not based on the
         physical layer"
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 12 }

  dsx1Fdl OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (1..15)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
         "This bitmap describes the use of the
         facilities data link and is the sum of the
         capabilities.  Set any bits that are appropriate:

         other(1),
         dsx1AnsiT1403(2),
         dsx1Att54016(4),
         dsx1FdlNone(8)

          'other' indicates that a protocol other than
         one of the following is used.

          'dsx1AnsiT1403' refers to the FDL exchange
         recommended by ANSI.




Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


          'dsx1Att54016' refers to ESF FDL exchanges.

          'dsx1FdlNone' indicates that the device does
         not use the FDL."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 13 }

  dsx1InvalidIntervals OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (0..96)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of intervals in the range from 0 to
              dsx1ValidIntervals for which no data is available.
              This object will typically be zero except in cases
              where the data for some intervals is not
              available (e.g., in proxy situations)."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 14 }

  dsx1LineLength OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (0..64000)
       UNITS  "meters"
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The length of the DS1 line in meters.  This
              object provides information for line build-out
              circuitry.  This object is only useful if the
              interface has configurable line build-out
              circuitry."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 15 }

  dsx1LineStatusLastChange OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  TimeStamp
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The value of MIB II's sysUpTime object at the
              time this DS1 entered its current line status
              state.  If the current state was entered prior to
              the last re-initialization of the proxy-agent,
              then this object contains a zero value."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 16 }

  dsx1LineStatusChangeTrapEnable  OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX      INTEGER {
                      enabled(1),
                      disabled(2)
                   }



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS      current
       DESCRIPTION
              "Indicates whether dsx1LineStatusChange traps
              should be generated for this interface."
       DEFVAL { disabled }
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 17 }

  dsx1LoopbackStatus  OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX      INTEGER (1..127)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS      current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This variable represents the current state of the
              loopback on the DS1 interface.  It contains
              information about loopbacks established by a
              manager and remotely from the far end.

              The dsx1LoopbackStatus is a bitmap represented as
              a sum; therefore, it can represent multiple
              loopbacks simultaneously.

              The various bit positions are as follows:
               1  dsx1NoLoopback
               2  dsx1NearEndPayloadLoopback
               4  dsx1NearEndLineLoopback
               8  dsx1NearEndOtherLoopback
              16  dsx1NearEndInwardLoopback
              32  dsx1FarEndPayloadLoopback
              64  dsx1FarEndLineLoopback"

       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 18 }

  dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber  OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX      INTEGER (0..28)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS      current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This variable represents the channel number of
              the DS1/E1 on its parent DS2/E2 or DS3/E3.  A
              value of 0 indicates that this DS1/E1 does not
              have a parent DS3/E3."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 19 }

  dsx1Channelization  OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX      INTEGER {
                      disabled(1),
                      enabledDs0(2),



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                      enabledDs1(3)
                   }
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS      current
       DESCRIPTION
              "Indicates whether this DS1/E1 or DS2 is
              channelized or unchannelized.

              The value of enabledDs0(2) indicates that this is a
              DS1 channelized into DS0s.  Setting this value will
              cause the creation, and resetting it to disabled(1)
              will cause the deletion of entries in the ifTable
              for the DS0s that are within the DS1.

              The value of enabledDs1(3) indicates that this is a
              DS2 channelized into DS1s.  Setting this value will
              cause the creation, and resetting it to disabled(1)
              will cause the deletion of entries in the ifTable
              for the DS1s that are within the DS2."

       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 20 }

  dsx1LineMode  OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX      INTEGER {
                      csu(1),
                      dsu(2)
                    }
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS      current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This setting puts the T1 framer into either
              long-haul (CSU) mode or short-haul (DSU) mode."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 21 }

  dsx1LineBuildOut  OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX      INTEGER {
                      notApplicable(1),
                      neg75dB(2),
                      neg15dB(3),
                      neg225dB(4),
                      zerodB(5)
                   }
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS      current
       DESCRIPTION
              "Attenuation setting for T1 framer in long haul
              (CSU) mode.  The optional values are -7.5dB,
              -15dB, -22.5dB, and 0dB."



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 22 }

  dsx1LineImpedance   OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX      INTEGER {
                      notApplicable(1),
                      unbalanced75ohms(2),
                      balanced100ohms(3),
                      balanced120ohms(4)
                   }
       MAX-ACCESS  read-write
       STATUS      current
       DESCRIPTION
              "Nominal line impedance.  For T1 and J1 lines, the
              value is typically balanced100ohms(3).  For E1
              lines, the value is typically unbalanced75ohms(2)
              and balanced120ohms(4).  When this object does not
              apply, or when the appropriate value is not known,
              the value should be set to notApplicable(1)."
       ::= { dsx1ConfigEntry 23 }

  -- The DS1 Current Table
  dsx1CurrentTable OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF Dsx1CurrentEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The DS1 Current table contains various statistics
              being collected for the current 15-minute
              interval."
       ::= { ds1 7 }

  dsx1CurrentEntry OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  Dsx1CurrentEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "An entry in the DS1 Current table."
       INDEX   { dsx1CurrentIndex }
       ::= { dsx1CurrentTable 1 }

  Dsx1CurrentEntry ::=
       SEQUENCE {
           dsx1CurrentIndex            InterfaceIndex,
           dsx1CurrentESs              PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1CurrentSESs             PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1CurrentSEFSs            PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1CurrentUASs             PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1CurrentCSSs             PerfCurrentCount,



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


           dsx1CurrentPCVs             PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1CurrentLESs             PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1CurrentBESs             PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1CurrentDMs              PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1CurrentLCVs             PerfCurrentCount
  }

  dsx1CurrentIndex OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  InterfaceIndex
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The index value that uniquely identifies the DS1
              interface to which this entry is applicable.  The
              interface identified by a particular value of this
              index is the same interface as identified by the
              same value as a dsx1LineIndex object instance."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 1 }

  dsx1CurrentESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 2 }

  dsx1CurrentSESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Severely Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 3 }

  dsx1CurrentSEFSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Severely Errored Framing Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 4 }

  dsx1CurrentUASs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Unavailable Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 5 }

  dsx1CurrentCSSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Controlled Slip Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 6 }

  dsx1CurrentPCVs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Path Coding Violations."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 7 }

  dsx1CurrentLESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Line Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 8 }

  dsx1CurrentBESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Bursty Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 9 }

  dsx1CurrentDMs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS deprecated
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Degraded Minutes."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 10 }

  dsx1CurrentLCVs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Line Coding Violations (LCVs)."
       ::= { dsx1CurrentEntry 11 }

  -- The DS1 Interval Table
  dsx1IntervalTable OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF Dsx1IntervalEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The DS1 Interval table contains various
              statistics collected by each DS1 interface over
              the previous 24 hours of operation.  The past 24
              hours are broken into 96 completed 15-minute
              intervals.  Each row in this table represents one
              such interval (identified by dsx1IntervalNumber)
              for one specific instance (identified by
              dsx1IntervalIndex)."
       ::= { ds1 8 }

  dsx1IntervalEntry OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  Dsx1IntervalEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "An entry in the DS1 Interval table."
       INDEX   { dsx1IntervalIndex, dsx1IntervalNumber }
       ::= { dsx1IntervalTable 1 }

  Dsx1IntervalEntry ::=
       SEQUENCE {
           dsx1IntervalIndex             InterfaceIndex,
           dsx1IntervalNumber            INTEGER,
           dsx1IntervalESs               PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalSESs              PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalSEFSs             PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalUASs              PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalCSSs              PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalPCVs              PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalLESs              PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalBESs              PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalDMs               PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalLCVs              PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1IntervalValidData         TruthValue
  }

  dsx1IntervalIndex OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  InterfaceIndex



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The index value that uniquely identifies the DS1
              interface to which this entry is applicable.  The
              interface identified by a particular value of this
              index is the same interface as identified by the
              same value as a dsx1LineIndex object instance."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 1 }

  dsx1IntervalNumber OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (1..96)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "A number between 1 and 96, where 1 is the most
              recently completed 15-minute interval and 96 is
              the 15-minute interval completed 23 hours and 45
              minutes prior to interval 1."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 2 }

  dsx1IntervalESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 3 }

  dsx1IntervalSESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Severely Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 4 }

  dsx1IntervalSEFSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Severely Errored Framing Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 5 }

  dsx1IntervalUASs OBJECT-TYPE



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Unavailable Seconds.  This object
              may decrease if the occurrence of unavailable
              seconds occurs across an interval boundary."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 6 }

  dsx1IntervalCSSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Controlled Slip Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 7 }

  dsx1IntervalPCVs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Path Coding Violations."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 8 }

  dsx1IntervalLESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Line Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 9 }

  dsx1IntervalBESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Bursty Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 10 }

  dsx1IntervalDMs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS deprecated
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Degraded Minutes."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 11 }



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


  dsx1IntervalLCVs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Line Coding Violations."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 12 }

  dsx1IntervalValidData OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX TruthValue
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This variable indicates whether the data for this
              interval is valid."
       ::= { dsx1IntervalEntry 13 }

  -- The DS1 Total Table
  dsx1TotalTable OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF Dsx1TotalEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The DS1 Total table contains the cumulative sum
              of the various statistics for the 24-hour period
              preceding the current interval."
       ::= { ds1 9 }

  dsx1TotalEntry OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  Dsx1TotalEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "An entry in the DS1 Total table."
       INDEX   { dsx1TotalIndex }
       ::= { dsx1TotalTable 1 }

  Dsx1TotalEntry ::=
       SEQUENCE {
           dsx1TotalIndex                InterfaceIndex,
           dsx1TotalESs                  PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1TotalSESs                 PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1TotalSEFSs                PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1TotalUASs                 PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1TotalCSSs                 PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1TotalPCVs                 PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1TotalLESs                 PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1TotalBESs                 PerfTotalCount,



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


           dsx1TotalDMs                  PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1TotalLCVs                 PerfTotalCount
  }

  dsx1TotalIndex OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  InterfaceIndex
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The index value that uniquely identifies the DS1
              interface to which this entry is applicable.  The
              interface identified by a particular value of this
              index is the same interface as identified by the
              same value as a dsx1LineIndex object instance."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 1 }

  dsx1TotalESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Errored Seconds encountered by a DS1
              interface in the previous 24-hour interval.
              Invalid 15-minute intervals count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 2 }

  dsx1TotalSESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Severely Errored Seconds
              encountered by a DS1 interface in the previous
              24-hour interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals
              count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 3 }

  dsx1TotalSEFSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Severely Errored Framing Seconds
              encountered by a DS1 interface in the previous
              24-hour interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals
              count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 4 }



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


  dsx1TotalUASs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Unavailable Seconds encountered by
              a DS1 interface in the previous 24-hour interval.
              Invalid 15-minute intervals count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 5 }

  dsx1TotalCSSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Controlled Slip Seconds encountered
              by a DS1 interface in the previous 24-hour
              interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals count as
              0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 6 }

  dsx1TotalPCVs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Path Coding Violations encountered
              by a DS1 interface in the previous 24-hour
              interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals count as
              0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 7 }

  dsx1TotalLESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Line Errored Seconds encountered by
              a DS1 interface in the previous 24-hour interval.
              Invalid 15-minute intervals count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 8 }

  dsx1TotalBESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Bursty Errored Seconds (BESs)



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              encountered by a DS1 interface in the previous
              24-hour interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals count
              as 0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 9 }

  dsx1TotalDMs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS deprecated
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Degraded Minutes (DMs) encountered
              by a DS1 interface in the previous 24-hour
              interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals count as
              0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 10 }

  dsx1TotalLCVs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Line Coding Violations (LCVs)
              encountered by a DS1 interface in the current
              15-minute interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals
              count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1TotalEntry 11 }

  -- The DS1 Channel Table

  dsx1ChanMappingTable OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF Dsx1ChanMappingEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The DS1 Channel Mapping table.  This table maps a
              DS1 channel number on a particular DS3 into an
              ifIndex.  In the presence of DS2s, this table can
              be used to map a DS2 channel number on a DS3 into
              an ifIndex, or used to map a DS1 channel number on
              a DS2 into an ifIndex."
       ::= { ds1 16 }

  dsx1ChanMappingEntry OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  Dsx1ChanMappingEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "An entry in the DS1 Channel Mapping table.  There



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              is an entry in this table corresponding to each
              DS1 ifEntry within any interface that is
              channelized to the individual DS1 ifEntry level.

              This table is intended to facilitate mapping from
              channelized interface / channel number to DS1
              ifEntry (e.g., mapping (DS3 ifIndex, DS1 channel
              number) -> ifIndex).

              While this table provides information that can
              also be found in the ifStackTable and
              dsx1ConfigTable, it provides this same information
              with a single table lookup, rather than by walking
              the ifStackTable to find the various constituent
              DS1 ifTable entries, and testing various
              dsx1ConfigTable entries to check for the entry
              with the applicable DS1 channel number."
       INDEX   { ifIndex, dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber }
       ::= { dsx1ChanMappingTable 1 }

  Dsx1ChanMappingEntry ::=
       SEQUENCE {
           dsx1ChanMappedIfIndex  InterfaceIndex
  }

  dsx1ChanMappedIfIndex OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  InterfaceIndex
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "This object indicates the ifIndex value assigned
              by the agent for the individual DS1 ifEntry that
              corresponds to the given DS1 channel number
              (specified by the INDEX element
              dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber) of the given channelized
              interface (specified by INDEX element ifIndex)."
       ::= { dsx1ChanMappingEntry 1 }

  -- The DS1 Far End Current Table

  dsx1FarEndCurrentTable OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF Dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The DS1 Far End Current table contains various
              statistics being collected for the current
              15-minute interval.  The statistics are collected



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              from the far-end messages on the Facilities Data
              Link.  The definitions are the same as described
              for the near-end information."
       ::= { ds1 10 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  Dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "An entry in the DS1 Far End Current table."
       INDEX   { dsx1FarEndCurrentIndex }
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentTable 1 }

  Dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry ::=
       SEQUENCE {
           dsx1FarEndCurrentIndex      InterfaceIndex,
           dsx1FarEndTimeElapsed       INTEGER,
           dsx1FarEndValidIntervals    INTEGER,
           dsx1FarEndCurrentESs        PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1FarEndCurrentSESs       PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1FarEndCurrentSEFSs      PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1FarEndCurrentUASs       PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1FarEndCurrentCSSs       PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1FarEndCurrentLESs       PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1FarEndCurrentPCVs       PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1FarEndCurrentBESs       PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1FarEndCurrentDMs        PerfCurrentCount,
           dsx1FarEndInvalidIntervals  INTEGER
  }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentIndex OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  InterfaceIndex
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The index value that uniquely identifies the DS1
              interface to which this entry is applicable.  The
              interface identified by a particular value of this
              index is identical to the interface identified by
              the same value of dsx1LineIndex."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 1 }

  dsx1FarEndTimeElapsed OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (0..899)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 47]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of seconds that have elapsed since the
              beginning of the far-end current error-measurement
              period.  If, for some reason, such as an adjustment
              in the system's time-of-day clock, the current
              interval exceeds the maximum value, the agent will
              return the maximum value."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 2 }

  dsx1FarEndValidIntervals OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (0..96)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of previous far-end intervals for
              which data was collected.  The value will be 96
              unless the interface was brought online within the
              last 24 hours, in which case the value will be the
              number of complete 15-minute far-end intervals
              since the interface has been online.  In the case
              where the agent is a proxy, it is possible that
              some intervals are unavailable.  In this case,
              this interval is the maximum interval number for
              which data is available."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 3 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 4 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentSESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Severely Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 5 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentSEFSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Severely Errored Framing



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 48]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 6 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentUASs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Unavailable Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 7 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentCSSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Controlled Slip Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 8 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentLESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Line Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 9 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentPCVs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Path Coding Violations."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 10 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentBESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Bursty Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 11 }

  dsx1FarEndCurrentDMs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfCurrentCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS deprecated
       DESCRIPTION



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 49]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              "The number of Far End Degraded Minutes."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 12 }

  dsx1FarEndInvalidIntervals OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (0..96)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of intervals in the range from 0 to
              dsx1FarEndValidIntervals for which no data is
              available.  This object will typically be zero
              except in cases where the data for some intervals
              is not available (e.g., in proxy situations)."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndCurrentEntry 13 }

  -- The DS1 Far End Interval Table

  dsx1FarEndIntervalTable OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF Dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The DS1 Far End Interval table contains various
              statistics collected by each DS1 interface over
              the previous 24 hours of operation.  The past 24
              hours are broken into 96 completed 15-minute
              intervals.  Each row in this table represents one
              such interval (identified by
              dsx1FarEndIntervalNumber) for one specific
              instance (identified by dsx1FarEndIntervalIndex)."
       ::= { ds1 11 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  Dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "An entry in the DS1 Far End Interval table."
       INDEX   { dsx1FarEndIntervalIndex,
                 dsx1FarEndIntervalNumber }
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalTable 1 }

  Dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry ::=
       SEQUENCE {
           dsx1FarEndIntervalIndex       InterfaceIndex,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalNumber      INTEGER,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalESs         PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalSESs        PerfIntervalCount,



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 50]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


           dsx1FarEndIntervalSEFSs       PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalUASs        PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalCSSs        PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalLESs        PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalPCVs        PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalBESs        PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalDMs         PerfIntervalCount,
           dsx1FarEndIntervalValidData   TruthValue
  }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalIndex OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  InterfaceIndex
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The index value that uniquely identifies the DS1
              interface to which this entry is applicable.  The
              interface identified by a particular value of this
              index is identical to the interface identified by
              the same value of dsx1LineIndex."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 1 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalNumber OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  INTEGER (1..96)
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "A number between 1 and 96, where 1 is the most
              recently completed 15-minute interval and 96 is
              the 15 minutes interval completed 23 hours and 45
              minutes prior to interval 1."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 2 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 3 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalSESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 51]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              "The number of Far End Severely Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 4 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalSEFSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Severely Errored Framing
              Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 5 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalUASs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Unavailable Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 6 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalCSSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Controlled Slip Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 7 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalLESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Line Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 8 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalPCVs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Path Coding Violations."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 9 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalBESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Bursty Errored Seconds."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 10 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalDMs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfIntervalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS deprecated
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Degraded Minutes."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 11 }

  dsx1FarEndIntervalValidData OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX TruthValue
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              " This variable indicates if the data for this
              interval is valid."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndIntervalEntry 12 }

  -- The DS1 Far End Total Table

  dsx1FarEndTotalTable OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF Dsx1FarEndTotalEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The DS1 Far End Total table contains the
              cumulative sum of the various statistics for the
              24-hour period preceding the current interval."
       ::= { ds1 12 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalEntry OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  Dsx1FarEndTotalEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "An entry in the DS1 Far End Total table."
       INDEX   { dsx1FarEndTotalIndex }
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalTable 1 }

  Dsx1FarEndTotalEntry ::=
       SEQUENCE {
           dsx1FarEndTotalIndex          InterfaceIndex,
           dsx1FarEndTotalESs            PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1FarEndTotalSESs           PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1FarEndTotalSEFSs          PerfTotalCount,



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


           dsx1FarEndTotalUASs           PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1FarEndTotalCSSs           PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1FarEndTotalLESs           PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1FarEndTotalPCVs           PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1FarEndTotalBESs           PerfTotalCount,
           dsx1FarEndTotalDMs            PerfTotalCount
  }

  dsx1FarEndTotalIndex OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  InterfaceIndex
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The index value that uniquely identifies the DS1
              interface to which this entry is applicable.  The
              interface identified by a particular value of this
              index is identical to the interface identified by
              the same value of dsx1LineIndex."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 1 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Errored Seconds encountered
              by a DS1 interface in the previous 24-hour
              interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals count as
              0."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 2 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalSESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Severely Errored Seconds
              encountered by a DS1 interface in the previous
              24-hour interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals
              count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 3 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalSEFSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              "The number of Far End Severely Errored Framing
              Seconds encountered by a DS1 interface in the
              previous 24-hour interval.  Invalid 15-minute
              intervals count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 4 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalUASs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Unavailable Seconds encountered by
              a DS1 interface in the previous 24-hour interval.
              Invalid 15-minute intervals count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 5 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalCSSs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Controlled Slip Seconds
              encountered by a DS1 interface in the previous
              24-hour interval.  Invalid 15 minute intervals
              count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 6 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalLESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Line Errored Seconds
              encountered by a DS1 interface in the previous
              24-hour interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals
              count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 7 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalPCVs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS  read-only
       STATUS  current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Far End Path Coding Violations
              reported via the far end block error count
              encountered by a DS1 interface in the previous
              24-hour interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals
              count as 0."



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 8 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalBESs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS current
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Bursty Errored Seconds (BESs)
              encountered by a DS1 interface in the previous
              24-hour interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals
              count as 0."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 9 }

  dsx1FarEndTotalDMs OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX PerfTotalCount
       MAX-ACCESS read-only
       STATUS deprecated
       DESCRIPTION
              "The number of Degraded Minutes (DMs) encountered
              by a DS1 interface in the previous 24-hour
              interval.  Invalid 15-minute intervals count as
              0."
       ::= { dsx1FarEndTotalEntry 10 }

  -- The DS1 Fractional Table

  dsx1FracTable OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  SEQUENCE OF Dsx1FracEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  deprecated
       DESCRIPTION
              "This table is deprecated in favor of using
              ifStackTable.

              The table was mandatory for systems dividing a DS1
              into channels containing different data streams
              that are of local interest.  Systems that are
              indifferent to data content, such as CSUs, need
              not implement it.

              The DS1 Fractional table identifies which DS1
              channels associated with a CSU are being used to
              support a logical interface, i.e., an entry in the
              interfaces table from the Internet-standard MIB.

              For example, consider an application managing a
              North American ISDN Primary Rate link whose
              division is a 384-kbit/s H1 _B_ Channel for video,



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              a second H1 for data to a primary routing peer,
              and 12 64-kbit/s H0 _B_ Channels.  Consider that
              some subset of the H0 channels is used for voice
              and the remainder are available for dynamic data
              calls.

              We count a total of 14 interfaces multiplexed onto
              the DS1 interface.  Six DS1 channels (for the sake
              of the example, channels 1..6) are used for video,
              six more (7..11 and 13) are used for data, and the
              remaining 12 are in channels 12 and 14..24.

              Let us further imagine that ifIndex 2 is of type
              DS1 and refers to the DS1 interface and that the
              interfaces layered onto it are numbered 3..16.

              We might describe the allocation of channels, in
              the dsx1FracTable, as follows:
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2. 1 = 3  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.13 = 4
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2. 2 = 3  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.14 = 6
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2. 3 = 3  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.15 = 7
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2. 4 = 3  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.16 = 8
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2. 5 = 3  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.17 = 9
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2. 6 = 3  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.18 = 10
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2. 7 = 4  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.19 = 11
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2. 8 = 4  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.20 = 12
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2. 9 = 4  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.21 = 13
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2.10 = 4  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.22 = 14
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2.11 = 4  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.23 = 15
            dsx1FracIfIndex.2.12 = 5  dsx1FracIfIndex.2.24 = 16

              For North American (DS1) interfaces, there are 24
              legal channels, numbered 1 through 24.

              For G.704 interfaces, there are 31 legal channels,
              numbered 1 through 31.  The channels (1..31)
              correspond directly to the equivalently numbered
              time-slots."
       ::= { ds1 13 }

  dsx1FracEntry OBJECT-TYPE
       SYNTAX  Dsx1FracEntry
       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
       STATUS  deprecated
       DESCRIPTION
          "An entry in the DS1 Fractional table."
      INDEX   { dsx1FracIndex, dsx1FracNumber }
      ::= { dsx1FracTable 1 }



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


  Dsx1FracEntry ::=
      SEQUENCE {
          dsx1FracIndex        INTEGER,
          dsx1FracNumber       INTEGER,
          dsx1FracIfIndex      INTEGER
      }

  dsx1FracIndex OBJECT-TYPE
      SYNTAX  INTEGER (1..'7fffffff'h)
      MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
         "The index value that uniquely identifies the
         DS1 interface to which this entry is applicable.
         The interface identified by a particular
         value of this index is the same interface as
         identified by the same value as a dsx1LineIndex
         object instance."
     ::= { dsx1FracEntry 1 }

  dsx1FracNumber OBJECT-TYPE
      SYNTAX  INTEGER (1..31)
      MAX-ACCESS  read-only  -- read-only since originally an
                              -- SMIv1 index
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
         "The channel number for this entry."
     ::= { dsx1FracEntry 2 }

  dsx1FracIfIndex OBJECT-TYPE
      SYNTAX  INTEGER (0..'7fffffff'h)
      MAX-ACCESS  read-write
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
         "An index value that uniquely identifies an
         interface.  The interface identified by a particular
         value of this index is the same interface
         as identified by the same value as an ifIndex
         object instance.  If no interface is currently using
         a channel, the value should be zero.  If a
         single interface occupies more than one time-slot,
         that ifIndex value will be found in multiple
         time-slots."
     ::= { dsx1FracEntry 3 }

   -- DS1 TRAPS




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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


  ds1Traps OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ds1 15 }

  dsx1LineStatusChange NOTIFICATION-TYPE
      OBJECTS { dsx1LineStatus,
                dsx1LineStatusLastChange }
      STATUS  current
      DESCRIPTION
              "A dsx1LineStatusChange trap is sent when the
              value of an instance dsx1LineStatus changes.  It
              can be utilized by an Network Management Station
              (NMS) to trigger polls.  When the line status
              change results from a higher-level line status
              change (i.e., DS3), then no traps for the DS1
              are sent."
       ::= { ds1Traps 0 1 }

  -- conformance information

  ds1Conformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ds1 14 }

  ds1Groups      OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ds1Conformance 1 }
  ds1Compliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ds1Conformance 2 }

  -- compliance statements

  ds1Compliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "The compliance statement for T1 and E1
              interfaces."
      MODULE  -- this module
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1NearEndConfigGroup,
                             ds1NearEndStatisticsGroup }

          GROUP       ds1FarEndGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "Implementation of this group is optional for all
              systems that attach to a DS1 interface."

          GROUP       ds1NearEndOptionalConfigGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "Implementation of this group is optional for all
              systems that attach to a DS1 interface."

          GROUP       ds1DS2Group
          DESCRIPTION
              "Implementation of this group is mandatory for all
              systems that attach to a DS2 interface."



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


          GROUP       ds1TransStatsGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "This group is the set of statistics appropriate
              for all systems that attach to a DS1 interface
              running transparent or unFramed lineType."

          GROUP       ds1ChanMappingGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "This group is the set of objects for mapping a
              DS3 Channel (dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber) to ifIndex.
              Implementation of this group is mandatory for
              systems that support the channelization of DS3s
              into DS1s."

          OBJECT dsx1LineType
                  SYNTAX  INTEGER {
                              other(1),
                              dsx1ESF(2),
                              dsx1D4(3),
                              dsx1E1(4),
                              dsx1E1CRC(5),
                              dsx1E1MF(6),
                              dsx1E1CRCMF(7),
                              dsx1Unframed(8),
                              dsx1E1Unframed(9),
                              dsx1DS2M12(10),
                              dsx1E2(11)
                            }
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line type is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineCoding
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line coding is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1SendCode
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the send code is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LoopbackConfig
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              "The ability to set loopbacks is not required."

          OBJECT dsx1SignalMode
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the signal mode is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1TransmitClockSource
                  SYNTAX  INTEGER {
                               loopTiming(1),
                               localTiming(2),
                               throughTiming(3)
                             }
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the transmit clock source is
              not required."

          OBJECT dsx1Fdl
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the FDL is not required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineLength
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line length is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the channelization is not
              required."
      ::= { ds1Compliances 1 }

  ds1MibT1PriCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "Compliance statement for using this MIB for ISDN
              Primary Rate interfaces on T1 lines."
      MODULE
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1NearEndConfigGroup,
                             ds1NearEndStatisticsGroup }
          OBJECT dsx1LineType
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1ESF(2)   -- Intl Spec would be G704(2)



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                               -- or I.431(4)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Line type for T1 ISDN Primary Rate
                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1LineCoding
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1B8ZS(2)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Type of Zero Code Suppression for
                   T1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1SignalMode
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  none(1), -- if there is no signaling channel
                  messageOriented(4)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Possible signaling modes for
                   T1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1TransmitClockSource
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  loopTiming(1)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The transmit clock is derived from
                   received clock on ISDN Primary Rate
                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1Fdl
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Facilities Data Link usage on T1 ISDN
                   Primary Rate interfaces.
                   Note: Eventually, dsx1Att-54016(4) is to be
                         used here since the line type is ESF."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the channelization



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                   is not required."
      ::= { ds1Compliances 2 }

  ds1MibE1PriCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "Compliance statement for using this MIB for ISDN
              Primary Rate interfaces on E1 lines."
      MODULE
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1NearEndConfigGroup,
                             ds1NearEndStatisticsGroup }
          OBJECT dsx1LineType
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1E1CRC(5)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Line type for E1 ISDN Primary Rate
                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1LineCoding
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1HDB3(3)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Type of Zero Code Suppression for
                   E1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1SignalMode
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  messageOriented(4)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Signaling on E1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces
                   is always message oriented."

          OBJECT dsx1TransmitClockSource
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  loopTiming(1)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The transmit clock is derived from received
                   clock on ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1Fdl



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 63]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Facilities Data Link usage on E1 ISDN
                   Primary Rate interfaces.
                   Note: There is an 'M-Channel' in E1,
                         using National Bit Sa4 (G.704,
                         Table 5A).  It is used to implement
                         management features between ET
                         and NT.  This is different from
                         FDL in T1, which is used to carry
                         control signals and performance
                         data.  In E1, control and status
                         signals are carried using National
                         Bits Sa5, Sa6, and A (RAI Ind.).
                   This indicates that only the other(1) or
                   eventually the dsx1Fdl-none(8) bits should
                   be set in this object for E1 PRI."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                   "The ability to set the channelization is not
                   required."
      ::= { ds1Compliances 3 }

  ds1Ds2Compliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS current
      DESCRIPTION
              "Compliance statement for using this MIB for DS2
              interfaces."
      MODULE
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1DS2Group }

          OBJECT dsx1LineType
               SYNTAX INTEGER {
                          dsx1DS2M12(10),
                          dsx1E2(11)
               }
               MIN-ACCESS read-only
               DESCRIPTION
                   "Line type for DS2, E2
                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
               MIN-ACCESS read-only
               DESCRIPTION
                   "The ability to set the channelization is not
                   required."



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 64]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


      ::= { ds1Compliances 4 }

  ds1NCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "The compliance statement for T1 and E1
              interfaces."
      MODULE  -- this module
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1NearEndConfigurationGroup,
                             ds1NearEndStatisticsGroup }

          GROUP       ds1FarEndGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "Implementation of this group is optional for all
              systems that attach to a DS1 interface."

           GROUP       ds1NearEndOptionalTrapGroup
           DESCRIPTION
               "Implementation of this group is optional for all
               systems that attach to a DS1 interface.  If it is
               implemented, then ds1NearEndOptionalConfigGroup
               should also be implemented."

          GROUP       ds1NearEndOptionalConfigGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "Implementation of this group is recommended for
              all systems that attach to a DS1 interface and
              implement ds1NearEndOptionalTrapGroup."

          GROUP       ds1DS2Group
          DESCRIPTION
              "Implementation of this group is mandatory for all
              systems that attach to a DS2 interface."

          GROUP       ds1TransStatsGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "This group is the set of statistics appropriate
              for all systems that attach to a DS1 interface
              running transparent or unFramed lineType."


          GROUP       ds1ChanMappingGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "This group is the set of objects for mapping a
              DS3 Channel (dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber) to ifIndex.
              Implementation of this group is mandatory for
              systems that support the channelization of DS3s
              into DS1s."



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


          OBJECT dsx1LineType
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line type is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineCoding
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line coding is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1SendCode
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the send code is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LoopbackConfig
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set loopbacks is not required."

          OBJECT dsx1SignalMode
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the signal mode is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1TransmitClockSource
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the transmit clock source is
              not required."

          OBJECT dsx1Fdl
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the FDL is not required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineLength
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line length is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
          MIN-ACCESS read-only



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 66]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the channelization is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineMode
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line mode is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineBuildOut
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line build-out is not
              required."
      ::= { ds1Compliances 5 }

  ds1MibT1PriNCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "Compliance statement for using this MIB for ISDN
              Primary Rate interfaces on T1 lines."
      MODULE
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1NearEndConfigurationGroup,
                             ds1NearEndStatisticsGroup }
          OBJECT dsx1LineType
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1ESF(2)   -- Intl Spec would be G704(2)
                               -- or I.431(4)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Line type for T1 ISDN Primary Rate
                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1LineCoding
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1B8ZS(2)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Type of Zero Code Suppression for
                   T1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1SignalMode
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  none(1), -- if there is no signaling channel
                  messageOriented(4)



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Possible signaling modes for
                   T1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1TransmitClockSource
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  loopTiming(1)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The transmit clock is derived from
                   received clock on ISDN Primary Rate
                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1Fdl
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Facilities Data Link usage on T1 ISDN
                   Primary Rate interfaces.
                   Note: Eventually, dsx1Att-54016(4) is to be
                         used here since the line type is ESF."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the channelization
                   is not required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineMode
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the line mode is not
                   required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineBuildOut
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the line build-out
                   is not required."
      ::= { ds1Compliances 6 }

  ds1MibE1PriNCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "Compliance statement for using this MIB for ISDN
              Primary Rate interfaces on E1 lines."



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 68]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


      MODULE
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1NearEndConfigurationGroup,
                             ds1NearEndStatisticsGroup }
          OBJECT dsx1LineType
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1E1CRC(5)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Line type for E1 ISDN Primary Rate
                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1LineCoding
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1HDB3(3)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Type of Zero Code Suppression for
                   E1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1SignalMode
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  messageOriented(4)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only

              DESCRIPTION
                  "Signaling on E1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces
                   is always message oriented."

          OBJECT dsx1TransmitClockSource
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  loopTiming(1)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The transmit clock is derived from received
                   clock on ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1Fdl
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Facilities Data Link usage on E1 ISDN
                   Primary Rate interfaces.
                   Note: There is an 'M-Channel' in E1,
                         using National Bit Sa4 (G704,
                         Table 5A).  It is used to implement



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 69]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                         management features between ET
                         and NT.  This is different from
                         FDL in T1, which is used to carry
                         control signals and performance
                         data.  In E1, control and status
                         signals are carried using National
                         Bits Sa5, Sa6, and A (RAI Ind.).
                   This indicates that only the other(1) or
                   eventually the dsx1Fdl-none(8) bits should
                   be set in this object for E1 PRI."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the channelization is not
                   required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineMode
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the line mode is not
                   required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineBuildOut
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the line build-out
                   is not required."
      ::= { ds1Compliances 7 }

  ds1J1Compliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS  current
      DESCRIPTION
              "The compliance statement for T1, J1, and E1
              interfaces."
      MODULE  -- this module
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1NearEndCfgGroup,
                             ds1NearEndStatGroup }

          GROUP       ds1FarEndNGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "Implementation of this group is optional for all
              systems that attach to a DS1 interface."

           GROUP       ds1NearEndOptionalTrapGroup
           DESCRIPTION
               "Implementation of this group is optional for all
               systems that attach to a DS1 interface.  If it is



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


               implemented, then ds1NearEndOptionalConfigGroup
               should also be implemented."

          GROUP       ds1NearEndOptionalConfigGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "Implementation of this group is recommended for
              all systems that attach to a DS1 interface and
              implement ds1NearEndOptionalTrapGroup."

          GROUP       ds1DS2Group
          DESCRIPTION
              "Implementation of this group is mandatory for all
              systems that attach to a DS2 interface."

          GROUP       ds1TransStatsGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "This group is the set of statistics appropriate
              for all systems that attach to a DS1 interface
              running transparent or unFramed lineType."

          GROUP       ds1ChanMappingGroup
          DESCRIPTION
              "This group is the set of objects for mapping a
              DS3 Channel (dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber) to ifIndex.
              Implementation of this group is mandatory for
              systems that support the channelization of DS3s
              into DS1s."

          OBJECT dsx1LineType
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line type is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineCoding
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line coding is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1SendCode
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the send code is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LoopbackConfig
          MIN-ACCESS read-only



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set loopbacks is not required."

          OBJECT dsx1SignalMode
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the signal mode is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1TransmitClockSource
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the transmit clock source is
              not required."

          OBJECT dsx1Fdl
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the FDL is not required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineLength
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line length is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the channelization is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineMode
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line mode is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineBuildOut
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set the line build-out is not
              required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineImpedance
          MIN-ACCESS read-only
          DESCRIPTION
              "The ability to set line impedance is not



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              required."
      ::= { ds1Compliances 8 }

  ds1NMibT1PriNCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS current
      DESCRIPTION
              "Compliance statement for using this MIB for ISDN
              Primary Rate interfaces on T1 lines."
      MODULE
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1NearEndCfgGroup,
                             ds1NearEndStatGroup }
          OBJECT dsx1LineType
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1ESF(2)   -- Intl Spec would be G704(2)
                               -- or I.431(4)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Line type for T1 ISDN Primary Rate
                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1LineCoding
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1B8ZS(2)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Type of Zero Code Suppression for
                   T1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1SignalMode
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  none(1), -- if there is no signaling channel
                  messageOriented(4)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Possible signaling modes for
                   T1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1TransmitClockSource
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  loopTiming(1)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The transmit clock is derived from
                   received clock on ISDN Primary Rate



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RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1Fdl
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Facilities Data Link usage on T1 ISDN
                   Primary Rate interfaces.
                   Note: Eventually, dsx1Att-54016(4) is to be
                         used here since the line type is ESF."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the channelization
                   is not required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineMode
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the line mode is not
                   required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineBuildOut
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the line build-out
                   is not required."
      ::= { ds1Compliances 9 }

  ds1NMibE1PriNCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
      STATUS current
      DESCRIPTION
              "Compliance statement for using this MIB for ISDN
              Primary Rate interfaces on E1 lines."
      MODULE
          MANDATORY-GROUPS { ds1NearEndCfgGroup,
                             ds1NearEndStatGroup }

          OBJECT dsx1LineType
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1E1CRC(5)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Line type for E1 ISDN Primary Rate
                   interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1LineCoding



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 74]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  dsx1HDB3(3)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Type of Zero Code Suppression for
                   E1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1SignalMode
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  messageOriented(4)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Signaling on E1 ISDN Primary Rate interfaces
                   is always message oriented."

          OBJECT dsx1TransmitClockSource
              SYNTAX INTEGER {
                  loopTiming(1)
              }
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The transmit clock is derived from received
                   clock on ISDN Primary Rate interfaces."

          OBJECT dsx1Fdl
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "Facilities Data Link usage on E1 ISDN
                   Primary Rate interfaces.
                   Note: There is an 'M-Channel' in E1,
                         using National Bit Sa4 (G704,
                         Table 5A).  It is used to implement
                         management features between ET
                         and NT.  This is different from
                         FDL in T1, which is used to carry
                         control signals and performance
                         data.  In E1, control and status
                         signals are carried using National
                         Bits Sa5, Sa6, and A (RAI Ind.).
                   This indicates that only the other(1) or
                   eventually the dsx1Fdl-none(8) bits should
                   be set in this object for E1 PRI."

          OBJECT dsx1Channelization
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 75]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                  "The ability to set the channelization is not
                   required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineMode
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the line mode is not
                  required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineBuildOut
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set the line build-out
                   is not required."

          OBJECT dsx1LineImpedance
              MIN-ACCESS read-only
              DESCRIPTION
                  "The ability to set line impedance is not
                   required."
       ::= { ds1Compliances 10 }

  -- units of conformance

  ds1NearEndConfigGroup  OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1LineIndex,
                dsx1TimeElapsed,
                dsx1ValidIntervals,
                dsx1LineType,
                dsx1LineCoding,
                dsx1SendCode,
                dsx1CircuitIdentifier,
                dsx1LoopbackConfig,
                dsx1LineStatus,
                dsx1SignalMode,
                dsx1TransmitClockSource,
                dsx1Fdl,
                dsx1InvalidIntervals,
                dsx1LineLength,
                dsx1LoopbackStatus,
                dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber,
                dsx1Channelization                      }
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects providing configuration
              information applicable to all DS1 interfaces."
      ::= { ds1Groups 1 }




Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 76]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


  ds1NearEndStatisticsGroup OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1CurrentIndex,
                dsx1CurrentESs,
                dsx1CurrentSESs,
                dsx1CurrentSEFSs,
                dsx1CurrentUASs,
                dsx1CurrentCSSs,
                dsx1CurrentPCVs,
                dsx1CurrentLESs,
                dsx1CurrentBESs,
                dsx1CurrentDMs,
                dsx1CurrentLCVs,
                dsx1IntervalIndex,
                dsx1IntervalNumber,
                dsx1IntervalESs,
                dsx1IntervalSESs,
                dsx1IntervalSEFSs,
                dsx1IntervalUASs,
                dsx1IntervalCSSs,
                dsx1IntervalPCVs,
                dsx1IntervalLESs,
                dsx1IntervalBESs,
                dsx1IntervalDMs,
                dsx1IntervalLCVs,
                dsx1IntervalValidData,
                dsx1TotalIndex,
                dsx1TotalESs,
                dsx1TotalSESs,
                dsx1TotalSEFSs,
                dsx1TotalUASs,
                dsx1TotalCSSs,
                dsx1TotalPCVs,
                dsx1TotalLESs,
                dsx1TotalBESs,
                dsx1TotalDMs,
                dsx1TotalLCVs }
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects providing statistics
              information applicable to all DS1 interfaces."
      ::= { ds1Groups 2 }

  ds1FarEndGroup  OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1FarEndCurrentIndex,
                dsx1FarEndTimeElapsed,
                dsx1FarEndValidIntervals,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentESs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentSESs,



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 77]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                dsx1FarEndCurrentSEFSs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentUASs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentCSSs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentLESs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentPCVs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentBESs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentDMs,
                dsx1FarEndInvalidIntervals,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalIndex,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalNumber,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalESs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalSESs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalSEFSs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalUASs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalCSSs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalLESs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalPCVs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalBESs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalDMs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalValidData,
                dsx1FarEndTotalIndex,
                dsx1FarEndTotalESs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalSESs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalSEFSs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalUASs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalCSSs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalLESs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalPCVs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalBESs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalDMs }
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects providing remote
              configuration and statistics information."
      ::= { ds1Groups 3 }

  ds1DeprecatedGroup OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1IfIndex,
                dsx1FracIndex,
                dsx1FracNumber,
                dsx1FracIfIndex }
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of obsolete objects that may be
              implemented for backwards compatibility."
      ::= { ds1Groups 4 }

  ds1NearEndOptionalConfigGroup OBJECT-GROUP



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 78]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


      OBJECTS { dsx1LineStatusLastChange,
                dsx1LineStatusChangeTrapEnable }

      STATUS    current
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects that may be implemented
              on DS1 and DS2 interfaces."
      ::= { ds1Groups 5 }

  ds1DS2Group OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1LineIndex,
                dsx1LineType,
                dsx1LineCoding,
                dsx1SendCode,
                dsx1LineStatus,
                dsx1SignalMode,
                dsx1TransmitClockSource,
                dsx1Channelization }
      STATUS   current
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects providing information
              about DS2 (6,312 kbps) and E2 (8,448 kbps)
              systems."
      ::= { ds1Groups 6 }

  ds1TransStatsGroup OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1CurrentESs,
                dsx1CurrentSESs,
                dsx1CurrentUASs,
                dsx1IntervalESs,
                dsx1IntervalSESs,
                dsx1IntervalUASs,
                dsx1TotalESs,
                dsx1TotalSESs,
                dsx1TotalUASs }
      STATUS   current
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects that are the
              statistics that can be collected from a DS1
              interface that is running transparent or unframed
              lineType.  Statistics not in this list should
              return noSuchInstance."
      ::= { ds1Groups 7 }

  ds1NearEndOptionalTrapGroup NOTIFICATION-GROUP
      NOTIFICATIONS { dsx1LineStatusChange }
      STATUS    current
      DESCRIPTION



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 79]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


              "A collection of notifications that may be
              implemented on DS1 and DS2 interfaces."
      ::= { ds1Groups 8 }

  ds1ChanMappingGroup OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1ChanMappedIfIndex }
      STATUS    current
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects that give a mapping of
              DS3 Channel (dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber) to ifIndex."
      ::= { ds1Groups 9 }

  ds1NearEndConfigurationGroup  OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1LineIndex,
                dsx1TimeElapsed,
                dsx1ValidIntervals,
                dsx1LineType,
                dsx1LineCoding,
                dsx1SendCode,
                dsx1CircuitIdentifier,
                dsx1LoopbackConfig,
                dsx1LineStatus,
                dsx1SignalMode,
                dsx1TransmitClockSource,
                dsx1Fdl,
                dsx1InvalidIntervals,
                dsx1LineLength,
                dsx1LoopbackStatus,
                dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber,
                dsx1Channelization,
                dsx1LineMode,
                dsx1LineBuildOut                      }
      STATUS  deprecated
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects providing configuration
              information applicable to all DS1 interfaces."
      ::= { ds1Groups 10 }

  ds1NearEndCfgGroup  OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1LineIndex,
                dsx1TimeElapsed,
                dsx1ValidIntervals,
                dsx1LineType,
                dsx1LineCoding,
                dsx1SendCode,
                dsx1CircuitIdentifier,
                dsx1LoopbackConfig,
                dsx1LineStatus,



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 80]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                dsx1SignalMode,
                dsx1TransmitClockSource,
                dsx1Fdl,
                dsx1InvalidIntervals,
                dsx1LineLength,
                dsx1LoopbackStatus,
                dsx1Ds1ChannelNumber,
                dsx1Channelization,
                dsx1LineMode,
                dsx1LineBuildOut,
                dsx1LineImpedance                     }
      STATUS  current
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects providing configuration
              information applicable to all DS1 interfaces."
      ::= { ds1Groups 11 }

  ds1NearEndStatGroup OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1CurrentIndex,
                dsx1CurrentESs,
                dsx1CurrentSESs,
                dsx1CurrentSEFSs,
                dsx1CurrentUASs,
                dsx1CurrentCSSs,
                dsx1CurrentPCVs,
                dsx1CurrentLESs,
                dsx1CurrentBESs,
                dsx1CurrentLCVs,
                dsx1IntervalIndex,
                dsx1IntervalNumber,
                dsx1IntervalESs,
                dsx1IntervalSESs,
                dsx1IntervalSEFSs,
                dsx1IntervalUASs,
                dsx1IntervalCSSs,
                dsx1IntervalPCVs,
                dsx1IntervalLESs,
                dsx1IntervalBESs,
                dsx1IntervalLCVs,
                dsx1IntervalValidData,
                dsx1TotalIndex,
                dsx1TotalESs,
                dsx1TotalSESs,
                dsx1TotalSEFSs,
                dsx1TotalUASs,
                dsx1TotalCSSs,
                dsx1TotalPCVs,
                dsx1TotalLESs,



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 81]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


                dsx1TotalBESs,
                dsx1TotalLCVs }
      STATUS  current
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects providing statistics
              information applicable to all DS1 interfaces."
      ::= { ds1Groups 12 }

  ds1FarEndNGroup  OBJECT-GROUP
      OBJECTS { dsx1FarEndCurrentIndex,
                dsx1FarEndTimeElapsed,
                dsx1FarEndValidIntervals,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentESs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentSESs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentSEFSs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentUASs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentCSSs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentLESs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentPCVs,
                dsx1FarEndCurrentBESs,
                dsx1FarEndInvalidIntervals,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalIndex,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalNumber,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalESs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalSESs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalSEFSs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalUASs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalCSSs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalLESs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalPCVs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalBESs,
                dsx1FarEndIntervalValidData,
                dsx1FarEndTotalIndex,
                dsx1FarEndTotalESs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalSESs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalSEFSs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalUASs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalCSSs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalLESs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalPCVs,
                dsx1FarEndTotalBESs}
      STATUS  current
      DESCRIPTION
              "A collection of objects providing remote
              configuration and statistics information."
      ::= { ds1Groups 13 }
  END




Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 82]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


5.  Security Considerations

  There are a number of management objects defined in this MIB module
  with a MAX-ACCESS clause of read-write.  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.  The
  specific objects and their sensitivities/vulnerabilities are as
  follows.

  Setting the following objects to incorrect values may result in
  traffic interruptions:

     dsx1LineType
     dsx1LineCoding
     dsx1SendCode
     dsx1LoopbackConfig
     dsx1SignalMode
     dsx1TransmitClockSource
     dsx1Fdl
     dsx1LineLength
     dsx1Channelization
     dsx1LineMode
     dsx1LineBuildOut
     dsx1LineImpedance

  In the case of dsx1LineType, for example, both ends of a DS1/E1 must
  have the same value in order for traffic to flow.  In the case of
  dsx1SendCode and dsx1LoopbackConfig, for another example, traffic may
  stop transmitting when particular loopbacks are applied.

  Setting the following object to an incorrect value will not harm the
  traffic, but it may cause a circuit to be misidentified and thereby
  create difficulties for service personnel when attempting to
  troubleshoot a problem:

     dsx1CircuitIdentifier

  Setting the following object can cause an increase in the number of
  traps received by the network management station:

     dsx1LineStatusChangeTrapEnable

  The readable objects in this MIB module (i.e., the objects with a
  MAX-ACCESS other than not-accessible) may be considered sensitive in
  some environments since, collectively, they provide extensive
  information about the performance of interfaces in DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2
  equipment or networks and can reveal some aspects of their



Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 83]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


  configuration.  In such environments, it is important to control even
  GET and NOTIFY access to these objects and possibly to encrypt the
  values of these objects when sending them over the network via SNMP.

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

  It is RECOMMENDED that implementers consider the security features as
  provided by the SNMPv3 framework (see [RFC3410], section 8),
  including full support for the SNMPv3 cryptographic mechanisms (for
  authentication and privacy).

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

6.  Acknowledgments

  This document was produced by the AToM MIB Working Group.

7.  References

7.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2119]       Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
                  Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

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

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

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

  [RFC2863]       McCloghrie, K. and F. Kastenholz, "The Interfaces
                  Group MIB", RFC 2863, June 2000.



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  [AT&T-TR-54016] AT&T Technical Reference, Requirements for
                  Interfacing Digital Terminal Equipment to Services
                  Employing the Extended Superframe Format, Publication
                  54016, May 1988.

  [ANSI-T1.403]   American National Standard for Telecommunications --
                  Carrier-to-Customer Installation - DS1 Metallic
                  Interface, T1.403, February 1989.

  [CCITT-G.703]   ITU-T G.703, Physical/Electrical Characteristics of
                  Hierarchical Digital Interfaces, November 2001.

  [ITU-T-G.704]   ITU-T G.704: Synchronous frame structures used at
                  1544, 6312, 2048, 8488 and 44 736 kbit/s Hierarchical
                  Levels, October 1998.

  [ANSI-T1.231]   American National Standard for Telecommunications --
                  Digital Hierarchy DS1-- Layer 1 In-Service Digital
                  Transmission Performance Monitoring, T1.231.02,
                  October 2003.

  [ITU-T-O.162]   ITU-T O.162, Equipment To Perform In Service
                  Monitoring On 2048 kbit/s Signals, October 1992.

  [CCITT-G.821]   ITU-T G.821, Error Performance Of An International
                  Digital Connection Forming Part Of An Integrated
                  Services Digital Network, December 2002.

  [AT&T-TR-62411] AT&T Technical Reference, Technical Reference 62411,
                  ACCUNET T1.5 Service Description And Interface
                  Specification, December 1990.

  [CCITT-G.706]   ITU-T G.706, Frame Alignment and Cyclic Redundancy
                  Check (CRC) Procedures Relating to Basic Frame
                  Structures Defined in Recommendation G.704, April
                  1991.

  [CCITT-G.732]   ITU-T G.732, Characteristics Of Primary PCM Multiplex
                  Equipment Operating at 2048 kbit/s, November 1988.

  [ITU-T-G.775]   ITU-T G.775: Loss of signal (LOS) and alarm
                  indication signal (AIS) defect detection and
                  clearance criteria, October 1998.

  [ITU-T-G.826]   ITU-T G.826: Error performance parameters and
                  objectives for international, constant bit rate
                  digital paths at or above the primary rate, December
                  2002.



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  [ANSI-T1.107]   American National Standard for Telecommunications --
                  Digital Hierarchy - Format Specifications, T1.107,
                  January 2002.

  [RFC3593]       Tesink, K., "Textual Conventions for MIB Modules
                  Using Performance History Based on 15 Minute
                  Intervals", RFC 3593, September 2003.

  [ITU-T-M.1400]  ITU-T M.1400: Designation For Interconnections Among
                  Network Operators, October 2001.

  [JT-G704]       JT-G.704: Synchronous frame structures used at
                  Primary and Secondary Hierarchical Levels, 2002.

  [JT-G706]       JT-G.706: Frame Alignment and Cyclic Redundancy Check
                  (CRC) Procedures.

  [JT-I431]       JT-I.431: ISDN Primary Rate User-Network
                  Interface,Layer 1 Specifications, 2002.

7.2.  Informative References

  [RFC1213]       McCloghrie, K. and M. Rose, "Management Information
                  Base for Network Management of TCP/IP-based
                  internets:MIB-II", STD 17, RFC 1213, March 1991.

  [RFC3895]       Nicklass, O., "Definitions of Managed Objects for the
                  DS1, E1, DS2, and E2 Interface Types", RFC 3895,
                  September 2004.

  [RFC2495]       Fowler, D., "Definitions of Managed Objects for the
                  DS1, E1, DS2 and E2 Interface Types", RFC 2495,
                  January 1999.

  [RFC1406]       Baker, F. and J. Watt, "Definitions of Managed
                  Objects for the DS1 and E1 Interface Types", RFC
                  1406, January 1993.

  [AT&T-UM-305]   AT&T Information Systems, AT&T ESF DS1 Channel
                  Service Unit User's Manual, 999-100-305, February
                  1988.

  [RFC3896]       Nicklass, O., "Definitions of Managed Objects for the
                  DS3/E3 Interface Type", RFC 3896, September 2004.







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  [RFC3592]       Tesink, K., "Definitions of Managed Objects for the
                  Synchronous Optical Network/Synchronous Digital
                  Hierarchy (SONET/SDH) Interface Type", RFC 3592,
                  September 2003.

  [RFC2494]       Fowler, D., "Definitions of Managed Objects for the
                  DS0 and DS0 Bundle Interface Type", RFC 2494, January
                  1999.

  [ANSI-T1.102]   American National Standard for Telecommunications --
                  Digital Hierarchy - Electrical Interfaces, T1.102,
                  December 1993.

  [RFC3410]       Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D., and B. Stewart,
                  "Introduction and Applicability Statements for
                  Internet-Standard Management Framework", RFC 3410,
                  December 2002.


































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Appendix A - Use of dsx1IfIndex and dsx1LineIndex

  This appendix exists to document the previous use of dsx1IfIndex and
  dsx1LineIndex and to clarify the relationship of dsx1LineIndex as
  defined in RFC 1406 with the dsx1LineIndex as defined in this
  document.

  The following shows the old and new definitions and the relationship:

  [New Definition]: "This object should be made equal to ifIndex.  The
  next paragraph describes its previous usage.  Making the object equal
  to ifIndex allows proper use of ifStackTable and ds0/ds0bundle mibs.

  [Old Definition]: "This object is the identifier of a DS1 Interface
  on a managed device.  If there is an ifEntry that is directly
  associated with this and only this DS1 interface, it should have the
  same value as ifIndex.  Otherwise, number the dsx1LineIndices with an
  unique identifier following the rules of choosing a number that is
  greater than ifNumber and numbering the inside interfaces (e.g.,
  equipment side) with even numbers and outside interfaces (e.g.,
  network side) with odd numbers."

  When the "Old Definition" was created, it was described this way to
  allow a manager to treat the value as if it were an ifIndex; i.e.,
  the value would be either:  1) an ifIndex value or 2) a value that
  was guaranteed to be different from all valid ifIndex values.

  The new definition is a subset of that definition; i.e., the value is
  always an ifIndex value.

  The following is Section 3.1 from RFC 1406:

     Different physical configurations for the support of SNMP with DS1
     equipment exist.  To accommodate these scenarios, two different
     indices for DS1 interfaces are introduced in this MIB.  These
     indices are dsx1IfIndex and dsx1LineIndex.

     External interface scenario: the SNMP Agent represents all managed
     DS1 lines as external interfaces (for example, an Agent residing
     on the device supporting DS1 interfaces directly):

     For this scenario, all interfaces are assigned an integer value
     equal to ifIndex, and the following applies:

        ifIndex=dsx1IfIndex=dsx1LineIndex for all interfaces.






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     The dsx1IfIndex column of the DS1 Configuration table relates each
     DS1 interface to its corresponding interface (ifIndex) in the
     Internet-standard MIB (MIB-II STD 17, RFC 1213) [RFC1213].

     External & Internal interface scenario: the SNMP Agents resides on
     a host external from the device supporting DS1 interfaces (e.g., a
     router).  The Agent represents both the host and the DS1 device.
     The index dsx1LineIndex is used to not only represent the DS1
     interfaces external from the host/DS1-device combination, but also
     the DS1 interfaces connecting the host and the DS1 device.  The
     index dsx1IfIndex is always equal to ifIndex.

     Example:

     A shelf full of CSUs connected to a router.  An SNMP Agent
     residing on the router proxies for itself and the CSU.  The router
     has also an Ethernet interface:

           +-----+
     |     |     |
     |     |     |               +---------------------+
     |E    |     |  1.544  MBPS  |              Line#A | DS1 Link
     |t    |  R  |---------------+ - - - - -  - - -  - +------>
     |h    |     |               |                     |
     |e    |  O  |  1.544  MBPS  |              Line#B | DS1 Link
     |r    |     |---------------+ - - - - - - - - - - +------>
     |n    |  U  |               |  CSU Shelf          |
     |e    |     |  1.544  MBPS  |              Line#C | DS1 Link
     |t    |  T  |---------------+ - - - -- -- - - - - +------>
     |     |     |               |                     |
     |-----|  E  |  1.544  MBPS  |              Line#D | DS1 Link
     |     |     |---------------+ -  - - - -- - - - - +------>
     |     |  R  |               |_____________________|
     |     |     |
     |     +-----+

     The assignment of the index values could for example be:

          ifIndex (= dsx1IfIndex)                     dsx1LineIndex
                  1                   NA                  NA (Ethernet)
                  2      Line#A   Router Side             6
                  2      Line#A   Network Side            7
                  3      Line#B   Router Side             8
                  3      Line#B   Network Side            9
                  4      Line#C   Router Side            10
                  4      Line#C   Network Side           11
                  5      Line#D   Router Side            12
                  5      Line#D   Network Side           13



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     For this example, ifNumber is equal to 5.  Note the following
     description of dsx1LineIndex:  the dsx1LineIndex identifies a DS1
     Interface on a managed device.  If there is an ifEntry that is
     directly associated with this and only this DS1 interface, it
     should have the same value as ifIndex.  Otherwise, number the
     dsx1LineIndices with an unique identifier following the rules of
     choosing a number greater than ifNumber and numbering inside
     interfaces (e.g., equipment side) with even numbers and outside
     interfaces (e.g., network side) with odd numbers.

     If the CSU shelf is managed by itself by a local SNMP Agent, the
     situation would be:

          ifIndex (= dsx1IfIndex)                      dsx1LineIndex
                  1      Line#A     Network Side            1
                  2      Line#A     RouterSide              2
                  3      Line#B     Network Side            3
                  4      Line#B     RouterSide              4
                  5      Line#C     Network Side            5
                  6      Line#C     Router Side             6
                  7      Line#D     Network Side            7
                  8      Line#D     Router Side             8

Appendix B - The Delay Approach to Unavailable Seconds

  This procedure is illustrated below for a DS1 ESF interface.  Similar
  rules would apply for other DS1, DS2, and E1 interface variants.  The
  procedure guarantees that the statistical counters are correctly
  updated at all times, although they lag real time by 10 seconds.  At
  the end of each 15-minute interval, the current interval counts are
  transferred to the most recent interval entry and each interval is
  shifted up by one position, with the oldest being discarded if
  necessary in order to make room.  The current interval counts then
  start over from zero.  Note, however, that the signal state
  calculation does not start afresh at each interval boundary;  rather,
  signal state information is retained across interval boundaries.















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+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
|               READ COUNTERS & STATUS INFO FROM HARDWARE             |
|                                                                     |
| BPV EXZ LOS FE CRC CS AIS SEF OOF LOF       RAI G1-G6 SE FE LV SL   |
+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
  |   |   |   |  |   |  |   |   |   |         |    |    |  |  |  |
  |   |   |   |  |   |  |   |   |   |         |    |    |  |  |  |
  V   V   V   V  V   V  V   V   V   V         V    V    V  V  V  V
+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
|    ACCUM ONE-SEC STATS, CHK ERR THRESHOLDS, & UPDT SIGNAL STATE     |
|                                                                     |
|  |<---------- NEAR END ----------->|    |<-------- FAR END ------>| |
|                                                                     |
|  LCV LES PCV ES CSS BES SES SEFS A/U    PCV ES CSS BES SES SEFS A/U |
+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
   |   |   |  |   |   |   |   |    |      |  |   |   |   |   |    |
   |   |   |  |   |   |   |   |    |      |  |   |   |   |   |    |
   V   V   V  V   V   V   V   V    |      V  V   V   V   V   V    |
+------------------------------+   |    +----------------------+  |
|         ONE-SEC DELAY        |   |    |    ONE-SEC DELAY     |  |
|           (1 OF 10)          |   |    |      (1 OF 10)       |  |
+------------------------------+   |    +----------------------+  |
  |   |   |  |   |   |   |   |     |      |  |   |   |   |   |    |
  /   /   /  /   /   /   /   /     /      /  /   /   /   /   /    /
  |   |   |  |   |   |   |   |     |      |  |   |   |   |   |    |
  V   V   V  V   V   V   V   V     |      V  V   V   V   V   V    |
+------------------------------+   |    +----------------------+  |
|         ONE-SEC DELAY        |   |    |    ONE-SEC DELAY     |  |
|           (10 OF 10)         |   |    |      (10 OF 10)      |  |
+------------------------------+   |    +----------------------+  |
  |   |   |  |   |   |   |   |     |      |  |   |   |   |   |    |
  V   V   V  V   V   V   V   V     V      V  V   V   V   V   V    V
+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                    UPDATE STATISTICS COUNTERS                       |
|                                                                     |
|<-------------- NEAR END ----------->| |<--------- FAR END --------->|
|                                                                     |
|LCV LES PCV ES CSS BES SES SEFS UAS DM PCV ES CSS BES SES SEFS UAS DM|
+---------------------------------------------------------------------+

  Note that if such a procedure is adopted, there is no current
  interval data for the first 10 seconds after a system comes up.
  noSuchInstance must be returned if a management station attempts to
  access the current interval counters during this time.

  It is an implementation-specific matter whether an agent assumes that
  the initial state of the interface is available or unavailable.




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Appendix C - Changes from Pervious Versions

C.1.  Changes from RFC 3895

  The changes from RFC 3895 [RFC3895] are the following:

     (1) Values were added to dsx1LineType to support J1 types.
     (2) The object dsx1LineImpedance was added.
     (3) All DM-related objects were deprecated following their
         removal from ITU performance standards.
     (4) Relevant text and reference section were updated.
     (5) Changes in Compliance Statements to include new values.

C.2.  Changes from RFC 2495

  The changes from RFC 2495 [RFC2495] are the following:

     (1) The dsx1FracIfIndex SYNTAX matches the description range.
     (2) A value was added to dsx1TransmitClockSource.
     (3) Values were added to dsx1LineType.
     (4) Two objects were added, dsx1LineMode and dsx1LineBuildOut, to
         better express transceiver mode and LineBuildOut for T1.
     (5) Reference was added to Circuit Identifier object.
     (6) Align the DESCRIPTION clauses of few statistic objects with
         the near-end definition, with the far-end definition, and with
         [RFC3593].
     (7) Changes in Compliance Statements to include new objects.
     (8) A typographical error in dsx2E2 was fixed; new name is dsx1E2.

C.3.  Changes from RFC 1406

  The changes from RFC 1406 [RFC1406] are the following:

     (1) The Fractional table has been deprecated.
     (2) This document uses SMIv2.
     (3) Usage is given for ifTable and ifXTable.
     (4) Example usage of ifStackTable is included.
     (5) dsx1IfIndex has been deprecated.
     (6) Support for DS2 and E2 has been added.
     (7) Additional lineTypes for DS2, E2, and unframed E1 were added.
     (8) The definition of valid intervals has been clarified for the
         case where the agent proxied for other devices.  In
         particular, the treatment of missing intervals has been
         clarified.
     (9) An inward loopback has been added.
    (10) Additional lineStatus bits have been added for Near End in
         Unavailable Signal State, Carrier Equipment Out of Service,
         DS2 Payload AIS, and DS2 Performance Threshold.



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    (11) A read-write line Length object has been added.
    (12) Signal mode of other has been added.
    (13) Added a lineStatus last change, trap and enabler.
    (14) The e1(19) ifType has been obsoleted, so this MIB does not
         list it as a supported ifType.
    (15) Textual Conventions for statistics objects have been used.
    (16) A new object, dsx1LoopbackStatus, has been introduced to
         reflect the loopbacks established on a DS1 interface and the
         source to the requests. dsx1LoopbackConfig continues to be
         the desired loopback state while dsx1LoopbackStatus reflects
         the actual state.
    (17) A dual loopback has been added to allow the setting of an
         inward loopback and a line loopback at the same time.
    (18) An object indicating which channel to use within a parent
         object (i.e., DS3) has been added.
    (19) An object has been added to indicate whether or not this
         DS1/E1 is channelized.
    (20) Line coding type of B6ZS has been added for DS2.

C.4.  Companion Documents

  This document is a companion to the documents that define managed
  objects for the DS0 [RFC2494], DS3/E3 [RFC3896], and Synchronous
  Optical Network/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SONET/SDH) [RFC3592]
  Interface Types.

Author's Address

  Orly Nicklass, Editor
  RAD Data Communications, Ltd.
  Ziv Tower, 24 Roul Walenberg
  Tel Aviv, Israel, 69719

  Phone: 9723-765-9969
  EMail: [email protected]
















Nicklass, Ed.               Standards Track                    [Page 93]

RFC 4805                  DS1/J1/E1/DS2/E2 MIB                March 2007


Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).

  This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
  contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
  retain all their rights.

  This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
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