Network Working Group                               SNMPv2 Working Group
Request for Comments: 1903                                       J. Case
Obsoletes: 1443                                      SNMP Research, Inc.
Category: Standards Track                                  K. McCloghrie
                                                    Cisco Systems, Inc.
                                                                M. Rose
                                           Dover Beach Consulting, Inc.
                                                          S. Waldbusser
                                         International Network Services
                                                           January 1996


                         Textual Conventions
                         for Version 2 of the
             Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)

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.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ................................................    1
  1.1 A Note on Terminology ......................................    2
  2. Definitions .................................................    3
  3. Mapping of the TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro .....................   19
  3.1 Mapping of the DISPLAY-HINT clause .........................   19
  3.2 Mapping of the STATUS clause ...............................   21
  3.3 Mapping of the DESCRIPTION clause ..........................   21
  3.4 Mapping of the REFERENCE clause ............................   21
  3.5 Mapping of the SYNTAX clause ...............................   22
  4. Security Considerations .....................................   22
  5. Editor's Address ............................................   22
  6. Acknowledgements ............................................   22
  7. References ..................................................   23

1.  Introduction

  A management system contains:  several (potentially many) nodes, each
  with a processing entity, termed an agent, which has access to
  management instrumentation; at least one management station; and, a
  management protocol, used to convey management information between
  the agents and management stations.  Operations of the protocol are
  carried out under an administrative framework which defines



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  authentication, authorization, access control, and privacy policies.

  Management stations execute management applications which monitor and
  control managed elements.  Managed elements are devices such as
  hosts, routers, terminal servers, etc., which are monitored and
  controlled via access to their management information.

  Management information is viewed as a collection of managed objects,
  residing in a virtual information store, termed the Management
  Information Base (MIB).  Collections of related objects are defined
  in MIB modules.  These modules are written using a subset of OSI's
  Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) [1], termed the Structure of
  Management Information (SMI) [2].

  When designing a MIB module, it is often useful to define new types
  similar to those defined in the SMI.  In comparison to a type defined
  in the SMI, each of these new types has a different name, a similar
  syntax, but a more precise semantics.  These newly defined types are
  termed textual conventions, and are used for the convenience of
  humans reading the MIB module.  It is the purpose of this document to
  define the initial set of textual conventions available to all MIB
  modules.

  Objects defined using a textual convention are always encoded by
  means of the rules that define their primitive type.  However,
  textual conventions often have special semantics associated with
  them.  As such, an ASN.1 macro, TEXTUAL-CONVENTION, is used to
  concisely convey the syntax and semantics of a textual convention.

  For all textual conventions defined in an information module, the
  name shall be unique and mnemonic, and shall not exceed 64 characters
  in length.  (However, names longer than 32 characters are not
  recommended.) All names used for the textual conventions defined in
  all "standard" information modules shall be unique.

1.1.  A Note on Terminology

  For the purpose of exposition, the original Internet-standard Network
  Management Framework, as described in RFCs 1155 (STD 16), 1157 (STD
  15), and 1212 (STD 16), is termed the SNMP version 1 framework
  (SNMPv1).  The current framework is termed the SNMP version 2
  framework (SNMPv2).









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2.  Definitions

SNMPv2-TC DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS
   ObjectSyntax, TimeTicks
       FROM SNMPv2-SMI;


-- definition of textual conventions

TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MACRO ::=
BEGIN
   TYPE NOTATION ::=
                 DisplayPart
                 "STATUS" Status
                 "DESCRIPTION" Text
                 ReferPart
                 "SYNTAX" Syntax

   VALUE NOTATION ::=
                 value(VALUE Syntax)

   DisplayPart ::=
                 "DISPLAY-HINT" Text
               | empty

   Status ::=
                 "current"
               | "deprecated"
               | "obsolete"

   ReferPart ::=
                 "REFERENCE" Text
               | empty

   -- uses the NVT ASCII character set
   Text ::= """" string """"

   Syntax ::=
                 type(ObjectSyntax)
               | "BITS" "{" Kibbles "}"
   Kibbles ::=
                 Kibble
               | Kibbles "," Kibble
   Kibble ::=
                 identifier "(" nonNegativeNumber ")"




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END


DisplayString ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   DISPLAY-HINT "255a"
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "Represents textual information taken from the NVT ASCII
           character set, as defined in pages 4, 10-11 of RFC 854.

           To summarize RFC 854, the NVT ASCII repertoire specifies:

             - the use of character codes 0-127 (decimal)

             - the graphics characters (32-126) are interpreted as
               US ASCII

             - NUL, LF, CR, BEL, BS, HT, VT and FF have the special
               meanings specified in RFC 854

             - the other 25 codes have no standard interpretation

             - the sequence 'CR LF' means newline

             - the sequence 'CR NUL' means carriage-return

             - an 'LF' not preceded by a 'CR' means moving to the
               same column on the next line.

             - the sequence 'CR x' for any x other than LF or NUL is
               illegal.  (Note that this also means that a string may
               end with either 'CR LF' or 'CR NUL', but not with CR.)

           Any object defined using this syntax may not exceed 255
           characters in length."
   SYNTAX       OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..255))


PhysAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   DISPLAY-HINT "1x:"
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "Represents media- or physical-level addresses."
   SYNTAX       OCTET STRING


MacAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   DISPLAY-HINT "1x:"



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   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "Represents an 802 MAC address represented in the
           `canonical' order defined by IEEE 802.1a, i.e., as if it
           were transmitted least significant bit first, even though
           802.5 (in contrast to other 802.x protocols) requires MAC
           addresses to be transmitted most significant bit first."
   SYNTAX       OCTET STRING (SIZE (6))


TruthValue ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "Represents a boolean value."
   SYNTAX       INTEGER { true(1), false(2) }

TestAndIncr ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "Represents integer-valued information used for atomic
           operations.  When the management protocol is used to specify
           that an object instance having this syntax is to be
           modified, the new value supplied via the management protocol
           must precisely match the value presently held by the
           instance.  If not, the management protocol set operation
           fails with an error of `inconsistentValue'.  Otherwise, if
           the current value is the maximum value of 2^31-1 (2147483647
           decimal), then the value held by the instance is wrapped to
           zero; otherwise, the value held by the instance is
           incremented by one.  (Note that regardless of whether the
           management protocol set operation succeeds, the variable-
           binding in the request and response PDUs are identical.)

           The value of the ACCESS clause for objects having this
           syntax is either `read-write' or `read-create'.  When an
           instance of a columnar object having this syntax is created,
           any value may be supplied via the management protocol.

           When the network management portion of the system is re-
           initialized, the value of every object instance having this
           syntax must either be incremented from its value prior to
           the re-initialization, or (if the value prior to the re-
           initialization is unknown) be set to a pseudo-randomly
           generated value."
   SYNTAX       INTEGER (0..2147483647)


AutonomousType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION



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   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "Represents an independently extensible type identification
           value.  It may, for example, indicate a particular sub-tree
           with further MIB definitions, or define a particular type of
           protocol or hardware."
   SYNTAX       OBJECT IDENTIFIER


InstancePointer ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       obsolete
   DESCRIPTION
           "A pointer to either a specific instance of a MIB object or
           a conceptual row of a MIB table in the managed device.  In
           the latter case, by convention, it is the name of the
           particular instance of the first accessible columnar object
           in the conceptual row.

           The two uses of this textual convention are replaced by
           VariablePointer and RowPointer, respectively."
   SYNTAX       OBJECT IDENTIFIER


VariablePointer ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "A pointer to a specific object instance.  For example,
           sysContact.0 or ifInOctets.3."
   SYNTAX       OBJECT IDENTIFIER


RowPointer ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "Represents a pointer to a conceptual row.  The value is the
           name of the instance of the first accessible columnar object
           in the conceptual row.

           For example, ifIndex.3 would point to the 3rd row in the
           ifTable (note that if ifIndex were not-accessible, then
           ifDescr.3 would be used instead)."
   SYNTAX       OBJECT IDENTIFIER


RowStatus ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The RowStatus textual convention is used to manage the



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           creation and deletion of conceptual rows, and is used as the
           value of the SYNTAX clause for the status column of a
           conceptual row (as described in Section 7.7.1 of [2].)

           The status column has six defined values:

                - `active', which indicates that the conceptual row is
                available for use by the managed device;

                - `notInService', which indicates that the conceptual
                row exists in the agent, but is unavailable for use by
                the managed device (see NOTE below);

                - `notReady', which indicates that the conceptual row
                exists in the agent, but is missing information
                necessary in order to be available for use by the
                managed device;

                - `createAndGo', which is supplied by a management
                station wishing to create a new instance of a
                conceptual row and to have its status automatically set
                to active, making it available for use by the managed
                device;

                - `createAndWait', which is supplied by a management
                station wishing to create a new instance of a
                conceptual row (but not make it available for use by
                the managed device); and,

                - `destroy', which is supplied by a management station
                wishing to delete all of the instances associated with
                an existing conceptual row.

           Whereas five of the six values (all except `notReady') may
           be specified in a management protocol set operation, only
           three values will be returned in response to a management
           protocol retrieval operation:  `notReady', `notInService' or
           `active'.  That is, when queried, an existing conceptual row
           has only three states:  it is either available for use by
           the managed device (the status column has value `active');
           it is not available for use by the managed device, though
           the agent has sufficient information to make it so (the
           status column has value `notInService'); or, it is not
           available for use by the managed device, and an attempt to
           make it so would fail because the agent has insufficient
           information (the state column has value `notReady').





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                                    NOTE WELL

                This textual convention may be used for a MIB table,
                irrespective of whether the values of that table's
                conceptual rows are able to be modified while it is
                active, or whether its conceptual rows must be taken
                out of service in order to be modified.  That is, it is
                the responsibility of the DESCRIPTION clause of the
                status column to specify whether the status column must
                not be `active' in order for the value of some other
                column of the same conceptual row to be modified.  If
                such a specification is made, affected columns may be
                changed by an SNMP set PDU if the RowStatus would not
                be equal to `active' either immediately before or after
                processing the PDU.  In other words, if the PDU also
                contained a varbind that would change the RowStatus
                value, the column in question may be changed if the
                RowStatus was not equal to `active' as the PDU was
                received, or if the varbind sets the status to a value
                other than 'active'.


           Also note that whenever any elements of a row exist, the
           RowStatus column must also exist.



























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           To summarize the effect of having a conceptual row with a
           status column having a SYNTAX clause value of RowStatus,
           consider the following state diagram:


                                        STATE
             +--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
             |      A       |     B     |      C      |      D
             |              |status col.|status column|
             |status column |    is     |      is     |status column
   ACTION    |does not exist|  notReady | notInService|  is active
--------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
set status    |noError    ->D|inconsist- |inconsistent-|inconsistent-
column to     |       or     |   entValue|        Value|        Value
createAndGo   |inconsistent- |           |             |
             |         Value|           |             |
--------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
set status    |noError  see 1|inconsist- |inconsistent-|inconsistent-
column to     |       or     |   entValue|        Value|        Value
createAndWait |wrongValue    |           |             |
--------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
set status    |inconsistent- |inconsist- |noError      |noError
column to     |         Value|   entValue|             |
active        |              |           |             |
             |              |     or    |             |
             |              |           |             |
             |              |see 2   ->D|          ->D|          ->D
--------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
set status    |inconsistent- |inconsist- |noError      |noError   ->C
column to     |         Value|   entValue|             |
notInService  |              |           |             |
             |              |     or    |             |      or
             |              |           |             |
             |              |see 3   ->C|          ->C|wrongValue
--------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
set status    |noError       |noError    |noError      |noError
column to     |              |           |             |
destroy       |           ->A|        ->A|          ->A|          ->A
--------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------
set any other |see 4         |noError    |noError      |see 5
column to some|              |           |             |
value         |              |      see 1|          ->C|          ->D
--------------+--------------+-----------+-------------+-------------

           (1) goto B or C, depending on information available to the
           agent.





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           (2) if other variable bindings included in the same PDU,
           provide values for all columns which are missing but
           required, then return noError and goto D.

           (3) if other variable bindings included in the same PDU,
           provide values for all columns which are missing but
           required, then return noError and goto C.

           (4) at the discretion of the agent, the return value may be
           either:

                inconsistentName:  because the agent does not choose to
                create such an instance when the corresponding
                RowStatus instance does not exist, or

                inconsistentValue:  if the supplied value is
                inconsistent with the state of some other MIB object's
                value, or

                noError: because the agent chooses to create the
                instance.

           If noError is returned, then the instance of the status
           column must also be created, and the new state is B or C,
           depending on the information available to the agent.  If
           inconsistentName or inconsistentValue is returned, the row
           remains in state A.

           (5) depending on the MIB definition for the column/table,
           either noError or inconsistentValue may be returned.

           NOTE: Other processing of the set request may result in a
           response other than noError being returned, e.g.,
           wrongValue, noCreation, etc.


                             Conceptual Row Creation

           There are four potential interactions when creating a
           conceptual row:  selecting an instance-identifier which is
           not in use; creating the conceptual row; initializing any
           objects for which the agent does not supply a default; and,
           making the conceptual row available for use by the managed
           device.







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           Interaction 1: Selecting an Instance-Identifier

           The algorithm used to select an instance-identifier varies
           for each conceptual row.  In some cases, the instance-
           identifier is semantically significant, e.g., the
           destination address of a route, and a management station
           selects the instance-identifier according to the semantics.

           In other cases, the instance-identifier is used solely to
           distinguish conceptual rows, and a management station
           without specific knowledge of the conceptual row might
           examine the instances present in order to determine an
           unused instance-identifier.  (This approach may be used, but
           it is often highly sub-optimal; however, it is also a
           questionable practice for a naive management station to
           attempt conceptual row creation.)

           Alternately, the MIB module which defines the conceptual row
           might provide one or more objects which provide assistance
           in determining an unused instance-identifier.  For example,
           if the conceptual row is indexed by an integer-value, then
           an object having an integer-valued SYNTAX clause might be
           defined for such a purpose, allowing a management station to
           issue a management protocol retrieval operation.  In order
           to avoid unnecessary collisions between competing management
           stations, `adjacent' retrievals of this object should be
           different.

           Finally, the management station could select a pseudo-random
           number to use as the index.  In the event that this index
           was already in use and an inconsistentValue was returned in
           response to the management protocol set operation, the
           management station should simply select a new pseudo-random
           number and retry the operation.

           A MIB designer should choose between the two latter
           algorithms based on the size of the table (and therefore the
           efficiency of each algorithm).  For tables in which a large
           number of entries are expected, it is recommended that a MIB
           object be defined that returns an acceptable index for
           creation.  For tables with small numbers of entries, it is
           recommended that the latter pseudo-random index mechanism be
           used.








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           Interaction 2: Creating the Conceptual Row

           Once an unused instance-identifier has been selected, the
           management station determines if it wishes to create and
           activate the conceptual row in one transaction or in a
           negotiated set of interactions.

           Interaction 2a: Creating and Activating the Conceptual Row

           The management station must first determine the column
           requirements, i.e., it must determine those columns for
           which it must or must not provide values.  Depending on the
           complexity of the table and the management station's
           knowledge of the agent's capabilities, this determination
           can be made locally by the management station.  Alternately,
           the management station issues a management protocol get
           operation to examine all columns in the conceptual row that
           it wishes to create.  In response, for each column, there
           are three possible outcomes:

                - a value is returned, indicating that some other
                management station has already created this conceptual
                row.  We return to interaction 1.

                - the exception `noSuchInstance' is returned,
                indicating that the agent implements the object-type
                associated with this column, and that this column in at
                least one conceptual row would be accessible in the MIB
                view used by the retrieval were it to exist. For those
                columns to which the agent provides read-create access,
                the `noSuchInstance' exception tells the management
                station that it should supply a value for this column
                when the conceptual row is to be created.

                - the exception `noSuchObject' is returned, indicating
                that the agent does not implement the object-type
                associated with this column or that there is no
                conceptual row for which this column would be
                accessible in the MIB view used by the retrieval.  As
                such, the management station can not issue any
                management protocol set operations to create an
                instance of this column.

           Once the column requirements have been determined, a
           management protocol set operation is accordingly issued.
           This operation also sets the new instance of the status
           column to `createAndGo'.




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           When the agent processes the set operation, it verifies that
           it has sufficient information to make the conceptual row
           available for use by the managed device.  The information
           available to the agent is provided by two sources:  the
           management protocol set operation which creates the
           conceptual row, and, implementation-specific defaults
           supplied by the agent (note that an agent must provide
           implementation-specific defaults for at least those objects
           which it implements as read-only).  If there is sufficient
           information available, then the conceptual row is created, a
           `noError' response is returned, the status column is set to
           `active', and no further interactions are necessary (i.e.,
           interactions 3 and 4 are skipped).  If there is insufficient
           information, then the conceptual row is not created, and the
           set operation fails with an error of `inconsistentValue'.
           On this error, the management station can issue a management
           protocol retrieval operation to determine if this was
           because it failed to specify a value for a required column,
           or, because the selected instance of the status column
           already existed.  In the latter case, we return to
           interaction 1.  In the former case, the management station
           can re-issue the set operation with the additional
           information, or begin interaction 2 again using
           `createAndWait' in order to negotiate creation of the
           conceptual row.

                                    NOTE WELL

                Regardless of the method used to determine the column
                requirements, it is possible that the management
                station might deem a column necessary when, in fact,
                the agent will not allow that particular columnar
                instance to be created or written.  In this case, the
                management protocol set operation will fail with an
                error such as `noCreation' or `notWritable'.  In this
                case, the management station decides whether it needs
                to be able to set a value for that particular columnar
                instance.  If not, the management station re-issues the
                management protocol set operation, but without setting
                a value for that particular columnar instance;
                otherwise, the management station aborts the row
                creation algorithm.

           Interaction 2b: Negotiating the Creation of the Conceptual
           Row

           The management station issues a management protocol set
           operation which sets the desired instance of the status



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           column to `createAndWait'.  If the agent is unwilling to
           process a request of this sort, the set operation fails with
           an error of `wrongValue'.  (As a consequence, such an agent
           must be prepared to accept a single management protocol set
           operation, i.e., interaction 2a above, containing all of the
           columns indicated by its column requirements.)  Otherwise,
           the conceptual row is created, a `noError' response is
           returned, and the status column is immediately set to either
           `notInService' or `notReady', depending on whether it has
           sufficient information to make the conceptual row available
           for use by the managed device.  If there is sufficient
           information available, then the status column is set to
           `notInService'; otherwise, if there is insufficient
           information, then the status column is set to `notReady'.
           Regardless, we proceed to interaction 3.

           Interaction 3: Initializing non-defaulted Objects

           The management station must now determine the column
           requirements.  It issues a management protocol get operation
           to examine all columns in the created conceptual row.  In
           the response, for each column, there are three possible
           outcomes:

                - a value is returned, indicating that the agent
                implements the object-type associated with this column
                and had sufficient information to provide a value.  For
                those columns to which the agent provides read-create
                access (and for which the agent allows their values to
                be changed after their creation), a value return tells
                the management station that it may issue additional
                management protocol set operations, if it desires, in
                order to change the value associated with this column.

                - the exception `noSuchInstance' is returned,
                indicating that the agent implements the object-type
                associated with this column, and that this column in at
                least one conceptual row would be accessible in the MIB
                view used by the retrieval were it to exist. However,
                the agent does not have sufficient information to
                provide a value, and until a value is provided, the
                conceptual row may not be made available for use by the
                managed device.  For those columns to which the agent
                provides read-create access, the `noSuchInstance'
                exception tells the management station that it must
                issue additional management protocol set operations, in
                order to provide a value associated with this column.




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                - the exception `noSuchObject' is returned, indicating
                that the agent does not implement the object-type
                associated with this column or that there is no
                conceptual row for which this column would be
                accessible in the MIB view used by the retrieval.  As
                such, the management station can not issue any
                management protocol set operations to create an
                instance of this column.

           If the value associated with the status column is
           `notReady', then the management station must first deal with
           all `noSuchInstance' columns, if any.  Having done so, the
           value of the status column becomes `notInService', and we
           proceed to interaction 4.

           Interaction 4: Making the Conceptual Row Available

           Once the management station is satisfied with the values
           associated with the columns of the conceptual row, it issues
           a management protocol set operation to set the status column
           to `active'.  If the agent has sufficient information to
           make the conceptual row available for use by the managed
           device, the management protocol set operation succeeds (a
           `noError' response is returned).  Otherwise, the management
           protocol set operation fails with an error of
           `inconsistentValue'.


                                    NOTE WELL

                A conceptual row having a status column with value
                `notInService' or `notReady' is unavailable to the
                managed device.  As such, it is possible for the
                managed device to create its own instances during the
                time between the management protocol set operation
                which sets the status column to `createAndWait' and the
                management protocol set operation which sets the status
                column to `active'.  In this case, when the management
                protocol set operation is issued to set the status
                column to `active', the values held in the agent
                supersede those used by the managed device.

           If the management station is prevented from setting the
           status column to `active' (e.g., due to management station
           or network failure) the conceptual row will be left in the
           `notInService' or `notReady' state, consuming resources
           indefinitely.  The agent must detect conceptual rows that
           have been in either state for an abnormally long period of



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           time and remove them.  It is the responsibility of the
           DESCRIPTION clause of the status column to indicate what an
           abnormally long period of time would be.  This period of
           time should be long enough to allow for human response time
           (including `think time') between the creation of the
           conceptual row and the setting of the status to `active'.
           In the absense of such information in the DESCRIPTION
           clause, it is suggested that this period be approximately 5
           minutes in length.  This removal action applies not only to
           newly-created rows, but also to previously active rows which
           are set to, and left in, the notInService state for a
           prolonged period exceeding that which is considered normal
           for such a conceptual row.


                            Conceptual Row Suspension

           When a conceptual row is `active', the management station
           may issue a management protocol set operation which sets the
           instance of the status column to `notInService'.  If the
           agent is unwilling to do so, the set operation fails with an
           error of `wrongValue'.  Otherwise, the conceptual row is
           taken out of service, and a `noError' response is returned.
           It is the responsibility of the DESCRIPTION clause of the
           status column to indicate under what circumstances the
           status column should be taken out of service (e.g., in order
           for the value of some other column of the same conceptual
           row to be modified).


                             Conceptual Row Deletion

           For deletion of conceptual rows, a management protocol set
           operation is issued which sets the instance of the status
           column to `destroy'.  This request may be made regardless of
           the current value of the status column (e.g., it is possible
           to delete conceptual rows which are either `notReady',
           `notInService' or `active'.)  If the operation succeeds,
           then all instances associated with the conceptual row are
           immediately removed."


   SYNTAX       INTEGER {
                    -- the following two values are states:
                    -- these values may be read or written
                    active(1),
                    notInService(2),




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                    -- the following value is a state:
                    -- this value may be read, but not written
                    notReady(3),

                    -- the following three values are
                    -- actions: these values may be written,
                    --   but are never read
                    createAndGo(4),
                    createAndWait(5),
                    destroy(6)
                }


TimeStamp ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The value of the sysUpTime object at which a specific
           occurrence happened.  The specific occurrence must be
           defined in the description of any object defined using this
           type."
   SYNTAX       TimeTicks


TimeInterval ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "A period of time, measured in units of 0.01 seconds."
   SYNTAX       INTEGER (0..2147483647)


DateAndTime ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   DISPLAY-HINT "2d-1d-1d,1d:1d:1d.1d,1a1d:1d"
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "A date-time specification.

           field  octets  contents                  range
           -----  ------  --------                  -----
             1      1-2   year                      0..65536
             2       3    month                     1..12
             3       4    day                       1..31
             4       5    hour                      0..23
             5       6    minutes                   0..59
             6       7    seconds                   0..60
                          (use 60 for leap-second)
             7       8    deci-seconds              0..9
             8       9    direction from UTC        '+' / '-'
             9      10    hours from UTC            0..11



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            10      11    minutes from UTC          0..59

           For example, Tuesday May 26, 1992 at 1:30:15 PM EDT would be
           displayed as:

                            1992-5-26,13:30:15.0,-4:0

           Note that if only local time is known, then timezone
           information (fields 8-10) is not present."
   SYNTAX       OCTET STRING (SIZE (8 | 11))


StorageType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "Describes the memory realization of a conceptual row.  A
           row which is volatile(2) is lost upon reboot.  A row which
           is either nonVolatile(3), permanent(4) or readOnly(5), is
           backed up by stable storage.  A row which is permanent(4)
           can be changed but not deleted.  A row which is readOnly(5)
           cannot be changed nor deleted.

           If the value of an object with this syntax is either
           permanent(4) or readOnly(5), it cannot be modified.
           Conversely, if the value is either other(1), volatile(2) or
           nonVolatile(3), it cannot be modified to be permanent(4) or
           readOnly(5).

           Every usage of this textual convention is required to
           specify the columnar objects which a permanent(4) row must
           at a minimum allow to be writable."
   SYNTAX       INTEGER {
                    other(1),       -- eh?
                    volatile(2),    -- e.g., in RAM
                    nonVolatile(3), -- e.g., in NVRAM
                    permanent(4),   -- e.g., partially in ROM
                    readOnly(5)     -- e.g., completely in ROM
                }


TDomain ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
         "Denotes a kind of transport service.

         Some possible values, such as snmpUDPDomain, are defined in
         'Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network
         Management Protocol (SNMPv2)'."



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   SYNTAX       OBJECT IDENTIFIER


TAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
         "Denotes a transport service address.

         For snmpUDPDomain, a TAddress is 6 octets long, the initial 4
         octets containing the IP-address in network-byte order and the
         last 2 containing the UDP port in network-byte order.  Consult
         'Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network
         Management Protocol (SNMPv2)' for further information on
         snmpUDPDomain."
   SYNTAX       OCTET STRING (SIZE (1..255))


END

3.  Mapping of the TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro

  The TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro is used to convey the syntax and
  semantics associated with a textual convention.  It should be noted
  that the expansion of the TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro is something which
  conceptually happens during implementation and not during run-time.

  For all descriptors appearing in an information module, the
  descriptor shall be unique and mnemonic, and shall not exceed 64
  characters in length.  (However, descriptors longer than 32
  characters are not recommended.)  Further, the hyphen is not allowed
  as a character in the name of any textual convention.

3.1.  Mapping of the DISPLAY-HINT clause

  The DISPLAY-HINT clause, which need not be present, gives a hint as
  to how the value of an instance of an object with the syntax defined
  using this textual convention might be displayed.  The DISPLAY-HINT
  clause may be present if and only if the syntax has an underlying
  primitive type of INTEGER or OCTET STRING.  (Note, however, that the
  semantics defined for a particular syntax can cause the use of
  DISPLAY-HINT for that syntax to make no sense, e.g., for Counter32
  [2].)

  When the syntax has an underlying primitive type of INTEGER, the hint
  consists of an integer-format specification, containing two parts.
  The first part is a single character suggesting a display format,
  either: 'x' for hexadecimal, or 'd' for decimal, or 'o' for octal, or
  'b' for binary.  The second part is always omitted for 'x', 'o' and



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  'b', and need not be present for 'd'.  If present, the second part
  starts with a hyphen and is followed by a decimal number, which
  defines the implied decimal point when rendering the value.  For
  example:

    Hundredths ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
        DISPLAY-HINT "d-2"
        ...
        SYNTAX     INTEGER (0..10000)

  suggests that a Hundredths value of 1234 be rendered as "12.34"

  When the syntax has an underlying primitive type of OCTET STRING, the
  hint consists of one or more octet-format specifications.  Each
  specification consists of five parts, with each part using and
  removing zero or more of the next octets from the value and producing
  the next zero or more characters to be displayed.  The octets within
  the value are processed in order of significance, most significant
  first.

  The five parts of a octet-format specification are:

(1)  the (optional) repeat indicator; if present, this part is a `*',
    and indicates that the current octet of the value is to be used as
    the repeat count.  The repeat count is an unsigned integer (which
    may be zero) which specifies how many times the remainder of this
    octet-format specification should be successively applied.  If the
    repeat indicator is not present, the repeat count is one.

(2)  the octet length: one or more decimal digits specifying the number
    of octets of the value to be used and formatted by this octet-
    specification.  Note that the octet length can be zero.  If less
    than this number of octets remain in the value, then the lesser
    number of octets are used.

(3)  the display format, either:  `x' for hexadecimal, `d' for decimal,
    `o' for octal, or `a' for ascii.  If the octet length part is
    greater than one, and the display format part refers to a numeric
    format, then network-byte ordering (big-endian encoding) is used
    interpreting the octets in the value.

(4)  the (optional) display separator character; if present, this part
    is a single character which is produced for display after each
    application of this octet-specification; however, this character is
    not produced for display if it would be immediately followed by the
    display of the repeat terminator character for this octet-
    specification.  This character can be any character other than a
    decimal digit and a `*'.



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(5)  the (optional) repeat terminator character, which can be present
    only if the display separator character is present and this octet-
    specification begins with a repeat indicator; if present, this part
    is a single character which is produced after all the zero or more
    repeated applications (as given by the repeat count) of this
    octet-specification.  This character can be any character other
    than a decimal digit and a `*'.

  Output of a display separator character or a repeat terminator
  character is suppressed if it would occur as the last character of
  the display.

  If the octets of the value are exhausted before all the octet-format
  specification have been used, then the excess specifications are
  ignored.  If additional octets remain in the value after interpreting
  all the octet-format specifications, then the last octet-format
  specification is re-interpreted to process the additional octets,
  until no octets remain in the value.

3.2.  Mapping of the STATUS clause

  The STATUS clause, which must be present, indicates whether this
  definition is current or historic.

  The values "current", and "obsolete" are self-explanatory.  The
  "deprecated" value indicates that the definition is obsolete, but
  that an implementor may wish to support the use of this textual
  convention to foster interoperability with older implementations.

3.3.  Mapping of the DESCRIPTION clause

  The DESCRIPTION clause, which must be present, contains a textual
  definition of the textual convention, which provides all semantic
  definitions necessary for implementation, and should embody any
  information which would otherwise be communicated in any ASN.1
  commentary annotations associated with the object.

  Note that, in order to conform to the ASN.1 syntax, the entire value
  of this clause must be enclosed in double quotation marks, and
  therefore cannot itself contain double quotation marks, although the
  value may be multi-line.

3.4.  Mapping of the REFERENCE clause

  The REFERENCE clause, which need not be present, contains a textual
  cross-reference to a related item defined in some other published
  work.




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3.5.  Mapping of the SYNTAX clause

  The SYNTAX clause, which must be present, defines abstract data
  structure corresponding to the textual convention.  The data
  structure must be one of the alternatives defined in the ObjectSyntax
  CHOICE or the BITS construct (see section 7.1 in [2]).

4.  Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

5.  Editor's Address

  Keith McCloghrie
  Cisco Systems, Inc.
  170 West Tasman Drive
  San Jose, CA  95134-1706
  US

  Phone: +1 408 526 5260
  EMail: [email protected]

6.  Acknowledgements

  This document is the result of significant work by the four major
  contributors:

  Jeffrey D. Case (SNMP Research, [email protected])
  Keith McCloghrie (Cisco Systems, [email protected])
  Marshall T. Rose (Dover Beach Consulting, [email protected])
  Steven Waldbusser (International Network Services, [email protected])

  In addition, the contributions of the SNMPv2 Working Group are
  acknowledged.  In particular, a special thanks is extended for the
  contributions of:

    Alexander I. Alten (Novell)
    Dave Arneson (Cabletron)
    Uri Blumenthal (IBM)
    Doug Book (Chipcom)
    Kim Curran (Bell-Northern Research)
    Jim Galvin (Trusted Information Systems)
    Maria Greene (Ascom Timeplex)
    Iain Hanson (Digital)
    Dave Harrington (Cabletron)
    Nguyen Hien (IBM)
    Jeff Johnson (Cisco Systems)
    Michael Kornegay (Object Quest)



SNMPv2 Working Group        Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 1903             Textual Conventions for SNMPv2         January 1996


    Deirdre Kostick (AT&T Bell Labs)
    David Levi (SNMP Research)
    Daniel Mahoney (Cabletron)
    Bob Natale (ACE*COMM)
    Brian O'Keefe (Hewlett Packard)
    Andrew Pearson (SNMP Research)
    Dave Perkins (Peer Networks)
    Randy Presuhn (Peer Networks)
    Aleksey Romanov (Quality Quorum)
    Shawn Routhier (Epilogue)
    Jon Saperia (BGS Systems)
    Bob Stewart (Cisco Systems, [email protected]), chair
    Kaj Tesink (Bellcore)
    Glenn Waters (Bell-Northern Research)
    Bert Wijnen (IBM)

7.  References

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

[2]  SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and
    S. Waldbusser, "Structure of Management Information for Version 2
    of the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1902,
    January 1996.
























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